{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0428905":{"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":"2023-03-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1955-11-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0428905\/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":" \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0V \u25a0'''\u25a0 ;.\u2022\u25a0 \u2022 ' \/ ''\nCyprus Future\nUnder Study\nBritain Striving To Retain Cyprus\nFor Commonwealth Against Enosis Push\nBy SEYMOUR TOPPING\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Britain has begun a \"most active\"\nreview of its Cyprus policy in a fresh effort to patch up differences with Greece over the future of the key Mediterranean   island,   the   foreign\nopinion that it was unlikely that\nBritain would make an offer of\ndominion status. They pointed out\nthat a dominion has the right to\nleave the 'Commonwealth when\never it 'ph'oodes to become completely Independent,\nWOULD PICK GREECE\nAbout 80 per cent of the popula.\ntion of Cyprus is Greek-speaking\nand their leaders maintain that an\noverwhelming majority of them\nwould vote for union with Greece\nif given the chance.\nBritain has opposed yielding\nsovereignty over Cyprus, site of\nfhe British Middle East headquarters, on the grounds that it\nis vital to Western defence of the\narea. Turkey has backed the\nBritish stand. About 20 per cent\nof the Cypriot population\nTurkish.\n$Pm\u00a7!?K\u2122\noffice     disclosed    Tuesday\nnight.\nA spokesman told newspaper\nmen \"the whole future of Cyprus\"\nIs under consideration in London\ndiscussions between ; government\nleaders and Field Marshal Sir\nJohn Harding, military governor\nof Cyprus.\nBut the foreign office refused to\ncomment on Greek reports that\nthe London talks may produce an\noffer of dominion status for\nCyprus. This would be aimed at\nquieting. Greek Cypriot agitation\nfor immediate \"union with their\nhomeland.\nGreece   hai   strongly   backed\n\"enosis,\" the unlon-wlth-Greece\nmovement. Britain opposed any\nbreakaway from the Commonwealth but offered the Cypriots\nSon\u00abtJ,tutional  local self-government under the Brltleh flag.   .\nBritish   officials   said   Greece's\nnew  premier,  Constantine  Karamanlis, also has agreed to take a\nfresh look  at the  Cyprus situation.  Britain  was unable  to  get\ntogether with his predecessor, the\nlate Field Marshal Papagos.\nSEE NEW 8TATUS\nBritish newspapers quoted\nAthens Radio as saying that Harding brought to London with him\n10 days ago a plan drafted with\nArchbishop Makarios that would\ncommit Britain to this program:\n1. Britain would declare she\nrecognizes that the Cypriot\npeople have the right to decide\ntheir fate.\n2. A constitution would be\ngranted to Cyprus that would\npave the way to eventual\ndominion status.\n3. The time allotted for the\ntransition to dominion status\nwould be worked out In negotiations between delegates of\nthe elected Cypriot parliament\nend the British government.\nBritish  officials  said, the  Eden\ngovernment is considering a wide\nrange of plans to satisfy Greek\nCypriot aspirations, but they declined to say whether the dominion idea was under active\nStudy.\nSome   officials   expressed   the\nZhronic Hospital\nSeen as Additional\nTaxpayer Burden\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A hospltal director here says a provincial government offer on construction of chronic hospitals\nmeans an additional heavy burden on city taxpayers.\nAid. George Miller, member\nof the Vancouver General Hospital board of directors, said:\n\"Victoria will put half the\nconstruction cost \u2014 If the city\nagrees to operate the hospltal\u2014\nahd this can only mean the taxpayers will have to bear the inevitable deficit.\"\nHe said chronic hospital patients are usually those least\nable to pay the required 100 per\ncent cost of their care.\nHospital patients are usually\nthose [east able to pay the required 100 per cent cost of their\ncare.\nHospital Insurance does not\nextend to chronic cases.\nCouncil members agreed to\nawait the report of their special\ncommittee before taking action\non the provincial government\noffer.\nWants Freer\nNews Movement\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 Walton A. Cole, editor of Reuters\nnews agency, recommended Tuesday that editors of the Commonwealth press should adopt a \"Canberra charter\" to help news flow\nmore smoothly between the nations of the world.\nHe told the Commonwealth\nPress Union conference here that\ncommunications are the cornerstone of the Commonwealth. But\nthe press tended to be too complacent on the subject.\nCole's proposal for a \"Canberra\ncharter\" was referred to a committee for study.\nBUS DRIVERS TO\nADD TO SUCCESS\nOF GREY CUB DAY\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 City bus\ndrivers have agreed to skip overtime claims as a gesture towards\nthe success of Grey Cup day here\nNov. 26.\nA release from the Street Rall-\nwaymen's Union (AFL-TLC) said\nthe operators of 426 trolley coaches and gas buses have agreed to\nwork longer hours without benefit\nof overtime pay on Grey Cup day.\n. The union said the operators will\nbe working longer so that \"Vancouver may stage the greatest\nGrey Cup day that Canada has\nyet seen.\"\nSays Drew Reviving '\nOld Policies\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Justice\nMinister Garson said Tuesday that\nProgressive Conservative leader\nDrew is trying to revive the old\nConservative idea of \"blasting\"\nCanada's way into world markets.\nSuch a policy aggravated Canada's troubles in the Bennett regime of the 1930s, he said in ,an\naddress to the annual meeting of\n(he Manitoba Liberal-Progressive\nAssociation.\nMr. Garson said Mr. Drew, in\na recent speech here, contended\nCanada is exporting too much unprocessed raw material. Canada\nhad had a devastating demonstration that this would not be a wise\npolicy,  Mr.  Garson said.\n\"This,\" he said, \"is Mr. Drew's\n1955 edition of Prime Minister\nBennett's plan of the 1930s of\nblasting his way into the markets\nof the world.\"\nJACK J. WUftM of Palo Alto, Califs, smiles philosophically\nIn a San Carlos, Calif., restaurant kitchen where he Is employed\nas a dishwasher.-He stands to Inherit half of the twelve million\ndollar estate left by a daughter of Isaac Singer, sewing machine\nmanufacturer. Seven years ago he found a bottle drifting in the\nlurf at San Francisco containing the only will ever found and\nwhich divided the estate between her attorney and the finder of\nthe bottle. The strange case Is still awaiting a final settlement and\nWurm has said he would gladly sell his claim for $100,000 cash.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nLIBRARY\nM\nWEATHER FORECAST     ^\nKOOTENAY: Cloudy and mIM'!\nwith   occasional   clear   intervals.\",'\nWind south 20 in some valleys,\notherwise light. Low-high at Cranbrook. 25 and 4_i; Crescent Valley,\n32 and 45.\nolotov\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1955   Not More Than do Daily.  10c Saturday\nNo. 169\nHopes of Big Four\n'iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiumiiiiiiiiiniii;\nCame Out 50 Cents\nAhead Besides\nPORT ARTHUR (CP) \u2014 A\nyoung woman, who tangled with\nJohn Barleycorn and landed In\ncourt as a result, left a lasting\nImpression on police and court\nofficials here after pleading ,\nguilty and paying her fine on a\ndrunk charge.\nWhen set to pay her fine, the\nwoman found she was $3.50\nshort. She asked for time, but\nwas refused when she described\nherself as a hitchhiker heading\nfor Vancouver.\nUndaunted, the quick-think-\nIng female went to work on\nmembers of the police force\navailable and managed to scrape\nUp all but $1. The magistrate he-\ncame interested and wound up\nmaking a contribution.\nAfter the woman had departed following -payment of the\nfine, those concerned began to\nfigure It all out. It was discovered she had made 50 cents on\nthe deal.\niiiiiiiiiijiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\nPolice Called lo\nQuell Ship Fight\nLIVERPOOL, England (CP) \u2014\nShip officials radioed for police\nhelp when a fight broke out early\nTuesday among, the British crew\nof the Canadian Pacific Liner Empress of Scotland as it neared\nLiverpool after being battered by\nhuge waves and gale winds up to\n65 miles an hour.\nLiverpool police who boarded\nthe 29,000-ton vessel, inbound frdm\nMontreal with nearly 200 passengers said they are investigating\nthe incident.\nCanadian Pacific Steamship officials said in a statement that the\nfighting was nothing more than \"a\nsmall disagreement\" and that'reports it was a major battle were\n\"completely untrue.\"\n\"A small disagreement took\nplace within their own quarters\nbetween a few .members of the\ncatering department, In which\nblows were struck and superficial\ncuts received,\" the statement said.\nDemands All Germany\nFollow Red East Bloc\nBy DANIEL DE LUCE\nGENEVA (AP) \u2014 Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov\nstunned the Big Four conference Tuesday night with a demand for Communist dominance in a united Germany.\nThe Western Allies itnmediately obtained a recess until today. A French delegation officer said Wednesday's\nmeeting \"could be the last.\"\nANTOINE'PINAY, French Foreign Minister,\nholding cup and saucer in one hand and cigar\nIn the other, makes point during chat with U.S.\nSecretary of State' John Foster Dulles, right,\nfollowing luncheon at MontfleufV, the former's\nGeneva residence., Listening at left Is British\nForeign Secretary Harold Macmillan. The western powers appear toi have won the Big Four\nconference battle with Russia up to the midway\npoint.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nVancouver Seeks Liberal Member Asks\nFlood Aid\nChurch Plans \u25a0\nStudent Residence\nAt UBC\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The\nsynod of the Presbyterian Church\nin Canada has announced plans to\nbuild a $200,000 residence for male\nstudents at the Uinversity of B. C.\nThe residence, which will house\n40 students, is to be called St.\nAndrew's Hall. It is scheduled for\ncompletion by opening of the 1956\nuniversity fall term.\nF-L-A-S-H\nFOUR BUILDINGS\nABLAZE AT COAST\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A two-\nalarm fire was burning out of\ncontrol In the Oamble Street\nIndustrial section shortly before\nmidnight. Four buildings, Including a tire factory, were\nblazing.\nMission Span To\nBe Replaced Soon\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The Canadian Pacific Railway announced\nhere today the missing span on\nthe Mission bridge will be re-,\nplaced shortly.\nA company spokesman said the\nwork will go ahead as soon as\nthe necessary steel has been delivered and fabricated.\n\"Restoration and repairs to the\nbridge will amount to about $2,_-\n000,000,\" the  spokesman said.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - North\nand West Vancouver have demanded an early meeting with\nPremier Bennett to seek financial\naid from the B.C. government to\nrepair heavy damage caused by\nlast  week's  floods.\nReeves Grant Currie of North\nVancouver and John Richardson\nof West Vancouver said today they\nare ready to go to Victoria for a\nmeeting with  the premier.\nMunicipal councils of both communities met Monday night to determine causes and damages of\nthe flooding.\"\nMunicipal engineer D. I. H\u00bbw-;\nkins of West Vancouver estimated\n13 inches of rain struck the North\nShore last Wednesday and Thursday. The runoff was increased by\nmelting snow from'the mountains.\nDamage would total $200,000, he\nestimated.\nThe North Vancouver council\ndemanded the district be declared\na flood disaster area so that aid\ncan be obtained from national\ndisaster  funds,\nTelegrams were sent fo Premier\nBennett and Prime Minister St.\nLaurent demanding that North\nVancouver receive the same aid\ntreatment as the Fraser Valley in\n1948 and last year's Humber Valley hurricane victims in Ontario.\nWattlen's Suspension\nVANCOUVER\" (CP)\u2014 The warden of Oakalla prison, from which\n95 men bfive broken out in the last\n10 years, has drawn comments of\nboth admiration and condemnation from politicians.\nTom Goode, Liberal member of\nParliament for Burnaby - Richmond called Monday night for the\nsuspension of warden Hugh Christie for Friday's escape of four prisoners. All have been recaptured.\nMr. Goode also called for the\nremoval of the prison from the\nlower British Columbia mainland\narea.     .\nCHARGES   INCOMPETENCE\nMr. Goode accused the warden\nof incompetence and said he has\nbeen without the \"confidence and\nloyalty of his own men for four\nTears.\"\nThe warden was defended Tuesday, by E. E. Winch, veteran CCF\nmember of the B.C. legislature for\nBurnaby.\n\"I wish to dissociate myself from\nYARD SEEKS\nYOUTH'S KILLER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Scotland\nYard Tuesday night mobilized all\npolice stations and patrol cars In\na hunt for the killer of a young\nIndian electrical engineer, recently arrived fr^m Canada, whose\nbody was found here early in the\nday, badly beaten and stuffed inside a folding divan.\nThe body of the engineer, identified as Akon Chandra Dutta, was\nfound in the top floor flat of a\nrambling Victorian mansion in\nBalham, south London, following\na tip tb the police that \u00a350 was being offered in the underworld to\nanyone who would dispose of his\nbody.   \u201e\nDutta -flew to London from\nMontreal Saturday. He was on his\nway home after a year's study in\nCanada and planned to go to work\non the Canadian-sponsored Umtru\nColombo plan power project today.\nI). S. Businessman Says Big\nCompanies a Threat fo Freedom\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 T. K.\nQuinn, American businessman and\nauthor, thinks \"General Motors is\nentirely too big.\"\n\"It unwittingly threatens the\nvery existence of countless good\ncompanies and eventually our own\nfree American institutions,\" Quinn\nsifW In a statement to the Senate\nanti-trust and monopoly sub-committee at the opening session of\na four-week \"study\" of GM, the\nworld's largest manufacturing\nfirm.\nQuinn proposed a \"maximum\nfree-enterprise bill' designed to\nrestrict the size of large corporations and possibly to persuade\nthem to break up. This, he^aid,\nis the way to deal with what he\ntermed the \"giantism issue\" \u2014 the\n\"pressing, dreadful issue\" facing\nthe country.\nLong a critic of large corporations, Quinn formerly was a vice-\npresident of General Electric Corp.\nHe now is head of two small firms\nin New York and has written a\nnumber of books, including \"Giant\nBusiness; Threat to Democracy\"\nand \"I Quit Monster Business.\"\nQuinn suggested the imposition\nof steeper corporation income tax\nrates on firms exceeding the maxi\nmum.\nWOULD CURB POWER\nUnder his proposal, such companies would not be allowed to\npurchase or absorb other firms;\ntheir officers and directors could\nnot serve in the same capacities\nwith other corporation; and a corporation could remove itself from\nthe oversize class by splitting into\nseparate companies.\nQuinn said:\n\"The decisions pf company\nmanagements like General\nMotors and U.S. Steel can deter\nmine the whole course of the\ncountry's development in human\nrelations,, organization, opportunity, profits and prosperity,\nregardless of our people or their\nrepresentatives.\"\nany suggestion for the removal of\nwarden Christie,\" said Mr. Winch.\n\"Anyone who has any knowledge and understanding of conditions that existed prior to his\nappointment, and as they now\nprevail, will accord him appreciation for what he has done and\nencouragement and support in\nwhat he is trying to do In humanizing the operation of our\njail system.\"\nThere have been 39 break-outs\nsince 1952 when Mr. Christie took\nover as warden of the 1,000-pri-\nsoner provincial institution which\nwas designed to hold 470.\n\"Despite demands by Mr, Goode\nand Burnaby reeve Charles Mae-\nSorley that the prison be moved\nout of Burnaby, Attorney-General\nRobert Bonner said Tuesday it\nwill stay put. The provincial government had a multi-million dollar investment in the prison.\nHowever, completion of the\nHaney correctional institute would\nsee removal of nearly half Oakal\nla's present population.\n\"If Molotov maintains his position, including his statement that\nRussia does not intend to submit\nany other proposals on German\nunification, it Is difficult to see\nhow the West could make any\nagreement or compromise on any\nother front in the agenda,\" the\nFrench officials said.\nMolotov's sweeping rejection of\nany plan to unify Germany by\nfree elections in the foreseeable\nfuture and his blunt demand that\nall Germany follow the Communist course of the East German\nregime demolished Western hopes\nof conciliation, built up by his\nMoscow remark Monday night\nthat he was bringing back \"better\nbaggage\" to Geneva.\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles told\nthe conference:\n\"What Mr. Molotov had said\nseems so serious In terms of the\ndirective of our heads of government and the x hopes with\nwhich we came here, that I\nprefer to study the matter overnight before speaking.\"\nFrench Foreign Minister Pinay\nand   British   Foreign' Secretary\nMacmillan agreed.\nBritish,  U.S.  and  French press\nofficers   jointly   announced   after\nthe session, the eighth in 13 days,\nthat  the intial Allied \u25a0 impression\nof   Molotov's   speech   is   that   it\n\"tears   up\"   the   directive   of  the\n\"summit\" conference last July.\n\"It   Indicates,\"   they   said,   \"a\ndetermination    by    the    8ovlet\nUnion to accept  no settlement\nof   the   German   problem   that\ndoes not Involve the cpnimijn'\nIzatlon of all Germany\/\nMolotov  denounced the West's\nproposal of last Friday for Germany's unification by free elections in September'1956. He called\nit \"unreal-, and dangerous,\" reviving militarism and capitalism in\nall Germany and directing these\nforces against the Soviet Union.\nThe Communist German republic, he said, \"is sure of a great\nfuture, since It Is following the\npath of development which is that\nCows' Milk May Soon\nGive Disease Protection\nBy ADOLPH JOHNSON\nMINNEAPOLIS (AP) \u2014 Two\nUniversity of Minnesota scientists\nsay they have found a way to\nmake cows give milk that can provide protection against disease,\nThey report they have discovered that cows vaccinated for a\ncertain disease \u2014 or several diseases \u2014 will produce milk that has\nthe power to protect against those\ndiseases.\nImmunity already has been\nbuilt up in animals by feeding\nthem milk from vaccinated cows.\nTwenty human guinea pigs have\nshown-that protective qualities in\nmilk are absorbed into the blbod\nstream. Researchers say they are\nconfident further experiments will\nshow human beings can achieve\nimmunity through drinking \"protective milk\":\nIMMUNITY TEMPORARY\nThe immunity to be achieved Is\nof a \"passive\" or temporary char-\nOUEEN'S COUSIN\nFOUND UNCONSCIOUS\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Lady Nancy\nBlair, 37-year-old twice-marrie'd\nfirst cousin of the Queen, was\nfound unconscious Tuesdav in a\ntraip sleeping comoartment.\nHours after she wa* taken from\nthe train to a hospital her case\nwas a mystery.\nScotland Yard said nolice did\nnot know the nature of any illness Lady Nancy may have\nsuffered.\nNINE MONTH TERM\nFOR $300 THEFT\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 John Joseph Desmarais. 34, of Notch Hill,    \t\nwas sentenced to nine months in  be televised\nacter. It continues only as long as\n\"protective milk\" is consumed regularly.\nThe discovery was made by Dr\nWilliam E. Petersen, professor of\nanimal husbandry and authority\non milk, and Dr. Berry Campbell,\nassociate professor of anatomy\nwho has done considerable work\nin the field of immunology.\nThey cautioned that much work\nremains to be done.\nThey say they are sure that\n\"protective milk\" can be used to\nimmunize human beings against\nsuch diseases as streptococcal infection, sue has sor;e throat, measles, smallpox, diphtheria, and tuberculosis.\nThey also believe it will be effective against polio.\nCeremony Ends\nPasha-Sultan Feud\nST. GERMAINE EN LAYE,\nFrance (Reuters) \u2014 Berber chieftain Thami el Glaoui, pasha of\nMarrakesh, Tuesday ended his\nlong, bitter feud with Moroccan\nsultan Mohammed Ben Youssef as\nhe bowed low three times a\/nd\nkissed his feet.\nIn a three-minute ceremony. El\nGlaoui begged forgiveness and\npledged his loyalty. The 83-year-\nold pasha was one of the leaders\nwho succeeded in having Ben\nYoussef exiled two years ago for\n\u25a0his nationalist feelings.\nprison Tuesday when .he pleaded\nguilty to theft of stock and cash\nfrom the Kamloops branch of the\nCanadian Legion. The logger said\nhe stole the money, amounting to\nmore than $300, to buy clothes and\na stove for his family.\nDOLLAR  LOWER\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 U.S. dollar Tuesday closed at a discount of\n3-32 per cent In terms of Canadian\nfunds, up 1-16. It took BO 28-32\ncents Canadian to buy $1 American.\nti.S. dollar bid 99 29-32, asked\n9\u00bb 15-16.\nOUEEN WON'T APPEAR\nON TELEVISION\nLONDON   (AP)  \u2014 The Queen\nhas turned down suggestions that\nher annual Christmas Dav broadcast to the Commonwealth should\nlive or on film \u2014\nthis year. Tha BBC will broadcast\nit by radio as usual; It will he\ncarried on TV networks at home\nin sound, with a picture as background.\nRETS NINE MONTHS\nFOR RING THEFT\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 ,Allan\nRossman. 44, a waiter, was sentenced Tuesday to nine months\nin jail for the theft from a patron\nof a diamond ring valued at\n$5200. The gem was recovered at\nthe U. S. border when city police\novertook his car. The diamond was\nhidden, in a .tube of shaving cream.\nAssault On Ripple\nRock To Begin\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A scow\nloaded with 200 tons of equipment\nfor the destruction of Ripple Rock\nwas being towed towards Seymour\nnarrows Tuesday. $\nThe equipment, including a\ngiant shovel and bulldozer, will be\nused by the 40 men who will open\nthe assault on the notorious west\ncoast navigation hazard about 120\nmiles upcoast from Vancouver.\nThe federal public works department1 has commissioned Northern\nConstruction Co. and J. W. Stewart Ltd. \u2014 a single firm \u2014and\nBoyles Bros. Drilling Co. Ltd., to\nremove the rock.\nThe two peaks of Ripple Rock,\nwhich straddles the inside passage\nbetween Vancouver island and the\nmainland, are 400 feet apart and\nstand nirfe and 20 feet below the\nlow water mark.\nThe job requires the rock to be\nremoved in a single underground-\nunderwater blast within 30\nmonths.\nof all mankind, and has strong\nand peace-loving friends (the\nSoviet bloc).\"\nFACING DEADLOCK\nWhen the Big Four reassemble\ntoday, they will still be bitterly\ndeadlocked on point one of their\nagenda \u2014 European security and\nGerman unification. The second\npoint, disarmament, has not been\ndiscussed since the conference\nopened Oct, 27. On the third arfd\nlast point, development of East-\nWest contacts, a committee of experts 4s bogged down in arguments\nbut under orders to report to the\nforeign ministers Thursday.\nMolotov claimed that all German workers considered the East\nGerman republic as their only\ntrue fatherland,, and would never\npermit its Communist regime to1\ndisappear with all its \"achievement.\"\nThe West German delegation\nhere was shocked at what a\nspokesman called \"the brutality of\nMolotov's position.\" But Foreign\nMinister Heinrich von. Brentano\ndeclined comment until after he\nconsults with the three Allied\nministers today.\nMolotov hammered on the\ntheme that only by negotiations\nbetween the two rival German\ngovernments to make eom-\nmunlzatlon a mod'el for all Germany can unification be carried\no_rt\nOttawa Awards\n$7 Million In Public\nWorks Contracts\n\u2022OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Contracts\nworth $7,138,800, Including $4,-\n384,313 for new works, were\nawarded by the public works department during October, it \\tras\nannounced Tuesday.'\nA total of $2,693,422 was for repair and maintenance of existing\nstructures and $61,064 for dredging. '\nTop contract of the month was\none for $2,639,878, awarded to\nNorthern Construction \u2014 J. W.\nStewart, Ltd., a single firm, and\nBoyles Brothers Drilling Company of Vancouver for removal\nof Ripple Rock, a shipping menace in Seymour narrows on the\nwest coast. The rock is to be\ndrilled and then shattered with a\ngiant blast.\nGrudge Prompted\nChurch Robberies\nFAIRMONT. Minn. (CP)\u2014Glen\nW. Smith, 23, of Toledo, Ohio,\nwho allegedly told police here he .\nrobbed 3000 churches in the\nUnited States. Canada and Mexico\nof about $25,000 during the last 18\nmonths, was arraigned Tuesday in\njustice court in Fairmont.\nSmith was bound over to the\ndistrict court and bail set at\n$10,0,00, which was not furnished.\nHe is charged with grand larceny a.nd breaking and entering.\nPolice chief George Cavers\nquoted Smith as saying he had a\ngrudge against churches \"because\nthe same people who turned me\ndown for jobs go to church.\"\nAnd In This Corner...\nHAWARD8 HEATH, Eng. (AP) \u2014 Mrs. Eliza Luckett, whoas a\nchild was too frail to attend school, will be 107 years old Wednesday.\nAsked by friends what she would like most for a birthday present,\nMrs. Luckett replied: \"A bottle of whisky.\"\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Anybody want any black monkey skins?\nPublicity bureau commissioner George Warren knows where\nthere is an ample supply.\nMonday the bureau received a request from a 15-year-old African Gold Coast boy for \"catalogues\" about Victoria. He offered to\npay with black monkey skins.\nMr. Warren thanked him for the offer of the skins, sent a generous supply of tourist pamphlets and told the boy he could not accept the skins because the bureau's s'ervices are free.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 When her vintage coupe broke down on a\nhighway recently, Mayor Charlotte Whitton fixed It with a bobby\npin.\nThen she drove to a service station to have the broken carburetor spring replaced, ftecountlng the tale to city council Monday\nnight, Miss Whitton said the service man looked and askedi\n\"You do this yourself?\"\n\"Yes, sir!\" \u201e .        , ,\n\"If this goes on men'll soon be as extinct as horses,   he said.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 This Is the story of two bishops wlth^\nspots before'their eyes. \u25a0 \"\nIt seems Rt. Rev. Angus Dun. Episcopal bishop of Washington,\nnoticed his vision was blurring on his return from the church's recent general convention In Honolulu.\nBy coincidence Bishop Henry Knox Sherrill of New York, who\nhas been at the convention, too, had Borne eye trouble at the same\ntime \u2014 In Australia, where he'd gone from Honolulu.\nBishop Dun thought of going to an oculist but didn't get around\nto it.\nBishop Sherrill did \u2014 on his return to the Unlfed States.\n\"This is odd,\" said the oculist, In effect. \"These glasses don't\nmatch your prescription.\"\nThe bishop recalling that Bishop Dun had been wearing glasses\nIdentical In appearance with his. dashed off a note to his Washington co'leaoue: \"Could we have mixed up our glasses?\"\nThey had \u2014 In the flurry uf winding up the convention.\nSo an exchanqe of glasses was made bv special delivery.\nNow both bishops see everything more clearly.\n-:\u25a0\n_______\n___________\n |pip^fe\u00abW^'      , ; : \u25a0 -7\u2014-; \u25a0\u2014^\u2014\u2014 \u2014 \u2014\u2014; \u2014\n^^^^^j^^\n.    '-!    '.'     ' . \u25a0 \u25a0   .\n.\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9, 1955\n1\nTONIGHT ONLY \u2014 GIANT ALL, THRU.L SHOW\nComplete Shows at 7:00-8:34\nCIVIC\n1i_1s_1.mii [Duitmi loimitii\nIMS UUt-\nil FAMOUS\nPUVEBS\nTUEATBF\nCHARLES 1(. FELDMAN\nGroup Productions presents\nthe\nseven\nyear\nitch\nDirected by\nBILLY WILDER\ni&y&to'\n\u00aen_<fa,\nideWrt,\nMARILYN\nMONROE5*\n\u25a0Out,\nTOM EWELl\n\u2022a tvam KfTEJ. SONNY TOFTS\nmBCBT STRAUSS . OSCAR HOUOtW\nMARCtTERITt CHAPMAN \u2022 VICTOR MOORE\nCOXAIINE\nQnemaScoPE\nI couanrnutu\nCMb\nReleased b\u00bb^\nlOOl Century Fox\nFAMOUS\nPLOVERS\nTHEATRE\nKary, Wallacli, Coventry Seek\nRe-Election; Bourque Undecided\nNAME COURT OF\nREVISION, R.O\nCity clerk Reeve C, W, Harper\nhas been named returning officer\nfor tha December 8 civic election\nand Mayor Joseph Kary, Alderman George. Eckmier and Alderman Stanley Smith a court of revision fco sit and review the voters j an effort\ntho* park.\nMay Light Park\nTo Stop Damage\ntfThe city- electric light department will investigate the cost of\ninstalling lights in Gyro Park in j son  Rotary  Club  and  St.  Paul's\nMayor Joseph Kary, Alderman Elizabeth Wallach and\nAlderman J. H. Coventry said Tuesday they would seek\nre-election at civic elections December 9. Their two-year\nterms are up in December. Alderman T. H. Bourque, whose\nterm also expires, is still undecided.\n\u00bb, \"The present administration has a lot of programs under way, and I would like to see them completed if given\nthe people's mandate,\" Mayor Joseph Kary said in announcing his decision to stand for re-election. He has been\nNelson's chief magistrate for\nfour years.\nAlderman Wallach also said she\nwould seek Ve-election because\nshe would like to follow through\nprograms the present council has\ninitiated, particularly their plans\nto put bylaws before the ratepayers for construction of a new\ncity hall and for street improvements, concrete sidewalks, surfacing and storm sewer programs.\nAlderman Coventry tossed his\nhat into the ring with the conviction, \"Nelson is on the verge of\nexpansion.\" Because of this, he\nfelt \"the experience of the present\ncouncil has gained in past administrations will serve the city well\nin coming terms.\"\nAlderman Bourque, who has\nbeen an alderman since 1951, was\nundecided when contacted -Tuesday night.\nMayor Kary. who served two\nyears as an alderman before becoming mayor and two years before that as \u00ab school board member, has been active ln organizational work for a new city-district\nhospital and in winning provincial\ngovernment approval of a West\nArm bridge. He has been 'on the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nBoard the last four years as city\nrepresentative. He was secretary-\ntreasurer of the Nelson District\nBoy Scout Association for two\nyears, a Rotary Club member nine\nyears and was first president of\nWest Kootenay Agricultural and\nIndustrial Exhibition. He has been\na Nelson resident 10 years, is married and has three children.\n8ECOND WOMAN\nAlderman Wallach has also\nbeen a councillor since 1951 and is\nthe second woman to serve on a\nNelson city council. She was born\nand educated in Nelson, later receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree from University of B. C. She\nhas been a leader in pro-recreation, having taught all girls' physical education in Nelson Junior\nand Senior High schools from,\n1937 to 1942 and at Trail-Tadanac\nJunior-Senior High Sohool for one\nand a half years. She is a member\nof St, Paul's United Church, is\nmarried and has two children.\nIn the past year as a city council recreational representative she\nhas organized the Nelson Recreation Association of which she is\nnow chairman. She ls chairman of\nthe city council gas and transportation committee and is a member\nof the finance committee, public\nworks committee and is the city\nrepresentative to the Selkirk\nHealth Unit.\nTOWN PLANNINO\nAlderman Coventry has been a\nNelson resident 18 years and an\nalderman for the past four. Prior\nto that he had served as president\nof the Nelson Retail Merchants'\nAssociation and on the executive\nof the Retail Section of the Board\nof Trade. He is a member of Nel-\nlist November 15.\nNominations for election will be\ntaken m the city clerk's office\nand the poll will be in the Civic\nCentre Badminton Hall from 8\na.m. to 8 p.m. December 8.\nKleenburn . . .\nWestern Monarch\nGait \u2014 Greenhlll\nCanmore Briquettes\nPHONE 889\nCoal\nTowleR\nFuel & Transfer\nto   stop   vandalism   In\nEstimate of costs was asked by\ncity council Monday night after\nhearing the \"shelter in the park\nhad been damaged, tables upset,\nswings broken and stones rolled\ninto the pool.\"\nChairman of the Parks Committee Alderman J. H, Coventry\nreported the damage and recommended lights be installed.\nEleetrolux\nPhone .1108-553\nNELSON\nOVERLOAD YOUR\nELECTRICAL CIRCUITS\nTHIS CHRISTMAS!\nFaulty Wiring and\nOverloaded Circuits\nCan \"Burn You Up \"\nHave Your Wiring Done by a\nGovernment' Certified Class A\nElectrician\nColeman Electric\nPhone 1752\nNelson, B.C.\nUnited Church. He is married and\nhas three children.\nSince election in 1951, he has\ndone considerable research toward\nformation of a town planning\ncommission. He is chairman of\nthe Community Planning and\nHousing Committee and the Parks,\nSanitation and Welfare committee. He is also a member of the\nElectric Light and Power Committee and Water and Fire Committee.\nDud-\nJudge Lenient\nBecause of Age\nTwenty-year-old George\nley Graham was senrtneed to two\nyears in the B.C. penitentiary\nhere Tuesday on three charges of\nbreaking and entry and theft in\nihe East Kootenay. The sentence\nwill run concurrently with sentences totalling three years received before Magistrate William\nEvans here for breaking and\nentry and theft of a Balfour\nservice station and theft of a car\nat Prince George.\nGraham pleaded guilty to the\nEast Kootenay charges which included breaking and entry and\ntheft of a Wardner general store.\n<m Erickson grocery store and a\nCreston parage, in county court\nbefore His Honor Judge E. P.\nDawson.\nJudge Dawson, in passing sentence, said he was giving Graham\na lenient sentence only because of\nMs youth and hoped he would\n\"se the three years he must serve\n*o learn a trade and come out\nietermined to become a good\n\"itizen. t\nR. B. Allan was crown counsel.\nThere was no defence counsel.\nTrail Man Dies\nWilliam Innes of Trail died at\nVancouver at the age of 74.' He\nserved in the Boer War and World\nWar- One.\nHe is survived by his wife, two\nsons, James of Trail, David of New\nTersey; two daughters, Mrs. &\nStrong, Nelson and Mrs. G. Fred-\nirickson, Trail; 15 grandchildren\nqnd seven great grandchildren.\nlev. G. Turpin D D. conducted the\nfuneral service In Mount Pleasant\nChapel, Kingswayat 11th Avenue\nI Tuesday, Cremation followed.\n(Hy Okays\nElevations for\nSupermarket\n- Bramwell Construction Company will be advised that its proposed elevations for the new Safeway Ltd. supermarket and parking area in Fairview rrieet the requirements for Nelson streets.\nBramwell Construction Monday\nnight requested the ruling, and\nasked permission to proceed with\nits project and assurance that any\nstreet, boulevard, sidewalk, sewer\nor water development carried out\nin the area' would conform with\nthe elevations shown in the plans.\nElevations for the new development were established from a survey m&cie by Boyd C. Affleck, B.C,\nLand Surveyor.\nMrs. C Walts,\nPioneer Nurse,\nDies at Nelson\nMrs. Caroline Kennedy Watts\ndied ln Mount St. Francis Tuesday\nmorning at the age of 94.\n| She was-born in St. Andrews,\nManitoba, and graduated from\nWinnipeg hospital as a nurse in\n1897.\nMrs. Watts came to Nelson in\nits early days as one of the city's\nfirst and finest nurses, and while\ndoing signal service during the\n1918 influenza epidemic, she was\ni asked to take over the post of\nmatron of the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, after the death\nof the matron of that time.\nIn 1951, Mr. and Mrs. Watts celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. They were married in\nWinnipeg.\nBesides her many friends. Mrs.\nWatts is survived by her husband.\nCharle-Vof Nelson; two nephews\nE. P. Burnell. Jack Kennedy of\nKelowna and one niece, Mrs, J.\n{ James of Winnipeg.\nPrivate funeral service will be\n| held in  Nelson Thursday.\nGEORGE   MERZ\nVogue, photo\nMerz of NES lo\nCranbrook Post\nNelson City Council has approved a finance committee\nrecommendation that a bylaw be drawn up under the\nTown Planning Act to set out duties of the Nelson Town\nPlanning Commission, Such a commission must number\nnine persons including the school district board chairman,\nthe parks committee chairman and the mayor.\nAt the same time it also approved recommendations\nthat an additonal grant of $1823 be given the Civic Centre\nto meet costs of installing gas heaters; that a $700 grant\ntowards construction of a swimming pool at Lakeside Park\nbe paid to the Swimming Pool Committee of Nelson Rotary Club; that the transportation committee be authorized to spend up to $512 to replace two nnsts and flnorins\nand to build and m,\u00a9ve bins at the city garage and that\nbad- debts for light totalling $398.56 and gas amounting to\n$88.69 be written off.\nG. S. Strong, 702 Second Street,\nwill be advised of the city's\nauthority under the Municioal Act\nto drain any irea where water\naccumulates and bill the owner\nand will be advised of his re-\nsponslbility as a property owner.\nThe letter refers to a gulley on\nSecond Street, owned largely by\nMr. Strong where water accumulated and was said to have ceated\na hazard, particularly for children. The city has made a number\nof attempts to drain it. but the\nculvert continues to plug. Drainage is Mr. Strong's responsibility\nCouncil believed.\nA    letter    from    Nelson    High\nGeorge Merz, who was employ'\nment officer at the National Em'\nployment Service office in Nelson\nfor the past two and a half years, \\ School students thanking the city\nhas been promoted to the Cran- \u25a0 for the privilege of attending the\nbrook office, where he will be 'civic luncheon for Premier W A\nemployment supervisor. j C. Bennett and his cabinet when\nMr.  Merz has lived  in   Nelson | they visited Nelson, was received\ndistrict all his life.  He  attended [ and filed,\nschool  at Procter  and  at  Nelson j *   *   *\nBusiness College. He spent two j Notice was received and filed\nyears in the Royal Canadian from the International Brother-\nNavy,   two  and   a   half  years  at|nood of Electrical Workers local\nYale Lead and Zinc Mine at Ain.\nworth arid three years in the permanent  air  force  in   administrative work.\nMr. Merz is married and\" with\nhis wife, Dell, and two sons,\nKenneth, four, and Jimmie. 18\nmonths, has resided at 211 Hart\nStreet. Mr. and Mrs,\nfamily have already\nresidence at Cranbrook.\n)003 of termination of their present agreement with the city\nThey requested negotiations be\nopened for a new working agreement.\n*   *   t\nA  letter from Junior Chamber\nof   Commerce   drawing   council's\nMerz   and j attention  to  a  traffic  hazard   on\ntaken   up | Vernon   Street  when   show   mat-\nI inees   get  out   in   the  afternoons\nWill Be Prosecuted . . .\nStudents Strung Across Streets\nOn Way lo School, Block Traffic\nALDERMAN\nELIZABETH WALLACH\nbishop McCarthy\nALDERMAN  J.\nCOVENTRY\nIOOF SPONSORS\nSTUDENTS IN    \"\nUN PILGRIMAGES\nFifty-four delegates and members of the West Kootenay District\nRebekah Association attended the\ndistrict semi-annual meeting held\nin Nelson in conjunction with the\nIOOF district meeting. Members\nof Adinah Rebekah.Lodge of Trail\nDeborah Rebekah Lodge of Rossland, Floral Rebekah Lodge of\nSlocan City, Kinjarson Rebekah\nLodge of Castlegar, Sunrise Rebekah Lodge of Kaslo. and Queen\nCity Rebekah ^odge of Nelson attended the session.\nBusiness of the Association took\nup the afternoon sessions with a\nbreak for tea and fellowship with\nthe IOOF lodges. Seventy attended the delicious banquet which\nwas followed by a social evening.\nDuring.the evening a Trail student\nshowed pictures and spoke concerning a trio taken last summer\nthrough tho Canadian provinces to\nthe United Nations headquarters\nin New York where he studied\nand viewed the projects of the\nUnited Nations. Students are sent\non this limited Nations P'leriimge\nby the IOOF of several districts nf\nn.C. as well as other nrovfnces of\nCanada  and states of America.\nThe IOOF conducts competitions in public speaking at the\nhigh schools and selects an outstanding student to be snonsored.\nfinances paid bv the IOOF nf the\ndistrict or citv. Trail IOOF last\nyear sponsored such a student.\ni\\ College Stelreal\nI New president of Notre Dame\n, College and bishop of Nelson dio-\nj cese, Rt. Rev. T. J. McCarthy will\n; conduct a three-day retreat at the\nj college November 14. 15 and IB.\n1 The retreat is one made every\nyear. All classes and school activities stop and students take time\n| for a spiritual inventory and consideration of the fundamental\n] thihgs of life.\nI Bishop McCarthy will conduct\nla series of lectures for students,\nI there will be mass and holy com-\n\u25a0 munion each morning and stu-\ni dents will read selected books and\n! pamphlets and devote time to pri-\nj vate meditation.\ni The first day of retreat is at-\nI tended by both Catholic and Protestant students as lectures deal\nwith general principles. Remaining lectures are optional and Protestant students, if they do not\nwish to attend, are free to study.\nThe retreat follows mid-semester exams.\nwas referred to the public works\ncommittee for studv and report.\nCouncil agreed there was a\nhazard in the area, particularly\nto children. v\nAn easement from the CPR requested by the city for power line\ncrossings at mile 135.92, Nelsori\nsubdivision at $12 'annual rental,\nwas approved.\n* a    \u2022\nAn   additonal  guard  rail  will\nbe placed beneath the knee rail\non the  Rosemont Bridge across\nCottonwood    Creek   to    ensure\nsafety for children. W,  H.  Kit-\nto brought the danger of children falling beneath the rails to\ncouncil's   attention   In   a   lefter\nsuggesting    heavy wire screening be placed on both rails. The\n'   rails will  leave a gap of only\nabout four inches, city engineer\nG. Q.  Lake said.\nOrder to put the additional rail\non the pedestrian walk side was\nalready in when the letter was received.    Possibility    of    children\nsleighriding under the rail on the\ntraffic  side   had   decided   council\nto place a rail there.\nThe city will purchase $50\nworth of Christmas trees from\nNelson Boy Scout Association to\ndecorate city light standards.\nNelson Fire Department ha;\nstarted painting fire alarm posts\nred and white to make them more\neasily seen, Fire Chief Elwin\nOwens reported.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nCouncil approved sale of two old\nfire ladders that were-being stored in the fire hall basement to the\nnewly organized Salmo Volunteer\nFire Department for $100.\nn. He\nStudents who blockade streets\nas they come and go from school\nare creating a traffic hazard for\nmotorists and will be prosecuted\nif they do not use sidewalks.\nMotorists are complaining that\nthe students often stretch from\none side of a street to another,\nleaving no room for cars to pass\nand when a vehicle does approach\nare reluctant to move aside, city\npolice said Tuesday.\nPolice have spoken to junior\nhigh school students, who are reported the worst offenders, but\nsay they have received little cooperation They now feel prosecution is the only means left to Impress on them the necessity of\nleaving the street open.for traffic.\nRecently a group of junior high\nstudents refused to obey a police\nofficer when he asked them to\nclear the street for an approaching\ncar, police said.\nFREIGHT CARS\nTRAILED\nFARRON, B.C. (CP)\u2014Six cars\nof a 40car CPR freight train\nwere derailed Tuesday near Porcupine, three miles east of here.\nNo   one   was   injured   and   the\nELECTED lone representative\nfor the B.C. Hotelmen's Association and president of the Nelson Hotelmen's Association\nwas James Madden, above, vet.\neran NelBon hotelman, at a\ncent zone meeting In Nelson. ..-\nsucceeds Frank Williamson, who    track    was    to    be    cleared    by\nFairview Boy\nInjured In Spill\nTreated in hospital after a bad\nfall from his bicycle on Behnsen\nStreet Tuesday was Gerald Koe.\n12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs\nGeorge D. Koe, 604 Fifth Street.\nThe boy was knocked unconscious when his head struck the\nground after his bike skidded and\nsent him flying over the handlebars on the hill in the 600 block.\nHe was picked up by passersby\nand taken to Kootenay I^ake\nGeneral Hospital by his parent-\nafter he was given first aid treatment at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nE. E. Hopwood.\nThe boy was released from\nhospital after, it was found his\ninjuries were not serious. He received cuts and scratches on his\nface and hands.\n*1 MILLION HOTEL.\nSHOP CENTRE PLANNED\nVANCOUVER tCP) \u2014 Plans for\na $1,000,000 west end hotel and\nshopping development were announced Tuesday by Macaulay.\nNlcolls, Maitland and Co., .Ltd.\nTravellers will be able to drive\ninto a parking garage, register\nthere and take an elevator direct\nto their rooms.\nLAPOINTE SWORN IN\nOTTAWA (CPl -Hon. Hugues\nLapointe was sworn in Tuesday as\npostmaster-general. He also holds\nthe veterans affairs portfolio. He\nsucceeds the late Alcide Cote who\ndied last summer.\nrecently sold the Royal Hotel.\nMr. Madden previously had\nserved as Nelson president for\n14 years. Re-elected as Nelson\nsecretary was W. B. F. Green.\nDelegates from Nakusp, Salmo,\nYmir, Procter and Nelson\nattended.\nRequest Holding\nWatershed Area\nB.C. Department of Lands will\nbe requested to refuse any applications to purchase property within\nthe Nelson watershed area reserve.\nCity Qouncil Monday night\nmade this statement of policy following a request from the Land\nDepartment for a property sale.\nAn application to buy a three-\nquarter section in the area has\nbeen made by Mrs. B. E. Miller,\nwho already owns one quarter-\nsection.\nFire hazard would increase in\nthe area with the use of the land\nit was pointed out. Alderman T.\nH, Bourque recalled that the City\na few years ago applied for watershed reserves on Cottonwood\nCreek so that the land could not\nbe sold.\nWatershed area is approximately five miles from Nelson, on the\nWest Arm side of the divide, and\nwith Five-Mile Creek, which is\nthe actual soitrce of the City's\nwater supply, on the East side.*\nnightfall\n* The accident occurred while the\ntrain   Was  travelling  on   a  steep\ngrade.   An   auxiliary   train   was\nsent  from  Nelson   with   a  work\ncrew.\nThe Weather\nNelson       y 36\nToronto   31\nKenora      20\nSaskatoon   23\nCalgary               38\nCrescent Valley   34\nKamloops   34\nPenticton     45\nVancouver     47\nVictoria            47\nGIFTS\nBy\nSHULTON\nFriendship's Garden\nOld  Spice\nDesert Flower\n75c to $4.00\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine SL     Phone 1203\nFIRST\nAID\nCLASSES\nThursday, Nov.  10\nCity Fire Hall, 2:00 p.m.\nCanadian Legion, 8 p.m.\nBeginners: $2.00\nRenewals: $1.00\nA TREAT FOR YOU\nAND YOUR FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR  SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St.        Nelson\nEmergency\nGeneral Meeting\nTo Determine the Future of the\n. Nelson Badminton Club\n8:30 p.m. THURSDAY\nBadminton Lounge \u2014 Civic Centre\nIf you are a member or plan to play It is essential\nthat you be present.\nUsed\nAdding\nMachines\nWe Have Several Good  Used\nAdding Machines.\nRECONDITIONED\nVICTOR'S\nSMITH CORONA'S\nREMINGTON'S\nAll Guaranteed For One Year.\nPriced From $59.50\n$.J. mowatt&Co.\n\"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL\"\n536 Ward St. '        Nelson, B.C. Phone 200\n ..-..\u25a0\u2022\n\u25a0\u25a0:y-'.--i   \u2022     -  \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0     y\u20147\nsnn\nMayor Undecided... in.       \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u00bb\u00bb       __ \"_H'\u00bb\nTwo 'Forks AldermJ||il.f ^ .Firms,\nTo Seek Reflection   \\ToP Bend Purchases\nGRAND, FORKS - Aid. Carl F\nWolfram and Aid. Alfred W.t)ow-\nI ney,   whose   two-year   terms   on\nGrand Forks city  council expire\nI this year will both seek re-election\n| nt the December 8 civic elections.\nMayor 0. O. Stephenson, who is\ni finishing hts sixth  term  and  his\n[eighth  year  as   chief  magistrate,\nhas not yet mgde up his mind but\nit is likely he will also have his\ni>ame on the ballot, he said Tuesday. Several Grand Forks citizens\nhad approached  him  to seek reelection, he stated. Before becoming mayor, Mr. Stephenson was an\nalderman for three years.\nA third man is also considering\nrunning for alderman. He is John\nL, Lusk who has been a member\nof the Grand Forks school board\nthe past year. Aldermen Wolfram\n'tnd Downey have both served four\nyears. Mr. Lusk said he had beety\napproached   by   sftne   citizens   to\ntry for an aldermanic seat.\nNomination day is December 1.\nU.S. LIFTS\nENTRY BAN ON\nTRAIL UNIONISTS\nSEATTLE (CP) - John Boyd,\nU.S. immigration head here, said\nMonday the department has lifted\nan entry ban imposed earlier this\nyear on two members of Trail local\nof the International Union of\niMine, Mill and Smelter Workers\nl(Ind.)\nThe  bans  were  removed   from\n(Cecil S. Skinner, vice-president of\nthe local and Mrs. Alice Marie\nPetrunia of local's women's auxiliary.\nThey were originally stopped at\nIthe U.S. Border in March with five\nlother unionists on their way to an\n[International convention at Spo-\ne. The other five had not appealed their exclusion, Mr. Boyd\n(reslon Man to\nPrince Albert\nRCMP Command\nOTTAWA (CP) - A switch in\ninspectors between Prince Albert.\nSask., and Ottawa was announced\ntoday by the RCMP. j\nInspector John Atherton, 46, of (\nCreston, B.C., is transferred from j\ndivisional personnel officer at Ottawa to command Prince Albert]\nsub-division. ;\n'.Inspector John McPhee, 50, Min-j\nden, Ont., is transferred from command of the Prince Albert sub-di-J\nvision to succeed Inspector Ather-1\nton. !\nPlanning   to   move?     Call   ui\nfirst.   Our  modern   vans  and\nskilled movers assure a SAFE\nmoye  wherever  you  go. We\n\u25a0 rV agents for North  Amerl-\n[ can    Van    Lines,    America's\nleading long distance moving\n| organization. It costs no more\nI to   enjoy   this   finer   servicel\nWest\nI Transfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.\nNelson B.C.\nPhona 33\nT. Kennedy, 81,\nDies, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK - Timothy Kennedy, age 81, died Sunday at St.\nEugene Hospital. For the past ten\nyears his home had been on Koot\nenay_ Street  in  Cranbrook.\nHe was born and grew up at\nMattawa. Ont., and in 1903 he came\nWest to Star City, Saskatchewan.\nwhere he homesteaded and operated a farm until 1935. On sale of\nthis he moved to Tidale, Sask,.\nwhere he continued farming for\nten years. When he retired because of failing health he moved\nto Cranbrook.\nSurviving him are his wife, An-\ngeline in Cranbrook, a son, John.\nat Fort Macleod, three grandchildren and two brothers, Terrence\nat Fort Macleod and Martin at\nDetroit.\nRosary service lakes place at McPherson Funeral Chapel Tuesday,\nand requiem will be\\celebrated at\nSt. Mary's ChOrch Wednesday\nmorning.\nHm (mm\ntolll 2 Games\nFERNIE\u2014Cranbrook and Fernie\nhigh school basketball teams split\nin East Kootenay high school basketball league games played\nCranbrook. Fernie girls eked out\na 39 to 35 win in a thrilling encounter. Cranbrook ^boys held the\nadvantage , throughout to win by\n42 to 29.\nCranbrook girls took a 10-5 first\nquarter lead which the Fernie\ngirls cut to a two-point margin by\nhalf time when the score read 16\n18. The third quarter was close\nwith Fernie girls scoring 10 points\nto Cranbrook's nine to make the\nscore 26-27 in favor of Cranbrook\nFernie girls took the edge in the\nplay in the final quarter to out-\nscore Cranbrook 13-8 to take the\ngame. The final score was 39-35\nfor FernieMSandra Scott of Fernie,\nwas the top scorer with 16 points,\nCranbrook's top scorers were S.\nMcDonald with 15 and A. Lancaster wtlb. 13.\nCranbrook boys, took a 15-10\nfirst quarter lead. The second\nquarter was close checking with\nfew good scoring opportunities.\nFernie scored six points to Cranbrook's four to make the 'half\ntime score 16-19. Cranbrook took\ncommand in the second half, holding Fernie to 13 points, while they,\nthemselves were notching up 23.\nW. Morgan and L. Leiman led the\nCranbrook attack with 14 points\neach. Bernard Audia with nine,\nand Dennis Crabtree with eight,\nled the Fernie scorers.\nCrow's Nesl Production Up 30 p.c.\n;FfttNlE \u2014 Collieries of the\nCrows Nest Pass Coal Company\nLimited showed ft coal production\nincrease of over 30 per cent during October as compared with the\nsame month in 1954.\nThis October fi4,144 tons were\nmined, an increase of 22,592 tons\nthe October, 1954 production of\n71,552, tons. Elk River Colliery\nshowed art increase of 1230 tons.\nMichel Colliery, the company's\nlargest producer, showed an increase of 21,362 tons. Coke production at Michel by-product plant\ndropped 1861 tons, the actual figures being 15,173 tons as compared\nto 16,834 tons in October of last\nyear.\nComplete production,figures follow with, Oct. 1955 shown in the\nfirst column and October 1954 in\nthe second:\nCcal Production\nElk River 2fi,884\nMichel ... 67.260\nTotal 94,144\nCoke  Production:\nBv-Product           13.820\n*.P. Breeze          1.353\nTotal     15,173\n25.654\n45.893\n71,552\n15.307!\n1.527!\n16,834\nCranbrook Post\nOffice Returns\nHighest In Years\n\u00bb CRANBROOK - Partly due to\nactual peak employment and partly due to the revision In unemployment Insurance terms, October, post office records show high\nest return from a month's sale of\nunemployment insurance stamps\nfor many years at $7488.48, com\ntared with sales for the same\nmonth last year at \"$4697.55. Report\nhas been prepared by Post Master\nE. T. Girling.\nPostage strfhnps and meters revenue for the month came to 4002.15,\ncompared with 53948.64 for the\nmonth last year. Number of money\norders purchased at 2949 was\nslightly up from the total of 2943\nTor last October, and money orders\noaid numbered 850, compared with\n313 last October.\nI Volume of business reported for\nthe month was $64,291.03, compared with last October's total\nvolume  of $59,869.90.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9, 1955 \u2014 3\nL. Nerdstrom\nBuried al Nalal\nNATAL \u2014 The funeral of Leo\nNerdstrom, who died as a result of\nasphyxfation at Cranbrook ' was\nheld at Natal recently with funeral\nservices held in the Natal United\nChurch Mr. A. Sallis officiating.\nMr.   Nerdstrom,   who   was   53\nJust one example . . .\nNiagara Loans range from\n$100 to $1500 or more.\nyears of age, was well known\nthroughout the Natal-Michel district, having lived up the Elk Valley at the well known Big Ranch\nfor many years.\nSince leaving Natal he also logged at the coast before returning\naround 1950 to the Cranbrook district, where he had worked at\nvarious mills since.\nSurvivors are his mother and\nthree brothers in Cranbrook, a\nbrother in Vancouver and two sisters in California.\n8IX KOOTENAY FIRMS have topped 1S54'b final figures In\npurchases of the tenth series of Canada Savings Bonds-through\npayroll deduction plans. The entire area, organized by W. L, Clark\nof Nelson, Is at 96.4 Der cent with a total of $624,550. B.C.'s payroll\npicture shows $11,284,150, or 90.6 per cent of last'year. Above, Miss\nOlive Clark, secretary with the Investment men acting as organizers for the B.C, region payroll deduction \"team\", finds a crystal\nball of no help In determining if the ten millionth order Is among\nthose applications. Officials believe that many bonds will be\nbought. Six firms over last year's total are Cominco Mine, the\nMill and the Fertilizer Plant, Crows Nest Pass Coal, Kootenay\nForest Products and T. Eaton Company of Trail. '\nSuggests Banning\nHallowe'en Pranks\njj. P. Robinson of\nMarysville Dies\nKELOWNA  (CP)  \u2014 Aid. Jack\nTradgold   has   proposed   to   city\ncouncil   that   Hallowe'en  celebrations in Kelowna \"be banned en-[    MARYSVILLE \u2014 Funeral ser-\ntirely.\" vices will  be held  in Kimberley\n\"We let kids get away with j for James P. Robinson of Marysville who died Nov. 6,safter several years of failing health. !\nHe was in \"his 71st year. '\nBorn at Ulverston, England, on\nNov. 12, 1884, Mr. Robinson came\nto the U. S. in 1906 settling at\nButte, Mont., where he worked in\nthe mines. He later moved to the\nCoeur d'Alene mines in Idaho. In\n1923 he came to Canada to work\nfor Cominco first as a miner then\nas a powder man at the Sullivan\nmine following his retirement in\n1948, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson moved\nto New Westminster but in 1950\nthe pioneer couple returned to\nMarysville to live.\nMr. Robinson was very interested in Fall fairs and roaeos and\ntook many prizes for his prize\nbantam chickens. For 27 years he\nhas been a member of Kimberley\nBPOE '(Elks) No. 27. Surviving\nare his wife in Marysville, a brother in England, a sister, Mrs.\nCharles Bennett and a nephew,\nCharles Fallows both of\nWestminster.\nrAwunro Man,\n!).\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 David Leith.\naee 69, longtime machinist with\nCominco, died suddenly at his\nSpokane Street home.\nBorn in Aberdeen, Scotland, he\n* ad lived in the district since 1909.\n*Te engaged first in railway mach-\nne shop work at Cranbrook where\nhe resumed residence in 1919 a\/ter\na return to Scotland. Ho then was\nmachinist with the Staoles Lumber\nCompany at Wycliffe. In 1924.\nwhen Cominco began full scale\nproduction at the Sullivan mine\nhe bagan service at Kimberley\nwhich continued until his superannuation in 1951. He was a worker in St. Andrew's Presbyterian\nChurch   congregation.\nHis wife survives him at Kimberley and two daughters, Mrs.\nFred (Jessie) Jensen at Marysville\nand Miss Alice Leith at Smithers,\nand three sods, John at Kimberley,\nJames at Trail and William at\nMontreal. A fourth son, David,\ndied following a plane accident\nat Cranbrook several years ago.\nMICHEL HOTEL\nCHANGES HANDS\n'NATAL \u2014 The Michel Hotel\noperated by Mr. and Mrs. Avelirio\nfabbro for the past five years has\nbeen purchased by Mrs. Mary\nMatt of Natal. The latter had previously operated the Modern Cafe\nat Natal for the past six years.\nMrs. Matt took over the operation\nof the Michel Hotel on September\n\\ 1955 The purchase price was\nnot disclosed.\n\u2022    MONTHLY PAYMENTS\n'6\n1]\n19\n$44.63\n$23.64\n$19.46\nLoom fo $1500 or* Ufa Insured\nat no extra coif fo you.\nIIAGARA\nLOANS\n_J BRANCHES C0AST-T0 COAST\n560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE  1636\nDo You Need a\nSINK\nOf Fine Quality?\nReasonably\nPriced ?\nWE HAVE\nIT!\nDrop in Today to\nKootenay\nPlumbing\n351 Baker St.     Phone 666\nHousewives and Husbands\nAll Agree\nthings onp night-a year that they\nwould normally be sent to jail\nfor,\" he said.\nAid. Dick Parkinson said \"elderly people are terrorized by\nrowdy teenagers waging firecracker wars.\"\nInterior Glass Works reported\nto council 'that $600 in damage was\ndone by youths who turned over\na large packing case containing\nplate glass Hallowe'en night.\nHunters Bag\nElk, 4 Bears\nNATAL \u2014 A successful hunting\ntrip was reported by guide Ben\nVolpatti of Natal, assisted by\nguides Andrew Billy and George\nKaisner when they ventured up\nElk Valley some 43 miles from\nNatal in the Lewis Creek vicinity\nwith a four-man party from the\nU. S. The big game hunting party\nconsisted of Lou Giroux of Reno,\nNev., and Mike Imperatrice, J. D.\nImperatricrf and son Reg of Cali-1\nfornia.\nOn the seven-day hunt the party\nbagged three grizzly bears, one\nblack bear and an elk. They had\n.difficulty disposing.of two of the\nthree grizzlies. Although wounded,\nthey still endeavored to charge the\nhunters who made no mistake\nwith a second volley of ahots that\nstilled the ferocious animals. The\nAmericans stated they would return for another trip up the\nbeautiful Elk Valley next year.\nSix al Hockey\nReferee School\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Six men from\nCreston and Cranbrook attended\nthe eight-hour hockey referee\nschool conducted here by E. Swanson. It included a cover-to-cover\nstudy and discussion of the new\nCanadian Amateur Hockey Association rule boolr, then an equal\ntime spent on ice at the Memorial\nArena in interpretation and application of the rule-book material.\n' Started last year on suggestion\nof the Alberta-B. C. Intermediate\nHockey League to provide a supply of referees for local games\nin the towns from Coleman\nthrough the Crow's Nest Pass to\nCreston, the 1954 school graduated\n17 candidates who continued in\nthe work last season. Enrolment\nthis year was disappointing with\nNew | none of the Pass applicants for\nthe session appearing.\nGives Home Heating Comfort with\nCleanliness and Economy!\nOrder KUfMtMH Cpol\n. . a Load of Heating\nSatisfaction. ..NOW!\n\u2022i\u00ab\nFUEL\nond     TRANSFER\n526 Stanley  Street . . . Nelson\nMichel Coal\nProduction Up\nNATAL \u2014 The Michel mines are\ncontinuing to work steady and\nhave been operating ^ull time for\nthe past few months.\nCollieries of the Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Company consisting of\nMichel Colliery and Elk River\nColliery at Fernie showed an in*\ncreased coal production of 12,033\ntons during the month of September, 1965, as compared to the same\nmonth last year. The comparable\nnf-oduction figures given are 92,-\n059 tons in Sentember. 1955, as\ncompared to 80,026 tone in Septem-\nberjast year.-\nThe big East Kootenay producer,\nMichel Colliery, showed an increase nf 6618 tons as 64,4^1 tons\nwere produced this September\ncomnared to 57,805 tons produced\nin September of Inst year. Elk\nRiver ColVery produced the remainder.. 27.638 tons this September, an increase of 5415 tons over\nthat of last year in September\nwhen 22.223 tons were mined.\nCoke production at the Michel bv-\noroduct nlant dropped from 15.031\ntons to 14.299 tons, a decrease of\n732 tons from that produced in.\nSeptember of last year. Coke production figures given were as follows: By-product 13,022 tons in\nSentember 1955, compared to 13,-\n642 tohs in September la^t vear.\nB.P Breeze figures were 1277 tons\nproduced in Seotembmer of this\nyear comnared to 1381 tons produced in September last year.\nUse FIREPROOF BLOCKS\nWHEN YOU BUILD YOUR GARAGE\nNo  repairs or  upkeep fo worry\nabout.  Use concrete blocks ond\nBuild for a Lifetime.\n ; I \t\nTotal Cost of Blocks for\nAverage Garage $135.00.\nDelivered in Nelson.\nWrite or phono Trail 2105 \"collect\" tor full Information or\ncontact K. W. DIXON CO.. NELSON.\nKORPACK Cement Products Co. Ltd.\nSuppliers for the Kootenay of Blocks (Cinder or Concrete)\nChimney Blocks\n154 Wellington St.        Trail, B.C.        Phone 2105\nPhn Own Sta rids\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Red China has\nannounced that its first stamp-\nprinting project begins operations\nnext year. Designs have been\ndrawn up with the help of Czechoslovak,experts.\nDoes Your Roof Leak?\nThen It's Time for New Roofing\nWe Have a Complete Stock of\nRoofing Supplies\nat the\nLOWEST PRICES IN TOWN\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n165 lb. Hexagon Shingles,     $1Q\nPer 100 souare feet \u25a0 \"\n50\nPer 100 square feet\n45 Ib. Roll Roofing,\nWith  tar and  nails'\n$3.75\n90 Ib. Red or Green Roofing,   *C-\u00bb*\nPer  roll * <J\nNEW IN ALUMINUM ROOFING\nCross, Corrugated, Embossed Aluminum\n3 and 4 foot widths.\nRolls, 100 ft. long.\u2014Cuts down on labour costs\nand savei side lapping waste.\nCOLUMBIA TRADING Co.\n902 FRONT ST. NELSON, B.C.\nlft>\nte y\u00b0ui-\nth\nv*\ne\narid\n+i*vml*Ur\u00bb\npi a**\nNELSON\n(Via Castlegar)\n\"to...\nHAWAII\n$34,-3\u00b0 $21.51\n3T    down    per mo.\nMEXICO\n$3 3.00 $21.08\n3 3     down        .    per mo.\nEUROPE\n[S0\n90\ndown\n$30.33\nper mo.\nSAVE AI UAST $380 IN THRIFT SEASON\n\u2014WITH FAMILY PLAN FARES.\nORIENT\n\u202297\ni*\n(Q7.14 $38.52\ndown    per mo.\n\u25a0that vacation abroad\n..yours this year\nwhen you ,\nfly CPA now\npay later*\nPlan a vacation, in foreign lands . ..\nand plan to go all the way on one airlint\nticket. Fly CPA Canadian lines to\nVancouver, then board a CPA Super\nDC-6B for any of four continents-\nAsia, Australia, Europe or South America.\nNo more years of waiting and saving\nfor world travel. It's yours this year\n\u2014for'Iess than the cost of an\n\"at home\" vacation!\nCanadian Pacifio's \"Pay Later\" plan\nlets you go for just 10% down and th*\nbalance in up to 24 easy monthly\npayments. No endorsers, no cosigners\u2014\nit's the world's lowest cost budget\ntravel plan . . . yours on both luxury\nEmpress first class or thrifty Princess\ntourist services.\nToday, see your\ntranl agent or *\nINTERNATIONAL ROUTES\nCoMttdUiM (PttciUc\nAIRLINES\nFASTEST TO   t,  CONTINENTS  AND  B5   COMMUNITIES   IN   CANADA\n'f.\n ?Kp5W^?pW^i^\u00bbn^ifP!^\n...:\u25a0  '\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- :;\"\u25a0\u2022:.\u25a0\u2022\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0   '     T-^ :    - ^'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-;\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.; \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0.\u25a0,.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0   ' .\u2014\u25a0.. '-. \u25a0\u25a0..  .. v -.   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0\u2014r^ \"~\"\u2014^\"^\nNf Ison Sailij Npwb\nEstablished April 22, 1902\ninterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia,\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER  OF   THE   CANADIAN   PRESS  AND\nTHE   AUDIT BUREAU   OF, CIRCULATIONS.\nWednesday, Novembgr 9, 1955\nCouncil Proposes That Nelson Make\nItself an Up-tO'Date Municipality\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Nelson City Council is taking a\nwise step in deciding to obtain and\nlay before citizens the costs of a\n\u2022complete works program that could\nbring most of the municipality's facilities up to date and provide a long-\nneeded city hall. The Council is\ncounting on the support of progressive citizens in this leadership.\nFinancial standing of the municipal corporation is good. The city has\nbeen carefully brought back into a\nposition where it is capable of such a\n\"streets, sidewalk and sewerage program as envisioned. Council has\n\u25a0shown the foresight to plan for a\n.better city and the courage to put\ntheir plans before the citizens. The\nnext step when'the details are complete will be with the citizens them-\niselve=.\nThe completion of such a'program\nwould go a long way toward putting\nfurther onus on the provincial gov-\nernment to al^o get its public works\nand health house in shape in the\nfringe areas from whence originate\nmany of Nelson's problems.\nTlie far-reaching proposal has\nbeen raised at a time that gives the\ncommunity plenty of opportunity for\nconsideration. There has been sufficient pre-announcement indications\nin various public addresses and statements by Council members and administrative personnel to show that\nsuch a plan was shaping up. The\nannouncement itself is sufficiently\nearlier that it escapes the heat of preelection conflict. The plans will not\ngo to vote before the Spring so that\nthe public will have the opportunity\nfor ample study of details.\nB.C. Fish Attract 3Q,000 Visiting\nAnglers, 71,000 Residents in Sport\nA government department to control and\nconserve wildlife in British Columbia was\nfirst established in 1905. Today it operates\nunder the Attorney-General and is headed\nby a single Game Commissioner. There are\n128 permanent employees, points out the new\nWildlife Review. Working directly with the\nCommissioner are an Executive Assistant, a\nChief Fisheries Biologist, a Chief Game Biologist, and a Supervisor of Predator Control.\nA clerical staff of 20 people is employed.\nThere, are five game biologists and 10\nfisheries biologists on the staff. A crew of 11\nfisheries and hatcheries officers operate the\nfour permanent and five seasonal hatcheries.\nwhile working on the control of predatory\nanimals under the Supervisor are 11 hunters\nand an Assistant Supervisor.\nFour Inspectors control the operations\nof 62 Game Wardens in the field.\nRevenue is derived irom the sale of\nfirearms  and  anglers'  licences,  gams  tags,\ntrophy fees paid on game by non-residents,\nfur traders' licences and fur royalties, taxidermists' and fanners' licences, sale of confiscated firearms and' from fines collected\nfrom violators qf the Game Act and regulations.\nThe work of the branch has increased\nenormously since the end of the war. In\n1935 the total revenue was about $200,000.\nbut it has averaged a million dollars more\nthan that in recent years.\nIn 1935, 370 non-resident hunters entered\nthe province, while in recent years the average has been 3700. About 30,000 non-resident\nanglers visit the province annually nowadays, a great increase over the 1935 number.\nThere are in excess of four times as many\nresident firearms licences sold now as compared with 1935, while thte resident anglers\nhave increased from some 18,000 to more\nthan 71,000.\nThey're Even Bu\u00a3fcin& the Jury Room\nWe're shocked to read that a hidden\nmike was placed under the table of a jury\nroom in Wichita, Kansas, and the deliberations of six juries secretly recorded.\nThe project was in the interests of science. But that does not excuse it. Wiretapping is spreading dangerously, invading\nour ohce-sacred privacies. It cannot be al-\n\u25a0 lowed to eavesdrop on our courts.\nIn this case the University of Chicago,\nworking under a Ford Foundation grant to\nresearch the U.S. jury system, sought and\nobtained permission of the presiding judge\nto make the recordings. No doubt what was\noverheard will be of immense value to the\nresearch project. But. in our opinion, this is\ncarrying research too far.\nThe jury system certainly merits scrutiny. It has plenty of faults. There are also\nDestroying, Matter\nScience also marches on, learning as it\ngoes.\nAs an example, a standard physics textbook definition of a few years back related\nthat \"matter cannot be created or destroyed'\nby any means known to man.\",\nIt l)ad stood as scientific fact for a long\ntime. Then a few days ago discovery of the\n\"antiproton\" was announced by a nuclear\nscientist in California\nRelates the explanation, these can \"annihilate\" the basic block of all matter, and\nrelease hundreds of times the energy produced by fission.\nMatter, finally, can be destroyed by a\n- means known to man; a means capable,.of\nbeing harnessed by him.\u2014Windsor Star.\nwell-founded suspicions that juries are over-\ngenerous in damage suits, sometimes incapable of weighing complex technical evidence beyond their grasp, and occasionally\nI swayed by local public feeling.\nBut research can be pushed by other\nmeans than hidden mikes. Juryrrtln can be\ninterviewed, evidence and verdicts 'studied.\nThe U.S. Congress is expected to outlaw\njury room \"bugging\". We are confident that\nrespect for the judicial system in this country would make tapping inconceivable and\nlegislation unnecessary.\u2014Vancouver Province.\nEast -to West\nAlmost every feature of the man-made\n\"satellites\" which scientists now predict may\nbe rocketed in 1957 beyond the earth's atmosphere to take up new orbits in space\nseems to have been mentioned save one:\nwhich way will they revolve? If there is to\nbe more order in the heavens than is noticeable on earth the projectors had better\nsettle for right-hand circuits; that is, the\nastronomers' East to West, in the fashion in\nwhich the universe seems to be arranged.\nOtherwise there would be some wrong-way\nCorrigans in space, launched about-face into\nthe ce'estial and majestic order of the eternal\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nIt's Been Said\nThe language denotes the man; a coarse\nor  refined   character   finds   its   expression\nnaturally in a coarse or refined phraseology.\n\u2014Christian Nestell Bovee.\n? Quest ions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Namos of per-\n30ns asking questions will not be published. \"There Ii no charge for thla ier- .\nvice. Queitloni. WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BV MAIL except where there\nIi obvlout necessity for privacy.\nR. B. A., NelsOn\u2014Will you olease repeat\nformula tor making Yule logs? Also, wifl\nyou tell us if one has to use any special\nstring? We were thinking that when the\n\"logs\" are burning, the string will blaze\nand the magazines fall apart, and that\nwire would not be satisfactory.\nYule logs: Two pounds _coarse salt, two\npounds  bluestone   (copper   sulphate),  two*\ngallons boiling water, one ounce each of\nsalts In desired colors\u2014slronium nitrate, red;\nbismuth nitrate, crimson; antimony chloride,\nblue; borax, green; potassium chloride, purple. If you do not wish all these colored\nflames when logs-are burning, leave some of\nthe salts out. Use no metal, mix in wooden\npail. Roll up very tightly old magazines or\nnewspapers  (shiny paper does not absorb\nwell), tie, and soak two weeks.- Let them\ndry on rack for about a month. The string ls\nonly to. hold the paper together while soaking. When in the solution the \"logs\" become\npulpy and self-adherent; as they dry they I\nharden 'and the string is not needed. Don't\nforget to turn them end to end every now\nand again so as to achieve a thorough soaking.\nMrs. E. P.. Wetaskiwin, Sask.\u2014Thank you\nfor the uncooked cake recipe. We are\nfiling it with the others already published. Tlte addition of apricots, prunes,\nmarmalade and honey makes it sound\ndelicious.\nSteady Reader, Sandon\u2014Is there anyone In.\nNelson who pan replace cords in Venetian blinds?\nNelson Upholstery, 409 Hall Street;\nDeerward's Upholstery. R.R. 1, Nelson. We\nwould also advise you to get in touch with\nfirms that supply the blinds'. Home Furniture Ltd.. 640 Baker Street; Freeman Furniture Co., 639 Baker Street; Mc & Mc Ltd., 476\nBaker Street; Sterling Home Furnishers.\n441 Baker Street, and Hudson's Bay Company. 402 Baker Street, all of Nelson.\nInterested. Nelson\u2014Is there anyone ln town\nrepresenting MacMillan & Bloedel, Ltd.''\nBurns   Lumber   Company.   602   Baker\nStreet, are representatives of this company.\nBABY BURNED TO\nDEATH AT COAST\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B. C\n(CP) - Bobby Kerr, 17-month-'\nold baby, was burned to death\nMonday in ' a fire caused by\nmatches with which' Bobby's\nthree-year-old brother and < playmate were playing.\nThe baby's mother tried vainly\nto battle through flames to reach\nthe child's crib.\nThe one-storey six-room frame\nhouse was do'stroyed.\nMILLIONS KNOW THE\nCOUGH\nAND\nCOLD\nFIGHTING POWER OF\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nLATEST FLOOR\nWhen In Finland\nDo as the\nFinrts Do\nThe visitor to Finland who is not a\ncoffee-drinker will find himself at a disadvantage socially.-From metropolitan Helsinki\nto the wilds of northern Lapland coffee is\nthe invariable offering upon entering a\nhome, be it rich or poor. Although I had begun drinking coffee the year before, I never\nactually became fond of it until reaching\nFinland. This was no doubt due to the superior way Finnish coffee is made, plus the\nfresh cream that is invariably served with it.\nThere are two rules to be followed in\ndrinking coffee in Finland. Failure to observe them on the part of newcomers Will\nof course be understood, but the sooner the\nvisitor learns about them the better. The\nfirst concerns the number of cups of coffee it\nis permissible to accept during a call. Politeness demands acceptance of the first cup\nalways, unless there are personal reasons\nfor not drinking coffee. The average number per visit, especially when calling at the\nhome of a stranger, is two. Ofhen, on longer\nvisits at the home of friends, no disgrace\nattaches to a third cup, That, however, is\nthe maximum. The fourth cup will probably\nbe offered, but it should %e refused.\nThe second ri^le concerns pakkopulla,\nwhich means \"compulsory bread\". This is\nthe term that Finns jokingly use for the\nplain-looking coffee bread\u2014sweet, with a\nfew raisins, perhaps\u2014that is usually served\nwith the coffee, along with an array of more\ndelicious pastries. It is the unwritten law\nthat the pakkopulla is taken with the first\ncup of coffee. After that the hand may rove\nfreely among the more luscious selections.\nWatch Your Language\nSEPTIC\u2014(SEP-tik) \u2014Adjective: Putrefactive; produced by putrefaction or morbid\ngerms, as septic poisoning. Noun\u2014A substance that promotes putrefaction. Origin:\nLatin\u2014Septicus. from Greek\u2014Septikos! from\nSepein, to make putrid.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n4tTENT!ON, JOUPN4LISM\nCLASS! WHO IS IT lUAT TXlWKS\nHE KHOWS JUST HOW A STOtfV\nSHOULD BE WRITTEN!? WHy.TVlE\nPHOTOGRAPHER, OF COURSE- Y\/\nr2\nJERW-WHO'S\nWRITING\nTHtSSTDR*\nMX) OR\nME?\nToday's Bible\nThought\nIf ye abFde In me and my words\nabide In you, ye shall ask what ye\nwill, and it shall be done unto\nyou.\u2014John 15:7.\nBut many of us forget the word\nIF. If we did so abide we would\nnot make silly and selfish prayers.\nCbmL dhL\nackzifavo\nNow available In\n6 Beautiful Background Colours\n.     CHARCOAL \u2022 GREY \u2022 GREEN \u2022 BEIGE \u2022 RED \u2022 BLUE\nThe amazing thing about \"Jackstraw\" is the way it draws your eye\nacross the floor . . . makes any room look bigger as well as more\nbeautiful. The famous Gold Seal imprinted on the back guarantees you satisfaction in quality and wear. The\"Jackstraw\"\ndesign guarantees you the smartest floor in town for\nonly a few dollars! Write for free folders showing \"Jackstraw\" and all other Congoleum\npatterns in full colour, to Congoleum\nCanada Ltd., 3700 St. Patrick\nSt., Montreal.\nfLOOR COVERING DIALER SOON I\nf-wXtZ\nIn British Columbia, the forests generate half of every .\ndollar in our pockets. Beautiful as well as bountiful, they\nare our heritage.\nBut they are the heritage of future generations as well,\nand their value, their productivity, as well as their\nbeauty, must be maintained if we are to keep faith with those\n, who follow us.\nWe of Celgar are proud to join with other progressive\n, companies in working to preserve this great natural\nwealth. Through responsible, scientific forest\nmanagement, we are helping to grow more trees tlflm\nwe use, helping to perpetuate these natural\nriches of our Province.\nmmm k \"V^\nDon't believe the henpecked guy\nwho blames his wife for his blunders. If he wasn't a blunderer, he\nwouldn't be-henpecked.\n T^T\u2014\u2014 \u25a0 ! \u2014-, ;     , ,,\u201e., .,,,,\n\u00ab#2l\nrlamorous Grandmother\n'ells How to Stay Young\nBy DOROTHY ROE.\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The way to\nStay young and look your best is\nto keep busy, says Margaret Rud-\nExtra Pounds\nEndanger Health\nByDR. HERMAN N. BUNDESEN\nSO ypu>re  a  little  overweight.\nWell, maybe that isn't too serious. But if you're fat, you'd better do something about It.\nNow just how fat is fat?\nYour physical appearance probably provides the best answer to\nthat question. When the girth\naround your abdomen exceeds that\nof your chest (unexpanded, mind\nyou) then you're fat.\nMaybe, though, you feel fine.\nIn fact, you might feel In the b*t\nof health. Then why reduce?\nLife fnsurance companies can\ngive you some pretty good reasons.\nThey have statistics which show\nthat if you are fat:\nYou are more susceptible to\ndiabetes, more likely to haveihlgh\nblood pressure, get varicose veins\nand suffer from gallstones and\ngallbladder trouble.\nYou are more apt to have heart\ntrouble, and you will have more\ndifficulty recpvering from acute\nInfections such as pneumonia. You\nare more likely to have other diseases and ailments.\nThe life insurance companies say\nyou are a greater risk to them than\na person of ordinary weight.\nNow then, why are you fat?\nOh, I know you've got a good\nexcuse  You probably blame it on\nfamily tendency to overweight,\nor maybe you insist that some of\nyour internal organs are at fault.\nWhile it's true that certain conditions within your body can\ncause obesity. I'll bet most of jou\nare overweight simply because you\neat and drink too much, a^i lead\ntoo easy a life.\nBASIC CAUSE\nIt's this simple: You take In more\ncalories than you convert to energy.\nSome of you should probably\nblame chronic beer drinking. On\nthe other hand, some of you can\nblam\u00bb the fact tha\\ you don't\ndrink beer or alcohol. Quite frequently a person who doesn't\ndrink or smoke will compensate\nfor denying himself these, by\nmaintaining a diet out of proportion to Ms requirements.\nYou know the type. He eats a lot\nof sweets and chocolates, and\nthinks he Is being a good boy!\nkin, a> glamorous red-haired\ngrandmother whose latest honor is\nthe award of the Medallion of\nHonor from the Women's International Exposition.\nMrs. Rudkin, who started with a\nloaf of home-baked bread and\nbuilt an international business,\nsays:\n\"My own grandmother had retired to her shawl and her rocking chair at my age, and wore her\nbonnet and best black silk dress\nonly on Sundays.\nMrs. Rudkin, on the other hand.\nis given to frivolous Paris hats\nand spike heels, keens up with the\nlatest in art and literature and\nmanages a far-flung business empire with accomplished ease.\nKNOWS   EMPLOYEES\nDespjte her fantastic success\nhowever, she knows every employee at her Pepperidge Farms in\nNorwalk, Conn., and personally\nsupervises the old-fashioned ingredients and hand processes -that\ngo into her bread.\nMrs. Rudkin has a granddaugh\nter. Margaret Rudkin. aged 10\nmonths, daughter of her son Henry\nJ)\nSays grandma: \"She's simnly\nwonderful, has red hair just like\nme, and I'm going tn see to it that\nshe has a career. I'd like to see\nher go tn business school\nMrs. Rudkin feels that the\nworld's hanniest women as well\nas sdme of the most glamorous get\nthat way from keening busy, not\ngrowing bored, having more than,\nthey can do most of the time. Says\nshe:\n\"When you're in business you\nhave to be on your toes, look your\nbest and spend less time at it,\nWhen you have to do these tilings,\nvou do them, and manage to be\nefficient ?beut it.\n\"I think women's worst\" enem\nis boredom, which comes of not\nhaving enoneh to do. I mi?M add\nthat    I    never    have    had    that\ntrouble.\"\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 LAW Betty John-\n:on of La France arrived home\non two weeks leave from her base\nat Sunnyside. Prince Edward\nIsland. On her return she will bfi\nposted to Goose Bay. Alaska.\nJVIr. C. H. Bebbington has left\nto spend the winter with his\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. H. Horswill\nin Nelson.\nA party was held in the La\nFrance Community Hall. Court\nwhist was played and a dainty\nsupper was served by the ladies\nof the community\nMrs. Fredrick Simpson of Bos\nwell is a patient in Creston Valley\nHospital.\n\\Velsh HYM NWRITER\n'Ann Griffiths, who died in 1805,\nwas one of Wales' most celebrated\nhymn writers.\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nButcherteria\nFirmer support with  no binding!\nNelson Social\nReaden are Invited to tend\nIn Itemi of general Interest for\nthli column. \u2014 Phone 1844.\nMrB. Keith Kettlewell, Nelson\nAvenue, has left tor the coast to\nvisit her'slster and brother-in-law.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Edgar, Chilliwack. ,   \u25a0\nE. J. Leveque, Victoria Street,\nwho has been a patient in a Coast\nhospital for several months, is pro<\ngressing. \u25a0*\nNatal CWL\nBazaar Saturday\nNATAL \u2014 The annual St.\nMichael's fall baeaar, under the\njoint sponsorship of the Catholic\nWomen's League and Mount Car\nmel Society, will take placp in the\nSt. \u25a0 Michael's Hall at Natal on\nSaturday. In the afternoon a sale\nof home cooking, afternoon tea,\nfancy work, aprons, novelties,\ncandy, and take-home-your-supper\nwill take place.\nIn the evening twenty-two prizes will be awarded.\nEntire proceeds from this bazaar\nwill go towards the stuccoing and\npainting the exterior of the\nChurch, Hall and Rectory slated\n(or next spring.\n(Dmaa. lAft Wtlh.\n'Vy-'OfL Wlwdbi\n36-50\nSIZES TO 50\nPRINCESS lines of this Wonderful bra \u2014 promise you the most\nflattering fit, comfortable [firm\nsupport for the larger figure! Sizes\nup to 50 can jiffy-sew regular and\nlong-length versions \u2014 to wear as\nthe basis of all your fall and winter fashions!\nPattern 9055: Women's sizes 36,\n38, 40, 42. 44, 46, 48, 50, Size 36\nlonger version, 1 yard 35-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY \u25a0 FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted* for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. NDN, 60 Front St., W\u201e\nToqonto, Ont.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9, 1953 \u2014 5\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nBLOUSE collectors\u2014and there la an ever-Increasing army of\nthem\u2014should be really happy this season. Never Were blouses so\nbeautiful, never were price-tags so low, and never has there been\nsuch a wide variety available, Yolande who does such exquisite\nlingerie Is equally adept at creating blouses of delicate charm,\nsuch as the pretty piece pictured here. Nylon neorgettc, loosely\ncuffed In satin and with self-trim applique set off by embroidered\naccents all adds up to a blouse that Is a good choice for the traveler since It washes In a jiffy, dries quickly and scorns an Iron.\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 A 28-year-\nold Montreal artist Tuesday defended his prize-winniijg painting\nwhich one of the sponsors of the\nart show in Winnipeg's art gallery has described as \"nauseating\nblobs.\"\nJean Paul Mousseau said in a\ntelephone interview he could not\nunderstand the reason for the controversy surrounding his abstract\npainting. He said his modernistic\ncanvas was not a meaningless\nblob but an expression of the cosmic forces of the universe.\nThe controversy started when\nMrs. W. J. Waines, a member of\nthe gallery women's committee\nwhich, with the Universityof Manitoba Art Students' Club, is sponsoring the show, said she might\nwithdraw her support if the gallery- continued to show such\n\"stuff.\"\nBLOBS OF PAINT\nShe said the paintings left her\n\"physically nauseated\" and .particularly objected to Mousseau's\npainting which she described ' as\n\"two things with blobs of red.\nwhite and blue paint all over it\nand covered with shellac.\"\nMoflsseau said Tuesday the form\nand color of his painting was just\na \"relation to life.\" .He said he\ncould not describe it in words because \"words are too narrow, they\ndon't go far enough into reality.\"\n. Mrs. Waines retorted: \"If that's\nhis view of reality, then all I can\nsay is, Heaven help him.\"\nMousseau .said ne worked on his\ncontroversial abstract for several\ndays before it was completed. He\ncalls it \"La Marseillaise\" because\nhe said when he looks at it he\nfeels the same as he does when\nhe hears the French national an\nthem.\nMousseau's painting was one of\ntwo awarded the $200 first prize.\nThey were judged by Maxwell\nBates of Calgary and Jean Rene\nOstdguy of the National Gallery\nin Ottawa. Both described \"La\nMarseillaise'' as \"very poetic.\"\nThe other prize-winning painting was also an abstract, \"Three\nFigures\" by R. P. Dubois, art instructor at Winnipeg's technical-\nvocational high school.\nThey   were  selected   from   111\npaintings which were hung for\nsale and which were chosen by a\ncommittee from 400 entries from\nacross Canada. Mr. Bates said he\nfelt the best paintings were \"semi-\nabstract or expresslonistic.\"\nGeorge Swinton, professor at the\nuniversity school of art, said the\nshow was \"very good for what it\naspires to be, a representative\nshow of some of the up-to-date\nwork being done in Canada. It\ndefinitely represents a point of\nview and you can take it or leave\nit. It also jepresents the viewpoints\nof the two judges.\"\n\"Winnipeg should be excited\nabout this show,\" the art school's\ndirector, Richard E. Williams,\nsaid. \"It is billed as an exhibition\nof contemporary art and you could\nhardly expect anything else than\nwhat Is hung.\"\nCOMMON SENSE\nA persons holding a child should\nnot be smoking\u2014{ailing ash may\nburn the infant's eyes or face.\nbif. aCcuuut UJhmlsA\nWhen\nwhat you need\nis a good\ncup of\nPlaytex* High Style\n*The custom-styled bra . . . with the exciting results! Rich .\nembroidered cotton and nylon curve you to today's raised,\nrounded look. Strategically placed elastic keeps you there ...\nnever binds or hitches up. No matter what your size or\nin-between-size . . ..the fit is fabulous! Washes and dries in\na flash . . . holds its shape as beautifully as it doeB yours!\nNo ironing necessary. At your favorite department or\nspecialty store. In pure white, sizes 32A to 40C .\n,. a marvelous buy at ls^rlrt^\ntLAYTEX LIVING BRA-richly embroidered nylon\nand elastic . . . exclusive design for superb fit. 3'S\nGipyrfyA- Canada 195S\nStyUi in JV_i_ -V _ nnd Und. In Canada hy Playls* Ltd.... PLAYTEX PARK...\nArnprior, OniOJio.\n>P.q. T.U.\nINSTANT   COFFEE\n\u2014file modern way\nZOO PARADE\nSee how fast Baby makes\nfriends with all these farm and\ncircus pets \u2014 embroidered on a\ncozy-warm quilt! Use scraps for\nthe gay -little animals \u2014 such fun\n\\o make!\nZoo parade quilt! Pattern *654:\nembroidery, applique transfers for\nquilt, 32x44 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CEttTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler;\nNDN, 60 Front St W., Toronto,\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLook for .smartest Ideas- In\nneedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting,\nembroidery and lovely things to\nwear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons, novelties \u2014 easy, fun to make! Send\n25 cents for your copy of this book\nNOW! You will want to order\nevery new design in it.\nSwifknit\nHome Knitting\nMachines\n\u2022 175 Ne<_d|es\n\u2022 Do any kind of .knitting\nwith any kind of yarn,\n(excluding Indian).\nHOBB;YKITS FO R C HIL D REN\nEmbroidery.Sets \u2022 Bead Craft\nCarpentry Sets * Sewing Cards\nFinger Paints -  Models\nAll  Christmas Tree Delights\nHobby Shop\n677 Ward St. Phone 224\nNelson, B.C.\nSo long-wearing that a quarter-million footprints will not ufear\ndown its lush % inch pile of sturdy Spunvis carpet rayon! Perfect\ncarpet for busy modern families, a luxury carpet at a budget price..\n$16.95\nChoose from 17 decorator\ncolors: Opera Red, Spruce\nGreen, Rose, Beige, Blue,\nPearl Grey,'Rose Dust, Turquoise, Gunmetal, Water\nGreen, Greize,. Hunter\nGreen, Sandalwood, Old\nGold, Cocoa, Moss Green,\nCopper, Natural.\nAs seen In WcCalls,\nBetter. Homes and Gardens\nand Good Housekeeping\nYou Con Own *\n9 x 12 RUG\nFor Only\n$10.00 DOWN,\n$2.00 WEEK.\nOther Sizes\nOn Eosy Budget Terms.\nNatal Notes\nNATAL \u2014 Miss Helen Katrl-\nchak, accompanied by Miss Edda\nWard, returned to their respective\nhomes in Port Alberni, B.C. after\nspending their holidays at Natal.\nThe former is the daughter of Mrs.\nJ. Katrichak of Michel.\nMiss Mary MacLean of Vulcan\nis spending a short visit at Natal\nat the home of her sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. Whalley Krall.\nMr. Joe and Joe Makuk of Natal\nwere visitors at Calgary.\nMrs. G Fabbro returned to her\nhome In Natal after spending \u00ab\nshort visit at the Coast.\nThe annual Poppy sale sponsored by the local Branch No. 81, Ca-\nRussians Invited\nTo Visit Britain\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Eden announced Tuesday\nParliament has invited a Russian\nparliamentary delegation to visit\nBritain next July. ,\nHe said that the invitations had\nbeen set to the two chairman of\nthe Supreme Soviet, Russia's parliament, by the Speaker of the\nHouse of Commons, William Morrison, and the lord , chancellor of\nthe House of Lords.\nBracelets have been among the\nInsignia of royalty since the earliest times.\nWatch for Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT  MARKET - Phone 832\nnadlan Legion, throughout Natal-\nMichel and district was well supported. '\nMr. and Mrs. John KXassen and\ntwin daughters of Travers. Alta.,\nwere recent week-end visitors at\nNatal at the home of the latter's\nparents Mr. and Mrs. Pete Zeith.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH\u2014Mr. and Mrs. R.\nSherriden had as their guests Mrs.\nJ. E. Hoibrook of Castle Rock.\nWash., also Mrs. J. W. Hearn and\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hearn of Salmo.\nSixty years ago Mrs. Hoibrook,\nthen Jenny Davis, and Mr. Sherriden. resided at Pilot Bay with\ntheir parents and attended school\nthere and had not seen each other\nfor 51 years.      ,\nMrs. M. M. Lane and son Thomas\nhave taken up residence in their\nnew home. Part of the house is\nused as post office. Mrs. Lane is\nthe postmistress.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR \u2014 Mrs. H. Haynes ot\nSan Francisco, who was staying\nwith her parents for their golden\nwedding anniversary has returned\nhome.\nMrs. Organ who was the guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. R. Heap for a\nweek has returned to her home\nin Lethbridge, Alta.\nCharles Wilson was re-elected\nfor a year as school representative for Sirdar.\nRelieve Suffering f\nFast-Effectively\nwith   VVAPORUB\n\"BRAN-ANA\" NUT BREAD V.\nVa cup shortening\nVi cup sugar\n1 egg\n1 cu,i Kellogg's All-flran ,-\n1 Vi cups mashed rips bananas\n1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring\nI Vi cups sifted flour   \u25a0\n2 teaspoons baking powder\nVi teaspoon baking soda\nVi teaspoon salt\nVi cup chopped nutmeats\nBlend shortening and sugar thoroughly. Add\negg and boat well. Stir in All-Bran, bananas\nand vanilla, Sift together flour, baking powder,\nsoda and salt. Add to finit mixture with nut-\nmeats, stirring only until combined. Spread in\nwell-greased 8\\i x 4^-incb loaf pan. Bake in\npreheated moderate oven (360? f.) about\nlhour.\n4ft%9\u00bb ALL-BRAN-\na delicious, ready-lo-eat cereal,\non aid lo natural regularity.\n : \\;-.- '.';.\n\u25a0 : f\t\n___________________......\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9, 19S5\nMedical (are\nSuggestion\nDefeated M\nRBOINA (CP> \u2014 A compulsory\nmedical cut pltn proposed for tht\n'Asjlnlbola-Gravelbourg health region has baen defeated by t vote\nof almost 7 to 1.\n. -Charley Lindsay, returning officer lot tht Nov. 2 municipal emotions in tht *\u00abglon, said tht-litest\ncount showed 7380 against tht\n' proposal nnd IMS in favor,\nTht pltn, oonveived 10 ytars ago\nby tht CCT government, and \\Wiich\nhat been operating Sinea 1940\namong 80,000 residents ot tht Swift\nCurrent health rtgion, also \u00abp.\npoared headed, for defeat ln the\n.Regina rural region. *\nWith 276 of 383 polls heard from\ntoday, Ultra ware 10,731 against\ntht plan and 3704 in favor.\nTha plans wou}<. bt supported\nmostly by taxes.\nKelowna To Apply\nFor Night Flying\nKELOWNA (CP) - City coun:\noil will mako application to the\ndepartment \u2022 of transport for a\nnight flying licence at Ellison airport\nSurprise Awaits\nHead of (Ian\nCALGARY (CF.-Dame Flora\nMacLeod boarded a plane for Edmonton today with a promist from\nMayor Donald Mackay that when\nsht returns to Dunvegan Castla in\nScotland a box containing the\n\"really colorful spirit of Calgary\"\nwill be waiting for her.\nIn the box will be a white cowboy hat. During tht weekend when\nDame Flora\u2014head of tht cla\u00bb\nMacLeod\u2014was presented with a\ngold clock as a memento from the\ncity, she turned to the m'ayor and\nexpressed * wish for a white hat.\nAfter spending some time in Edmonton, Dame Flora will fly to\nVancouver and Victoria.\nNews of the Day\nRATE8: 30c lli\\e, 40o Una black net type; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt piymtnt\nBINQO   TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC   HALL\u2014\u00ab|00  P.  M.\nFor Watkins Quality Products.\nPhone 1215-Y. A. J. Lindsay.\nMile Summit,\/black overshoe. Reward. Nelson 354-R.\nFIRE   EXTINGUiaHERS\nFor all  your fire extinguisher\nneeds call P. Leslie, 1724 Fall St.\nFresh  stock  of underwear for\nboys and girls. All sizes.\nEBERLE'S.\nSLABWOOD FOR SALE. LONG\nCORDS OR CUT TO STOVE\nLENGTH.\u2014 PHONE 330-L.\nHOSPITAL AUXILIARY WILL\nMEET IN NURSES HOME, NOV.\n18, 2:30 P. M.\nFIRST AID CLASSES start\nThursday City Fire Hall 2 p.m.\nCanadian Legion 8 p.m. Open to\nthe public. See other ad this paper.\nTHIS EMBLEM MEANS\nRELIABLE INSURANCE SERVICE\nA member of thia ajaociation ia an independent business man in your community\nand ii well qualified to advise you on the kind\nof insurance that suits your exact needs.\nHis experience, plus the fact that he can\nselect your policy from more than one\ncompany, enablet) him to give better insur-\nonco service.\nIf you have a claim, a. telephone call will\nbring hit (rained assistance.\nLook for this emblem when you buy\nfire, Automobile or General\nInsurance.\nTHE INSURANCE AGENTS'\nASSOCIATION\nOF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nGuaranteed Radio and\nTelevision   Service\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\n.Chimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned.\nPounder's Chimne_> Service\nPhone 1541-L.\nROBT. NOLTE, MA8TER TAILOR\n253 Baker Street\nSuits made on the premises\nAlso alterations and repairs\nRAYMAR\nThe low-priced'wall to wall carpeting is in stock again. See it at\nSterling Home Furnishers.\nCOMING   EVENT8\nJunior Hospital Aux., Christmas\nBazaar, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2 to 5\np.m., Silver Room, Hume Hotel.\nPlate, Sheet, Safety, Wired, and\nPatterned Glass, and glass repairs.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.     Nelson     Phone 156\nWA to Hth Nelson Scouts and\nCuba will meet at Mrs. A. Anderson's home, Wasson St., Thursday,\n8 p.m., Nov. 10.\nRemembrance Day \"Smorgasbord\" style buffet dinner 7-9 and\ndance 9:30 to ? Friday, November\n11, 1956. Tickets $1.50 per person.\nMust be obtained from Legion\nOffloe by Wednesday, Nov. 9th,\n1966.  All   members  please  note.\nLost \u2014 between  Casctdt  and\nNew velvets tnd brocades for\nyour coekttll or't'lmnil in wldt\nassortment.   ,\nTAYLOR'S   DRY  GOODS\nPatient! In Kootenay Lake Gen-\noral Hospital can have tha Dally\nNews sent to them (very morning.\nPhono 1044, Circulation Department Dally News.\n-Save  futl!   Weatherstrip doors\nand windows now! Our stock ls\ncomplete   of  felt,  rubber   .gasket\nand strip-seal weatherstrlpplng-\n. HIPPERSON'S\nEMERGENCY GENERAL\nMEETING NELSON BADMINTON CLUB, 8iJ0 P. M., THURSDAY, BADMINTON LOUNGE,\nCIVIC CENTRE.\nKOKANEE CHAPTER,  IODE\nMembers please meet at Cenotaph, Friday, Nov. 11 at 10:40 a.m.\nAlso regular monthly meeting on\nTuesday, Nov. 15.\nm\nFollowing, ustd items for sale:\n1 piano, 1 complete bedroom suits\n1-plaster paris fireplace.\nWE BUY AND SELL NEW\nAND   U8ED   FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nGet ready for Fall! Clean your\nchimney and stovepipes with Red\nDevil Soot and Carbon Remover.\nNo mess or fuss. Cleans from fire-\npot to chimney-top.\nHIPPERSON'S\nSt.\nFAMILY  FAIR\nSvalour's   Memorial   Hall\nWednesday, Nev. 23\n6:00 p.m. turkey dinner followed\nby games, movies, square dancing.\nBake table novelty booth, knitting\ncandy, etc.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nWALDER\u2014Funeral services for\nthe late William T. Walder of\nKaslo, B. C, will be held on Thursday at 2:30 p.m.. at St. Mark's Anglican Church in Kaslo. The Rev.\nW. S. Beames will officiate and\nInterment will be In Kaslo Cemetery.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nWATTS\u2014Private funeral service\nfor the late Mrs. Caroline Kennedy\nWatts, will be held on Thursday\nat 11:00 a.m., at the Thompson\nFuneral Home. Rev. G. W. Payne\nwill officiate, and Interment will\nbe in the IOOF plot in Nelson\nMemorial Park. No flowers by request.\nTRAIN KILL8 TWO\nSTURGEON FALLS, Ont. (CP.\n\u2014Two men were killed Monday\non the Canadian National Railways line 1V4 miles north of\nRive^'Valley when a freight train\ncrashed into a jigger.\nSTOLE $5300 RING\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Allan\nRossman, 44, was remanded Monday for sentence when ho pleaded\nguilty to a charge of stealing a\n$5300 diamond ring. TTie theft\noccurred in a downtown club\nNabob's Special\nPliofilm Liner...\nSEALS IN\nFLAVOR\nat the peak of roasting goodness!\nNabob goes right from roasting to an ultra-modern package\nthat guarantees you more delicious coffee. The special pliofilm\nlining is instantly heat-scaled to protect all the rich aroma and\nflavor. Moisture stays out I This durable package keeps Nabob\nfretll three timos longer than ordinary packages. Get Nabob\ncoffee and be sure 1\nWGstqrn Canada's Favorite Coffee By Far I\nMovie Theatre\nReceipts Drop\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Fewer Canadians went to the movies last year\nand motion picture exhibitors saw\ntheir receipts drop for the first\ntime In more than 20 years, the\nbureau of statistics said Tuesday.\nIt reported that motion pictures\nwere shown in 3471 theatres,\ndrive-ins and halls in 1954. down\n83 from 1953. Paid admission!\nnumbered 237,264,894. a drop of\n8.5 per cent from 259,348,837 the\nprevious yfear.i\nReceipts dipped to $105,515,563.\noff 3.S per cant from $109,072,528\nin 1953, and amusement taxes collected amounted' to $12,975,256,\ndown from $13,582,540.\nCanada1. Approves\nFAQ Budget Cut\nROME (AP) \u2014 J. G. Taggart,\nCanada's dtputy minister of agrl- j\nculture, Tuesday supported a Brit-1\nish proposal to cut the pronosed I\n1956-57 budget for the United Na- j\ntions Food and Agriculture Organ- j\nization. '\nDerick Heathcoat-Amory, Brit- i\nish minister of agriculture, had!\nurged reduction of a proposed!\nbudget of slightly more than $7.- j\n000,000 for each of the next two\nyears.\nTaggart said Canada wants the\nwork of the FAO to go forward,\nbut this need not mean an expansion in the budget.\nHe said the 1953 conference had\napproved a \"substantial\" increase\nfor 1934-53. The proposed increase\nfor the next two years amounts to\nadditional 15 per cent and\n\"seems to us to be excessive.\"\nMsxlmum economies \u2022 must be\nmade on present operating costs.\nEcuador Is the world's chief\nsource of balsa wood, strong but\nonly'half as heavy is cork.\nFalse Teeth Need\nA Special Cleanser\nDon't Brush Your PlatosI\nSoak Thtfm In Polldont\nAs Dentists Suggest\nPolident is thi recommended way to\nclean dentures, banish Denture Breath.\nJuit follow these easy rules.\n1. Novor use a brush en thorn! Your dental plates are much softer than natural\nteeth. Brushing wears down fitting ridges\nto they get loose. \u2022\n2. Novor via soap or toothpaste! They\ncan leave film which cpliects bacteria\nand food particles, a major cause of\noffensive \"Dentura Breath .\n3. Use a coaldng-typo cloa'nsar made fer\nfalso tooth enly . . . Polldontl Polident\ncleanser is recommended by more dentists than any other. No brushing, no\nhandling of soapy pjates. Polident gets\nwhere a brush can't reach.\nBest of all; Polident always leaves false\nteeth odor free. Get the world's largest\nselling denture cleanser, Polident, at\nyour drug counter. D-133\nBUY YOUR COAT ON \"BAY\" LOW BUDGET TERMS\nMuskrat\nCOATS\nLuxurious (dyed) muskrat back coats\nthat guarantee good looks, warmth and\nwearability. Dyed to perfection to favorite ranch mink tones by the famous\nHollander process. Sizes 12 to 20.\nFull Length Moutons\n(Processed Lamb)\nA warm, rich appearing fur coat it a low budget\nprice!  Full length styling\nfor years of luxurious wear!     tt I\nSizes 12 to 20. Pay as low     \u00ab^\nas   $14   down   on   budget\nterms \t\n149\nWomen's Orion Cardigans and Pullovers\nHigh bulk orlon cardigans,\nlong sleeve style hi attractive pastel shades of white,\npink, blue, maize and tan.\nSizes 32 to 42\t\nButton front,\n95\n5\nShort sleeve pullovers with round knitted\nneck, to match or make a \u00ab^    ** \u00ab\ndelightful  orlon twin ^\u00ab    W J\nsweater set. Sizes 32 to c ^ \u00b0\n40 \u2022\t\nrouna\n3\nSpecial!\nFLANNELETTE SHEETS\nTimely savings on popular \"Sunnyside\"\nsheets . . . thickly napped, sturdy cotton\nflannelette in creamy white shade with pink\nor blue borders. Size 70x90. Pair \t\n4\n99\nReg. 7.95 Nylon and Rayon Blankets\nReduced to bring you big savings on a\nwarm durable blanket. Second quality\nwith slight flaws that should not affect\nwear. Thickly napped with a wide satin\nbinding. Size 72x90. Solid colors of maize,\npink, blue and rose\t\nSheets and Pillowcases      foam Rubber Pillows\nFinely woven, snow-\nwhite cotton sheets in a\nlarge, 81x100, double bed\nPair'  6*66\nGood quality, snowy\nwhite pillow cases. Full\n42-inch size. 1| UQ\nPair   I*3V\nIt's truly Inexpensive. Soft, resilient and lint-free ...\nCqyered in durable cotton in choice of smooth or\nventilated foam surface. Cover colors: A QQ\nwhite, pink or blue     neiriF\nI   \\\nBoys\nCoat Sets\nIncluding surcoats, show pants and helmet. Made\nof nylon blend gabardine, full quilted lining for\nextra warmth, imitation fur trim on coat and hat.\nColors of navy, wine, green, rust. ||  fl(\"\nSizes 4 to 6x .... \u201e._...    M.sJ\nKiddies' Snow Suits\nMade of nylon and fine combed cotton to give you warmth\nwithout weight, full quilted lining, knitted cuffs, adjustable hood has candy striped. knitted trim. The new scarf\nattachment is very smart and practical colors of Q Ar\nred, green, blue in sizes 3 to S only  O.J J\nLined Corduroy\nBOXER LONGS\n2.98\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nChoose your Christma\/ cards early and avoid that\nlast minute rush. Choose from this large assortment\nof general cards. \u25a0 Q Q\nBoxed fifty to the box    *00\nJust what you have been waiting for.\nCorduroy boxer longs, fully lined with\nsanforized checked flannelette. Colors\nof red, green, blue, brown.\nSizes 2-6x\t\nFLANNELETTE\nPYJAMAS\nQuality pyjafnas made of novelty patterned flannelette. Boys or 1 QO\ngirls stylings in sizes 2-6x     I *<rO\nFlannelette SHIRTS\nBoys' flannelette shirts in a good selection of colors and patterns. Sanforized\nto retain shape and wear | AQ\nlonger. Sizes 2 to 6x     \u25a0 eT J'\n______________________________________\n____________________________\n PT\nmmm^\nswiip?'.-   :   -ji#pp\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0  ! : :\u2014;\u2014       '\u25a0 ,'.' ';\u25a0 .\u25a0.-\/*\u2014r~\u2014\u25a0-  .,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0'    \u25a0\u00ab>\n______ _________\u2014.\n&351\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9,1955 \u2014 7\nyyyyyy -y\nShop Thursday and Saturday - Closed Friday\n(g^^_a_.\n\" li: \u00a3\nTEENAGERS and MEN'S\nCAMPUS COATS\n\u2022 Warm, all wool melton cloth.\n\u2022 Smart two-tone campus styling.\n\u2022 Fingertip length\u2014dome front\nfasteners.\nI\n\u2022 Quilted satin-over-wool inner\nlining throughout.\n\u2022 Black, royal, wine, grey and\ngreen.\n\u2022 Teeners' sizes 6 to 18, men's\nsizes 36 to 45.\nTEENERS' 7\"\nMEN'S 12\"\nKIDDIES' PARKAS\nThis warm, sturdy, hard-\nwearing jacket is made of\ndurable nylon gabardine,\nfully lined, and has the\n\"gro-waist\" for snug fit,\nHood is adjustable with\nfur trim. Sizes 2-8x.\n4\n98\nChildren's\nSki Pants\nReplat shipment of\nthis low priced quality\nwool frieze snow-pant\nShoulder straps, knitted,\ncuffs. Sizes 2 to 6x.\n1.99\nDoor\nOpening\nSpecials\n9 A.M THURSDAY\nReg. 1.50 Men's Socks\nSeconds with very minor flaws from a leading\nmaker's  lambswool and nylon  blend QO\nsocks. All colors. .  \u00bbW\nReg. 4.95, 5.95, 6.95 Shirts\nMen's dress shirts in white and plain    ^   .A. A\nshades. Broken sizes.   A.Tt\nReg. 3.95 Full Length Dress Mirrors\n12\"x48\" size in white wood frame. Limit one per\ncustomer at this *}   QQ\nspecial price.       _4t77\nReg. .39 Cotton Anklets\nTriple roll cuff, nylon reinforced.   . | Q\nWhite only. Sizes 9-10V4      \u2022 I *\nReg. 2.59-2.98 Girls' Sweaters\nLimited quantity only. Cardigans and       |    ^Q\npullovers. No. 1 seconds. . ... .   .        I \u00ab \/ 7\nReg. 7.95 Tweed Skirts\nExceptional savings on semi-flare self-    jn   QQ\nbelt Fall skirts. 12 to 20    3.7\/\nReg. 3.95 Millinery\nSmart selection of Fall hats |    QQ\nat a great saving.        I \u00bb7J\nReg. .49 and .59 Yard Print Mill Ends\nColorful good quality cotton print at a 3 Q\nhuge saving. Yard iJ\/\nCongratulations!\nMISS ELSJEWIESNER\nAge  12, 420 Innis St.\nWinner of The Bay's\n\"Name the Doll Contest\"\nQUILTED SURCOATS\nWarm protection against wintry blasts! Both men's\nand boys' styles in hip-length jackets \u2014 fully lined\nwith quilted wool insulation. Sturdy nylon gabardine\nshell-in rich, plain shades. Boys' sizes 6 to 16 have fur\ncollars, men's sizes 36 to 46 in choice of fur collar or\nself collar.\nMen's\nBoys'\n12\"   7\n99\nBOYS' WINTER PANTS\n\u2022 Heavy \"Crompton\" oorduroy slacks\nor warm 24-oz. wool melton ski\npants.\n\u2022 Both strongly made with sturdy\npockets.\n\u2022 All popular plain shades, Ski style\nhave elastic cuffs.\n\u2022 For boys ages 6 to 16.\n4\n98\nSTATION WAGON\nCOATS FOR CHILDREN\n10\nNylon blend gabardine, full quilted lining,\ntwo pocket style -with imitation fur collar.\nBelted waist.-Sizes 4 to 6x\t\nTELEVISION\n32 RICH SHADES!\nGrand'mere\nSmoothies\nw\nThe sweater \"hit\" of every age\ngroup! Popular v-neck, long sleeve\nstyling in rich, Jong wearing blended lambswool and botany yarns.\nAlmost every color of the rainbow\nis represented in these shrink-\nproof sweaters ... including mint,\ncharcoal, coral, flame, yellow,\n, powder and copper. Sizes 36 to 46.\nMEN'S WEAR \u2014 MAIN FLOOR\nMen'sCasual Slacks\n\"DACRON\" BLEND WORSTED\nYou would  ordinarily pay  10.95 for  these\nlong-wearing slacks \u2014 but a Bay special\nourchase  makes   this   low   price  possible!\nMiracle \"Dacron\" blend worsted flannel in\nrich char tones. Sizes 29 to 42\t\nrich-appearing,\n88\n8\nINSTALLED IN\nYOUR HOME FOR\nAS LOW AS\n$25 Down!\nNEW  1956 RCA VICTOR TV Models NOW AT THE BAY\nRCA \"DEVLIN\" Console   RCA Townsman' 21'\nRCA Radio Combination\n1\"\nLuxurious styling plus\n\"deep image\" 21\" television screen.\n\u2022 Extra   sensitivity  and\nstability.\n\u2022 Better brightness \u2014\nBetter contrast.\n\u2022 Better interlace \u2014\neateier tuning.\n\u2022 Better sound j\u2014\nf       aluminized \"Deep Image\"\n90 degree picture tube.\nThe modern cabinet is available in walnut, mahogany or\nlimed oak.\n30995\nCombines compact beauty\nin a modern design with\nthe better 7-way advanced\nengineering of superb\n\"Deep Image\" performance. A smart table model\nin a beautiful wood-grain\nfinishes of walnut, mahogany and limed oak. Attractive matching consolette\nbase available.\n25495.\n(Base Extra)\nReg. $229\n6-tube standard wave band powerful radio \u2014 plus \u2014 a top quality\n3-speed automatic record player in\na rich mahogany cabinet! It's the\ncombination \"buy\" of this year \u2014\na beautiful set designed to enhance\nyour living room.\n$\n179\nPay Only $18 Down \u2014\nBalance on Low Monthly Tarmt\nRCA \"NIPPER\" RADIO\nA powerful, compact little table radio in\na choice of six colors \u2014 .red, white, blue,\ngreen, yellow or . cream to match any\nkitchen or bedroom decor. \"J^ O^t\nPrice      d. I .\u00a5 J\nRCA CLOCK RADIO\nA modern design award winner in a rich\nplastic case! Features station selector, accurate alarm set, automatic slumber\nswitch turns your radio on in the morning!\nMany decorator colors. . A A QC\nPrice        liT.3'^\n______________________\n__________________________________________\n !-   ;   \"\u2022':,'    .    -\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022,'..   \u25a0;'\u2022\nPSP\u00bb..''*, \u25a0_..\u25a0\u25a0<'\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022     :\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     ,      y    \u25a0'.   .'.   '\u2022   : \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   ,.\u2022;    \u25a0;        ,  '\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014 .\u25a0..\u25a0   \u2022,     ,   ,-\n_ _ . ___ ,      .....      . \u2014\u2014 : \u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9, 1955\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily Newt does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof \u00bbn error In tne,followingj Iliti.\nMacfie Exploration\t\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nQuotation lists from ihe\nCanadian stock markets are\ncompiled and published by the\nDally News ai a service to\nsubscribers. The lists are add-\n. ed to or revised constantly,\nStocks In which tnere is particular interest, and not now\nquoted, can be added -at the\nthe request of readers.\nIllllllllllllllllllllftlllllllllllllllllllll\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcaaia Uranium 15\nAlgom Uranium    16.t\u00abVi\nAnacon Lead .       3.25\nAnglo Rouen  .-.      1.37\nAunor   _           2.40\nBarnat       1.01,\nBaska Uranium  38\nB&se Metals      85 '\nBibis Yukon 10%\nBobjo _ 65\nBrilund  ..'.      1.80\nBroulan           1.70\nBrunswick   11\nBuff Can        _       ,14\nBuff Red Lake  09\nCallinan  27V4\nCampbell C  16\nCan Met .       _      2.65\nCentral Patricia  88\nChimo       1.50\nCoin Lake 12ft\nCons Denison  _,,    10.25\nCons M & S \u201e.   35.50\n.1514\n5.50\n5.10\n3.65\n4.15\n.1814\n.40\n1.03\n.10\n16.8214\n.73 Vt\n.45\n.29\n.0814\nCons Orlac\nConwest\nCons Sub\nCons Discovery\nCons Howe\nDetta M \t\nDonalda \t\nDyno \t\nKast Amphi\nEast Malartic       2.34\nEast Sullivan      6.50\nFalconbridge \u2014 27\nFaraday              2.00\nFrobisher     4.70\nGeco\nGiant Yd\nGod's Lake\nGoldale\nGoldcrest\nGold Eagle\nGolden Manitou      3.55\nGold Hawk    25\nGoldora        17\nGrandine      _ 25\nGunnar Gold     20.1214\nHarricana      1.48\nHassaga      \u2022      1.35\nHollinger      _    19.8214\nHudson Bay     68.75\nInt Nickel       80.50\nJoliet Que      _ 82   \u2022\nJonsmith        34%\nKerr Addison     18.50\nKevbovcon        12\nKristina  _ 1414\nLake Lineman    14\nLakeshore              4.80\nLeitch _ 71\nLexindin  32\nLittle Long Lac       1.13\nLorado              1.41\nMacassa '__.      2.10\nMacDonald    83\n'   .37\nMackeno  47\nMaosen R L  _     2od\nMalartic G F       1.95\nManeast  35\niviari iVicNeely  10\nMcKenzie K L _ 37\nMcmarmac       20\nMining Corp  ,    22.uj\nfviulti Mins           1.74\nMogul        _      3.01)\nflew Alger      25\nwew Bluiamaque  29\nNew Delhi  v.    Pol\nNew Harricana       .30\nNew Highridge _ 56\nNew Jason        _ 15\nNew Lund  4y .4\nNew Xnurbois  25\nNoranda     _    52.50\nNorgold  24\nNormetals         6.75\nNorth Can  _      .58\nNorpax  52\nOsisko  '  04y4\nPardee  .'       .83\nPickle Crow       1.19\nPlacer Develop     39.50\nPurdy M  32\nPreston E D          6.80\nQuebec Copper      3.40\nQuebec Lao         10\nQuebec Lithium  16\nQubeec Nickel         2.13\nQuemont _    26.50\nRadiore    . ',      1.55\nRayrock              1.87\nSan Antonio            136\nSherritt Gordon .'.     8.15\nStadacona -    '  .29\nSteep Rock          \\2.t2Vt\nSullivan Con             6.45\nSurf Inlet Vane  08\nSylvanite       1.33\nteck Hughes    _      2.76\nTombill  41\nTorBrit      92\nThomp-Lund            1.50\nTrans Cont Res  38\nUnited Keno          7.00\nUpper Canada       100   I\nVentures     39 3714\nViolamac      2.85\nWaite Amulet     15.75\nWright Hargreaves \u2014      1.95\nYale  .\u2022 49\nYellowknife   Bear        1.94\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc       1.04\nAnglo Can       5.40\nCalgary & Edmonton     16.50\nCdn Atlantic       6.70\nCanadian Collieries     13.6214\nCan Decalta \u201e.  72\nCentral Leduc           2.35\nCentral Explorers       6.50\nCan Dredge   2114\nCan  Oil            20\nCan Pacific Rly   32'\/.\nDom Magnesium          2014\nDom Steel & Coal B   17\nDom Stores                  34H\nDom Tar & Chemical  13V4\nDom Textiles _  874\nDom Magnesium   -6514\nEddy  Paper\nFamous Players\nFleet Air\t\nFord A     .. _   ...\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pfd\nGoodyear\nGreat Lakes \t\nGypsum Lime      60%\nImperial 'Oil        38%\nImp. Tobacco j     H'i\nInt Metals -     3614\nInt Pete          29%\nLoblaw A        45\nLoblaw B .. _.:     84>\/4\nMassey Haasis    106%\nMcColl Frontenae   .'...    4314\n23%\n25   ,\n138\n31%\n16%\n10%\n150\n4014\n60%\nMont Loco\nMoore Corp\nNat Steel Car ...\nPage Hershey ...\nPowell River\nRuss* Industries\nShawinigan   \t\nSicks Brew \t\nSimpsons A  \t\n17%\n40\n28'A\n75\";\n55\n14\n67%\n28 Vi\n18\nStandard Paving    36\nSteel of Canada         54%\nUnion Gas of Can   47%\nWestern Grocers A   41*\nWeston George  31\nWinnipeg Gas     . \u2014  13\nJhs.  (HiqkwayA,\nCascade-Rossland: Rough, slippery sections, carry chains. Ross-\nland-Goatfell: Normal. Goatfell-\nCrow's Nest: fair, rough sections\ndue to construction.\nNo! 3A Trail-Salmo \u2014 Normal.\nNo. 6 Nelway-Vernon \u2014 (a) Nel-\nway-Nelson-South Slocan: Normal (b) South Slocan-Nakusp-\nNeedles: Rough and slippery sections. Needles-Monashee: rough,\nmuddy and slippery sections, carry\nchains; id Monashee-Vernon: fair.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate-Cranbrook-\nGolden \u2014 (air. sanding, construction Kingsgate to Yahk.\nNelson-Kaslo: fair, rough sections. Kaslo-New Denver: fair,\nrough and slippery sections. Kaslo-\nLardeau: fair, rough sections. Lar-\ndeau-Grerard: fair, rough sections.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n By Frances Drake\t\nDECEMBER 23 to JANUARY 21\n(Capricorn)- \u2014 Similar indications\nto Sagittarius now. Be smart in\nplanning procedure; don't make\nunwi.ce investments, but do take\nreasonable, progressive measures\n'MARCnH\"2Tro'APRIL'2o'(Aries)' to advance.Know your facts. Have\nfaith.\nJANUARY 22 to FEBRUARY 20\nLook In the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFOR THURSDAY, NOV. 10, 1955\nThe\nsmooth\neasy\nchewing\nCons Peak\nDuvex   \t\nFederated Pete _.\nGreat Sweetgrass\nHome        \t\nH Wood Senr\t\nKroy \t\nLiberal Pete \t\nMarigold   \t\nMid Cont \t\nNat Pete \t\nOkalta     \t\nPacific Pete \t\nPathfinder   \t\nPetrol     \t\nRoyalite   \t\nTriad      \t\nUnited Oils \t\nYank C .._\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi      \t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nAluminum   \u2014..\nArgus      \t\nAtlas St\t\nBathurst Power\n.12\n.23\n4.20\n.13\n1.18\n2.70\n.43\n.72\n2.40\n1.95\n13.50\n.91\n3.10\n14.1214\n5.85\n1.52\n.23\n..    35%\n..    90\n..   105\n..     21%\n..     17%\n40\nBell Telephone _     5014\nBrazilian\nBC Electric 4s\nBC   Electric   4y<s\nBC Forest        \t\nBC Packers It __...\nBC Packers B \t\nB.C. Power A \t\nBurns A\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Breweries \t\nCan Canners   \t\nCan Celanese _\n1V<\n98\n51'A\n.151\/4\n1614\n!4V4\nVenus, Moon and Uranus in excellent aspects particularly sponsor the artistitc professions, home\nand family interests, also unusual\nendeavors if sound and promising.\nCare in finances!\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 20 (Taurus)\n\u2014Favorable for your personal affairs, for family happiness and\nbenefits, for monetary gains\nthrough your own smart business\nmanagement and general know-\nhow.\nMAY 21 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nDon't look at any sudden disappointment as final. You have opportunities galore today but it may\ntake extra patience to find them\nand work with them. Don't fret if\nall ideas don't click immediately.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nTops for good effort. Your innately kind and charitable nature will\nbe rewarded by benefits from unexpected places. Strengthen business and personal ties.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 22 (Leo)-\nDelicate matters, home and pri\nvate affairs have tine Moon and\nVenus rays. A highly successful\nday? Maybe not, maybe yes. It's\nmostly up to you.\nAUGUST 23 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo)\u2014Although you may not\nbe as keen and mentally alert as\nusual now, the day holds advan\ntages and beneficial returns \u2022 for\nall good efforts and sound ideas.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to QCTOBER\n23 (Libra)\u2014You have very helpful Venus and Moon aspects\\o aid\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Enlivening, benefic\nUranus rays here spell unusual\nachievement if you handle day's\nmusts as well as you know how\nand don't waste valuable time on\nunessentials or unproductive people. Forward!\nFEBRUARY 21. to MARCH 20\n(Pisces)\u2014Please heed Gemini. Be\nmindful of your many talents and\ncapabilities, then, with faith, step\ninto things with the best competitors. Your interests favored anew.\nYOU BORN TODAY are artistic,\nsuited to a scientific or other professional career. If living true to\nyour finer nature, you are steadfast, dependable, capable. It Is well\nthat you like tojiather knowledge;\nkeep on doing so. for -you can always make worthwhile knowledge\npay. Control your temper and curb\na tendency to domineer. Give others their innings, too. Develop\nyour talents and put them to daily\npractical use. Procrastination can\nbe an expensive failing with Scorpio.\nBirthdate: William Hogarth, noted painter, pictorial satirist; Oliver\nGoldsmith, famed writer.\nCopyright, 1955, King Features.\n33% 1 you  in\nworthwhile undertakings,\n11\n37'A\n79\n30\n36\n22\nseems to make your work\nr..easier!\nquicke\n\u2022television for today\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n9:45\u2014Sign On\n10:00\u2014Love of Life\n10:30\u2014Love Story \u2022\n11:00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n11:30\u2014House Party\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n12130\u2014TBA\n12:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n1:00\u2014Brighter Day\n1:15\u2014Secret Storm\n1:30\u2014On Your Account\nl:15-Valiant Lady\n2:00-Variety Hour\n2:30\u2014Search Tor Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3:00\u2014Valient Lady  '\n3:15\u2014TBA\n3:30\u2014Garry Moore\n4:00\u2014What's Cookirt'\n4:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n5:00\u2014Western Roundup\n5-30\u2014Western Roundup\n5:55\u2014The Neca Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10-Weather Vane\n6:15\u2014Doug Edwards\n6:30\u2014Cowbov G-Men\n7:00\u2014U.S.   Sleel   Hour\n8:00\u2014Godfrev and His Friends\n9:00\u2014The Millionaire\n30\u2014I've Got a Secret\n10:00\u2014Pa\"\u00b0 Page\n10:15\u2014Fr rtoal! Hall of Fame\n10:30\u2014Damon Runyan Theatre\n11:00\u2014News   n\n11:05\u2014Heart of the City\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n8:40\u2014Test Pattern\n8:45\u2014Color Test Program\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading\n9:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014Search for Beauty\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Women\n1:45\u2014Mod. Romances\n2:00-Pinky Lee\n2:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n3:00\u2014Matinee on Six\n4:00\u2014Mr. Engineer\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Bar 6 Corral\n6:00\u2014Curtain Time\n6:30\u2014 Bar 6 Bunkhouse\n6:45\u2014Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Justice\n7:30\u2014Eddie Fisher\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Screen Directors Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Father Knows Best\n9:00\u20141 Led Three Lives\n9:30\u2014Highway Patrol\n10:00-This Is Your Life\n10:30-The Whistler\n11:00\u2014Mr. and Mrs. North\n11:40\u2014News Headlines\nespecially if they are generous in\nscope, unselfish in motive. A good\nday for clever and artistic folks.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio)\u2014Not especially inspiring rays for vigorous and laborious\nwork, but any worthwhile activity in which cleverness and skill\nare required can move ahead satisfactorily.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n22 (Sagittarius)\u2014Not wholly encouraging-for quick gains, but this\nIs a day for sound attainment\nthrough constant effort and sen-\nsible'management. Keep striving.\nBowater Paper Co.\nHikes Prices\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Bowater\nPaper Co. has increased the price\nof its newsprint by $4 a ton, effective Dec. 1, it was announced\ntoday. Bowater became the eighth\ncompany to raise the price in the\nlatest   round   of   increases.\nThe company, sales representative for Bowater mills at Cornel\nBrook. Nfld.. and Calhoun. Tenn.,\nnotified publisher customers by\nletter\nThe increase will bring Bowat-\ner's price to $130 (U. S.) a ton. delivered in New York. Other companies have announced boosts oi\nfrom $3 to $5 a ton, bringing their\nprices in the $129 to $131 range.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n4. Thus\n5. Grows\nwhite\n6. Macaws\n(Braz.)\n7. Of the\nshore\n8. Part of\na garment\nIL Little\nchildren\n12. Wicked\n13. University\nofficer\n17. A wing\n20. A shower\nof rain\n21. Sphere\n22. Tiny\n24. Coin\n(Jap.)\n25. Giv^\n\u25a0 over\n26. Passes\na rope\nthrough\n(naut)\n27. Bam.\nboo-\nlike\ngrass\n28. A going\nout\n29. Slopes\n31. Work,\nas dough\n\u2022 IsIMHH   HHHU\nIBHHZIH   HldBES\niiraiaa (\u25a0____ HBE\nna    'jhh HHt;\nl=_NI!_gH\u00a3_6_a\nHHHMH   HBHSIl?\niiaiii Mas nr\nuhe he canst\nMuraim aratssi\nKNHiaa   HHBII!\naiana taigas\nYesterday's Aaawst\n34. Not\nworking\n35. Identical\n36. Hastened\n40. Erbium\n(*ym.)\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n2:45\u2014Test Pattern\n3:00\u2014Movietime on 2\n4:15\u2014Krem's Kolor Kast\n4:30\u2014Story Land\n4:45\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:55\u2014Watch the Birdie\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00\u2014Kit Carson\n6:30\u2014All-American Game of the\nWeek\n7:00\u2014Wed. Night Fights\n8_00\u2014Disneyland\n9:00\u2014Overseas Adventure\n9:30\u2014MGM Parade\n10:00\u2014Break the Bank\n10:30\u2014News\n10:35\u2014Championship Bowling .\n11:45\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subiect to change by stations without notice 1\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.-Phoho 1300\nEvenl rigs\u2014 Phone 1033-R\nDally   Except  Sundays\nand  Holidays\nMc & Me\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nACROSS\n1. Crowns\n5. Chums\n9. Exchange\npremium\n10. External\nseed coating\n11. Jog\n12. In high\nspirits\n14. Carousal\n15. Waistcoat\n16. Sign of the\nInfinitive\nIT. Sloths\n18. Eggs\n19. Walk slowly\n22. Song bird\n23. Constellation\n24. Body\nof water\n25. Wooden\nlining on\nInside of\na shaft\n27. Staggered\n30. Even (poet)\nil. Know\n(Scot)\n32. Greek letter\n33. Describe\n35. Store\n37. Shunned\n38. Succors\n39; Girl's name\n40. Ostrichlike bird\n41. Snow\nvehicle\n42. Shades of\na primary\ncolor\nDOWN\n1. Vegetable\n2. Eager\n3. Compassion\nDAILY CBVPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work tt:\nAXY DLBAAXE\nIn   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A lo uoo\nfor the three L'o, X for the two O's, etc. Single lottoro, npos\ntrophies, tho length and formation ot the words are all hint)\nEach day tho code letters aro different .\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nYSW       KT       MILR,       YLZ       WKCJ       KT\nAMJJWKLR \u2014 MILRAJMMIB.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: SO ANGUISH STILL SUCCEEDS\nJDEUGHT, AND GRIEF OUR JOY ATTENDS\u2014LILLQ.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\n1\n1\n2\ni\nA \"\n%\n3\n6\n7\nB\ni\n'\/\/<\n9\nVA\nIO\n^A\nI.I\ni\na\nIS\n\\4\n%\nIS\"\nIfc\nf\ny4\na\nV\/\/<\n16\n19\nIO\n21\n^\nIX\ni\nVA\n23\n%\n\u25a0A\n^\n^\/A\nIS\nlb\nn\nt-1\nIB\n29\n3t>\n|\n31\n^\nty,\n32\n33\n3+\n1\nIS\nZb\n37\n%\nit*\n1\n39\n1\nAO\nl\n%\n41\n%\nAX\nVA\n________\n \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0; .-\u25a0\u25a0>\":\u25a0.:'*\" ^\u2022\u2022\u25a0\"\u2022yyyfiyyyy   >'y:\/y.y  ; ;>''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0 ; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:.      \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0 .;..-.\nWl--- ' . \u25a0   .   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-    \u25a0--pwpHi^^. \u25a0\u25a0-      \u25a0\n!     :    :   :    : '\u2014:\u2014'      \u2014\u2014t_\u2014\n3%)5\nSMALL INVESTMENT -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story -PHONE 1844\nf>\nBIRTHS\t\nKABATOFF\u2014To Mr. and Mrs\nJohn Kabatoff of Blewett, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nov.\n4, a daughter.\nMALOFF\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. P\nMaloff of Thrums, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Nov. 4, a\n&on.\nMALOFF\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. C.\nMaloff of Thrums, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Nov. 7, a\ndaughter.\nMcCONNELL\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn McConnell of Emerald mine,\nSalmo, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Nov. 7, a son.\nLAUDER \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nSamuel Lauder of RR 1 Nelson, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nNov. 7, a daughter.\nSCALES \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Scales, 802 Fifth Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nNov. 8, a daughter.\nKOENIG\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Alec\nKoenig, 223% Union Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nNov. 8, a daughter.\t\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nHELP WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE Accepted up to 5 p. m. November\n15,1955, for the position of school\nbus driver .and general maintenance man. Applicants to apply in\nown handwriting, stating salary\nrequired and qualifications other\nthan that required for bus driver. Forward applications to\nSecretary-Treasurer, School District No. 7, 554 Stanley St., Nelson, B. C\nDISTRICT E-NQINEERS OR Superintendents, B. C. Civil Service,\nDepartment of Highways, Various centres in B. C. Salary: $387\nrising to $464 per month. Initial\nsalary contingent on qualifications, and experience. To be responsible for highway maintenance in a departmental district.\nShould be registered Professional Engineer in B. C, with some\npractical experience in highway\nmaintenance, OR if not a professional engineer, extensive practical training and .experience in\nthis field. Must have tact and\ndemonstrated ability to meet and\ndeal with the public, and to successfully supervise staff. These\npositions are permanent; generous vacation and sick leave: superannuation plan. Aoply Chairman, Civil Service Commission.\nParliament Buildings, 544 Michigan Street, VICTORIA. NOT\nLATER THAN NOVEMBER 18,\n1955.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY      NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9, 1955 \u2014 9\nson\naOtomotive,\nmotorcycles, bicycles\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nWE NEED THE SERVICES OF\nan appliance salesman. Experience preferred but an urge to\nlearn acceptable. Excellent opportunity for aggressive man.\nApply to the Manager, Hudson\nBay Company, Nelson\nJUNIOR CLERK FOR PERMAN-\nent position. Excellent opportunity for advancement. Commencing salary $32.50 per 5-day\nweek. Apply Box 7697, Nelson\nDaily News\nWANTED - SALESMAN T5\nwork five days a week, to replace one who didn't. Car essential. Apply Box 3937, Nelson\nDaily News.\nMARRIED OR SINGLE TO EARN\n$45 a week or more in spare\ntime. Full time if satisfactory.\nApply Box 3936, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED - SECOND CLASS\nengineer for shift work. Apply\nMaster Mechanic, Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Company Limited.\nMichel, B.C.\"\t\nWANTED \u2014 CONTRACTOR\nwith portable sawmill and logging equipment. Box 7874 Daily\nNews.\nTIMBER SALE X88444\nThere will be offered for sale at\npublic auction, at 10:30 a.m. (local\ntime) on Monday, November 28th,\n1955, in the office of the Forest\nRanger, Lardeau, B. C, the Licence X68444, to cut 19,000 cubic\nfeet of sawlogs. and 3600 lineal\nfeet of cedar poles and piling, situated West of Healy Creek, Kootenay District. Two (2) years will\nbe allowed for removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the District Forester,\nNelson, B. C or the Forest Ranger, Lardeau, B. C.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nCorporation of the Village of Salmo\nVOTERS LIST 1955-1956\nA Court of Revision for the purpose of correcting and revising the\nabove Voters' List which is now\nposted in the Clerks Office and the\nPublic Notice Board, will be held\non Monday, November 14th, 1955,\nat 10 a.m., in the Village Office.\nVoters are urged to check the list.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nVANCOUVER PROVINCE CAR-\nriers for Rosemont, Ymir Road,\nUphill and Fairview. Phone\n712-X.\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED SILK\npresser at once. Apply Empire\nCleaners.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nYOUNG WOMAN UNDER 35 FOR\npermanent, responsible office\nposition. Typing and general office experience essential. No\nshorthand required. Above average salary for qualified applic\nant. Applications confidential.\nApply to The Manager, Hudson's\nBay Co.. Nelson.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPUBLIC   STENOGRAPHER\nAvailable eves, and  weekends,\n'rates reasonable. Phone 973-X,\nafter 5 p.m.\nEXPERIENCED, RELIABLE WO-\nman cook wants job in camp\nany number of men. Work guaranteed. Box 2768, Daily News.\nCARPENTER WORK AND ODD\njobs. Reasonable rates. Phone\n1282-L evenings.\nANY KIND OF ODD JOBS. PH.\n599-X-3.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap Iron, batteries, brass, alu\nminum, copper. Used parts for\ncars and trucks for sale\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132. Granite Road, Nelson. B.C\nPHONE 189-R-4.\nPRICES ROADSIDE AND F.O.B\nVancouver on 2000 Christmas\ntrees. Reply to A-l Auto Wreckers. 4760 E. Hastings, Vancouver. B. C.\nWANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nsnd cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Products, Box- 450. Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity of\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News\nWE BUY SCRAP METAL. PHONE\n882-Y for honest deal. Warehouse- 415.4 Latimer St. City\nIndependent Trader\n$>l0tm SatUj 5Jpnid\n\u2022 Subscription Rote*\nEffective Oct. 1st, 1956\nPay No Mors Than 6o Mon. to Frl\n10c on Saturday\nBy carrier, per week\nip advance .35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month       I    $ 1.25\nThree  months $ 3.50\nSix months         $ 6.50\nOna year      $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom\nor the United States\nOne month                $ 1.75\nThree  months    _     $ 5.00\nSix  months          $ 9.50\nOne year       $18.00\nLOOKING\nFOR A\nFAMILY HOME?\nNewly     redecorated     4     B.R.\nHome, double plumbing. Laundry   room,   rumpus   room   and\nfurnace room on first level. 6\nlotrterraced with $|Q500\nghrubs. Only ...... \u00a5   v'   v\nConvenient Terms\nBAKER STREET LOCATION\nImpeccable, compact 3 B.R.\nHome with full basement and\nfurnace. New roof <tlft *\\ftft\nand plumbing. Now*piV\u00bbOUU\nAvailable financing.\nIDEAL LOCATION\nNear all schools. New composition siding on 4 B.R. home with\nfurnace heat. 3 lots fruit trees\nand garage.\nOnly\n\u25a0     \u2022 Terms\nDrop In at\nReuben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\nToday\nAnd Deal With Confidence\nWith the Largest\nAutomotive Dealer\nIn the Interior of B.C.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1956 Meteor Rideau\nHardtop.\nFully equipped.\n1956 Dodge Regent\n4-Door Special\n1955 Ford Fairlane 2-Door\n1954 Ford Crestline\nFully equipped.\n1954 Chevrolet 4-Door\n1953 Austin 4-Door\n1953 Ford 4-Door\nRadio.\n1953 Chevrolet 4-Door\n1953 Oldsmobile 4-Door\n1952 Chevrolet Hardtop\n1951  Chevrolet 4-Door\n1951  Austin 4-Door\n1950 Chevrolet 4-Door\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTODAY'S\nSPECIALS\n1954 Pontiac $1595\n1954 Austin 1295\n1947  Kaiser Sedan      150\n1951 Meteor 695\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 G.M.C. Pickups\n1954 Austin 3 Ton\nLow mileage.\n1952 Fargo Pickup\n1951   Chevrolet Pickup\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nWe Pay Spot Cash for\nLATE MODEL CARS\nThis Season's Best\n'BEST\n1\u2014D4 Caterpillar with\ndozer and winch.\n1\u2014D6--Caterpillar with\ndozer and winch.\n1\u2014TDM IHC with dozer\nand winch. '\n1\u2014Fordson Major Diesel\nCrawler with dozer and\nwinch.\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\n%\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Railway St.      Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE  1402\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nohain steel . plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St. Vancouver. B.C. Ph\nPAcifie 635? '\nLUMBER CLEARANCE SALE -\nall dressed stock, random length.\n2x4, 2x6, 1x4, 1x6, 1x8 boards.\n$30 per thousand, BM. Free delivery for orders 4000 BM or\nmore. Phone S. Kudra, 1702-R.\nNelson.\nFOR SALE 2 PAIR BOYS TUBE\nskates size 8. Also 2 CCM bikes.\nOne with 3 speed, hub, carrier\nequipped. Price $15 and $35.\nPhone 73B-Y-1.\nSHIP US- YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals. copper, brass, lead, aluminum Highest prices, prompt payment Active Trading. 935 E\nCordova  Vancouver\nCUTLER'S NEW AND DSED\nfurniture, basement. 301 Bakei\nSt Phone 47 \"We buy used fur'\nniture.\"\n$5,900\nNEWLYWEDS ATTENTION\nExpress your own personality\nin nearly finished house on .2\nlots in centre Fair- $5300\nview. Only ^\nTerms.\nCONFIDENTIAL\nINFORMATION ON\nEXCLUSIVE LISTINGS\nOF INVESTMENT PROPERTIES\nPROFITABLE\nOPPORTUNITY\nTo live upper duplex and rent\nthe other $40 per mo. Walking\ndistance from city $g ZQQ\ncent*-*. Prife ^vj-vw\nFinancing to right party.\nFor your convenience.\nOpen   Every   Wednesday.\nCall  S. Brashear\nPhone 1821-L for eve.\nappointments.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY\n536 Ward St. Phone 99\nReal Estate Agents and\nInsurance Agents\n803 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 1135 and 1843\nFOR SALE \u2014 1947 DeSOTO SUB-\nurban, with body considerably\ndamaged by collision. Please\nsubmit bids to Box 7666 Nelson\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1951 PREFECT.\nJust.had a $145 overhaul. Terms\nor take older car as* part payment. Pit. 326-X-2.\nFOR SALE-20-ACRE RANCH.\nFruit trees and building. For\nparticulars. Art Miller. Kaslo\n3-ROOM HOUSE ON 2 LEVEL\nlots. Ideal for young or old\ncouple. Phone 751-X-3.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nWRITE FOR OUR FALL BUL-\nletin containing important information regarding changes in\nthe Poultry Industry and.reasons\nwhy early hatched chicks are\nmore profitable. Rump & SEN-\ndall Limited, Langley; B. C.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 OLD OR\ncrippled horses for mink feed,\ndelivered to Nelson or South\nSlocan. Apply G. O. Quise.\nFruitvale, B. C.\nWANTED \u2014 3 FRESH COWS.\nWrite all particulars Box 3951\nDaily News.\n2 REGISTERED JERSEY BULLS,\n1 yr., 2 months old. J. W. Hoodicoff, Thrums, B. C.\nFOR  SALE\u2014COWS  AND   HEIF-\ners.  Major Bros., Procter.\n1947 CHEV. LIGHT DELY., NEW\nmotor; also 1948 panel deluxe\nChev, both good tires, and good\ncondition. Phone 1582-L.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1939 PLYMOUTH\nsedan. Brand new tires and battery. What offers? Phone 874\ndays; 743-Y-l  evenings.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM    AND    BOARD    AVAIL-\nable at 614 Josephine St.\nLog Loaders\nShovels\nBack Hoes\nSALES AND SERVICE\nWrite or Phone\nLtd.\nMACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson. B.C.\nMACHINERY\nEQUIPMENT\nSERVICE\nLubriplate Grease and Oils\nStelco Electrodes\nOxygen and Acetylene\nDodge   Pulleys,   Bearings,\nGear Reducers and Couplings.\nStevenson's\nMachine Shop Ltd.\n708 Verhon St.       Phone 98\nFOR SALE - WOOD, SLABS\nand edgings, in long length,\ntruck load approx. 2\\4 cords\n$12.00.  Phone .1702-R.\nBOMBER HOISTS, 1500 LBS CA-\npacity. $45. while they last Active Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova.\nVancouver\n8 MM BOLEX MOVIE CAMERA\nand projector. Kodak Monitor\n616 w\/f:4.5 in 1 second to 1-400\nshutter. Phone Joe at 80.\nUSED BOOKER SELF-FEEDING\ncoal furnace with casing. New\ngrates, first class furnace $85.\nColumbia Trading, 902 Front St.\nFESS OIL HEATER WITH PUMP\nand floor base. $75. Good terms\nto right party. Phone 1790-R.\nFOR QUICK SALE - HORTON\nwashing machine, good condition. Phone 1636.\nFESS SPACE OIL HEATER LIKE\nnew at Fashion Barber Shop,\n334 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nFOR   SALE  -   FAWCETT   OIL\n.   range. Phone 1507-Y.\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13 50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered in Nelson\nSAVE TIME -.SAVE MONEY\n\"Do   tt   the   Easy   Way\"\nMILK MARKETING\nTO BE TOP TOPIC\nVERNON. B.C. (OP) \u2014 The\nClyne report on milk marketing\nis expected to be the principal\nsubject of discussion when the\nB.C. Fedpi ation of Agriculture\nholds its annual convention here\nNov. 22-23.\nA Royal commission under Mr\nJustice J. V. Clyne studied milk\nmarketing for six months and the\nreport now is in the hands of the\nQueen's Printer.\nOnly speakers at the convention\nwill be federal agriculture minister Gardir.er and B.C. agrl\nculture minister Kenneth Kiernan.\nMarket Trends\nNew York st,ock exchange closed\nTuesday due to local elections.\n1953   MALL  CHAIN   SAW   FOR\nsale. Phone 1841.\nOIL   HEATER   MEDIUM   SIZE.\nPhone 1712-R after six.\n1953 COMBINATION COAL AND\ngas McClary stove. Phone 445-X.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Cash grain\nprices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 71.\nBarley, No. 1 feed 1.02.\nVancouver Stocks\n\u25a0    (Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver  Lodge- \t\nBeta Gamma   \t\nBralorne        \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nGiant Mascot\t\nGranduc       \t\nGrandvlew \t\nHamil Sil      \t\nHighland Bell \t\nJackson Basin        ....   \t\nKootenay Base Metals ....\nNational' Ex \t\nPac Eastern Gold \t\nPend Oreille   \t\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Border ._. \t\nQuatsino \t\nReeves MacDonald \t\nRexspar \t\nRix-Athahaska Uran \t\nSheep Creek        ___\t\nSherritt Gordon     \t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Ridge     \t\nSilver Standard    \t\nSunshine Lardeau  \t\nTaylor\nWestern Exploration    ....\nYale\nOIU8\nAltex .,\t\nAnglo Canadian   \t\nA P Consolidated        '\nCalgary & Edmonton \t\nCharter __\t\nChamberlain  :._.\nDel Rio   \t\nGas Exp \t\nHome \t\nNational Pete \t\nOkalta Com       \t\nPacific   Pete \t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite\nRoyal Cam \t\nSparmac  \t\nUnited   \t\nVanalta \t\nWestminster Paper\nWestern Plywoods\nTrans Mtn   \t\n.50\n.12\n4.85\n.65\n.79\n6.6(1\n'    .22\n.05\n.55\n.28\n.0214\n.77\n.13\n4.50\n1.76\n.05\n.26\n2.10\n.43\n.95\n1.35\n8.00\n.12\n.26\n.49\n.30\n.23>,4\n.48\n.45\n.28\n8.35\n.30\n16.25\n1.83\n.36\n1.70\n2.12\n8.75\n2.35\n1.90\n12.87%\n9,40\n13.50\n.07\n.32\n1.50\n.19V.\n30.00\n21.50\n39.50\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket went ahead Tuesday for\nthe fourth straight session but\nbusiness was very light owing to\nlack of leadership from New York.\nThere was some light selling in\na few Wading industrial issues in\nthe last hour, but a further push\nahead in the closing minutes sent\nprices to about their best of the\nday. Seniqrs provided most of the\nstrength in base metals during\nearly transactions.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 There was\na mild improvement at the close\nof moderately active trading on\nthe stock market Tuesday. The\nsteel group paced the upward\ntrend with gains ranging to four\npoints in extremes. However, the\nmajority of price increases were\nfractional. Mines fluctuated withifl\na 10-cent range. Activity was moderate following a -brisk inilial\nhour. Western oils were trendless.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The recession in the London stock market Tuesday continued with increased momentum. Prices opened\nsomewhat unsteadily i and when\nthe terms of the new Rhodesia\nand Nyasaland loan were known\nthis was the signal for a general\nlowering of prices.\nThe fact that the new borrowing\nrate is more than five per cent\ncast a cloud over the market.\nB.C. Herring\nFishers Apree\nOn Price Offer 4\n(\u25a0 VANCOUVER- (CP)-Memberi\nof the United Fishermen and AH\nlied Workers union (Ind.), which\nrepresents nearly 800 B.C. her.\nring fishermen and tendermqn,\nhave volpd to accept a new prifi\noffer, incorporating substantial increases, for their catch.\nThe new one-year contract with\nthe Fisheries Association of B C.\nalso inclueds n fleet limitation program wherehy ihe association \u2022\nagrees to limit its fleet to 78 boats\nfor the season. -\nFLEET TO SAIL\nj The new herring price will be\n$12.8714 a ton. or $1.03 a man a top\nfor reduction herring and $18 -or\n$1.28 a man a ton for herring used\nfor canning and salting.\nThe prices represent an Increase\nof $1.62Mi or 13 cents a man a ton\nover prices paid last year for reduction herring Itnd an Increase of\n58 cents or 4V4 cents a man a ton\nfor canning  and  salting herring.\nThe herring fleet will sail for\nthe grounds at noon today and\nfishing will start at 6 a.m. Thursday. The fleet will return to port\nDec. 16 and sail again Jan. 8.\nMETALS PRICES\nNEW YORK (CP)\u25a0\u2014 Spot prices:\nLead..N. Y., 15V4.\nZinc, East St. Louis 13.\nSilver, N. Y\u201e 91%.\nDividends\nBy The Canadian Presa\nFord Motor Co., of Canada Ltd.,\nA and B $1.25 Dec. 15, record Nov.\n18.\nCanadian Breweries pfd., 31V4:\ncom 37% Jan. 2. record Nov. 30.\nPlacer Development Ltd., $1\nplus $1 bonus Dec. 12, record Nov.\n21.\nGeneral Motors Corp.. $1 Dec. 10,\nrecord Nov. 18.'\nAnglo - Newfoundland Development Co. Ltd., 15 cents Jan. 4, record Dec. 2.\nInternational Nickel Co.. of\nCanada Ltd., 65 cents plus $1,35\n<U. S. funds) Dec. 20, record Nov.\n21.\nCalgary Livestock\nj\nVantor       1.08\nYankee Princess  78'*\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers            2.00\nAlberta Distillers Vt        1.73\nBC Forests   15 3714\nBC Power       32 50\nBC Telephone   48.25\nInt Brew B      5.10\nInland Nat Gas       3.95\nLucky Lager      .;-.-.'-.-'_:......     5.35\nMacM & Bloedel B   42.00\nMid Western       3.90\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014Selling fadl:\nities at the livestock market 04\nTuesday were taxed to handle an\nexceptionally heavy run of cattle\nand calves. Prices, however, held\ngenerally steady. Offerings up to\n10:30 a.m., included 2589 cattle and\n1100 calves. Receipts were mainly\nmedium to good stock and feeder\nsteers and good stock steer calv?|.\nGood and choice ' butcher steers\nwere meeting good demand at\nsteady prices: bulk of the choice\nsteers selling at 20 down; medium\nand good grade generally steady.\nChoice steers 19.25-20: good\n17.50-19: medium 15.50-17; common\n10-15; good heifers 15.50-17; meff-.\nium 13-15: common 10-13: gopd\ncows 9-9.75; medium 8.50-8.75;\ncommon 8-8.25; canners and cutters 5-8; good bulls 9.50-10.60}\ncommon   to   medium   7-9.\nGood feeder steers 15-17; goo$\nstock steers 16-17.50; odd galea\nhigher; common to medium 10-\n15; good stock steer calves 16.5ft-\n18. -'\nGood butcherweight heifer calves weighing 350 to 450 lbs., 14-\n15.25; good and choice light, vaal\n16-18; common to medium 10-15;\nhogs sold steady Monday, 20.25 _fr\nGrade; sows unevenly $1 highey\n10-12  liveweight.\nGood lambs 15-16: good ewesJr\n7.\nClassified  Ada  Get  Results\n.FOR SALE - MY EQUITY IN D-6\nCaterpillar with blade and\nwinch. Take over payments,\nPhone Geo. Webster at 631-R,\nRossland.\nRENTALS\nCABINS FOR WINTER ACCOM-\nmodation up till June. Complete\nwith bedding, kitchen utensils\nor without. Complete self-contained   individually   heated   by\n' Propane gas. From 1 up to 4\nrooms. Apply 805 Nelson Ave..\nPhone   864.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS     ANONYMOUS\nBox 368     Ph   161-L-3 or 366-R\nGET QUICK RELIEF, LASTING\ncomfort. Wilder's Stomach Powder. Every druggist in Canada\nsells Wilder's \u2014 in the blue\ncheckered can.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST ON BAKER ST. SUM OF\nmoney Oct. 29. Reward. Phone\n1770-X-2.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE  W   WIDDOWSON S. CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St.   Nelson\nH    S    ELMES   ROSSLAND   BC\nAssayer   Chemist. Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nG   W   BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34. Frutvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A. L  Purdy\nBOYD C   AFFLECK  M.E.I.C.\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St    Nelson   Phone 1238\nS.  V   SHAYLER.   PC..  BOX 252\nKimberley. Phone 54\n6.C  Land Surveyor   Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593   324   Vernon St\nTIMBER CRUISER\nEUGENE   H.   HIRD\nSlocan City. B.C.\nConfidential estimates.\nFOR RENT\u2014AT WINTER RATES\nCabins $60 per month including\nheat and light. Fully modern\nand fully furnished. Apply\nBroc-n-Brae Motel, Phone 321-M\nCreston, B. C.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nROOMS, fully furnished. Day.\nweek, or monthly rates. 171 Baker\t\nMODERN APT. AVAILABLE ON\nDec. 1. 3 rooms and bath, utility,\nstorage, 3 clothes closets. Phone\n879-L.\nFOR RENT - THREE ROOM\nhouse in Fairview $50 per\nmonth. Phone Robertson and\nHilliard Cattell 1912.\nFOR RENT \u2014 TWO-BEDROOM\nhouse at Willow Point. Dec. 1.\nPhone  782-X-l.\nFOR RENT \u2014 3-ROOM SELF-\ncontained apartmenj. Apply 1019\nLatimer Street.\n4-ROOM FURNISHED COTTAGE\n$30 monthly. Phone 46, 1022\nBeatty Ave\nFOR RENT \u2014 WARM HOME, 9\nmiles North Shore, 2 bedrooms,\nbath. Ph. Olson 1389-X.\nFOR RENT\u2014BASEMENT STOR-\nage space, central location Baker St. Apply Box 8142. D. News.\nFURN. 3-ROOM SUITE. PHONE\n697-X, before 3 p.m.\n4-ROOM SUITE, MAIN FLOOR.\nPhone 651-R.\nFOR RENT-HEATED  HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 405-L.\nFOR RENT - 2 ROOM SUITE.\nApply 614  Victoria.\n2-ROOM SUITE WITH PRIVATE\nbath, close to Baker. Ph. 1367.    ;\nPHONE   1844  FOR   CLASSIFIED]\nf uy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nSelling\u2014Renting\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n.\n'\nMWT UNt\nSfCONfi UNI\nTtttRD LINI\nFOURTM UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nMVINTH LINI\nEMHTH UNI\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(bach group of numbers or letter* count as ont word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two Kites\n\u2022 Add lis tor Box Number\ne  Deduct 10% from above rates if payment is\nenclosed 1\n, ....       \u201e,,_.     ,.     \u201e     -. \u2022  Take advantage of \"the low six time rote\nlon Consecutive Insertions 20* a Line Per Tima. ,\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is lo Run \t\nYOUR  SAME  i  '\u201e..\nBill  Me ,\nADDRESS   -1 i '\u25a0 ' Payment Enclosed  \u25a0\u25a0\t\nLine\n1   Inftnrtinn\n\u00a5 -\u00ab\u2022\nJ CMecHvf  lnIMtions\n.M\n? Ci>\u00bbf\u00bb\"^ive Insf\"tions     ...      .\n__M\n.Ml\n26 Consecutive Insertion*\nl.___2\nNelson.Daily News\nClassified*Advertising Department, Nelson. B (\\\ni_.V_v.\u00bbtrMC\n \t\n , , . \u2014 ! ! TW\u2014\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 9, 1933\nCALLING ALL\nPOGO ENTHUSIASTS\nFor those not Initiated Into the mysteries of our little\n'possum friend, here Is a good way to get started. A\nhumorous,  friendly   book  for  all\nAt $1.35\n\u2022 And  Have All. the  Beauty of the\n\"LIVING    DESERT\"    and    \"VANISHING    PRAIRIE\"'\nat your fingertips. Lovely pictures and concise\nexplanations of Walt Disney's masterpiece.\n\\ At $3.95 Each\n,   ' and. '\n\"THE  ONE-WINGED   DRAGON\"\nBy Catherine Anthony Clark (formerly of Gray Creek)\nAt $2.73\nBOOKS \u2014 BOOKS \u2014 BOOKS\n<\u00bb_&__.\nMANN\nSmokies, Flyers Rack Up\nDazzling Wins in WIHL\nLeafs Lose 6-4\nWIHL  STANDINGS\nW  L T F A Pts\nTrail       6   5   0 43 48 12\nNelson  \\..   5   5   0 43 46 10\nSpokane    .5   6   0 49 50 10\nKimberley  .4   8   0 64 72 8\nByrne Year's\nComeback Boy\n\u25a0\\ CHICAGO (AP)\u2014Pitcher Tom-\nply Byrne of New York Yankees\ntt>as voted the comeback of the\nyear award Tuesday by the\nChicago chapter of the Baseball\nwriters Association of America.\nI The 35-year-old southpaw who\npitched his way out of the majors\nbecause of wildness came back to\nthe Yankees this year and posted\n\u00a7 16-5 record to help the Bombers\n*j\/in the American League pendent.\nOntario Laid\n$57 Million\nOn the Horses\nI TORONTO. (CP) \u2014 Ontario\n] racing fans, following what is be-\n; coming an annual pattern, set an\nI other betting record this year.\nIn the 165-day running race sea^\nI son which ended Tuesday they\n1 poured $57,273,791 into the pari\nI mutuel betting machines, an in\n\u25a0 crease of $141,641 over the prev\nI ious high of $57,132,150 in 166 days\nof racing in 1954.\nHARTACK HAS 376\nWINNERS SO FAR\nI LAUREL, Md. (AP) \u2014 Youthful Willie Hartack continued his |\ninonopoly on the winner's circle at\nLaurel Tuesday, bringing home\nthree winners to boost his total to\nthe year to 376.\nThat's only 24 away from a glittering 400, a goal attained only by\none other jockey in the U. S.,\nWillie Shoemaker.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED  and   REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 Front St. Phone 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical   Arts   Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nPlaymorstt\nFor t!ie Big Pre-Holidoy\nHUD\nand Floor Show\nTHURSDAY\nWe Bring You\nEVAN KEMP\nAND    HIS    VANCOUVER\nRADIO   REVUE   OF   1955\nFeaturing   JOAN   TITMUSS,\nand the TRAIL RIDERS\nOLD-TIME AND MODERN\nMUSIC\nSINGING   -   YODELLING\nROPE  TWIRLING\nMUSICAL   SKITS\nFUN  FOR ALL!    \u2022\nExtra!   Square   Dance\nCalled by Lovely Joan Tltmuss\nALTHOUGH Edmonton's 30-5\nvictory over the tall-end Calgary\nStampeders meant nothing to\nthe WIFU standings, It was a\nhistoric game for Eskimos' Nor-\nmle Kwong. The 25-year-old\nChina Clipper plowed his way\nto four league records, Including a new mark for individual\nrushing of 1250 yards. The game\nclosed out the western schedule\nwith the defending Grey Cup\nchampion Eskimos leading the\nleague by eight points over\nsecond-place Saskatchewan\nRoughriders.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone   327\n676   Baker   Street\nF\nRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nFour  goals  In  leas than  two\nminutes . . , TVantlc goal-mouth\n* scrambles . . . spectacular goal-\ntending ... a tying goal  with\nonly a second remaining ... all\nin one  hockey  game  In  which\nthe Trail  Smoke Eaters defeated the Maple Leafs 6-4 In Nelson\nCivic Arena Tuesday night.\nThe' dazzling finale came when\nformer Smoke Eater Bud Andrews\nscored   Nelson's   fourth   goal   at\n19:59 in   the  third  period  to  put\nthe game into ten minutes of overtime.\nAfter only 13 seconds of overtime play Smokie wingman Gerry\nPinner caught the corner of the\nNelson net to score the winner and\nat the 52-second mark, Frank\nTurik followed with the clincher.\nThe victory was Trail's second\nstraight on the road. It was pulled\nfrom Coach Jimmy Morris's bag\nof tricks as if by magic, for .Morris\nplayed pnly six forwards. Pinoke\nMclntyre and Harry Smith never\nleft the Trail bench.\nThe return of centreman Frank\nTurik to the Trail .lineup and Ger\nry Penner's hat trick gave Trail\nthe faint trace of an edge in the\ngame, the closest seen in Nelson\nthis season.\nTrarl took an early lead with\nCharlie Kraeger's long shot and\nGerry Penner's first goal, scored\nwhen he slipped behind the Nelson\ndefence to beat the unprotected\nGus Adams.\nLee Hyssop put Nelson back in\nthe game, scoring with a backhand\nshot to tally the only goal of the\nsecond period.\nHighlight of this period was a\nnear free-for-all, started when\nFrank Turik tangled with Gus\nAdams near the Nelson goal.\nQuick action by referees, Laurie\nLudlow of Cranbrqok and Bob\nMaker of Kettle Falls, Wash..\nbroke up the melee.\nDuring the third period the lead\nflashed from Trail to Nelson and\nthen back to Trail. Vic Lofvendahl\nopened the scoring with a long\nshot from the point to tie It up\nDon McGregor \"stretched a mile'\npoking the nuck home to put Nelson ahe^d. The Smokies deadlocked the score and edged into the\nlead with goals by Penner and\nTurik. Turik scoring at  18:48.\nAlthough Trail finished the winner, Bud Andrew's last-second tying goal was ironic. Only last Saturday night, Andrews was wearing a Trail uniform  in  Spokane\nHe   was   released   Tuesday   and\nsigned by Nelson hours before the\ngame.\nLineups:\nTrail  \u2014  goal. Martin;  defence\nKraeger. Conn. McLeod, Fletcher;\nforwards. Lenardon, Shabaga. De-\nmore,   Penner.   Turik,   Saplywy\nMclntyre, Smith.\n|    Nelson \u2014 goal, Adams: defence,\n! Lofvendahl,    Parker,    McGregor:\nI forwards,     Hyssop,     Keller*,     F.\nj Koehle,   Jeffrey.   Moore,   Howe,\nj Starr.  Wappel,  Andrews.\nSummary:\nFirst  period   \u2014   1,   T.   Kraeger\n(Shabaga)    3:26;    2,    T,    Penner\n(Turik) 17:06.\nPenalty \u2014 Conn.\nSecond period \u2014 3, Nelson, Hys-\nsoo, 8:44.\nPenalty \u2014 Howe.\nThird period \u2014 4. Nelson. Lofvendahl  (Hyssop, F. Koehle)  :29;\n5. Nelson. McGregor (Moore, Jeffrey) 7:13     6.-Trail, Penner (Turik) 12:18; 7. Trail. Turik (Conn)\n18:46;   8.  Nelson,  Andrews   (Hyssop)  19:59.\nPenalty \u2014 Howe.\nOvertime   \u2014   9,   Trail.   Penner\n(Turik. Fletcher)   9:13;   10,  Trail,\nTurik (Penner) 0:52.\nPenalties \u2014 None,\nPersonal Loans\nFor  Bills.   Fuel,   Repairs,   Cars,\nor any. good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arts Bidg.\nPHONE  1786\n7th Dynamiter Loss\nKlkBERLEY \u2014 Rejuvenated\nSpokane Flyers With a dazzling\nshow of forechecking and' back-\nchecking sent kimberley Dynamiters dov*n to their seventh\nstraight loss by a 9-5 score here\nTuesday nlghf, solidly entrenching the slumping former league\nleaders in the'WIHL basement.\nDynamiters were never in contention, trailing Spokane scorers\nall evening.\nThe first period opened fast\nwith Flyers dominating play,\nbuilding up a three-goal lead on\ngoals by Tom Hodges, Art Jones\nand Jack Miller.\nAfter Lorne Nadeau scored Spokane's first unanswered goal, rookie Kimberley defenceman Joe\nKershaw, who played a stellar\ngame, opened Kimberley's scoring\nwith what looked like a Dynamiter rally, on goals, followed by\nClaude Bell and Cal Hockley, only to have Jack Lancien. Art Jones\nand Frank Kubasek score three in\na row at the beginning of the\nthird period.\nGoals again by Bell and Hockley whittled the score to 7-5, but\nwith goaltender Dave McLay out\nin Dynamiters' last ditch stand,\nplaying six forwards, rookie Art\nJones scored followed by Gino\nRozzini to dispel any Dynamiter\nhopes for victory.\nSpokane goals were evenly divided, Art Jones leading with a\nbrace and two assists, with single\ntallies scored by Tom Hodges,\nDave Gordichuck, Jack Miller,\nLorne Nadeau, Gino Rozzini,\nFrank Kubasek and Jack Lancien,\nwho also gathered three assists.\nFor Dynamiters, rookie defence-\nman Joe Kershaw was a pillar of\nstrength while scoring one goal\nwhile forwards Claude Bell and\nCal Hockley each gathered two\ngoals and two assists.\nReferee Tommy Dunn and\nGeorge Cullen handled the contest, meting out seven penalties,\nfour of which were two Fivers.\nOfficial shots on goal were 33 by\neach team.\nDynamiters played without the\nservices of veterans Bill Jones.\nEarl Betker and Gerry Barre, still\nsidelined by injuries.     '\nKimberley \u2014 goal. McClay; defence. Kershaw. Craig, Andre, Lebioda; forwards. Hockley, Krekle-\nwiltz. Mellor, Knipnleburg,. Bell,\nMcTeer,   McNiven,   Larson.\nSpokane \u2014 goal, Panagrot; de\nfence, Luke, Lancien. Pasqualotto,\nRozzini; forwards, Tilson, Jones,\nGordichuk, Nadeau, Kubasek, Miller. Hodges, Currillo.\nFirst period \u2014 1, Spokane.\nHodges (Tilson, .Lancien) 2:27; 2,\nSpokane, Jones (Lancien) 6:58: 3,\nSpokane. Kubasek (Lancien) 19:16.\nPenalties \u2014 Lancien, McTeer,\nLebioda.\nSecond period \u2014 4. Sookane,\nNadeau (Miller) 6:36: 5. Kimberley. Kershaw (Bell. Hocklev)\n10:21: 6, Kimberley. Bell (Mellor,\nHockley) 15:44; 7. Kimberley,\nHocklev (Larson. Bell) 18:02.\nPenalties \u2014 Craig 7:26. Jones\n13:46. Currillo 17:41.\nThird period: 8, Spokane. Lancien (Gordichuk. Rozzini) 7:55; 9.\nSnokane, Jones (Gordichuk) 8:07;\n10. Spokane. Kubasek (Nadeau,\nLancien) 9:40; 11. Kimberley. Bell.\n(Mellor. Larson) 13:55; 12. Kimberley, Hockley 16:46: 13, Sookane\n\u25a0Tones iR07?.ini. Lancien\/ 17:33: 14.\nSnokane. Gordichuk (Jones, Rozzini) 17:46.\nPenalty \u2014 Rozzini.\nEsks Dominate\nAll-Star Team\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Edmonton\nEskimos, who ran away-with league honors in the Western Interprovincial Football Union this\nseason, also dominated the 1955\nWIFU all-stars.\nThe defending Grey Cup champions placed five men and coach\nFrank (Pop) Ivy on the offensive\nteam and six men on the defensive\nteam. , ,\nHalfback Ken Carpenter, forrtier\nstar of Cleveland Browns who led\nthe league's scorers witKSO points\non a league-record 18 touchdowns\nwas the only unanimous choice.\nNorm Kwong of Edmonton took\nthe plunging halfback spot, Gerry\nJames of Winnipeg cornered a\nhalfback berth and Harry 'Longford of Calgary was named guard.\nSecondary Ted Tully and end Gordie Strutridge of the Roughriders\ncrashed the defensive teams.\nOnly two players made. both\nteams\u2014tackle Dale Meinert and\ncentre secondary Kurt Burris,\nboth of Edmonton.\nCrowe Applies\nFor Stukus Job\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Clem\nCrowe, line coach of British Columbia Lions of the Western\nInterprovincial Football Union,\nhas applied verbally for the post\nof head coach, Phil Webb, team\ngeneral manager, said Tuesday.\nCrowe formerly coached Ottawa\nRough Riders of the Big Four and\nUnited States professional teams.\n\"He talked about it just before\nhe left here. He approached the\nclub and was told to submit a\nwritten application.\"\nAnnis Stukus has been dismissed as head coach, effective\nDec. 15 when his contract expires.\nWebb said in an interview \"no\ndecision on a head coach can be\nmade until after Nov. 17.\" That is\nthe date set for a meeting between club members and directors\nto discuss the Stukus firing.\nSenators, Red Sox\nTrade 5-for-4\nBy HERB ALTSCHULL\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Moving\nswiftly to rebuild Washington\nSenators, the club's new president,\nCalvin Griffith, Tuesday acquired five young players from Boston Red Sox but had to surrender\ntwo of Washington's old pros,\nMickey Vernon and Bob Porterfield.\nIt was a 5-for-4 deal as the Senators also gave up left-handed\npitcher Johnny Schmitz and reserve outfielder Tommy Umphlett.\nQuite obviously, the Red Sox are\nbidding for the pennant in 1956,\nsince the Boston club can't expect\ntoo many years' service from its\nnew players.\nVernon will be 38 in April;\nSchmitz will be 35 later this\nmonth. Porterfield, who has been\nhaving difficulty winning for the\nlast two seasons after a 22-game\nyear in 1953, is 31. Umphlett apparently was a throw-in. He came\nhere from the Red Sox two years\nago and never hit over .220.\nCENTRE   FIELD   PICK\nIn return for these players, the\nSenators acquired three pitchers\nand two outfielders, all 25 or\nyounger, but none with much of\na major league record. The biggest\nname among the five .belongs to\noutfielder Karl Olson, whom Griffith already has labelled Washington's centre fielder.\nThe other outfielder is a fellow\nnamed Neil Chrisley, a lefthander\nwho batted .320 with Nashville of\nthe Southern Association last year.\nThe three pitchers, all righthanders, are Dick Brodowski, Al Curtis and Truman Clevenger.\niiiiiiiiiiiinimiiimmimini.minim\nDistant Fields\nWeren't Greener\nYARMOUTH, Me. (AP) \u2014\nRaymond B. Durgln and several friends travelled by auto\nand plane to Fort Kent\u2014round\ntrip 500 miles\u2014In an unsuccessful deer hunt. No one got\neven a shot. Monday morning\nDurgln's brother, Arthur, 18,\nawakened him to tell him he\nhad just shot a 200-pound buck\n200 yards from their door.\nin ji 11 r i mi i r 111111 jiim liiiii j 111 inn mn\nWith Stane\nand \u2022 Besom\nThe Don Porteous rink, skipped\nby M. B. Ryalls, copped the 'A'\nevent of Nelson Curling Club's\nopening bonspiel late Monday\nnight by defeating Earl' Hunt 10-7,\nwhile Jim Harvey beat L. J. Mau\nrer 15-13 in a hard-fought final in\n'B' event.\nCurling with Porteous and Ryalls were D. Benedetti and Moore\nand with Hunt were H. Farenholtz,\nMel Buerge and IVan Laughton.:\nA. Barrett, A. Reid, and M. J. Var-\nseveld were on the Harvey rink\nand L. Bicknell, D. Winlaw, and\nTom Bate with Maurer.\nTonight's draw:\n7 p.m. \u2014 Lockwood vs Stern;\nChandler vs Campbell; J. Leeming\nvs Mason; Ramsbottom vs Sample; A. B. Ronmark vs Strachan.\n9 p.m.\u2014Litkiwich vs Maurer;\nCathcart vs F. Carmichael; Hinitt vs Tickner; Nash vs Palmer;\nWaters vs Hesse.\nMOVING?\nTake The Reliable Way\nWILLIAMS\nLONG DISTANCE\nWith or Without\nPacking\nPhone 77\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nVancouver 5. Saskatoon 1\nEdmonton 5. Retina 4\nWESTERN JUNIOR\nLethbridge 5, Medicine Hat 2\nOSHL\nPenticton 7. Kamloops 1\nVernon 5, Kelowna 4.\nWALKER HIGHEST PAID\nHOUSTON fAP> \u2014Harry Walker, baseball veteran who managed\nSt. Louis Cardinals most of last\nseason, Tuesday became one of the\nhighest-paid managers in Texas\nLeague history.\n*oycs, L\u00abve\nLead In WHL\nVANCOUVER CCP1 \u2014 Centre\nBobby Love of New Westminster\nRoyals was the Western Hockey\nLeague's player of the week last\nweek, picking up two goals and\nfive assists\u2014but it wasn't enough\nto catch teammate   Blinky Boyce.\nBoyce continues .to lead individual scorers, picking up one goal\nand five assists in the last week\nto increase his total to 24\u2014three\nbetter than Love.\nWELL-TRAVELLED CAT\nSOEST, Germany (Reuters) \u2014\nGinger, *the most travelled cat\nthe Canadian Army, is going home\nthis week. The orange and white\ncat. who has done 18.000 miles on\narmy postings, is leaving for home\nwith his owner, Capt. Ray Lawlor\nof Charlottetown, P.E.I.\nJAPANESE  TEXTILES\nTextile exports account for more\nthan half of Japanese sales to\nother countries.\nED SANDFORD METRO PfiYSTAI\nMINUS THE FURORE that marked his departure from De-\ntrolt Red Wings to Chicago last season, veteran centra Metro Prystal returns to the Detroit club In exchange forvforward Ed Sandford. Red Wing officials protested violently when tha 27-year-old\nPrystal was sent to Chicago Black Hawks by NHL club owners as\npart of the famed \"help the have-not teams\" movement last year.\nSandford, who Detroit'brass said \"failed to fit Into our style of\nplay,\" joins the Black Hawk^after eight years with Boston Bruins\nand a short spelJ thlo season with Red Wings.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian Photos,\nLubrication\nCold weather driving\ndemands complete end\nproper lubrication ef\nall moving parti.\nMaki sure your car hat\ntht right type and flrndo\nof Winter  Lubricants.\nANTIFREEZE     .\n<\nProtect tho radiator, block\nand aoollng ayatom of your\ncar with Permanent Base\nGlycol  Anti-Freeze,\nBatteries\nTha life-blood of your car\nIs the battery and electrical system. Have yours\nehecked now. Avoid those\ncold morning \"non-starting\" troubles, Install a\nnew \"Deleo\" battery today.\nSuburbanite\nTires\nGo ln snow \u2014 grip en Ice\n\u2014 with the finest of Win-\nter tires \u2014 the Suburbanite by Goodyear. Available\nnew In all popular sites,\nbotii  new and  retreads.\nDO IT NOW!\nNELSON\nTRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\nThe Largest and Most Completely Equipped Garage\nIn The Interior of British Columbia.\n323 VERNON ST. PHONE 35\nNELSON, B.C.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nG A Pts P\nBeliveau, Mont   8 11 19 30\nOlmstead, Mtl   4 M 18 32\nCreighton, NY  5 12 17 12\nMurphy, NY   9 6 15 13\nHowe, Det  6 9 15 32\nDelvecchio,  Det .... 8 8 14 8\nM. Richard, Mtl ... 7 6 13 20\nLindsay, Det  9 3 12 51\nHarvey, Mtl   0 11 11 22\nSloan, Toronto 9 1 10\nHergesheimer.   NY 4 6 10 10\nMoore, Mont   3 7 10 10\nBathgate, NY   2 8 10 22\nKelly, Det   1 9 10 27\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& CO.    .\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phono 235\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nMeasure\nAnniversary\nSUIT\nSALE\nW. R. Johnston are celebrating their 87th anniversary and are giving a\n20% Discount off all their\nmade - to - measure Suits,\nTopcoats and Sport Coats.\nRegular $62.50\n$49,50\nRegular $71.50\n'56.50\nRegular $77.50\n'61.50\nThese are  all  new cloths\nand a chance to make\na real saving.\nCMORY'C\n\u25a0     Limited    **\nt\nFor All Your Baking Needs Try\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe flavor is right   On sale at\nYour Grocers, or Phone 238.\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO, LTD.\nAs 8een  on Your TV\nREXALL\nSUPER PLENAMINS\nMultiple Vitamins\nWith Minerals\nPlus   Vitamin   B12\nPrlea $2.49, $4.79, $7.93\nSold Only by Your Rexall Store '\nCity Drug\nCIVIC CENTRE\n- TODAY -\nAdult Skating\nTONIGHT\n8:15 to 10:15\nMusic by Skatin Toons\nATTENTION\nORGANIZATIONS SEEKING MEETING FACILITIES, ROOM A IS NOW AVAILABLE BY CALLING THE CIVIC CENTRE OFFICE 118.\nBESTWINTEB\n.   TIRE EVER\"\nMmy\nSuburbanite\nby GOOD\/YEAR\nSuperb traction in deep snow or mud\u2014on treacherous\ncurves\u2014up steep hills and driveways\u2014away from slippery\ncurbs. It's leaps and bounds ahead of other winter tjres!\nRuns quietly too.\nCome in and let us show you how its 1856 gripping, biting\nedges grab the road. We'd be glad to teH you\u2014plain and\nsimply\u2014why the Suburbanite give* mequafled trac*io\u00bb\u2014\noutsells all other winter tires. *\ni -_\u2022__\n_____&>\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1955_11_09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0428905","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}