{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429241":{"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":"1955-09-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429241\/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":" :-   ft\n--\"\u25a0\n.\ny. \u25a0\u25a0\" \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'.yifwff.fffp\nU.S. Switches\nTo Aerial\nInspection Tack\nShelves Long-Range Disarmament\nPlans as Impossible at Present\nUNITED NATIONS,' N.Y. (AP)-The United States\nTuesday served notice it has put its long-range disarmament plans into a diplomatic deep freeze. In the future\nit will concentrate on President Eisenhower's aerial inspection program laid down at Geneva in July.\nAn authoritative U.S. source said Harold E. Stassen,\nPresident Eisenhower's disarmament adviser, called on\nthe UN five-power disarmament sub-committee members\nto prepare and present new positions upon the problems\nof inspection and control.\nPPPPP\n4:\n~.\/,.v;,.;. ;*\u25a0-<;v..\"\\:\u25a0\"!\u25a0;(;.: -;. -.':\u2022.\u25a0,\u2022\u2022\u25a0:;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ?\u25a0.'...\u25a0.\nStassen was reported to have\nadded that the*new position should\ninclude a response to Eisenhower's\nplan for a beginning on disarmament based on effective inspection\nand controls.\nThe announcement of the turn\nIn American planning on disarmament came as the sub-committee\nof the United States, France^ Britain, Canada and Russia began Its\nsecond week of work.\nAuthoritative \"U.S. sotirces said\nit has been agreed by the United\nStates and the Soviet Union that\nit is impossible to devise a system\nwljich would account fpr all nuclear material. A bomb containing\nnuclear material in its casing may\nbe in one room of a building and\nthe best scientific devices cannot\ndetect it from the other side of\nthe building.\nBy inspection, the United States\nhopes to prevent massive surprise\nattacks by fleets of carriers of\natomic or hydrogen bombs.\nB.C. Holiday Death\nToll Mounts to Six\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Traffic\nand boating accidents claimed six\nlives in B. C. during the Labor\nDay weekend.\nFour deaths followed highway\naccidents, three near Merritt and\none at Lillooet, while two men\nwere drowned in a boating mishap\non the Kitimat river.\nDead are Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert\nEadie and Mr& Rose Trelenberg,\nall of North Vancouver; Rex Jenks\nof ' Lillooet and Heinz Schopper\nand Rudolph Scwarz of Kitimat.\nThe North Vancouver trio died\nSaturday when their car went\nover an embankment on the Merritt highway, 18 miles southwest\nof Merritt and plunged into Trapp\nlake. All three drowned when\nthey were unable to reach shore.\nMrs. Trelenberg's husband, Adolph\nwas saved.\nIn Canada traffic accidents killed 55 of the 81, persons who died-\nviolently during ' the three-day\nLabor Day weekend*\nA Canadian Press survey from\n8 p.m. local time Friday to midnight Monday listed 14 drownings\nand 12 deaths from various other\ncauses.\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 American\nmotorists ran up a near-record Labor Day weekend traffic toll, topping both advance estimates and\nlast year's totals.\nDelayed reports trickling in today showed that 414 persons were\nkilled in traffic accidents between\n6 p.m. local time Friday and\nMonday midnight, compared with\nthe record high of 461 set in 1951.\nAnother 79 persons were drowned\nand 85 met violent death from\nmiscellaneous causes for an overall  total  of  578.\nTWO CHARGED IN\nPOST OFFICE THEFT\nPORT COQUITLAM, B. C. (CP)\n\u2014Tw0 men charged with breaking and entering and theft at the\npost office here were remanded\nTuesday to Sept. 13. Charged with\nthe Aug. 8 robbery of $60,000\nworth of postal orders are Lloyd\nAugust Speirs, 25, and Raymond\nJamison, 23. Magistrate G. R,\nLeigh refused bail.\nSYNOD CRITICIZES\nIMMIGRATION\nPOLICY\nBy DAVID OANCIA\nCanadjan Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Canada's\nimmigration policy was described\nTuesday at the general synod of\nthe Anglican Church of Canada as\n\"anti-Protestant, anti-British and\npro-Roman Catholic.\"\nThe statement was made in a\ndiscussion of immigration policy\nby lay delegates Col. T. A. Kidd of\nKingston, Ont. He said two of\nevery three persons who came to\nCanada were not British.\nHe urged an assistance policy\nto induce more Britons to come to\nthis country,\nSynod adopted a resolution re-\nquestlhg-^e^feBfel'al-gd^ft^h'i'^it\nto provide more adequate planning for immigrants, financial assistance and to allow a greater\nnumber of immigrants from the\nBritish West Indies.\nPIPELINE TO BE\nREAL BENEFIT\nSAYS ST. LAURENT\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Prime Min\nisler St. l_aurent said Tuesday\nnight he is confident that federal\nand provincial government and\nprivate industry will succeed\nbuilding a pipeline to carry Alberta natural gas to eastern Canada\n\"All Canadians are looking forward to the day the pipeline be.\ngins, for they recognize it will be\nan event of real benefit to all parts\nof Canada,\" he said at ceremonies\nmarking the 50th anniversary of\nAlberta's entry in Confederation.\nHe said Trade Minister Howe\ndiscussed the project with Premier Manning of Alberta a few\nweeks ago and that similar talks\nwere held with Premier Frost of\nOntario. He added:\n\"We are confident that the' efforts of the various governments\nconcerned added to those of the\nnatural gas industry will find a\nsolution to this problem.\"\n\u25a0.\u2022.\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\nPROVINCIAL j\nLIBRARY\n5 333\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: - A few cloudy\nperiods. A little cooler. Light\nWinds. Low-high today at Cranbrook 45 and 80, Crescent Valley\n40 and 80. *\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1955\nNo. 116\n67 Escape by\nMiracle; One\nKilled, One Hurt\nALBUQUERQUE,' N.M. (AP) -\nA huge, four-engined C-124 Globe-\nmaster with 69 men aboard crashed on takeoff Tuesday at Kirtland\nair force base and was destroyed\nby flames. One man was killed,\none seriously injured and 67 miraculously escaped injury or suffered only minor injuries.\nThe air fdrce transport, from\nBiggs air force base, El Paso, Tex.,\napparently had gone almost the\nfull length of the runway when\nit skidded for several hundred feet\nand pancaked on the shoulders of\nthe runway. It burst into flames\nalmost immediately.\nThe passengers and crew scrambled out of the plane.\nSome were given first aid treatment at the scene while firemen\nbattled the flames.\nThe one victim, whose name was\nwithheld pending notification of\nnext of kin, still was in the plane\ntwo hours after the crash. Effort\nto reach his body were thwarted\nby the intense heat.\nr Soviet Farmers \u201e..\nicicd Diriijer To\nSoothe Ruffled Feelings\nFour Sentenced\nOn Drug Charges\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Four men\nwere  sentenced here Tuesday  to\ntotal oM9^ years in prison on\ncharges of trafficking in narcotics.\nHeaviest terms were given to\nEdward (Porky) Bailey, 33, and\nSidney Matthews, 32. Bailey had\npleaded guilty to four charges and\nwas sentenced ln police court to\nsix years, the same term handed\nto Matthews, whose case had been\nadjourned after pleading not\nguilty.\nSentenced to five years was\nJohn Madden, 35-year-old truck\ndriver and admitted \"back alley\ndope fiend.\" He was also.given\n\"iarge <rt trafficking. He had been\nfound guilty on both charges.\nLloyd Bergeron, 22, was sentenced to 2Vz years.\n\"J By HAROLD MORRISON  !\nCanadian Prois Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada's top\ndiplomat will play host to the leader: of the Soviet agricultural delegation today in what appears to\nbe a Canadian government move\nto soothe the ruffled feelings of\nthe farm experts.\nExternal Affairs Minister Pearson returned to his office Tuesday\nfollowing a two-week visit in\nwestern Canada and immediately\nagreed to hold a private luncheon\nfor delegation leader Vladimir\nMasskevich, acting Soviet agriculture minister.\nAt the luncheon will be S. J.\nChagnon, assistant deputy minister \u25a0 of agriculture who was in\ncharge of the Russians' Canadian\ntour, and the ambassadors of the\ntwo countries! Dmitri Chuvahin of\nRussia and John Watkins of Canada. Mr. Watkins is in Ottawa to\nadvise Mr. Pearson on his scheduled Sept. 30 visit to the Soviet.\nThe 12 Russian farm authorities\nare in Ottawa inspecting the 1.100-\nacre central experimental farm as\na conclusion to a 4,000-mile tour of\nfarmlands in four provinces.\nSKIP TORONTO\nDuring the first 11 days of the\nscheduled 16-day tour, they encountered anti-Red demonstrations\nin three Canadian cities. They decided to by-pass Toronto alto-\ngethrf because of fear of further\ndemonstrates and because of a\nnewspaper report that the city\nwould officially ignore their visit.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014The Canadian dollar closed unchanged\nTuesday at a premium of 1% per\ncent in terms of U.S. funds. Pound\nsterling was unchanged at\n$2.78 9-16.\"\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\ndollar closed Tuesday at a discount of 1% per cent in terms\nof Cariadian funds, down 1-32.' It\ntook 98% cents Canadian to buy\n$1 American. Pound sterling, at\n$2.74%, was down %.\nCOFFIN RETURNED\nTO JAIL AFTER\nBRIEF ESCAPE\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Wilbert\nCoffin, 44-year-old convicted murderer who escaped briefly early\nTuesday from Quebec Jail, arrived\nhere later in the day and was\nlodged at Bordeaux jail on the\nnorthern outskirts of Montreal,\nHe is scheduled to be hanged\nhere Sept' 23 for the 1953 murder\nof a J.I-ysar;old American 'hu^t^r,.\nGROWERS VOTf\nFOR CONTROLLED\nMARKETING   ;i\nKELOWNA, B.C. (CP) ~ Okanagan vegetable growers have\nvoted 2 to 1 to continue controlled\nmarketing, it was announced here\nTuesday.\nResults of a ballot throughout\nthe valley showed 308 growers\nfavored the present scheme and\n153 voted againstit. There were 21\nspoiled papers.\nControlled marketing has beeh\nin effect for th.e last 20 years and\nthe Interior Vegetable Marketing\nboard ordered the vote after some\nproducers criticized poor returns\n{or produce.\nForest Closure\nHas 8000 Jobless\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014L. R. An-\ndrewg, vice-president of the B.C.\nLumber Manufacturers' Association, said here Tuesday the forest\nclosure in the Vancouver forest\ndistrict \"may not be too serious\nif it does not last long.\"\nAt the same time, loggers' employment agencies estimated\nworkers will lose $500,000 a week\nin wages.\nThe closure order, in effect\nsince midnight Monday, has shut\ndown logging operations from\nVancouver 150 mlty north and in\nsouthern Vancouver island. Forest\nminister Robert Sommers i\nnounced the closure because of\nthe hazardous fire danger in. the\nwoods.\nIt is the first general forest shutdown since August, 1852, and resulted In more than 20 major logging companies and dozens of\nsmaller operators shutting down,\nInlying some 8000 loggers without\nwork. The closure wtill continue\ntglL ft.' Jesist, M .irtosilsi: and. longe*\nunless, the weather changes.\nB. Millar, Silverton Oldtimer,\nKilled as Coop Roof Collapses\nA 74-year-old Silverton old-\ntimer, Benjamin Millar, was killed instantly in a freak accident\nSaturday when the roof of an old\nchicken coop he was tearing down,\ncollapsed on him.\nThe crash of the collapsing roof\nwas heard by neighbors, Mr. and\nMrs. \"Warren NeLson, but they did\nnot know what had happened.\nThe oldtimer's body was not\nfound until Monday when the\ncouple, alarmed when he failed to\ndrop in on them as he habitually\ndid every day or so, went in search\nof him.\nRCMP' believed Mr. Millar had\nbeen working on the sides and\nbase of the building, and had,weakened it.\nMr. Millar lived alone on a\nbench North East of town.\nHe is survived by a daughter,\nMrs. William Jones, at Ainsworth\nFuneral services will be held at\nNew Denver Thursday.\nRiots Rock Istanbul;\nGreek Stores Razed\nIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII\nMarine Knows\nHis Cookery\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A\ncrew-cut US. marine captain\nwith a shy grin Tuesday night\nwon $32,000 on a television\nquiz show by trotting out his\nencyclopaedic knowledge of\nfood and cooking.\nTall, handsome Capt. Richard McCutchen of Worthlng-\n. ton, Ohio, knocked off a complicated five - part question\nabout.fancy desserts \u2014 what\nthey're made of and where\nthey originated.\nThus he qualified for a try\nnext week at $64,000, top prize\non- the CBS TV show \"the\n$64,000 question.\" If he chooses\nhe can take his $32,000 and \u25a0\nquit. If he tries and. misses,\nhe loses all but a consolation\nprize of an expensive automobile.       *\n_iiii..ii.__.iii.__i..ii..iii.--__iii.iiii_..i\nSommers Backs\nFores) Policy\nBRALORNE, B.C. (CP. \u2014 Forests. Minister Robert Sommers\nsaid to'an election address here\nTuesday night more than 13,-\n000,000,000 board feet of timber\nvalued at $10,000,000 had been returned to direct government control In the lastv three years.\nThe minister said the recovery\nof the timber had been made under the government's forest management licence policy:\nMr. Sommers, speaking in support of Social ^Credit candidate\nDonald F. Robinson in the forthcoming Lillooet by-election, Baid\n\"pr\u00abotic\u00bblly.(lll pt.the timber Jjad\nbeen'' given ' away\" -into tirivate\nownership by previous administrations.\"\nOn Vancouver Island private\nowners had complete control of\n60 per cent of nil crown timber\nland until 1952.\n\"In many cases this pattern\nmeant- no - stumpage of\" royalties\nwere paid. In some cases it paid\nas low as 50 cents per board foot\nthere was no reforestation and in\nall cases companies could liquidate\narid get out at any time.\"\nDefending the government's\ndeallngr;wlth-small and independent logging 9perators, Mr. Sommers said the public working\ncircle expanded last year to a cut\nof 179,640,000 cubic feet\u2014almost\ndouble that of the forest management system.\nTurks Protest Consulate Bombing in\nAthens by Smashing Greek Property\nISTANBUL, Turkey (AP)\u2014Violent anti-Greek rioting exploded in Istanbul Tuesday night.\nTens of .thousands of young Turks roamed through\nthe city, smashing Greek store windows, wrecking store\ninteriors  and  overturning\nautomobiles.\nThe rioting erupted in a sudden\nreaction to the dynamiting of the\nTurkish consulate in the Greek\ncity of Salonika.\nIt broke out at 6:30.p.m. and\nmore than two hours later mobs\nstill charged through the streets\nbent  on destruction.\nThe crowds attempted to set fire\nto one big Greek Orthodox church\nin the city but were driven off by\npolice and firemen.\nAt the height of the disorders ^\nhundreds of Turkish infantry with\nfixed bayonets moved into the\ncentre of the city to quell the out\nbreak.  '\nTHOUSANDS CHEER\nThe Turkish rage apparently\nwas touched off by reports here\nthat the birthplace of the late\nKemal Atatuvk was damaged in\nthe Salonika dynamiting.\nAtaturk, father of the Turkish\nRepublic, is thfi country's national\nhero and first president\nThey ripped out stow furnishings and hurled them about th*\ncobbled streets. Merchandise, from\ngroceries to high priced furniture,\nwas strewn about the streets, sidewalks and square* of the aneieot\ncity.\nBritain Offers New Constitution\nLONDON (AP) - Britain offered Cyprus a new constitution\ngiving the Mediterranean island's\n500,000 residents more self-rule and\nthe prospect of self-determination\nin the future, Tuesday.\nThe move, announced by\nForeign Secretary Harold Macmillan, is intended to break a\nstalemate among Britain, Greece\nand Turkey over the future of the\ndisputed island, headquarters of\nBritain's Middle East command.\nMacmillan's proposals were\nplaced before a conference of foreign ministers of the three countries who have been meeting here\nfor nine days.\nGreece has demanded that Cyprus be given the right to choose\nits own political future in a\nreasonably short time.\nThe Athens governments believes t big majority of Cyjrlptfc\nof whom about 400,000 are Oreefc-\nspeaking, would vote for\nwith Greece.\nSNATCHES MONEY\nFROM WOMAN\nVANCOUVER (CP) i. A ttief\nsnatched $120 from a woman's\nhand in a hotel tioket oKioo of an\nairline her* Tuesday and oscapod.\nThe woman, whose nam* is believed to be Mrs. Reldemann, mi\nholding the money while mttttog\nfor a CP Airline* dork to nuke\nout tickets to Wi.llam3 Lake, B.C\nfor herself and her two children.\nThe thief darted Into tho small\noffice, snatched th* bills and .had\ndisappeared by Ihe time the woman and clerk Margaret, Phillips\nreached tiM street. \u00abr'-\nSt. Laurent Helps\nCalgary Celebrate\nLondon-New York Trip\nIn 1.75 Hours Seen\nBRISTOL, England (Reuters) \u2014\nVertical takeoff jet planes of the\nfuture will be able to shoot almost six miles straight up Into the\nair before levelling off at 2,000\nmiles an hour,    aviation\nfuture be handled by monorails.\nMasefield said the monorail, an\noverhead-slung rail car    running\non rubber tires at speeds of up to\n\",vuu 180 miles an hour would be able'to\npredicted Tuesday. ? *    cover the 12 miles from ^ city\nPeter Masefield, chief executive cent.re \u00b0f L\u00b0nd\u00b0n t0 the alrp\u00b0rt \"\na trip which now takes almost an\nhour by bus \u2014 in five minutes,\nHe also predicted keen competition during the next 10 years between American jet airliners and\nBritish turbo-jet aircraft. He said\nhe thought \"there will be a place\nfor both types.\nOf the helicopter, Masefield\nsaid: \"Like a pretty girl, the helicopter is pleasant to be seen\naround with, but rather noisy and\nthe more you take her out, the\nmore she costs.\" He added, however, that helicopters are \"going to\nbe very important\" on shorter\nroutes between city centres.\nof British European Airways, told\nthe engineering section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science that at four-figure\nspeeds the 3,465-mile trip from\nLondon to New York would be a\nmatter of one hour and 45 minutes.\nThe \"Flying Bedstead\" exhibited at last year's Farnbrough air\nshow \u2014 a wingless platform, directed by jet streams \u2014 was just a\ncrude example of the tremendous\npotential of vertical takeoff aircraft, Masefield said.\nSEES MONORAIL ADVANCE\nHe   p r e d icted   city-to-airport\nground transportation will In the\nBy  R. J.  ANDERSON\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nCALGARY (CP) - Prime Minister St. Laurent arrived Tuesday\nin an Alberta that wag sunny as\nadvertised. Calgary, his first stop\nin the province, lived up to its\nreputation for hospitality and the\nprime minister loved every minute\nof it.\nOn i non-political tour to help\nAlberta and Saskatchewan celebrate their golden jubilees, the 72-\nyear-old prime minister was as\nbeaming and ruddy as the bright\nsun overhead when he stepped\nfrom the RCAF aircraft that\nbrought him from Regina.\nHe was ready for Calgary, the\nStampede City, with a white, 10-\ngallon hat \"broken out\" for the\noccasion on the flight from Regina.\nOnce the official greetings at the\nairport were out of the way, Mr.\nSt. Laurent quickly got into the\nspirit of the occasion and set out\non a round of ceremony that left\nfagged members of his party hardly half his age.\nHe seemed not the least hinder\ned by the walking cast on his left\nfoot though he leaned heavily at\ntimes on hte stick. The prime minister broke his ankle last month\noh a fishing trip.\nTURNS ON CHARM\nCalgary, usually Cnnserraitv* hi\npolitics, turned on its famed chorm\nfor the Liberal leader. The city\nwas en fete for this was its official\n(jbservanee for the province's jubilee. Edmonton will celebrate today with the prime minister officiating.\n\u25a0 The streets of Calgary, enjoying\na civic holiday, were all but deserted an hour before the city's\nparade got under way at 11:45 a.m.\nBy parade time, a crowd estimated\nby a veteran police sergeant at\nmore than 40,000 lined 8th avenue.\nThe prime- minister reviewed the\nall-women parade from a stand\nmounted on a truck at 8th Ave.\nand 1st St.\nThe three-mile-long parade of\nwomen was impressive. It was announced as a voluntary display\nby women's organizations in Calgary to show what women are doing in every line of endeavor.\nMASSED BANDS of Nelson's 16th annual West\nKootenay Caledonian Games delighted a large crowd\nin Lakeside Park Sunday as they awaited Monday's\ncompetitions. The three bands, Edmonton Boys Band,\nwhich,won.the band competitions; Kootenay Kilties\nand Trail Balmoral combined bands, second, and''Edmonton Girls' Band, third, participated in the colorful\nmarch and each presented a concert prior to the march.\nThe park concerts and march have become a popular\npart of the Labor Day event.\u2014Daily News photo.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP)\u2014A year ago Mr. and Mrt. David\nMartin of nearby Wallensteln, with a family of seven boyt, wanted\na girl\u2014so did the seven boys. Instead they had twin sons.\nThis year the Martins still wanted a girl. But Tuesday they\nhad\u2014twin sons.\nEldest of the family of 11 boys Is 11.\nGREY ISLAND, Nfld. (CP)\u2014Eugene Tobin, 14, caught six\nbarrels of cod with a red plastic raincoat.\nThe boy reported the cod spurned both the squid and herring\nbait he tossed overboard from his dory.\nExperimentally, he snipped a piece off his raincoat and threw\nthe hook over the side. A fish snapped it up and Gene was in\nbusiness. '\nTwo hours later, the raincdat gone, Gene rowed happily ashore,\nthe dory wallowing under a full load.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014A cat bit the hand that fed It Sunday. The\nfeline died Monday. Said a police officer reporting the case: \"Apparently It was sick. I don't think Its death can be blamed on tha-blte.\"\nThe unidentified owner went to hospltal for treatment after his\nhand became swollen. There's no moral to all this.\nSAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)\u2014The upholstery In Don Lester's car\ncaught fire as he drove off a ferry 15 miles from here.\nThe Rothesay fire department answered his urgent telephoned\nsummons and put out the fire.\nTen miles farther along the highway to Saint John the fire\nbroke out again. Again Rothesay firemen put it out.\nA few more miles along the road, a third fire. This time. Lester\ncalled the Simonds fire department and its men put It out.\nThe weary motorist wheeled his water-lodged, soot-streaked\nautomobile into his backyard here around midnight and climbed\n'into bed.     ' '\nThe fourth outbreak woke him at 1 a.m. It finished off the car.\nStudents, Help the Drivers to Traffic Safety\n \u25a0V   :'\u25a0.-;'\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022' v;r\"-     ' \u2022.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. .\u25a0\"'\u25a0\u25a0;    \u25a0\".'\u25a0\"'.\n; JAlDVUVOW'i\n\u2022      V91.r'. 4U\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESbAY, SEPT. 7, 1955\n \u25a0\u2014--\u25a0 \u2014  t-v-a .\u25a0uor^tV\ni'j\nThe Great Stage Success\ndone in the M-G-M manner\nin Cinemascope\nand COLOR!\nM-CzM's mgttifieent wtrtfeo! Oarrtttg\nOENE KELLY -VAN JOHNSON\nCYD CHARISSE with Elaine STEWART\nustpay TOMORROW\n\"Desire.\"\nMarion Brando |_J   1   I\nJean Stwiwom\nn    CTADIirUT   HDI1IC IM     IJ\n| STARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\n\u25a0j        SHOWING TONIGHT, THURS., FRI., SAT.\n'     ' v\"^&\nP^|S\u00bb \u00ab\"\"\"' _r%<^g* ||    ..    ;   jHk'*^ \/ 'I      V     '1\nl\nl\nl\nWin   tn     ta   \u00bb1\u00bb\u00bb   \"w '* te CM\nI\nFirst Show 8:00\u2014 Last Complete Show 9:30 p.m.\n[]   Door Prizes Tonight\n_i $5.00 Meroh8nt_.se \u2014 $2.60  Merchandise\n2 Passes to the Starlight\n111 \u2014W Hi Hi I\nI\nThe Weather\nNELSON ..\nSi John'a .\nToronto .._\nWinnipeg\nRegina \t\n.\u201e \u00ab\n._ W\n_ js\n.__ 46\n  M\nCalgary  34 75\nKimberley    43 86\nCrescent Valley   89 82\nPenticton      46 89 \u25a0\nVancouver   51 78\nVictoria   57 70\n\u2014 CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nEVEN A NON-SCOTSMAN couldn't fail to appreciate the grace of the highland dancers at the 16th annual Caledonian games at Nelson Labor Day. Severity-nine contestants from .all over the province, from Lethbridge, Edmonton, and\nthe United States took part in the games held'at the Civic Recreation Grounds\nin 90-degree temperatures.\u2014Daily News photo.\nNelson Family Drives Over\nPower Line Road to Kimberley\n\"Dusty, but enjoyable and marvellously scenic,\" describes an\nunusual weekend journey by a\nNelson family.\nTravelling in a light delivery\ntruck, Harry D. Harrison took\nMrs. Harrison and their children\nfrom Gray Creek to Kimberley\nvia Rose P&ss, following Comin-\nco's power line maintenance road\ninto St. Mark's River valley. They\nreturned to Nelson on No. 3-high\nway.\nMr. Harrison had become curious about the possibilities of\ndriving over the road after oh\nserving it during an. airplane\nflight. As president of the B.C\nsection of the* Southern Trans-\nCanada Highway Association\n(Crow's Nest route), he1 is keenly\ninterested in improvement \u25a0 of\nSouthern British Columbia roads\nand development of ,new routes.\nThe Rose Pass road took the\nparty up to an altitude of 6150\nfeet and dropped them on the East\nside on Highway No. 95, roughly\nhalf way between Marysville and\nKimberley. a distance of 43 miles.\nMr.   Harrison   estimated   it  took\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN.\nTRAIL,   B.C., ,     ,\nLAST TIME TONIGHT\n\"THREE FOR THE SHOW\"\nCINEMASCOPE\nRegular Prices\nMarge and  Gower Champion\nCARTOON  and  NEW8   ,\nTime: 7:46 p.m.,\n I,     \u25a0' \"'\"' \u2014\nAgriculti\nWest Kootenay\ntural and Industrial\nEXHIBITION\nThe Show Window 0\/ the Kootenays\nCIVIC CENTRE - NELSON\nSEPT. 15-16-17\n*\nNOW\nis the time to\nplan your exhibits\nfor the Fall Fair.\nEnter as many exhibits as you wish.\nCheck your Fair\nbooklet and plan\nto show at the\nExhibition.\ntwo and a half hours driving time.\nIt is about 120 miles from Gray\nCreek to Cranbrook via No.- 3\nhighway.\n\"At the summit we could see\na great expanse of Kootenay Lake\nand down the West Arm as far\nas the Blaylock residence,\" Mr\nHarrison said. Lookfng to the\nNorth, the party saw goats cavorting on one of the ridges. They\nalso found \"excellent\" fishing\nspots.\nMr. Harrison said the road was\nnot too difficult, that a good car\ncould probably negotiate it, but\nthat it would be inadvisable to\ntry it in wfft weather because of\nsteep grades, particularly on the\nEastern side.\nCHLORINATION OF\nWEST TRAIL\nWATER ADVISED\nTRAIL \u2014 \"installation of chlor-\nlnation equipment to give proper\nsafeguard to water supply for West\nTrail from Violin Lake was recom-\nmended to city' council* Tuesday\nnight by J. L. Hiebert, sanitary\ninspector of the West Kootenay\nhealth unit.\n\"As part of the watershed and\nits course to the city is open there\nis the possibility of a carrier contaminating the supply. Oqce an\nepidemic started it would be hard\nto stop,\" said the inspector.   ,\n\"It would call for a few thousand dollars in outlay,\" said Alderman G. E. Sanborn, chairman of\nBoard of Works. \"We could nut\nhandle it this year.\" '\n\"Nevertheless we cannot afford\nto monkey around with the health\nof ihe citizens,\" said Mayor E. G.\nFletcher as the matter was passed\nto  the committee for study.\nInspector Hiebert said an inspection of cafes had revealed them\nto be in fairly good shape.\nHe felt that the milk bylaw\nvhoujd be* adjusted to allow only\nthe sale of pasteurized'milk. Milk\nBUTLER PARK I\nPROJECT LEADS      I\nTRAIL BUILDING\nTRAIL \u2014 Erection of a grandstand, office and retaining wall at\nButler Park l?y Trail Dliitrtet Recreational Project! Society topped\nAugust construction, the building\nInspector's report to city council\nTuesday night showed.\nTotal building WM $109,080.\nA\" request was received that the\nbuilding fee of $124 be donated\nback to the society. This was approved with two dissenting votes.\nAlderman Sanborn said the city\nhad made similar donations on two\nor three other occasions and it was\ntime they were looking after their\nown coffers. Alderman J. Bryan\nwas the other dissenting voter.\nA letter from C. K. Morrison,\nsecretary of the public library\ncommission, pointed out that it\nwould, be necessary to get slgna.\nlures of 100 residents asking for a\nlibrary as the correct procedure\nto establishing a municipal library\nCopies will be sent lp municipality\nof Tadanac and village of Warfield\nfrom where city of Trail hopes to\nget assistance on an assessment\nbasis.\nMayor Fletcher reported on a\nsuccessful convention of municipalities held in Edmonton. All the\nconferences were ' well attended.\nThere was little time for extracurricular activities.\n60 To Meet Here at\nSocial Credit Parley\nHonor Printer\nOn Long Service\nA Nelpon Daily News employee\nfor 25 years, Victor L. Davies received a long-service gift from the\nboard of directors at a presentation in the News Composing Room\nTuesday afternoon.\nThe presentation was made by\nMajor R. H. Green, president of\nNews Publishing Company, Vic\ntoria. Mrsi Davies received a\ncorsage.\nIt was the sixth presentation\nmade in recent years to employees\nwith 25 years' service.\nMr. Davies, a native of Nelson\nis a linotype operator.\nInsurance Agents\nTo Meet Here\nApproximately 40 delegates\nfrom as far distant as Grand Forks\nand the Alberta border are expected in Nelson Sept. 23 for a\nmeeting of the Insurance Agencies\nof B. C, Kootenay Division.\nR. Hedfield of Victoria, Department Superintendent of Motor\nVehiclejs, will be guest speaker.\nHis talks, one on the \"safety responsibility law\" and a second on\n\"driver education and demonstration of the licence record panel\"\nwill be open to the public.\nMr. Hedfield will be accompanied by Mr. Copeland.\nO. Woodman of Vancouver, secretary of the B. C. Agents Association, will also attend the convention.\nOn the agenda will be a demonstration of fire fighting equipment by Nelson Fire Department.\nA business meeting and re-election of officers will also be held.\nA cocktail party and dinner are\nplanned.\nRetiring president is A. K. McAdams of Nelson, retiring vice-\npresident is Jack Falkins of Cranbrook and retiring secretary-treasurer is Robert Phillips of Nelson.\nThe convention will be held at\nthe Canadian Legion.\nThere are 75 insurance agents\nin Kootenay Division.\nHas Your favorite\nBoat Skipped Out?\nIf you got up one morning this\nSummer and your favorite fiberglass rowboat had slipped its\nmoorings and skipped off down\nKootenay lake then this is for you.\nRCMP are seeking the owners oflshould onl* be served from or**i-\ntwo unclaimed rowboats drifting nal containers of proven dispen\non Kootenay Lake and the West\nArm.\nThe 14-foot fiberglass boat was\ndrifting on the main lake June 3\nand a 15-foot roiyboat was found\nby a resident, floating at Seven\nMile on the West Arm, August 2.\nThe boats will be returned to the\nowners who identify them.\nFuneral Held\nFor Mrs. Davey\nPrivate funeral services were\nconducted Saturday by Rev.\nCanon W* J. Silverwood at Thompson Funeral Home for Mrs. Margaret Annie Davey of Los Altos,\nCalifornia, who died Wednesday\nat Invermere.\nHymns sung were \"God Be With\nYou\" and \"Abide With Me.\" Or-\n| ganist was Mrs. W. A. Manson,\nPallbearers were L' G. Atwell, T.\nS. Shorthouse, M. J. Stallwood, C.\nHufty, H. A. D. Greenwood and\nC.Jensen, Well\nKnown Here, Dies\nIn Saskatchewan\ndied\nMr.\nChristian K. Jensen, 72,\nSunday at Gull Lake, Sask.\nJensen was well known in Nelson\nand district and owned a summer\nhome at Crescent Bay.\nSurvivors include his wife, four\ndaughters, one son and several\ngrandchildren.\nW.  G.  Harold.  Interment was\nNelson Memorial Park.\nGladys Blows Out\nBROWNSVILLE, Tex.  (AP)  \u2014\nHurricane-hunter planes probed a\nj mighty squall line off the coast of\nI Texas Tuesday  and  weathermen\neyed a potential new storm in the\nGulf of Mexico.\nThe gusty, wet weather in the\ngulf was part of a torrential adieu\nfrom tropical storm Gladys, blowing itself out in Mexico.\nGladys smacked the Mexican\ncoast late Monday, did an unexpected turn and headed toward\nTampico instead of the lush Rio\nGrande valley of Texas.\nHeavy rain* blamed on Gladys\naffected ,40.000 families in flooded\nlow portions of Mexico City. They\ntouched off rains up to six inches\nin southern Texas.\nA warning of possible isolated\nfloods along the Rio Grar_.de from\nrains touched off by Gladys still\nheld.\nNORTH  SHORE  OFFENCE\ni     Leonard Edwards of Nelson was\nfined $20 in provincial court Mon-\n| day for exceeding the speed limit\n\u25a0 on the North Shore. He pleaded\n! guilty before Magistrate William,\nj Evans.\nNews Principals\nVisiting District\nMajor and Mrs. R. H. Green and\nson Gordon, principals in the News\nPublishing Company'Ltd., of Victoria, and Mrs. Green's niece, Miss\nMargaret Bird of Sydney, Australia, were visitors in Nelson Monday and Tuesday. They earlier had\nvisited in Trail.\nTHIEVES CAREFUL NOT\nTO BREAK WINDOW\nTRAIL HOTELS\nASK SLIDING ,\nLICENCE SCALE\nTRAIL\u2014Appearing as a delegation before City Council Tuesday night, members of the Trail\nHotelmen's Association protested\nthe municipal bylaw charging $50\nfor six months for dining lounge\nlicence, dining room licence,\nlounge licence or public house\nlicence.\nProprietors from the Crown\nPoint, Arlington, Montana and\nRex Hotels appeared with ihe\nassoiation's secretary, L. A. Read,\nwho acted a\u00a7 spokesman. Mr.\nRead said the association would\nlike to see a sliding scale of\ncharges whereby hotels not doing\nmuch business and in some cases\nnot getting enough ^o live on\nmight get a reduced licence fee\n\"Some are paying over $200 a\nyear in licence fees and just making a living,\" he said. \"We ar?\nnot asking for a cancellation of\nthe bylaw, but for fair consfdera\ntion.\"\nCouncil' asked that full infor\nmation on revenue of hotels be\nsubmitted so that a study of the\nbylaw could be made and fair\nconsideration recommended for\nthe following year.\nSocial Credit delegates from\nthroughout the provincial constituency wfill gather in Nelson Saturday for the annual convention.\nThe Nelson-Creston Social Credit Association will be in session\nfrom i) a.m. until about 8 p.m. at\nthe Canadian Legion to elect officers, name delegates to the provincial convention and pass on resolutions proposed for consideration\nat the B.C. meet.\nThe Provincial gathering will\nbe at Vancouver October 28 and\n29.\nHon. W. D, Black, member for\nNelson-Creston, will be in Nelson\nfor the Saturday meeting.\nWilliam Kapak is chairman of\nthe resolutions committee while\nmembers of the local executive\nare handling convention arrangements. About 60 delegates are\nexpected.\nW. Bmckner,\nWindermere\nResort Owner, Dies\nINVERMERE - William Buck-\nner, 43, well known Windermere\ndistrict resort owner, died Monday\nin University Hospital, Edmonton.\nOwner and operator of Dutch\nCreek Hotel, Fairmont, Mr. Buck-\nner also owned the Royal Antler\nranch near Invermere.\nHe is survived by his wife and\nfour children at home, Karen.\nJames, Donald and Jane. Funeral\nservice is to be held Wednesday\nat Edmonton.\nSchool Starts\nQuietly for Sons\nThe first day of school opened\nquietly for Sons of Freedom children throughout West Kootenay.\nThere were no demonstrations\namong the sect, traditionally\nkngwn to oppose education, as\ntheir children returned to school.\nNot all Sons of Freedom are\nattending school, but those that\nare, returned peacefully. School\nboard officials had no figures\nTuesday night on the number who\nregistered.\nOne misunderstanding kept a\nfew Krestova children from the\nclassroom. The school bus driver\nbelieved school didn't start until\nWednesday and did not pick the i\nchildren up.\nA TREAT FOR YOU\nAND  YOUR  FRIEND8\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR  SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m, to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St.       Nelson\nYouths' Conditions\n\"Greatly Improved\"\nCondition of 15-year-old Benny\nAnderson and 18-year-old Charles\nRiesterer, two youths struck by\na car on th* North Shore Tuesday, were \"greatly improved\"\nTuesday night. The accident occurred six miles east of Nelson on\nNo. 3 highway.\nFALL CLASSES\nHOBBY SHOP\nINSTRUCTIONS IN \u2014\nFIBRE   FLOWERS\nMETAL   TOOLING.\nGLOVE   MAKING\nCERAMICS\nMETAL   ETCHING\nJEWELLERY\nNEEDLEPOINT\nAND  OTHERS\"\nClasses   for   Adults   and\nChildren.\nREGISTER NOW\nPhone 224 577 Ward St\nCar Plunges 60 Feet,\n.Driver Uninjured\nDriver of a car that plunged 80\nA thief or thieves lifted a win-1 feet down  an    embankment    on\ndow out of a service station at\nBalfour on the weekend, carefully\nso as not to break the pane, then\nstole a flashlight, a set of keys\nand $10 in $1 bills and change.\nThe service station is owned by\nMr. and Mrs K. Chandler.\nRCMP are investigating.\nYmir Road Sunday and was totally demolished, escaped uninjured!\nZiri Vlahovich was alone ln the\ncar that was travelling toward\nNelson when his car left the road\nnear Cottonwood Lake and rolled\ndown the embankment.\nNO LONGER is it necessary to buy replacement\nfilters every 3 or 4 months\nfor your forced-air heating.\nGoodyear PLIOTRON Filters stay as good as new for\nyears, and extract 400 per\ncent more fine dirt.\nThey are washable.\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL A TRANSFER\nby Comparing\nOUR PRICES!\n168\u00ab\n   89e\nKEY TABS\n3 Ring Looseleof. Each\t\n3-RING   LOOSELEAF   BINDERS \t\n3-RING  LOOSELEAF  REFILLS :  15e\nLIBRARY  PA8TE.  Bottle  ...._  14c\nSCIENCE   NOTEBOOKS    J. \u201e  43c\n8CI6SOR8. Pair      226\nROYAL BALL-POINT PENS. Reg. $1.20. NOW     99o\nREEVES 7-COLOR  POSTER  PAINT SET      _  $1.69\n12\" RULERS. Plastic. .'..... 14c\n12\" 8TEELEDGE  WOOD _ _    13c\nPENHOLDERS       13c\n6-PCE.  MATH. SET AND CASE ,   58c\n$. J. VnowatL & C\u00b0-\n536 Word St.\nPhone 200\nUse FIREPROOF BLOCKS\nWHEN YOU BUILD YOUR GARAGE\nNo  repoirs  or upkeep  to worry\nabout.  Use concrete blocki and\nBuild for a Lifetime.\nTotal Coit of Blocks for\nAverage Garage $135.00.\nDelivered in Nelson.\nWrite or phone Trail 2105 \"collect\" tor full Information or\ncontact K. W. DIXON CO., NELSON.\nKORPACK Cement Products Co. Ltd.\nSuppliers for the Kootenay of Blocks (Cinder or Concrete)\nChimney Blocks\n154 Wellington St.        Trail, B.C.        Phone 2105\nFIREPROOF\nHOUSEHOLD\nSTORAGE\nAGENTS FOR\nWILLIAMS\nLong Distance Moving and Storage\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n(NELSON) LTD.\n701 FRONT ST.\n I \u2022      \u2022:\u25a0.,\u25a0'\n\u2022.-\u2022.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022.'\n.   ,      -    - \u2014\u25a0 :\u2014,    ; \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \/\n^\n\u20229 &$\n$2000 in Prizes at\nCranbrook Rodeo\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Final Cowboy\nProtective Association circuit rodeo of the Summer under Cranbrook Lions sponsorship last\nweekend, major event in the jubilee celebration, drew excellent\ncrowds who were given a lop\nperformance in ideal stampede\nweather. * Prizes totalling $2000\nwere distributed among the winners and points added to their\nseason standings for the big Fall\nawards. Reg Kessler, Association\nmanager, brought in the stock and\nmanaged the show. Competitors\nwere from Alberta and British\nColumbia and seven chuck wagon\noutfits from Alberta participated\nResults at the end of the meet\nwere:\nBare-back riding: first day \u2014\nFirst, Alvin Owens; second, Mark\nCawston; third, Bill Johnson;\nfourth split, Don MacLeod, Alex\nLaye. Second day \u2014 First, Mark\nCawston; second, Reg Kessler;\nthird; Hank Campsell; fourth,\nGeorge Myron. Final money \u2014\nFirst, Mark Cawston; second. Bill\nJohnson; third, Reg Kessler, and\nfourth, Don MacLeod.\nBronco riding: first day\u20141. Dick\nNash; 2. Bill Johnson; 3. Alvin\nOwens; 4. Bob Fisher. Second\nday \u2014 1. Dick Nash; 2. Alvin\nOwens; 3. John Worts; 4. Paddy\nBrown. Final money \u2014 1. Dick\nNash; 2. Alvin Owens; 3. George\nMyron; 4. Bill Johnson.\nBull riding\u20141. Jack Cook, 2.\nDan MacLeod, 3. Don Hadrell, 4.\nBill Haire, ,5. Gordon Akins, 6.\nMark  Causton.\nChuck wagon races: first day\u2014\n1. Jack Sheckter, 2. W. I. Newman,\n3. Ed Crochell, 4. Carl Barret. Second day\u20141. W. I. Newman, 2. Ed\nCrochell, 3. Jack Sheckter. 4. Carl\nBarret. Average\u2014Jack Sheckter*,\nW. Newman, Ed Crochell, Carl\nBarret.\nDecorating: First day\u20141. Reg\nKessler, 2. Brian Butterfield, 3.\nAlex Laye, 4. Gordon Earl. Second day\u20141. Alex Laye, 2. Tom\nButterfield, 3. Gordon Earl, 4.\nBrian Butterfield. Average \u2014 1.\nAlex  Laye,  2. Brian Butterfield,\nHow About\nThis Odd Amount?\nOdd amounts con bo con- <\nvoniontly repaid evenly each\nmonth. This plan Is paid In 15\nmonths at $35.00 a month. It's\njust one example of Niagara\nloans ranging from $100 to\n$1500 or more.\nRofoi ar* lowor on many Niagara loom.\nA LAXATIVE\nthat really\ndoes you good!\n3. Gordon Earl, 4. Reg Kessler.\nCow milking\u20141. Eddie Ivans, 2.\nFred Gladstone, 3. Tom Duce, 4.\nBud Van Cleave, 5. Cliff Vander-\ngrift, 6. John Hawk.\nCalf roping: first day\u20141. Bud\nVan Cleave. 2. Bill Collins, 3. Cliff\nVandergrift, 4. (split) John Hawk.\nAlex Laye. Second' day\u20141. Bill\nCollins, 2. John Hawk, 3. Fred\nGladstone, 4. G. Sutcliffe. Average\ntime\u20141. Bill Collins, 2. Bud Van\nCleave, 3. John Hawk, 4. Reg\nKessler.\nHarold Nyman\nDies al (oast\nNEW DENVER - Harold John\nNyman, 20, of South Burnaby.\nbrother of Leonard Nyman of\nNew Denver, died August 28. The\nNyman family resided at Rosebery and New Denver for several\nyears.\nMr. Nyman Is survived by his\nmother, Mrs. F. R. Wales of Burnaby, three brothers, Leonard of\nNew Denver, James of Vancouver,\nLloyd of Keremeos; three sisters.\nMrs. Thelma Fryer, Mrs. Hazel\nHogenson of Toronto, Mrs. Bruce\n(Myrtle) Rockhart of Reston,\nManitoba. Fiyieral service was\nconducted in Burrard Chapel at\nNorth Vancouver on Friday by\nRev. Canon John Leigh. Interment was in North Vancouver\nCemetery.,\nTom Kinna's\nBrother Beaten\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Violence\nflared again ln Vancouver's narcotics underworld during the\nweekend when a 32-year-old man\nwas kidnapped and assaulted by\nthree men.\nPolice said the victim was a\ndrug addict and that he was taken\nfrom a downtown street and driven under a viaduct where he was\nbeaten. No motive was known.\nMeanwhile, another beating victim, Robert Kinna, told police he\nwas hammered with brass knuckles and boots to keep his brother\nTom from talking.\n\"You can tell Tom to dummy\nup,\" he said he was told as three\nmen beat him last week.\nKinna gave the statement to police Tuesday. His brother, Thomas,\n29, was beaten June 12 with an\niron bar until both legs were broken. Three men were charged\nwith attempted murder in the\ncase.\nStill another man was beaten in\nthe downtown area last week by a\ntrio who accused him of telling\npolice about their drug cache. It\nwas believed he was mistaken for\na police informer.\nLongest-time pioneer present at the testimonial dinner to Cranbrook's\npioneers who lived there in 1905 or before was R. C. (Rocky Mountain Dick)\nMcLure, who cam& to Cranbrook in 1897 on foot ahead of the railway, and has\nmined, painted and engaged in many enterprises in the Cranbrook district ever\nsyice. He is shown at the left, and others reading to the right are Mrs. Lillis\nHoward, Mrs. tfillis and Malcolm Gillis, all pre-1905 residents, while Scandinavian Sisters member, Mrs. E. R. Erickson of the organization which put on the\nspread, stands at the rear.\n.ItlllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII\nDrive at 15 MPH\nIn School Zones\n11f111lllllllll1111lllllll111lllll IflIII111111\nSets 'Organthon'\n(0-Hour Record\nBRANDON (CP)\u2014Pte. Donald\n(Tiny) Bird from Camp Shilo,\nMan., was a tired but hapy man\nMonday night as he claimed another world record after completing his 60-hour \"organthon.\"\nA crowd bf more than 4000 persons from many parts of southwest\nManitoba and eastern Saskatchewan gave the 248-pound soldier a\ntumultuous ovation when he played his last chord at 9 p.m. in\nBrandon's Wheat City Arena.\nIn all, more than 10,000 spectators filed n and out of the big\narena during the 60-hour period\nsince Tiny began the long grind\nat 9 a.m. Saturday.\nFollowing the \"organthon,\" Tiny\nwas examined by Dr. E. J. Skafel\nwho pronounced him \"perfectly\nall right except for minor swelling\nof the legs, which will disappear\nas soon as the blood gets a chance\nto circulate.\"\nRules of the \"organthon\" did\nnot permit him to stop playing or\nleave the stool on which he sat,\neven to stretch. Official watchers\nwere on duty throughout the\nhours.\nB.C. PC Leader's\nFather Passes\nCOMOX, B.C. (CP) \u2014 John\nArchie Finlayson, father of provincial Progressive Conservative\nleader Deane Finlayson,. died suddenly here Monday.\nThe .Tory leader will interrupt\nhis campaigning in the Lillooet\nby-election as a result and not\nreturn to the political campaign\nuntil Friday, after the funeral.\nRADIANT ENERGY\nRadiology is a branch of science\nwhich uses ^radiant energy such as\nthe x-ray  in   the  diagnosis\ntreatment of disease.\nand\nYoo owe it to yourself to try\nKellogg's All-Bran and milk as!\nan aid to health and regularity.\nAll-Bran corrects the cause of ir-\nregularity due to insufficient bulk. |\n(Chemical or drug-type laxatives 1\nare intended only for overnight\nrelief of a temporary stoppage.)\nAll-Bran and milk is a wholesome, good-tasting dish\u2014a safe,\nnatural way to improve \"intestinal, tone\"\u2014so essential to comfortable elimination. All-Bran,\n_ made from the outer layers of\n\" whole wheat, contains natural\nfood bulk. It is also an excellent\nsource of niacin (necessary for\nnormal body functioning.)\nThere is only one All-Bran,\nKellogg's. Famous for nearly 40\n.Jyears as the original natural\nlaxative cereal. It is milled for\nmaximum effectiveness. We'll\nprove to you that AHjBran with\nmilk will give gentle relief from\nconstipation within 10 days\nor double your money back.\nKellogg's, London, Ontario.\nPlanning to move? Call ut\nfirst. Our modern vans and\nskilled movers assure a SAFE\nmove wherever you BO. We\nare agents for North American van Lines, America's\nleading long distance moving\norganization. It costs no more\nto   enjoy this  finer  service!\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.    .\n719 Boker St.\nNelson B.C.\nPhone 33\nSask. Has Quiet\n5Wh Birthday\nBy DON HANBIGHT\nCanadian Presi 8taff Writer\nREGINA (CP)\u2014It was a day of\npublic   crystal-gazing  and  reminiscing In Saskatchewan Monday.\nThe dozen speeches that wound\nup the province's golden jubilee\ncelebrations lauded pioneers for\ntheir part in the past and cautioned teen-agers on their role in\nthe future.\nThere was none of the merrymaking that prevailed all summer\nduring the more than 400 community celebrations. Most of the\nprovince is by now stripped of\n50th .birthday celebrations. Nearly\nall Monday's observances were before comparatively small audiences in Regina.\nAn impressive JICMP mounted\nescort led Prime Minister St. Laurent and other government officials\nto the formal ceremonies on the\nlegislative grounds.\nAfter brief speeches by the\nprime minister and Premier\nDouglas, the official party moved off the platform to chat with\nmembers of the audience of 5000\n\u2014among them 350 persons who\nwitnessed the Sept. 4, 1905, Inauguration by Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Governor-Genera! Earl\nGrey.\nFinal part of the day's program\nwas a province-wide CBC broadcast of a banquet at the Hotel Saskatchewan for Mr. St. Laurent and\nSaskatchewan's senators and past\nand present members of the House\nof Commons and the provincial\nlegislature. Roughly 300 attended.\nNO LONGER POOR COUSIN\nIt was there'that CCF Premier\nDouglas, making his 80th golden-\njubilee address, gave a few facts\nand figures on progress and summed it up this way:\n\"Saskatchewan,     which     has\nlong been regarded as the poor\ncountry cousin of Confederation,\nnow  Is a  lady of considerable\nmeans and excellent prospects.'1\nThe other speakers, besides the\nprime minister, were four ex-premiers of the province: Chief Justice W. M. Martin (1916-1922), Hon.\nCharles Dunning (1922-26), Agriculture Minister Gardiner (1926-29,\n1934-35) and Lieutenant-Governor\nW. J. Patterson (1935-1944).\nMr. St. Laurent, making his first\nvisit to the Prairies in two years,\nwas scheduled to fly today to Calgary for Alberta jubilee observances there, then to Edmonton\nWednesday.\nYahkYoulh\nDrowns in\nMoyie River\nCRANBROOK\u2014 Sixteen-year\nold only child of Mr. and Mrs.\nAlex Mlastowskl of Yahk, Edwin H. T. Mlastowskl was\ndrowned while swimming In the\nMoyie river In Yahk vicinity\non  Labor Day.\nInquiry Into circumstances of\ntha Cranbrook district'* only\nholiday fatality Is under way.\nHe was born In Cranbrook,\ngrew up In Yahk and completed\nhigh school here In June. He had\nbeen employed on a highway\nconstruction Job under way In\nYahk area since then.\nAMBASSADORS\nTOUR RUSSIAN\nA-POWER PLANT\nMOSCOW (peuters) \u2014 The ambassadors of the United States.\nBritain and five other non-Com\nmunist countries left here by car\nTuesday, accompanied by their\nwives, for the first visit to Russia's atomic power station by\nMoscow's Western residents.\nThe power station is believed to\nbe about 60 miles from Moscow.\nThe party assembled near the\nKremlin and drove off in procession with flags flying, led by a\nRussian foreign ministry official.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII\nStudents, Help the\nDriver. Keep to\nThe Sidewalks\nii 11 ilium i ej i iiiiiiii i limn 11 iiiiiii 11 eif\nLost Man Turns\nUp; Case Closed\nCRANBROOK\u2014Object of a policy search all Monday afternoon.\nJohn Gretich, Cranbrook logger,\nturned up Monday night unaware\nhis absence had aroused interest.\nGabriel Paul had found his complete outfit of clothing except for\nsocks on the Mission road about\nnoon Monday together with his\ncar with his keys still in it and\nreported the matter to police His\nexplanation of his absence was\nsatisfactory, police said.\nSpokane Boaters\nHoliday at Nakusp\nNAKUSP \u2014 About 25 boats of\nthe Spokane Outboard Club made\nthe return trip to Nakusp. A number of the boats arrived in Nakusp on Saturday evening, and\nothers docked Sunday morning.\nAfter enjoying several hours of\nswimming, and water skiing, the\nparty fueled up and left for home.\nThey planned to camp overnight at Edgewood on the return\ntrip. Perfect weather prevailed\nfor the entire, trip. One incident\nof a capsized boat in the rapids\nat1 the confluence of the Kootenay and Columbia rivers dampened the spirits briefly, but fortunately no life was lost.\nName Changed\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 RCAF\nNo. 12 air defence group, with\nheadquarters at Vancouver, has\nbeen renamed No. 5 air division, it\nwas announced Tuesday by air\nforce officials.\nIts function and responsibilities\nremain unchanged. The Vancouver\nheadquarters continues to be responsible to air defence command\nheadquarters at St. Hubert, Que.,\nfor control of all air defence operations on the west coast, the announcement said.\n\"The change is one in name only\nand is being made to avoid confusion resulting from a conflict in\nterminology with other RCAF and\nUSAF air defence formations,\" the\nstatement said.\nShot in Stomach\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) \u2014\nSteve Roman, 19, was shot in the\nstomach at a playground here\nduring the holiday weekend and\nJohn Pasek, 21, was charged with\nwounding. Police said the 19-year-\nold was in good condition after\nbeing struck by a bullet, apparently fired from close range.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1955\u20143\nPORTABLE   CARRIAGE\u2014 This kangaroo-type baby\ncarriage, made In Hamburg, Germany, permits mothers to use\ntheir arms and hands freely while carrying a youngster.\n3 RESCUED FROM\nARROW LAKE\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Three Spokane residents were rescued from\nchilly Arrow Lake after their cabin cruiser hit a partly-submerged\nlog and sank.\nKarl Pat Manetsch, owner of\nthe boat, his w'.fe and Mrs. O. R.\nDalzell were rescued about a mile\nand a half from the scene of the\naccident.\nMr. Manetsch said the life jackets they wore helped them survive the strong current which carried them towards the village of\nKinnaiud.\nThe bow of the cruiser was rip-1\nped open in the accident. Most oft\nthe $3000 loss was covered by in-;\nsurance. The party was headed for\nthe annual Labor Day regatta at:\nEdgewood 60 miles northwest of!\nthis Kootenay smelter city. j\nTHE PARTY LINERS\nwm\nKieenburn . . .\nWestern Monarch\nGait \u2014 Greenhlll\nCanmore Briquettes\nPHONE 889\nCoal\n19\nTowleR\nFuel & Transfer\nGLADYS THE GABBER\n(teen age type) talks and\ntalks and talks. Her party\nline neighbors are fuming.\nMeanwhile, somebody's\nphoning Gladys and\ngetting only.a busy signal.\nPLEASE\u2014Gladys  .  .  .\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nPlanes Collide\nLA TAZ, Bolivia (AP) \u2014 Two\nBolivian planes, a freighter and\nan airliner, collided Monday 9000\nfeet over the industrial city of\nCochabamba. Three members of\nthe crew of the freighter were\nkilled when their plane crashed.\nThe airliner, with eight passengers\naboard, landed at its destination\non one engine.\nA GIANT F.ROG\u2014Rana Go-\nHath\u2014Is shown at the Bronx,\nN.Y., zoo shortly after its arrival from Africa. Dr. James\nOliver, curator of the zoo, said\nt'idt the rare specimen measures\n28 Inches long and weighs five\npounds. The species was discovered 50 years ago and Is a\nsoiree of food for natives of\nthe Southern Cameroons of\nAfrica and the Gabon region of\nFrench West Africa, where the\nhuge frog !\u2022 found.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nCook Drowns\nPORT ALBERNI, B.C. (CP) -\nHerbert Churchill, -23, of Trinity\nBay, Nfld., cook aboard HMCS\nOriole\/ was drowned Sunday in\nthe Nahmint river about nine\nmiles from here.\nRCMP said the able-bodied sea^\nman was drowned in about four\nfeet of water while swimmin,\nwith another rrtember of the crew\nof the RCN training vessel. Dr. N.\nH. Jones and a member of the Port\nAlberni volunteer fire department\ninhalator crew were flown to the\nscene from here but were unabie\nto revive the victim.\nOriole is a schooner-rigged sailing ship.\n, AB. Churchill is survived by his\nwife in Victoria. An inquest will\nbe held.'\nPLUMBING or HEATING\nPROBLEM\nPHONE 666\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Phone \u00a366\nNO FINER WHISKY\nIS MADE IN CANADA-\nDOMINION\nTEN\nCANADIAN WHISKY\nONE   OF   THE   WORLD'S    GREAT    WHISKIES\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nliquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia!,\nMen, materials...\nand money\nWhen a business lands an order or a contract,\nit is likely to go to a chartered bank to arrange some\nof the financing. It may need bank credit to meet\npayrolls, to buy materials or to cover other\ncosts that arise before it is paid.\nThat's why businesses both large and small can\ntake on many jobs they would be unable to\nhandle if they had to depend entirely on their own\nfinancial resources... And why, every day\nand in every part of Canada, the chartered banks\nare lending money to producers, manufacturers.\nprocessors and other commercial customers.\nCommercial loans are only one of many banking\nservices available at a branch of a chartered bank.\nYou will find it is a convenient banking\nservice-centre where you can attend to\nall your banking needs.\nOnly a chartered bank offers a full\nrange of banking services, including:\nSAVINGS ACCOUNTS\n\\Keep your money safe; pay\nyou steady interest; encourage the habit of thrift.\nFARM IMPROVEMENT\nLOANS\nFor many worthwhile purposes,\nadding to progress, efficiency\nand the comfort of farm life.\nTRAVELLERS  CHEQUES\nPtotect you against theft or\nloss of cash. They are readily\nneeotiable anywhere.\nPERSONAL   LOANS\nTo finance your personal needs;\nrepayment in regular instalments from your earnings.\nTHE  CHARTERED  BANKS  SERVING  YOUR  COMMUNITY\n \u25a0\u25a0_:'..\u2022 :'   ;;   \u25a0\n\u25a0^ .,\u25a0,,;\u2022;',   \u2022...;.,\u25a0     \u2022\n^^~\nwpSPi^P\nw^m\nEstablished April 22. 1002\nInterior British Columbia'* largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS. PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized u Second Cla\u00bb\u00bb Mall Port Office Department. Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\t\nWednesday, September 7, 19SS\nWorld's Longest Microwave System\nCrossing B.C. Via the Kootenay\nA story on page two of this newspaper Saturday told of telephone engineers racing the weather to path\ntest the route for the world's longest\nmicrowave system. The microwave\nchain when it is set up across Southern British Columbia via the Kootenay will link with a 3800-mile route\nfrom Vancouver to Sydney, Nova\nScotia, providing for television channels and additional long \"range distance telephone circuits.\nEngineers working westward in\nthe Kootenay now are participating\nin one of Canada's greatest communications achievements.\nKnown as TD-2, the $5 million\nmicrowave system will permit the\n\"stacking\" of 120 telephone circuits\nabove the television signal.\nThe TD-2 system will carry telephone conversations and television\nfrom coast to coast with the speed of\nlight by means of 137 relay stations\nspaced an average of 28 miles apart.\nIncluding spurs, the system eventually will be 4300 miles long, linking\nmost major centres across the country by means of 155 stations.\nPreliminary surveys in B. C. were\nmade by air, and tests to establish\nbasic line-of-sight paths were made\nby the use of mirror-reflected light\nfrom point to point before actual\nradio path testing began. The latter\noperation is being carried out with\nthree portable steel towers which\ncome in sections and can be raised\nto a height of 200 feet. The tower\nsections and other equipment are\ntransported by four-wheel drive vehicles or on foot where roads have\nnot yet been put all the way to the\nsites. Most B. C. relay sites are above\nthe 4500-foot level.\nDuring the light testing operations a helicopter was used on the\nleg between Sumas Mountain, near\nAbbotsford, and Dog Mountain, near\nHope. A man was dropped by helicopter on Dog Mountain, which is\ninaccessible except on foot, to act as\na relay station there, while the helicopter made several runs over Sumas\nMountain. Light mirrors were used\nin both cases to determine the line-\nof-sight conditions between.\nThe cross-country microwave skyway is a co-operative undertaking\nof the seven major telephone systems\nin Canada, which make up the Trans-\n' Canada Telephone System. Each system is building the facilities for the\nchain in the territory it serves and\nconnecting them with those of other\njysterrfs.\nA Dozen Playlots\nNot Too Many Here\nCommunity planning texts declare a neighborhood playlot for every hundred families as the ideal\nminimum. This may seem unreasonably numerous for a valley community such as Nelson. But a dozen\nwould not.\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nLetteri.to the Editor on any tople of genuine Interest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be Inaerted In whole, or In part, except over the\nllgnature and  address of the writer.   Unsolicited  correspondence!  cannot  be  returned.\nUrges Setting Aside\nOf Playlot Space\nNot Be Left Too Late\nTo the Editor:\nSir-Glad to see your prod regarding\nsetting aside the space for playgrounds. Why\nnot put on a campaign now and ask citizens\nto pick out places in and around Nelson\nthat should be set aside for such purposes?\n\"The Junior and Senior Chambers of Commerce should be interested in seeing this\ncarried through and not left for the future\nwhen it is too late.\nDon't overlook the sections adjoining\nthe city that may some day come into the\ncity. These people could set an example by\nsetting aside such spaces.\nN. C. STIBBS.\nSays Neighborhood Play\nSpots Where Kids\nLearn To Give and Take\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Carry on in your fine program for\nneighborhood playgrounds. They are badly\nneeded. Nelson has a few fine recreation\nspots, but their use is limited. What is\nneeded is a series of small places for the\nneighborhood kids to~get together and learn\nhow to give and take in the atmosphere of\nplay.\nMRS. T. S. TERNAN.\nNelson, B. C.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Name, of\npertoni asking queitloni will 'not be\npublished. There Ii no charge for thli\nlervlce. QUE8TION8 WILL NOT BE\nAN8WERED BY MAIL except where\nthero is obvloui necessity for privacy.\nC.  C.  O.,  Nelson\u2014What  ls Inspiration  as\napplied to the Bible?  \"\u25a0\nA published answer by Billy Graham\nwas that Inspiration comes from a Latin\nword meaning \"breathing ln\". As In Genesis\nII, 7, God breathed into Adam's nostrils \"the\nbreath of life; and man became a living\nsoul.\" A form of inspiration is experienced\nby poets, artists and inventors when they\ntranslate their \"breathing .in\" into rhythmic\nlines, forms and machines. There is a kind\nof inerrancy, meaning \"not wandering\", in\ntheir experiences. This inspiration, too, is\nfrom God. When God wanted His word to be\njiven to mankind He \"breathed into\" the\nsacred writers the inerrancy that today we\ncall the Bible. The historic position of the\nchurch is that the Bible was literally In-\nipired by God.\nD. W., Castlegar\u2014About how many are employed at the two Kaiser aluminum operations near Spokane?\nAbout 4500, of whom 3000 work at tho\nrolling mill and 1500 at the reduction plant\nQ. D., Moyie\u2014What are the five largest\nUnited States colleges in numbers enrolled?\nUniversity of California (all seven campuses) leads with 35,273. Others in order\nare: New York University, 33,447; State University of New York (all 22 campuses), 30,-\n578; University of Minnesota (two campuses), 28,195; City College of New York,\n25,177.\nH. R,, Nelson\u2014Why do we use the expression \"red tape\"?\nThe term originated in England in the\ndays before modern filing cabinets. It was\nthen the custom to store records and documents in bundles tied with red tape. Naturally the chore of locating past records with\nsuch a method was a laborious one, and\neasily gave rise to the impatient comment:\n\"tied up in red tape.\" Shortly it had become\npopular in describing any petty and delaying\nroutine or formality.\nExplains Unions'\nPolicy on\nImmigration\nSOUTHPORT, England (Reu-\nters>\u2014Mrs, Emily Ross of the\nTrades and Labor Congress of\nCanada explained to British trade\nunion leaders here Tuesday why\nCanadian unions oppose unrestricted immigration.\nMrs. Ross,-58, from Edmonton,\nherself emigrated to Canada frona\nYorkshire 35 years ago.\nMrs. Ross, international representative of the 1,000.000-strong\nUnited Garmept Workers of America, said: \"Some of you may think\nthat Canada is a place where\nworkers from Britain and other\ncountries should go.\n\"We of the Trades and Labor\nCongress of Canada insist that\nCanada must follow a policy of\nvery select Immigration.\n\"We cannot justify the en-\ncouragement of new emigrants to\ncome to Canada when there are\nno jobs or opportunities of employment to offer them,\n\"Please do not misunderstand\nme. We in Canada believe that we\nneed a larger population, but we\ncannot accept the proposition that\nimmigration should be continued\non a wide-open basis when jobs\nare not available for such new.\ncomers.\"\nExplaining Canada's system of\nfederal and provincial governments, Mrs. Ross said that unemployment creates problems for\nCanada which apparently could\nnot develop in Britain.\nMilk Contains\nGamma Globulin\nLAKE LOUISE. Alta. (CP) \u2014 A\nnoted scientist told the National\nDaity Council Monday lt had been\nfound that milk 1\u00bb one of the\ngreatest containers of gamma globulin, an antibody against disease.\nSpeaking to the Council's annual\nmeeting, Dr. W. E. Petersen of the\ninstitute of agriculture; University\nof Minnesota, said that by drinking\na quart of milk a day from vaccinated cows he had built up ln\nhimself in four days sufficient\nantibodies to resist certain dlsr\neases. \u2022\nBy injecting a cow with disease\norganisms such as diphtheria, salmonella and staphylococci, he Said\nthe resulting milk produced antibodies against those diseases in\nthe human body.\nVote More Power for\nBritish Union Leaders\nThe Feverish Pace\n(Halifax Chronicle-Herald)\nWe save time and labor by all our modem devices\u2014and then we proceed to fill up\nthe time so saved by plunging into a feverish whirlpool of other activities, so that the\nleisure which we ought to have disappears.\nWe can do so many things faster and more\neasily that speed and ease become the key\nwords of our lives.\nWe don't read books and magazines; we\nread digests. We don't walk; we go in the\ncar. We don't plod behind a team of horses;\nwe drive a tractor. The whole pattern is of\none piece, typified by speed in place of leisure, the pavement in place of the good\nearth.\nA certain sense of achievement involved\nin overcoming difficulty'breeds a mental,\nemolional and spiritual health which is sadly\nlacking in these days of easy accomplishment, and can only be restored on the land\nand close to Nature.\nGraveyard Lore\nFrom Napier Moore'i Scratch Pad\nPublication of an epitaph in this column\nproduced an international correspondence\nwhich has lasted 18 months. Now we have\nbeen sent a book, \"Stories on Stone\", by\nCharles L. Wallis, associate professor of\nEnglish at Keuka College in New York\nState. It contains 250 pages of authentic\nAmerican epitaphs commemorating deaths\nbf statesmen, eccentrics, colorful characters\nand prize cows. For those who are fascinated\nby graveyard lore, it is a rich store.\nOne of the briefest and most pungent\ninscriptions is:\nHe Called\nBill Smith\nA Liar.\nAnd we, rather liked this one:\nHere lies Jane Smith, wife of Thomas\nSmith, marble cutter. This monument was\nerected by her husband as a tribute *o her\nmemory and a specimen of his work. Monuments of the same style 350 dollars.\nArrest 2 Wanted\nFor Robbery\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Winnipeg\npolice during the weekend arrested two persons wanted by Regina\npolice in connection with a robbery.\nClara Peepeech, 34, of Grenfell,\nSask., and Novey John Powers, 38,\nof Calgary, will be turned over to\nRegina police.\nForest Fire Said\n\"deliberately Set\"\nWINNIPEG (CP) - A forest\nfire raging out of .control in the\nSandilands forest reserve, 50 miles\nsoutheast of Winnipeg, was \"deliberately set in three or four\nplaces,\" provincial forestry officials said Tuesday.\nThe fire, wrjich broke out Sunday afternoon, forced the closing\nof the new Trans-Canada Highway\nthrough the area.\nOne official said it was \"extremely difficult\" to trace the in-\ncendiarist. but proof that the fire\nwas deliberately set was uncov\nered.\nTwo other fires are burning out\nof control in the province. The\nworst is at Sandh River, about 15\nmiles west of.Bissett on the east\nshore of Lake Winnipeg. The fire\nwas reported more than five miles\nlong and about a mile wide.\nStrong winds Monday prevented\ngovernment planes from dropping\nsupplies to 100 men battling the\nblaze.\nAnother fire is out of control on\nthe east shore of Lake Winnipeg\nabout 75 miles north of Winnipeg.\nDetective To |\nEscort Suspect\nFrom Saskatoon\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A detective escort was to leave here today for Saskatoon to return with\nthe second man charged with last\nWednesday's $8,000 holdup here of\na branch of the Bank of Nova Scotia.\nSaskatoon police Sunday arrested Claude La Vlctolre, 28, five\nminutes after being notified by\nVancouver police he was wanted\non the bank robbery charge.\nAnglicans Agree\nTo Primafial\nSee Hear Ottawa\nMotorists! Slow\nFor School Zones\nflew Floods Sweep East India;\nFirst Red Cross Aid Arrives\nIt's Been Said\nThere is not, in my opinion, anything\nmore mysterious in nature than this instinct\nin animals, which thus rise above reason,\nand yet fall infinitely short of it.\u2014Joseph\nAddison.\nTelling, Tkem\n(Hamilton Spectator)\nArchitects predfet that the home of the\nfuture will be mounted on a pivot and rotated by the simple pressure of a button to\nmake the best of sun and shade, and already\nyou can hear the exasperated father yelling:\n\"I'm telling you kids for the last time: Quit\nturning the house around!\"\nYour Horoscope\nFOR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6: By\nyour own intense industry and constant efforts, you will win promotion and greatly\nimprove your position. If you are young\nand unwed, a happy romance is likely. Today's child may be well-balanced, intellectual, very loyal and true, and also a hard\nworker.\nFOR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7: In\nIhe months ahead you should gain directly\nor indirectly through a stranger in some\nnew business, but better be cautious in property dealings. Look for a very practical individual in today's child, one who will have\nexcellent financial sense.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n'\u00ab\u25a0*      By Jimmy Ha(lo\nAtlTUE PICTURES LENZO\nTHE G.MER4 BUS TAKES OF\nLITTLE KIDS SEEM TO BE\nT4KEM FROM THE WRONG\nEMD OF ,4 TELESCOPE-\nToday's Bible\nThought\nThey ought always to pray and\nnot to faint.\u2014Luke 18fl.\nFaith  is a  form  of courage.  If\nwe are on God's side we may be\nassured all will come out right.\nGiving  diligence to  keep the\nunity of the Spirit In the  bond\nof peace.\u2014Eph. 4:3.\nGjwL list\nNEW DELHI (API\u2014New floods\nswept areas of eastern India Tuesday as the International Red Cross\nsped a first shipment of 20 tons\nof relief supplies here by plane.\nIndian Red Cross officials estimate 25,000,000 persons have been\nmade homeless in east India and\neast and west Pakistan, where the\nheavy monsoon rains have coincided with the annual rise resulting from the melting of Himilayan\nsnows.\nBecause the river levels rose\nslowly, most villagers had time to\nflee to higher ground, and there\nhas been only a few deaths from\ndrowning.\nIn Geneva, Switzerland, Monday\na Dutch offfcial of the Red Cross\nreported after a 16-day flying survey over the flood area that more\nthan 28,000 villages were wrecked\nand the homes of 45,000,000 persons had been destroyed or damaged.\nHe said Red Cross societies have\ncontributed relief supplies valued\nat $250,000, but need at least $20,-\n000,000 worth to meet essential\nneeds.\nAt Toronto the Canadian Red\nCross announced allocation of\n$35,000 to buy relief supplies for\nIndia and Pakistan,\nThe donation is to buy Canadian-produced drugs and antibio\ntics\u2014$25,000 worth for India and\n$10,000 for Pakistan\u2014which will\nbe flown to the sub-continent.\nBy DAVE OANCIA\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Establish*\nment of the fixed primatial see \"in\nthe vicinity of Ottawa\" was almost unanimously approved by\nthe general synod of the Anglican\nChurch of Canada Monday night\nBoth houses of the synod approved recommendations made by\nthe house of bishops following a\ndiscussion of almost two hours in\njoint session.\nThe resolution adopted provides\nfor establishment of a special com\nmission on the primacy to study\nthe upper house recommendations,\nand to consult with diocesan and\nprovincial authorities to Imple\nment the pUn. The commission\nwill be asked to report to the executive council for its information\nand to the next meeting of the\ngeneral synod for action.\nThe proposed plan provldei\nfor creation of a new diocese,\nmajor reorganization of tome\nof the existing diocese* and\nerection of a new ecclesiastical\nprovince \"In the devofoplnfl\nnorthland.\" \"In addition to the\nnew diocese, the new province\nwould Include present dioceses\nof the Arctic. Moosonec, Cec-\nwatln and Yukon, over which\n- the primate would preside as\nmetropolitan.\"\nSOUTHPORT, England (Reuters)\u2014Delegates representing 8,-\n000,000 British workers voted\nafter a bitter debate Tuesday in\nfavor of giving union leaders\ngreater powers to intervene in\nindustrial disputes.\nA move to have the plan sent\nback to the general' council of the\nTrades Union Congress for further\nconsideration was defeated by 4,-\n842,000 votes to 3,039,000.\nThis represented a major success in the campaign of TUC leaders to ease Britain's industrial unrest.\nThe 35 members of the general\ncouncil had appealed to 980 delegates from 183 unions for more\npower to deal with strikes, and\nhad asked the 87th annual congress to alter the constitution to\nenable it to intervene in Industrial disputes before negotiations\nhave broken down In deadlock.\nThe TUC chiefs made their appeal in a bid to avoid unemployment and wage losses in future\nstrikes by workers not directly\ninvolved.\nTheir move followed this year's\nwave of strikes in the docks, railroads and coal mines, all of which\ncaused unemployment and losses\nin wages among workers outside\nthe disputes.\nSkeena Indians\nTo Protest\nGov't Liquor Laws\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C. (CP)-\nIndians of the Skeena river district will file a protest to the attorney -general's department\nagainst the \"unfairness\" of government liquor laws.\nHarold Sinclair of Kitwanga village former executive member of\nthe Native Brotherhood and\nspokesman for the Skeena natives,\ncharged the liquor law was a\ndouble-crossing trap for Indians.\"\nIndians in British Columbia are\nallowed to drink in beer parlors\nbut are prohibited by the Indian\nAct from having liquor in their\npossession.\nMr. Sinclair said because an Indian can not buy bottled beer to\ntake home with him, \"he sits and\nconsumes as much as he can in a\nbeer parolr and is then picked up\noutside for being drunk.\"\nTHE BAY HAS IT!\nNEWPIAYTEK*\nUGHT \"WEIGHT fflHQLE OF FABRIttW\/\nAmazEngr new girdle material f\nA woman don't make a fool of\n\u25a0 man. She only gives him the\n.desire to develop his natural\ntalent\nTo Acf Quickly\nOn Liquor Laws\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Premier\nCampbell indicated Tuesday that\nIhe report of a royal commission\nrecommending broad changes in\nManitoba's liquor laws would receive speedy handling by his government. '\nThe partial report, received Friday night from a five - member\ncommission headed by former\nPremier John Bracken, recommended legislation to permit the\noperation of cocktail rooms and\nthe sale of beer and wine in high-\nstandard restaurants where approved by local option votes.\nShortly before entering a cabinet meeting, Mr. Campbell said\nthe government would not wait\nfor the commission's full report\nbefore taking action on the recommendations. '\nNEW COMMANDER\nOTTAWA (CP.-Brig. Arthur E.\nWrinch, 46, of Ottawa will take\ncommand of the 1st Canadian Infantry Brigade when it returns to\nCanada from Germany this autumn, army headquarters announced. Headqaurters of the brigade\nin Canada will be Edmonton. A\nnative of Hazelton, B.C., Brig\nWrinch was a signals officer during the Second World War and\nbecome director of signals at head\nquarters in 1946. He later served\non the Canadian Army staff in\nWashington and as deputy quartermaster-general. *\nCooler f Splrfc-xesistartt! Easy-on-and-ofi?!\n\"Open-pore\" Fabricon is a combination\nof absorbent, downy-soft cotton and\nfigure-slimming latex. Weighp only\nounces. Not a none, stitch or seara\nanywher^! Moves, gives, breathes\nwith your body! Washes\nand dries in minutes! *r\\VK\nAll sizes ... in petal pink.        \/\\ yO\n\u2022Rig. Trade Mark -\nSTORE NAME AND ADDRESS\nPlease send  f       )  Playtex Light Weight\nGirdles at 4.95 each.\nExtra Small      Small      Medium      Large\nExtra Largo\nName -...._. ~......\nAddress\t\n :. '    yvyy   ' \u25a0   \u2022' . .\u25a0\u25a0\nHi-Cuts\n\u2022 9\" Brown Moccasin Tip\no Knife Pocket   -\n\u2022 Rubber Heel\n\u2022 Gro Cord Sole\nYOUTHS'  SIZES.\n$7.95\nBOYS' SIZES.\n$8.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.     '\nLeaden In Footfashlon\nESTABLISHED 1902\n(Dual \"Up, UMl\n632\nSIZES\n2-10\ntUSE GAY REMNANT8I\nUse colorful remnants \u2014 for a\nool summer dress; school-time\nersion with little puff sleeves,\new-easy and So-o-o pretty; with\nmbroidery, ruffle eyelet trim!\nPattern 632: Children's sizes 2,\n4. 6. 8, 10. Tissue pattern, transfers, directions. State size.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew phart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY - FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NPMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St, W,\nToronto Ont\nMotorists! Slow\nFor School Zones\nWatch for Our\nWeekond Specials\nMEAT MARKET \u2014 Phone 832\nSTOMACH UPSET?\nFor FAST Relief take\nPHILLIPS'\nMILK OF MAGNESIA\n...And fe\/nemSe\/- i&\nflow Doing Fnatur.d At Your Drug Sign\nMR. AND MRS. RODGER NELSON '\n\u2014Don Elder photo.\nSt PauVs Setting for\nNelson-Miller Vows\nA double-ring candle light ceremony was performed in St. Palil's\nUnited Church recently when Jacqueline Dawn Miller exchanged\nvows with Rodger Alexander Carl\nNelson of Vancouver. Rev. G. W.\nPayne officiated.\nThe bride is the daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. J. A, Moore of Nelson, and the groom is the son\nof Mr.- and Mrs. C. A. Nelson of\nStillwater, B. C.\nGiven In marriage by her stepfather, .the bride entered the\nchurch to the strains of Lohengrin's Wedding March. Her gown\nof white shimmering Cafiri was\nballerina-length with a bouffant\nskirt and scoop neckline, complimented by a chapel veil held ln\nplace by a^coronet of lace and\nseed pearls. She wore a filigree\nsilver pendant and earrings, gift\nof the groom and carried a qres-\ncent-shaped bouquet of sprayed\nShasta daisies in pastel shades.\nPRETTY DUO\nMiss Ann Davis, maid of honor,\nchose a bouffant gown of pale organdie over taffeta, and her headdress was of chenille dotted net,\nJin tone with her gown. Miss Linda\nReeves of Vancouver, bridesmaid\nand classmate of the bride, chose\na bouffant gown of mauve nylon\nOrganza over accordion pleated\npink net. She wore a headdress of\npink chenille dotted net. Both attendants carried Colonial bouquets\ncorresponding ' with the bride's\nbouquet.\nThe groom was attended by Mr.\nRobert Hurley of Britannia Beach,\nB. C. During the signing of the\nregister, Mr. Gerry Pijckering of\nNelson sang \"I Love Thee\", accomt\npanied on the organ by Mrs. T.J.S.\nFerguson. J\nThe ushers were Mr. James Todd\nof Nelson and Mr. Peter Stonier,\nclassmate of the groom, of Vancouver.\nA reception was held in St.\nPaul's hall. A thuee-tier wedding\ncake, embedded in tulle, was\nflanked by pink and white tapers\nin silver holders and pink and\nwhjte sweetpeas centred the bridal table. The table was covered\nwith a hand-made lace cloth,\nPresiding at the urns were Mrs.\nW. W. Laishley and Mrs. Guy Davis, Mrs. J. G. Bennett, life-long\nfriend of the bride, cut the wedding cake. Serviteurs were Miss\nJane Bennett, Miss Judy Maglio,-\nMiss June Kelly,..Mrs. C. Vere\nand Miss Joanne Hopwood. .\nA toast to the bride was proposed by Mr. John A. Ferguson,\nand a toast t,o the bridesmaid was\nmade by the best man, and responded to by Mr_ Todd. Several\ntelegrams from well - wishing\nfriends were read.\nThe bride chose for her going-\naway outfit, a navy blue taffeta\ndress with princess linest and a\nbolero'jacket, accented by a pink\nSatin collar and cuffs, and a pink\nsatin cloche hat and accessories.\nShe wore a corsage of pink glad-\niola.\nAfter a short honeymoon trip\nthrough the United States, the\ncouple will make their home in\nVancouver where ths groom will\nenter his final year in medicine\nat U.B.C., and the bride, a graduate of U.B.C., school of nursing,\nwill be on the staff of the Vancouver General Hospital.\nOut-of-town guests included Mr.\nC. A. Nelson of' Stillwater, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Hurley of Britannia\nBeach, Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Miller\nof Grand Forks, Mr. and Mrs.\nDominic Serres of Harrop, Miss\nNancy Jones of Grand Forks, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. W. Reeves and daughter Linda of Vancouver, Mr. Robert Hurley of Britannia Beach and\nMr. Peter Stonier of Vancouver.\nPNE o Success\nDespite Drop\nIn Attendance\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Pacific\nNational Exhibition officials Tues\nday termed the 1955 edition of\nVancouver's big fair an .outstand'\ning success despite a sharp drop\nin attendance figures.\nA total of 750,792'persons clicked through the turnstiles during\nthe ll-day fair which wound up\nMonday night. The attendance\nreprqsented a drop of 120,628 from\nlast year's all-time high of 871,420.\n\"We had the best fair in history,\" said PNE general manager\nV. Ben Williams. \"This year's fair\nhad more exhibitors,- more exhibits, more free shows and a big\nincome. Everyone is happy.\"\nLA Plans Bake\nSale October 8\nKASLO\u2014The September meeting of the Kaslo Victorian Hospital Ladies' Auxiliary was held\nat the home di the president, Mrs.\nG. Browell.\nDishes purchased for the hospital were on display and much\nadmired. Plans were completed\nfor a bake sale to be held on\nOctober 8.\nAssisting the hostess ln serving\ntea were Mrs. N. S. Miller and\nMiss M. MacDonald as co-hostesses.\nSuccessful Sunday\nSchool Picnic Held\nAINSWORTH \u2014 A Sunday\nchopl picnic was held on the\ngrounds of the R. Hanker) home.\nThe parents of the children were\nalso invited. After games, lunch\nwas served. Mrs. S. McLellan, Mrs.\nJ. Sinclair, and Mrs. Lane, Sunday school, teachers, were in\ncharge.\n\u2122 MILDEST BEST-TASTING a**\u2122\nNelson Social\nDr. H. T. Lowe, medical health\nofficer and R. G. Scott, sanitary\nInspector, are in Edmonton where\nthey are attending the Canadian\nPublic Health Association conven\ntion for a week.\ni \u25a0.   \u00bb   \u2022\nMiss Myta McDMivray is spending a week with her parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. J. McGilllvray at Riondel before leaving fpr Spokane\nwhere, she will attend Gonzaga\nUniversity.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. 3.. W. Longworth, of Spokane, was the house guest of Mrs,\nK. P. Coates, Rosemont, for the La*\nbor Day ^eekend.\n...\nPatrick Wilcox, Stanley Street,\nhas returned frbm Vernon where\nhe spent the Summer. He will attend St. Francis Xavier, Antigon-\nisTi. Nova Scotia this Fall.\n...\nMiss Dorothy Smith, 510 Kokanee Ayertue, is holidaying in the\nUnited States visiting relatives\nand friends.\n...\nMiss Peggy Shaughnessy, An-\nnable Block, ls in Kaslo where\nshe will teach school this term.\n...\nMiss Leona Boss, 380 Baker\nStreet, has returned from a two-\nweek vacation at Dawson Creek\nand Edmonton where she visited\nrelatives and friends.\n.   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. P. Pryslazfiluk and\ndaughter have returned home after visiting friends and relatives in\nBrandon, Winnipeg and Northern\nManitoba points. They also visited\nYellowstone National Park.\n...\nMrs. Frederick Niven, Baker\nStreet, is holidaying at Calgary,\nBanff and the Windermere.\n...\nMiss Molly Amesen will leave\ntoday for Montreal where she will\nsail for Liverpool, England. She\nwill spend a year ln England. Mrs.\nGilbert Arnesen and Miss Gladys\nEwing will accompany her to\nMontreal by car.\nam\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1955\u20145\nOld-Time Phoenix\nTeacher Dies at 77\nGRAND FORKS - Funeral will\nbe held today in Vancouver for\ndeorge Duncan Turner, 77, retired\nmanufacturer's representative and\none-time school ^teacher at Phoe\nnix, who died In North Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital.\nBorn in Minneapolis, he moved\nto New Westminster in 1884. taught\nschool in Aldergrove and then be\ncame apprentice telegrapher with\nthe CNR at Kamloops in 1900.\nLater he taught school in the then-\nflourishing mining twon of Phoenix, and In 1909 moved to Vancouver where he sold real estate\nuntil he was appointed manufac\nhirers' representative for Prairie\nprovlncies ln 1915. He retired in\n1949.\nMUST PROMOTE\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nLAKE LOUISE, Alta. (CP) \u2014\nJustice Minister Garson mildly\nchided the Natoinal Dairy Council\nof Canada today because milk is\noutsold constantly by other beverages. He said advertisements \"impress upon us the claims of such\nproducts as soft drinks and beer in\na manner we cannot escape.\"\n\"By contrast, only modest efforts are made to popularize an Infinitely better product milk.\"\nMr. Garson told the council's annual meeting he is \"struck\" by the\n$300,000 the council spends annually to'promote milk consumption,\ncompared with \"the sum of $1,600,-\n000 recently mentioned in a combines report as the advertising expenditure for one year of a single\nbrewing concern.\"\nThe future of the dairy industry,\nhe said, depends on Its ability to\ncompete with other foodstuffs that\nare in most cases inferior to dairy\nproducts.\nClub Plans Crib,\nWhist Games\nAINSWORTH \u2014 Meeting of the\nAinsworth Community Club was\nwell attended. A committee ls to\nbe appointed each month for the\nvarious activities. The cribbage\nand whist \"games are to start in\nOctober, also children's games\nevery week.\nFalse Teeth Often\nHave a Certain Odor!\n^Soalt your platei\nIn Polident daily   *\nto avoid \"Denture Breath\"\nPol(dent ls the specially designed\ncleanser that keeps false teeth\u2014aud\nbreath\u2014clean and fresh always.\nFollow these simple rules.\n1. Never uit a bruih on thimt Your\n; dental plates are much softer than\nI natural teeth. Brushing wears down\n1 fitting ridges so they get loose.\nI 2. Never uio soap or toothpatte I They\nI can leave film which collects bac-\n| teria and food particles, a major\ncause of offensive \"Denture Breath.\"\n3.' Uio a eoakitig.type cloanior made for\n(alio toolh only ... Polident! Polident is\nthe denture cleanser recommended\nby more dentists than any other.\nNo brushing, no handling of soapy\nplates that can slip ahd break. Polident gets where a brush can't reach.\nBest of all, Polident. always leaves\nfalse teeth odor free.Get the world's\nlargest selling denture cleanser,\nPolident, at your drug counter.\n. D-H3\nGufhrie-Bland Nuptials\nNewlyweds Off to British Isles\nSOUTH SLOCAN \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. David Alan Guthrie, popular\nyoung UBC graduates who were\nmarried recently in St. Matthew's\nAnglican Church here, are on their\nway to the British Isles, where the\ngroom will take post graduate\nstudies for two years under an\nAthlone fellowship.\nThe bride is the former Maureen\nJoyce Bland, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. C. H. Bland, and the groom\nls the son of Mr. W. Guthrie and\nthe late Mrs. Guthrie.\nThe church' was decorated with\nwhite gladiolus and carnations and\ncandle light cast a soft, glow for\nthe service, conducted by Rev.\nCanon W. J. Silverwood.\nThe bride's exquisite cahill\ngown, hooped and with the skirt\nmisting to floor-length In a cloud\nof white, was sprinkled with dia-\nmente centred daisy medallions.\nThe gown featured a tucked basque satin bodice, buttoned down\nthe back, and a Peter Pan collar.\nA fingertip veil flowed from her\ntiny cap of daisies. She wore her\ngreat grandmother's gold filigre\nbrooch, and In her bouquet were\nTalisman roses and daisies.\nMiss Juanita Roberts and Miss\nJoan Mulloy, the bridesmaids,\nwere In matching floor-length\ngowns of crystal sheer in coral and\nblue respectively, and matching\nheaddresses and gloves, and carried bouquet^ of blue and yellow carnations. \"Lois Elsdon, the\nthree-year-old flower .girl, was\nsweet in a floor-length yellow net\ndress, a headdress of yellow with\ntiny pearls and shoes and gloves\nto match. She held a nosegay of\npink and blue carnations.\nMr. Robert C. Bland of Edmon\nton, the bride's brother, was best\nman, and Mr. Robert Eldsdon and\nMr. Ray Sargeant ushered.\nThe wedding music was played\non the organ by Miss Barbara Lea,\nand soloist was Miss Carol Coventry.\nFor her daughter's wedding Mrs.\nBland had selected a turquoise\nblue ensemble with pink accessories, and her corsage was of pink\ncarnations.\nBRIDAL ARCH\nThe reception took place ln the\nNo. 3 West Kootenay Power and\nLight Company hall, decorated in\npink ai)d white, with the words\n\"Good Luck Joyce and Dave\" ln\nbig lettering at one end. A white\narch centred by a bell formed a\nbackground for the bride's table,\nwhich was covered with a fine\ncutwork cloth and centred hy\nthree-tier cake, and appointed\nwith pink and white carnations in\nsilver epergne and white candles\nin silver holders.\nMr. L. Hammond was master ot\nceremonies, and Mrs. R. Mulloy\nlooked after the guest book. Mr.\nW. G. Elsdon proposed the toast to\nthe bride, and the groom gave a\ntoast to the bridesmaids and\nflower girls which was responded\nto by Jhe best man. Mr. Yuel Guthrie proposed a toast to the bride's\nparents, and response was given\nby Canon Silverwood. The best\nman read several congratulatory\ntelegrams.\nMrs. G. Hall, Mrs. D. Bell, Mrs.\nY. Guthrie and Mrs. W. Rogers\npoured. Others assisting were Mrs,\nW. G. Elsdon, Mr. and Mrs. P. O.\nBird. Mrs. Hammond. Miss Leslie\nHammond. Mrs. T. Wallach, Mrs.\nB. Marshall, Miss Maureen' Kennedy,' Miss Joyce Stewart, Miss\nTeresa Marshall, Miss Noralee\nMarshall, Miss Mary Guthrie, Mrs.\nR. Johnstone, Miss Diane. Davis\nand Miss Margot Wadeson.\nBefore leavjng on their honeymoon trip, the bride presented her\nbouquet to her grandmother, Mrs.\nJ. F. Croll. The bride chose for\ntravelling a navy blue tailored\nsuit, a navy hat and red accessories, with which she wore a corsage of red carnations.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR\u2014Charles Wilson visited Nelson to attend the funeral\nof CIrlo Lavagetti, an old-timer\nof Sirdar. He had been a resident\nof Mount St. Francis for a few\nmonths.\nMr. and Mrs. Haynes and family, who spent their vacation with\nMr. and Mrs. R. Heap, have returned, to San Francisco.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Schnob entertained at a party of friends to\ncelebrate their wedding anniversary.\nkr. and Mrs. Mason of Kimberley, and Mr.'and'Mrs. Ed Mason were weekend' visitors to\nfriends in Sirdar.\nMr. and Mrs. Dom Pascuzzo\nwere visitors to relatives in Kimberley.\nMR, AND  MR8. DAVID  GUTHRIE\nEAST KOOTENAY\nLABOR GROUPS\nCERTIFIED\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Certification\nas employees' bargaining agent\nhas been granted by the Labor Relations Board to International\nWoodworkers of America, Local\n1-405 for employees of the Cranbrook Sash and Door Company\nLtd. In its sawmill at Mineral\nLake and its associated logging\ncamps in Lamb Creek area. IWA\nlocal office received its notification last week. Both were formerly under certification of\nWoodworkers Industrial Union\nof Canada. IWA had already been\ncertified for employees of the\ncompany's subsidiary Columbia\nContracting Company \u00bboperations\nIn 'Canal Flat and the Upper\nKootenay area.\nLabor Relations Board bulletin\nfor last week also reports issuing\nof certification to the IWA for\nemployees of Colin Cameron\nwhich covers about 23 men working at the Cameron sawmill In\nWasa area, and at the supplying\nlogging camps in the Ram Creek\nsection of the Public Working\nCircle east of Wasa.\nAlso Included in the list of certifications in East Kootenay was\nKimberley and District Trades\nand General Workers Union, Local 935, International Union of\nMine Mill and Smelter Workers\nas agents for employees of the\nplant of Enterprise Dairy at Kimberley operated by Walter Pighin.\nCertified as bargaining agent\nfor the graduate nurse employees\nof Lady Elizabeth Bruce-Hospital\nat Invermere is the Registered\nNurses' Association of British Columbia, according to the week's\nsummary.\nSCOTTISH UNIVERSITY\nThe oldest university ln Scotland was founded at St. Andrew's\nin the 15th century.\nTownsend Says\n\"Waif and See\"\n. LONDON (AP) \u2014 \"Wait and\nsee\" was the cryptic reply from\nGroup Capt. Peter Townsend on\nMonday night to questions about\nhimself and Princess Margaret.\nThe 40-year-old RAF hero Was\nthe centre of attention at a cock\ntail party at the Belgian embassy\nbecause of long-standing reports\nlinking him romantically with the\n25-year-old sister of Queen Elizabeth.\nTownsend flew here from Brussels where he fs British air at\ntache for the opening of the Farnborough air Ehow.\nTownsend's replies to questions\nby reporters did nothing to dispel or confirm rumors.\n\"Do you expect any startling developments during your visit?\" he\nwas asked.\n\"I hope to have a quiet three\ndays in England,\" said Townsend.\n\"I do not think there will be any\nstartling developments as far as\nI am concerned.\"\nPrincess Margaret fs vacation\ning, at Balmoral Castle in Scotland.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH\u2014Miss D. Hawes,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Hawes\nis attending business college In\nTrail.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Sherraden have\nas their guests Mr. Sherradin's\nniece and husband, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Manson of JDetroit.\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nButcherteria\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nBalance 18 Months\nby. 3Lojuacl WhssdsA.\nLOVELY   TV   COVER\nRoses in color\u2014sparkle on this\nTV cover! They're solid crochet,\nstanding out in life-like form\nagainst a lovely background.\nPattern 808: Color-crochet Rose\nTV cover in 3-D! Larger, 26 Inches in No. 30 mercerized cotton;\nsmaller, using No. 50.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS 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 ln\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 ln it\nLOOK YOUR VERY BEST NOW\nOPEN  A  CHARGE  ACCOUNT\nTODAY\nJo&huHL J'imL\n696  BAKER  8T.\nPHONE 627\nATTENTION!\nSchool Sweaters, Skirts,\nStrides, etc.\ncan\" be   kept   in   perfect\ncondition  economically at\nEMPIRE\nDry Cleaners\nBaker Phone 288\n321\nHIGHEST   QUALITY .\nLOWEST  PRICES\nOld-time'eatin'cheese\"!\nSEALED IN SPECIAL\nAlffTIGHT WRAP\n\u2014bo you get that superb\nnatqral flavor as fresh\nB8 if the cheese were cut\nbefore your eyes!\nMILD (as most folks like\nit). Look for the blue\nlabel.\nMEDIUM (with a touch of\nsharpness). Look forthe\nsilver label.\nOID (sharp and nippy).\nLook for the gold label.\nIn 8-oz. and 13-oz.\nwedges.\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0        .\u25a0       \u2014\"\u25a0 \u2014~  \u2022\u25a0\u2014-\u2014\u2014\"*< \u25a0  \u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0 .\u25a0' \"   \u2014\u20147\u2014\u2014:\u2014' \u2014! r, ;\u2014\u2014 . -. .'\u25a0-'\u25a0\u2014\u2014 .,  ... .   ..    ,\u25a0 \u25a0    ffl,fjjp\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1953\n1\ni ''::\"-.    \u25a0 \"'V \u25a0     yyy \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0':\u25a0 ;\"y    \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'.'        .\"   fyy- .   \u25a0 ;' . .\\: ':':y::'y\/. '\"'\u25a0\u25a0\/ .'W;;'\nRICCINC DECORATOR S_Members of England's\nGirls' Nautical Training Corps climb rigging of training ship\nFoudroyant at  Portsmouth during review for  commandant.\nYOUTH   PARADE\u2014 Students In carnival costumeo march on streets of Warsaw, Poland, In ceremonies opening World\nTouth Festival, a two-week program of music, literature and athletics, this picture was released by Polish Embassy in Washington.\nWALKING   IN   THE   K R E M L I N - A Russian\nwoman and soldier walk through the Kremlin In Moscow, seat\not Russian government, which has been opened to the .public.\nVETERAN IN BRONZE- Albert Woolson. loa.\nsole survivor of Civil War Union Army, poses In Duluth, Minn.,\nhome with bust ef himself by sculptor Kalervo Kalllo, rear.\nQUEEN   TURNS   SALESLADY \u2014 Bayers rush tho counter as Britain's Queen\nElizabeth sells Items at basaar (or chnrch near Balmoral, Scotland, where royal family worships.\nNEW  COVERNOR-\nWalter A. Gordon, CO, of Berkeley, Cal., the grandson of a\nslave, has been appointed Governor of the Virgin Islands by\nPresident Elsenhower.\n'WALKS' ON WATER-Aleck Womlak. of Not-\ntlngham, England, \"walks\" on Thames River, from Battersea to\nCharing Cross, on kayak-like skis propelled with paddle poles.\nDUKE'S   WELCOME \u2014 Britain's Duke of Kent, right,\non first visit to Riviera, ls greeted at Nice by Consul Charles,\nForestier, left, and Ambassador Sir Glad wyn Jebb.\nRUSSIAN TREAT\u2014 Eira T. Benson, V. S. Secretary of Agriculture, tastes caviar at a\nRussian Embassy reception In Washington for visiting Soviet farm chiefs headed by Vladimir\nMatskevich, left Others are Interpreter Vasla Girliin of State Department, and Mrs. Benson.\nTO    FAR    E AS T-\nRear Admiral Stuart H. Ingcr-\nsoil, of Springfield, Mass.,. former Assistant Chief of Naval\nOperations, will command the\nV. S. 7th Fleet In the Far East.\nORGANIZER \u2014 Benjamin Wllloter, of Brighton, England, demonstrates to Boy Scouts his model church organ which\nplays from music rolls, st a model engineer show in London.\nBERLIN   T O'D AY \u2014 Airlift Monument, right center, In Airlift Square, commemorates\nAllied breaking of Soviet blockade of 1948-49 and shows West Berlin reconstruction sines the war.\n'CHRIST  OF  THE   PEAKS'- Alpine troops\ncarry head of 12-ton \"Christ of the Peaks\" statue to be Installed\non summit of Balmenhorn In Italian Alps.\nWORKINC   MODEL \u2014 Charles Mooney of Columbus, Ohio, demonstrates radio-con-\ntrolled model freighter capable of five knots speed, one of scale craft he has been building 30 years. \\\nmmmmmmm\n 'Vy'y     \" \u25a0'\u25a0   , : ! . \u25a0    \u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0\nSPORTS\n\u25a0 \/' \u25a0  !\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014r '\u2014i 7-\u2014~\nQ^<=f '1\nSenior Women's Strikes and\nSpares Aclion Gels Under Way\nFall season action in the Senior vs Hickman.\nWomen's Bowling League got\nunder way Tuesday night. Six\nmatches will be played each Tuesday night by the senior women's\nleague. Other leagues will start\ntheir fall seasons soon too. Senior\nWomen's draw to Dec. 20 follows:\nSept. 13: 7 p.m. \u2014 Peck vs Sergent, Hickman vs McGinn, Stern\nvs Tilston.\n9 p.m. Byres vs Van Feggltn, Winlaw vs Paterson, Miller vs Jones.\nSept 20: 7 p.m. \u2014 Jones vs Van-\nFegglin, Tilston vs Miller, McGinn\nvs Peck. ,\n9 p.m. Hickman vs ' Paterson,\nStern vs Sergent, Winlaw vs Byres.\nSept. 27: 7 p.m. \u2014 Byres vs Paterson. Van Fegglin vs Stern, Winlaw vs Jones.\n9 p.m. Miller vs Peck, Tilston\nvs Hickman, McGinn vs Sergent.\nOct. 4: 7 p.m. \u2014 McGinn vs Winlaw, Peck vs Tilston, Hickman vs\nSergent.\n9 p.m. Stern vs Jones, Miller vs\nByres, Paterson  vs Van Fegglin.\nOct. 11: 7 p.m. \u2014 Tilston v*\nJones, Byres vs Hickman, Miller\nvs Paterson.\n9 p.m. Sergent vs Winlaw, McGinn vs Van Fegglin, Peck vs\nStern.\nOct, 18. 7 p.m. \u2014 Milles vs McGinn, Winlaw vs Peck, Byres vs\nStern.\n9 p.m. Van Fegglin vs Hickman,\nSergent vs Jones, Tilston vs Paterson.\nOct. 55: 7 p.m. \u2014 Hickman vs\nStern, Paterson vs Sergent, Jones\nvs Peck. ,\n9 p.m. Winlaw vs Sergent, Van\nFegglin vs Miller, Byres vs McGinn.\nNov. 1: 7 p.m. \u2014 Sergent vs\nByres, Miller v\u00ab Winlaw, Tilston\nvs Van Fegglin.\n9 p.m. HcGinn vs Stern, Peck vs\nPatersog. Jones vs Hickman.\nNov. 8: 7 p.m. \u2014 Winlaw vs\nHickman. Stern vs Paterson, Sergent vs Miller,\n9 p.m. Tilston vs Byres, Jones\nVs McGinn, Van Fegglin vs Peck.\nNov. 15: 7 p.m. \u2014 McGinn vs\nTilston, Sergent vs Van Fegglin,\nPeck vs Byres.\n9 p.m. Jones vs Paterson. Winlaw vs Stern, Hickman vs Miller.\nNov. 22: 7 p.m. \u2014 Winlaw vs\nVan Fegglin. Peck vs Hickman,\nMcGinn vs Paterson.\n9 p.m. Stern vs Miller, Tilston\nvs Sergent, Byres vs Jones.\nNov. 29: 7 p.m. \u2014 Tilston vs\nStern. Winlaw vs Paterson, Van\nFegglin vs Byres,\n9 p.m. Peck vs Sergent, Jones\nvs Miller, McGinn vs Hickman.\nDec. 6: 7 p.m. \u2014 Peck vs McGinn, Sergent vs Stern, Paterson\nFRIENDLY\nAMILY.\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor  Bllla,  Fuel,  Repairs, Can,\nor any good  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Ltd.\nSuite 212, Medical Arts Bldg,\nPHQNE  1786\nBOWLING\nEvery Day\n1   P.M.  TO   MIDNIGHT\nPHONE 166\nBOWLADROME\n9 p.m. Jones vs Van Fegglin,\nByres vs Winlaw, Miller vs Tilston.\nDec. 13: 7 p.m. \u2014 Jones vs Winlaw, Hickman vs Tilston, Peck vs\nMiller.\n9 p.m. Byres vs Paterson, Sergent vs McGinn, Stern vs Van\nFegglin.\nDec. 20: 7 p.m, \u2014 Sergent vs\nHickman, Byres vs Miller, Jones\nvs Stern.\n9 p.m. McGinn vs Winlaw, Van\nFegglin vs Paterson, Tilston vs\nPeck.\nSnead Win Cinches\nRyder Cup Berth\nWETHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP)\u2014\nSlamming Sam Snead, competing\nfor a place on the Ryder Cup\nteam, captured the $20,000 insurance city open golf tournament\nwith a 72-hole total of 269, which\nincluded a twp-under-par round of\n69 Monday.\nThe victory not only gave him\nenough points to- clinch a spot on\nhis fifth Ryder Cup team, but the\n$4000 first prize and cheers from\na record golf crowd of 10,000.\nTurner Eying\nOlson Crown\nSYRACUSE, N.Y, (AP) \u2014 Gil\nTurner hopes to paVe the way to\na welterweight title shot with the\nking himself by beating champion\nCarmen Basilio in their 10-round,\nnon-title fight here tonight.\nBut Carmen has far different\nideas. He says he figures that by\nknocking out Turner, lOth-ranked\nmiddleweight, he should become\neligible for a crack at Carl (Bobo)\nOlson's middleweight crown.\nSo tonight's battle at the County\nWar Memorial auditorium should\nbe quite a scrap. Both have a lot\nto gain. Basilio was a 12-to-5 favorite.\nTurner is making a comeback\nafter losing a year ago against\nAl Andrews ln an upset that hurt\nTurner's title chances. Basilio had\ntaken ail 10 rounds from Andrews\na short time before. But Turner\ninsists he wasn't properly trained\nfor the Andrews fight.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Cricket\nresults in Britain today:\nEngland team 329 and 255 for\nseven declared. Commonwealth\nteam 272 and 256. England won by\n56 runs.\nGentlemen 331 and 159 for six\ndeclared, Players 278 and 217 for\neight. Players won by two wickets.\nSouth 431 and 335 for nine declared, North 435 for nine declared and 222, South won by 109\nruns.\nTOP WINNERS in annual Labor Day tournairpt\nat Nelson Golf and Country Club are showi) here.\nAt left, J. G. Allan, president, congratulates Art Donaldson, right, as he presents him with the Ken McBride\nMemorial Trophy. Donaldson, former Trail and Cal\ngary pro, is moving to Kitimat. At right, Miss Joan\nSutcliffe smiles as she accepts women's prize, Kootenay Breweries Trophy, from Mrs. R. H. Dill.\n\u2014Daily News photos.\nWorld Series Starts September 28\nNH.SON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 19S3\u20147\nBig Crowd Anticipated When\nEsks Beard Lions in Their Den\nTabori Clips\n1500-Meter Record\nOSLO (AP)\u2014Hungary's Laszlo\nTabori nosed out Denmark's Gun-\nnar Nielsen Tuesday in a sensational 1500-metr* race in which\nboth clipped a full second off the\nlisted world record of 3:41.8. Each\nwas timed in 3:40.8.\nAt first it was ruled a dead heat\nbut the judges then announced\nthe Hungarian as the winner.\nJohn Landy's 3:41.8 is the recognized world mark for the metric\nmile but Tabori's countryman,\nSandor Iharos, ran a 3:40.8 1500-\nrnetres July 28 In Helsinki,\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The 1955\nWorld Series will start Wednes-\nnesday, Sept.. 28, in-the American\nLeague city, unless a playoff is\nneeded to settle the Junior circuit's four-team race.\nAt a meeting of representatives\nof the contending teams in the offices of baseball commissioner\nFord Frick, plans for the series\nwere decided as well as dates and\nticket prices.\nFive American League clubs-r\nCleveland, Chicago, New York,\nBoston and Detroit\u2014and Brooklyn and Milwaukee from the National League were represented\nat the meeting. Since at least four\nclubs are still in the running for\nthe American League flag, the\nstart of the World Series could not\ndefinitely be set.\nIf a playoff is required the series\nwill start Thursday, Sept. 29. Play\noff arrangements will be made \"by\nthe American League at a meeting to be held in Chicago Sept. 13.\nCOIN   FLIP   DECIDES\nPresent rules provide for a one-\ngame playoff, If two clubs are tied\nat the season's end Sept. 25. A\ncoin will be tossed to fix the site\nof the playoff if two clubs tie.\nIf more than two clubs are tied\nthe coin-tossing would determine\nopponents as well. Games one and\ntwo of the world series will be\nheld in the American League\nchampions' park, three, four and\nfive in Ebbets Field, assuming\nBrooklyn wins in the National\nLeague, six and seven, if necessary, in the American League city.\nIf Brooklyn plays Chicago White\nSox, Friday, Sept. 30, will be an\noff-day for travel. If the Dodgers\ngo against New York Yankees,\nCleveland Indians or Boston Red\nSox, the series will run right\nthrough with no off days.\nMonday and Tuesday, Sept.\nand 27, are available for playoffs.\nIf rain puts off a playoff, the\nstart of the series will be delayed\na day.\nWorld Series tickets will cost\nthe same as last year; box seats\n$10, reserved seats $7, standing\nroom in the grandstand $4, and\nbleachers. $2.\nSeek to Abolish\n\"Athletic Slavery\"\nSOUTHPORT, England (AP) \u2014\nThe Trades Union Congress Monday night unanimously backed a\nplea by Britain's Soccer Player?\nHave a GOOD BUMforyour money\nDEMERARA   \\\\\\\nThis advertisement is nol published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n\"ath-\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Associated Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAB R H Pet.\n475 80 158 .333\n408 79 135 .331\n559 101 177 .317\n491 118 154 .314\n470   75 147 .313\nAshburn, Phla .\nCampanella, Bkn\nKluszewski, Cin\nSnider, Bkn  \t\nFurillo, Bkn \t\nRuns \u2014 Snider 118\nRuns batted in \u2014 Snider 129\nHits \u2014 Kluszewski 177\nDoubles \u2014 Loga, Milwaukee, 33\nTriples \u2014  Bruton,  Milwaukee,\nMays, New York and Long, Pittsburgh, 10\nHome runs \u2014 Kluszewski 44\nStolen bases \u2014 Bruton 22\nPitching \u2014 based on 15 decisions\n\u2014Newcombe, Brooklyn, 20-4, .833\nStrikeouts \u2014 Jones, Chicago, 175\nLeague home runs \u2014 1,141 (record is 1,197 set In 1953)\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiini\nStudents, Help the\nDriver. Keep to\nThe Sidewalks\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii\nLake Swim lo\nStarr This A.M.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nKaline, Det\nSimpson, KCy  .. \u2022 328   34 104 .317\nPower KCy     533   78 167 .313\nSmith, Cle     548 108 170 .312\nKuenn, Det     548   92 168 .307\nRuns \u2014 Mantle, New York, 114\nRuns batted in \u2014 Jensen, Boston\n106\nHits \u2014 Kaline 184\nDoubles \u2014 Kuenn 34\nHome runs \u2014 Mantle 37\nStolen bases \u2014 Rivera, Chicago\nPitching based on 13 decisions-\nByrne, New York, 14-4, .778\nStrikeouts \u2014 Score, Cleveland,\n220-\nLeague home runs \u2014 885 (record Is 973 set In 1950).\nBy  GEORGE   HANC0CK8\nCanadian Prei* 8taff Writer\nNIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ont.\n(CP)\u2014Thirty-five cheering swimmers were told Tuesday night\ntheir once-postponed marathon\nswim across Lake Ontario will\nstart early this morning.\nChairman Harry E. Price of\nthe Canadian National Exhibition\nsports committee said abating\n529 113 184 .348! winds will definitely make it pos^\nsible to start the 32-mile swim. It\nwas scheduled to go at 3 a.m.-but\nPrice indicated it may be delayed\nan hour.\nHe made the announcement\nafter consultation with Fred Turn-\nbull, chief meteorologist with the\ntransport department's weather\nstation in Toronto, and president\nWilliam A. Harris of the CNE.\nSaskatoon to\nSenior Women's\nFastball Finals\nSASKATOON (CP) \u2014 Saska\ntoon Ramblers powered their way\ninto the western Canadian senior\nwomen's softball final Monday\nwhipping Vancouver Kerrys 12-3\nand 12-0 for a clean sweep in the\nbest-of-three series. Ramblers now\ngo to Winnipeg where the best-of-\nfive western final opens Wednesday night.\nUnion  for liberation from\nletic slavery.\"\nThe TUC, which represents 8,-\n000,000 workers, passed a resolution calling for a conference of\nmanagement and players to consider arrangements \"for a complete and comprehensive new\ndeal\" for the athletes.\n\"I stand before you as a representative of the last bondaged\nmen in Britain \u2014 the professional footballers,\" said Jimmy Guthrie, a veteran player and ^pokes-\nman for the union.\n\"We seek your help to smash a\nsystem in which, in this year of\n1955, human beings are bqught\nand sold like cattle \u2014 a system\nwhich, as in feudal times, ties men\nto one master, or if they rebel,\nstops them from getting a new\njob.\n\"The conditions of the professional footballer's employment\nare akin to slavery and are a\nsmirch on the name of British\ndemocracy.*'\n(fcP)\n874\nHunters Bag\n874 Blue Grouse\nCAMPBELL RIVER. B.C.\n\u2014 Some 386 hunters bagge\nblue grouse during the three-day\nLabor Day weekend following opening of the hunting season.Saturday.\nOnly a few hunters bagged their\nlimit of eight birds.\nGame Inspector George Stevenson said it was the first time in 21\nyears that there were no violations\nof game regulations and no accidents during the season's opening.\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON . (AP) \u2014 Results   of\nrugby matches played in the United Kingdom today:\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nLancashire Cup Second Round\nBarrow 24 Workington 10\nRochdale 12 Warrington 26\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiimii\nWants a Bell\nRocky Can'Hear\n. NORTH ADAMS, Mass.\n(AP) \u2014 Manager Charley\nJoRnston said Tuesday he was\ngoing to demand a bell that\ncan be heard all over Yankee\nStadium on Sept. 20 when\nRocky Marciano defends his\nheavyweight crown against\nlight heavyweight champion\nArchie Moore.\n\"I don't know if Marciano Is\ndeaf,\" said Johnston, manager\nof Moore, in a discussion of\nthe heavyweight champion's\nfighting tactics, \"but he has a\ntendency to hit after the bell\nand has done it in many of\nhis fights.\n\"He always claims he does\nnot hear the bell. Well, in this\nfight, I don't want any doubt.\nI want a big, loud bell, one\nhe can hear even if they have\nto get the gong off a fire\nengine.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii\nSOCCER DRAWS\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nof soccer matches played in the\nUnited Kingdom today:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nArsenal 0 Manchester C 0.\nDivision II\nBristol C 3 West Ham U 1\nDivision III (Southern)\nWatford 1 Reading 0\nDivision lil (Norther*}\nGrimsby T 1 Carlisle U 0\nSouthport 2 Gateshead 0\nTranmere R 0 Darlington 1\nScottish League Cup\nPlayoff First Leg\nDumbarton 2 Morton 1\nScottish-Lenguo\nDivision B\nStenhousemuir 5 Arbroath 1\nOdds on '\u2022\nMeld Today\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Lady\nZia Wernher's filly Meld, which\nhas arrived at Doncaster fit and\nfree from coughing, Tuesday night\nwas made an odds-on favorite of\nthe eight probables for today's\nSt. Leger at the final Victoria\nClub callover here.\nIt was the first time Meld hasi\nbeen odds-on since official call-'\novers began, and there were no\ntakers. Earlier some backers had\naccepted even money to fair\namounts.\nIf Meld triumphs she will be the\nfirst of her sex to win Britain's\noldest turf classic at the town\nmoor course since Book Law in\n1927.\nBeau Prince and Cobetto, the\ntwo French challengers, were\nflown across from France Tuesday.\nThe pair, who are expected to\nprove Meld's chief rivals, were\nnot substantially supported in the\ncallover. Beau Prince eased to\n7 to 2 while pobetto was clipped\none point to 8 to 1.\nMarwarl, mount of Australian\njockey Scobie Breasley, was the\nbest supported outsider at 100 to\n8. Previously he had been at 100\nto 0.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Largest\ncrowd ever to cram into Empire\nStadium was forecast Tuesday for\nSaturday night's football game between British Columbia Lions and\nleague-leading Edmonton Eskimos,\nLions' general manager Phil\nWebb said the,Lions, fresh from\ntwo Prairie victories over other\nteams in the Western Interprovincial Football Union, would probably play before 30,000 fans.\nWebb said team officials would\nmeet today to discuss possible installation of more seats in the 25,-\n600-seat stadium. Over-all capacity^\ncounting standing room, is 35,000.\nA crowd of 30;000 would be the\nlargest gathering ever to watch a\nCanadian football game.\nLions set the present record,\n28,013, against Calgary Stampederj\nhere last month.\nFootball Standings\nWIFU\nW L\n. 4 0\n.   3   3\nEdmonton\t\nSaskatchewan\nB.C    3   2\nCalgary   . ._    2   3\nWinnipeg .05\nBIG  FOUR\nW L\nMontreal....  \u25a0 1   1\nHamilton     1   1\nToronto    1   1\nOttawa       1   1\nF\n74\n100'\n78\n56\n46\nF\n52\n43\n43\n42\nMackell, Mohns\nBack With Bruins\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014 Veteran forwards Fleming Mackell and Doug\nMohns Tuesday returned signed\ncontracts to Boston Bruins, bringing to 13 the number of players ln\nthe fold for the 1955-50 National\nHockey League season.\nThe Bruins open their pre-\u00abea-\nson training drills next Monday sst\nHersey, Pa.\nTo Quarter-Finals\nIn II. S. Tennis\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AI*. \u2014\nAustralia's \"mighty mouse,\" Ken\nRosewall, and two of his American Davis Cup rivals. Vie Seixas\nand Hamilton Richardson, stroked\ninto the quarter-finals Tuesday in\nthe United Stateg'tennls championships.\nThe rest of the field will catch\nup today when the round of eight\nwill be completed ln both men's\nand, women's divisions.\nRosewall, tiny backcourt marksman seeded No. 1 in the foreign\nlist and heavy favorite for tha\ntitle, needed only 57 minutes to\ncut up Eddie Moylan of Trenton,\nN.J, a 33-year-old court veteran,\nA Pts 8-2, 8-3, 6-3. ' . '\n43 8 The defending champion, Seixas\n'B polished off Neale Fraser, No. 4\n6 member of the Australian -Davis\n4 Cup team, 7-5, 6-4, 6-2.\n0 Then Richardson, the 22-year-old\nRhodes scholar from Baton Rouge,\nA Pts La., exploded the 24-hour bubble\n41 2 of young Whitney Reed Jr., con-\n43 2 queror of Italy's Nicola Pietrang-\n43 2 ell. Richardson won 6-3, 6-4, 8-6,\n51     16-4.\nRoberts, Gromek\nGopjier Ball Leaders\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Phlladel\nphia's Robin Roberts and Steve\nGromek of Detroit Tigers, the\ngopher bali leaders of the major\nleagues in 1954, are up to their old\ngrooving habits again this season.\nRoberts, who allowed 35 home\nruns a year ago, already has been\nsolved for 35 round-triopers to top\nthe National League. Gromek has\ngiven up the most home rims in\nthe American League, 25, after\nbeing tagged for 26 during the 1954\ncampaign.\nWarren Hacker of Chicago\nCubs is giving Roberts stiff competition In the gopher department,\nhaving grooved 34 home run\nserves. Hacker, too, is no johnny-\ncon\\e-lately to this group as his\n35 homers allowed were the most\nby a National League pitcher in\n1953.\nHowever, Roberts has pitched\n276 innings, the most nf any pitcher in the majors. On the other\nhand. Hacker has worked 201 innings, an equivalent of eight fewer\nnine-inning games.\nSfifrs International\nGlider Record\nVICTORVILLE, Calif. (AP) \u2014\nAn international glider record\nwas claimed by a Califoniian who\ncomupleted a round trip of 305\nmiles.\nI_yle Maxey, 38, soared from El\nMirage Field near here to Independence and back. This beats the\nold record of 260 miles for a flight\nto a predetermined goal and return held by Bill Coverdale of\nTennessee.\nIdeal soaring conditions, with\nstrong updrafts, prevailed for the\nflights. Two Canadaln records\nwere among those claimed in addition to the international marks.\nTHE   SIGNALMAN\n\"Gel it there first; but first, got it right.\"\n, Signals \u2014 nerve system of the Canadian Army \u2014a\nhigh-speed, accurate combination of radio networks,\ntelephone ana1 teletype systems and motorcycle despatch\nriders.\nThe Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, with other\ncorps, offers hundreds of good-paying, lifetime careers.\nThe opportunities for advancement, special training and\ntravel are many. A visit to your Army Recruiting Station\nwill soon show, without obligation, how you can fit In.\nRemember, in Ihe Army you team up with men and\nleaders you can rely on \u2014 right down the line.\nSERVE CANADA AND YOURSELF IN THE ARMY\nTo be eligible you musf be 17 fo 40 years of age, skilled tradesmen to 45. When\napplying bring birth certificate or other proof of oge.\nApply right away. Writ; 'phone er visit the Army Recruiting Station nearest your dome.\n,       No. 11 Personnel Depot, 4201 West 3rd Avenue, Vancouver, B, C\u2014Tel. CHerry 2111\nor\nCanadian Army Information Centre, 647 8eymour Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nTelephone PAclflc 6046\nor\n\u2022    The Army Reerultlna 8tatlon or Militia Armoury nearest your home.\n \u2014rr- ;\u2014'\u25a0 : ;         \u25a0 -:    .   -.-\u25a0.. ' ~\u2014! 1  -  -      \u25a0.     .- -   -   \u25a0\u25a0 ..\u25a0.\u2022--\u25a0 - -\u25a0\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7,'l955\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nrno Daily News does not nold. itself- resppnsmie in the event\not an error  In the'following lists\nAnglo Can      5.U0\nminimum...iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nQuotation lists from the\nCanadian stock markets are\ncompiled and published by the\nDally New.s al a service to\nsubscribers. The lists are added to or revised constantly.\nStocks in which there Is particular interest, and not now\nquoted, can He added at the\nthe request of readers.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing  Prices)\nMINE8\nAcadia Uranium 12\nAlgom Uranium    17.50\nAmal Larder         1.29\nAnacon Lead       3.25\nAnglo Rouen       1.50\nAtlin Ruff  20\nBarnat        99\nBaska Uranium  30\nBase Metals  65\nBibis Yukon 10V4\nBobjo  50\nBrilund        1.75\nBrunswick      13.00\nBuff Can      15V,\nCampbell R L       7.60\nCampbell C     14.85\nChimo         1.50\nCoast Copper 94\nCoin Lake  13\nConiaurum  60\nCons Denison     10.65\nCons Orlac  14^4\nConwest           6.40\nCons Discovery      3.70\nCons Howe       4.75\nDetta M  23\nDonalda  42\nDyno               1.01\nEast Malartic       2.47\nEast Sullivan       7.00\nFalconbridge     29.35\nFaraday        2.04\nFrobisher   ....'      4.50\nGeco     19.50\nGiant Yel         6.50\nGod's Lake 67\nGoldale     44\nGoldcrest  18\nGolden Manitou       3.15\nGold Hawk 30\nGoldora  10\nGunnar Gold     14.85\nHeadway       1.10\nHollinger        23.00\nHomer Y K  17\nHudson Bay     69.00\nInspiration       1.45\nInt Nickel    85.00\nJoliet Que    75\nJonsmith  45V4\nKerr Addison     17.50\nOh     3_;._j\n^a_ & jikl     oi.w\nL-ttimuut    io%\n(jun Atlantic       6.2J\ncan uecalia  u.\nCentral i_,euuc      2.'to\nunemicat iteaearch        t.uil\nreuera.ed reie           5.oo\nG.eat pwee.grass    3.oU\nnome     lu.oU\nimperial Oil    41.01)\nInter ma    2o.u0\nKroy\nMarigold    .'.\t\nMid Cont\t\nWai. fete\t\nOkalta      \t\nPacific Pete \t\nPathfinder \t\nPounder   \t\nTriad   \t\nUnited Oils\t\nYank C      \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum\nAmerican Tel & Tel .\nArgus\nAtlas St\t\nBell Telephone\nl.oO\n.32\n.72\n1.95\n1.75\n.12 li\n.92\n1.00\n6.55\n1.75\n.30\n.    36\";\n.    84\n. 104\n. 178 Vt\n.    24\n.     HVt\n51V4\nPeace River Gal      8.50\nRoyalite    13.75\nSpaimac   40\nUnited        1.75\nVanalta   18\nVantor  95\nYankee Princess  70\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers             2.15\nAlberta Distillers Vt       1.80\nB C Forests    13.75\nB C Power    33.50\nB C Telephone     49.25\nInland Nat Gas         3.35\nLucky Lager       5.15\nMacM & Bloedel B      42.75\nMid Wry-tern       4.(15\nTrans Mtn  i 3950\nWestern  Plywoods      21.50\nWestminster Paner 27.50\nBond Markets Quiet\nMONTREAL (CP) - Montreal\nbond markets were quiet Tuesday\nPrices were steady.\nCorporate and government markets were featureless in inactive\ndealings. There were no significant changes in a slightly firmer\nCanada market.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanada Bread Co. Ltd. class\n\"B\" B2V, cents Oct. 1, record\nSept. 16.\nWhite Hardware Ltd. 1st pfd. 70\ncents Oct. 1, record Sept. 12.\nBank of Nova Scotia 45 cents\nNov, 1,, record Sept. 30.\nSuperior Propane Ltd. pfd. 35\ncents Oct. 1, record Sept. 15.\nWINNIPEG (CP)-A dividend\nnf five cents a share was declared\nTuesday, payable Oct. 15 to shareholders of the Calgary and Edmonton Corporation Ltd.\nKeyboycon\nKrlstina  \t\nLabrador \t\nLake Lingman\nLeitch\t\nLexindin .\nLittle Long Lac\n.12'4\n.18=,\n17.35\n.15V,\n.81\n.42\n1.45\nLorado        2.40\nMacassa      1.99\nMacDonald       1.05\nMackeno. 62\nMadsen R L       2.50\nMalartic G F       2.10\nManeast         35\nMart McNeely 17\nMcMarmac     20\nMining Corp     24.85\nNew Alger  27\nNew Bidlamaque  29%\nNew Harricana  32\nNew Thurbois  3SVt\nNoranda       61.00\nNorgold    29\nNormetals       7.15\nOsisko    4814\nPardee           1.17\nPickle Crow          2.26\nPlacer Develop     34.15\nPurdy M  37\nPreston  E D         7.00\nQuebec Copper             3.90\nQuebec Nickel Nickel       2.44\nRadiore       1.85\nRayrock      2.05\nSan Antonio       1.50\nSherritt Gordon       9.55\nSilver Miller         1.00\nSullivan Con        6.90\nB.C. Electric 4%s   14\nB.C. Forest   18\nB.C. Packers A  16\nB.C. Packers B   33%\nBrown Co.         16%\nCan. Cerhent       36%\nCan. Packers B      37\nCanadian Dredge   24\nCan Oil   23\nCanadian Pacific Rly   34id\nCockshutt   814\nCons. Mining St Smelt   39\nDist. Seagram   44%\nDom. Foundries   28V4\nDom. Steel & Coal fi    19%\nDom. Stores   38\nDom. Tar & Chemical   1214\nDom. Textiles        7%\nEddy Paper   6414\nFamous Players   23%\nFanny Farmer   27\nFleet Air   2.00\nFord A   137\nGen. Steel Wares     1014\nGoodyear  158\nGreat Lakes     4314\nGvp'sum Lime     60%\nHiram Walker   76%\nImperial Oil        4114\nImp. Tobacco      18Vs\nInt. Metals         37\nLaura Secord  2014\nLoblaw A   44\nLoblaw B   8714\nMassey Harris        11\nMcColl Frontenae   4514\nNat. Steel Car  34\nPage Hershey   70\nPowell River   5714\nPower Corp  6314\nRuss. Industries     16\nShawinigan   1W>\nSicks Brew  30\nSimpsons A   18\nSteel of Canada      5514\nUnion Gas of Can  54\nUnited Steel       1614\nWinnipeg Gas    1514\nSchool's in. Watch\nFor 15 MPH Zone\nPlant Chinese Flag\nTAIPEI, Forma (AP) - Daring\nfrogmen planted a Chinese Nationalist flag on the beach of\nAmoy, a Communist island, Saturday and it was still flying there at\n.sunset Monday, according to local press reports. The exploit\nwas in celebration of Nationalist\nChina's first armed forces day.\nON THE AIR    \u2022\nCKLN PROGRAMS ...   1240 on1 ihe dial\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1955\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up  Time\n7:00 News\n7:05-Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014 Farm   Fare    -\n7:15\u2014Chapel  in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014March of Truth\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:10\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Melodic Sketches\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call   One-Nine\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:05\u2014Prairie News\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News     '\n12:30\u2014Farm  Broadcast\n12:55\u2014This Is Our Story\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Radio Feature\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n2:15\u2014Classic Corner\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada   Matinee\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014B.C.   Roundup\n4:30\u2014Music on Two Pianos\n4:45\u2014Time For a Story\n5:00\u2014Ragtime Rhythm\n5:30\u2014Spotlight Star\n5:35\u2014Today in History\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Interlude\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00-r-Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Musicale\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Molody\n7:00\u2014News and  Roundup\n7:30\u2014The   Wed.   Night  Progran\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Life in Mexico\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1955\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBeta Gamma \t\nBralorne       \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc       \t\nGrandview     \t\nHighland Bell \t\nJackson Basin \t\nNational Ex   \t\nPac Eastern Gold\t\nPend Oreille    \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nQuatsino\nReeves MacDonald\nRexspar\n.63\n.12\n3.60\n.78\n.79\n7.35\n.21\n.65\n.4114\n1.05\n.13\n4.75\n1.91\n.18\n1.70\n.60\nR_x-Athabaska Uran       1.15\n10\n1.57\n2.02\n.35\n1.95\n.38\n7.60\nSurf Inlet Van\nSylvanite\nTeck  Hughes  ...\nTombill\nThomp-Lund\nTrans Cont Res\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada       1-14\nVentures     39.75\nVicour       28\nWright Hargreaves       2.05\nYankee Canuck  30\nYakeno   13\nYale    64\nOILS\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Ridge       \t\nSilver Standard   \t\nSunshine Lardeau \t\nTaylor\nWestern Exploration ..\nYale    \t\nOILS\nAl.ex \t\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary. & Edmonton\nCanadian Anaconda ....\nCharter \t\nChamberlain  \t\nDel Rio \t\nGas Exp \t\nHome \t\nNational Pete \t\nOkalta Com   \t\nPacific Pete   \t\n1.35\n9.40\n.23\n.27\n.39\n.33'4\n.2414\n.58\n.62\n.33\n16.00\n.1814\n1.85\n.14\nIBS\n.93\n10.no\n1.70\n1.70\n12.00\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical  Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical   Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning   Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical   March   Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10-Here's   Bill  Good\n8:15\u2014Morning Mupsic\n9:00-BBC  News\n9:15\u2014Aunt  Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura  Limited\n9:45\u2014Composer's   Corner\n10:00\u2014Morning   Visit\n10:15\u2014Melodic   Sketches\n10:45\u2014Musical Program\n11:00\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C.  Farm  Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five  to One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada   Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014Today's  Music\n4:30\u2014Prairie   Picture\n4:45\u2014Mystery at Wind Whistle\n5:00\u2014At Home With the Lennickl\n5:25\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014International Commentary\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Footloose\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Toronto   Promenade\nConcert\n8:30\u2014Travellin' Joe\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n9:30\u2014Eventide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Rewards of Globe Trotting\n10:30\u2014Conversation\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV   -   Channel   4\n11:00\u2014Sign On\nll:15-5.Secret Storm\n11:30\u2014House Party\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n1:00\u2014Welcome Traveler\n1:30\u2014TBA\n1:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n2:00\u2014On Your Account\n2:30\u2014 Valiant Lady\n2:45\u2014Brighter  Day\n3:00\u2014Variety Hour\n3:30\u2014 Search for Tomorrow\n3:45\u2014Guiding Light\n4:00\u2014Love of Life\n4:15\u2014Armchair Adventure\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore\n5:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n5:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n1:00\u2014Antics With Andrew\n6:30\u2014Doug  Edwards\n6:45\u2014Sports on Parade\n7:00\u2014U. S. Steel Hour\n1:00\u2014Jungle Town\n8:15\u2014 News\n1:25\u2014Weather Vane\n1:30\u2014Cowboy  G-Men\n9:00\u2014The Millionaire\n):30\u2014I've Got a Secret\n10:00\u2014Frankie Lane\n11:00\u2014Patti Page Show\n11:15\u2014Ames Brothers\n11:30\u2014Damon Runyao Theatre\n12:00\u2014Safeco News\n| 12:05\u2014Heart  of  the  City\nKHQ-TV  -  Channel \u00ab\n9:25\u2014Test Pattern\n9:40\u2014Color Test Program\n9:55\u2014Bible Reading\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014Parents Time\n10:45\u2014World at Home\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014\"Face in the Fog\"\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n3:30\u2014It Pays To Be Married\n4:00\u2014Q's Kaleidoscope\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n4:45\u2014Modern Romance\n5:00\u2014 Pinky Lee\n5:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n6:00-*-Howdy Doody\n6:30\u2014Mr  Engineer\n7:00\u2014Little Rascals\n7:30\u2014The Front Page\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Request Performance\n8:30\u2014Father Knows Best\n9:00\u20141 Led Three Lives\n9:30\u2014Amos 'N' Andy\n10:00\u2014 This Is Your Life\n1:00\u2014\"Riverside Murder\"\n11:00\u2014 People Are Funny\n11:30\u2014The Whistler\n12:00\u2014Racket Squad\n12:40\u2014News Headlines\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014 \"Samuri\"\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness Club\n5:15\u2014\"Deadlock\"\n6:55\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n7:00\u2014Wed Night Fights\n7:45\u201411th Round\n8:00\u2014 The Lone Ranger\n8:30\u2014Disneyland\n9:30\u2014Clary Wright Show\nH:00\u2014Masquerade Party\n10:30\u2014\"Arson Squad\"\n11:30\u2014\"Big Picture\"\n12:45\u2014Layman's fall to Prayer\n(Programs subject to change byt stations without notice I\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n8:30 a.m  to 6 p.m.\u2014Phone 1300\nEvenings\u2014Phone 1033- n\nDally Except Sundays\nand  Holidays\nMc & Me\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nACROSS\nI. A Job\n6. Speak\n11. Seraglio\n12. Dried plum\n13. A sharp\nedge in\nmoldings\n(archlt.)\n14. Leg-of- .\nmutton\nsleeve\n15. Father\n16. Cons'tella.\ntion\n17. Plural\npronoun\n18. Italian\nriver\n19. Deadly\n21. Changed\ninto ions\n23. Finnish seaport\n26. Trap\n27,-Did not\nwork\n29. Viper\n30. Bestowed\n32. Having a\nsharp taste\n33. Steamship\n(abbr.)\n34. Bone (anat.)\n36. Coin\n(Swed.)\n37. Cry of pain\n38. Goddess of\nthe hunt\n40. Tapestry\n43. Indian of\nMexico\n44. Occurrence\n45. Line for a\ndog\n46. Slender and\nlong-limbed\nDOWN\n1. Mandarin-\ntea\n2. Whaler's\nmissiles\n3. Odd (Scot.)\n4. Biblical\nname\n5. Type mea.\nsures\n6. Advancing,\nas a workman\n7. Test\n8. Pull\n9. Enough\n(poet.)\n10. A network\n16. Devoured\n18. Location of\nthe \"Leaning,Tower\"\n19. Pinaceous\ntree\nannais uaiauti\n\u25a1HQE3   HIiiHHBE\nHEHHliy   HU3U\nam    tsuGi\nDID   HHEH   EBH\nElUHUa   ISIUHMU)\naaaB uhhe\n20. The-\nChina\ntree\n22. Short\nsleep\n23. High\n(mus.)\n24. A thin\nfilm\nformed\nIn\nport Yestertsy'i Answer\n25. Excess of      35. Dimensions\nchances\n28. Period ot\ntime\n31. Single unit\n32. Vocal\nsounds\n34. Woody vine\n(E. I.)\n37. Not closed\n39. Luzon na\u00ab\n\u25a0    tive\n40. Thrice\n(mus.)\n41.\t\nGardner\n42. Pig pen\n1\n1\n3\nA\n5\nV\nk.\n7\n3\n<.\nIO\nII\n%\n\u2022X\n13\n%\n14\n^A\nIS\n%\nty,\nIO\n1\n'7\n18\n^\ni\u00b0>\n_o\nVA\nV\/<\n%\n21\nn\n%\n\u202233\n54\nIS\n2b\n\/\/\/\nV\n26\n29\n%\njo\n31\n^\nV\n%\n32.\n^\n33\n54\n35\n%\nif-\n%\nVA\n37\n%\nJ3\n39\nV\n40\n-41\n+2.\n43\n%\n44\n45\n%\n4fo\n9-7\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work iti^\n.AXYDLBAAXR\n\u2022 is LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ia used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa*\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nNAZ     AZEQN    GR    AEQXZRN    GM     NAZ\nRYINZRN     OVGTZR;     NAZ    UERRGYMR,\nIVYJQGRA,    NAZ    EIIZONGYMR    X G Z\u2014.\nV E MX YQ.\nYesterday'B Cryptoquote: TRUST NOT A MAN: WE ARE\nBY NATURE FALSE, DISSEMBLING, SUBTLE, CKUbU\nAND INCONSTANT \u2014 OTWAY.\nciiirihiiU-l hv tttna Feature* Syndicate\n ^  . .\u201e.\u201e..,\u201e.\n; l rrr?- .    .........   .._.........,,....   : .   :.;-,:;\u25a0.'\u00bb)\n5341\nSMALL INVESTMENT - LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE 1844\nBIRTHS\nCUMMING \u2014 To Fit. Lt. and\nMrs. R. J. Cumming (nee Sheila\nKearns) at Nottingham, England,\nAug. 30, a son.\t\nHELP WANTED\nDEMONSTRATOR FOR ALARM-\nO-Safe and Sta-Put signs. Our\ndemonstrators are averaging\nover one hundred dollars weekly by calling on all businesses.\nAbove lines are guaranteed for\ntwenty years. Write full particulars about yourself to P. 0.\nBox 401, Edmonton.\nWE NEED A YOUNG MAN TO\ntrain as a salesman. Some typing\nability preferred. Good future\nwith well established Nelson\nfirm. Apply in confidence to\nBox 2933, Nelson Daily News.\nOur staff has been informed of\nthis ad.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nLEGAL NOTICE:\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nVILLAGE OF SILVERTON,\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nNOTICE: Nominations for ONE\nVillage Commissioner for office,\nterminating December 31st, 1955,\nwill be accepted in the Clerk's\nOffice, Municipal Building, Silver-\nton, British Columbia, on Wednesday, October fifth, 1955, from\ntwelve o'clock noon, to two p. m.\nand the polling, if any, on Wednesday, October twelfth, 1955 from\nnine o'clock a. m. to seven o'clock\np. m., in the said Clerk's office.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ECT. FOR SALE\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,  BICYCLES\nBOY TO WORK FULL OR PART\ntime, retail business, good opportunity to learn trade State\nprevious employment and -if able\nto drive. Apply Box 10715. Nelson Daily News.\t\nATTENTION: HELP WANTED -\nWanted reliable man to drive\ntaxi, full time. Phone Smitty's\nTaxi in Rossland, 90 or 5.\nWANTED - HOUSEKEEPER\nfor family of 4. Good wages. Immediate employment. Sleep in\nor out. Phone 1435-R.\t\nSAWYER AND MILLWRIGHT,\n150,000 capacity. $2 per hour. 9-\nhr. day. Full Smith Lumber Co.\nTopliff Apt. Rossland, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED DRI-\nver for logging truck. Box 100.\nFruitvale or phone Fruitvale\n3421.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nEMPLOYMENT \u2014 LA R G E\nLocal Industry requires female\nInvoicing clerk \u2014 Typing essential. Shorthand not necessary \u2014 Permanent position,\npleasant working conditions and\ngood salary prospects. M.S.A.\ncaverage and 5-day week. Apply\nto National Employment Service.\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. Just show North American Fashion Frocks to friends.\nNo canvassing, investment or\nexperience necessary. North\nAmerican Fashion Frocks Ltd.,\n2163 Parthenais St., Dept. T3438\nMontreal.\nWANTED - A REPRESENTA-\ntive for Doraldina Cosmetics,\nearnings above average. Send\nfull particulars if you can work\nfull or part time, to Doraldina\nCosmetics Co., P. O. Box 401,\nEdmonton.\nWOULD LIKE LADY PARTNER\nin tailoring and dress making\nbusiness established in Nelson,\nB. C. Write Box 8946. Daily\nNews.\nCOMPANION - HOUSEKEEPER\nfor elderly lady. Write R.\nOborne, Robson? or phone Castlegar 2831.\nSTENOGRAPHER SALES CLERK\npermanent position. Applicant\nmust be capable and reliable.\nPhone 83.\nPERMANENT    POSITIONS\navailable at Armson's Cafe Bus\n\"Depot. Nelson, B C.\nWANTED AT ONCE - HOUSE-\nkeeper. Apply 612 Carbonate.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nOPERATING MILLWRIGHT. SIX\nyears experience in mechanics\nand mill work. Excellent technical background in engineering\nand drafting. Single. Apply to\nBox 8941, Nelson News.\nWILL CARE FOR CHILDREN IN\nmy own home. 1112 McQuarrie\nAve.\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPH-\ner, bookkeeper desires part time\nposition. Phone 1711-R.\nFOR   ALL   ODD   JOBS   PHONE\n256-R.\nWANTED-WORK   AS  TYPIST\nor sales clerk. Phone 1244-L.\nGERMAN GIRL WANTS HOUSE-\nwork. Phone 1094-Y.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWE BUY COW HIDES. SHEEP\npelts, horse hair (mane and tail)\nold batteries, copper, brass, aluminum, radiators, beer and pop\nbottles. Phone 1807 days, 882-Y\nevenings. Warehouse 415 .4 Latimer St.. City. Independent\nTrader.\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\nscrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper. Used parts for\ncars and trucks for sale*\nWestern Auto Wrecking. Box\n132, Granite Road, Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 189-R-4.\nHIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap metal, brass, copper and\naluminum. Old batteries $1.50 ea.\nApply Charlie Symmonds, Box\n162, Granite Rd. or ph. 378-X-2.\nWANTED-NEW TYPE PIANO\nState make, size, condition, finish, yea* bought new, price paid\nand price asked. Will pay cash.\nBox 8893. Nelson Dally News.\nWANTED, TO BUY - SAW LOGS\nand 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\nORE SACKS. ADVISE QUAN-\ntity, condition and price. Box\n8611  Daily News.\nSECOND HAND CHAIN SAW.\nP. O. Box 416, Nelson.\nDrop in at\nREUBEN BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\nToday and Deal With\nConfidence With the Largest\nCar Dealer in the Interior of\nBritish Columbia.\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1952 Hillman\n1952\nAustin Sedan\n1952\nMorris\n1951\nAUSTIN\n1950\nAustin\n\u2022    \u2022     \u2022\n1955\nPontiac Sedan\n1955\nFord Customline\nSedan\n1954\nFord Sedan\n8000 Miles\n1954\nPontiac, Low Mileage\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1953\nFord Sedan\n1953\nChevrolet Belair Sdn\n1953\nPontiac  Powerglide\n1952\nPontiac Sedan\n1951\nMeteor Sedan\n1950 Cheyrolet Sedan\n1948\nMonarch Sedan\n1947\nPontiac Sedan\nSPECIAL\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n$195\n1955 Chevrolet Pickup\n1955 Ford Ranch Wagon\n1954 Austin 3-Ton\nLow mileage, good tires.\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1952   Chevrolet Sedan Dlry\n1952 Fargo Express\n1951  Austin Pickup\n1951  Willy's Jeep\n1951   Chevrolet Pickup\n1950 International   Pickup\n*    \u2022    \u2022\nMotors Ltd.\nPhone 1135 and 1843\n803 Baker St.      Nelson, B.C\n1955 FORD SEDAN FOR SALE,\njust driven from Ontario. Beautiful two-tone, automatic and\nwhite walls, $400 less than Nelson price. H. Herbison, Phone\n1832-L.\nCADILLAC. 1952. TAKE '49 OR\n'50 Pontiac, Chevrolet, Ford,\nin trade. Buyer assume payments $2263. Box 8938, Nelson\nNews.\n1947 MERCURY. FIVE PASS,\ncoupe. Radio, heater. 5 new tires.\n$325. Phone 1363-L-4 or Box 382,\nNelson.\n\u202241 PONTIAC, A-l CONDITION.\nRadio and heater, new tires\nPhone 1564-X after 5:00 p.m.\nWANTED\u2014'41 CHEVTMUST BE\nA-l. Phone 1450-L.\nFOR SALE\u20141952  G.M.C.   HALF-\nton pickup  Phone 1055.\nFOR SALE\u2014LADIES' CCM BIKE\nexcellent condition. Phone 635-X\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFebruary & March hatched pullets \u2014 Hampshires. Leghorn-\nHampshire Cross. White Leghorns and other breeds Get\nthese for early layers. Write tor\nPrice List.\nRUMP St SENDALL LIMITED\nLangley. B. C\nFOR SALE'AT CRAWFORD BAY\n\u201450 Toulouse Geese for breeding. Will sell 1 gander and 2\nfemales for $20. H-. Harrop.\nProne 1278.\nONE ABERDEEN ANGUS BULL\nwith papers. Morton Brothers.\nBox 136, Nakusp, B .C.\nWANTED\u2014JERSEY COW, QUIET\nmilker, giving 3'gals. W. Fraser.\nKootenay Bay.\nI Buy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nTo Sell\nOWNER TRANSFERRED\nRecently constructed modern\nranch-style house; 1266 .square\nfeet; fully insulated. Three\nbedrooms, Heatalator fireplace, colored bathroom fixtures, inlaid hardwood kitchen\ncupboards, hardwood floors\nexcept in kitchen and bathroom,' oil furnace, perimeter\nheating. Attached garage 14\nby 20 feet with overhead steel\ndoor. Full-sized 8-foot basement with plumbing and\nheating laid out for rumpus\nroom. Ideal location on Nelson Avenue in Fairview district. Flat corner lot completely landscaped. Ready for\nimmediate occupancy. \u2014 Full\nprice\n$20,500\nOPEN TO OFFERS\nN.H.A.   Mortgage   $8000\nPayments '$77.00 Monthly\nIncluding City Taxes.\nTo View Property Please\nPhone 68\u2014or Evenings, 397-X\nREAL ESTATE\n532 Ward St.       Nelson, B.C.\nHomes\nValued From\n$5000 to $8000\nALSO\nA Modern 2-Bedroom Home\nIn Lower Fairview\nBuyers\nPlease' Phone\n68\nHerb Peacock\nREAL ESTATE\n532 Ward St.       Nelson, B.C.\nSMALL DAIRY IN CONJUNC-\ntion with mink farm. Can be\nbought with or without stock.\n14 acres of land, cows, on irrigated pasture. Freezing plant.\nGood opportunity for anyone interested. Breeding stock can be\nhad at pelt.prices. Beach frontage. 3 miles west of Castlegar\nferry. G. S. Hett, Robson, B. C.\nTO CLOSE ESTATE\u2014352 ACRE\nranch with buildings and timber, near Park Siding between\nFruitvale and Salmo, at inventory price of $55.00 per acre. For\ndetails see A. R Dahlstrom, 1412\nBay Avenue. Trail. B C. Telephone 870. Solicitor for Alex\nToth estate.\nFOR SALE ON THE NORTH\nShore opposite ferry\u2014Well located lot, 75x200 Greenwood\nsubdivision. Wonderful value at\n$1,000. Apply P E. Poulin. Real\nEstate Agent, Nelson. B. C.\nA BEAUTIFUL 2 BEDROOM\nhouse, on two level lots ln Fair-\nview, by owner, reasonable\nprice, immediate possession,\nPhone 723-R.\nREVENUE PROPERTY - CON-\nsisting of three suites. $2000 will\nhandle, bal. $40.00 per month\nand Interest. Apply Box 10858.\nNelson  Daily News'.\nFOR SALE: COMPLETELY FUR-\nnished 3 room dwelling located\nat Tye, B. C. Bargain at $600.\nApply P. E. Poulin real Estate,\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BUILDING IN\nSheep Creek 40 x 40. Bargain.\nTom Jadro, 1368 McQuarrie,\nTrail, B. C.\nFOR SALE, THREE BEDROOM\nhouse, with any amount of lots\nup to eight. Low dowp payments.\nPhone 667-L-l.\nCLEARED LlSViL SUl'LbtNfc\nlot, 55x100. 1424 Stanley Street.\nPhone 983-Y.\nFOR SALE-,-1 CLEARED LOT,\nNorth Shore,. 300 ft from ferry\nPhone 1684.\nFOR SALE GREEN LIGHT\ngarage and light plant Box 46\nSlocan City.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 16-FT. WHITE ROW-\nboat, drifted from 6-Mile Point.\nFinder phone 81, E.A. Mann.\nLOST\u2014GREEN WALLET, SUM\nof money, compact, and lipstick.\nPhone 239-R. Reward.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBUILDER SPECIAL GOOD\ngrade lumber (Immediate delivery) all dressed 1x6, 1x8, 1x10.\nboards, also 2x4, 2x8, random\nlenghts all goes for $50.00 per\nthousand, also have beaded pan\neling 3 species, Spruce Larch\nCedar. Build that extra room\nnow. Special at $50.00 per.thousand. Orders should be 200 B. M\nor more F. O. B. Nelson. Also\ndressed low grade lumber 2x4,\n2x6, 1x6, 1x8, 1x10, boards $30.00\nper tousand. Free delivery for\norders 4000 B. M. or more. Phone\nS Kudra 1702\u2014R.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron St Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C. Ph\nPAcific 6357\nCOMBINATION COAL AND GAS\nrange; gas water heater, copper\ncoils; electric plate; electric\ntoaster; adjustable barrel pump;\npair men's loafers 10%. Phone\n1267-X.\nFOR SALE - AUTOMATIC\nwasher, Singer elect, sewing machine. Both in new condition,\ncheap for cash. Contact Fred\nTownsend, Madden Hotel.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-\nals, copper, brass, lead, aluminum. Highest prices, prompt payment Active Trading. 935 E\nCordova, Vancouver\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USEB\nfurniture, basement 301 Bakei\nSt Phone 47 \"We buy used furniture.\"\nBOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-\npacity. $45. while they last Active Trading Co.. 935 E. Cordova.\nVancouver\nFOR SALE - 1 FRIGIDAIRE\nalmost new See J Brashear at\nStewart Apartment, Granite Rd\nor Western Auto Wrecking Co\nTOILET AND BATH. HOT\nwater tank. Good condition\nPhone 242-Y evenings or 1089\ndays.\nFOR SALE BURPEE PRESSURE\nCanner. Phone 224.\nMACHINERY\nCapacity  from %  yd. to IH\nyds Front end loading, rubber\ntired. Torqmatic transmission;\nno clutch wear.\nOPTIONAL ACCESSORIES:\n4.WHEEL DRIVE.\nPALLET   FORKS,     BULLDOZER      BLADE,      SNOW\nPLOW, CRANE HOOK.\nWrite or Phone\n' MACHINE SHOP\nPhone 593 Nelson, B.C.\nUD 14 POWER UNIT REBUILT.\nD7 Cat with dozer and double\nrear PCU. Winch for HD7 AC\nCat. Dry kiln 35 M capacity. A\nG  Bayes Ltd., Cranbrook, B.C.\nONE ALLIS CHALMERS COM-\nbine, No. 40; one new Holland\nwire tie baler. No. 80. Morton\nBrothers, Box 136, Nakusp, B. C.\nBUSINESS OPORTUNITIES\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES,\nTWO . MONTHS - OLD MALE\npups for sale. Part Cocker, part\nSetter, $5. Silver Bay iLodge, 3\nmiles south of Kaslo. Ph. 47-T.\nClassified Advertising Rates\nPer line, 1 time .20\n2 consecutive times           35\n3 consecutive times     ..       .45\n4. 5 and 6 consecutive\ntimee .60\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions     .20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra.\nPUBUC    ILEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS.'  etc. -20c   per   line\nfirst insertion, 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance __ .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nMail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month   $ 1.00\nThree months _     $ 2.75\nSix months       $ 5.50\nOne year     _ $10.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom\nor the'United States:\nOne month . $ 1.25\nThree months      $3.75\nSix months    1.      $ 7.50\nOne year $15.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove  rates plus postage.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1933-J0\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBUSINESS FOR SALE ~ VICIN-\nity of Fruitvale. Partly-built service station, garage, store, house,\ncabin and campsite. Operating\nnow. Will sell, cash or terms or\nconsider trade on house, property, etc. Reply Bo_f 10613, Nelson Daily News.\nONE CHANCE IN A THOUSAND\nto buy a good revenue producing\nbusiness, large place centrally\nlocated in a good payroll city.\nApply to Box 8871 Daily News.\n_ LOCAN DRESS SHOP LADIES\nSt Childrens wear. Apply Box 48\nSlocan City.\nREMINGTON PORTABLE TYPE-\nwriter, like new. Phone 1671-L\nSEALERS,  QTS. &  M.-GAL.   Ph.\n281.\nROOM AND BOARD\nGOOD HOME OFFERED HIGH\nschool girl for light' services.\nWrite Box 8919. Nelson News.\nFOR   SALE  \u2014   CHESTERFIELD\nsuite. Phone 1855-R.\nFOR SALE\u2014WINE DAVENPORT\ngood condition. Phone 1467-Y.'\nRENTALS\nUNFURNISHED, NEWLY-DECO-\nrated 3-room cottage with carport. Wired for electric range,\nalso a 3-room apartment suitable for business couple. Inquire\nat 1304 Robertson Ave., two\nblocks above the bridge on the\nway to the Golf Course.\nFOR RENT - BUSINESS PLACE\n16x60 on ground floor. Could be\nused for office or store. Apply\nS.   Maco or  phone 723-R.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nROOMS, fully furnished. Day,\nweek, or monthly rates. 171 Baker.\nROOMS FOR RENT. KITCHEN\nprivileges. 576 Baker St., Apt. B.\nafter 4:00 p.m.\nROOM    FOR    RENT, LADY OR\ngent. 576 Baker, Apt. B.\nBOARD AND ROOM OR ROOM\n622 Victoria Street.\nSchool's in. Watch\nFor 15 MPH Zone\nSTRIKE COSTS\n$700,000\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A $700,-\n000 price tag was set Tuesday on\nthe two-month strike ot 350 Un,\nion Steamships crew members\nwhich ended Saturday.\nThe company share of this loss\nwas estimated by general manager\nJ. F. Ellis at about $400,000.\nHe Set the seamen's wage losses\nat $290,000 and declared it would\ntake four years to make this up\nwith increases gained.\nUnion' ships would not likely\nsail before Monday or Tuesday,\nsaid Mr. Ellis, revising earlier\nstatements that the first ship probably would leave Vancouver\nThursday. It will be about two\nweeks before the full fleet of 12\npassenger ships an<J freighters is\nat sea again.\n\"There is a lot of detail to be\nworked out before the agreement\nis ready for signing,\" said Mr. Ellis. \"There were separate agreements previously for passenger\nships and the freighters. These\nhave to, be combined into one contract.\"\nThe 350 members of Seafarers'\nInternational Union (AFL), who\nwalked out July 3, won a $19\nmonthly*-fncrease spread over two\nyears, stand-by allowances, welfare plan and other benefits.\nbast\nways to\nSAW WOOD\nMcculloch ModeU7\nCHAIN SAW\nnils orn-man saw for professional\nlogging, pulp cutting, tree surgery,\n\u2022tc, takes most of the effort out\nof woodcutting. Gasoline powered\nlight-weight Model 47 (only 30 t.J\noperates In any position, contej\nwith blades from 14\"\nto 36\" for any Job.\nComa In and sea It, try's\nIt, buy It It will pay \u2022\nfor Itself in time saved.\nSee\nH.   \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n614 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nConcrete Ltd.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nPHONE 871\nDelivered in Nelson\nSAVE TIME - SAVE MONEY\n\"Do  It  the  Easy  Way\"\nMINERS' HOUSES\nBritain's National Coal Bo&fd\nhas spent more than \u00a330.000,000\nbuilding homes for miners.\nMarket Trends^\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The stock\nmarket advanced strongly Tuesday with prices around record\nhigh levels in the- late afternoon.\nThe advance produced gains\nthat at times went to 6 points.\nPlus signs of 1 to 3 points wire\nfrequent.\nChemicals and aircrafts were\nprominent leaders of the forward\nmovement, and they had plenty\nof help from steels and coppers.\nCanadian issues were mostly\nhigher. Canadian Pacific and International Nickel added Vt and\nDome Mines gained V,. Hiram\nWalker lost Vs.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Industrials\nled the stock market higher Tuesday, closing almost four points\nahead on the group's index at; a\nnew high. Interest in coppers, sent\nthe base metal index up almost\nthree points. Other sections wete\nmixed.\nPapers, steels and refining oils\nwere in demand from the staM.\nThen came'support from manufacturers, utilities and financial\ninstitutions. General - Dynamics\nwas a standout, jumping 1Vt to 59.\nMost senior base metals gained\na fraction.\nThere was only moderate aettr-\nity among uraniums.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Gatai dominated the industrial list in a moderately active session on the stock\nmarket Tuesday. Minee were jje-\ntlve and generally a few cents\nhigher. . \"|\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A\u00abho^(h\nbusiness remained small on the\nstock exchange Tuesday, \u00bbtao)H.\nmade a slightly better showing\nthanks to Monday'i speech by lite\nchairman of the Trades Uqjpn\nCouncil warning the unions not\nto \"over exploit\" full employment.\nAussie Blood Bank\nBoasts Record        3\nBRISBANE. Australia (CP)-\nDoctors gave a man, shot in the\nleg, six gallons of blood ln 23 hoiirs\nin a fight to save his life. His condition is reported improved.   -,\n\"We believe this is a world record transfusion,\" said an official of\nthe Brisbane biood bank. ;\nThe man, Douglas Harold McLeod, 31, widower with six children, was critically wounded by a\nshotgun blast at Easter Archer-\nfield. He received a total of 78\nblood transfusions.\nTO RENT\u2014BED-SITTING ROOM\nkitchen privileges, business lady. I\ncentral. Phone 1267-X. I\nFOR RENT\u20142-BEDROOM SUITE\nCall 520 Carbonate Street, after\n5:00 p.m.\n2 FURN. HOUSEKEE PING\nrooms, one or two working girls.\nPhone 1084-R.\nWANTED - 2 OR 3 BEDROOM\nhouse. References. Wired for electric range. Phone 1761-L-3.\nURGENTLY WANTED - 3 BED\nroom house Oct. 1st. Ph. 862-L\n3 ROOMS, BATH, PRIVATE EN\ntrance. Adults. 719 Stanley Si\nFULLY \u2022 FURNISHED    HOUSE\nkeeping room. Phone 217-Y.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT\u2014923 VER-\nnon Street.\nFURNISHED 3-ROOM APT. FOR\nrent. Petty Apts. Ph. 1184-Y.\nFOR RENT \u2014 HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 1564-X.\n2-ROOM FURN. APT. HEATED.\nApply 406 Richards.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 368   Ph   161-L3 or 366-R\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE  W   WIDDOWSON St CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St.. Nelson\nH    S   ELMES. ROSSLAND   BC\nAssayer   Chemist. Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nG  W   BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyoi\n373 Baker St     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34. Frutvale. B.C        I\nSuccessor to the late A. L Purdy\nBOYD C   AFFLECK  M.E.I.C.\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil i\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nS.  V   SHAYLER. .P C. BOX 252\nKimberley. Phone 54\nB.C  Land Surveyor, Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED '\nMachine   Shop,. Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewind\ning   Phone 593   324  Vernon St\nTIMBER CRUISER\nEUGENE H  HIRD\nSlocan City: B.C Timber cruising\nmineral claim Inspection\nAnywhere in B.C.\nBuyitig\u2014Selling\u2014Rentinj\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n__-\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINI\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one 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\nPer Line\n1   Insertion\n2 Consecutive  Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive, Insertions .\n26 Consecutive  Insertions\n$ .20\n.35\n.48\n\\60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add He for Box Number\no  Deduct 10% from above rates it payment is\nenclosed\n\u2022 take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon Consecutive Insertions 200 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo ot Days Ad Is To Run \t\n :  Bill  Me \t\nYOUR   VAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\nMi. WMl\n \u2014\n1\n\u25a0\u2022U-IJ  ,\n, .    \/\u25a0 5       J fi\n______\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1955\nWhether It Is o Major Accident or Just a Small Cut\n. . . There Should Be Available at All Times\nFirst Aid Supplies\nIt is imperative that for health's sake and even at\ntimes for a life's sake, you have the proper first aid\nsupplies.\nWe have in stocks at all times\nIndustrial First Aid Kits\nHome First Aid Kits and\nWaterproof Utility First Aid Kit \t\nTravelkit _  .\t\nBoy Scout First Aid Kit\t\n$2.28\n$1.38\n$1.90\nWE ARE OPEN ALL DAY TODAY\nI\nSPECIAL \u2014 STATESMAN  FOUNTAIN PEN\nWith Gold Plated Nib. Each $1.29\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nHelicopter To\nEvacuate Trawler\n1 ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) - A\njhelicopter prepared Tuesday to\nfly over the ice-choked waters off\n.Greenland's east coast and evacuate 35 men from the listing and\nJce-battered Norwegian trawler\n.Jopeter.\nThe little 486-ton ship has been\n\/in the shifting ice floes since Sat-\n\u25a0 'urday and with no immediate\njiope of her squeezing free, the\nJUnited States Air Force is setting\nliip the evacuation system,\n.' Have the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nS LIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\ni PHONE 815\nj). A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nMedical  Art.  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front 8t- Phono 63\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 80c line, 40o line black face type; larger type ratei on\nrequetjt.   Minimum two lines.  10% discount for prompt payment\nFuller Brush Representative\nDon E. Sargent - Phone 1335\nL.A.   to   F.O.E.    officers    7:30.\nMeeting 8:00 p.m. today.\n3   top   wool   brands  for   Indian\n, sweaters,   your   choice   of   Mary\nMaxim, Polar yarn or Sportsman\nAll your  knitting needs at\n| EBERLE'8  ON   BAKER  STREET-\nHospital Auxiliary meets in the\nNurses' Home Friday at 2:30\nBINGO   TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\u20148:00 P. M.\nFor Watkins  quality  products.\nPhone   1215-Y.\nMixed two-ball foursome, Wednesday, 5 p.m. Dinner to follow.\nMARY A. HEDDLE, B.C.R.M.T.A.\nViolin Studio. Phone 659-R-3.\nClasses for expectant mothers.\nCommencing Sept. 28 at Selkirk\nHealth Unit. To register, Ph. 1214.\nTickner Tailors have moved to\n556A Josephine St.\u2014Business as\nusual.\n8LABWOOD FOR SALE, LONG\nCORD8    OR    CUT    TO    STOVE\nLENGTHS-PHONE 330-L.\nAttention Eagles\nSpecial   Business   Meeting\nThurs. 8 p.m. Please attend\n1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nStudents, Help the\nDriver. Keep<to\nThe Sidewalks\nimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiii\nMushrooms May\nRetard Cancer\nEAST LANSING, Mich. (AP)\u2014,\nAn old folklore story says that eating certain kinds of mushrooms\nmay help prevent cancer.\nAnd a scientist who became curious about it now says extracts\nfrom some mushrooms do indeed\nshow ability to retard or stop the\ngrowth of some cancers transplanted into mice.\nThese extracts arq not yet pure\nenough for human tests to disprove or prove the Old story. But\nthev m*v \"\"vide a new cltie for\ncancer control.\nThe sciti.Liiic research into the\neld wives' tale was described by\nDr. E. H. Lucas and Dr. Joseph\nStevens of Michigan State University at the opening of the annual\nmeeting of the American Institute\nof  Biological   Sciences.\nUSED INTERNALLY\nThe Hound's Tongue, a red-\nflowered plant which grows on\nwaste land, was widely used as a\nmedicine in early days.\nGuaranteed Radio and\nTelevision   Service\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 Baker St.       \u2014       Phone 1555\nChurch of The Redeemer\nFAIRVIEW\nSunday School begins Sunday next\n9:45 a.m.\nCHICKEN MANURE\n$1.00 per sack\u2014$15.00 for 4 yards\ndelivered. Amsden Poultry Farm,\nRR1\u2014Phone 559-X-3.\nWide range of new suitings and\nskirtings in celanese and orlon\n56\"\u2014$1.79;   $2.50.\n. TAYLOR'S   DRY   GOODS\nPlywood of all kinds.\nFull Sheets or cut sizes\nT. H. WATERS & CO., LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.     Nelson\nUse Septonic to keep your sep>\ntic tank healthy. Septonic is formulated to create new bacteria and\neat into- the solids and grease. Recommended for outside and chemical toilets.     \u2014 HIPPERSON'S\nBeautiful, solid walrtut dining\nroom suite by Gibbard, $175.00;\nalso one dining room table with\nfour chairs, $25.00.\nWE   BUY   AND   SELL   NEW\nAND  USED FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nFor your, camping trip! Tyee\nfolding camp cots, light weight.\nFold up in surprisingly small roll-\nInexpensive. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nChimneys, cleaned and topped\nFurnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned\nPounder's Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L.\nOn Sale Now\u2014Last year's carryover of snowsuits, winter jackets,\nwinter  coats   \u2014   all   first  quality\nmerchandise at clearance prices.\nEBERLE'S\nPatients In Kootenay Lake General Hospltal can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning. Phone 1844, Circulation Department,   Daily   News.\nButler No. 1\nProblem of NDC\nLAKE LOUISE, Alta. (CP) -\nButter, and its place on the food\nshelf of the Canadian housewife,\n\\\ncontinued Tuesday to be the No. 1\nproblem of Canada's manufacturers and processors of dairy products.\nHow to meet the competition of\ncheaper substitutes in the face of\nhigh production costs for their\nown product worried leaders, of\nthe industry meeting here at the\nannual convention of the Nation\nal Dairy Council. The only solu\ntion advanced so far was government help.\nThat the price of butter is too\nhigh was decided unanimously at\nMonday's opening session of the\nthree-day meeting. How to bring\ndown the price\u2014and at the same\ntime present butter in a more attractive form to the consumer-\nwas the problem.\nOn this, representatives of producer groups and the manufac\nturers came to the same conclusion\u2014government subsidies.\nIn a meeting of minds, the president of the Dairy tarnu.o vi\nCanada, Gilbert MacMillan of\nHuntingdon, Que., representing\nthe .producers, and Grant Carlyle\nof Calgary, NDC president, for\nthe manufacturers, recognized\neach other's point of view and\ndemanded that butter prices be\nreduced. Both said the federal\ngovernment should absorb any\nloss. Both said the present 58-cent-\na-pound price-support program\nmust be continued.\nMr. MacMillan, serving his seventh term as president of the\ndairy farmers, is a former president of the National Dairy Council. The two groups split in 1941.\nC. R. HIGGINBOTHAM sprays chickens\nwith water at Anaheim, Calif., in an effort to\nkeep them cool In the Intense heat wave which\nhas engulfed Southern California. Officials esti\nmate more than a million chickens and rabbits\nhave died since the start of the heat wave several days ago with  loss of nearly $3,000,000.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nmr mi i r mi iirm linn 111 mi miimim i r m >\nMotorists! Slow\nFor School Zones\niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiniimii\nMARTIN RETURNS\nTO TALKS ON\nDISARMAMENT\nUNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (CP)\n\u2014Canada's Health Minister Martin\nreturned to the United Nations\nfive-power disarmanient conference table Tuesday after weekend\ntalks with government leaders in\n\u2022Ottawa. ,\nMartin discussed the progress of\nthe sub-committee talks with\nPrime Minister St. Laurent and\nexternal affairs department officials.\nIt is not known whether Martin\nwill present any new Canadian\nproposals when the closed-door\nsessions resume. When the conference began last week, he said\nCanada had no specific suggestions\nto make at that time.\nThe other delegates \u2014 Harold\nStassen, President Eisenhower's\ndisarmament adviser, Jules Moch\nof France; Britain's minister of\nstate, Anthony Nutting and Arkady Sobolev, permanent Soviet\ndelegate to the UN\u2014also reported\nto their governments during the\nweekend.\neverything\nM from denims\nto dainties\nSHOP WITH\nEASE-SHOP\nCLASSIFIED!\nSeaway Will Reduce Grain\nShipment Costs\u2014Chevrier\nRequired\n0\/ Course!\nSlacks\nfor Class\nAt Emory's we have a\ncomplete line of slacks\nfor class.\n\u2022 WORSTEDS     \u2022 GABS\n\u2022  DENIMS\nup\nDUKE DEFENDED\nMELBOURNE (Reuters) \u2014 Several Melbourne churchmen have\ndefended the Duke of Edinburgh\nagainst attacks by the Free Church\nof Scotland for playing pol6 and\ncricket on Sundays.\nThe Scottish church's magazine.\nMonthly Record, took.the duke to\ntask for captaining a cricket eleven and for playing polo at\nWindsor on the Sabbath. It also\ncriticized the queen and other\nmembers of ihe royal family for\nwatching the duke play.\nThe views of several Melbourne\nchurchmen are published in today's Sun-News-I'ictorial.\nRev. A. Creighton Barr of Scots\nchurch, Melbourns, says it was\nimpertinent to criticize the duke,\nadding: \"The Free Church of\nScotland has no right to declare\nprinciples for individuals or members of the royal family.\"\nREADING, England (CP)\u2014Girls\nas well as boys are enthusiastic\nmembers of rowing instruction\nclasses. The girls hold their own\nregattas in this town on the upper\nreaches of the Thames.\nSays Dairymen Should Give More\nAttention lo Consumer Psychology\nFor details about placing\nyour   WANT   ADS   for\nresults! . . . PHONE\n1844\nYOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A SHERLOCK HOLMES\nto find the bargains you want in every category of merchandise and services. Use our Classified Ads when shopping for\nanything from 'denims to dainties' . . . from 'homes to housewares' . . . from 'mink to muskrat' . .' . for complete satisfaction. And, if you have a car to sell, a room to rent, or\n\"stow-away\" items eating up space in your attic or garage,\nthe Classified Section will take them off your hands . . ,\nput money in your pocket!\nThe\nNelson Daily News\nLAKE LOUISE, Alta. (CP) - A\n\"Consumer Daniel in your den of\nlions\" spoke her mind Tuesday to\nthe National Dairy Council.\nMme. H. E. Vautelet of Montreal,\n^resident of the Canadian Associa-\n:ion'of Consumers, was self-de-\n.Tibed as the only consumer at\nhe council's annual meeting. She\nr.ok ful ladvantage of the oppor-\n\u25a0inity to speak her piece on behalf\n[ consumers in general and wo- j\nisn in particular. j\nTo the gathering of 300 lead-:\ners of the dairy industry she.\nsaid: |\n\"Markets, like women, need to\nbe won, Yours was, a few years|\nago. But also, like women, youj\nmust keep them courted. I think\nyou have failed here.\"\nMme. Vautelet. who received the\n\"BE in 1942 from King George VI\nfor   leadership   in   patriotic   and\ncharitable   work,     wondered\nwhether   dairy   boards   and   the\niairy  industry in  general hadn't\nconcentrated so much attention on\ntrices  and   production   that  th'ey\n'^nd forgotten that   markets   also\nwere    necessary.    The    industry\nhadn't given enough attention to\nconsumer psychology.\nCONSUMER RESISTANCE\nShe said:\n\"It is clear to most onlookers\nthat dairying, in its efforts to protect its- prices and its production\nagainst very real dangers, is simul\ntaneously building up consumer\nresistance to one at least of its\nmost important products.\n\"I often wonder if our dairy\nfarmer associations know how\nmuch they promote margarine\nby having It outlawed In Que\nbee \u2014 which doesn't prevent its\n$4.95\nGym Shorts and Shirts.\nCMORY'C\n\u25a0\u25a0    Limited    *^\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone   327\n576  Baker  Street\nsale but merely buildi up Irrtt\nated consumers' InteresMn ob\ntalnlng It, while Increasing the\ncompetition of spreads.\n\"Or again by pressuring the\ngovernment into butter stockpiling\nand the solving of this year's but\nter surpluses by handouts to for\neign markets to make sure prices\nto Canadian consumers will not be\nlowered. As a protest many consumers now are buying margarine.\"\nShe was afraid that the industry\nhad only a few years to win or\nlose the Battle for Butter. \"For\nsoon those who prefer the taste of\nbutter will be moving out of the\nscene and the younger people,\nbrought up on margarine, will not\nknow the difference.\"\nSubstitutes would keep coming\nand \"it is clear that legislation\ncannot halt them forever.\" The\ndairy industry's only defence is to\nmake the consumer prefer its product and through making access to\nthat product as easy and flexible\nas possible.\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014Hon. Lionel\nChevrier, president of the St,\nLawrence Seaway Authority,\nTuesday told a Canadian Club\naudience the St. Lawrence seaway project will reduce grain\nshipment costs.\n\"The advent of the St. Lawrence seaway will reduce shipment costs through the elimination of transfer of cargo and reduction in rates for the span now\ncovered by rail or shalfow draft\ncanals,\" the former transport min\nister said.\nMr. Chevrier said lake carriers\nnow carry grain on two routes,\nboth  requiring transshipment.\nVessels from the Lakehead ship\ngrain either to Georgian Bay ports\nfrom which it is moved by rail\nto lower St. Lawrence or Maritime\nports, or to Sarnia, Ont., Lake\nErie, and Lake Ontario ports from\nwhere it is carried by smaller\ncanal vessels via 14-foot canals to\nSt. Lawrence ports.\nSOME  TRANS-SHIPMENT\nThe seaway will not completely\nobviate the need {or trans-shipment,\" he said. Absence of navigation in the winter would necessitate rail shipments but the seaway's increased capacity would\ndivert the spring and fall movement now carried by rail.\nThe seaway would extend the\nzone from which grain could be\ngathered in the Prairies and delivered abroad at competitive\nprices via St. Lawrence ports.\n\"A commodity so well adapted\nto water transport in bulk as grain\nwill not fall to take advantage of\nthe St, Lawrence seaway facilities,\" Mr. Chevrier said.\nVessels carrying Labrador Iron\nore from the lower St. Lawrence\nto Great Lakes ports would he\nable to carry grain on their return trips. \"This reduction in rates\nwill be substantial ...\"\n\"Whether~these savings will be\ntranslated into increased profit\nper bushel for the farmer or lower\nprices on export markets is still\nan undecided factor.\n\"Whatever way the question is\nsettled, the outcome will be beneficial to the grower as he will\nreceive more profit per bushel or\nsell more bushels at a stated\nprofit.\"\nThe statements were included\nin the text of a speech issued to\nthe press before delivery.\nPARK LOST, IF     '\nWATER RAISED\nSAYS TOURER\nVICTOHIA \u2014 On a tour of Canadian parks in the provinces of Alberta and British Columbia, C. Edward Graves, Western Representative of the National Parks Association of the United States, has\njust visited Buttle Lake in Strathcona Provincial Park. Mr. Graves\narrived shortly after Premier Bennett and the Provincial Cabinet\nhad issued an Order-ln-Councll\napproving the construction of a\ndam at Upper Campbell Lake, below Buttle Lake on the same\ndrainage, to be built in two stages.\nThe first stage would raise the\nwater level to the high water mark\non Buttle Lake and would do no\nparticular damage to the landscape. The second stage would\nflood the shore lines and wduld\nmake necessary the logging off of\nover two hundred million board\nfeet of timber.\nMr. Graves said this would unquestionably ruin the scenic values of the lake and reduce Strathcona Provincial Park, now one of\nthe finest units of the provincial\npark system, to the level of an ordinary logged-off wilderness. The\ndanger, he says, is that the Government may let the contract for\nthe second stage immediately, thus\ntaking the final step before the\npeople of the Province have had a\nchance to express their feelings on\nthe subject. In the United States\na proposal of this kind would have\nto go through public hearings in\nState Legislatures or Congress before action could be taken.\"\nAsk YoiJV Grocer for\nEllison's\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMakes  Delicious  Bread  the\nEasy and Quick Way\nELLISON MILLING\n4 ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nLET US DISPENSE YOUR\nDOSTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nSave With Safety at Your\nRexaM Store\n\"Try Us for Lower Prices\"\nRELIABLE   SERVICE\nCity Drug\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34 Box 460\nCAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\nFLASH!\nDLOUHY\nIs Coming to the\nPLAYMOR\nSATURDAY\nEGYPTIAN SOLDIERS, centre, stand guard\nas Arab workers clear debris from police headquarters In Khan Yunls In the raid-racked Gaza\n\u2022trip. The headquarters was blown up Aug. 31.\nwhen Israeli armor and troops broke through'\nEgyptian lines. At the time the  Israeli foreign\noffice announced that the attack was a defenca\nmove against Egyptian \"active warfare.\" Sept.\n3 warfare flared along the Gaza strip again,\nending a two-day unofficial Israeli-Egyptian\ncease-fire.\u2014AP Wlrephoto via radio from Cairo.\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_09_07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429241","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"}]}}