{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426504":{"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":"2023-07-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1952-09-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426504\/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":" r_~_\n1*0' i\u00bbIniivir \u00ab#iltll\nAfter Coronation\nSt. Laurent Says Federal Election\nImpossible Before Next Summer\nCALGARY, Sept 1 (CP)\u2014Prime Minister Louis St.\nLaurent said today there won't be, any Canadian federal\nelection before the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II next\nSummer.\n.The Prime Minister, en route to\nBritish Columbia on a speaking\ntour, said in an interview that an\nelection would have to be held before or after the coronation.\nHe added that before the coronation, the government would be \"tied\nup\" with Parliament.\nCommenting on an election, he\n(aid:\nWAR NOT LIKELY\n\"There is always the possibility\nof an election; But the probability\nis another thing. It will have to be\nwithin the next two vears, unless\nwe get into a war\u2014and I don't\nthink that is likely.\" ., ..\nAt Calgary Mr. St. Laurent left\nthe train and took a plane for\nTrail, B.C.\nDamaging Storms Hit\nVarious IL S* Points\nFORT WORTH, Tex., Sept, 1\n(AP)\u2014High wind, accompanied by\nrain and hail struck sprawling Cars-\nwell Air Force base tonight inflicting what Air Force spokesmen described as \"serious damage\" to the\noperational field for B-36 bombers.\nOne person, a civilian woman,\nwas killed when her automobile\nwas struck by a sign board blown\ndown In the storm. -\n; At Car'swell, headquarters for the\nEighth Air Force, spokesmen estimated 60 per cent of the field's\nplanes were damaged, among them\n''a number\" of the giant, $3,000,000\nB-36 strategic long-range bombers.\nAll of Carswell's off-duty personnel was summoned back to the base\nto begin the job of clearing the\n. debris.\nCHARLESTON, S.O, Sept 1 (AP)\n\u2022-Remnants of the season's first\nhurricane moved Into the Virginia-\nWashington area today and a warning that a second might be getting\nunder way came from the Miami\nweather bureau.\n- Cecil Gentry, forecaster at the\nMiami bureau, said an area of suspicion was reported about 500 miles\nEast of San Juan, Puerto Rico. A\nNavy hurricane hunting plane took\noff from San Juan to determine\nif it is a tropical storm.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (AP) \u2014\nA freak tornado, by-product of the\ntropical hurricane that lashed the\nCarollnas, today unroofed houses,\nsmashed automobiles and knocked\nout power lines in the Virginia\narea bordering Washington.\nWeather bureau officials estlmat-\ned wind velocity at 70 to 100 miles\nan hour.\nItl\nVol. 51\nlite.\nY$ars of S#vicf to th$ Koptehay-Bmindary V   1952\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOQTENAY-A few clouds Tuas-\nday morning, clouding over Tuesday afternoon. A lew showers,\nmainly in Eastern and Northern\nsections during the afternoon and\novening. A little cooler. Winds\nlight. Low and high at Cranbrook.\n85 and 68; Crescent Valley, 35 and\n75; Revelstoko, 40 and 70, ^\nSRSSa\nMlLSftN,; B.C., CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MOHNIrK5, SEPTEMBER 2, 1952\nNdM\nThird War Could\nErupt in Middle\nEast Says (rolls\nOTTAWA, Sept 1 (CP) - David\nCrolls, Liberal Member of Parliament for Toronto-Spadlna, said today a third world war could easily\nhave Its origin in the tensions and\n' tears which'grip the Middle East.\nIn a speech to the third national\nconvention of the Canadian Association of Labor Israel, he urged\n: more support lor the state of Israel\nand Mid the Western powers should\nstop ''propping up\" .feudal reactionary regimes that are.bound to fall\n.'.werjttWfe'.',*', .'\u25a0\"\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-''\n'\u25a0: :Mri,Crolt a member of the House\n: of Commons committee on external\naffairs, was cheered by the more\nthan 850. .delegates from all parts\nof Canada as'he was presented with\na 'scroll of honor\" by Mrs. Birdie\nSpivak of Toronto, leading pioneer\nwoman member, for his contribution to the cause of Israel and the\nHlstadrut, Israel's labor federation.\nRUNAWAY VOYAGE\nINTERCEPTED\n. MARSEILLE, France^-Sept. 1\n(Reuters) \u2014 '\u25a0 A pursuing Coast\nGuard vessel today captured and\ntowed to port the home-made raft\nKeh-Tookl on which five young\nmen and a girl were attempting a\nrunaway voyage across the Mediterranean.\nThe young sailors, defying a ban\nImposed by Marseille port authorities who last month declared the\nraf t unseaworthy and a menace to\nshipping, had slipped out to sea\nunder sail shortly after midnight\nand had a 10-hour start before the\npursuit\nLaunches sped out from the harbor and shipping was warned to be\non the lookout for the clumsy craft,\n27 feet long and 14 feet wide,\nbuoyed by barrels filled with^\nthousands of ping-pong balls.\nGUILD WEEK\nFESTIVALOPENS\nLONDON, Sept 1 (CP) \u2014 Preston Guild Week, one of the oldest\nfestivals in the world, opened on a\nfull throttle today at Preston, Lancashire\u2014and Canada is represented\namong the many visitors from all\nparts of the world.', 1\nA replica of a wooden model of\nPreston town hall clock brought to\nBritain on the liner' Empress, of\nCanda Is on display. With It is an illuminated scroll of signatures of all\nold Prestonlans now, resident In\nCanada and the U. S. The model\nand the scroll have been on display\nin North America -for the last\nfew months. -   ..\nTyphoon, Floods\nHit Philippines & ,-.\n:MANtiiAv;Sept ^ft'e\u00a3day).,tAP>\n\u2014 An erratic typhoon ithat' Whip-\nsawed' the Southern and Northern\nPhilippines and unleashed disastrous\nfloods Saturday claimed at least 103\ndead. '\nThe toll is expected to climb\nhigher as communications are restored with hard-hit areas, particularly sections of the Zamboanga\nPeninsula on Southwestern Mindanao Island.\nFlood waters In Zamboanga Province took 06. lives. Landslides buried several small villages.\nMan Commits Nearly\nPerfect Murder\nBALTIMORE, Sept. 1 (AP) \u2014\nAuthorities, who claim they have\nstripped the accident masquerade\ncostume off a brutal killing,,yesterday charged a quiet office manager\nwith the \"perfect murder\" of his\nSunday School teacher wife.\nThe plot that police said led to the\ndeath of 33-year-old Dorothy May\nGrammer, the mother of three,\nwould do credit to a 50-cent mystery\nnovel.\nIt involved a scheme so engineered that the woman appeared to\nhave died in a traffic accident \u2014 actually-witnessed by two Baltimore\npolicemen.\nNAVY STRIKES\nATCHONOjIN\nFactories,power\nPlants of $!<j;':'.;'.':\nPort Devastqteo!  -\nSEOUL, Sept 3 (Auesday) (AP)\n\u2014The United States'NavyMohday\nfollowed up its massive bombing\nraids at Siberia's doorstep' with\nsmashing blows by air' and se<: at\nthe big Korean port of Chongjitt,\nThe one-two smash, \"which \u25a0 car-\nrled the war .to within view of\nRussian guards on- 4he Siberia;\nKorean,frontier,: was*by far the\nbiggest all-navy show of the Korean\nwar.' ' -\u25a0'''' '\u25a0\u2022''       - '-\u2022'\u25a0\nChbngjin; largest port In North\nKorea, lies 50 miles South..,of the\nSouthern; tip' of Siberia's Maritime\nprovlnc&V ' \u25a0 '    i   . '\u25a0 - \u25a0\u25a0 \"\u2022\"\u2022 \u25a0\nBURNING REFINERY :. ; .\nSmokistlll rose itrom a burning\ntefinery hear the Siberian border\nand froiri' a frontier iron works\nfarther West - plastered In morning Navy strikes r^wben plahes\nlifted frpm three, U;S. carriers and\nheaded for un'suspeeting Chongjin.\nWaves of planes from the carriers\nPrinceton, Essex and Boxer roared\nover the. 'port, unloading their\nbombs, rockets and bullets on an\niron works, ijn electric plant and\nfactories;'    ''\u2022':, : '   \u2022'[ \"' .,\nWwle ruln'jralnea on Chongjta\nfront the skies, th* U.a heavy\ncruiser Bremerton swung to from\nthe se\u00bb and opened up on the port\nWith Its eighiand five-inch guns.\n\u25a0Tft\u00ab\" pilots who worked over.\nChbpgjln had carried out .the dar-\nlng raids in the morning on the\nsynthetic ott refinery at Adjl, Just\neight miles- West of the; Siberian\nborder, and on iron mine; works\nand a hydro-geherefting plant at\nMunsan, Wear the. Manchurian.\nKorean border about : 08\nSouthwest jofAojL\nU.S. Lifts Mexico\nCattle\n. miles\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n5* m LIMIT'--\u25a0\n70^M.P.H,\nFARNBOROUGH, England,\nSept 1 (Reuters) t- Britain\nput the brakes on her supersonic jet fighters at her big air\n' show here today and set a modest speed limit of 700 miles an\nhour.   ' \u25a0   \u25a0\u2022.'.\"\u25a0.;:\nThe reason given out was that\nlocal residents objected to the\nthunderclap caused by planes\nV when they break through the\ni sound barrier \u2014 760 miles an\nrt-hour.    \\        ' \u25a0:,\u25a0\u2022 .,\n; This explosion of sound which\nprecedes the eerie silence of the\nsupersonic world gives a clue to\nthe speed potentialities of the\nfast-flying planes. '\nDespite the speed limit a\nhuge crowd of experts includ-\n., lng Canadians were given a fascinating demonstration of British military and civil progress\non the opening-day of the week\nlong annual air show here, %\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTHE \"ONLY FIGHTER PLANE In the world capable of destroying an atom bomber\" li the British Air Ministry's description of the\nJavelin, a flying triangle equipped with Jet engines. Though built\n. and tested months ago, the plane was recently released to' public\nview, Details of Its performance are still secret but Its makers claim\nIt to be capable of performing at high and low altitudes.\u2014Central\nPress Canadian.\nWASHINGTON, Sept I (AP) :*r\u00bb\nThe United States today reopened\nits'borders tO'Mexlcan cattle and\nother livestock andto fresh,'frown;\nand chilled meat* They had been\ncloset! r<^iJW^^li|llTO^i;\nmouth SsfiWta fWWft\\T-j\\ S\nj Agriculture Secretary Tom Brtn-\nnan said Mexlco^has :been: puttd\nfree of the. disease, ;..:..,\nThe U. S. still bars the Importation of livestock or.fresh, frorin or\nchilled meats from Canada, ,'\n-The Canadian'embargo may be\nlifted by- the end of the year. The\ndisease exists In many parts of Europe, Asia and South.Amerlca. -\nSurvive!\nOver 160-FI. Falls\nBANFF, Alta, Sept 1 , (CP) \u2014\nLloyd Chrlstenson of Edmonton fell\n160 feet over the upper falls at Johnson's Canyon, 16 miles West of Banff,\nSunday and lives to tell the tale.\nLloyd, a member of the. Lutheran\nChurches of Edmonton spending the\nholiday -weekend 'at Banff, and a\ngroup of companions had climbed to\nthe top of the upper falls at Johnson's Canyon.\n- At that point ihere Is a narrow\ncanyon that can be Jumped by those\nwho .want to take the risk, However,\nChristensen slipped as he was Jumping and hurtled down the 160rfoot\nperpendicular, water fall to land feet\nfirst in a pool of water below.\nEric Lang of Edmonton was at the\npool at the bottom of the falls and\npulled Chrlstenson out before he\nwas swept the remaining distance\ndown the. steep canyon.\nChrlstenson was taken to Banff\nhospital where he was treated for\nshock and slight concussion.\nTo Be Discussed\nAl Mexico Meet\nbTTAWA, Sept 1 (CP) - Finance\nMinister -Abbott, accompanied by\neconomic and financial advisers, left\nfor Mexico City by air today to represent Canada at new talks on world\ncurrency problems.: .\nThe talks will be held at the 10-\nday annual meeting of the 53-coun-\ntry International. Monetary Fund\nand World Bank which opens Wednesday.,-- -, '. \u25a0 .':'-\u25a0; '\u25a0\n-M\u00a3 Abbott laid:      ,\n\"Canada, as in the past, will continue to support any measures which\nwill increase convertibility of currencies and expand world'trade.?\nIn all likelihood, 'the big issues\nwill be: :Y; . .    .A..\n% HOw to speed up sterling on the\nroad to convertibility with-the\ndollar. .\n2. Greater use of the; Fund's $8,-\n000,000,000 capital Jackpot in extending loans to countries 'facing dollar\nshortages.  ... \u2022;>'\n.8. Expansion of tha Fund'ii executive,- ^^*J^l*r&ffe#|jfe\n^^U'.tu^r,.result''of tbr^ entry-of\nirtaahy. Japan and. saveral. other:\nMtuitries to jhembeishlp. - \u2022.;..\nPreparedness Promises\nPeaceful future- St. Laurent\nA^ouli St. lourent Mokes First Vliit to Kootenoy\n(oal Miners End\nEditor-Politician\nMONTREAL,,-. Sept ,1 (CP)\nHenri Bburassa,.84, fiery champion\nof French - Canadian' nationalism\nand founder and former editor of\nthe' Montreal. daily newspaper Le\nDevoir, died at his home yesterday.\nHe would have been 85 today. -'\nAn outstanding political figure in\nQuebec in the. last 50 years, he\ngained early repute as an impassioned orator who denpunced\nimperialism and fought continually\nagainst conscription.\nMr. Bburassa's political career\nincluded a number of stormy con.\ntroversies. Originally a Liberal, he\nbroke with Sir Wilfrid Laurler over\nsending Canadian troops to the\nSouth African war. and became an\nIndependent\nMr. Bourassa followed In the\nfootsteps of his grandfather, Louis\nJoseph Papineau, who led Quebec's\narmed rebellion for self-government In 1837. He fought for what\nhe also considered Quebec's rights\nand grievances oh the floor of the\nHouse of Commons and through\nthe newspaper.\nHe was elected Liberal Member\nof Parliament for Labelle Riding\nin 1896 and a Cabinet seat was predicted for him until his break with\nLaurler. He resigned his seat and\nwas re-elected by acclamation. He\nwas defeated in the 1036. general\nelection and retired item politics.\n% :Septv~.l \"(AB) r-\nto -work tomorrow, .endr\nlng a 10-day memorial holiday that\ncut United States coal stocks by\nmore'than 10,000,000 tons.\nLewis ordered the men out Aug.\n23 for 10 days, sayips the period\nwas to memorialize 41 deaths in\ncoal mines since early July and to\ngive officials a chance to check\nsafety regulations.\nLewis has notified the govern-\nment that the union has not reached\nagreement'with the mine owners\non new contracts and that there is\npossibility'of a country-wide coal\nstrike at the end of the month. The\nunion has a tradition of \"no con\ntract ho work,\"\nLewis has not disclosed his 1952\ndemands. Soft coal miners now get\nbasic pay of $16.35 a day and hard\ncoal miners slightly more.\nCanadian Cement\nIn Short Supply\n, WINNIPEG, Sept 1 (CP)-Win-\nnipeg retail lumbermen said today\nthat no Canadian cement has been\ndelivered to Western Canada retailers for a month.\nThe lumbermen said the situation had been bad all Summer but\nnow is \"impossible.\" Shortages of\n'Canadian cement meant they had \"to\nobtain imports at a higher cost\nwith a resulting Increase in construction costs.\nAll Canadian cement now Is used\nfor government defence contracts,\nthe lumbermen said. Some dealers\nsaid in view of the shortage of Canadian, supplies, duty on imported\ncement of eight cents a hundredweight Bhould be, reduced.\nCanadians Take AMcmtage\nOf Last Summer BtMday\nPAINTERS ACCEPT\nWAGE PROPOSAL\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 1 (CP) -\nSome 500 Vancouver painters voted\nSunday to accept.a wage proposal\naimed at ending their, strike which\nbegan in early June; Contractors\nwill vote on the proposal, tomorrow.\nOfficials of the Painters and Decorators union (TLC) said the offer\nwould give painters an increase of\n20 cents an hour to a basic rate of\n$1.90, with an additional, 10 cents\nstarting Jan. 1.\n3 Drown in Squall\nCHATHAM, Ont, Sept 1 (CP)\u2014\nThree Dover Township boys were\ndrowned today when a sudden\nsquall swirled over Lake St Claire\nand upset the small, boat in which\nthey were fishing about 12 miles\nNortheast of here. Reported drowned were: Roger Emery, 10, whose\nbody was recovered; Homar Grif-\nfore, 14, and his ' brother, Ray-,\nraond, 10.\nBy The Canadian Press;;'\nFrom coast to coast Canadians\nmade the most, of the season's last\nholiday weekend, Labor Day.\n;\u25a0 Inrgenerallydear,: warm, sunny\nweather, labor -parades, regattas,\nbaseball, football, horse racing, boxing and church services figured\namong major attractions for the\nweekend.      ,,:\u25a0\"', \"J\n~ But one .note marred festivities.:\nA survey early Monday night showed more than'45 violent deaths atriee\nFriday night about halt traffic\nfatalities.\nLabor Day messages by Percy R.\nBengough, president of the Trades\nand Labor Congress, aid A. R\nMosher, president of the Canadian\nCongress of Labor stressed labor's\nresponsibility in eliminating,unemployment and the importance of\nCanadian participation in the United Nations. : i',-\nLabor Minister Gregg, in his annual, message said Canada cannot\nafford to cut down on defence preparations. \"NO new factor has appeared in the international scene to\nsuggest our defence effort could-be\ncut back,\" Mr. Gregs Mi4,\nPlan Secret Meet\nLONDON, Sept 1 (Reuters) -\nSenior Commonwealth officials will\nmeet in London privately Sept. 22\nto prepare for\" the Commonwealth\nPrime' Ministers' Conference here\nin. lata November, the Common?\nwealth Relations Office announced\ntoday.  ','-'\nThe prime ministers will begin\ntheir private conference Nov. 27. It\nii expected to last about two weeks.\nThe officials paving the, way for\nthe meeting will confer about\nthree weeks. Then they will fly\nback to their capitals to report.\nThey will consider all aspects of\nthe sterling area's economic, financial and trading problems,  '\nThey will'also discuss various\nquestions relating ' to Cdmmon-\nwealth developments and the problem of sterling convertibility.\nmismiiimiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nNO TRAFFIC\nDEATHS REPORTED\nOYE^HjOllilDAY,\n:''.' \u25a0\u25a0t^'^aShittjt:': appeared;'' at\n\u25a0.ipldniflh't'^amiviDay' to; have\n:.,,paj\u00bbed'-iri;'Jlrit-'fWeetoti3s:lh,: a.i\nmonth without \u25a0\u25a0fata)'highway .\naccident. No reports of fatalities\nwere   received   by   fVC.M.P. ,\nheadquarters here, and rumor\nof an accidental death In Nelson\nSaturday proved groundless.\n' Seven persons died is the result of highway accident  Injuries  In   August  raising  the\nKootenay-Boundary toll for the ,\nyear to 11.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWorkers'Support\nIn Rearmament\nBY SIDNEY WEIUaVb\nMARGATE, England, Sept I\n(Reuters) \u2014 Trade union chief Arthur Deakin appealed to \u2022 Britain's\n8,000,000 organuKd-workers today.to\nsupport rearmament as the 'means\nof keeping \"peace, justice and the\nreign of law In the world.\" '\n\u25a0 Deakin's presidential address, to\nthe opening Session of the Trades\nUnion Congress kicked oft a seething dispute. A growing leftists revolt has challenged the T.U.C.'s\nsteady defence of the rearmament\nprogram,. '    :\u25a0;\nCommunists and leftist forces of\nformer Cabinet minister Aneurln\nSevan were busy lining up rank-\nand-file support tonight, for1 thisir\nargument that the defence program\nwill bankrupt Britain.and bring unemployment to its workers,   j -\nA, sharp 'clash Is, expected at tomorrow's session when the Congress,\ncomposed of 183 unions, debates a\nseries of leftist resolutions. Observers anticipate a close vote.\nPiledrivers Get-\nPay Increase\nVANCOUVER, - Sept. 1 (CP)-A\nthreatened Strike of piledrivers was\naverted Sunday when they voted\nto accept a 10-cent pay boost offered by contractors;       '     \u2022' . .'\nThis brings the Journeyman's pay\nup to $2.15 an hour. Charge for\nboard and room on outside jobs has\nbeen reduced from $2 to $1 a day\nuntil Dec, 31. After that date, con.\ntractors-will pay the. full'cost of\nroom and;board.\nThe\u00bb625 workers had previously\nvoted to strike after a conciliation\nboard recommended no Wage in-\nWool Sale Starts\nIn Australia\nSYDNEY, Australia,- Sept 1 (Reuters) \u2014 The wool-selling reason\ngot underway here today with* prices firm at last year's vdoslng level\n\u2014about $206 a bale.\nUnited States buyers were conspicuously absent as British,; Japanese and European buyers' bid spiritedly. Fears that the forced market of 515,000,000 pounds of. South\nAmerican crossbred wool would\nwould force Australian prices down\nseemed unfounded,   \/\nCominco staged a reception for him\nat the Masonic Halt      '\nAt the banquet later a welcoming address was given by: W. A\nPortepus, honorary president of the\norganization. Mr. Porteous, incidentally, was celebrating his 83rd birth\nday and said he hoped that Mr. St\nLaurent would visit Trail again before his 93rd celebration. Mayor\nFletcher also extended a welcome\non behalf of the people of the district     \" ;\nMr. St Laurent was .introduced'\nby H. D. Harrison,'president of the\nNelson Chamber of Commerce and\nof West Kootenay Liberal Association.        , .--\u2022\u2022\nCanada Counts 65\nHoliday Fatalities\n> By The Canadian Press\nCanada's   Labor   Day weekend\ntook a total of 66 lives from Friday\nnight to   Monday midnight -Four\npersons were reported missing.\nA Canadian Press survey early\ntoday showed 34 trafflo deaths, 17\ndrownings -with tsur missing and\n112 fatalities, from other causes.\nBlarney Stone\nProves Itself\nPrime Minister Tours Silver City;\nCounts Youth as Country's Wealth\nTRAIL-^-Canada's future is assured not only by the\nwealth inherent in the country, but by the \"wealth\" of its\nyounger generation,; Prime Minister, Louis St. Laurent told\n250;citKens of Trail and other parts of West kootenay at the\nLegion Hall Monday night.      *   %\nHe. was more convinced of-this than ever after seeing\nthe industrial potential of West Kootenay, he said in an\naddress which had for its theme,.a Canada his grandchildren\ncould.be proud of..      *\n(For story of arrival see page 3)\nThat the prime minister was interested in Canada's younger generation was apparent throughout his\nvisit from the time he stepped from\nhis plane at noon at Castlegar air-\npor, for he went but of his. way to\ntalk to kiddies at the airport and\nduring his tour of Trail,-\nWherever he went he found \"real\"\nCanadians, the prime minister said\nat the Trail Chamber of Commerce\ndinner. -He counted each individual\nas a great chain, and said \"it is the\nchain that counts.\"\nTOUR8 CITY, PLANTS\nA lot has happened during the\nlast ten years,\" ho said, \"and we\nhave seen some trying experiences.\"\nAt the time he was sworn in as Minister of Justice he heard of the sinking of \"Repulse\" and the \"Prince of\nWales\" and later of the attack on\nPearl Harbor by the Japs.\n\"We came through .these trying\ntimes and will do so again If we\nhave to face same critical period In\nthe future,\" he continued.\nPRAISES NATO\nThe prime minister placed' high\nconfidence in the North Atlantic\nTreaty-Organisation.\n\"We want to safeguard out territory and affairs,\" ha said, ^and to\nthis organization we have 14 countries: working together to create coordinated strength to make it unlikely, that any aggressor attempt to\novenfowerj us, To develop hjecessary\npreparedness Is, Imposing: burdens\nupon7 us .and takinga, large JSart of\nannual production.\"'\\\"\nReferring\"-to Korea, he said that\naggressors were finding that aggression does not pay. He compared\npreparedness to sensible! insurance\nagainst war and said that \"if we can\nbuild' sufficient strength to prevent\nit Canadians can look forward with\nconfidence to make this one of the\nmost fortunate lands for men and\nwomen to live out their lives in a\npeaceful and satisfacto.y way.\"\nHe .said that he was highly lm,-\npressed with the development In the\nKootenay district\nR, W. Diamond, C.M.&S. executive\nvice president, Western region, gave\nan address of thanks on behalf of\nthe Chamber of Commerce and the\npeople of the district\nChairman' of the meeting was J.\nW. Loader, president of the Chamber of Commerce.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent and\nhis party are, flying to Pentlcton\nTuesday morning, Travelling iin the\nparty are Minister of Fisheries R. W.\nMayhewj J. W; PlckersgUl, clerk of\nthe Privy Council and secretary to\nthe Dominion Cabinet; Ross Martin,\nsecretary to the prime minister, and\nW. Munro, also of the prime minister's staff. \u00bb\nMrs..St Laurent went straight to\nVancouver and will meet her husband there.\nTALK8TO CHILDREN \" *:.\nDuring a tour throughout the\ncity, accompanied by Mayor E. G.\nFletcher and.members of the city\ncouncil, the Prime Minister fell a\nlittle behind In his Itinerary. He\nstopped severalv times to talk to\nsmall groups of people and children.\nDuring the afternoon the Prime\nMinister toured the Tadanac and\nWarfleid plants of the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company and\n. CORK, Ireland, Sept 1 (AP)\n\u2014The woman owner of fho famous Blarney Stone\u2014sail to\nconfer a gift of eloquence en\n,-those-rwlisrjiss 'lt^-has been'\ntalked Into marriage by a man\nwho dkt . , --   -'V.:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'..- \u25a0 j.'\nThis was disclosed today by\nMrs. Penelope Hamilton, who\ninherited Blarney Castle and\nthe legendary stone early this\nyear.-Her successful suitor is a\nchildhood friend, MaJ. Jack Hll-\nyard.. \" \u25a0   \u25a0' >\n, \"I proposed just a few mam*\nents after Mrs. Hamilton and I\nhad kissed the Blarney Stone,\"\nHilyard told a reporter.\n\"I believe in the legend.\"\nDEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER\nValerian A. Zorln (above), will\nreplace Jacob A. Malik, as the\nvoice or veto expert of the Soviet\nUnion at the United Nations en\nSept .16.. Malik has been chief of\nRussia's delegation at the U.N.,\nfor the past four years. Zorln\nmasterminded the Red coup In\nCzechoslovakia In 1948. His credentials have not yet been received at the; U.N.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\nAnd in This Corner \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nFLEETWOOD, England, 8ept 1 (AP)\u2014The gals with the luscious\ncurves In the finals of Fleetwood's bathing beauty competition Sat-\n-urday had to prove the curves were all nature's handiwork.\nThe management reported \"several\" complaints that tome swim\nsuits were built to fill and pinch figures In the right places. Before\nthe beauties paraded a woman helper \"interviewed\" all competitors.\nTwo contestants were found to have \"forbidden aids\" In their\ncostumes. ..........\nWinner of the competition was 18-year-old 8ydney June Walker,\nwho needed no artificial ,old whatever. ,\nTOKYO. Sept 1 (AP)\u2014\"Crazy, but not exactly haunted,\" ishow\nFujisaburb Takata describes his new home\u2014a suburban mansion which\nstood vacant for nearly 40 years, although It was rent-free.    \" \u25a0\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\nThe 32-year-old artist said today his alarm clock had rung at 2:40\na.m.,daily since he moved into the house last week, although ho never\nsets it for that time. \u25a0'.''\u2022 '\u25a0\".,       >'      M-\nHe bought a new clock. It went \"crazy\"-alas, he said, and rang\n         --...- \u00ab ....-,....-v ,,..,. -t0pi{;\ndon\nwithout fail at 2:40 a.m. eachday. Even a watchmaker couldn't stop\n\"I felt a chill in my spine the first three or four days, but I donf\nmind It how,\" Takata said resignedly.\nVIENNA, Sept 1 (AP)\u2014Yugoslav opera singer Jovan Qllgor will\nsing arias from \"Rlgoletto\" before a Vienna court at evidence In a\ndamage suit against the Vienna state opera.\nThe baritone's contract was cancelled'when his first two performances In \"Rlgoletto\" and \"Carmen\" displeased the authorities.\nClaiming damages of more than 100,000 schillings ($3846), Gllgor offered\nto sing some of the arias before the court as evidence.\n. The Judge, a former music teacher, accepted the offer, ordering\nthe vocal evidence to be heard at the court's next meeting.\nSTADE, Germany, Sept. II (AP)\u2014Caroline Meyer, 86, and Helnrioh-\nSchroeder, 85, announced their intention to wed. Therf they discovered\nthat as a married couple they would draw only one pension instead of\ntwo. So they announced they would continue being, engaged. Both are\nresidents bt the same old folks home. \" \/\u2022.'-.'.\n \u00ab___\n m^mmmn\n \u201e\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT.% 1952\nHEAVEN HELP THE NAVY\nWITH A CREW LIKE THIS!\nsltlRfiVr\nLate Newt\nCartoon in color,\nComplete Shows 7:00-9:00\ncwc\nI\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nOn No. 3 Highway East of Nelson\n* * *\nTuesday, Wednesday - Sept. 2-3\nTRUE LIFE STORY %\n\"Jim Thorpe, Ail-American\"\nFEATUBINO\nBurt Lancaster \u2014 Charles Blckford\nStevo Cochran \u2014 Phyllis, Thaxter\nCARTOON\nIlSHPlISlil^\nRegistration\nToday, (lasses\nOpen Wednesday\nToday is the day before the day\nwhen students collect their pencils\nand rulers, erasers and note books\nand head for the old School house\nfor a new term. Nevertheless,\nthere'll be many students' at the\nschools today. The reason is that this\nIs registration day.\nRegistration is being held only tor\nstudents coming into the Nelson\nschool system for the first time and\nthose wishing to make special time\ntable arrangements.\nRegistration at junior and Senior\nHigh Schools is at 2 p.m. and at\nHume and Central Schools 1 p.m.\nRegular classes will be held Wednesday all day.\nA special day for registration was\nallotted by Nelson School Board district No. 7 this year to give students\nand teachers alike time to prepare\nfor school Wednesday thus avoiding\nthe confusion thai usually accompanied opening day.'     \\\nSt. Joseph's Academy will also\nhold registration Tuesdar with full\nclasses Wednesday.\nNotre Dame College opens its Fall\nterm Sept. 22.    ,\nNo school buses will bs In operation Tuesday,\n*3$&\n<n\nBox Office \u2014 7:00 p.m.\nlit Show    \u2014 8:15 p.m.\nAdmission 60\u00ab$\nCHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE\n\u25a0 \"Soda-pop\" and other carbonated\nbeverages had their start In medicines.   ...\u2022:\u25a0\nWHITE\n'B' FASTBALL CHAMPS\nNANAIMO, B. C\u201e Sept 1 (CP) -\nLadysmlth won the B. C. Senior B.\nSoftball championship Sunday by\ndefeating Vernon 4-0 and 13-9 in a\nbest of three Series.\nOnly two-thirds of the people In\nthe world are. counted by census.\n?ampI9\/,pRIT2\nGET A CARTON TODAY\nA COMPLETE CHOICE OF\nWEIL-APPOINTED AND FULLY\nSERVICED APARTMENTS AND\nHOTEL ROOMS-* MODERATE\nM,H.Crane RATES Uenaq\u00abr\nVANCOUVER BC\nCredits To Be Given...   ;'\u2022*}*.''\nNotre Dome ExpMidsRw\nNight Course Adult Education\nThis year Notre Dame College of Nelson will conduct\nnight classes in adult education. . .   .\nSpecial courses attuned to the adult mind will be given\nin\" the Psychology of Human Happiness and in Living and\nThinking With the Great English Authors. Depending upon\ndemand, other subjects will be included in the series. Credits\ntoward a degree at Gonzaga University at Spokane and most\nNorth. American universities may be obtained through successful completion of these\nMany at Riles\nFor E. Collinson\nA large company at Nelson\nresidents, lodge members and business associates gathered Saturday\nin Thompson Funeral Home to pay\ntribute to the memory of Ernest\nCollinson.\nRites of the Masonic Order, led\nby J. A. Bracken, acting chaplain\nof Nelsoh Lodge'No. 23, A.F. &\nA.M., were accorded' the former\nNelson jeweller at the committal\nservice in Nelson Memorial Park.\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood, rural\ndean of West Kootenay, conducted\nthe chapel service.\nOver 130 persons attended. Represented were Nelson Lodge No.\n23, A.F. & A.M., Kootenay Lodge of\nPerfection, Rose Croix, Kaslo and\nSlocan Masonic lodges, Nelson\njewellers, Nelson Fish and Wild-\nlife Protective Association and Canadian Legion.\n, Masons formed open ranks from\nthe chapel to hearse through which\nthe casket was borne by\u2014pallbearers A. C. Emory, H. D. Harrison, M. T. Harris, H. J. Maddaford,\nG. L. Phillips and J G. Watson.\nInterment was in' the Masonic\nsection.\nOrganist was Mrs. J. A. Frasfr,\n\u25a0 j   .\u25a0}<*.'   ':.)'\">\"\"'..:',,'-;>';>,'\nBefore 1801 there was no official\ncensus of either England or Scotland.\ncourses.  .-\nLast year 18 public school teachers\nof West Kootenay took courses offered by Notre Dame. This year It Is\nthe intention of the Nelson college\nto serve not only the teachers but\nall who wish to study the philosophies and sciences of the world s great\nthinkers antd writers.,\nTIMETABLE FOR WORKERS\nIn an effort to meet the needs of\nthe community, Notre Dame plans\nto adjust Its time table for the day\nstudents to accommodate as many\nyoung working people as may wish\nto make use of Its teaching facilities.\nAs far as possible the regular College classes will be held In the morning between 8.30 a.m. and 12.80 p.m.\nThis will leave the afternoons free\nfor private study, special Instruction\n(or students needing individual at\ntention and for laboratory work.\nB.C. CURRICULUM\nThe regular senior matriculation\nprogram of B.C. Is taught In first\nyear. Credit for these courses may\nbe obtained by successfully writing\nthe college examination in May or\nby writing the B.C. Departmental\nExaminations in June.\nSecond Year Courses include phi\nlosophy, English literature, public\nspeaking, differential and qualitat-!\nive calculus, chemistry (quantitative and qualitative inorganic analysis) Latin, French, economics, prin\nciples  of  accounting,   psychology,\nftcology and history- '\nExtension'  students   may   take\neither the day classes or the night\nlectures. ',.\nThe teaching staffof Notre Dame\nwill include A. L. Cartler B.A., M.A-,\nPrincipal; Very Rdy. R. Anderson\nA.C. B.A.; M. L. Brown, B.A., M.A.;\nRev; L. R. McKentfe, B.A Hr. Phil.;\nMiss Janle Stevenson, L.R.A.M.,\nAJL.A.M.; Rev. D. Cullon, B.A.; and\nJ. H. Thomas, B.A., L. Ph.\nCLASSES SEPT, 22\nStudents are' now registering for\nThe Weather\nNELSON fci_\u00a3i\nMontreal \t\nOttawa\t\nToronto  \t\nWinnipeg\t\nRegina .......\u201e__\nCalgary  . ........\nEdmonton\t\nPentlcton\t\nVancouver \t\nVictoria  \t\nKimberley .........\nCrescent Valley.\nKaslo\t\nSpokane\t\n42\n88\n88\n68\n47\n38\n34\n38\n43\n48\n88\n33\n33\n43\n40\n81\n74\n78\n88\n54\n62\n87\n80\n78\n74\n80\n69\n79\n79\n78\n.05\nday classes which commence September 22. Registration for extension\nclasses in adult education commenced Monday. ,\nThe world's  largest copper reserve,  estimated   at   134 000,000,0001\npounds, is in Chile.\nIfYou'reTIREI\nALL THE TIME\nErujboJy gets a kit run-down now sod '\u25a0\nthen, Ured-out^ heavy-headed, and ouyb* '\nbotlitred oj baclachsa. Perhaps nothing \u2022\nauiouily wron|, just a temporary task\ncondition earned by esceu adds sad '\nmates, That'a the lima to take Dodd'a\nKidnojPUIa. Dodd'eetimulale the kidneys,\nand io help raaton their normal actional\nremoting eiceu adds and mites. Then\nyou fad better, sleep belter, work better,\nGat Dodd'a Kidney Pillar now. Look (or\nthe blue boi with the red band at all\ndrujtiate.You.can depend on Dodd'a.  sa\nREAD   THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY,\nFor Picking Ladders .\nand\nGarden Furniture\nLadder Sifces 12 ft. - $10\n14 ft - $12     16 ft. - $14\nApply Box C-300,\nNelson Dally News\n* INDUSTRIAL\n* COMMERCIAL\n* RESIDENTIAL  WIRING\nand\nCOMMERCIAL\nREFRIGERATION\nFREE ESTIMATES\nTED HILL ELECTRICAL\nCONSTRUCTION LTD.\n'hone 4947 P.6. Box 138;\nCastlegar, B.C.\nPUNNMS TO 6WD A NEW HOME OR RE-R00F YOUR PRESENT HOME?\nTHESE FIREPROOF ROOF SHINGLES\nWILL LAST 40 YEAI\nH^PnwittfM\nBEAUTOUL, TOO! The staggered butt\nlines of J-H Dorabestos Shingles, their\nold-wood grained effect and an excellent\nchoice of colours lend loveliness to any\nroof, Dorabestos Roof Shingles are made\nof asbestos and cement They are as durable as stone... fireproof, weatherproof\n\u2666Another Jbr>m-Moir\/D7e osboitos oenlovomenr\nand rotproof ... have all the essentials\nof lifetime protection and trouble-free\nsatisfaction. In over 40 years not one J-M\nasbestos shingle has ever burned ... or\nworn out!\nFor free literature so* your Mn dealer or wrllo\nCanadian Johnt-Manvllle, Dopt. 10, 199 Boy\nStreet, Toronto.\n-J-M ASBESTOS \u25a0:\nBRAKE LININGS -\nIn 1903 J-M made the first\nasbestos brake lining for automobiles. Today J-M makes,\nbrake linings for every kind of\ncar, truck, or bus. Throughre-\nsearch and manufacturing skill,\nJ-M employs the magic mineral asbestos to give you long-\nterm braking safety.   \u2022\ns\nJ-M ACOUSTICAL\nMATERIALS\nAll over Canada, Johns-Man-\nvilla- Acoustical Materials are\nhelping to reduce unwanted\nnoise in radio studios, offices,\nschools, theatres and hospitals.\nIn many cases their application\nhas resulted in noise reduction\nof as much aa 42%.\n.  ' S-S77\nFIRST IN ASBESTOS FOR EVERY PURPOSE\nBUILDING MATERIALS - BRAKE LININGS\nTRANSITS PIPE ACOUSTICAL MATERIALS\nINDUSTRIAL   INSULATIONS - PACKINGS\nNELSON MACHINERY CO. LTD.\nPhone 1139\nNelson, B. C.\nDistributors for the Interior\n214 Hall St.\n1424 Cedar St.\nArctic Insulators & Roofing Ltd.\nNelson, B. C.\nAGENTS\nPhone 9SS\nThe Fabro Building & Supply Co. Lid.\nKimberley, B. C.\nAGENTS\nPhone 46\nPhone 444\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co. Ltd.\nTrail, B.C.\nAGENTS\n1080 Spokane St.\nNOURISHING FINE FOODS AT LOW COST   \u2014    COMPARE 1\nNOTE: In order to render, quicker service to the hundreds of new cash customers, we are sorry -wo can not accept\nany new charge accounts until further notice.\nHeavy.   100-foot rolls.\n* Swift's Prem 32c tin\n* Wax Paper\n^ Sandwich Spread\n* Royal City Peas\n32c\nSummerside\nNew pack. Faney.\nSize 4. IS ox. ._\nCase pf 24 tins _\n$4.65\nGRAHAM\nWAFERS\nfor rJlliCiOOt\nOATMEAL COOKIES\n\u2014plain or fancy\nla |itt I nlaulii yi> \u00bb\u00bb auki At and\n\u2022data Otlmtol CmIIb you'll am Mat\nIt's \u00bb auy-yM dial araajaaia At ata,\nMrodwai far IS kinds tt roollK ta amy\ninikaja at \u00ab\u25a0\u2022 Htk Ostrntl Ctikla Mix\nvpk. J8c\"\nPaulin's\n12 or.\npk. 28c\nLunch Bucket Features\nPEANUT BUTTER\nSquirrel 48 ox. 'tin  \t\nSTRAWBERRY JAM\nMalkln's Purs. 46 or. tin\t\nBURN'S CHEESE\nGoldenloaf. Lb. , \u2014\u2014\nSARDINES\nBrunswick.   \u2014\n_ 95*\n_ 98\"\n59*\n3... 27*\ntins\nRobin Hood Flour\n5 lbs.\u2014 .35\n44 lbs. \u2014 $1.59\n49 lbs. \u2014 $3.09\n98 lbs. \u2014 $6.09\nBreakfast Foods\nPancake Flour\nRosebud. 30 oz. i'pkga.\nCornflakes\nKellogg's. Giant  \t\n25*\nShredded Wheat 2     33*\nCleaning Needs\nGIANT RINSO jy\nSUNLIGHT SOAP g     gr#\nGIANT LUX 7*7*\nGiant pkg. ,.   __\u2122\u2122\u00ab....    ' *r\nOLD DUTCH \u00a3     25*\nCanning Needs\nKERR WIDE MOUTH LIDS\nPkg.  : .- _\t\nLIQUID CERTO\n.Bottle   ... ...: \t\nSUGAR\n25 lbs.  \t\nPARAWAX\nLb.\t\n27*\n27*\n$^.7S\n19*\nLEAN STEW BEEF\nLEAN BOILING BEEF\nLEAN HAMBURGER\nTASTY MILD CHEESE\n-U.\nIb. 60c\nlb. 23c\nlb. sac\nlb. 55c\nRochester*.\nTasty. O.K.\nFreestone.\nO.K. Vs.\nFOR CANNING \u2014 APPROX. 17 LBS. fcjJY NOW \u2014 PEAK WEEK\nTOMATOES\nRed ripe, firm. \t\nlbs.\nCORN ON COB\nFresh Picked. 8 In cello .\nOn the husk. Lb. _\nGREEN PEPPERS\nLarge basket ._-.'\u201e_\u2014i_\nYAMS\nMedium.field. Lb.\t\ntor\n25*\n33*\n39*\n22*\nCUCUMBERS\nCrisp, salady. Lb.\t\nSPUDS\nAPPLES\nCooking. Duchess.\t\nJELLY GRAPES\n26neord. Bakt\t\n\u201e__ 81*\n10,.47*\n3,.25'\n85*\nBARTLETT PEARS\nFor canning. Buy now.\n18 lb. lots _-.._\n$1.89\nALL WEEK\nLOW PRICES at\nLIBERTY\nFOOD STOEE\nwmm\n SHOES for\nSCHOOL\nChums\nHurlbut\nHewetson\nAll dependable makes\n\u2022   for hard wear\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n533 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 895\nNakusp Pioneer,\nMrs. Picard Dies\nNAKUSP \u2014 A pioneer resident\ni of Nakusp and Revelstoke, Prances\nHannah Picard, wife of Edward Alexander Picard, died in Arrow\ntakes Hospital here Sunday at the\nage of 76. - 1*\n\u25a0 libs. Picard came to Canada from\nLeeds, Eng., in 1838, and lived at\nBanff* at that time called Castle\nMountain. She was married in 1890\nand Revelstoke was their home for\nmany years before they came to\nNakusp 40 years ago.\na The couple celebrated their diamond wedding anniversary in October 1950.\n: Of their 10 children, six are living. Mrs. Picard is survived by her\nhusband, a brother, Sam Needham,\nin Revelstoke, three sons, W. T.\nPicard In Klamath Falls, Ore., and\nEdward and Clarence in Nakusp,\nand three daughters, Mrs. Nels Nelson in North Vancouver, Mrs. Robert Kirk in Revelstoke and Mrs.\nW. Gansick, also in Revelstoke;\n23 grandchildren and eight great\ngrandchildren.\n. Funeral services will be held on\n.Thursday.       ,\nDANCE TO AID\nflRE VICTIMS\nKASLO \u2014 A benefit dance will\nbe held here tonight for a family\nwhose farm home at Shutty Bench\njust North of here was completely\ndestroyed by fire earlier in the\nWeek.\nResidents were Mr. and Mrs. S.\nBridges who bought the farm about\ntwo years ago from Andrew Shutty,\n! and their family of five. Mr. Shutty\nwho still lives with them, w,as away\non a visit\n1 The only belonging saved was a\npiano. Besides the dance, a fund has\nbeen organized and the Red Cross Is\nalso coming to the assistance of the\nresidents.\nj   ,   qjfrg t\t\nHerrldge Addresses\nMeeting at Silverton\nSILVERTON \u2014 Business at the\nlast session of the Dominion House\nwas discussed by H. W. Herridge,\n\u25a0 .11 P, for Kootenay West, when he\naddressed, a packed C. C. F. meeting\nhere.\n'He spoke of C. C. F. proposals to\nthe House in the need for price controls to help curb inflation, the\n.Seed for a government-backed housing scheme and for a federal health\nplan.\nCHILDREN CATCH HIS EYE...\nPM (jivm Rousing Welcome\nCASTLEGAR\u2014It .was \"children's dayv at the Castle-\ngar airport Monday.\nThe attention Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent paid\nto the youngsters in the crowd of 200 which greeted him on\narrival here during his first official visit to the West Kootenay, won the hearts of his\nwelcomers.\nThe crowd of men,, women and\nchildren, many of them Doukhobors\nfrom -neighboring communities,\nstarted arriving long before the silvery Department of Transport plane\nbearing the Prime Minister and his\nparty alighted at noori.\nMr. St. Laurent, wearing a grey\nsuit and carrying a brown hat,\nstepped off to be greeted by members of Nelson City Council, the\nCastlegar and Kinnaird Village\nCommissioners, Chamber of; Commerce officials from Nelson, Trail,\nand Castlegar, and by officers of\nthe West Kootenay Liberal Association and its member groups.\nAfter the introductions and handshakes, it was the people's show.\nThe Prime Minister strolled through\nthe crowd, shaking hands with parents and admiring their children.\nAt times he paused to addreas\nthe  welcomers informally. \"It's\nnice to see all you people out to\ngreet us,\" . . . \"I'm happy to see\nyou and your youngsters,\" ... \"I\nwish I could meet you more often,\nbut Canada Is a big country.\"\nOne of the few people in the\ncrowd who was not seeing Canada's\nNo. 1 political figure for the first\ntime was Rev. Father Patrick'Gal-\n-lery of Nelson, who served In the\nparish where' Mr. St Laurent resided.\nTHREE CHEERS\nIn the middle of one of his talks,\nthe crowd burst out with three\ncheers for the Prime Minister.\nFifteen minutes after he had set\nfoot on West Kootenay soil, he was\nwaving goodbye to the crowd, en\nroute to Trail\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nMore District\nNews on Page 4\ntiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinn\nWINNER of New Denver's\n1962 community award of $100\nIs Ray Aoyama, graduate of Lucerne high school. The son of Mrs.\nTonlko Aoyama, he will attend\nUniversity of British Columbia\nthis term.\nQala Arrow Park Fair\nTo Attract Hundreds\nARROW PARK \u2014 \"See you at the\nFair!\"\nThat's what Arrow Lakes residents in this area are saying as Saturday, the day for the Arrow Park\nAgricultural, Society's annual Fall\nFair, approaches; '\nIn addition to viewing exhibits\nand participating in the day-long\nactivities, hundreds of residents ar^d\nvisitors will take part in a dance at\nnight.\nJudges will be Mrs. Orr and Mrs.\nPorter from Burton, Mrs. Daly and\nMTs. De-Gans from Edgewood, and\nTed Swales and Roland: Anderson\nfrom Nelson will help with the livestock and 4-H Club-work,\n\u25a0... the classes are in vegetables, fielS\ncrops, fruit flowers, dairy produce,\nlivestock, canning, home cooking,\nneedlework, with a special prize for\nWomen's Institutes, and a school-age\nsection. i\nThe Society places great emphasis on youth work In- planning the\nfair. A special prize is awarded for\nthe best entry in the fair by a school\nstudent, and the Agricultural Society will award a purebred short:\nhorn heifer calf to the Calf Club\nmember having highest points for\nthe year! ..\nA- sliver tray .ban..been given by\nthe Canadian-Bank of Commerce to\nthe children's section.\nNEW CAR* BARRED\nFor a novelty stunt, a prize is given for the oldest car or truck in running order, and for freak growth in\ntimber, vegetable or fruit\nEntry forms and fees are to be in\nthe hands of the secretary by Friday, and all entries are to be in\nplace by 9 a.m. Saturday.\nCarpenters on Cominco\nProjects Get Increase\nCRANBROOK B. C\u2014As certified bargaining agent for employees on the multi-million dollar construction projects of the new fertilizer plant at Marysville and the\nWaneta power development near\nTrail, for the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company, Cranbrook-\nKlmberley Local 1719, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners\nof America, has reached agreement\nwith the contractor, Stone and\nWebster, Canada, Ltd.\nThe new contract retroactive to\nApril 1, allows a basic wage increase to $2.10, with time and a halt\nfor two hours overtime and' double\nSchool Enrollment Up\nGRAND FORKS\u2014Registration of\nstudents ta schools in the Grand\nForks district is expected to be\nslightly higher this year.\nAbout 850 students are> expected\nto start classes today. Schools have\ntheir full complements of teachers.\nVERNON SPEAKER\nNEW DENVER\u2014Miss H. R. Hurd\nof Vernon was the speaker for a\nJapanese service in Turner Memorial United Church. She also held\na service at the Orchard. .    ,\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY. STORE\nWit. Be Closed Until Monday, Sept. 8th\nC.P.R. Time Inspections\nWill Be Attended To as Usuol.\nCastlegar and District\nFALL FAIR\nSeptember 5th and 6th\ni\n\u2022 GRAND DISPLAY OF EXHIBITS\n\u2022 CROWNING OF HARVEST QUEEN\n\u2022 BABY SHOW \u2022 FIREWORKS\n\u2022 OUTDOOR CARNIVAL\nGRAND DANCE\nIN LEGION HALL SATURDAY NIGHT\nBob Graham's Dixielandors\nAdmission To Exhibits.:\nADULTS \u2014250 CHILDREN\n : \u25a0 i\nBIG DOOR PRIZES\n10^\ntime thereafter. It also limits board\ncosts to $2 a day to the employee\non out of town work, the management paying any additional cost\nNegotiations are proceeding between the local and the C. J. Oliver Construction Ltd., contractor,\nfor the post office here and federal\nbuildings at Kingsgate, and with\nFabro Building and Supply at Kim-\nWork has continued throughout\nthe Summer while negotiations\nproceeded, although master eon-\ntracts expired March 31.\n83rd BIRTHDAY\nfor kaslo Man\nKASLO - A party of 45 friends\nhelped Ronald Hewat sr., usher in\nhis 83rd birthday at a party at his\nhome.\nSongs by Mrs. J. S. P. Snowden\nand E. J. Leveque of Nelson arid a\nsing-song accompanied by Mrs. C.\nC. Halleran, were on the entertainment slate, and a birthday cake\nmade by Mrs. R. Hewat jr., his\ndaughter-in-law, was cut by Mr.\nHewat\nBorn near Conventry, : County\nWarwick, England, Mr. Hewat\nmoved to Canada at the age of ID\nin 1888, and settled for a time in\nNorthern Alberta. In- 1905 he\nentered B.C. government service in\nPrinceton, and In 1910. moved to\nFah-view, in South Okahagan, and\nagain moved to Wllmer in 1914.\nFORMER FERNIE MAN\nGoing to Fernie late in 1915, he\nheld the position of gold commissioner and government agent\nuntil his transfer to Kaslo in the\nSpring of 1920, where he continued\ninthe service until his retirement\nin 1938.\nMr. Hewat has three sons, Jack\nHewat photo-engraver in Toronto,\nRonald, safety. Inspector for the\nWorkmen's Compensation Board,\nand Harry C. Hewat superintend^\nent of the Jackson Basin Mine.\nMrs. Hewat died in 1941.\nNapoleon was born at Ajacolo,\ncapital of Corsica.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1952 \u2014 3\u201e\n100 Pickers To Move\nOnCreston HopsToday\nCRESTQN\u2014Harvesting of 2i7 acres of hops on the\nCreston holdings of the B.C. Hop Company will start here\ntoday.\nIt will be toe first harvesting, as\n15 acres, planted Dv tne Company\nlast year were as an experiment In,\ngrowth only.     % \u2022\nJ. A. T. Oreyell, the company's\nresident manager, said Monday his\nfirm expects to harvest 100 bales,\nWoman Injured in .\nFall Near Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C- Mrs. Irene Fra-\nser of Wenatchee Wash., is in Arrow Lakes Hospital after suffering\na fall while on a fishing trip with\nher cousins, Stanley Cowan and\nMiss Doris Cowan.\nMrs. Fraser fell on rocks leading\nfrom the hot springs trail to Kus-\nkanook Creek, Injuring her ankle\nand chest\nGordon Agar Winner\nOf Cranbrook Award\nCRANBROOK, \u2014 Gordon Agar,\nyoungest son of Mr. and Mrs. L. N.\nAgar of Cranbrook, has been notified by Dean falter Gage of the\nUniversity of British Columbia that\nhe has been awarded the $185 Nancy\nRyckman scholarship for the highest\nstanding of any J!ast Kootenay student at U.B.C. in second year\nstudies. He is a Cranbrook High\nSchool graduate; completed senior\nmatriculation and attended U.B.C.\nfor the 1951-53 term. He is employed\nat the Estella mine near Wasa for\nhis second Summer, and plans,to\ntake mining engineering.\nSeveral scholarships were created\nseveral years ago through a bequest\nof part of the estate of Mrs. Nancy\nRyckman, long-time pioneer Cranbrook resident\nMINING IN THEKOOTENAYS. .Y\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTOAD, MUSKRAT\n\"SCOOPED'f OUT\nBY NEWSPAPERS\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Nature has\nencroached conspicuously o n\nthe fourth estate in East Kootenay during recent weeks. Maybe It's all leading up to wolves.\nAt the Kimberley.News office,\nrecently sold to a company under management of J. G: Lehman, queer noises coming out\nof a press led to an investigation which disclosed a toad\nhomesteading a corner down\nunder. He was gently evicted\nfrom the premises.\nA\u00b0d last week the menace\ngrew at the Fernie Free Press\noffice. Lett in charge of the\nnewspaper operations while his\nfather, Victor Ball, attended the\nSt. Andrew's, N.B., meeting of\nthe Canadian Weekly News-'\npaper Association, Donald Ball,\ndoing a stint on press night enrolled volunteers from toe\nstreet to help handle a muskrat\nthat moved into the plant'\niiimiiiiiiirtiiiNiiiiiiiiNiiiimiiiiiiiiii\nFormer'Forks Man\nGets Calgary Post\nGRAND FORKS\u2014U. B. (Bernie)\nMcCallum, well known C.P.R. conductor in this district residing at\nFenticton and acting as assistant\nsuperintendent in the Okanegan\nfor-the C.P.R., has been appointed\ninspector for the Board of Railway\nCommissioners at Calgary. He will\nleave shortly to take up his new\nduties.     :\nMr. McCallum is a member of the\nwell known P. T, McCallum, family, prominent in Grand Forks life\nfor so many-years.\nMP. Won't Go To\nGeneva Conference\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 J. A. Byrne, MJP.\nfor Kootenay East, has been forced\nby local \"polio conditions to decline a request by Prime Minister\nLouis St. Laurent that he attend a\nLabor Conference being held in\nGeneva, Switzerland, early in September. '.       - - .*\u00ab.\nBdse Metis Way MaMWmU\nKootenay Base Metals Ltd. is seriously considering suspension of\nmine operations until lead and zinc\nmarkets improve, president W. B.\nMllner told the annual meeting in\nVancouver.\nThe drop in prices and the loss Instead of profit on- U.S. funds have\ncombined to reduce smelter returns\nby 35 to 40 per cent\nThis latter factor was mentioned\nin the company's annual report,\nwhich cantained no suggestion, however, that the mine might dose. Operations, it stated, are .showing an\noperating profit, while any increase\nin metal prices would be entirely\nprofit'\nDirectors do not consider It wise,\niald Mr. Mllner, to continue depleting ore which would likely\ncommand a. better price In the\nfuture,    '\n\/\u2022\u25a0 * *-. *\nAnother round of expansion at\nCanadian Exploration's big Jersey\nlead and zinc mine near Salmo, now\none of the province's biggest base-\nmetal operations, was hinted at Vancouver at the annual meeting of\nPlacer Development Ltd., the parent\ncompany.\n| Increased mill capacity to handle\n35,000 tons of Ore a month instead of\nthe current 25,000 tons will be ready\nearly next year,\"Hon. Charles A,\nBanks, president arid managing director of Placer Development, told\nshareholders.\nBut, he added, only a few small\nchanges   are   needed to Increase\nthis  eapaolty  to   65,000   tons\nmonth.\nOre reserves at September 20,1951,\nwere estimated at 7% million tons.\nMr. Banks said-new ore indicated\nsince then exceeds the amount mined and drilling continues with fav-\norable results.\".'\u25a0\nf Development; of tungsten ore at\nthe strategic mine near the Jersey\noperation \"continues satisfactory,\"\nsaid Mr. Banks. He reported that \"it\nwill be some time before an accurate\noutline of the ore body can be finally determined.\" > - '\n\u2022 * *\nIt's like oldtimes to visit the South\nbelt,these days where Ronlahd Mining Company Ltd, is developing the\nqld' Bluebird property adjacent to\ntoe city limits.\nDriving in on what is commonly\nreferred to as the road to Drake's\nRanch, one is first impressed by the\namount Of work that has been done\non the surface. The site has been\ncleared out and mine buildings dot\nthe area over a considerable distance. Construction work is still underway. Hub of activity is the machine shop, well equipped and manned\nto keep equipment working at top\nefficiency. The new \"dry\", is near-\ning completion and will prove a welcome addition to the comfort of the\nworkmen. In anticipation o increased crews, the \"dry\" is constructed to\nallow for expansion. An addition to\nthe North side will double its capacity: Far to the right is \"ocated the\npowder house with its eight-inch\nwalls and roof filled with sand to\nward of possible stray bullets.\nPride of the management is the\nequipment in use. The new compressor which supplies air for the\ndrills is the last word in this type\nof machinery and is capable of supplying twice the air of former ma-\nchines-of the same size. A big dozer\nIs \"employed building roads and\ndisposing of mine rock and waste.\nSome 20 men are employed at\nthe mine at present working on\nshifts'. No ore Is coins shipped to\nthe Smelter but the mine Is being\ndeveloped for a full scale operation, in the future which promises\nto once again bring Rowland Into\nthe mining picture of this province.\n* *  *\nWork at the new Bon Ton Mine\nnear Kitchener Is progressing with\na bulldozer-now on the job to make\na better crossing over the -track and\nbegin on mine stripping.\nThe' stripping will be done about\n1200 feet above the track. In addition to this the services of geologist and engineer, W. Campbell of\nKimberley, have been secured,\nC. Senesael is mine manager, and\nJ. Wolfe is contractor for roads and\nstripping.\nAfter the stripping is completed\ndiamond drilling will begin.\n* * *,\nStripping by Bulldozer has uncovered what are termed rich showings\nof silver-lead ore at the Hamll Silver Lead Mines Ltd., property,situated 25 miles; North of Cominco's\nBluebell mine on Kootenay Lake.\nGalena has been picked up at intervals for a length to date of 240\nfeet along the strike, which is\nroughly parallel to the Southwest-\nNortheast trend of the main vein\nand about 50 feet West of It Pits\nare being sunk at 50 foot Intervals\nand widths near toe surface are indicated at from two to 10 inches.\nH. F. Kenward, managing director reports that six additional\nclaims and fractions, have been\nstaked by the Hamll company' following this discovery.\n* *   *\nSearch for a fourth producing\nmine is now underway by Western\nExploration Ltd., Silverton, which\nis currently drawing ore from the\nEnterprise, Mammoth and Standard\nMines all in the same general area.\nIri a recent progress report It is\nstated that a tunnel is being driven\nfrom toe Monarch crosscut first\ndriven in 1944 to explore the ore\npossibilities between toe-Standard\ndrilling undertaken Some years ago\nand Mammoth mines. Diamond\ndrilling undertaken some years ago\nindicated the presence of high grade\nsilver-lead ore, but work was suspended In 1945, The company has\nto the area and early tola year re-\ncontiuued to give 'close attention\nceived a report based on an extensive geological survey which summed up to favor of the potentialities\nof this in-between area, A. M. Ham,\nmanager of the Silverton properties, reports that the new tunnel is\ngoing ahead on a two-shift basis,\nfollowing toe hanging wall of the\nveto, end making about 11 feet\ndaily.   : \u25a0-\u25a0 '\":\u25a0'\"' : \u2022\u201e'\n\"Should we strike ore as indicated by exploratory work, it means\na new mine,\" he explained.\nWhile, toe Monarch project is toe\nmost Interesting of the company's\ncurrent development attention is\ndrawn by the report to work proceeding at the producing mines. At\nthe Enterprise; No. 8 and No. 9\nlevels are being extended. At toe\nStandard mine, preparations to\nmine ore on the bottom level are\nwell advanced with ore deliveries\nexpected to start early in Septem-\nber' * *  *\nSunshine Lardeau Mines Ltd. reports that during July, 70.02 tons\nof lead concentrates and 98.2 tons\nof zinc concentrates with a value\nof approximately $31,500 were\n'shipped from the concentrator at\nBeaton. The mill operated for a total of 467 hours and treated 1205\ntons of ore.\nMillheads showed a gradual increase in grades treated during the\nmonth. During toe first week in\nJuly millheads averaged 10.5 ounces\nof silver, 3.31 percent lead'and 4.2\nper cent zinc-with recoveries of\n83.3 per- cent silver, 67,7, per cent\nlead and 75.6 per cent zinc During\nthe last week of the month, grade\nimprovement was noted in the following millheads: 15.9 ounces silver, 6.5 per cent lead and 5.3 per\ncent zinc\nThe lead oxide flotation circuit\nwas ready for operation by Aug,\n15, and It will now be possible\nto mill ores of higher grade and\nof heavier oxidization.\nAt the mine, parallel raises 90\nfeet apart are being driven from\nthe No. 8 level- to the No. 5 level\nto intersect toe downward extension\nof the high grade galena found in\nNo. 514 drift. Shipments of high\ngrade will resume when, contact is\nmade.\nEntire zinc output will be sold to\nBritish Metals Corporation, until\nJune 1953, at what Is stated by officials to be a satisfactory price.\nonly 15 bales of which will be from\nthis year's planting of 11 acres.'\nPicking will take, between 10 days\nand two weeks.\nThe hops will go Into the firm's\nnewly erected drying shed for drying by propane gas, and will then\nbe baled and shipped.\nAbout, 100 pickers will be employed, some of them local people\nand toe rest Doukhobors from com\nmunlties such as Glade and Brilliant\niiiiiiiiiiimiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nlet our trained, courteous,\nprofessional movers \"take the\nload off your mind!\" Your\nfinest furniture, dishes and\nother possessions will be\nscientifically packed ant\nhandled with the utmost care.\nPhone for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\n':    CO.\n719 Baker St.  Nelson, B.C.\nfhbneSI\niiii.tmiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nDid You Ever Think\nWhat a Difference\nANEW SINK\nWould Make in Your Housework?\nThe sink is the hub of a well-planned kitchen,\nand will save steps and labor.\nWe hove a well-assorted stock to choose from.\n\\   CONSULT US FIRST.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST. PHONE 666\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF\nHEALTH''.\nInvites Vou to- Listen\nTonight to\nDrama of Medicine\nOVER CKLN AT 6:00\nPHONE RES.\n1203 ,    394-L\n433 Josephine St.\nLEATHER\nZlfPER\nRING\nBINDERS\n\u2022 Choice Centre    '\nGrain Leathers\n\u2022 V'niidVA\"\nRings\nPRICED AT\n4.75,5.00\nand 5.50\nA Carson Product\nNo Change ot Schedule\nKASLO-NELSON\nCOACH  LINE\nLeave Nelson \u2014 7:20 a.m.\nLeave Kaslo  \u2014 3:00 p.m.\nPhone 945-X for Information\nBARGAINS\nGALORE\non the\nClearance Table\nDISCONTINUED LINES\nOddments In  '\n,'; -\u2022...China:. .-\u2022,;.'\u25a0 . ^^jMiiwaN   . \u2022\n\u2022  Dinnerware        \u2022Tools\nSomething You've Wanted\nAt a Price You Can Afford\n...   DROP IN TODAY\nJiL\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n\" r-'RIfNDLY\nPhone 21\n446 Baker Sr\nCheck This Listing Carefully\nJNK, Waterman's Blue-Black\nPENCILS\nREEVES PAINTS, 8 colors .\nINK PENCILS, write-easy .\nART GUM ERASERS\t\nPENCIL ERASERS \t\n\u00ab*\n-\u00ab*\n70*\n25*\n-\u00ab*\n-S*\nPens & Pencils by Eversharp\nPROPEL PENCILS\t\nREPEATER PENCILS\t\nBASIC JUNIOR NIB PEN\nBASIC SENIOR NIB PEN\nREPORTER PENS\t\nRefills :\t\n$1.00\n$2.00\n$1.98\n$3.95\n$1.50\n-SO*\nSCOTCH TAPE, in dispenser .\nRefills\nMUCILAGE, with rubber top _\nWAX CRAYONS, 8 to o box _\nWAX CRAYONS, 8 to o box _\nRULERS, wood or plastic\t\nGUMMED REINFORCEMENTS.\nMATHEMATICAL SETS\t\n 15*\n IS*\n IS*\n  15*\n  10*\n 10*\n2 for\" 15*\n__i_ 19*\nTrio Sets\nSet consists of one Repeater Pencil, one      fitfi\nBall Point Pen.and one Nib Pen ' +\u2122W:.\nEXERCISE BOOKS, ruled or plain, for pencil\n' or pen and ink work . 5e) and 10*\nTHREE-RING BINDERS, hard cover .  49*\nLOOSE LEAF.REFILLS, 1 l'Wa\" size.\nRuled or plain  . \u25a0.\n15*\n'' MOONKMMW \u2022* WW MM\ni-'-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0':\n';\u25a0    ...-.-..-.\n Tr '\u25a0'\u25a0\"\"\u2022] ' \"\"^^ i'0?:^'^.\"\"^\u2014:\u2014\n.\u2014_ _\t\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014i\u2014:\u2014' \u2014\u2014\ni&fO:\n4\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1952\nMICHEL COLLIERY\nOUTPUT GAINS\nFERNIE\u2014Output of coal at the\nMichel colliery of the Crow's Ne6t\n. Pass Coal Company, Ltd., In July,\nsoared over production in the same\nmonth )ist year.;\nOutput totalled 67,113 short tons,\ncompared to 35,260 short tons in\nJuly, 1851. At the Elk River colliery,\noutput was down from 25,076- short,\ntons to 23,072 short tons. Total for\nthe East Kootenay district was up\n: from 73,884 to 91,085 short tons,\ndespite, the Hillcrest-Mohawk collieries' output of 12,089, boosting last\nJuly's total. The province produced\n116,168 short tons last month, \"compared to 109,050' in July, 1951. A\ntotal of .13,738' short tons of coke\ncame out of Michel last month.\nFree Book on Arthritis\nAnd Rheumatism\nHOW TO  AVOID  CRIPPLING\nDEFORMITIES   .\nAn amazing newly enlarged 44-\npage book entitled \"Rheumatism\"\nwill be sent free to anyone who\nwill write for it\nIt reveals why drugs and medicines give only temporary relief\nand fail to remove the' causes of\nthe trouble; explains \u25a0 specialized\nnon-surgical, non-medical treatment\nwhich has proven successful for the\npast 33 years.\nYou ineur no obligation in sending for this instructive book. It\nmay be the means of saving you\nyears of untold misery. Write tor\nday to The Ball Clinic, Dept 5244,\nExcelsior Springs, Missouri.\nCampaign Launched in\nCreston Hospital Vote\nCRESTON \u2014 A committee has\nbeen organized here to inaugural*\na whirlwind campaign calling tor\nan affirmative vote on a plebiscite\nthis month for a new 80-bed hospital for the Creston district.\nThe committee was named at a\nmeeting of representatives of valley\norganizations invited to hear a report from an investigating committee and Hon. W. D. Black, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Provincial Secretary, and M.L.A. for\nNelson-Creston. Thirty-eight of the\n47 organizations Invited sent representatives.\nMr. Black said his government\nhad honored the 1300,000 commitment of the previous government in\naid toward construction of a hospital, if.s new plebiscite failed as\none several months ago did, the\ngrant would be cancelled.\nLONG-TERM\nRepayment of the government's\nloan of $160,000 (district share) if\nthe district votes affirmative, would\nbe spread over a period of years,\n16 or 17.     \u25a0,\nW. G. Anderson, chairman of the\ninvestigating committee, said his\ncommittee had found plans for the\nhospital were first class and had\nbeen designed with an eye to the\nfuture.\nThe campaign will be conducted\nby members of the investigation\nand publicity committee, and consists of H. K. Legg, chairman; F.\nMartello, campaign chairman! Mrs.\nLangaton, secretary; A. Avery, C.\nCarr, J. Veltch, D. Clark, H. B.\nJohnson, H. L, Miller, W. G. Anderson, with Lane Messtnger at liaison\nbetween hospital I board arid'the\ncommittee, V, h, Masher is in an\nadvisory capacity,      '       v;\nDuring a question and publicity\nSuggestion period, it was revealed\nthat more than 50 per cent of voters\ndid not turn out at the last plebiscite;    \"\nTwo organizations have endorsed\nthe plan for a new hospital plebiscite. They are the Creston Valley\nHospital Women's Auxiliary, and\nLocal 2318 of the United' Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners,1\nwith a\nPunch\nWe ute the right PAPIR,\nthelcfotfTYPIFACIS,,\nand the right color of INK\nto make your PRINTED MATTER   .\nlook ATTRACTIVE and MODERN\nCALL 144\nNELSON\nDAILY\nNEWS\nArsonists Strike\nAl Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR.\u2014 An Incendiary\nfire damaged a newly-constructed\nhome owned by John Bloodoff here\nearty Saturday evening. The house\nwas almost completed and its\nowner' planned to move in within\na week. .\nFirefighters were called to the\nscene shortly after fire broke out\nand managed to save the frame of\nthe home. R.C.WLP. said they have\nunearthed signs of incendiarism.  -\n- Damage was said to be about\n$1500.\nBloodoff's home is located near\nthe Castlegar High School, a few\nhundred feet from where a'home\nwas'completely destroyed by fire\nearly last month.\nFire Chief R. A. D. West reported\nthe fire started in the bathroom of\nthe home that had just been\nplastered the day before and it is\nbelieved that a four gallon gas can\nwith about two and i half gallons\nof gas in it was set off.\nDamage to the house was mostly\nto the roof and rafters.\nEntries in Boys, Girls Sections\nLauded by judges; Quality Tops\nFRUITVALE~A fa&er and daughter team carried\noff two major awards in the annual Fruitvale Pall Fair here\nLabor-Day.\nJack Wilson, Fruitvale dairy operator, won the Turn-\nbull. Trophy with the Ayrshire he entered- in the livestock\nseotion, and his youngest daughter, Miss Ruth-Wilson, received the Cameron Trophy ior her attainments in the Call\nClub during the year.\nMiss Wilson also wen the sward\nwhen it was first pasted four yean\n\u00abgq'.\nHundreds took advantage of the\nfine\" weather to enjoy a holiday at\nthe fair, held at the Recreation\nPark. Besides watchin'jpme enter*\ntainment, they browsed.- among\nexhibits in the old elementary\nschool. .\nHIQH QUALITY\nAll exhibits were et exceedingly\nhigh quality, particularly boys end\ngirls' sections, which draw high\npraise from the judges.\nMrs. R. A. Custer of Nelson\njudged .boys and girls\" sections, said\nthe was surprised and pleased 'at\nthe number and quality of the\nexhibits end felt it augured well\nfor the future of both home and\nfair.\nWinner of the Parent-Teacher\nAssociation cup, at present held by\nLucy Webster, for boys and girls\nsection, will be made known later.\nA new section for children's\ngarden club, featured displays from\nBeaver Falls-Montrose Garden Club\nand the Fruitvale Garden ' Club,\nwith Fruitvale. winning the first\nprize. Its display consists of vegetables and flowers.\nDuring the afternoon a ball\ntournament was held, with Fruitvale   Juniors,  Fruitvales   Seniors,\nRosalind and Nelson participating,\n.The first game between Rowland\nand .Fruitvale Juniors went its\nRowland 15-6, and the second between Nelson and Fruitvale Seniors\ndame out Nelson 0, Fruitvale It.\nThe final between Rossland and\nFruitvale Seniors went to Fruitvale\n0-7, Referees were Peter Morlsette\nend Horace Vyse,\nHIGHLAND DANCING\nIn late afternoon,' six girls give e\nprogram of highland dancing, with\nB. C. MoKinnon of Rossland as\npiper. Taking pert ware Mary\nCruickshenk and Lois Haley \u00bbf\nRossland, Beverley MoAdam end\nBarbara Graham of Trail, and Shirley Harding and Joan Harding' of\nFruitvale;\nAn excellent display of wrestling\nand boxing wound up the day,\nunder the direction of tho Trail\nAthletic Association, The first boxing bout between A Haywood and\nD. Haywood ended in a draw, and\nIn the first wrestling, Banderlye\nwon over Peratina. Second boxing\nbetween P. Mason and P. Olenk\nended in a draw, and in wrestling,\nGeorge Shanks, wen over Olenk. In\nthe final boxing, St. Denis won\ntechnical knockout over Geloloff.\nA dance was held at night at\nthe grounds.\nLongbeach Man\nDies Here alii\nA Longbeach resident, James\nArmstrong, 76, died at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Sunday,\nMr. Armstrong resided at Moose\nJaw for many years prior to 1907\nwhen he entered farming at Em-\nfold, Sask. After 20 years there, he\nmoved to Longbeach 15 years ago.\nHe was a native of Ontario.\nSurviving are his wife, Mrs. Alice\nKata Armstrong, a nephew, Ralph'\nJames Armstrong of Oakland, California, and a niece, Mrs. Kathleen\nPeters of Moose Jaw.\nNews of the Day\nRATEBi SOo line. Me Una black face type: larger type rates en\nroquest Minimum two linos. 10% discount (or prompt payment,\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY,\nTop-flight shoe repairs at\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP\nFine supply of Mrs' Gray's and\nMoir's Chocolates at WAIT'S.\nBingo Tomorrow Night,\nCathedral Hall.\nSwan's Grocery\nOpen till 8 p.m. evenings\n. \"Polio Policies,\" S10.00 per family\nfor two years. Individual \"Policies\n$5.00. Why take chancel. Phone or\nwrite today.\nC. W. APPLEVARD.& CO. LTD,\nBox 20, Phone 269, Nelson, B.C.\nMetal medicine cabinets with\ngleaming plate-glass mirrors and\nsparkling crystal glasi shelves,\ndifferent styles to choose from at\nT. H. WATER8 A CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St. Ph0ne 156\nFernie Girl Wins\nLegion Scholarship\n\"FERNIE \u2014 A $200 scholarship\nhas been awarded to Ruth Hogan\nof Fernie by B.C. Command of the\nCanadian Legion. The certificate\nwill be presented to her by Fernie\nbranch of the Canadian Legion,\nwhich sponsored her.\nHalf of the sum will be given to\nMiss Hogan at the start of her Fall\nterm at the University of British\nColumbia, the balance to be paid\nafter the Christmas recess.\nDUO-THERM OIL HEATERS\nNow on display at \u25a0  ,\nMo A Mc (NEL80HJ) LTD.\nHUNTING AND FISHING\nLICENCES ,\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP.\nDresser scarves, size 10x43.\nGenuine Swiss made.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nBlazers   for   school wear. Sizes\n2-flX.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP\nMc Brine Dress and Steamer\nTrunks. Built to take It. Priced from\n$35.00.\u2014WADES'.\nHave   you  investigated   Floater\nPolicy Insurance? See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY.\nDUO-THERM OIL HEATERS\nNow on display at\nMc A Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nAnytime'is the right time to gladden her heart with a box of candy.\nStop in today at VALENTINE'S.\nFurnaces -and Steves cleaned.\nFounder Chimney Service. Phone\n1541-L.\nTEACHER OF PIANO\nMrs. G. R, Norris\n302 Hoover St. Phone 1400-R.\nCommencing Tuesday, Sept. 2,\nand every following'Tuesday, the\nQuestion Mark will be closed afternoons and evenings. **\nWATCH REPAIRS\nFor reliable repairs, at moderate\nprices try COLLINSON'S JEWELLERY STORE, 551 Baker Street\nCans .for your canning. 2 end 2%\npound site, inside enamelled and\nplain. Burpee onn sealing machines.\nHIPPERSON'S\nRemember last Winter's zero\nweather? It's time to think of heating comfort for; next .Winter, end a\nColeman oil heater Is the'answer.\nSee the new models, also the,new\nColeman floor furnace now in stock\nat HIPPERSON'S.\n8PECIAL NOTICE\nTemporiury offices of the Nelson-\nCreston Social Credit Assoe. located\n,?, *?\u00a3 \"' Tot '\u00bb' ***\u00bb \"tore, 383\nWard St., Nelson. Office open 10 to\n6 p.m. Saturdayi or phone 1327-L\nfor appointment ,\nReasonably priced 'Astral Frig' in\nexcellent condition.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture. ,\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\n^!1m\\MTURE   CHANGE\nHALL8TV       PHONE 1680\nATTENTldN B.C. GOVERNMENT\nEMPLOYEES\nMonthly meeting of the Nelson\nBranch of the B.C. Government Employees Association will ba held in\nthe Canadian Legion Hall tonight,\nTuesday Sept 2 at 8 p.m. .Films,\nrefreshments. , i   :\nSchool will open . Wednesday\nmorning, Sept 3rd; at 9 o'clock.\nRegular, classes will begin on that\nday, io that pupils, are expected to\ncome to school, with notebooks Ind\nwriting equipment. Pupils who are\ncoming into the Nelson school system for the first time, or others\nwho wish to make special timetable\narrangements are asked to register\nat the Junior and Senior High\nSchools on Tuesday, September 2nd,\nat 2 o'clock. Hume and Central\nSchools beginning pupils and new\npupils register at 1 p.m, Tuesday.\nar Nelson\nGeorge Douglas, one of. NeUjon'l\nfirst street car operator! and well\nknown oldtimor, died here Monday.\nMr. Douglas, ago about 76. was\nfound died about 0:30 p.m. on'Silver\nKing-trill Monday evening. He had\nbeen out for e walk and died of\nnatural causes, -  '\nHe lived tor 20 yean it the Club\nHdtei, 401 Silica street, end was\nana of Nelson's most popular old-\ntimers. Following a stroke 15 years\nago he wu partially crippled,\nBorn In Scotland, Mr. Douglas\nreceived hit education there snd\nliter beoame a gardener et Lennox Oiltle, When things boaome\nquiet ind money scarce he decided to eeme to Oanada where\none ef hl\u00ab first Job* was land-\n\u2022eaplng with  another gardener,\nMr, Crawford, also of Scotland,\nthe first gardens laid out by professionals In Nelson et the heme\nef R, I, Lemon en the East end'\nof Virnen Street,\n' He later worked for Green Brothers ind Burden as chain snd axe\nmm in the Kootenays ind at various ether jobs,\nAt one time, Mr. Douglu returned to the eld country thinking he\nmight remain, but later returned.\nMr, Douglas, a pensioner, has no\nkin in this country,\nCustoms Go On\n24-Hour Schedule\nCRANBROOK- Urged by\nboards of trade on both sides of\nthe boundary for a long time, the\nborder-eroiiing station of Kings-\ngite-Eastpert between this province end Idaho has gene en e 24-\n' houri-a-day operating basis.\nServing moat of the Banff-\nbound tourist traffic this Is the\nbusiest entry station of the Interior. Undue! haste, of motorists\nto catch the evening closing has\nbeen a hazard,\nFull-time operations went Into\naffect last week by staffs ef both\nCanadian and American customs\nand Immigration services.    -\nCanadian offlco facilities started lest'Fall are nearlng completion, with construction of a\n$130,000 budding by C, J. Oliver\nConstruetion to accommodate the\nfederal service; In addition to the\nofficial buildings on the same\nscale as their American counterparts, the project Involved housing for,Canadian staff members.\nPROTECT!\nINSULATE!\nBEAUTIFY!\nBARRETT\nINSULATED\nSIDINGS\nCamp Koolaree came to an official close over the weekend with\nthe annual fraternity camp, during\nwhich \"close-up\" chores were carried out.\nNearly SO participated, the \"old\ncrew\" initiating a dozen district\nlads into the mysteries of fraternity\ncamp. Initiation ceremonies Saturday night saw the boys taken from\npoint to point in the camp, winding\nup in serious vein at the .chapel and\ntwo minutes silence for campers\nwho have passed on. Campflre\nfollowed, then the boys were on\ntheir own .until their return home\nMonday.,\nThe previous weekend 24 young\npeople attended a successful camp\nat which discussions were led by\nRev; G. W. Payne of Nelson and\nFred Robins of Trail, veteran camp\ndirector. .\nAt fraternity camp were:\nOld crew \u2014 Jaok Steed, Lome\nIrwin,'Murray Harris, Nelson; Ron\nAvery, Salmo; Dick McBurney,\nColvln McBurney, Cranbrook; Ernie Vyse, Fruitvale; Fred Robins,\nGordon Hunter, Bob Davles, Ian\nBryden, Bob Rowlands, Trail; Ken\nStanley, Nakusp.\nInitiates \u2014 Derek Fraser, Rossland; Gary Burch, Wynndel; Wes\nBarrett, Wally Anderson, Bob\nLeonard, Trail; Hugh Anderson,\nDouglas Mervyn, Fruitvale; and\nGary Foxall, Dlnham Drew, Jack\nBoyes, Bill Gibbon and Dick Fraser,\nNelson.\nMrs.'{da Van was cook.\nSrdall pox first appeared in the\nhew world In 1616, when it was\nknow nas the Indian plague.\nV Protect Your Home Against AH Weather\nV Insulate Against Heat and Cold\nV Make Your Home Look Smart and Modem\nV Styled in Prick, Stone and Pioneer\nShake Designs.\nTAKE YOUR -BUILDING PROBLEMS\nTO YOUR BARRETT DEALER\nBesides Sidings,, your Barrett\nDealer has a complete Hoe of\nroofing, insulation1 snd weather-\nproofing materials.\nTHE BARRETT COMPANY, LIMITED\n1045 West Pender Street,\nVancouver, B. C.\nCONSULT THESE BARRETT DEALERS\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n\u25a0      A\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n395 Baker St. NELSON.B.C. Phono 497\n=pf,\nT. H. WATERS\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n101 Hall St. NELSON, B.C. Phono 1S6\nm\nFabro Building & Supply\nCOMPANY LIMITED      \"\nWollinger Ave. <       KIMBERLEY, B. C. Phone 46\nWALDIE LUMBER\n& BUILDING SUPPLY LIMITED\nPhone 2321- Complete Builders' Supply   Castlegor, B.C.\n'-'\nFall and Winter training sessions\nof 111th Battery of 24th H.A.A. Regiment  commences Tuesday,  Sept.'\n2nd. All ranks required to attend.\n'.       VACATION  TIME\nMake  it. a..'.SWEET  SEND-OFF\nwith fine candies. Always In perfect\ntaste.\u2014GRAY'S.\nWhen Words Fail - Say It With\nFlowers From   ,\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n,   Phone 962\nIhi& advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\n'   - by the Government of British Columbia.,\nC.I.L. Plastic Wood\u2014Handles like\nputty, hardens into wood.\u2014Tin 60c\nlarge tube 35c.\n-    BURNS LUMBER CO.\nIf  BUTTERPIELD cant  fix   it.\nthrow, it away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nBoys' Pullover Swelters. Wool re.\nInfbrced with cbtton, round neck\nstyle, popular deer design. Flies 8\nto 14 \u2014 $239. i. - \"   ,-.\"\nTHE CHILDREN'S SI-OP\nHOU8EWIVES, iturday is the\nlast day to enter., your preserves,\nbakery or arts and, crafts exhibits in\nthe FALL EXHIBITION, Don't be\nlate - do It today.\n'\nProducers and others concerned ore asked to note the following regulations applicable to the marketing of produce in the cities of Nelson, Rossland and Trail, effective as from September 15th, 1952.\n1. Producers are not permitted to market their produce direct to retailers.\nOrders for produce, as required, wi II be placed with Mr. Louie Fedor, representative of our Marketing Agency. Retailers may obtain their supplies\nfrom any.of the wholesalers licenced to operate within the district.\n7   All producers are required to register their names and acreages with the\nBoard.\n. 3. No orod.uee may be marketed whic h does not meet .requirements of Government grades.\nThrough these regulations it Is our Intention ef ensuring (1) a fair share of the market for each iprodueer (quality\nbeing equal), (2) fair returns for producers. .\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the BOARD OFFICE,' 1.476 Water Street, Kelowna, B.C.\n-\"\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-.      \u00bb \\. \".-',.-,-' \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0_' *\n'.'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0  '\" '\u25a0->\u25a0'.''**.', '.:y.   ' . .\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0.'\u25a0'\u25a0 ,','\u2022\u25a0'-.   ;,''-\u25a0\u2022'-'-''-. \/ ;       *\nr      I. Ce Interior Vegetable Marketing Board     .\n\"\"\u25a0 .'.'..\"'\u2022 .-'.  E. POOLE, Secretary\nm^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\nmm\n_\nJ\n 7osy\nQoldenVheasaht\nBrown Cqlf - Brown Suede\nStrap Pump\nAs illustrated.\nWidths AAAA-AA-B\n$14.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASIHON\nEstablished 1902\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP\u2014Mrs, R. Patterson en\ntertained on her 76th birthday to\nhonor Rey.iW. E: G. Dovey and Mrs.\nDovey and1 family of Windsor, Ontario, who are visiting the district\nMrs. Patterson was assisted in\nserving by her daughter, Mrs. Dan\nBerard, and Mrs; H. L. Miller. A\nbirthday cake had been made and\npresented by Mrs. Miller.\nfOA\nVel < TO\nL\nTOWLER\nfuel A Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\nSt Paulas Setting for\nBrown-MacLeah Rites\nKatherine Mary, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H.\nMacLean, became the bride of Leonard Brown, eldest son of\nMr. and Mrs. H. Brown of Ymir, at a quiet and pretty double-\nring jceremony in Si Paul's Ignited Church Thursday night.\nThe slender brunette bride,\nwho\nwas given in marriage by her father; looked lovely in a tailored.white\nwool dress with metallic\"* gold\nthread stitching, gold sandals, and\na halo and a corsage of yellow rosebuds and gladioli.-Her only attendant was her sister, Miss Margaret\nMacLean, who wore a pink nylon\nnet frock with a halo and a corsage\nof pink gladioli.\nMr. Henry Brown, brother of the\ngroom, was best man.\nThe mother of the bride wore a\nsmart rose and blue figured silk\nprint dress with navy blue accessories and a corsage of roses. The1 mother of the groom wore a dress of\nsoft grey with a corsage of pink\nroses.\nThe ceremony was performed'by\nRev. G. W. Payne, the bridal music\nbeing played by Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson.\nA family reception was held after\nat the home of the bride. The brides\ntable was covered with a beautiful\nChinese lace cloth which had belonged  to her grandmother, the\n(Oasu. lip, U)ilk\nVilaAuui WjcudbL\n.tfree Yourself\nfrom laxative slavery\nfty this delightful family breakfast\nteeatr Eat a generous bowBnl\n(\u2022.boat Jf cop) of crisp toast;\nKeBogg's all-bran with sugar and\ncream. Drink plenty of Banjos.\niMrBBAH fa the natural faxaerra\neereal that may help yon baek to\nyouthful regularity, lost because of\nlack of bulk fa yoor diet Ifs the\nonly type readry-to-eat eereal that\neuppBesoBthe bulk yon may seed.\nHigh in protein end iron ... not\n\u25a0boh rmumjg. w ay aon t yon try\nKr KeOetx's fa so sore yonH B\u00bb\nMi-BBAH that \u00ab yon're net M\u00bb\njrfefeJ* mOafiti after M days, aessd\n'   l to KeUogg's, London,\niirow\nTo Enter\nThe WEST\nKOOTENAY\nINDUSTRIAL\nAND\nAGRICULTURAL\n\\\nPhone 1027\nM. C Mutehler\nSec-Manager\nDo It Now!\nt^?249\nSIZES\n10-1*\nYOUR PALL FIRST\nCheers, Teener! Here's the dress\nto wear back to school! A cutle for\ndates or duty, it has yokes, pockets,\npleated skirt Designed for YOU to\nsew easily. So be fashion-bright and\nsew it right away! Have it in checked cotton or wool with bright contrast.\nPattern R9249: Teenage Sizes 10,\n12, 14, 16. Size 12 takes 2% yards\n35-inch; % yard contrast\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTYiFIVE CENT8 (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRE88, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson News, Pattern Dept, Nelson B.C.\nthree-tiered cake being decorated\nwith the ornament used tor her mother's and father's wedding cake,\nand flanked by ivory tapers and\nsweetpeas embedded in pale yellow\ntulle.\nGO TO BANfF    .\nThe young couple left for a honeymoon at Banff.\nOut-of-town guests were sisters\nof the groom and their husbands,\nMr. and Mrs. Gerald Fullertomand\nMr. and Mrs. William Harkness- of\nTraiL\nWITH RELATIVES ... LAC Bud.\nKelley, who is stationed in Winnipeg, is spending a few days with\nhis uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs.'\nR. Kelley, 278 Baker Street.\n', \u2022 A\u00bb-,\u00bb ''\nHOLIDAY OVER . . . Miss Mary\nWaldle has returned after a holiday\napent at the coast and in New Westminster.\n\u2022 . \u2022   \u2022'\nAT THE COAST..'. Mr. and Mrs\nR. Kelley, 273 Baker Street, have\nEWELL, England (CP)\u2014The Surrey Fire Brigade pullshed leaflets\nwarning householders to take extra precautions in the kitchen. The\nbrigade reported that more fire calls\nare received at tea-time than any\nother period.\nTlssdlsfMgL\nSif. dhuuuL UfhssJsJL\nROTH CROCHETED\nTwo adorable vesti to crochet \u2014\nperfect tor back to school. One is\nall-over pattern stitch in two colors\nof 3-ply fingering yarn. The other\nis waffle stitch in one color of Sport\nyarn. I        '    ''...,'\nBoth easy! Pattern 358; crochet\ndirections; 32-34 and 36-38 included.\nSend TWENTY-fjIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern -to Nelson News,\nNeedlecraft Dept, Nelson B.C. Print\nplainly. PATTERN NUMBER, and\nSIZE, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nMORE TltVDfjt -3\u00bb^\nMACARONI  *0** DELICIOUS\nbefore scoring\nsummer things\nOUR EXPERTS GET CLOTHES\nESPECIALLY CLEAN!\nSPECIAL CALL SERVICE\nCleaning brought to our office BEFORE 9 A.M.,\nREADY 4 P.M. SAME DAY\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nAND CLEANERS\n182 Baker St.\nPhone 1175\nNelson Social\n.PHONE   144\nreturned from a  holiday  visit  to\npoints or the West Coast.\n\u2022 -\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0 V-''',\nTO SPOKANE ; .'. . Mrs. H. M.\nWhimBter, 407 Third? Street, her sister, Miss Ruby Palmer W Kimberley, and her'daughter,' Miss Lois\nWhimster, left Monday for a few\ndaya in Spokane. ! I\nVISITORS . .'. Mr., and Mrs.\nFrank Flynn of Passmore have had\nas their guests Mrs Don Martin\nand family of Lethbridge, and Mr.\nand Mrs. Willoughby of Lethbridge,\nTheir granddaughter, Keren, will\nstay with the WUloughbys until until the end of the month.\n* \u2022   \u2022'.'       \u2022',-.--.\nHOLIDAYER . .. Miss June Kelley has returned from Vancouver\nand Victoria where she spent her\nholidays. '' \u25a0    .-; j;    \u25a0':\n\u2022 \u2022'.\u2022';\u25a0 j\"- 4'L \u25a0 .;-\u25a0\nFROM U.S. . . . Mrrand>Mrs,-,C.\nP. Lee of Chicago, and their daughter, Dr. Virginia Lee\/ of Denver,\nColorado, are visiting Mrs. 'Lee's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. S. N. Fawcett 411 Fourth\nStreet. They were accompanied by\nMrs.   Lee's   sister.   Miss   Dorothy\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 19S2 \u2014 5\nFawcett, who his been spending\nseveral weeks at Chicago.\n,A -i-.    \u2022-\u25a0..\u2022\u2022\u2022\nRETURN HOME . . . Mr. and\nMrs.T..G. Laughton and sons. Michael ana -Patrick have returned to\ntheir:homo after vacationing In\nVancouver'..-. , -.'.'-;'\nIliiillililliiiiiilliiitiiililiimiillllllllll\nBUY\nV     on our;..'..'\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 - NELSON\n'The House of Furniture Valuer\n:iniililiniliiin.umilllimn\"\n=L\u00bbi\ngfeXfea^a^^A^\nV\njj WHEN SCHOOL 8ULSRIHG i\nm    Send young scholars off alert     m\nJjj     and healthy with wholesome     m\n\u00abRr*\\\u00ab\nw &\n'\u25a0's&ds froi ^\n15L*V\/iV\n^bteh appetites soar, as young folks answer the call of the textbook\nand school playground. Keen young minds and husky bodiesdemand\nptartyof wholesometnourishmg foods to carry them through each busy\nf\u00bb**Mry- gateway is ready. Oft bur shelves youTJ find ideas for hearty\ntin^fc interesting,lunch boxes, delicious dinners. Choosefcom a\nwide variety of items;forthose energy-lifting afternoon snacks. And\"\nremember, these quality foods are priced low every day in the week. You\ncan save money eweiyriov at SAFEWAY.' \u25a0 \u25a0\nPrices Effective\nSEPTEMBER\n2nd to 6th\nAylmer.\n10 oz. can\n12c\nCake Mixes T\u00a3%?*-\":.. r\u201e\nSandwich Biscui^fS ceUo\nGraham Wafers %&$*.\nStrawberry Jam J^a\u00a3S...\nPeanut Butter f8e\u2122   *\"*\u25a0\nGardenside Std.\n28*bz. can _\t\n27c\nChicken Noodle f\n.  Lipton's.\n, .'  2 oz. pkt\nPitted Dates TotkJ*1\"1\t\nAustralian Raisins Ijffit, ..\u201e\nEmpress Pure\nRASPBERRY JAM\nNew Pack\nMade From-the Choicest Fruits\nObtainable In the Fraser Valley.\nV^'eJA'lU\n48 fl, oz. can .\n98*\nIHHBBIiBHHHsssssm'\nGrapefruit Juice   $*\u00a3\u2122,^ 29*\nTomato Juice T\u00a3\u00a3*\"L \u201e...\u201e...  11*\nOrange Juice tft*.\u2122: _ \\ 35*\nBurn's Spork, \"an \u25a0.  31*\nPork and Beans It\u2122*: :   12*\nPINEAPPLE PIECES\nAustralian Choice. 20 oz. can \t\nFRUIT COCKTAIL\nHunt's Choice. 15 oz. can  i.\nCHOICE PEAS\nAylmer. Sieve 5.15 oz. can \t\nGOLDEN CORN\nCountry Home. Fancy. 15 oz. can\nIRISH STEW   .\nPuritan. 15 oz. can \u201e\t\nSWIFT'S PREM\nOblong. 12 oz. can  \u201e\t\nCORNED BEEF\nEl Penon. 12 oz. can  ._\t\nSOCKEYE SALMON\nCitation Fancy 7% oz. can \t\nPINK SALMON\nCloverleaf Fancy. IVt oz. can .:'.-\nSARDINES 9\nGuardsman. 31 oz. can ..    'for\nTUNA FLAKES\nCloverieaf. Fancy light. 6 oz. can\nSHREDDED WHEAT\nNabisco. 12 oz  ctn.        \t\nTOMATO CATSUP\nTaste Tells. 13 oz. bottle  ,\t\n33*\n24*\n16*\n19*\n33*\n32*\n49*\n42*\n25*\n25*\n28*\n16*\n23*\nWalnut Pieces\nTea Bags\nLight-Amber.\n8 oz. cello\t\nCanterbury. 60's.\nFresh Eggs \u00a3\u00a3&' g?L_\nMargarine'fe^8^\"- __\nPure Lard \u00a3\"*gf; ,\t\nMild Cheese CeUo wrapped. Lb.\n 27*\n-- 35*\n\u2122_ 28*\n92*\n97*\n2 for 23*\n_ 24*\n_45*\n-L.._ 38*\n69*\n60*\n2 for 65*\n11*\n..' 49*\n\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\neiBOK ROASI. Iran tup grades of beef\nAll Safeway nieots ore trimmed waste-free before\nweighing . . . So you save money.\n6S\u00bbJ\nBlade In.    Blue Brand ..\nStanding Rib Roast ST Brand  69*\nBoiling Beef ^ket Blue Brand: 20*\nPure Pork Sausage l^1 Unks:.... 49*\nSliced Side Bacon g*Z\u00a3\u00b1     37*\nWhole or\nLamb Shldr. Roast haif. Lb. .\nBoneless'Stew Beef SdS\nShldr. Veal Roast\nBologna\nRound bone or\nblade. Lb.\t\nPiece or sliced.\nLb\\   \t\n53\u00bb?-:. Tenderized Hams ST*.^... 79*\n64*    RibVedi'^Ops Solct ^ 89*\n65*     Fresh Red Stjimon L^     62*\n37* - Pork Liver.^!.^ ^LL^. 25*\nPicnic Shoulders\n.Smoked. Whole or    ;.        Jls)\nshonk half Lb. \\..    11\nLeg of Pork Roast\nChoice. Whole or\nshank end. Lb.\t\n52\u00ab\nBoiiina Fowl\nGrade \"A\". Fresh-killed.\nHead, feet off. Lb. __-.._\n39'\nRoasting Chicken\nGrade \"A\"; FreshTkilled.     JCA*\nHead, feet off. 4-6 lbs. Lb.   J_7.:\n^eisiiMUMiiiilliiii^miamiMmiiliiimiinimiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiniliiiiiniiliiiiiiriiiilimiimliliiiiio^-\nPeaches are big news this week at Safeway! Our produce stands are loaded with some of the firjest we've\never seen .'. . Big, luscious fruit-fairly bursting with\nmellow-sweet flavor. OKANAGAN Vs.     ,\n2 lbs. 29c\n17 lb.\ncase\n$2.09\n\u2022CANTALOUPE ss-*it\nLOcal Lettuce tS&S^-\nField Tomatoes Red.ripe, i0cau\nCrisp Celery ^'T     \t\nNow Cabbage fg*:.*'^:^..\nGreen Peppers t^.\u2122^:\t\nSnap-Top Carrots Loeu.\nNew Potatoes\nCauliflower\nPickling Onions -ST^L\nSunkist Oranges FuU ot juice.\nBananas  (5olden'ripe'\n.lbs.\nLocal washed.   .\nSnow white beads.\nLb\t\n3\n10\nLb.\nRed Malaga Grapes\nDucheSS Apples  Local.\nTable variety.\nLb\t\n,lbs.\nlibs.\n18*\n25*\n19*\n7*\n16*\n25*\n45*\n23*\n27*\n23*\n17*\n29*\n. . ,\nWe Reserve the Right\nTo Limit Quantities.\nSAFEWAY\nCANADA SAFEWAY\nLIMITED\nL\ni^^\n v .;\u25a0.-:\n,-.-.,,\n\/ti5&\nMm Satin&m    tKTESSTO   ?Oii^tinn<i?\nEstablished April 82, 1902      - \" .- .-, TVLJf C   -C ATTAn '    ^C ^ \u2014 ^: \u25a0-     ^ '^   *\nANSWERS\n:i.\ni\n!\n1 '\n1% <\nBritish Columbia's\nMost \/nfereslinq Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\n'      ' ,        l i,'.' .       \u25a0** '.i 7  \u2022 -.*\u2022\nAuthorized as Second Gloss Mall,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF; CIRCULATIONS.\nTuesday, September 2,1952-'\n\u25a0.     '       1      ~\nLabor\nCanadians have just celebrated their\n59th Labor Day\u2014a daysetaside^to pay\ndeserved tribute to \"the dignity of\nlabor.\" ' : &\nIt was on July 23, 1894, that Prime\nMinister. Sir John Thompson, convinced of the need for such a holiday as\nadvofcated in the campaign of Alexander W. Wright, editor of the Knights\nof Labor Council, pushed the bill\nthrough the Commons. In the United\nStates, Peter J. McGuire through the\ncentral Labor Union in' New York had\nalready been successful in obtaining\nan official holiday by act of the United\nStates Congress.\nIn its .earlier celebration Labor Day\nwas a holiday for parades, picnics and\nfraternizing among families of laboring\nmen. Labor leaders made speeches at\nthe gatherings, and 'workers generally\nexamined their achievements, needs\nand responsibilities, These aspeqts of\nLabor Day haVe largely, disappeared\nand it has become a general day of .rest.\nMeanwhile the lSbor unions have\ngrown and prospered. Because of that\nprobably a few moments of the holiday\nspent in reflection might .still have\nbeen in order. The power of th\/; unions\nhas never been as great How,is the1\npower being used? Where is the membership being led?\n' The worth of the labor movement,\nboth to Itself, and to the community\nand nation at large, depends on the\nworth of its leadership and the part\nthe membership plays in its activities.\nIf the members are simply led, their\ncollective power can be misused; if they\nparticipate democratically they can\nmake a contribution to the greatest of\ntheir nation as well as td their own\nstatus.\nGod in Partnership\nThe late Jack Miner, Canadian naturalist,\nused to say, \"No life-is complete without God.\"\nAnother of h'is statements was: \"No man starts\nliving until he starts believing,\" and he used\nto apply this to his bird banding.      .,     .'\nHe started catching ducks in 1909 to band\nthem and study their migration routes, In fact,\nJack Miner was the first man on earth to secure a complete record of where a.bird was\nbanded and when it was killed. He banded his\nfirst duck in August, 1009,. and-it was shot In\nJanuary, 1910, by\\ Dr. !W. t. -Bray of Ander- .\nson, S. C. . _ \" '\u25a0\u25a0\"'.   st\"'\nAt the beginning he heard from only a'\ncomparatively small percentage 'that, he hid\nbanded; but when he started to put a verse of\nscripture on one side of each band, and. as he\nsaid, \"take \"God into partnership with him\",\nhis bird bandlpg became a success. He added\n'the Bible quotations entirely from ph, intuitive\nfeeling that something would come, of It, because he could not foresee that the Eskimos\nand Indians of the North would take these\nbands to the Anglican missionaries an(j' Jesuit\npriests for interpretation of the verse of Scrip- _\nture. \u2022    -> \/\u2022'\u2022\u25a0\"\nIn this way the reverend gentlemen acted\nas Jack Miner's agents in collecting the bands,\nwhich gave him- the scientific knowledge he\nwanted as to how long a bird liyed and: where\nIt was killed. A name^ or number on a band\nmeant nothing to these natives'; but the verse\nof Scripture on the band caused them u\\rush\nto their clergymen to \"see what God sald'thls\ntime.\"\nIt's'Been Said.\nTo feel another's joy as one's'own, that\nis love.\u2014Emanuel Swedenborg.\nTHEEDITQR\nLetters'may be published over a nem\nde plume, but the aotual signature' of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor ai\nevidence of good faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In the waste paper basket?   '-..\n. i: '*     \u25a0   '   '\u2022       \u2022-   ',-\u2022 *\u25a0> v.'.- -.\n; School Board.' Acts\nOnly on Orders of\nHealth Authorities\nTo the Editor:\nSir \u2014 I would, appreciate it If a small\namount of your valued space could be allotted\nto me in order to reply to the recent .letter\nof Mr. A. K. Mc Adams.    -, ,'\nAs chairman of the Nelson School Board,\nI can fully appreciate the feeiings and sentiments u expressed by Mr. McAdams, end\nknow very well that similar thoughts must\nbe running through the minds of many parents\nin this district However, I Would like to point\nout that your School Board has no authority\nto close the schools, due to the polio outbreak,\nbut' must act on the orders of the public\nhealth authorities. I can .assure you that your\nBoard of School Trustees will collaborate fully\nwith such authority at all1 times\".\nO.'MERMET.\nPeach Prodder\n'Life has been made Just a Utue more 'interesting for us by our: recently acquired\nknowledge of Mr, Norman Sheldon and his\nodd profession. Mr, Sheldon is.a peach prod-\n' der. He told Us about his work in a BBC broad-\n' cast. He prods not only peaches but nearly\nevery other kind of fruit that goes into Britain\nfrom South Africa. His prodder is Really a\npressure tester. It looks like-a bicycle pump,\nand has a gauge on It; something like a tire\ngauge. Becoming rather, technical, Norman\nsaid: \"A pear, for example, should read 14\npounds when.It's landed from the ship, but\nby the time it'e ripe you should get a reading\nof-four poupds.\" He sends full reports of his\nprodding to the South African fruit growers\nso that, they .can check and see that their\nproduce is picked at exactly the right stage.\nSeeing Norman at work In Covent Garden one\nday, a small boy said, \"Look, mum, that man's\nblowing 'eni up!\"\nTo which the mother-replied, \"So that's\nwhat; they do to ..keep the1 prices up!\"\n\u2014Napier Moored In Financial Post\nSoliloquy\n(Northern Miner)\n\"Full many a rose Is born to blush unseen\nAnd waste its sweetness on the desert air.\"\nDid that ever come to mind as you stood\non the soggy edge of a mile of muskeg trail?\nPerhaps you had a packsack full of canned\ngoods, or a core'splitter on your back, an axe\nand a five-gallon can of gas in your hands.\nThe tamorac or black Spruce stood like sparse\ngrey beard on the face of Nature, and while\nyou braced yourself .for the knee-deep plunge,\nthe mUe-lnng fallow, .you cursed the black\nflies, the couhtfy, and your own stupidity for\nbeing there,. -,    -' \u2022\nHallway-actossr w(th heart pounding,\nBweat streaming down your forehead, and\nstaggering'with the weariness .of treading moss\nthat held, gave way, or pressed against your\nfeet like fighting feathers, you tripped over a\n. submerged root \"This is it\u2014to hell with It!\"\nYou rolled over and sorapefl the rotten,\nstinking.moss off ypur knees and arms. You\npicked out a hummock that looked dry but\nwasn't apd; balancing the pack on your raw\nback, gently-lowered yourself down to your\nmossy seat  ,V  '   ', '\nAt this.point, my friend, we are glad to\nsay. that frustration and sweating. rage gave\nwax to philosophic calm\u2014a contemplation of\nthe beauties of nature, and finally sweet content.\n. There, right before you, was a rose, a\ntundra rose. The- tfush was only inches high,\nand there was only one fruit bloom, but how\nbeautiful it was! The petals-ranged from waxy\nwhite to pale pink, the pink that you see in\nthe Northern sky for onr instant or two after\na.lovely sunset\nOut of this dismal bog came sweetness and\nperfection, and but of the hardships of this\ntrip might come rich, reward, If not monetary,\nat least the quiet philosophizing of the moment\nwould suffice. Emulating Grey and his beautiful Elegy in a Country Churchyard, you could\nnot help breathing this deathless couplet:\nBy chance, as o'er the hill wind idly blows,\nWe meet, we part, Qh lovely tundra rose.\n-SMASHED HOME\nAn intoxicated driver wteeked his trailer\nhouse against a concrete wall\u2014showing you\nanother way -drink can break up a home.\n\u2014Stratford Beacon-Herald.\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no ehar'ge for thla-service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE AN8WERED\nBY MAIL except where there. Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.'\nJ. H., Robson\u2014Where, locally, can I get a\nshort-nosed Collie pup?\nGet in touch with Mrs. A. Draper, Port\nCrawford, B.C.\nReader, Salmo\u2014Can you please give me the\naddress and name of \u25a0 company that makes\nand sella appetite reducer pills?\nft   Reducing pills should only be taken under\nthe advice of a doctor. Consult your physician\nIf you wish to reduce, - \u00bb   ,        '\nt     , -. ,-\u2022 ,\nL. G., Cranbrook\u2014On what day of the week\ndid December 28,1033, fall, and December\n\u25a0   ;ss, 1034T ''-:;..-...-,-,. . '\u25a0 .-  -\nDecember 28, 1033, was on Thursday. December 28 .lBM^feU^on, Friday.\n\"Inquisitive\", Salmo\u2014To 'settle- an argument\ncan you tell me the population of Metaline\nFalls? Alio, ]t a .'roan'has been acquitted\nand found Innocent then several years\nlater substantial evidence is found to prove\nhe is guilty, can the se'me case be brought\nback to eourt?        .,\u25a0-\u2022' .\/ '   '\u25a0'\nThe population of Metaline Falls is not\nindividually listed in the U.S. census results,.\nbut It is below 1000. Regarding the second\nquestion, the governing principle Is that a\nman's freedom cannot be jeopardized a second\ntime on same evidence, but he can be brought\nto trial on new evidence,    -    -\nLooking Backward\n10YEAP8.AQO\nFrom The Nelson Dally 'News, Sept. 2, -1942\nW. T, Beaven, formerly agent Canadian\nPacific Express Company et Nelson, has keen\nappointed agent of the company at Calgary,\nsucceeding J. A. Waiford.\n2S YEARS! AOO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Sept 2, 1927\nMrs. J, Burgess was-chosen leader of the\nNelson Girl Guides newly-formed ranger company at a meeting.-held recently.\nMiss Charlotte Jeffs left for Victoria where\nshe will enter the nurse-in-training class at\nRoyal Jubilee Hospital.\n50 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Sept. 2, 1902\nCity wholesalers have reported business\n\u25a0 during August this year considerably higher\nthan August 1901 with, one firm doing over\n$2000 more business. .' *\nR. H. Williams, who spent last week in\nWashington, along the lower Kettle Valley\nRiver, reports that crops this year are excellent\nNature's Balance\nThe late Jack Miner, Canadian naturalist\nbelieved that the balancing of nature is all left\nwith rhan. He used to say, \"God intended man\nto balance Nature,\" and he would always quote\nthe Holy Scriptures where they state, \"Let\nman have dominion over all.\"\nJack Miner was a great one to illustrate\nhis point, end by way. of illustration would\nsay: \"If man shoots deer for food, then man\nshould kill the timber wolf, which is the deer's\nenemy, to the same proportion. If man shoots\nwild duck for food, then man should shoot to\n(he same proportion -the crow, its natural enemy, because crows eat duck eggs. If man\nshoots pheasants or partridge for food, then\nman should kill just as many of their enemy,\nthe great horned owl.\"\nMan upsets nature's- balance so it is up\/ to\nman to restore it. He would always close such\ndiscussions by adding: \"it my potato vines\nbecome covered with.potato bugs, I use parla\ngreen,; I don't wait for God to send another\nbug to kill the potato bug.\"\nYour Horoscope\nYou should be able to hold out for your\nown terms now. Many pleasant surprises may\nbe in store for you in the year ahead, but\nconserve some of your gains. Today's child is\nlikely to have a very analytical and'discriminating mind, and to be original and independent. ...\nNEIGHBORS SUSPICIOUS\nNothing gets a man as many suspicious\nlooks from the neighbors as being around\nhome at 10 a.m., perfectly well and unshaven.\n-^Brandon Sun.'\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n(BoOD QL'FlDeUA REAULy tVEUT TO\nBAT FOR HER NEEDy PAL'\/M? EASeTD\nher itroA vert Mice job-^\nAtR.WIrttSAP-THIS IS W     ,\nFRiaro-fenLLfcrrA toadstool\/\n' IVE BEEU TSLUrJS KXJ      '\nabojt. sue needs a cioe\nVBV'BAOiy, AtiDYOO\nMENTIONED \/BOUT HIRING\nM ASSIST\/ANT. FOR ME'\nSO I THOJGHT THAf\nSTILLETTA GOUIX>-\n\u25a0gTJUJBTTA WHO IS K^^WE\nEA\u00abNe~e46We Fidelia o>rT\nBHEREBy -TRAH6PERREP\nBy Jimmy Hado | t^'s BiWe Thought\nNot many at the time the pro-\nphot lived, but hundreds of millions\ndo now, Isaiah saw better times to\ncome through the coming of a child\nwho would lead humanity to glorious heights. It Is not too late for us\nto believe and profit\nWho hath believed our report?\nIsaiah 63: 1.\nomlfat\nw\n'MdM 9FT^>\" 1\nAMONG THE MANY EUROPEAN PORT8\nvisited this Summer by the Royal Canadian Navy's\nAtlantic command training flotilla was one particularly close to Canada's heart: Dieppe, where the\nCanadian second division of 6000 men suffered appalling casualties In their heroic assault of August\n19, 1943, In the above photograph Commander J,\nC. Littler, captain of the Crescent and senior of\nficer afloat In the force, has Just laid a wreath In\nhonor of the Canadian dead on the Dieppe Memorial during French National Day Ceremonies. Behind him are Lieutenant-Commander A. H. McDonald of Saint John, N.B., captain-of HMCS La\nHullolse, and Lieutenant-Commander J, R. Coulter\nof Montreal, captain of HMCS Swansea.\u2014(National\nDefence photo.)\nWbvk. tfouifL\nWill Rogers,'Jr.\nLife Appealing,\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Sep.t 1  (AP)  -\n'Yep, I'm doing it again. And darned if-1 don't like It\"\nThis was Will Rogers, Jr., talking.\nThe same fellow who said a few\nmonths ago that his Job. portraying\nhis father would be strictly a one-\nshotaffalr in films, He claimed he\ndidn't have the talent desire or energy to be an actor.\nBut he's back before the cameras,\nstarring with Marguerite Chapman\nin \"Life, Liberty and Orrin Dooley,\"\na television film being made for the\nFord theatre. He plays an ex-G.I.\nLOTS OF PRACTICE,\n\"It does take a lot of acting,\" said\nRogers in a drawl that is a combination of Oklahoma and Beverly\nHills. \"But fortuantely, the studio\nhad me studying with a drama coach\nfor a couple of days. I'm not like\nan  experienced actor, who could\nFinds Actor's\nMakes TV Film\npick up any part and read it right\noff.\"\nDoes he intend doing any more\nacting?\n\"Well, I don't know,\" he said. \"I\nwon't do any more portrayals of\nmy father, except in the Eddie Cantor biography, to which I'm already\ncommitted. I might do other things\non television\/But primarily I'm In\nthe newspaper business.\"\nHe operates the Beverly Hills\nCitizen.\nWhat was his reaction to the film\nabout his father?\n\"I thought it turned out all right'\nhe said. \"The main thing I was worried about was what the rest pf the\nfamily and our friends in Oklahoma\nwould think about it. Tbey thought\nit was fine.\n\"As for my own performance, I\ncan't say. I did whatever Michael\nCurtlz ,the director, told me to do.\nWhatever credit or blame Is belongs\nto him.\"\nNew Denver\nNEW . DENVER, B. C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. L. Martin and family of San-\ndon have taken up residence in\nNew Denver.\nMr. and Mrs. Hermann Clever and\nfamily are holidaying in Spokane.\nTom Carter has.returned to Vancouver after visiting his brother, A.\nE.' Carter and family.\nAfter a holiday with his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. T. Uchida, Akiro\nUchlda has returned to Prairie Bible\nSchool Institute at Three Hills.\nCory Johnson of Montreal, who\nattended the wedding of his sister,\nCharlotte Johnson at Kimberley,\nis* visiting his old home town and his\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Ole D. Johnson.\nMiss Elizabeth Donald of Vancouver, is the guest of her sister, Mrs.\nMartha Doyle for two months.\nMr. and Mrs. E. R. Adams have\nleft for. a holiday in Vancouver\nand other Coast cities with members of the family.\nGray Creek\nGFAY CREEK - Mr.-and Mrs. F.\nWilmot and daughter Sheila have\nleft tor their new home in Rlondel.\nMr. Wilmot came to Gray Creek\nfrom England in 1936 and some time\npartnered with D'Arcy Bacon. First\nthey bought A. J. Lewis' house and\nranch, then the Smith's ranch was\npurchased and Kootenay Cottages\nconstructed. They ran this resort\nfor some years, but during the second world war both served In the\nforces overseas. On returning to\nGray Creek Mr. .Wilmot married\nMiss Pat Wall who had spent most\nof her youth In La France a settlement South of Gray Creek and in\nNelson,-..\nMiss Alice Lymbery has returned from e holiday at Pasadena, Cal.\nJane says I ain't consistent about\nyoiinguns, but the younguns ain't\nconsistent. either, Spankln' might\nhelp one and be the ruination of\nanother...-'    .\nDeer Park Notes\nDEER PARK, B. C.-iMr. and Mrs.\nH. C, Coleman recently entertained\nat a musical evening.\nMr. and Mrs. Carter who spent a\nfew days at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. H.Mottersheaa\u201e left: for their\nhome in Hsmiltoh, Ont . '\nA surprise birthday party was\nheld at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nPat Romaine, the occasion being Mr.\nRomaine's birthday.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Brlggeman were\nhosts st a birthday dinner In honor\nof their nephew Jay, who Is visiting\nat their home from Seattle.\nMiss Laura Stucklberger has left\nfor Calgary, where she will attend\nschool. En route to Calgary, she will\nvisit her brother-in-law and sister,,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Grunlnger of Pinch-\ner Creek, Alta.\nMr. and Mrs. H. H, Wires and\nson'Jay, and Mrs. Ora Marsh, who\nspent a week at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Briggeman, returned to\ntheir home in Portland.\nAfter spending a month visiting\nfriends and relatives in his home\ntown in Prince Edward Island,\nRichard E. Best returned to* his\nhome here.\n;K\" Views- \/\nfrom the\nNews Fronts\nBY J. M. ROBERTS, JR.\nAssociated Press News Analyst    ';;\n'1'he.oniy, surprise auuui Sou,n At- -'\nflcan fiuat Minister iviaian's inreat\nro.qult toe briusn wminouweaiin\nis turn is uas Been so stow in coming,\n'ine danger began tne aay me nationalists wok over tne oouto African government now iviaian says\ntne empire' will find its grave in\nAirica unless tfritain coanges ner\npolicies in support of racuu equality. ,.      ,.;\noouth Africa's racial problem has\nmany different segments.\n'Mere is segregation of the blacks, I\nrestrictions on toe Indians; and the\npolitical Division among tne wnuea :\nnanded down from tne tioer, war.\ni'he 2,500,000 whites are divided into two major parties, Malan&'s -rla-\ntioanlists, primarily those of Dutch\nderivation, and the United Party of\nthe firitisn. doth bear responsibility\nfor the troubles, but the Nationalists\nin the four yearsol their auminlstraT\ntion have gone to . extremes,   even ,\ntampering with the constitution and i\nthe inviolability of the court*,    i I: ',\nThe British descendants see in this\nthe forging of a weapon which\nwould leave them a'tiny minority\nindeed in a country completely under the Nationalist thumb.\nAlready- there is talk of secession\nin Natal province, heavily British'\nan'', strongly opposed to Malab's idea\nof aettinc up an independent republic which, from this distance, appears to be planned along the lines\nat totalitarianism.\nMalan's racial program, tied in\nwith his talk of new governmental\nforms, creates a situation strongly\nremindful of Germany in 1932.\nBritain has been walking softly\nwith relation to South Africa ever\nsince Malan's victory in 1048. Comments in the British press are most\ntemperate. But nervousness is obvious.\nMalart has already flung himself\nin the face of the United Nations,\nand frequently reiterates his defiance of outside interference. Dark\nforces ere at work which have not\nyet come to a heed.\nIt is not impossible to envision a\nday when the British-owned gold\nand diamond mines would go the\nsame road as Iran's oil wells.\nCar&l Emery, 9, ef Victoria,\nB.C., Is honey to this pat bumble\nbee which crewls on her face and\narms and doesn't fly away. Carol\nand her sister Linda, 7, nursed\nthe bee while Its broken wing\nmended. They feed It on a honey\nand water nectar and the bee Is\nan Inseparable companion.\u2014(CP\nphoto.)\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. D. J. Davis and Miss Dianne\nDavis have returned from a holiday\n1 in Spokane.\nMrs. N. Brewston is a visitor to\nCalgary and Glacier, Alta.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Marshall and\ndaughters have returned from a\nmotor trip to Campbell River where\nthey visited Mr. and Mrs. W. E.\nMarshall, the former's parents.\nMr. and Mrs. W, W. Conkih have\nhad as their guests the latter's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs, 'Wilson and baby who were\nen route to Dawson Creek, where\nMr. and Mrs. Wilson will be teaching school.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Wilkinson, who\nhave been spending the Summer\nholidays with their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Canty\nin Slocan City have returned to the\nPrairies.\nSunshine Bay\ni SUN.SHINE BAY - Miss Mary\nStevenson and Miss Barbara Stevenson have returned from Vancouver where they visited their uncle\nand aunt,'Mr. and Mrs, Wilfred Carpenter and attended the Pacific National Exhibition.\nMr. and Mrs. Abe Dosenberger\nand four children have returned\nfro ma two-week motor trip to New\nWestminster and Vancouver where\nthey visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernie pal-\nman nd family. They drove down\nthe West coast'of Washington and\ncrossed the Southern part of the\nState, then drove through Idaho\nand came home by way of Rykerts\nand' Creston- Miss Josephine Mc-\nMullih, who went to Vancouver\nwith them, returned a few days later with Mr.' and Mrs. Coleman,\nher brother-in-law and \\sister. Mr.\nColeman is going to teach in Salmo\nduring the coming term,\nMr. and Mrs, Robert Clarke end\ntheir three sons from California are\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Clarke's cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dunstall.\nWillow Point\nWILLOW POINT, B.C.-Summer\nvisitors to Willow Point at the home\nof Mr, and Mrs. E. Shannon were\nMr. and Mrs. E. Wright and ''children of Fernie.\nMr, and Mrs. C. Haycroft have as\ntheir guest Miss A. Melckle of Sydney, V.I.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Hankin are visiting Calgary.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nMONTREAL \u2014 Henri Bourassa,\n04, fiery champion of French-Canadian nationalism and founder and\nformer editor of the Montreal dally\nnewspaper Le Devoir. .   .\nRIVIERE DU LOUP\u2014 Andre Pel-\nletter, 54, former member of the\nQuebec Legislative Assembly for\nTemlscouota. < v    t\nLONDON... \u2014 Sir Walrond Sinclair, 72, chairman of th British\nTire and Rubber Company and of.\nthe Indian Rubber, Gutta Percha and\nTelegraph Company.\nTORONTO - Rev. Harold F. Ca.\nley, 41, Roman Catholic chaplain of\nSunnybrook veterans hospital.\nTORONTO \u2014 Jolm Joseph OTJelL\ndirector of the hospital tax plan for.\nOntario. \u25a0> \u25a0';-.\u00bb,\nMUNDARE, Alta.\u2014Rev. Theodos-\nhis Haluschinski, 72, of Rome, superior-general of the Roman Catholic Order of Bastlien Fathers.\nEAGLEVTLLE, Calif. - Joseph\nFloyd (Arky) Vaughan, 40, former\nj National League baseball star.\nWALMER, England \u2014 Maj.-Gen.\nGordon Hamilton Seath, 65,\"aide-de-\ncamp to the late King George VI\nWOULD WALK CHANNEL\nLOS ANGELES, Sept 1 (AP) \u2014\nBill Abernathy, 29, is anxious to do\nthe English Channel swimmers one\nbetter. He is looking-for a sponsor\nto finance a walk across the bottom\nof the English Chanriel, 166 feet\ndeep at its deepest point A diver\nby trade, Abernathy estimates it\nwould cost $15,000 to install a series\nof buoys across the Channel to\nchart his course.\nLime water is one of the ingredients used in preparing bides for\ntanning.\nSHORE, THE EXECUTIVE . . .\nEddie Shore, famed, rough and\nready defenceman for the Boston\nBruins, has gained -new dignity\nwith hit appointment as executive vice-president of the American Hookey League. The famed\nrearguard, referred to at \"Edward\nW. Shore\" In the official appointment will assume duties formerly\nhandled by Maurice Podoloff who\nrecently retlgned at president of\nthe league.\"\nCLASSIFIED ADS (SET RE8ULTS\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. L.\nMacPhee have left by motor for Edmonton, where they will visit their\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs.-^age MacPhee.\nMrs. K. Hewat Jr. and family have\nleft for Eriderby, where she plans to\nreside, Mrs. Hewat has accepted the\nposition of teacher in the school\nat Ashton Creek,\nG. (Monty) Armstrong has left\non a business trip to the Coast\nMrs. Ray Hughes has returned\nfrom Spokane, where she was called\nthrough the illness of her sister,\nMrs. Harty.\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerich has as\nher guest, Miss Agnes McAndrew of\nSan Francisco.\nThe tunlcata, a class of marine\nanimals,'spend most of their adult\nlife fixed to rocks or to the sea\nbottom.\nASK FOR Scotland's Favourite Son...\nJOHNNIE\nSORN  1820\u2014\nSTILL GOING STRONG\nFINE OLD SCOTCH WHISKY\nDistilled,\n. Blended and\nBottled in\nScotland\nContents 26^ oi. ^*tW jj Mi\nJobs Walkes S Sons Ltd, Scotch whisky Distillers, Kilmarnock, Scotland\nrhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Boord or by the Government ofj British Columbia.\n\\^^\n\t\n\u2022\u2022   '\n \/oss\n1 .        '\"\" '' -    \u25a0 .    -. \u25a0'        v \u2022 -\u2022-     '\nHudson Open to Coc&Qolfer\njp-\u00bb-\u25a0\u2014-*\u2014 ' .\"\u25a0' \".\u25a0 '\u2014-    \u25a0' -\"j \" Johnny Johnston, who had\nat\" \u25a0     I'll l# >i** I to borrow a set of clubs to\nSternberg Keeps Singles ss^jtas\n^   \u25a0  \" \"\u25a0\u25a0     :*;-.- \u25a0'.\u25a0\u2022'    Ship with an easy 6 and 6 vioi\nin Doubles s^\u00bb\u00ab*i\nTRAIL \u2014 Former Canadian-Davle\nCup star Walt Stohlberg successfully\ndefended his West Kootenay tennis\nSingles crown Labor Day when he\nbreezed past Rossland's Ed Haley\nt-S, 6-1 in the tinals at the Tadanae\nrjourta, ,,\nStohlberg was the'victim of e\nslight upset In the doublet final\nwhen, minus his strong partner of\nlast seaaen, Claude Fung>a-Llng,\nhe bowed to Ed Haley and Trail's\nNed Rhodes.\nThe Rhodes-Haley due-took the\nfirst set from Stohlberg and Percy\nHalllweil 8-2 put were extended in\nthe second set by Stohlberg's strong\nserves before winning 6-4.\nNed Rhodes and Mrs, Jenney Ye-\nrest of Trail copped the mixed doubles event, when they defeated Mr\nand Mrs. Maurice Major of Nelson,\n8-1, 6-1.\nMrs. Jean Wylie of Castlegar took\ntop honors in the women's singles,\ndowning Mrs. Bob Cornwall of Nel-\nson 1-6, 6-0, 6-1 and then combined\nwith Mrs. Yerex to beat Mrs. Major\nand Mrs. Cornwall in the women'.s\ndoubles final 6-2, 0-3.,\nGordon Laurie of Cranbrook\nbreezed past Vlv Kravski of Castlegar In the boys' singles final 6-1, 6-3\nwhile Suzanne Thompson of Tadanae beat Glenda Cummlngs 3-6, 6-1,\n6-2 in the girls' singles event.\nGeorge Pedlar of Vancouver, pre\nsldent of the B.C. Lawn Tennis As\nsociation, presented the prizes.\n, Results   of semi-final  and  final\ngarnet are as follows:\n-MEN'S SINGLES\nSemi-final!\nW. Stohlberg beat L. LeFeaux 6-0,\n6-1; J. Johnston beat R. Cornwall\n6-0, 6-0; E. Haley beet N. Rhodes\n6-1, 6-1; G. Burnia beat B. Taylor\n6-1, 7-5.\nFinal\nStohlberg beat Haley 6-3, 6-1.\nLADIES' SINGLES\nSeml-flnals\nMrs. R. Cornwall beat Mrs. S. Yerex 6-4,6-4; Mrs. J.  7yllie beat Mrs.\nM. Major 0-6, 6-4, 6-2.\nFlrUI\nMrs. Wyllio beat Mrs. Cornwall\n,1-6,6-0,6-1.\nMEN'S DOUBLES\nSeml-flnals\nN. Rhodes end E. Haley beat H.\nOodderis and T. Roberts 6-1, 6-2; M.\nMajor and R, Cornwall beat H. Yoll-\nand and M. Dalton 6-1, 6-1; J. John-\neon and G. Burnie beat J. Taylor\nend   G.   Richardson   6-0, 6-1; W.\nStohlberg and P. Halllweil beat C.\nBell end R. Plncott 6-0, 6-4.\nLADIES' DOUBLE*\nSeml-flnals\nMrs, R, Cornwall and Mrs. M, Major beat Mrs. P, Halllweil and .Miss\nDeLong 6.1, 2.6, 7-5; Mrs, J, Wyllle\nand Mrs. D, Yerex berft Mrs, R.\nThompson end Miss M, Matthews\n6-1, 6-6, 6-8.\nFinal\nMrs. Wyllle and Mrs, Yerex beat\nMrs; Major and Mrs. Cornwall 6-2,\n6-8. .\nMIXED DOUBLES\nSeml-flnels\nMr. end Mrs, M. Major beet Mrs.\nP. Halllweil end B. Shelton 6-2, 6-4;\nMiss M Matthews end C. Barwis\nbeat Mrs. J, Wyllle and R, Plncott\n3-6, 7-5, 0-4; Mr. and Mrs, R. Cornwall beat Mrs. R. Thompson and L,\nLeFeaux U-0, 9-7; Mrs, S, Yerex and\nN. Rhodes beat Mr. and Mrs. W.\nStohlberg 6-3, 6-4.\nFinal\nYerex-Rbodes beat Mr. and Mrs-\nMajor 6-1, 6-1.\nMEN'S CONSOLATION\nSINGLES\nSeml-flnals\nG. Taylor beat H. Godderls 6-3,\n6-3; J. Richardson beat E. Kirch 6-4,\n8-10,6-2,\nF|nal\nRichardson beat Taylor 6-1, 6-1.\nLADIES' CONSOLATION\nSINGLES\nSeml-flnalt\nMiss B. DeLong beat Miss A. -De-\nMorvey 6-0, 6-3; Miss M. Matthews\nbeat M'ss D. Cumming 6-3,6-3.\nFinal\nMiss Matthews beat Miss DeLong\n6-8,6-3,\nBOYS' SINGLES\nSeml-flnalt\nV. Kraskl beat N. Gabana 6-1, 6-2,\nG. Laurie beat G. Godderis 4-6, 6-1,\n6-1.\nFinal |\nLaurie, Cranbrook, beat Kravski\n6-8, 6-2.\nGIRLS'SINGLES\nFinal\nSuzanne Thompson, Tadanae, beet\nGlenda Cumming 3-6,6-1,6-2,\nVETERANS' DOUBLES\n8eml-flnala\nP. Halllweil and D. Crowder beat\nFrederickson and C. Barwis 6-1, 6-8;\nM. Major and J. R. Fleming, beat H.\nGodderls and C. Bell 6-1,6-1.\nFinal\nMajor and Fleming beat Halllweil\nand Crowder 6-2, 6-2.\nNew Canadian Amateur Champ...\njBouchy Scores Popular\nUpset Over Campbell\nYANCOWYER, Sept 1 (CP) \u2014Biglteur    Golf    championship  with i\nLarry Bouchey of California | smashing  comeback   victory   over\nleetsrder.won the Canadian Ama-\nThe world's\nfinest tobaccos\n;.\u25a0\u25a0\n-\nthe most pleasing\ncigarette\nyou can smoke!\nWest Virginian Bill Campbell on\nthe 37th hole.\nIt was one of the most drama\ntlo finishes In the history ef the\ntournament   and   a popular win\namong the Canadian gallery of\n3600 on the sun-scorched Capllano\ncourse In Wait Venoeuver.\nCampbell, U.S. Walker Cut player\nfrom Huntington, W. Va\u201e apparently\nhad the match sewn up on the 34th\nhole when he and the 220-pound\nBouchey   both   took   one-over-par\nfours, leaving Bouchey dormie two.\nBut  Campbell  conceded himself\nan 18-inch putt on that hole and\nBouchey immediately called him.\nThe officials   awarded the. hole to\nBouchey.\nThat Btill left the yellow-haired\n27-year-old < InglewOod, Calif., bill\ncollector one down with two to pley.\nHe took the 85th, canning a 15-foot\nputt for a birdie three to square the\nmatch on the 36th tee.\nCampbell again had a golden opportunity to finish off Bouchey on\nthe 36th green. But he flubbed a\nthree-foot putt, permitting Bouchey\nto get a half.\nBAD DRIVE\nOn the 87th tee, Campbell pounded his ball into the woods \u2014 his\nfirst bad drive all day \u2014 and had to\nchip out onto the fairway. His third\nshot was just short of the green, as\nwas Bquchey't second\nBouchey shipped up within eight\nfeet Campbell within 10. Campbell\nmissed hit putt and took a one-qver-\npar six. Bouchey got down in two\nputts for a five and the match.\nIt was Campbell's horrendous display of putting that cost him the\nmatch. Though he studied each\ngreen about five minutes, he\ncouldn't read them properly. He was\nobviously tense on the carpets and\nafraid of his putts. There seemed to\nbe a small ridge around every hole\nfor him. He three-putted three\ngreens on the final 18 and missed at\nleast fdur putts under 'bur feet\nThe big break came on that cruc\nlal. 263-yard 34th hole.\nCnmpboll drove to the right of\nthe green. Boucney was In a trap\nto.tho left Campbell shipped within 3'\/e feet ef the sup. Bouchey\n\u25a0topped six feet away. Bouehey\nmisted hit first putt the.bell gelng\nfour feet by the eup. He then dropped hit four-footer. Campbell also missed his first, going 18 Inches\nPast\nBouchey had been conceding nearly all these short putts to Campbell\nall day. On the 34th, everybody, figuring the hole had been halved with\nfours, started to walk off the green,\nIncluding Bouchey and the referee.\nBREAK ON 34th\nCampbell picked up his ball.think-\ning it had been conceded. Bouchey\nJohnston, one ef the better play.\ner\u00ab at Vancouver's University Club\ncourse, succeeds club-meto Charlie\nSwanson ef Trail as holder ot the\nKen McBride Memorial trpphy.\nLittle Mary Jilrlleff ef Nelson\nretained the Women's epen eham-\nplonthlp end the Kooteney Breweries Trophy she wen lest year\nby downing veteran Mi's, Helen\nTownthend   of   Nelsen,   many,\ntimes Winner, by s t end 1 count\nWELL DIVIDED\nJohnstoq had planned to take a\n\"holiday\" from golf after playing\nearlier- this week In the Canadian\nAmateur at Vancouver where he\nwas ousted in the second round by\nPhil Farley of Toronto.        \u2022\nHe had come to Nelson with his\nwife to visit her parents end had\npurposely forgotten his clubs. But\na persuasive Jimmy Allan. talked\nhim into entering the tournament,\nwhich incidentally was his Jlrst ap.\npearance here.\nFlight honors were well divided\namong Nelson and Washington gol-\nfers. Jimmy Allan won the tlrst\nflight John Bllow, Sr., of Newport,\ntopped the second flight Walter\nWait was thlrd.fllght victor and\nBob May of Metaline took the\nfourth flight title.\nMac McLean took the fifth flight\ntop prize while another Nelsonite,\nWarren Ferguson, won the sixth\nflight. Newport's 15-year-old John\nBilow, Jr., followed up his dad't\nvictory with a seventh flight triumph.\nOFF FORM\nThe championship final was never in doubt with Carlson way off\nform both off the tee end on the\ngreen. He menagea only three\nhalves in the out nine when he\nparred only two holes and blew\nhimself to a, 42 on the'par-33 layout\nJohnston was tlx holes up after\nthe first tour, despite a mediocre\ntwo-over-par. and won tha 10th to\nttretch hie lead to seven with eight\nto go.        i\nCarlson won his first and only\nhole on the 11th and was closed out\non the 13th after two more halves.\nBoth had played muoh better\ngolf  In  tha  teml-flnalt  where\nCarlton rallied to down Nelton't\nJohnny Letchuk on the 19th hole\nafter being  dormie two at the\n17th. Johntton had difficulty with\nJim Marateo ef Trail before tub-\ndulng him 2 and 1 In the other\nbracket\nOPEN CHAMPIONSHIP\nFirst round ,\nJ. Leschuk, Nelson beat Jim Allan,\nNelson; J. Rogers, Nelson beat A.\nSllverwood, Nelson; W. C. Carlson,\nVancouver beat G. Barefoot, Nelson;\nG Steed, Nelson beat Q. Lake, Nel.\nson; D. Campbell, Nelson beat R.\nEvans, Nelson; J. Marasco, Trail\nbeat-W. Vlckers, Nelson; B. Latre-\nmouille, Nelson beat J. Wright, Rossland; J. Johnston, Vancouver beet\nL. M. McBride, Nelson.\nSecond round\nLeschuk, Nelson beat Rogers, Nelson; Carlson, Vancouver beat Steed,'\nNelson; Marascp, Trail beat Campbell, Nelson; Johnston, Vancouver\nbeat Latremouille, Nelson.\nSeml-flnalt\nCarlson, Vancouver beat Leschuk,\nNelson (10th hole); Johnstone, Ven-\ncouver beat Marasco, Trail 2 and 1.\nFinal \"\nJohnston, Vancouver beat Carlson, Vancouver 6 and 5.\nFIRST FIGHT\nSeml-flnals   '    '\nJ. Allan, Nelson beat G. Barefoot,\nNelson; J. Wright Rossland beat R,\nEvans, Nelson-\nFinal\nJ. Allan, Nelson beat Wrigh', Rossland.\nSECOND FLIGHT\nSeml-flnalt\nJ. A. Bllow, Newport, Wash, beat\nF. Thompson, Nelson; M. Wellock,\nRossland beat L. Atwell, Nelson.\nFinal\nBilow,   Newport   beat   Wellock,\nRossland.\nTHIRD FLIGHT\nSeml-flnalt\nW. Walt Nelson beat G. Morton,\nKaslo; D. McLean, Kaslo beat L.\nGarland, Ainswortb.\nFinal\nWait, Nelson beat McLean, Kaslo.\nFOURTH FLIGHT\nSeml-flnalt   <\nB. May, Metaline, Wesh. beat R-\nGilday, Nelson;. D. M. Sartple, Nelson\nbeat J. Knox, Trail.\nFinal\nMay, Metaline beat Sample, Nelson. \u25a0     .'       .\nFIFTH FLIGHT\nSemi-finals\nM. McLean, Nelson beat R. Armstrong, Kaslo  (default);    W. Ross\nKaSlo beat   E. Aldous,   Kaslo (de\u00ab\nfault).        ,\nFinal\nMcLean, Nelson beat Ross, Kaslb.\nSIXTH FLIGHT\nSeml-flnalt\nJ. Strait, Nelson beat F. Hansen,\nNelson; W. Ferguson, Nelson beat\nW. Calhoun, Oceen Falls-\nFinal\nFerguson, Nelson beat Sttelt Nelson.\nEx-Buc Star Arky\nVaughan Drowns\nEAGLEVILLE, Calif., Aug. tl\n(AP)\u2014Joseph Floyd; (Argy) Vaugh-\nan, 40, former National League ball\nstar, drowned late Saturday only\n80 feet from the shore oU lake.\nA friend, Bill Wlmcr, 45, e log.\nger, drowned with hi* when their\nfishing boat overturned, '\nVaughan began bis major league\ncareer in 1832 et shortstop for trio\nPittsburgh Pirates, for'whom he\nplayed 10 year*, He was chosen the\nleague's most valuable player In\n1036 ,when he batted .883. Bold to\nBrooklyn Dodgers In 1842. Vaughan\nvoluntarily retired In 1844 but returned In 184741, In 1049, he played\na short time with San Francisco\nSeals in tne Pacific Coast League.\nRoyals Clinch\nInternationa)\nLeague Pennant\nBy The Canadian frets\nMontreal Royals clinched the International Baseball League pennant\nSunday before a crowd of 12,592 on\ntheir home grounds by defeating\nBaltimore Orioles in both ends of\ndoubleheedar to make a clean\nsweep of their five-game ser\nSeores were 8-5 and 8-4.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1952 \u2014 7\nIndians Lose,Tougfiie ...\nCast off Wins for Yanks\nBedard To Royals\nNEW. WESTMINSTER, Sept 1\n(CP) - New Westminster Royals el\nthe Western Hockey League announced Saturday they have purchased defenceman Jim Bedard of\nChicago Black Hawks of the National League.\nOwner Kenney Mackentle slid\nhe bought Bedard outright \"with no\nstrings attached.\"\nSEVENTH FLIGHT\nSemi-final\nT. Wiginton, Nelson beat V. Hudson, Nelson.\nFinal\nJ, H. Bilow, Newport beat Wiginton, Nelson.\nSENIOR TOURNAMENT ,\nSeml-flnalt\nP.'Townshend, Nelson beat L. S.\nBradley, Nelson; W.' J. Biker, Trail\nbeat T. R. Wilson, Nelson.\nFlr.al\nTownshend,   Nelson   beat Biker,\nTrail.\nConsolation\nW. Anderson, Nelson beat N. Tat-\ntrie, New Denver; G. Broughton,\nNew Denver beat A. Sutherland,\nNelson.\nLeschuk, top-seeded player and\nfavored to take the title ,had play\ned steady par golf throughout until\nhis putter went haywire on the last\nthree holes of the match with Carlson.\n' Carlson was playing in the finals\nfor the sixth time in seven tournament tries. He has won the title\nthree times.\nJohnston, who is married to' former Nelson girl Betty Benwell and\nwell-known here, shot the hottest\nround of the tourney In a first\nround match against Leigh McBride\nof Nelson when he tourned the nine\nholet in a three-under-par 30.\n25-HOLE MATCH\nEasily the closest and longest\nmatch of the two-day event was\nmat between C. J. White of Kaslo\nand John Bllow in the second flight.\nThe veterans played 24 holes Sunday and were still deadlocked when\ndarkness postponed completion until Labor Day. BtloW finally won\nout on the 25th.\nAnita Henderson of Nelson, won\nthe women's1 consolation event\nwhile Bill Anderson took the prize\nIn the senior event consolation.\nThe tournament was under the\ndirection of match committee chairman Bruce Latremouille, Freddy\nThompson and president Jack\nYoung.\n. By The Asseelated Press\n- Cleveland's pennant hungry Indians suffered a heart-breaking defeat in the second game of a Labor\nDay doubleheader In St. Loult after\nEarly. Wynn had coasted to a 9-8\ntriumph in the first game. .\n. The Indians scored three runs in\n,the sixth Inning of the second game\nto assume a 4-2 .lead but before\nBrowns could Complete their half\not the sixth inning the game'was\ncalled because of rain. The score\nreverted to'ehd Of five Innings, giving St. Louis a 3-1 triumph.\n- Boston   discard   Ray   Scarborough, backed by a home-run barrage, gained sweet revenge at he\npitched Yankees to \u00ab 8-1 victory\nover his formbr Red Sex team-\nmates, The triumph enabled the\nYanks to pull V\/t garnet ahead\nof runnep>up Cleveland.\nJoe Collins smashed two homers\nand Yogi Berra one to end Yanks'\nbombardment against starter and\nloser Ellil Kinder. The first five\nhits of the game were extra-base\nblows.\nBROOK LEASEHOLDS\nA! twin bill between Brooklyn's\nNational League pace-setting Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies was\nalso rained'out but Brooks retained\ntheir nine game edge .over New\nYork Giants, held to a standoff by\nBoston Braves. Giants took the\nopener 3-1, but lost the second 8-1.\nIn other National League games,\nChicago split with Pittsburgh and\nSt. Louis divided,with Cincinnati.\nCubs won the opener. 6-0, and the\nPirates, the nightcap in 11 innings.\nSt Louis beat the Reds, 6-0, but\ndropped the aftermath, 3-2.\nWynn scattered seven hits in\nhanging up hli 18th victory for\nCleveland in the opener at St Louis.\nVic Wertz accounted for two of\nthe. safeties with his 19th and 20th\nhome runs. Luke Easter and Wally\nWestlake led Cleveland's 14-hlt attack with two-run homers. Clint\nCourtney's homer in the second inning accounted 'for the Browm' second game victory over Bob Lemon.\nSatchel Paige was the winner.\nLOPAT 8HARP\nEddie Lopat looked like the 21-\ngame winner of 1931 Sunday as he\npitched New York Yankees to a\n6-1 triumph over Washington Senators to protect Bombers' two game\nAmerican League lead over Cleveland Indians.\nLopat, hampered most of the season with a shoulder injury, restricted Senators to three hits in earning\nhis seventh victory to five defeats.\nIndians kept pace by downing the\nChicago White Sox, 6-3, behind\nMike Garcia who notched his 17th\nverdict.\nIn other games, St. Louis clipped\nDetroit ,7-4, and Philadelphia and\nBoston halved a twin bill. Red Sox\nthrashed Bobby Shantz. 11-1, in the\nopener but the A's won the second\ngame, 2-0, back of Harry Byrd.\nBrooklyn's   pennant-bound\nDodgers opened up a nine game\nlead   In   the   National    League,\nsmearing   runner-up   New   York\nGiants,   9-1.   In   other   National\nLeague garnet, Pittsburgh upset\nSt. Loult, 4-2, Philadelphia traded  shutouts with   Boston, losing\nthe  first,  1-0,  but  winning  the\ntecond, 4-0. Chicago and Cincinnati also divided, the Cubs taking\nthe opener, 4-2, and the Redo the\nnightcap, 6-6,\nIt was Harold .(Skinny) Brown,\nobscure righthander of Chicago\nWhite Sox, who Jolted Cleveland's\nAmerican League pennant ambitions Saturday night as he gained\ncredit for an 11-6 triumph over the\nIndians.\nWhile they was going on front-\nrunning New York Yankees downed Washington 6-4, St. Louis shaded\nDetroit 2-1 and Boston and Philadelphia were rained out after three\ninnings of play with Red Sox ahead\n6-0.\nSal Maglie kept alive New York's\nslim National League pennant hopes\nby pitching Giants to a 4-3 triumph\nOver Brooklyn Dodgers. St. Louts\nEsks Rally in 4th Quarter.., \u25a0' -,\nStamps Halted\nEDMONTON, Sept. 1 (CP)\u2014Ed-\nmonton Eskimos,'coming from behind in the fourth quarter, won 17-\n10 over Calgary Stampeders tonight\nfor their first Western Interprov-\ninclal Football Union victory. The\nwin moved Esks into third place in\nthe league standings.\nA Claude Arnoldno-Joe Aguirre\nforward passing combination gave\nEdmonton two converted touchdowns and Aguirre kicked for two\nmore points as Eskimos rocked\nStampeders with their first defeat\nafter three straight victories, had\ngiven them the c&nJerenca leid,\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers are In\ntecond place with two victories\nand a tie, Edmonton third with a\nwin and a tie end Roughrldert,\nWHITE SOX GET\nCINGY FIELDER\nCHICAGO, -Sept. 1 (AP) - The\nChicago White Sox announced- to\nday they had bolstered their bench\nby acquiring outfielder Hank Edwards from the Cirieinnati Reds of\nthe National League,\nThe Sox said'they received Edwards in a trade for a Sox player\nto he named during the coming\nWinter. Before the deal could be\nmade, Edwards was waived by all\nNational League clubs, the Sox\nsaid.\nEdwards, a left-handed hitter,\nhas a batting average ot .287 this\nseason and a major league average\nof .284 over the last 11 years.\nEdwards has been in the Na\ntional League for three years at\nChicago, Brooklyn and Cincinnati.\nBefore that he was with Cleveland\nin the American League. He is 33.\nWestern champions last year, In\nthe basement with one win In\nfour garnet, ' r\n3rd 8TRAIQHT FOR STAMPS\nCALGARY, Aug,. 31 (CP)-Cal-\ngary Stampeders rolled to their\nthird straight Western conference\nvictory here Saturday night when\nthey downed a battling band of\nEdmonton Eskimos 14-7 before e\ncrowd of some 12,000 at Mewata\nStadium.\nIt was an auspicious home opener\nfor the Calgary club which opened\nthe season with two victories oh\nthe road and now holds the league\nlead with six points.\nJACOBS TOPS DOBB6\nREGINA, Sept 1 (CP) - Winnl-\npeg Blue Bombers today came from\nbehind to - defeat Saskatchewan\nRoughrlders 16-8 and consolidate\ntheir hold on Second place in the\nWestern Football Conference.\nPlaying coach Glenn Dohbs came\noff the Regina bench in the last\nquarter after Winnipeg took the\nlead and the ace quarterback ot\nlast year's Western champions fill-\ned the air with passes,\nBut an old rival, quarterback\nJack Jacobs of Winnipeg, also got\ninto the game in the final quarter\nand it was Jacobs' great forward-\nJ passing display that assured Winnipeg of victory.\nOther results;\nBIG FOUR\nToronto 38, Hamilton 18\nO.R.F.U.\nSarnla 45, Balmy Beach* 0\n1\nMOTOROLA\nCar Radios\n$39.95 to $79.95\nWe pay HALF of the Installation,\nRecapping\n600 x 16\u201419.30\n\u2022 *;\nSeat Covers\nPlastic $19.95\nFibre    $11.95\nJOHNSON\nTIRE COMPANY\n716 W, 2nd .\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nHENRY MARTELL\nALTA. CHAMP\nCALGARY, Sept. 1 (CP)-Steady\nplaying Henry Martell, professional\nfrom Edmonton Highlands, today\ntucked away his fourth' Alberta\nOpen golf championship with a 72-\nhole total of 71-73-70-69\u2014283,\nMarteH's\" regular pace gave him\na four-stroke margin over runner-\nup Art Donaldson, Calgary Earl\nGrey pro.\nBob. Kidd) Edmonton amateur\nwho matched pace with Martell in\nthe first two rounds, slipped today\nto finish with a 71-78-77-74\u2014295.\nDoug Sllvefbefg of Red Deer, former Canadian junior champion, led\nthe amateurs entered with a 293.\nThird among the professionals was\nBob Wvlie of the Calgary Earl Grey\nwith 289. . .   .  \u2022\nVON NIDA AUSTRALIAN\nOPEN GOLF CHAMPION\nPERTH, Australia, Sept. 1 (API-\nNorman Von Nida, Australian golf\nprofessional, broke Gene Sarazen'3\n16-year-old record by winning the\nAustralian open title today with a\n278. Sarazen won the 1936 open with\n282.     \u25a0'\nVon Nida shot 69-70-71-98 and finished the four rounds 14 strokes under the Lake Karrinyup course's\npar of 73.\nHARD LUCK HURLER\nWENATCHEE,, Sept. 1 (AP) -\nHard luck Frankle Dasso set a Western International League record today for losses In a single season as\nhe suffered nis'24th\/setback in the\nopener of a Labor Day 'twin bill.\ntrounced Pittsburgh 12-2, Chicago\nbeat Cincinnati 5-3 and Philadelphia captured a twi-night twin-bill\nfrom Boston, 4-2 and 8-6.- (For complete results, standings, see page\nnine.)\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT PUBLISHED OR DISPLAYED BY THE IIOUOR CONTROL\nBOARD OR BY THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSUPEB-CUSmON\nAU-WEATHR\nferee supported Boudlcy add award*\ned him thi hole. \\'   <.,\nAfterwards, Cimpbejl declined to\nsay anything about the incident,\nBouchey said he was' \"very lucky\nand very surprised\" with fall victory.\nHe added that he didn't have any acceptance speech prepared and that\nhe had been scheduled to be back at\nwork Thursday. \"   '\nC-mpbeli admitted frankly \u2014 and\nthe crowd loved him for- it \u2014- that\nhe had been wondering at the 33rd\nhole what he would say when he received the Earl Grey Cup. \"I wanted\nturned around and said to'Campbell this one badly, perhaps tee badly,\"\n\"I didn't give you that putt.\" The re- he said.\nNo idle boast! ACTUAL C.N.E. LABOUR PAY COUNT PROVES AGAIN\nMORE PiOfU ME Of\/ GOOOYEAR. TtRES\n7^\nOn tho thousands, of Canadian cars that wore parked at the C.N.E.\ntbOrewere ,1.-\nMORE GOODYEAR: TIRES THAN ANY OTHER KIND I\nFor'several years an independent research Organization has made an\nactual count of tires on can at the \"Ex\" on Labour Day. In every one\nof these annual surveys, Goodyear has led all competitors by a wide margin!\nHen once again is proof that Canadian motorists prefer Goodyear\nTires. . .   ;_' \u25a0\nDoesn't it stand to reason that tho tires preferred by most motorists\nare, the tins for you to buy? Set) your Goodyear. Dealer soonl\n*:. C v-.;.\/:-:\u2022;,.>;-:\u25a0'\u25a0-.,\n \u25a0;0i\nGIANT PUFFBALL ... Norman Terry, 7, holds this,bushel-\n\u2022Izo puffball grown on e farm at Hllltburgh, Ont\u201e 20 miles North-\neast of Guelpn. The mushroom-type product, weighing 16\/2 pounds,\nprovided a meal for farmer Devld Brydaon end his neighbors'.\n\u25a0       j  '       '\u25a0-\u2022.'\u25a0-    .- '-,,-'-   - '      \u2014CP photo,\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON TUB DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER2, 1952\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Morning Revue\n7:30\u2014News\n7:85\u2014Morning. Revue\n8:00\u2014News\n8:i0\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Consumer's Corner\n(COO^-Western Fred's Ranche\n0:30\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:45\u2014Musical Varieties   .\n10:00\u2014Riders of the Purple-Sage\n10:15\u2014Picnic With Pat\n10:45\u2014Guestin' With Kesten\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Music Time\n11:15\u2014Date With D'Arcy\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:20\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:65\u2014Behind the News\nliOO-^Concert Hour\n2:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:45\u2014Allison Grant\n8:00\u2014Musicale\n:i5\u2014Waltz Time\n30\u2014Varna of the Sea\n45\u2014Novel Tune\n;00\u2014Musical .Program\n:30\u2014Children's Program\n45\u2014Pacific News\n55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n00\u2014Show Time\n15\u2014John Fisher\niZOWnterhational Commentary\n30\u2014The Music Box\n:45\u2014Sports Newi\n:50\u2014News\n00\u2014Drama of Medicine\n15\u2014Hour of St. Francis\n:80\u2014Cavalcado of Melody\n00\u2014Newi\n15\u2014News Roundup\n:30\u2014Leicester Square\n00\u2014Talk on Mexico\n:15-Club Date\n30-^Passport to Adventure\n:00^-Musle by Mantovaal\n:00\u2014News     ,    ' ' -\nilrMEuropean Traveller\n:80\u2014The Big Time    ,\n;00-\"NEWaV Night Cap\nGBG PROGRAMS\n'     PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3\/1952\n8:00\u2014Newa\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC Newa Commentary\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy. ' \u25a0   ;\nfcSO-iaura'Limited\n9:45-Muslcal Varieties\n10:00\u2014Morning. Visit\n10:15\u2014At home with the LennickB\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concart'\n2:30\u2014Musical Program\n2:45\u2014Our Babies\n2:66\u2014Women's Commentary\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Waltz Time\n3:30\u2014U.N. Album\n3:45\u2014Novel Time\n4:00\u2014Opera Stars\n4:15\u2014Piano Pops\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45\u2014Don Messer\n5:00\u2014Musie Won't Hurt Yon\n5:20\u2014International Commentary\n5:30\u2014Question Box\n5:45\u2014News   '\n8:00\u2014Neighborly News\n6:15\u2014Introduction to  Wed. Night\n6:30\u2014Strings\n7:00-rNewe\n7:15\u2014News-Roundup\n7:S0-Reeital: ' ,\n8:00\u2014The Glory Road\n8:30\u2014Aaron's Road\n9:15-RecitalofLieder\n9:30\u2014Organ and Harpsiehord\nlOiOO-^News.\n10:18\u2014Supplement\n10:30\u2014-Muslcland-\nU:00-UJJ. Today\nll:16-Muslcland\nll:45-Night Cap\nlil:57-News\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nI. Any fruit\ndrink\ni. Dibble\ni  7. The dye\nindigo\n8. Scope\n10. Species\n\/, .-\u25a0\u2022 of pepper\nllv Simpleton\nIS. Mature\n14. Species of\nflowering\ntree\n15. Nickel\n(sym.)\n18. Wise\n18. In what\nmanner\n19. Crypt\n31. Winnows\n22. Extinct\n. blrd(N.Z.)\nSB. Forbid   '\n24. Fragment\n26. Long, protective eoat\n29. Owns\n30. Relative\n31. Greek letter\n82. Having\na handle\n84. Young dog\n36. Aim\n36. Lumps\nofearth\nSB. Particle\n39. Mature\n40. Near (Scot.)\n41. Affirmative\nreply\nDOWN\n1. Poker stake\nI. Perish\n8,AddiHonte 1% Something\na bunding\n4.Aball\n{.Melody\n6. Liking\nT.God of\nthese*\n\u2022.Negatively\nchargedlOn\n10. Slam\n12. Steers wIM\n(naut.)\nM.Paet\n16. Cease\nW.LUXOB\nomitted\nII. Quick\nfe.KindofreU\n2*. Fellow\nfensegeh. ,\nIndoohins\neity   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nJ J. Owinf '.'.-\n7. Discharge\n-  through\ntne pores\nSB. Tears\nSO. Oil of\nrose petals\nSt. Pilaster\nftt.BxptaneB\nallghtly '\n86. Weep\n87. Recline\n32\n35\nWA\na\nm\nm\nso\npr\nn\nn\nm\nn?\n1\nw\nIII\n8KUNK PET \u25a0\".'. . Elrfier, a three-month-old. skunk owned by.\nMrs. 8. Evans of Winnipeg, reaches for a bit of cheese offered by\nthree-year-eld Danny Mason, a young playmate. Elmer also likes\ngooseberry \"Jam,, bread and milk. Mrs, Evans says Elmer li clean,\nhousebroken and doesn't sharpen his claws on furniture or climb\ncurtains. And, more Important, Elmer has been deodorized.\u2014(CP\nphoto;)-. '- \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-,-\u25a0- -- :.,..-;.;\n\"G'WAN.NO PICTURES\"'.'-.. Reddy.a net fox owned by i2-'year\nold Sharon Robertson of London, Orit,, gets-temperamental at the\nsight of the photographer. Roddy was enjoying the lee oreamoone\nand didn't want to be Interrupted^ '\"      \"- '\nA happy General Dwlght Elsenhower acknowledges the cheere\nof the crowd with a wave or his hand as he arrived at LaGuardla\nairport from Chicago. With him are his wife and one-man welcoming committee composed of Thomas E. Dewey, New York governor),\nwho was so Instrumental In helping him gain the GOP presidential\nnomination. Ike Is In New York to address the American Legion\nnational convention.\u2014Central Precs' Canadian.\nDAILY GBYPIOQUOTE-Here's bow to work ft;\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIff LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply etands for another. In this example A is user)\nfor the three Ms, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters, epos-\ntrophies, the length .end formation of the words are aH hints,\nBach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nYEU   VKH8   HI   OUAHOTTN   HM   X AN A Mi\nSWHN    KH BAT-HI A. V\nSaturday'. Cryptoqootw WHERE HB PLTJNGES IN HE\nMAKES A WHIRLPOOL AMD ALL STREAM SOWN TO IT-\nCOLERIDGE.    .\nROLE IN MOVIE . . . Carmen\nGlngrat, 12-year-old daughter of\na Montreal taxi-driver, has a role\nIn the Alfred. Hitchcock movie \"I\nConfess,\" being made In Quebeb\nCity. She will play with such\nHollywood stars as. Montgomery\nCllft, Anne Baxter and John\nHodlak. She plays: the piano and\nsays she has been Interested In\ndrama for \"some time.\" \u2014 (CP\nphoto.)    ,  . . ..\n'si:'   I    ..       \u25a0'\u25a0-'\u2022\u25a0.\nTwinJelSpllfs,\nSpectator! Hurt\nDETROIT, Sept. 1 (CP)-A horrified crowd of-51,000 Saturday saw\na speeding twin-jet fighter fall\napart in mid-air and crash, killing\nits two occupants.\nFive spectators at Detroit's International Aircraft Exposition were\ninjured, none seriously, as the\nthundering F-89 Scorpion crashed\nas it was doing a \"flyrby\" over an\nExposition crowd. S\nThe pilot and radar observer-who\nwere killed were identified as Major Dohald Adams, 31, of Mt. Clem-.\nens, Mich., and Capt. Edward Kelly,\n34, of New York city.\nTwo passenger trains had to brake\nsharply to avoid smashing into the\nwreckage. -\nThe five, persons injured were\nstruck by wing fragments as the\nIjilane roared over the crowd.\nHong Kong ,at the mouth of the\u2122\nCanton River, is the largest safe\nanchorage  between  Shanghai  and\nIndio-China.    '\n:-r:'-'is:-i-;-'-i-\"\n, 'V . - ;1 'v!V ;!.;'\n s--f\n\"Wf\n\/o$6\n'1 PERSOHO-PiRSON WANT ADS\n\\     FOR QUICK'RESULTSV\nPhone 144\nDeadline) for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\n'.'.. HOLDSWORTH - To Mr. and\n'\u25a0\u25a0Mrs. F. C. Holdsworth of Kimberley at McDougall Hospital, Aug. 21,\na son.\nBROWN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. L.\nBrown of Kimberley, at McDougall\nHospital, Aug. 22, a daughter.\nPEARCE-\u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. David Pearce of Meadowbrook, at the\nMcDougall Hospital in Kimberley,\nAug, 25, a daughter.\t\nHELP WANTED\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nWANTED \u2014 TYPIST WITH\nsome bookkeeping experience. Shorthand not re\nquired. Permanent position\nfor qualified applicant. Apply Box 4085, Doily News\nWANTED\u2014 SALESLADY FOR\nchildren's wear. Well-paid,\npermanent employment for\nsuitable applicant Box 4161\nDoily News.\nWAITRESS \u2014 MUST BE ABLE TO\nrelieve cook on days off. Board\nand accommodation provided.\nGood wages. Apply Immediately\nto Yale Lead and Zinc Mines Ltd.,\nAinsworth.\nWANTED-MILLWRIGHT, FULLY\nexperienced; able to hammer and\nlook after saws as well. Top wages.\nApply Halston Planing Mills Ltd.,\nKamloops, B.C.\nWANTib-iOMPANlbN HOUSE-\nkeeper for elderly lady in country\nhome at Keremeos. For details\nphone 132-X In Nelson.\nPOSITION OPEN F\u00b0R BRIGHT\nyoung girl as junior clerk. Apply\nImperial Bank.\nMAN TO OPERATE POWER SA^rV\nfor 5 or 6 days, also helper. Box\n4480 Daily News\n[XPERIENCED MECHANIC.\nSteady employment for right man.\nApply Empire Motors.\nWANTED - WAITRESSES AND\nkitchen help. Apply Armson's\nCafe.  .\nAGENTS WANTED\nATTENTION ALL SALESMEN -\nFor full time or aide line, fast\nselling plastic signs and specialties. Make bigger money selling\ndirect. A reply stating particulars\nof experience, lines carried, territory and past lines handled, brings\nyour first free samples. Consolidated Tower Co. Ltd., 4263 St.\nCatherine St West, Montreal P.O..\nSALESMEN \u2014 ABSOLUTELY\nmake $50 a day. New. sensational\n--^ittiUtiritem for every *>od,bever-\n' age outlet, etc. Samples furnished.\n' Utility A Co, 53-CPI West Jack-\nion, Chicago 4.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\n\u25a0' KATE RICE, DECEASED\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat all persons having claims\nagainst Kate Rice, deceased, late of\nAppledale, B.C., who died at New\nDenver, B.C on the 30th day of\nJuly, 1952, are required to file\nparticulars thereof with the undersigned solicitors tor the executrix\non or before the 24th day of September, 1952, after which date the\nexecutrix will proceed to> distribute\nthe assets of the said deceased\namong the persons entitled thereto,\nhaving regard only to-the clajms\nwhich shall then have been filed as\nabove required.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this 20th\nday of August, 1952.\nO'SHEA, GAItLAND k GANSNER,\nP.O. Box 490. Nelson, B.C.,\nSolicitors for the Executrix.\nRENTALS\nBUSINESS MAN, MARRIED, NO\ndependents, transferred to Nelson\nwishes to rent small house or\nsuite. Please phone Mr. Bryan at\n144 between 9 and 5.\nBUSINESS LADY -REQUIRES\nhousekeeping room. Phone 144 between 9 and 5 p.m.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED-WORK FOR D-8 CATS.\nApply F. A. Dobbin & Sons, New\nDenver, B.C., or phone 97-X New\nDenver,    \t\ntxp^^NTasr*ciQti-5Fi,Era5\nto children any age, country home,\nschool bus. Box 4176 Daily Newa.\nSXnd and grAVel, top soil\ndelivered,' basements dug. Write\nBox 127, Salmo.        \t\nwTLt cAre for WvAlId lAdy\nta my. home. Apply Dally News\nBox 4496.\nMAN.WITH POWER SAW SEEKS\nwork cutting wood. etc. Box 2858.\nDaily News, Nelson.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR OUTSTANDING QUALITY\nin calves, used Polled Shorthorn\nSires. Snowshoe Ranch offers\nyoung Sires at all times. C. Flick,\nEdgewood.\nCOW FOR SALE \u2014 HAVE TWO\ncows, one must be sold. Good\nmilkers. Paul Voykln, Crescent\nValley.\nPRICED FOR QUICK SALE. -\nGood milking cow, freshened 6\nweeks ago. Peter Dechkoff,\nAppledale, B.C.\n1. North Shore (% mile from\nferry), 2 bedroom bungelow, 4\nyears  old,  fully  modern,  full \u2022\n.concrete basement, oil furnace,\ninsulated. Beautfiul location.\nSome terms. <fXfi'9(lA\nPriced at     -PD4UU\n2. A Home in Rosemont, bungalow type with two unfinished\nbedrooms upstairs. %7ilrtft\nPriced at   .'. '...    *'-vUU\n3. 5^ acres, one mile -from\ntown. Main road frontage and\none very old house in poor state\nof repair and another house\nmuch better, but needs some\nfixing. This would be a splendid\nsite for a tourist t^lflA\ncamp. Priced at      <P\u00ab\u00bbOWU\n4.' Tourist Camp on Main Lake.\nSix units, store and residence,\nboats, dtc. 47 acres. Good re-\n2SSZ35? $IM00\n5. Large older type home in uphill section. Newly renovated.\nOccupied at present as three\napartments. Some 47^'tis\nterms Price    .p\/OOV\n8. Cottage on two lots. Garden\nand   fruit  trees  in  Rosemont\np\u00a3eda,     $2700\n7. Bungalow (2 bedrooms) 3\nmiles west ot Nelson on Highway. Requires finishing but\nvery livable. Modern kitchen,\n\u25a0etc., insulated. Owner will fin-\n\"tah for a'mSbTeKtrprlfee. Price\"\nS& :  $4100\n8. Good V.L.A. holding, 3%\nacres with new 2 bedroom house\nnearly finished and also old\nhouse rented. 8 miles SCKAfi\nWest of Nelson     \u00abPOuUU\n9. Cottage unfinished on Cottonwood Creek, 1 mile from City.\nMaterial in house to finish.\nOwner's health rea- COOAA\nson for selling. Cash   \u2022P^V\"\n10. Dairy Farm. 3 miles from\nNelson, 200 acres, two houses,\nusual   farm   buildings.    Some\nfeat $14,700\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nBox 26 Phone 26!\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR RENT - 2. ROOM SUITE\nwith bath, business couple preferred; Phohe, 1325-X.\nREQUIRED BY GOVERNMENT\nemployee by Sept 1. 2 bedroom\nhouse. Phone 634-X.\nWANTED - 3 OR 4 RM. SUlfft BY\nSept. 13 for adults.. Phone 1108-L.\nR66MS FOR 'RENT. (JENTLEMBK\npreferred Ph. 351-Y.     '\nBEDROOM FOR MM, Sl9 SILICA\nGentlemen only.\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nInternational\nT044 For Sale\nWith Isaacson Dozer and\nSkiddihg Winch in A1 .condition. Price on application,\nand machine may be seen\nat-\nBURMIS LUMBER CO.\nBurmis, Alta.\nMACHINERY\nUsed FariB\nEquipment\nSale\n1 Farmoll Tractor\nwith plow ond snow\nplow \u2014$1150\n1 Pony Tractor\nwith plow mower ond\nsnow plow \u2014 $1200\n1 Cockshutt Horse\nDisc\nLike new \u2014 $55\n1 Massey Harris\n2-Horse Mower\nLike new \u2014 $125\n1 Ferguson Tractor\nDouble Action Disc\nLike new \u2014 $150\nUsed Caterpillar\nEquipment\n1 RD-6 Wide Gauge\nwith cable angle dozer\ncompletely overhauled.\n.  $5000 ............ , -;\n1 D-7\nwith hydraulic angle\ndozer \u2014 $9000\n1 D-4\nwith hydraulic angle\ndozer and hyster winch.\n$4000\n1\u2014395 GF.M.  Semi-\nPortable Sullivan Compressor\nLike new.\nORCHARD PROPERTIES FOR\nSALE: Total of 130 acres of irrigable orchard together with full\nline of equipment including Tractors, Sprayers, Trucks, Sprinkler\nEquipment etc. Also some bush\nand range land. For full particulars apply to LAKEVIEW ORCHARDS LIMITED, OKANAGAN\nCENTRE, B.C.   ,\nROAN GELDING, WEIGHT 1750\nGood logging horse. For particulars write John Marshall, Kaslo.\nB.C.\ns\nFOR SALE - SHETLAND PONY,\nwith complete outfit. Will trade\nfor cattle. Apply Dally News\nBox 3B35.\nGOOD C6W 'FOR SALS. FreSH-\nens In one week. Paul S. Popotf,\nSlocan Park, B.C.\n\u25a0\n-\nI\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\n,   lie line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n81.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions)   Box numbers  ltc extra.   Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL} - NOTICES,\nTENDERS. Etc.\u201420c per lirie,\nfirst   insertion.   16c, per   Una\neach subsequent Insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES ' LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed  Here)\nBy carrier, per week, ;\nin advance .80\nBy carrier, per ye^f        $15.60'\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month         ...    $ 1,25\nThree months        375 |\nSix months         7^0\nOne year 15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month      _.      1.00\nThree months       2.75\nSix months  _;       5.50\nOne year       10.00\nWhere extra pottage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFOR SALE \u2014 20 ACRE FARM AT\nWlnlaw. close to highway, tt mile\nfrom school and store. Good\nbuildings and Irrigation, \\ excel\nlent soil. Apply to Mr. Bill Pooha-\nchoff, South Slocan, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 40 ACRES LAND.\nCan be sold In 20 acre lots with\napprox. 700 ft. frontage on Nelson, Castlegar Highway, OH miles\nfrom Nelson. Box 367, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - SPACIOUS 4 BED-\nroom home In the uphill district.\nImmediate possession. For particulars phone 423-R.\nFOR SALE - NEW 4 ROOM BUN-\ngalow. Complete modern plumbing and wiring. Apply Box 2974\nDaily News.\n12V4 ACRES 6F LAND, 5 It* HAY,\nnew 4 room modern house with\nbath. Running water. $4500. Write\nto A. W Baker, Winlaw, B.C,\nfor sale \u2014 Home At proC-\nter; $1800 cesh. Apply Dally Sews\nBox 3716.\nfor sale - Corner building\nlot in City limits. For particulars\ncall 811 Cedar.\nFOR' SALE \"- 6 R06M HOME.\n$7000 full price. $2750 cash to ac-\nceptable boyer. Phone 1412-R,\nWANTED - 2   L6*S.    PREFER^\nably in Falrylew. Phone 712-R.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nP.O  BOX 388. NELSON. B.C.\nRAWLEIGH PRODUCTS-NICK N\nKazakoff, Genl Delivery, Nelson\nFOR EXPERT PAINTING AND\npaperbanglng. ph A Cook. 681-X\nWAWANESA  MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsuranoe Co., D  L Kerr. Agent\nALMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C P R\nDepot Clean rooms and reasonable rates. Vancouver, B.C\n& Equipment Co. Ltd!\n623 Railway St     P.O. Box 110\nNelson, B.C.\nThe new regulations are requiring more protection and we are\nin a position to service you with\napproved tire extinguishers.\n5-gallon, pump-type,\nHolden Fire Pack\nwith dual nozzle \u2014 $25.00\n1 quart carbon tetrachloride\nFire Extinguishers\u2014$16.50\n5-lb., 6-lb., 10-lb. arid 15-lb.\ncarbon dioxide\nFire Extinguishers\nWe have supplied over 15 mills\nIn the -district with this equipment and we are familiar with\nyour requirements,\nPLEASE WRITE, WIRE\nOR PHONE\nThe\n\u2022 '\"'Selkirks\nEquipment,\nand Supply Co., Ltd.\nPhone 1580 P.O.Box 81\n820 VERNON ST.\nMort Browne, Manager\nNATIONAL MACHINBRY\"cO~\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS! EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville' Island. Vancouver 1, B.C.\nCATERPILLAR RD8 COMPLETE\nwith belt pulley . drive, now\nengine, priced low Bayes Equip-\nnvnt Co., Cranbrook, B.C.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nRAMP\nBody and Fender Works\nDistributors For:\nPhil Wood hydraulic hoists and\nbodies fpr truck or trailer 6\ntypes. 20 models 2 to 40 tons\ncapacity Pumps, power take-\noffs, universale, etc\nPhone 185       556 Josephine St\nNelson, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nHOLTS PISTON-SEAL.RESTORE\ncompression add engine power,\nreduce oil consumption and -stop\npiston-slap. Simply remove plugs\nand squeeze Piston Seal into plugholes. For free details write -Major Distributors, Room 827, Dept.\n8, 736 Granville St., Vancouver 2.\nFOR'SALE - '47 ONE TON MER-\ncury, foglight ond heater, excellent condition throughout. $1200\nfor quick sale, can be financed.\nApply 1812 Stanley St or phone\n526-L-l.  .\nFOR SALE - 1951 B.S.A. 500 C.C-\ntwin motorcycle. 'Low mileage,\naccessories. A-l cond. See Doug\nBrown, Sam Brown's Bike Shop.\n' Nelson.\nFOR SALE -\"1949 PLYM6UTH\nConcord 2-door sedan, 36,000 miles\nGood condition. Apply A. W!\nNixon. Blueberry \u2022 Creek, B.C. or\nphone 2331. Castlegar,\t\nFOR SALE - 1939 INTERNATlON-\nal % to 1 ton. Flat de*ck, motor\noverhauled, good tires, licensed.\n$450. Apply Blewett Store, Blew-\nett, B.C.\nNELSON DAItY NEWS. TM*SnAY \u00ab-\u00ab>T..\u2022\u00bb  i**,? _*. o\nMAJOR BASEBALL RESULTS\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW   L\nBrooklyn ..,    83\nNew York     78\nSt. Louis        74\nPet.   GB\n.684-t\n.591- 9\n.565-12\n.547-14\u00ab\n\u2022493-t2H4\n.434-29\n.432-2914\n.201-48%\nFOR SALE - 1950 METEOR CUS-\ntom Sedan. Air conditioner, radio,\nnew tires, clean excellent mechanical condition, one owner.\nPhone 816-L-5.\nFOR SALE - '48 PONTIAC 4\ndoor, 2-toneJ green, all accessories, recently overhauled, lovely\ncondition. Phone 620-Y after 6.\nFOR SALE - PUMPING OUTFIT,\n1 h.p. engine,- V* inch pump. $50.00.\nWright's Garage, Kinnalrd, B.C.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nSPIN, DRY EASY WASHER, SELL\nor trade for piano, lroner or livestock or would rent; several other\nitems including Boy Scout outfit,\nsize 12, organ, gas and electric\nirons, coal oil stove with oven,\ncoal oil heater, pocket books, crib,\nnew mattress, priced reasonably\nor will trade. Box 4177 Dally News.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C Phone\nPacific 6357.\nFOR SALE - 1 H.P. FREEZING\nuhit, 1 blower coil, 1 show case, 6'\nwith fair coil and two rows, meat\ntrays, 1 meat block 3'x3\\ 1-18\"\nsteel furnace with automatic oil\nburner, 2 Invisible 10 gallon gas\npumps. Apply F. Eremenko, Box\n23, Castlegar, B.C,\nPIPE AND FITTINGS, W UP;\nS.S; pulleys, belting, small electric\nmotors and gas engines; 5-ton B.B.\nwinch, used sinks and wash basins,\n78 mill chain. COLUMBIA TRADING CO. 902 Front Street\nVerY Well Known mAkH vac-\nuum Cleaner, regularly serviced\nsince new. Worth $110\/ Will\nsacrifice $25.00. Apply Box 3276\nDaily News,\nFOR SALE - THE FOLLOWING\narticles reasonably priced for\nquick sale, gas range, one single\nlaundry tub. Phone 596-X or apply 804 Silica Street\nFOR SALE \u2014 BABY'S HIGH\nchair, stroller as new; Warever\nset flourescent piano or bed\nlamp. Phone 789-R.\nFOR SALE - 1950 STUDEBAKER\nChampion Sedan, low mileage,\nfully \"equipped. Phone 790-Y or\ncall 913 Hall St.\nFOR SALE - '39 SEDAN. EX-\ncellent condition, $175.00. Apply\n1304 Robertson Ave.\nMUST) SELL-'4T FORD DBLuXB\nSedan. A-l shape. Phone 161-L2.\n1949 PONTIAC. SPOTLESS. SNAP,\n230 Baker St, Ph. 1521-R.\n*i5o, 1938 Ford K ton HceNce.\n95 High St Ph. 451-Y.\nFOR SALE - '47 HUB! SEDAN.\nMaroon. A-l shape. Phone 1521-R\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METAL\nor iron. Any quantity. Top price\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C\ncedAr poleS - All clAssIS\nand lengths; Larch poles. Kootenay Forest Products Ltd.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 16-FT. CANVAS-\ncovered cedar canoe. .$60. Phone\n426-Y.\nP5R\"\n\"SALE - JOHrJSON'   OUT-\nboard motor.  A-l  condition\nquick sale. Phone 1330-L.\nfor\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - 1 PR. PLASTIC RIMMED\nglasses In Falrview Sat. Phrne\n1033-X.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nPhiladelphia     70\nChicago    66\nBoston          56   78\nCincinnati  57   75\nPittsburgh'    39   85\n8ATURDAY\nChicago        001 040 000-8 io  0\nCincinnati        000 001 110-3   4   2\nSchultz, Kllppsteln (8) and Chiti;\nRaffensberger, Schmits (7) Smith\n(8) and Semlnlck.\nPhiladelphia . 000 001 012\u20144 12   1\nBoston 000 001 100\u20142  7   2\nDrews   and   Burgess;   Burdette,\nCole (9) and Burris.\nPhiladelphia . 000 402 110-8 12  0\nBoston 000 201 SOM   7   1\nMeyer, Hansen (4) and Burgess;\nSpahn, Jones (6) Cole (7) Chipman\n(8) Johnson (9> end Cooper.\nNew York  001 300 000\u20144   7   0\nBrooklyn    ..,   110 100 000\u20143 10   1\nMaglle and Westrum; Rutherford,\nMoore (5) Black (8) and Campanula.\nSt Louis   105 020 004-12 15   1\nPittsburgh       000 110 000- 2   5   0\nStaley   and   D.   Rice;   Necciai,\nWaugh (3) and Garagiola.\nSUNDAY\nNew York  000 000 001\u20141   5   0\nBrooklyn     204 021 OOx\u20149 13  0\nHearn, Corwln (5) Connelly (5)\nKennedy (8) and Westrum, Yvars\n(7); Loes and Campanella.\nPhiladelphia .. 000 000 000-4)   3  0\nBoston    000 OOP 001\u20141   8   0\nRidzik and Burgess; Jester and\nCooper.\nPhiladelphia .. 000 000 004\u20144   t  0\nBoston  000 000 000-0   3   0\nKonstanty and Burgess; Surkont\nand Burris.\nSt Louis  100 100 000\u20141 - 9  2\nPittsburgh   103 000 OOX\u20144   8   1\nMiller, Yuhas (6) and D. Rice;\nDickson and McCullough.\nChicago    000 100 300\u20144 10  0\nCincinnati  000 200 000\u20142  8   1\nMinner, Leonard (7) and Atwell;\nFodblelan and Seminick.\nAMERICAN\nLEAGUE\nW   L    Pet   GB\nNew York  .\n     77   54   .588-\nCleveland ...\n    75   57   568- 214\nBoston\n    69   59   .539- m\nPhiladelphia\n    69   81   .531- V&\nChicago\n    67   62   .518- 9\nWashington\n    87   84   .611\u201410\nSt. Louis ....\n....    55   78   .414-23\nDetroit \t\n.. ..   43   87   .331\u201433H\nSATURDAY\nWashington\n.. 010 001 011-4 12   0\nNew York .\n101 200 20X-6 10   0\nGumpert, Johnson (5), Haynes (7)\nand Grasso; Reynolds and Berra.\nCleveland '.... 00 0200 400\u2014 8 15   2\nChicago . 107 201 OOx\u201411   9   0\nFeller, Harris (3) Wilks (4) Gro-\nmek (7) Brlssie (8) and Hegan,\nTipton (6); Brown,\" Kennedy (7)\nAloma (7) and Lollar.\nDetroit   100 000 000\u20141   2   0\nSt. Louis  000 100 Olx\u20142   5   0\nHoutteman and Ginsberg; Pillette\nand Courtney.\nBoston   at   Philadelphia,   called\nfourth, rain.\n8UNDAY\nWashington\nNew York\nGET A\n**$Moo^.iwm\nIAGARA\nSPENCER ADANAC CREAM ENA-\nmel wood and coal, range, warming oven, water jacket, new\ngrates and fire-racks. Ph. 1447-L.\nMIXMASTER, BED, BOOKS~OF\nKnowledge, tin heater, gas lamp.\nApply 1302 Crossley. Ave. Phone\n1043-Y.\nCRESS, WART REMOVER -\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS\nFOR SALE - STUDIO LOUNflE,\nwine cotton covering, $40.00.\nPhone 816-L-5.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE\ncial low prices. Active Trading\nCo. 935 E Cordova St., Vancouver\nRADIO AND PHONOGRAPH FOR\nsale. Phone 672-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014HERRMOM JORDON\n(1803) Violin and case. Ph. 1330-L.\nMICRO N.I C HEARING AIDS-\nWijte P O Box 39. Nelson. B.C\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAUCTIONEER\nAUC.TI.6NEER - REEVE pAXSflN,\nBox 487, Fernie. Anywhere in B.C.\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W   WIDDOWSON S C6., AS-\nseyers 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH.   S   ELMES.   ROSSLAND.   B.C\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine' Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking   Phone Rossland, 171.\n CARPENTERS\t\nDOUG GALLAHER. GENERAL\nCarpentry  Phone 873-L evenings.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR  W   HAGGEN.  Land Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and, Rossland,\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 G6RE ST!,\nKelson, B.C   Surveyor, Engineer\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARBV AGENCIES   LTD'.   IS-\nsurance. Real .Estate.\u2014Phone 135\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK^\nContact H \u25a0 HaVrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\n\"BENNETTS LIMITED '\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding Phone 593 324 Vernon Street\nTIMBER CRUI8INQ; ETC\nTIMBER  CRUISING   ANYWHERE\nIn B C E H Hlrd. Slocari City\nTin was one of the seven, metals\nknown and used by early man.\n.  SUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON, Sept 1 (Reuters)-Re-\nsuits of soccer matches played in the\nUnited Kingdom Saturday:\nENGLI8H LEAGUE\nDivision I\n. Arsenal 1, Sunderland 2.\nBlackpool 3, Bolton Wanderers 0.\nCardiff City 4, Sheffield Wed. 0.\nCharlton A. 2, Wolverham. W. 2.\nChelsea 2, Portsmouth 0.\nDerby County 0, Astpn Villa 1.\nLiverpool 3, Stoke City 2.\nManchester Ci. 2, Manchester U. 1.\nMiddlesbrough 1, Preston N. E. 1.\nNewcastle U. 1. Tottenham Hots. 1.\nWest Bromwlch Al, 1, Burnley 2.\nDivision II\nBarnsley 8, Swansea Town 1.\nBirmingham City 1, Fulham 1\nBlackburn Rovers 3, Everton 1.\nBury 1, West Ham United 1.\nHull City, 2, Brentford 2.\nLeeds United 1, Plymouth Arg. 1.\nLincoln City i, Doncaster Rov. 0.\nLuton Town 2, Rotherham Unit 1.\nSheffield U. 0, Huddersfleld'T. 2.\nSouthampton 5, Leicester City 2.\nDivision III (Northern)\ntVccrington Stan. 0, Workington 1.\nBradford 0, Grimsby Town 3.\nCarlisle U. 4, Hartlepools U. 1.\nChester 2, Bradford City 0.\ngrewe Alexandra 0, Darlington 1.\nalifax Town 3, Chesterfield 1.\nMansfield T. 1, Tranmere Rov. 0.\nOldham Athletic 2, York City 1.\nPort Vale 5, Rochdale 2.\nScunthorpe U. 2, Stockport Co. 1.\nSouthport 3, Gateshead 2.\nWrexham'4, Barrow'O.\nDivision III (Southern)\nAldershot 0, Colchester United 0.\nBristol City 2, Bri. It Hove Al. 2.\nCrystal Palace 2, Newport Co. 1.\nGlllingham 0, Mlllwall 1.\nipswlch Town 1, Reading 1.\nChicago    000 032 000-8 12   2\nCincinnati  400 000 02x\u20148  8  0\nRush, Hacker (8) and Chiti; Nux\nhall, Smith (6) Schmltz (T) Hiller\n(8) and Rossi.\nMONDAY\nSt. Louie 500 100 00O-\u00ab   I  0\nCincinnati   000 000 000-O   4   1\nMizell, Brazle (7) and D. Rice;\nChurch and Rossi.\nSt Louis   200 000 000\u20141   7   3\nCincinnati  200 001 OOx\u20148  8 \\i\nHaddix and D. Rice; Perkowskl\nand Rossi.\nChicago   100 000 014~<   9   1\nPittsburgh  000 000 000-0  1  0\nKllppsteln and Chiti; Pellet Main\n(9) and Garagiola.\nChicago ... 010 003 000   00-4 11   1\nPittsburgh   000 020 020 01-5 13   1\nKelly, Leonard (8) and Atwell;\nHogue, Kline (8) Dickson (9) end\nMcCullough.\nNew York  002 010 000-1 10   1\nBoston  000.001 00O-1   4   0\nLanier end Westrum; Wilson end\nCooper.\nNew York  000 000 100-1   7   1\nBoston  300 001 20x\u20148   \u00bb  0\nJansen, Koslo (1) Wilhelm (7)\nKennedy (7) and Wetrum, Yvars\n(7); Johnson and Burris.\nTED KROLL WINS\n$15,000 TOURNEY\nWETHERSFIELD, Conn,, Sept 1\n(AP)\u2014Playing in strong winds and\nheavy rains which uprooted several\nsmall trees along the course, Ted\nKroll ot New Hartford, N.Y., captured the first annual $18,000 insurance city open golf tournament today, With e 72-hole total ef 273, 11\nunder par,\nIt was Kroll's first victory on the\nSummer tour end was worth $2400.\nSkee Riegel of Tulsa, Okie:, closed\nwith a 73 for a 277 aggregate end\nsecond place.\nA disappointed Julius Boros, the\nConnecticut native and sentimental\nfavorite, from Mid Pines, N.C.,\nwound up with a 78 today for a\n282 total.\nWINT WINS\nKREFELD, Germany, Sept 1\n(AP) \u2014 Arthur Wint of Jamaica\nwon the 400 meters race In an\nInternational track meet here today. His time was 47.4, two seconds\nfaster than Ham Geister of Germany, who placed second.\nLeyton Orient 2, Bour. 4 Bos A. 2.\nNorthampton T. 4, Southend U. 8.\nQueens P. Rang. 0, Coventry Ci. 4.\nShrewsbury T. 1, Exeter City 8.\nSwindon Town 2, Norwich City 1.\nTorquay United 2, Watford 3.\nWalsall 3, Bristol Rovers 8.\n8COTTI8H LEAGUE CUP\nDivision A\nAberdeen 1, Rangers 2.     ,\u25a0     \u25a0\nClyde 3, Dundee 3, [ ' '' '\u25a0\u25a0,':' .\nFalkirk 2, Queen ot the South' 3.\nHibernian 3, Celtic 0.\nMotherwell 1, Hearts 2.\nFartick thistle' 2, St. Mirren ].\nRaith Rovers 1, Alrdrleonians 1.\nThird Lanark 2, East Fife 0.\nDivision B\nAlbion Rovers 4, Stenhousemulr 4.\nDumbarton 2, Stirling Albion 1.\nDundee United 2, Ayr United 1.\nDunfermline Ath. 4, Alloa Ath. 8.\nForfar Ath. 1, Hamilton Acad. 1.\nKilmarnock 4, Arbroath 0.\nMorton 2, Cowdenbeath I.\nSt. Johnstone 3, Queens Park 4.\nIRISH ULSTER CUP\nBangor 1, Distillery 0.\nCrusaders 8, Coleralne 8.\nDeny City 1, Clifton Ville 1.\nGlentoran 8, Ballymena U.\nLinfield 0, Ards 1.\nPortadown 0, Glenaven 1.\nHoliday Haunts \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nCRANBROOK\nGATEWAY AUTO COURT\nCoffee Shop\u2014Groceriea\u2014Gee\nJust outside Best (ate.\n000 000 001\u20141   8   1\n020 004 OOx-6 11   (\nPorterfleld, Consuegra (6) Far-\nrick (8). and Grasso; Lopat and\nBerra:\nCleveland    610 020 300\u20146   9  1\nChicago     002 000 010\u20143   7   0\nGarcia and Tebbetts; Pierce, Dor-\nlsh (7) Hudson (8) and Lollar.\nBoston  001 Oil 413\u201411 17   1\nPhiladelphia   000 000 001\u2014 1   7   1\nMcDermott and White; Shantz,\nHooper (8) and Astroth.\nBoston   000 000 OOO-O   7  0\nPhiladelphia ..' 010 001 OOx\u20142   6   0\nNixon and Wilberg; Byrd and\nMurray.\nDetroit   000 301 000-4   9  0\nSt. Louis  205 000 OOx\u20147 11   0\nWight Madison  (3)  and Batts;\nCain, Harrist (7)  Stuart (8)  and\nCourtney.\nMONDAY,\nPhiladelpla    002 330 000 1\u20140 15   2\nWashington   023 020 100 0\u20148 10   1\nKellner and Astroth; Marrero and\nGrasso.\nPhiladelphia .. 100 010 000-3   4   0\nWashington .. Ill 000 lOx\u20144   8  0\nScheib and Astroth; Moreno and\nKluttr-\nCleveland  040 030 020-9 14   1\nSt Louis 110 000 010-3   7   1\nWynn and Began; Bearden and\nCourtney.\nCleveland  001 00\u20141   3   0\nSt. Louis 020 00\u20142   i 0\n(Game celled end of five Innings,\nrain.)\nLemon and Tipton, Hegan (6);\nPaige and Courtney.\nMacken Reaches\nThird Round of\nChampionship\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y., Aug. 31\n(AP) - Vic Selxas and Dick\nSavitt, the United States' two top\nhopes to turn beck the Australians,\nstroked their way into the third\nround of the national tennis champ-\nplonship today.\nSavitt   recorded   an   effortless\n8-0, 8-3. 8-0 victory ever William\nStuckl of Cllffslde Park, NJ-, but\nSelxas had a tough time beating\nthe venerable Sidney Wood of\nNew York 7-8, 8-8, 7-6. Wood was\nWimbledon ohamplon mere than\ntwo decades ego.\nAustralian star Frank Sedgman\nalso flexed his muscles in a second\nrounder and when It wes over he\nhad taken the  measure  of  Tom\nBoys ot New York, 6-2, 84, 8-0,\nHerble Flam of Beverly Hills,\nCalif., fourth-seeded on the domestic list polished oft Tom Lewyn of\nNew York, 6-4, 64, 6-2.\nBut young Sam Glammalva of\nHouston, Tex., regarded as perhaps\nthe most promising player in the\nU.S. could do nothing with Fred\nKovaleskl of Washington and the\nlatter won, 6-1, 6-1, 6-4.\nBrendan Macken of Montreal,\na Canadian Davis Cup star, moved Into the third round by defeating William Cranson of 8an\nMarino,    Calif.,    6-4,    6-2,    8-6.\nStraight Clark of Pasadena, Calif,\nninth-seeded,   took   his   second-\nround match from Henri Roehen\nof Montreal, 6-1, 7-6, 6-4.\nRochon had advanced to the second round with a hard-fought 2-6,\n3-6,   6-4,   6-0,   6-2   victory   over\nCheuncey D. Steele, Jr, of Cambridge, Mass.\nAnother Canadian, Davis Cupper\nLome Main of Vancouver, was\neliminated Saturday by the 17-\nyear-old Australian, Lewis Head,\n4-6, 6-0, 6-2, 6-3.\nIn the women's singles Saturday\nKatherine Hubbell of Conway, N.H.,\neliminated Dorothy Hurst \u25a0 of Toronto 6-8, 6-1.\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014'Ben Hogan\nhas been nemed the top professional\ngolfer of the last 50 years in a\npoll conducted by the Professional\nGolfers' Association.' '\nP.G.A. headquarters said It polled\n3032 of its members as well as more\nthan 900 sports writers and radio\ncommentators. , \u2022 E \u25a0\nBobby Jones was selected' as top\namateur. i  -    ;, \u2022 '\u25a0<-'-.-.\nLATEST REPORT\nAU roof Invmtuwul Deotn\ntot roe Utoil bporl\n'    \u00abad m  \"\nNelson\nCuts Hauling Costs!\nond\nTakes You Through\nWhen Others Can't\n4-wheel drive\n118\" wheel bate\ni\nThrifty, Dependable\n\"Hurricane\" Engine\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014- .v\nCome In today ond let us t\ngive you a demonstration '\nof this amazing truck.\nTHE NATIONAL\nSafe-Line'\nWIRE ROPE CLAMP?\nfor \"\n\u2022 SAFETY\n\u2022 SECURITY\n\u2022 SIMPLICITY\nBe Sura to Buy\nSAFE-LINE\n\u2022 *\nSTONEBORD\nTHE MODERN\nFIREPROOF\nWALLBOARD\nSmooth, Invisible Joint*.\n'    Hard and Durable.\n4 ft, wide and in lenfttN\nof 4 to 9 feat.\nSPECIFY   STONEBORD\nON YOUR NEXT\nBUILDING JOB       ,\ny-JOINT\nSHEATHING\nfor   . \u2022\u25a0        ,f 3\nBetter Outside     ?\nWalls\n\u2022 Fireproof i\n\u2022 Weatherproof\n\u2022 Bracing Strength\n\u2022 Speed ond\neconomy In\nerection\nStonelath\nThe Ideal Plaster Base\n\u2022 Does not expand\nor contract \u25a0)'\n\u2022 Saves plaster\n\u2022 Saves time and T\nmoney ''?'\nand, of course, -?'\n\u2022 Ifs fireproof\n\u2022    \u2022\nColor Styled\nROOFING\nrum:.'\"\"'.\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\n-   To   Beautify 'Your Home\n'SOLID.GOLQW\nThe new blended l\nAsphalt Shingles\nYears ef Protection\nGuaranteed\n mwmmm*mmmmlm^\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 2,19S2\n\/GSCo\nWE\nARE\nwith a tremendous Stock\nand a big and competent staff\nto serve the thousands\nof children and parents\nwho will be rushing and crashing\nthrough OUR STORE TODAY.\njra a jpi jc*\nDRUGS LTD.\nPersonal Contact Spreads Polio ....\npesperate Pleas Bring\nIrofi Lungs to Coast\nVANCOUVER, Sept 1 (CP)-Two\niron' lungs-, were flown into Vancouver during the weekend to.aid\nin the tight against a poliomyelitis\noutbreak in British Columbia.\nOne was flown here Saturday In\nan Americen military plane from\nSeattle, another arrived' Sunday by\nTrans-Canada Air Lines from Toronto.    :\nOfficials,of the Vancouver General Hospital sold \"several\" new\npolio cases have been reported. A\n14-year-old girl was flown from\nPenticton in the Okanagan Valley\nto Vancouver by the R.C.A.F.\nThis was the latest development\nIn the fight against a polio' outbreak which has hit nearly 200 persons this Summer in British Columbia, killing IT.\nWith more then 50 per, cent of\nthe victims being treated in hospitals here, a shortage of iron lungs\ndeveloped and even \"lungs\" being\nshown at the Pacific National Exhibition were returned to hospital\nDESPERATE PLEAS\nAn additional iron lung was\nneeded desperately Saturday so\ndoctors at;Vancouver General Hospital sent* pleas for help to both\nEastern Canada and the United\nStates.\nThe U. S. Polio Foundation locat\ned a spare one end It was flown\nto Vancouver from Seattle by Cmdr.\nF. M. Welch.-\nAfter the assistant director of\nGeneral Hospital,had personally\ndriven a truck to the. airport .and.\npicked up the equipment he announced: \"Nobody at this moment\nis suffering for. the need ot an iron\nlung.\"\nThe assistant director, George\nRuddick, said another iron lung\nhad been made available ta Toronto\nand \"in all probability\" will also be\nflown to Vancouver.\nMeanwhile, Dr. A. J. Nelson,\n- Provincial Epidemiologist returned from studying the serious polio\noutbreak in the East Kooteney\nfcrea of Southeastern B.C. end\nsaid that In that district at least,\nthe disease \"was spread, by person-to-person contact almost exclusively.\"\n\"The Kimberley epidemic offered us a rare opportunity to establish the relationship between\ncases,\" he said.\n\"Polio can, of course, be spread\nIn many other ways, but what we\nhave found points up to the necessity foe keeping children and\nother susceptible* away from\nlarge aggregations of people.\"\nif\nafapgwx\nRussia's Sfricl Specifications\nE. By ED 8HANKE\ni HELSINKI, Finland, Sept. 1 (AP)\n\u2014A \"golden\" ship will sail from\n\u25a0Finland toward Russia in mld-Sep-\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED 4 REPAIRED\nRECORINQ     .\nJim's Radiator Shop\n801 Word 8t   ' Phorte 63\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHaigh\nTru-Arr\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhono 327\n878 Baker 8t\n^SJELv\nWAICH REPAIRb\nYfARS EXPERIENCE\nNELSON. B.C.\nWrGiNTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nCLEAN CLOTHBS\nvia EMPIRE\nMen's and Ladies'\nSUITS  $1.25\nDRESSES\n1-pee., plain $1.25\nPANTS and\nSKIRTS  60e\nFREE PICK UP\nand\nDELIVERY      >\nSERVICE\nJus|\nPHONE 288\nDry\nCleaners\ntember-^the last of a back-breaking\nreparations bill Imposed on the industrious Finns tor a lost war.\nIt Is a mystery ship, too, of anti-\nmagnetic construction ta accordance\nwith strict specifications laid down\nby the Russians. It is the only one\nof its kind among the 91 schooners\nFinland has built tor Russia. No\nmagnetic material of any kind was\nbuilt into it. But it has a mass of\nshining brass,and copper fittings.\n\"That's why we call it golden,\"\nsmiled a Finnish officials .attached\nto the Reparations Commission.\nFor Finland, however, it is \"golden\" for other reasons.\nDelivery of the 300-ton schooner\nwill signal the end ot an annual 10-\nper cent drain on her national income during the, last eight years. In\na sense, it will shake loose.en economic grip which Russia had on the\ncountry.\nSERIOUS PROBLEMS\nOn the other hand, it will bring\nFinland face to face with the serious problem ot keeping ta operation the heavy Industrial machine\nwhich she was forced to build up.\nFinnish officials are frankly worried about the prospects of unemployment. ,\nAs Finland nears the end ot the\nlong reparations haul, its shipbuilding industry Is six times bigger than in 1944. The metal industry has doubled In size. Before the\nwar Finland had 40,000 workers in\nthe ship-building and metal trades.\nNow it has 80,000.\nWhat chance is there of keeping\nthese men at work in industries\nwhose output will be hard to sell\nabroad? Finnish officials put a great\ndeal of hope ta the five-year trade\nagreement with the Soviet Union.\nThey say Russia has promised to\ntake their output particularly because they are geared to meet Russian specification.\nAlberta Eases Up\nDuck Shooting\nEDMONTON, Sept. 1 (CP) \u2014\nBroader shooting regulations to\nhelp Alberta fanners combat damage to crops by ducks were announced Saturday by E. S. Huestis,\nProvincial Fish and Game Commissioner.\nMr. Huestis said the Federal Resources Department has issued a\npermit covering the period Aug. 30\nto Sept. 9 authorizing Alberta farmers South of the Athabaska River to\nkill mallard or pin-tail ducks which\nthey find are causing serious damage to their crops.\nWhere the farmer is unable by\nhimself to prevent crop damage by\nthese ducks he may authorize not\nmore than seven Alberta residents\nto shoot them oA his land.\nTO PROTECT CROP8\nNelson Teachers\nTo Coast,\nNorthern B.C.\nTwo young Nelson teachers have\nleft for the Coast where they wilt\nteach this term, and a third is travelling to Telegraph Creek in Northern B. C.\nMiss Norrie Cummins, daughter of\nMr. and1 Mrs. Con Cummins, North\nShore, and Miss Anne Poje, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Poje of\nRosemont, motored to the coast\nwith Ray Thompson Wednesday.\nMiss Cummins, who completed\nNormal school ta June, will teach\nat Cordova Bay, nine miles 'from\nVictoria in Saanlch district and\nRay Thompson, well known Nelson\nbaritone, will take a school in Burn-\naby.    . '\nMiss Poje chose Telegraph Creek\nfor her first year ot teaching and\nflew .In by T.C.A. plane from Seattle Friday. Miss Poje's sister,\nTheresa, said her spirit of adventure and the wish to see'other parts\nof B.C. made her select her northern school. All three received their\nschooling in Nelson.\nCity Dump Fire\nKeeps Firemen Busy\nNelson Fire Department was out\nover two and one half hours Friday\nafternoon in responding to- a call\nfrom the City dump, and a false\nalarm,\nA minor fire in the grass and\nbrush at city dump resulted ta little\ndamage but kept firemen on the\nspot over two hours watching for\nfurther outbreaks. Alarm was received at 12:05 p.m. and the small\nblaze was extinguished by 12:50 by\npumping water from the lake. One\ntruck remained out until 2:15 In case\nof further outbreaks.      '\nSecond alarm came at 1:43 when\na six-year-old lad pulled the fire\nbox at the corner of First and Behn-\nsen in Fairview, mistaking it for a\nletter box. The run last 25 minutes.\nPark Bathhouse\nTo Co$l $30,000\nEstimated cost .of the Kinsmen\nbathhouse project at Lakeside Park\nIs $30,000, Kinsmen club was told at\na special meeting in the Hume Friday, night\nPresident J. H. Nuyens, reporting oh a recent meeting of Kinsmen\naquatic committee with the City\nCouncil Parks Committee, presented a sketch of the proposed bathhouse and explained cost was estimated at $30,000. Type of construction, to be decided at a further\nmeeting With the Parks Committee,\nwill be either concrete, concrete\nblocks or frame. Plan, now only ta\nsketch form, will also be decided\nupon at the meeting to be held in\nthe near future. Construction is expected to begin late this Fall or\nearly spring. A. K. McAdams, President of the club for the 1952-53 season, and Fred Leno were chosen to\nattend the Kinsmen National Convention in Vancouver, Sept. 17r20.\nTwo 200 per cent attendance pins\nwere presented-by President J. H.\nNuyens. W. A. Duckworth and Ben-\nnie Sutherland each received a pin\nfor two years perfect attendance.\nInstallation of the new 1952-53\nexecutive will be held Sept. 4.\nPeople Walk Out\nOn Red Dean\nCANTERBURY, England, Sept. 1\n(AP)\u2014The \"Red \" Dean of Canterbury charged today that Americans\nShooting may be carried on at any j are making best sellers of books\nhour but the shooter cannot use any ! urging that doctors be kept out of\ndecoy, duck call or blind and can-1 backward countries so as to kill off\nnot discharge a gun within 50 yards . the native populations.\nof any watetf area. Dogs may be. About a dozen persons' walked\"out\nused. , !of Canterbury, Cathedral as:Dead\nFarmers are required to report to j Hewlett Johnson made the charge as\nthe Fish and Game Commissioner\nthe names and addresses of persons\nto whom he has given written authorization to shoot on his land and\nhe must specify the location of the\nland.\nMr. Huestis warned that this general permit was issued for the purpose of protecting farmers' crops\nfrom ducks and not for the purpose\nof shooting alone. Persons not abiding by the regulations will be subject to prosecution.   ' 4\nChauffeur Gets\n$25,000 and Car     )\nCLEVELAND, O., Sept. 1 (AP>-\nTwenty-two years ago, when he was\n18, Ronald W.' Becker took a \"one-\nday\" job. Now he has inherited $25,-\n000 from a woman who kept him on\nthat job ell these years,\nBecker had just lost his job in an\nautomobile agency, and one of the\nagency's executives asked him if he\nwanted to drive for one day for a\nwoman who had just bought a car.\nThat was how he met Mrs. Edith\nH. O. Hall, who died July 26 at the\nage of 79.\nMrs. Hall also left him $500 in\nbonds and the 1950 car he had been\ndriving for her.\npart of a Sunday evening sermon\npraising Communist China.\nJohnson said one of the troubles\nwith the United States was that\nAmericana read the wrong books.\nRight now, he said, books advocating that doctors be kept out of backward, lands so that deaths from disease would decrease the population\nare very popular in the U. S.\nA survey of literary reviews in\nNew York failed to disclose any\nbooks with such a theme either on\nbest seller lists or in general circulation.\nBritain's T.U.C.\nIncreases Members\nMARGATE, England Sept. 1 (AP)\n\u2014Sir Vincent Tewson, General Secretary,' has ' announced that the\nTrades Union Congress had a record\nmembership last year of 8,026,079\u2014\nan Increase of'192,134 over the 1950\ntotal.\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) * Campaigns\nfor good forestry management and\nnew reforestation laws are credited\nwith increasing the total wood in\nSweden's forests to about 65 billion cubic feet compared with 60\nbillion cubic feet ta 1920.\nMid-October to\nSee Paving\nWork Finished\nPaving on Nelson-Nelway-high-\nway is expected to be complete the\nthird week in October.\nRobert Dennis of Taylor Construction Company, paving contractors, states that paving will likely\nbe completed the third week in\nOctober. This estimate allows 10\ndays more than needed to finish in\nevent ot poor weather conditions.\nAsphalt cannot be 'laid ta rainy\nweather. If Fall weather is reasonably good the road will be completed on schedule.\nOnly one and a third miles of\nground or construction work prior\nto laying of asphalt remains before\njoining the pavement Mr. Dennis\nsaid.\nPaving was halted for a week\nwhen the company ran out of crushed gravel. However, a crusher was\nbrought in from the Coast and two\nare now in operation,\nPaving has been completed two\nand a half miles South of the city,\nand six miles left to pave.'\nFollowing completion of the Nel-\nson-Nelway road, some paving will\nbe done in Nelson.\nTeen-Age Girls Die\nIn Car Collision\nVERNON,,B.C., Sept. 1 (CPI\u2014\nTwo teen-aged girls were killed\nwhen the automobile in which they\nwere riding crashed into a telephone pole in Vernon. \u00ab,\nThe victims were Sadie Sadorsky\nand Sylvia Cowan, about 19.\nTwo youths riding with the girls\nescaped death.   ,\nLeather soles adapt themselves\nto your foot because they are made\nof natural cowhide.\nTourists Laud\nNelson District\n\"1 Was here 22 years ego and Nelson Is still the Queen City,\" en Ontario couple commented ta the\nChamber ot Comm-jce guest register. Complimentary remarks like\nthis ore written beside almost every\nname In the register as Nelson goes\nall out to welcome tourists ond visitors to the district\nHotel booking service, map and\ncamping information are some of\nthe many services supplied by the\nChamber and tourists are grateful.\nThey often express their gratitude\nwith such comments, as \"appreciate\nail the service and help,\" \"Excellent\nmap and road information\" and\n\"wonderful, cooperation and reception.''    . ',   'i\nBut of all the complimentary comments in the book, the bulk are directed toward the district its scenery and favorable weather,\n\"It's the most favorable spot this\nside ot General Grant\" a Californ-\nian said and a Minnesota man described it as \"nice and rugged.\" \"A\nlovely town,\" said'a Quebecker,\n\"Great place,\" remarked a coast\ncouple, but a men from Surrey, B.C.,\nsaid, \"too hilly.\"\nFew complaints are written ta the\nguest book, but one regarding the\nCascade road is frequently repeated: \"Swell place but Cascade road is\nvery bad.\"\n\"Salmo, Nelson end the towns\nhereabouts seem to boom,\" said a\nman from Washington, D.C., and an\nAlbertan jovially-expressed his love\nof the district by writing \"big enuff\n4 Alberta.\"\n\"It's God's country,\" wrote a man\nfrom Toronto and many tourists\nfrom over the continent express\ntheir appreciation of the district by\nsimply saying, \"Thanks, Nelson.\"\nAthletic Club\nFormed at Trail\nNotice that the Kootenay Carom\nClub.has been incorporated as a society under the Societies Act is contained in the current Issue of the\nB.C. Gazette.\nThe club, which will operate ta\nTrail was formed to engage ta various recreational and sporting activities and to promote athletics\namongst young people in Trail and\nvicinity by donations from time to\ntime.\n2 Men Rescued hy\nVisitor to Niagara\nNIAGARA FALLS, N. Y, Sept 1\n(AP)\u2014A construction foremen visiting Niagara. Falls saw. one man.\nshoot himself, pulled another from\na failing and summoned police to\nrescue a third' from a river rock\nSaturday.   ,\n. Police said the man rescued from\nthe rock was Thomas Peacock, 87,\nof Toronto. Inr hosplal Peacock told\nauthorities; he was an unemployed\ntruck driver, He said he had clung\nto the rock for two hours before his\nrescue.\nThe foreman, Jesse Kunes, told\npolice he was standing on Willow\nIsland In the river when he saw a\nman wade into the river and shoot\nhimselt The body was swept over\nthe falls.\nHe reported that to police and\nwalked to nearby Prospect Point\nThere he saw a man hanging from\nthe railing, pulled him back and\nheld him until'police arrived. - \\\nTHERE WAS ANOTHER\nwade into the Niagara River and v A short time later, Kuhei was on\nGoat Island, land, aa he told reporters:     ';   !'\n\"Damned It there wasn't another.\"\nHe said Peacock stepped Into the\nwater and was carried by the swift\ncurrent to a rock about 100 feet\nfrom the Canadian falls. Kunes called police again. v\nAfter several unsuccessful attempts, a park patrolman threw\nPeacock a weighted line. It caught\nand Peacock was unable to jerk\nit loose but he pulled out a pocket\nknife, cut the line and wrapped it\naround his waist Rescuers pulled\nhim to shore, where he collapsed.\nThe man who allot himself was\nidentified as Sidney Setb of Niagara\nFalls. Identity, of the man pulled\nfrom the Mil was not established.\nPastor Missing\nFrom Slocan\nFound in Halifax\nA missionary who had been missing from the Slocan district since\nMay 27 has turned up in Halifax,\nR.C.M.P. in Nelson said Friday. The\n35-year-old student pastor,, Richard England, had been the subject\nof an intensive search by R.C.M.P.\nacross Canada.\nEngland was last seen ta Slocan\nCity and was believed enroute to\nthe Coast when he' suddenly disappeared. A shell-shock victim of\nWorld War H, he told of lapses of\nmemory1, blackouts and amnesia\nwhich he suffered since his dls\ncharge. .\nR.C.M.P. ta Nelson received a\nwire from Rev. Mr. Sloan of Vancouver, , which stated England had\nbeen suffering from amnesia and\nhad travelled all over Canada when\nhe finally regained his memory ta\nHalifax.\nTwo Nelson\nFirms Registered\nNotice that Bitco Sales and Service Ltd. of Nelson has been registered under the Companies Act Is\ngiven in the current B.C. Gazette.\nRegistered office of the Company\nis 609 Baker Street and authorized\ncapital is $10,000.\nObject of the company Is to carry\non the business of manufacturers'\nagents, maintain a jobbing commission and general agency business\nand deal as wholesalers, jobbers and\nretailers.\nKokanee Lumber Company, has\nbeen incorporated with registered office at 101 Baker Street, the company has an authorized capital of\n$25,000.\nThe company will carry on logging and lumbering operations and\nthe business of sawmill and planing-\nmill operators and lumber merchants.\nThe Kirby-Stedman Distributors\nLimited of Trail has also incorporated with an authorized capital of\n$10,000. Object of the company is to\nbuy, sell and acquire any types of\nelectrical equipment and accessories.\nGlenmerry Builders Limited of\nTrail have been Incorporated under\nthe Companies Act. Authorized capital is $30,000 with registered office\nat 1412 Bay Avenue, Trail. The company will carry on the business of\ngeneral contractors.\nparachute jump Friday. The wiry,\nnarr MacFadden, 84, made his third\nparachute jump today. The wiry,\nwhite haired little apostle of physical culture leaped from a rented\nFrench plane over the Seine to\nprove \"I'm still a young guy.\" He\nmissed the river but ended up feeling fine.\nGive Bugles to\nBattle Comrades\nTOKYO, Sept 1 (Reuters)-The\n1st Battalion of .the King's Shropshire Light Infantry Saturday presented parting gifts of solid silver\nbugles to Australian Infantry, New\nZealand gunners and Indian- ambulance men who bave been their\ncomrades-in-arms ta Korea-for the\nlast 16 months. -\nThe Shropshires, who have a\nbugle; ta their regimental eap\nbadge;, had the instruments {specially\nmanufactured in London and flown\nout.to Korea for yesterday's ceremony;\nMaj.-Gen. A. J. H. Cassels, Commonwealth Division Commander,\ntold his men at a ceremony in a forward area that the Shropshires soon\nwill return to Britain and then will\nserve under him ta Germany where\nhe is to. command the 1st Corps ta\nthe British Army of the Rhine.\nBritish Judge\nArrives (oast\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 1 (CP)-Sir\nJohn Morris, British Lord Justice\nof Appeal, arrived here Saturday\nto attend the annual meeting next\nweek'of the Canadian Bar Association. He was among the first of 1600\ndelegates expected for the association's 34th annual meeting.\nSir John and his sister, Miss\nGwen Morris, have been in Canada\nfor three weeks and have visited\nmembers of the judiciary across\nthe country.\nHe will deliver the congregation\naddress Thursday when the new\nlaw building at the University of\nBritish Columbia is officially opened by Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent Both he and the Prime Minister will receive honorary degrees\nfrom the university.\n-vms\nWKSSi\nmm\n\u00ab|i|\n\u25a0\u25a0\nsiMliBIIIlSllg\nmommm\/mm\nIHIiiil\n%m ' ' \u2022\nCadets of the University Naval Training Divisions across Canada spend their summers aboard\nships end establishments of the R.C.N. As part of\ntheir training program the-cadets shown above\n______\nare receiving Instructions In wire splicing aboard\nHMC8 Cresoent during a recent training cruise to\nthe Mediterranean. The Instructor Is Petty Officer\nWilliam  Cyril  Salisbury of Toronto^-(Natlonal\nDefence photo.)   \u25a0\nKing Fuad to Be\nEducated in Egypt\nCAIRO, Sept-1 C.T outers)\u2014Prime\nMinister Aly Maher announced today that the infant\" King Ahmed\nFuad II will be educated in Egypt\nso that he will grow up among his\npeople.\n\"The return of King Fuad Is ot\nvital Importance. Be must learn to\nunderstand and love the people he\nwill one day rule,\" the announcement said.\nThe seven-month-old king now Is\nat Capri, Italy, with his parents,\nformer King Farouk and former\nQueen Narrlman. Farouk was forced Into exile by Gen. Mohammed\nNaguib ta a coup that established\nMaher as premier.\nKilled in U. S.\nAufo Collision\nSTAPLES, Minn.; Sept 1 (CP)-A\nCanadian auto-transport-driver was\nkilled and another Injured Saturday\nnight In a two-car collision hear\nhere. ,\nKilled Were Tom Boudler, Kam-\nloops, B. C, and Mrs. Richard Burns,\nBenson, Minn., passenger ta the second car.\nJ.- L. Cody, of Vancouver, suffered\nchest injuries, a possible skull\nfracture, and a broken arm. Richard'Burns, driver of the second ear\nand husband of the dead woman,\nand their two children also were Injured.\nBoudler and Cody, on a regular\nauto-ferrying rim from Detroit to\nVancouver, were being driven here\nby Herman Allguer, Motley, Minn.,\nto get new Urea for their transport\ntruck when the collision occurred.\nAllguer epparenty was not injured.\nStaples is ISO miles Northwest of\nMinneapolis.\nAngry Auslrians\nAttack Americans\nSALZBURG, Austria, Sept 1 \u2014\n(Reuters) \u2014 Austrian and United\nStates miliary police had to Intervene here Saturday night to rescue\nan American sergeant and his wife\nfrom an angry crowd which turned\ntheir car upside down.\nAn official report said Sgt. William G. Pennel drove blowing his\ncar horn through a crowd coming\nfrom a movie theatre.\nThe crowd surged around the\ncar, punched the sergeant and his\nwife ta the face, and turned the car\nupside down, Both were severely\nbruised.\nVancouver Resumes\nSailings To Orient\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Sept 1 -\nVancouver's long .awaited resumption of Canadian Pacific steamship\nservice to the Orient became a reality Sunday morning when the trim\n10,000 ton freighter-Maplecove nosed under the great spanof the Lions\nGate bridge and out of the harbor\ne nroute to Yokohama, Kobe, Manila\nCuba and Hong Kong.\nThis was the initial sailing in a\nregular monthly service from Vancouver that will see two Canadian\nPacific cargo vessels operating In\nthe Pacific. A sister ship the Maple-\nadele is en route here from Montreal.\nTogether with tons of general\ncargo the Maplecove carried some\n40 tons of naval stores, destined for\nCanadian naval threes In the Korean\nfighting area. The stores, consisting\nof clothing and comforts, came from\nthe naval depot at Esquimau on\nVancouver Island and will be transshipped to navy personnel from\nYokohama.\nThe Maplecove is in command of\nCaptain R. A. Leicaster, O.B.E., of\nVancouver.\nCABINET GETS RAISE\nVICTORIA, Sept 1 (OP) \u2014\nThe provincial, cabinet has given\nItself a raise, In travelling expenses.\nIn future, cabinet, members\naway, from the capital on business, will be entitled ta a $1B-a-\nday living allowance, In addition\nto actual expenses, \u2022\nTha living allowance previously was set at $10 a day. \u2022\u2022'\nHALE, Cheshire, England (CP)\n\u2014Builder Philip Oakes-claims he\ncan build a \u00a32000-type house for\n\u00a3650 by erecting a shell of metal\nsheets, Joined by sliding rods and\nkeys. Cheap filling : like broken\nbricks, stones'and rubble can be\npoured Into the cavities to form an\nlair blanket.\nForsyth   \u25a0\nCountry;\n\\\nClub\nWith tha Now Sensational\nPinn Collar:      -\nir Won't Wrinkle or curl\nir Sits low for greater\ncomfort        ,\n\u2022k Permits free sliding\nfor tie\nIn plain color* and white\n$4.95\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nNude Delegates\nFound Federation\nNEUCHATEL, Switzerland, Sept..\n1 (Reuters)\u2014Naked delegates from\nIS countries decided at a conferenco\nhereto found the first World Nudist Federation.\nThey pledged themselves to \"tolerate, promote and practice as far\nas circumstances permit mixed nude\nbathing ta air, water and sun.\" Tha .\nresolution added this would benefit physical and mental health and\nhelp counteract the demand lor pornographic literature.\nAn English girl, a Frenchman\nand a German were appointed to\ndraft a constitution tor the Federation, to be'established at next\nyear's conference near Bordeaux,'\nFrance.\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURI   \u00a7 j\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 14*\nFLEURY'S   Phormocy\n678 Baker St\nMod. Arte Bile.\nPHONES*\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nPhone 289 \u2022\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST      -,\nVI8UAL TRAINING\nMedical Arte Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nCAMPBELL; SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered ..Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 235\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nSIS Kootenay St        Phone Sfl\nAsk Your Grocer For\nELLISON'S BEST, FLOUR\nIt, makes '.better bread\n,   ELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\n323 Front St\nNelson, B.C.\nSCHOOL SUPPLIES\n8elect Now Your\nZIPPER LOOSE LEAFS\n$1.95     $3.25      $4.25     $440\nIn assorted colors.     ,\nCity Drag\nCompany\nNelson's Modem Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day - S07-R Night\nBOX 460\n\u2022USKssara,\nGordons\nStakcto SufiUmA   '\nTANQUOAY, OOkDON  t CO.  ITO.\n... \u00ab>\u00ab loi-gsit gin diitlllm In the world\n*\n_J\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. 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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"}]}}