 Nelson's  Record
1926 days
Traffic Fatality Free
Vol   55
etu0
'D
WEATHER FORECAST
Kootenay: Variable cloudiness.
Wind south 20 in a few valleys,
otherwise light. Low and high at
Cranbrook, 20 and 35; Crescent,
Valley, 25- and 40.
%%7
MORNING, DECEMBER 13, 1957
Not mors  Than  Co  Daily,  10c Saturday
No. 198
Tom Shorn iouse Elected Mayor
McNaughton Urges
Immediate Action
On Columbia Power
IJC Chairman Would Divert1 Kootenay
Into Columbia, Columbia Into Fraser
OTTAWA (CP)—Canada should proceed immediately
with power development of the Kootenay-Columbia-Fraser
River system in British Columbia, Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton,
chairman oi the Canadian section of the International Joint
Commission, said Thursday.
He said before the Commons external affairs committee that unless this is done Canada may lose these power
resources to the United States for all time.
He also said power development on the Frasfer would
be worth 100 times as much to British Columbians and
Canadians as the salmon fishery on that river.
Gen. McNqughton's proposal is for diversion of the1
Kootenay River into the Columbia and of the Columbia
into the Fraser through a tunnel under the Monashee mountains. Cost of 'storage and power dams for such a project
has been estimated at around        ""'"
$1,000,000,000.
Gen. McNaughton said it is'
time the salmon interests in British Columbia "sat back and took
a look at the real interests of
British Columbia and Canada."
The people of Vancouver now
were paying for whatever the
salmon fishing industry was
making. They were paying twice
as much for power as consumers
in the U. S. Pacific Northwest.
Gen. McNaughton said U. S.
power interests are exerting,
storage dam at Murphy Creek on
"tremendous pressure" to get
Canada to permit construction of
the Columbia River system just
north of the international border.
Such a dam, he said, would be
a benefit to the U. S. But it
would be a disadvantage to Can-
-ada in trying to store water farther north on the Columbia to develop power for Canadian use.
TWO ALTERNATIVES
There were two alternatives
facing Canada, in development of
power on the Kootenay-Columbia-
Fraser system.
Storage dams could be built on
the Columbia and the water fed
down to U. S. power plants as
needed; or the Columbia could be
diverted into the Fraser for
strictly. Canadian power development.
• Assuming the U.S. would return
to Canada half the power generated
from use of Canadian water, this
country would get 8,500,000,000 kilowatt hours a year.
But if Canada developed its own
power dam it would get twice this
amount — 17,000,000,000 kilowatt
hours a year. Southwestern B.C.
would be supplied with cheap
power for three decades. '
LINE UP TO TREATY
Gen. McNaughton said the American members of the Interna-'
tional Joint Commission refuse'
to discuss the Columbia - Fraser
diversion. However, it was clear
Canada had the right under the
1909 Boundary Waters Treaty to
make such a diversion.
The U. S. "crammed this
treaty down our throats" and
now must live up to it, he,said.
The general said "certain people" in the U. S. are promoting
the objections of Canadian fishing interests to the Columbia-
Fraser diversion because they do
not want Canada to go ahead
with the project.
The U. S. was anxious that
Canada commit itself on the
Murphy Creek project. But storage dams at Mica Creek and
Luxor on the Columbia would be
20 times more valuable to Canada than Murphy Creek.
Not only that, but a Murphy
Creek dam would raise the level
of the Arrow Lakes, a widening
of the Columbia, by 44 feet above
flood level.
On the other hand, there would
be no flood danger from dams on
the Fraser, even with water from
the Columbia diverted into it.
Gen. McNaughton stressed that
Canada would not want to proceed "ruthlessly" and withhold*
wafer from the U. S. American
interests could be safeguarded
adequately but Canada had to
look after itself first. Reasonable
agreement could be reached and
incorporated into a special treaty
governing the power uses of the
Columbia which flows through
both countries.
But unless the U. S. changed
its attitude, not much progress
would be made.
Gen. McNaughton also said
there is no conflict of interest between the International Joint
Commission and Swedish financier Axel Werner-Gren who pro-,
poses a big industrial develop-
harnessing of the Peace River
for power.
MIXED REACTION
Outside the committee there
were mixed reactions from B.C.
Commons members to Gen. Mc-
Naughton's statement.
James A. Byrne (L—Kootenay
East) said that if agreement cannot be reached with the U.S. on
American p a v m e n t of downstream benefits for Columbia
River waters "we have no alternative but to go ahead with diversion."
H. W. Herridge (CCF—Kootenay West) declined to comment
on the diversion aspect of Gen,
McNaiighton's statement or the
possible effects on the Fraser
fishery, but said he is "particularly delighted" by the general's stand that development of
the Columbia is urgent.
"We can lose .our rights by not
developing," Mr. Herridge said.
Other proposed developments to
the north on the Peace and Liard
rivers could be postponed. They
were entirely within Canadian
jurisidction.   .
Mr. Herridge also said the
publicly-owned B.C. Power Commission should seize its "great
opportunity" by developing the
Columbia and not leave it to private interests.
Only in four Kootenay-Boundary cities were mayors elected
in Thursday's municipal voting,
and in two of those cities the
chief magistrates retained their
positions.
Mayor Robert E, Sang won reelection in Cranbrook, where his
only opponent was George Haddad
who had been a member of his
Council. Counting had not been
completed by press time in the aldermanic race.
A mayoral upset, however, was
scored in Grand Forks by Archer
Davis who beat out long-time
mayor Ora Stephenson by a considerable majority.
Roy Green retained the position
of mayor of Kaslo, squeezing past
one opponent, Charles Lind.
At the same time, however, Kaslo indicated that he will be the last
mayor. Voters decided by 148 to 52
that the municipality will change
its status from that of a city to a
village. A three-fifths majority was
required and obtained for this
Council-advocated measure.
Fruitvale experienced the heav-
lament
Thursday
By The Canadian Press
Progressive Conservatives and
most Liberals voted down 70 to
30 a CCF amendment to reduce
the auto excise tax to five per cent
from 10.
Finance. Minister Donald Fleming said the only result of government acceptance of this unprecedented amendment to a tax-cut
bill would be "financial chaos."
The Commons approved by a
vote of 175 to 0 the principle of
the government bill to cut the
auto excise tax to TA per cent
from 10.
Social Credit Leader Low suggested that the Peace River region, with most of its crop snowed
under, be declared a disaster area.
NEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 3-16 lower Thursday at a premium of 2% in terms
of U.S. funds; a week ago 3 5-32
per cent premium. Pound sterling
was U-32 higher at $2.80 21-32.
MONTREAL (CP) - The U.S.
dollar Thurs, closed at a discount
of 2 per cent in terms of Canadian
funds, unchanged. Pound sterling
$2.73 9-16, up 3-16.
New Mayor for G* Forks;
Cranbrook, Kaslo Re-Elect
Canada Council
©rants To Coast
OTTAWA (CP) - Grants totalling $165,000 have been awarded
by the Canada Council to 11 Canadian organizations in the fields of
music, art and drama, it has been
announced.
The grants were allocated by the
council at a meeting in Ottawa last
week.
Among those receiving grants
and amounts approved:
Vancouver .Festival Society —
$25,000 toward establishment of
fh'e project and $25,000 for the 1958
festival.
Vancouver Symphony Orchestra
• $20,000.
Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra
- $10,000.
Edmonton Symphony Orchestra
- $10,000.
Canada Folf Music Society —
$10,000 to assist in meeting costs
of holding the meeting of the International Folk Music Council in
Canada in 1959 or 1960.
The Community Arts Council of
Vancouver — $10,000.
Calgary Allied Arts Council —
$10,000 to continue its extension
work in sending art exhibitions
through,Western Canada and other
projects', '
National Federation of Canadian
University Students — $5000 to help
meet costs of a national study
seminar for students at Canadian
universities to be held in September, 1958.
Striking Motormen
Demand Amnesty
NEW YORK. (AP) _ Striking
subway motormen Thursday night
demanded full amnesty as their
price for ending a four-day walkout. They also insisted on a voice
in collective, transit bargaining.
They asked Mayor Robert F.
Wagner to meet with them as soon
as possible to discuss the proposal.
iest vote in its municipal history.
Of the 287 eligible voters, 173 turned out to cast ballots. One ballot
was rejected.
In neighboring Salmo, slightly
more than half the eligible voters
went to the polls — 142 out of 273,
returning officer Frank Flood reported.
Fair attendance at the polls was
noted at Greenwood where 198
ballots were cast out of a possible
total of 330, two ballots being re-
jected. The winners were three aldermanic candidates seeking re
election. Edward Cooke was re-
turned as mayor by acclamation
December 2, the deadline for nom-
(nations.
At Castlegar 818 persons were
entitled to vote, but only 323 did.
Eight ballots were rejected in the
count for chairmanship, and 12
ballots each on the two-year and
one-year commission seats.
In the city of Fernie, the vote
for aldermen only represented
62 per cent. Of a possible 1074, 667
ballots were cast of which 18 were
■rejected.
The results follow. An "x" fol
.lowing a person's name indicates
present incumbency.
CASTLEGAR (Village)
Commission chairman;
J. E. Kraft (x> 175.
E. A. Lewis 140.
Commissioners   (two  seats  for
two-year terms):
,   R. C. Maddocks (x) 223.
G. C. Pettitt (x) 203.
M. A. McPherson (x) 135.
W. E. Harris 40.
Commissioner (one seat for one-
year term):
Mrs. Elizabeth Rysen 156.
Earl Bradford 155.
CHAPMAN CAMP (Village)
Commisisoners (two seats for
two-year terms):,.. . ......
G. S: Fisher (x) 125.   "'  ' ' '■
J. B. Yuill (x) 103;
J. E. Dietrich 71.
Commissioner (one seat for one-
year term): •
W. R. Young (x) 116.
Harold W. Stone 38.
CRANBROOK (City)
Mayor: .
R. E. Sang (x) 681.
George Haddad 514.
FERNIE   (City)
Aldermen (three seats):
Frank Butaia (x) 437.
John Sweeney (x) 389.
John Minton 383.
Frank Britney (x) 349.
FRUITVALE (Village)
Commission chairman:
Carleton Haines (x) 117.
Patrick Rochford 56.
Commissioners (two, seats):
Austin Olson 115.
Olio Schewe 95.
Hugh McCutcheon (x) 86.
Raymond Beaubien 34.
GRAND FORKS (City)
Mayor:
Archie Davis 305.,
Ora Stephenson 165.
Aldermen (two seats):
C. F. Wolfram (x) 264.
A. W. Downey (x) 237.
Y. Sugimoto 235.
GREENWOOD (City)
Aldermen (three seats):
H. H. Summersgill (x) 171.
W. E. McArthur jr. (x) 139.
A. F. Cudworth (x) 126.
E. M. Holf 94.
Russ Send Warning
Notes to UN Members
LONDON (AP - The Soviet
Union — stepping up its letter
writing campaign — said Thursday night it is sending notes to
all United Nations members warning that "the danger of nuclear
war has greatly increased."
The announcement by Radio
Moscow coincided with a UN debate in New York on a Soviet call
f o r p'eaceful coexistence and
came four days before a NATO
summit meeting in Paris.
The broadcast said the new,
notes declared "action must be
oaken at once to prevent a war
and improve relations between
countries,"
Word of the mass distribution
of new notes came hard on the
heels of a flurry of letters from
Soviet Premier Bulganin to Western government heads. Recipients of the letters included President Eisenhower, Prime Minister Maemillan, French Premier
Felix Gaillard and West German
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.
The messages generally have
covered the same Soviet proposals for renouncing nuclear weapons and tests and other actions
as steps toward peace.
The letters to Gaillard and
Maemillan were made public
Thursday night.
Bulganin told Gaillard the
NATO meeting was called "to accelerate war preparations" of the
western alliance and urged France
to try to. influence other NATO
members to consider Soviet proposals.
The letter to Maemillan said it
is "either irresponsible or downright provocative" for U. S. planes
to carry hydrogen bombs on patrols from British bases. It declared that countries where American
planes are based were put in a
"very dangerous situation." .
Bulganin's   letters   have   been
viewed in the West as Soviet efforts to influence the NATO meeting opening in Paris Monday.
INVERMERE (Village)
Commission chairman:
A. E. Erickson (x) (2.
W. Roy Lake 35.
Commissioners (two seats):
Corbin Mitchell 66.
E. J. Lambert (x) 66.
Rudolf Hecher (x) 62.
KASLO (City)
Mayor:
R. E. Green (x) 129.
Charles Lind 116.
Aldermen (two seats):
J. D. Morris (x) 145.
' J. V. Humphries 135. ' ,.
J. W. Hand (x) 105.
W. V. Drayton 72.
School Board (one seat):
W. J. Hend'ren (x) 129.
Mrs. Catherine Tyers 118.
Referendum—Are you in favor of
a change of status from city to
village: Yes 148, no 52, affirmed.
KIMBERLEY (City)
Aldermen (three seats):
Mark Beduz (x) 617.
J. Davis (x) 504. '
David Ure 410.
Violet W. Burrin 370.
D. F. Lane 282.
Edward Blundell 215.
Frank Pohl 190. (
Bylaw—$82,000 for road construction, for 549, against 314, approved;
MARYSVILLE (Village)
Commission chairman:
S. V. Higgins (x) 129.
H. L. Nielson 82.
Commissioner (one seat):
Edward Elliott (x) 110.
H. C. Ordway 101.
MONTROSE (Village)
Commissioners (two seats):
K. A. Manton (x) 111.
R. S. Webber 82.
J. R. Luke 61.
John Barne 46.
NELSON (City)
Mayor:
T, S. Shorthouse 1005.       	
■Joseph'Kary XX) 550.
j:"W. McUlelland 336.    '
C. F. BlBteman lit
Aldermen (three seats):
Dr. C. H. Bradsliitw 1034.
B. C. Affleck 972.    -
Mrs.-W. J. VanMaarion 8^7.
C. J. Hughes 712.
Frank Beresford 620.
L. G. Peerless 481.
George Latta 450.
H. H. Hinitt 378.
ROSSLAND (City)
Aldermen (three seats):
J. C. Miller (x) 496.
Davis Shaw (x) 415.
William Keane (x) 415.
J. G. Flanagan 264.
Paul Lowden 174.      " ■
SALMO (Village)
Commissioners (two seats):
Dennis Powers 93.
Murrel Bush (x) 92.
Kenneth Henderson 49.
Oliver Smith 34.
WARFIELD (Village)
Commission chairman:
Harry Simpkinson (x) 232.
C. E. Fenton 213. .
Commissioners (two seats):
E. C. Romano (x) 219.
D. F. Griffiths 187.
Stuart Metcalfe 164.
R. H. Lawrie 123.
F. W.' Collingwood (x) 112.
L. G. Smith 49.
Sukarno to Leave
Indonesia for
"Rest Cure"
By JAMES WILDE
JAKARTA (AP) - President
Sukarno is leaving Indonesia soon
for what officially is termed a rest
cure. Premier Jjuanda asked Parliament to swear in Parliament
Speaker Sartono as acting chief
executive Dec. 20.
Sartono, 56, regarded as a moderate nationalist, already has declared his readiness to take over
the affairs of this nation, now in
a period of crisis over ousting the
Dutch. .
Indonesia had had no vice-president since Dr. Mohammed Hatta,
a Moslem leader of pro-western
leanings, resigned a year ago.
Sukarno was reported invited by
the government of "a friendly
neighboring country to recuperate
ther?." It was learned the chief
executive may go to India or to
Egypt next month.   ■
Disclosure of these plans came
after the Indonesian army cancelled all leaves Thursday and
ordered its .troops to remain at
hand in their barracks.
A Dutch radio network broadcast a report of rumors in Jakarta
that Sukarno was a prisoner of the
army and said "he is supposed to
fly to India very soon, which In
fact, means he will bs in asylum
there."
MAYOR-ELECT SHORTHOUSE
Bradshaw, Affleck
Van Maarion Win
Piling up more than half- the total vote, ThomaB S.
ShorthOiise swept to victory in Nelson's mayoralty contest
in Thursday's civic election, in the second largest poll in
the city's history.-
The electors also chose Dr. Chester E. Bradshaw,
Boyd C. Affleck and Mrs. W. J. VanMaarion in that order,
as aldermen.
fust over 75 per cent of the voters turned out, rolling
up 2022 votes, compared to 2112 in 1951, when the turnout
was. nearly 80 per cent.
MAYOR J. KARY, RunneriUii
The counts, completed at 10:22
p.m., follow:
FOR MAYOR
T. S. Shorthouse 1005.
Mayor Joseph Kary 550.
Aid. J. W. McClelland 336.
Aid. C. F. Blakeman 114.
Rejected ballots 17.
FOR ALDERMEN
Dr. C. E. Bradshaw 1034.
B. C. Affleck 972.
Mrs. W. J. VanMaarion 847.
C. J, Hughes 712.
F. A. Beresford 620.
L.. G. Peerless 481.
George Latta 450.
H. H. Hinitt 378.
Rejected ballots 21.
The mayor-elect took the lead
from the moment, the sorting of
bailots began. Two boxes were
counted and the first gaye Mr.'
Shorthouse. a count of 675, compared to 362 for Mayor Kary, 235
for,Aid. McClelland and.67 for Aid.
Blakeman. ,
"I am overwhelmed with the
results  of  this  election,"   said
j  Mr. Shorthouse after the result
became known.  "I promise to
!  implement as quickly as possible
' the planks of my election platform.
1 "To 'Messrs.' Kary, McClelland
arid Blakeman,, who have served
the city.so'well on behalf of the
Nelson   citizens,   I   extend   my
Blanks'.
"I congratulate the newly elected
aldermen,and solicit, their support?
•DR. C. E. BRADSHAW
B. C. AFFLECK
MRS. W. J. VANMAARION
along with that of the remaining
members of the council. The confidence placed in me demands that
I carry the responsibilities of Nelson's highest office without prejudice and in the best interests of
the Queen City of the Kootenays."
PROTEST VOTE
"A very decisive victory for Mr. j
Shorthouse,"   said  Mayor   Kary,
"and   definitely   a   protest   vote
against my administration."
He extended best wishes to the
new councillors and offered his full
cooperation in helping to bring
about the new hotel-office tower
project.
The newly-elected mayor was
last a candidate in the heavy 1951
vote, when he ran third against
Mayor Kary and Aid. Alex Sutherland. Before that he had been an
alderman from 1946 to 1950 following four years as police commissioner.
WINS MOST VOTES
Most votes were given to Dr.
Bradshaw, who headed the aldermanic count with 1034. It will be
his first experience on city council, although he has served on the
school board, the police commission, the Civic Centre Commission
and the Municipal Library Board.
Mr. Affleck has had council experience, serving as alderman from
1945 to 1948 and he was city engineer from 1927 to-1934. Mrs. Van
Maarion is also a newcomer to the
civic administration field.
Ruoridation Vote
Gets Slim Majority
VANCOUVER (CP) - Voters
have approved by a slim margin
the • Budridati.on of Vancouver's
water supply,, the. first roadblock
to be cleared in this controversial
issue.
A plebiscite, one of four voted
on in the civic election Wednesday,
was adopted by a 55.8.per cent
margin. The vote was: For, 53,284;
against, 42,135.'(See also story
page 12.) ,
Vancouver City is a. member of
the Greater Vancouver Water
Board which- takes in 13 surrounding municipalities, all getting supplies from the same source, -the
Capilano watershed. Treatment
with fluorides Would affect all
equally.
The next step is to seek approval
o( the other municipalities for a
metropolitan fluoridation program.
Final approval would have to come
from the British Columbia legislature.
A plebiscite is only an assessment of public opinion, an indication of the people's wishes.
Medical, dental and civic offi
cials supported fluoridation, but
many other groups have campaigned against it over the years.
"Now it is up to civic and provincial officials to allow the people
to have the benefits of such a
healthy measure," commented Dr.
Jack Lewis, chairman of the fluoridation committee of the B.C. Dental Association.
Health associations and the Parent-Teacher Association supported
fluoridation-. , ■■:•",
Six To Be Added to
UN Steering Group
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)-
The United Nations .General Assembly Thursday adopted a resolution calling for an increase of
six members in its steering committee.
It adopted an Afro-Asdan resolution 49 to 1, with 27 abstensions,
including Canada. China cast the
only negative vote.
The measure would increase the
number of five—presidents to be
elected by the assembly to 13 from
seven.
And in This Corner....
LONDON (AP)—Henry Ferrle Sadley reported Thursday that
getting your face tattooed Is no way to win back a girl friend—
unlcsr, maybe you are'a Hottentot.
Ferrle, a 38-year-old janitor, recently had a spat with his
steady, Tilly Farrell, 40. Explaining to a reporter what happened
next, he said:
"I once told her 'Tilly,.If you ever leave me, I'll have my
whole face tattooed so that no other woman will ever look at me.' "
Ferrle went out and had a butterfly tattooed on his nose, a
tree on his forehead, a colled snake on his left cheek and a flying
dragon on his right cheek. Then he went to see Tilly.
"I thought he had taken leave of his senses," she said. "I'm
afraid It Is all up between us."
"Tho tattoos are permanent," said Ferrle, "so I think I will
get a Job with a circus to help me forget,"
He opened his shirt collar, revealing a tattoo across his throat
laying "Out here." ,
LINDSAY, Ont. (CP)—A couple of days in a cell wasn't too
great an inconvenience for westerner Ross Stewart. Police let him
take along his guitar.
Stewart was picked up when his wife in Brandon, Man., charged
non-support. For two days the station corridors echoed to Stewart's
warbles.
The concert ended Wednesday when Magistrate R. I. Moore
told Stewart he was free as a- prairie breeze. His wife had dropped
the complaint.
The happy ending: radio station CKLY in this town 18 miles
west of Peterborough tape-recorded Stewart's croonings and put
them on a program. Stewart has been offered a job in the area.
KITCHENER, Ont. (CP)—The stork called three times to
Kitchener-Waterloo hospital Thursday to deliver bundles each
named Martin. All three are girls and are from the same area
northwest of  Kitchener—but none  are  related.
. VANCOUVER (CP)—-Squirrels here are tough. One of them
attacked a policeman.
Constable R. R. Ginler went Into the zoo hospital at Stanley
Park to get some meat for the police dogs.
The squirrel, a convalescent, hopped onto his shoulder and bit
him on the ear. Const. Ginter was treated for a bad bite,
 2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 19.57
THE LOVER OF
LIFE AND
LUXURY WHO
SMASHED AN
ASSASSIN ARMY!
He blazed across
the world like
a fiery comet-
for love flf
K forbidden girl!
7.00
9.00
ioooooo^oooooooooo^o^o
STARTING  TODAY
►^ vistaVisiom*
cmc
A FAMOUS
PLOVERS
THEATM
CASTLE THEATRE
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
TONIGHT and SATURDAY
2 Shows Nightly. Starting 6:45
"THE    AMBASSADOR'S
DAUGHTER"
(Cinemascope)
Olivia De Havllland, John Forsythe
NEWS-CARTOON
S. R. POPE
RITES HELD
Funeral service for Sidney Richard Pope, 63, who died Tuesday
In Nelson, was held Thursday from
the Thompson Funeral Home. Interment was in Nelson Memorial
Park.
Rev. H. R. Whitmore officiated,
and pallbearers were Roland Anderson, Bunt Ogllvie, Vivian Rowley, Ed Serres, Jack Hobden and
William Donaldson.
"The Twenty-Third Psalm" and
"Unto The Hills Around Do I Lift
Up My Longing Eyes" were sung
with organist Mrs. W. A. Manson,
I wish to take this
opportunity
of thanking all those who
supported me at the polls
end I shall endeavor to
merit this trust.
C. I. BRADSHAW
CANMORE
BRIQUETTES
PHONE 889
TOWLER
FUEL & TRANSFER
Premiere  Theatre
FRUITVALE, B.C.
TONIGHT  and. SATURDAY
"HOT BLOOD"
Technicolor-Cinemascope
Jane   Russell,   Cornell   Wilde
Gravel Company
Rent Lowered
Mayor Joseph Kary and city
clerk C. W. R. Harper were authorized Wednesday night to sign
an 'agreement amending a 1954
lease to Premier Sand and Gravel
Company for rent of land near the
city asphalt plant. The lease is
retroactive to January 1, 1957.
The agreement, which is for. five
years, provides that rent will be
decreased to $600 per year from
$1100 per year. The city will have
to rebate $225, amount of overpayment so far this, year, to the
company. Reason for the reduction
is that the original lease covered
land and crushing equipment, but
the machinery has been useless
since 1955. The company now has
its own equipment.
Way has been cleared for the
city to sell the machinery and remove an old building on the
grounds. Works superintendent E
E. Olson' said the machinery could
be sold for scrap.
Sum of $180 per year, also retroactive to January, 1957, will
be paid by the city to the company
for free and uninterrupted use of
part of the land described in the
1954 lease for the asphalt plant.
The city is to remove rocks and
gravel unearthed from excavations
of pit-run gravel on the lands.
' This lease is renewable.
Office Established
By Nelsonite Bums
A former Nelson boy, Denis A
Boyd, Sunday night saw an office
he established at Medicine Hat,
Alta., destroyed by fire in a business section fire.
Underwood Ltd. branch office,
of which Mr. Boyd was manager,
an electrical store and apartrtjents
in an upper storey were burned
out, A large stock of typewriters
and office supplies were lost and
two families in the apartments lost
all they owned.
Denis Boyd is a son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. J. Boyd of Nelson. He has
been with'the Underwood company
since the war, first In the Lethbridge branch and then at Medicine
Hat, where he established Jtfie office several years ago.
To all those who supported me
at the polls yesterday,
Thanks Very Much.
FRANK BERESFORD.
Especially for
HER  CHRISTMAS
Ciro
Esscent $3-$4.75
Mist   $3.75
Danger,   Reflexions
New Horizons,
Surrender
Du Barry
Beauty Case
Beautifully   Fitted
Every Lady
Deserves Ono
$8.50
Ugr        Du Barry     ^
M7 Dusting   Powder
Hj   Gift Package $2.50
IH     Gemey  Dusting
IH&       Powder $2.00
Eflk      Gift Boxed'       ,
hv          Gemey       ^B8
V   WK         2-Piece Sets    .^H
H      Toilet Water    W
H          (Or  Cologne)        H
and Talc            j 1
BBk           $2.95           B
SjSk      Gift Package   jHL
We Carry a
DuBARRY
Complete Line of
PREPARATIONS
NELSON PHARMACY
"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH"
433 Jonephine SI.        Phone 1203    Res, 394-L       Nelson. B.C.
Kiwanis Turkey
Shoot Begins
Several local residents Thursday
night attempted to get turkeys for
their festive tables at opening night
ot Nelson Kiwanis Club's turkey
shoot in Nelson, Armoury. The annual event will continue until Saturday. -
Firing was on the downstairs
range, with an JtCMP officer as
range judge. There was a winner
for each 30 targets. Each person
got two shots, with only the nearest one to the target being considered on score.
About eight turkeys were given
away. Club officials said the first
night crowd was not too good.
Upstairs, other people were trying their luck at bingo and other
games.
Overall chairman was . A. J.
Hamson; John Hogg was chairman of bingo, J. S. Livingstone
was chairman of other games, and
E. W. White was chairman of the
turkey shoot. Other Kiwanians assisted.
The Weather
Nelson   31 37 —
Toronto   o 16 —
Regina  26 39 —
Saskatoon    17 40 —
Calgary   35 45 —
Edmonton  32 43 —
Kaslo  30 38 .12
Grand Forks   26 35 —
Kamloops  28 37 Tr
Penticton    37 39 —
Vancouver   42 48 —
Victoria   43 50 —
Whltehorse  15. 19 —
San Francisco  40 51 —
Spokane 	
33   43
Fish Population Must
Be Guarded-Finlayson
TRAIL (CP) — Deane Finlayson, Progressive Conservative leader in British Columbia, said
Thursday night that "regardless
of the dollars and cents involved,
we cannot make a move that is
going to deplete the fish population of B.C."
Mr. Finlayson was commenting
on a proposal by Gen. A. G. L.
McNaughton of the International
Joint Commission that the Kootenay and Columbia rivers in B. C.
be diverted for hydro-electric development into the Fraser river.
"Conserning the diversion, ... .
at the present time the best information indicates a real possibility
it would have a harmful effect on
the salmon population," Mr. Finlayson said,
In any, event, Canada could not
move unilaterally since "we have
got to respect the United States
interest in this matter." The Columbia originates in Canada but
flows through the U.S. northwest.
"We must give them the same
consideration as if the position
was reversed, notwithstanding the
fact  that   the   boundary   waters
treaty act of 1909 unquestionably
leaves Canada free to divert the
Columbia if it wishes."
URGES MICA DAM
There was no compelling urge
to develop all of the rivers involved
at once. The Columbia should be
developed through the Mica Creek
project—the building of a $250,,
000,000 project at Mica Creek,
B.C. — where "you don't need to
divert anything."
"There will be no conflict with
the U.S. if you do that."
Mr. Finlayson challenged Gen
McNaughton's statement that the
Wenner-Gren project for central
B.C. development did not conflict
with the proposed diversion.
' "The best and most realiable in,
formatio. indicates that the devel-
opment of the Columbia and Peace
River systems .simultaneously will
leave us for a period of time with
a surplus of power, and it will not
be economic to develop them both
at the same time.
"One will have to precede the
other by at least five and probably
10 years."
Christmas Postal Business
Slower So Far This Year
Christmas business in Nelson post office has been slow
this year up until Thursday*
compared to last year, stated
Postmaster W. G. Hall on
Thursday afternoon.
Victoria Has
27 PaC. Vote
VICTORIA (CP) - Three of four
incumbent aldermen were returned
to their seats on city council here
Thursday night on the first final
count of the civic election.
The only loser in the six-way
race for the four seats was J.
Donald Smith, Social Credit MLA
for Victoria.
He was beaten by Capt. D. J.
Proudfoot, a former Liberal MLA
for Victoria who polled 3145 votes
to Mr. Smith's 3037.
Only 27.5 per cent of the eligible
voters turned out, the second lowest on record since 1927.
The incumbent aldermen returned to office were Mrs. Lily Wilson,
3775; Geoffrey Edgelow, poll leader with 4205, and Millard Mooney,
second with 3981.
Recreation Director
Said "Indispensable"
Employment of a recreation director cannot be compared with
general civic employment since the
person hired should be of professional calibre, Robert Stangroom,
regional consultant, Community
Programme branch, said in a brief
to City Council dealing with position classification and salary for
the director.
Council, recreation commission
and the director should "have a
clear conception of what the work
entails and the responsibilities of
the position," and a salary 'schedule is desirable "so that the City
of Nelson and its citizens will have
the benefit of and be able to retain competent professional recrea,
tion leadership."
Starting salaries paid in other
Canadian cities all exceed the salary now paid Nelson's recreation
director, the brief said. Along with
other recreation information it was
filed for study, by the 1958 council.
CIVIC RESPONSIBILITY
Recreation is more a civic than
provincial or federal government
responsibility, although these governments also recognize its im-
portance, according to the brief.
"Essentially recreation is informal education and every • recreation agency is an informal school.
The leader is as necessary to the
recreation program as the teacher
Is to the schpol. Today it k especially true, for the conditions which
make playgrounds and recreation
centres a necessity have also made
the recreation leader indispens
able."
Correct estimate of the status of
recreation here means revising the
position classification and salary of
the recreation director, the brief
suggested.
"The' City of Nelson has been
most fortunate in the last few
years to have Enjoyed the services
o ftwo men who could properly
be   called   recreation   directors,
THANK   YOU
to all my friends for
supporting me at the
palls.
CECIL J. HUGHES
men of sound professional knowledge, wide experience in recreation and a great deal of ability and
initiative.
"Lack of vision and adequate
community recreation policies, together with administrative and salary inconsistencies, had much to
do with the departure of one of
these men, and, though the second is still with the city, it is obvious to this commission that he
can ill-afford to waste his time and
abilities in Nelson under the present
system." .    .
The weather, which has
been somewhat unChrist
maslike, may have had
something to do with the lack
of Christmas rush so far,
However, the mail has been
.coming through regularly
and there has been no holdup in deliveries.
It is expected that there
will be a noticeable increase
in both incoming and out'
going mail shortly.'
Monday, December 16, the
post oflice will be closed as
it is regularly.
Boy Released
From School
Release of a Sons of Freedom
Doukhobor boy from New Denver
dormitory school was ordered
Thursday by juvenile court judge
William Evans. The boy is now 15
years old, age at which children
may be released from the school.
Two Fined
Two Nelson men were fined
total of $40 and costs this week
after being found guilty by provincial court Magistrate William
Evans on driving charges. Both
pleaded not guilty.
J. H. Harris was fined $25 and
costs for driving, without due care
and attention December 1. J. A,
Brookes was fined $15 and costs
for crossing a North Shore intersection without giving right of way
to a car approaching from the
right.
Fined $25
Laurence Simpson of Nelson was
fined $25 and costs Thursday by
provincial court Magistrate Wil
liam Evans on a charge of failure
to answer-a demand for tax deduction information.
Simpson pleaded not guilty earlier, but changed the plea to guilty
and received the minimum fine.
/ Wish to Thank
Most Sincerely
All those Who Supported Me
at the Polls.
May You Never Regret
the Confidence
You Have Placed in Me.
Edith VanMaarion
THANK YOU
For Your Support
at the Polls
and to all those who helped me in
so many ways in my campaign.
I wish to congratulate mayor-elect
T. S. Shorthouse and the successful
aldermanic candidates and wish
them well in their terms of office.
JOE KARY
Ski Club Auction,
Tonight, Saturday
Any who are addicted to auctions will be present tonight and
Saturday afternoon at the Silver
King Ski Club auction when $2000
worth of merchandise will go on
the block. Proceeds will go toward
the Centennial Fund. Auctioneering will take place-at the former
Coleman Electric store, 327 Baker
Street, and one of the auctioneers
is to be Mayor Joseph Kary.
Merchandise has been supplied
by wholesalers of Nelson merchants and includes almost everything imaginable, "from bromo-
seltzers to lawn mowers", clothing,
shoes, clocks, lawn furniture, and
other miscellaneous items. Premises will be open from two o'clock
until nine o'clock both days.
Heavy Voting in
B.C. Elections
By The Canadian Press
Voting in civic elections throughout British Columbia was heavy
Thursday.
Ohe of the biggest turnouts was
84 per cent at Tofino on the west
coast of Vancouver Island.
An upset appeared to be shaping
up in Burnaby, a suburban municipality of Vancouver.
Reeve Charles MacSorley, a nonpartisan association candidate was
trailing Alan Emmott 1486 votes to
929 after 15 of the 35 polls had
been counted. Emmott is a member of the newly-formed Burnaby
Citizens Association which also had
four candidates leading for four of
the five council seats formerly held
by the NPA.
A $1,000,000 hospital bylaw was
defeated by voters in Langley
municipality.
Canadian Dollar
Slides Lower
NEW YORK (AP) - The Canadian dollar skidded Thursday to its
lowest level in more than a year.
It was quoted at $1.0244 in terms
of the U.S. dollar, off about 1-5
of a cent from Wednesday's close
Of $1.0256 and its lowest since October, 1956.
As recently as Nov. 21 the Canadian dollar was selling at a four-
cent premium over the U.S. dollar
and on Aug. 21 it reached an all-
time high of $1.0614. \
Dealers attribute the drop to a
lack of Canadian borrowing in the
U.S. in recent months, hesitancy
of some European investors to put
money into Canadian securities
and to some selling of Canadian
stock by interests outside Canada.
EIGHT-YEAR SENTENCE
VANCOUVER (CP) - John
Chernesky, 49, found guilty of manslaughter in the Sept. 30 death of
his landlord was sentenced Thursday to eight years in the B.C. Penitentiary.
The unemployed laborer was
convicted Wednesday in the death
of William Ostashek, 59.
In his sentencing Chernesky, Mr.
Justice J. V. Clyne told him:    <
"You killed a man. I have no
doubt you were so drunk you did
not know what you were doing."
THANK   YOU
to all my friends for
supporting me at the
polls.
J. W. MCCLELLAND
Eight Killed in
Spokane Air Crash
SPOKANE (AP) - A giant B-
52 ^ jet   bomber   crashed   shortly
Freedomites
Suing Mounties
VANCOUVER (CP) - Sons of
Freedom Doukhobor farmer and
his nine-year-old- son are suing
five RCMP officers for assault and
trespass.
The trial opened Thursday in
Supreme Court before Mr. Justice
J. O. Wilson. The plaintiffs, John
Savinkoff and his son Peter of
Passmore. allege RCMP officers
entered their home June 1, 1956,
to apprehend the boy because he
had not been attending school.
Savinkoff is suing the policemen
for $200 damage to his home and
the boy is claiming unspecified
damages for assault. They say the
boy was assaulted when police, attempting to remove him from a cellar where he had taken refuge,
poked at him wilh sticks and gave
him a cut forehead and bruises.
The defendants are Cpl. Alexander Borodula of Nelson. Staff Sgt.
W. J. McKay of Trail, Cpl. T. R,
Tobiason of Kelowna, Const. Robert
R. Miller of Penticton and Const.
Brian Bowron of Kimberley.
Mrs. Lucy Savinkoff, the boy's
mother, was the first witness called by thi defence, being conducted by Vancouver lawyer John T.
Steeves. She took the oath on the
Doukhobor symbols of bread, salt
and water.
Mrs. Savinkoff testified the five
officers entered the house with
blackjacks in their hands and produced a search warrant.
When she refused to call the boy
from the cellar, the officers said
they would break her house and
started pulling timbers off, she
said.
Trial of the suit is expected to
occupy two days in Supreme Court
DO YOU THINK ?
She Deserves a New
FIECTROLUX
Cleaner and Polisher
FOR CHRISTMAS
Call Clint Thompson, 1108
THANK YOU
to ail my friends for
supporting   me  at
the polls.
L. G. PEERLESS
after takeoff Thursday from Fair-
child U.S. Air Force bace about
15 miles west of Spokane.
Eight crew members were reported killed. The tail gunner survived a low-level ejection from the
plane and was not injured.
Staff Sgt. Elmer E. Clark of
Dallas, Tex., a member of the
emergency crash crew, said five
crew members apparently jumped
from-the plane, but only one survived. The other four died in the
wreckage, he said.
Officials said the B-52 was on
a routine training flight.
Man To Face
Car Theft Charge
RCMP are bringing from Victoria a man wanted here in connection .with a three-year-old
crime. He will probably be in court
Monday.
T. R. Thompson, address unknown, had been the object of a
search since he and a car belonging to Nelson-Lardeau Mines vanished August 4, 1954. He was apprehended recently in Victoria.
O. W. AASLAND
TAXIDERMIST
Serving You With the
FINEST IN TAXIDERMY
P.O. Box 361 Phone 946!
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
««««w««Wf.iM<giai<.w«W(.i«>«>;«
dis. fan, OJsjoJl  ',}
There is nothing nicer
than a
Sweater
f We are showing long
sleeve fully fashioned
V-necks — sleeveless V-
necks — button vests —
coat styles.
E At least a dozen colors to
a choose   from,   carrying   the
!. "TONY DAY" or "WARREN
M KNIT" label.
Godfreys'
378 Baker St.
r
>l»»^»lfck&afe.K»3l»!»lMtM!i_'.
NOTICE
Kootenay Lake Ferry
Additional Service Dec. 16th-Jan. 3rd, 1958
During the period December 16th, 1957 to January
3rd, 1958 ONLY, M.V. Balfour will operate on a 5-
day week (Monday to Friday) schedule, weather permitting. This is an addition to the regular schedule
maintained by M.V. Anscomb.
ADDITIONAL SCHEDULE AS FOLLOWS:
Leave Balfour Leave Kootenay Bay
., (Pacific Standard Time)
9:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.
11:00    " 12.00 noon
1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.in.
3:00    " 4:00    "
A. L. FREEBAIRN'
District Engineer
Nelson. B.C.,   Dec. 11, 1957.
We're Over Stocked f
with Sylvania T.V.1958 *««•
You Want One for Christmas I
MAKE US A DEAL
Easy Terms
Special
Discounts
This Is Your Beit Chance Because We Just Have to Have the Room
COLEMAN ELECTRIC
Corner of Front and Lake Street
PHONE 2055 NELSON, B.C.
li*»l8l»l>l»l»lJr>l2l^Jl»lJ1»iai)t.*»l»l»l»***»lMl9l»)»l»l*
 32%°|
Color and Pageantry to Reign
At Cranbrook Fete July 1 to 4
CRANBROOK — ' Chairman of
the Cranbrook and district Centennial Committee planning the 1958
Emerald Curling
Slate Elected
EMERALD MINE - The new
executive of the Emerald Ladies'
Curling Club was introduced by
retiring president Mrs. G. Carr at
a recent meeting.
Those introduced were Mrs. T.
Allen, president; Mrs. T. Smith,
first vice-president; Mrs. A. Jennings, second vice-president; Mrs.
G. Sutherland, secretary; and
Mrs. 0. Mathers, treasurer. Committee members are Mrs. W.
Clayton, Mrs. Carr and Mrs. I.
Weightman, ways and means;
Mrs. C. McGowan and Mrs. R. Duthie, prizes, and Mrs, T. Sanford,
Mrs. R. Stevens and Mrs. R.
Rowe, draws.
Cleaning and redecoration of the
club room was arranged.
To See the World,
To See the Life,
See Globe Agencies
It Says
"SEE THE VIPONDS"
Globe
Agencies
LIMITED
For
All Travel Requirements
by Land, Sea, or Air
and
General Insurance
1146 CEDAR AVE.
TRAIL, B.C.
Phone 2345 Anytime
celebration of the province's birthday, W. A. Burton reports plans
advancing well. Cranbrook has selected July 1 to 4 as its special celebration period.
Unveiling of a memorial plaque
to  David  Thompson  on  Moyie
Lake at a point along the highway mentioned by the explorer
in his early 1800 expedition  in
this area will be prelude on June
30, under sponsorship of the east
Kootenay Historical Association.
A parade,  Senior  Chamber  of
Commerce open track meet, children's sports, highland dancing and
a costume ball are arranged for
opening "day. July 2 will feature
loggers sports and a pioneer reunion.
A citizenship ceremony and program, and arts, crafts and hobby
displays on an international basis
will be. featured July 3. Climax
July 4 will be the two-hour "From
Wilderness to Wonderland" pageant with local cast, and an evening barbecue and dance will conclude the celebration.
Mr. Burton also reports for the
centennial year many special provincial events which will include
Cranbrook in the itinerary. The
April 27 opening day will be marked by three beacon fires in the
chain'across  the province.  Van
couver symphony and the "Cen-
turam'a" variety show will visit
in May. July feature will be the
RCMP musical ride. In August the
historical caravan will spend two
days here and the centennial play
by Lister Sinclair will be presented,
and in September Mart Kenney
and the Western Gentlemen will
appear.
Wyciiffe Bridge
Open Again
CRANBROOK - Repair and replacement of stringers, cross-ties
and deck of the Wyciiffe bridge on
the Cranbrook-Kimberley section of
the Kingsgate-Radium highway is
complete and the route is now fully open to traffic again. The highway department crews under district engineer W. M. Sproul completed the job in half the estimated
time.
This wooden bridge' over the St.
Mary's river will be given an asphalt surface in the general highway surfacing program next year
as a measure for remedying the
slippery surface which occurs in
frosty weather.
$1 Million'Business ...
Yule Tree Harvesting
Over for This Year
CRANBROOK - The annual two-
month Christmas tree industry has
wound up its season with yards
cleared and shipments over at a
tally of somewhere between one
and a half million and two million
trees,, distributed all over the
North American continent. The
harvest represents close to one
million dollars paid to people all
over_ the district for trees and
lebor in preparing them for railway loading.
Cranbrook East and Cranbrook
West B.C. Forest Ranger Districts
report a total of 707,742 trees cut
this season, slightly behind t h e
total for last season, while figures
for the Elko Ranger district where
cut is also heavy are not available.  Invermere and Canal Flat
Nakusp Legionnaires
Go To New Denver
NEW DENVER - New Denver-
Silverton branch of the Canadian
Legion was host to members of the
Nakusp branch when they delivered the travelling gavel.
Twenty-five Legionnaires came
from Nakusp for the social evening.
Ranger Districts totalled roughly
900,000 trees, and shipment of 200
railway cars.
Radium Hotel
Worker Dies
RADIUM—Stanley J. Fremack,
49, clerk and bookkeeper at the
National Parks Hotel, died in Invermere hospital early Wednesday
morning. Police said death was
from natural causes.
It was reported Fremack collapsed in the hotel kitchen, and
was taken to hospital by car on
advice of a doctor. He died shortly
afterwards.
Fremack came here about November 2 from Saskatoon, where
he had worked in a hotel for about
17 years. During his life Mr. Fremack had been a bellhop, accountant, clerk, and assistant manager,
and also practiced Swedish massage.
Single, he is survived by a
cousin in Winnipeg and two brothers in Saskatchewan.
u}piDtnq4
In Jewellery — for Qifts
RHINESTONE NECKLETS
'/2 price values $15.00 to $30.00
DRESS STONE-SET RINGS
Ladies' and Gents'  10K gold
Less 1/3 OFF
LADIES' and GENTS' WATCHES  .
Longines, Wittnauer, Cyma, Tavannes and Hofer
Less 1/3 OFF
DIAMOND RINGS
Up to $100. Less 25% OFF
HOLLOW WARE
Silver-Plated less 25% OFF
FOUR-PIECE TEA SERVICE
One Only
Croydon 1881   Rogers. Regular $96.50.
Special $72.40
3-PIECE CHROME DRESSER SET
One Only
Regular $29.75. Special $21.75
CIGARET CASES and LADIES' ELEC. RAZORS
Values to $17.50, less 25%
FLATWARE SETS
Three only 34, 42, and 43 piece
Values to $89.95, less 1/3%
MUSICAL JEWEL CASES
Regular values to $16.50. Special $10.95
SILENT BUTLER
One Only
Regular $9.50. Special $6.35
Many more items with similar reductions.
We Invite you to come  In and see for yourself.
Stretch  your  ChrlstmaB  dollars  further.
, BETTER BUYS AT BUTTERFIELDS
H. ButterE ield
Phone 333
JEWELLER
Nelson, B. C.
PREPARING for ski season at
Kimberley, highlights of which
will be the Northwest intercollegiate skt meet -and the Canadian ski championships in February during Snow Fiesta Week, Is
Noel A. Walilnger, caretaker for
the season at North Star Ski
Lodge. His grandfather, N. A.
Wallinger, well known in the
East Kootenay, was assayer at
the North Star mine, about a
mile from the Ski Lodge site,
from 1895 to 1905.—Charles Wor-
inington photo.
Would Make
Peace River
Disaster Area
OTTAWA (CP) - Social Credit
leader Low suggested Thursday
the Peace Riwr region, which
has suffered a crop failure, be
declared a disaster area.
Mr. Low told the Commons that
payments under the Prairie Farm
Assistance Act will fall far short
of averting widespread suffering
in the region.
Prime Minister Diefenbaker replied that necessary action will
be taken in co-operation with
Alberta to alleviate confusion
there.
He said the federal government
realizes the situation of "grave
discomfort and worse1' to people
living in the area. A full investigation would be made in cooperation with the Alberta government? and necessary action
would be taken to meet the situation within the confines of federal responsibility.
Bert Leboe (SC — Cariboo)
asked whether this would apply
tion of the Peace River area.
Mr. Diefenbaker said wishes of
the B.C. government would have
to be considered.
Cranbrook
Braces For
Post Office
Mail Rush
CRANBROOK — Sale of unemployment insurance stamps at
Cranbrook post office rose sharply
in November to $6608.38, compared with $5112.10 the month before
and was fourth highest total for
the year. However it was lower
than last November's total of
$6951.13. The sale appears to indicate a fairly satisfactory level
of employment.
Postmaster R. E. Fennessy reports for November the volume
of business at the .post office was
$89,636.96, highest total for any
month so far in 1957, and highest total ever reported for any
month at the post office.
Revenue from postage stamps
and meters wac $5457.69, compar
ed with $3860.83 for the same
month last year. The post office
issued 3988 money orders and paid
836 money orders compared with
3753 issued and 843 paid during the
same month last year.
FIRST TIME
The post office is stressing the
Fernie Concert
Aids Organ Fund
FERNIE — A large crowd enjoyed the Knox United Church
concert held in the School Auditorium Monday night in aid of the
church organ fund. The concert
consisted of two one-act plays and
several musical numbers.
The program opened with a piano
solo by Stewart Dicks. Next was
a vocal solo by young Ronald
Letcher. The Junior Girls accompanied by Mrs. A. Wyman, sang
two selections.
The first play, a comedy'entitled
"If Men Played Cards as Women
Do," brought gales of laughter as
the performers, an all male cast,
went through the various antics
of trying on hats, polishing nails,
admiring clothes and gossiping
without getting one game of cards
played. Those in the cast were Jim
Morris, Jack John, Eric Domke
and Jack Wilson.
Next was a vocal duet by Donald
McRitchie and Peter Johnson with
piano accompaniment by Mrs. A.
Wyman.
The second play, a drama,
entitled "The Late Miss Cordell"
was a sombre play with a ghostly
background interspersed with
situation comedy. Those taking
part'were Eileen Edgar, Ida Marie
Littler, Betty Banek, Estelle Shilling, Jean Colleaux and Rev. G.
Johnson.
The plays were directed by Celia
Morgan. The prompter was Ernest
Gibson. Bob Lees and James Ryley
were the stage managers.
Kootenay Support
Sought For UBC Drive
TRAIL - When the $7,500,000
public appeal for funds for the
University of B.C. begins in January, campaigners in the Kootenays will be ready to start. A
large group of committees has
been organized to cover territory
from the Alberta border to Midway. General co-ordinating chairmen for this section of the province is R. D. Perry, the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company's vice-president and general
manager. Sectional chairmen are
C. E. MacKinnon of Cranbrook for
the East Kootenay, and Dr. C. H.
Wright of Trail for the West Kootenay.
Commenting on the drive, Mr.
Perry said about half of the students of UBC are from outside
Greater Vancouver, but the campus can house only 1184, mostly
in" old army huts. The accommodation problem extends to other
facilities as well. Classes are
crowded and held in unsuitable
huts, alboratory sessions must run
until late at night, library space is
at a premium, and expensive
equipment is installed in very
makeshift quarters. The heavy
enrolment, which will continue to
increase, is a factor which makes
these and other problems very critical. Normal development of the
University was hindered by the
depression and the Second World
War which, combined with postwar needs, has produced the situation of today.
Up to 1965 it is anticipated that
approximately $30,000,000 will be
needed for buildings. It is estimated that $5,000,000 will be available from the Canada Council. The
Provincial Government has agreed
to provide the University with
$10,000,000 over the next 10 years
and will match dollar for dollar
money, donated and pledged by
business and industry, the general
public and alumni. A public subscription of $7,500,000 matched by
the Government will therefore
realize the full total required of
$30,000,000.
Mr. Perry expressed confidence
that people of the Kootenays will
give their share to UBC as an
institution which is extremely vital
to everyone, and at the same time
acknowledge their interest in good
accommodation and  facilities for
students who are far from their
homes.
In the Kootenays local chairmen
are: J. G. Acres, Grand Forks;
L. S. Gansner, Nelson; W. K.
Gwyer, Trail; R. F. Mitchell, Rossland; W. T. Waldie, Castlegar; F.
T. Middleton, Salmo; H. F. H. Miller, Nakusp; Norman Brooks,
Kaslo, New Denver and Slocan
City; D. S. Campbell, Riondel; C.
E. MacKinnon, Cranbrook (and
East Kootenay chairman); R. M.
Cooper, Creston; K. N. Stewart,
Fernie; D. A. Gilmour, Golden;
and W. H. R. Gibney, Kimberley.
Alumni associations in many Kootenay communities are working
closely with the campaign chairmen.
RITES HELD
FOR WYNNDEL
FRUITGROWER
WYNNDEL — Friends who knew
and liked him for his whimsical
humor and ready greeting paid
final tribute in St. Paul's United
Church here to George Elmer Lowden, 75, who died in Trail-Tadanac
Hospital.
Rev. B. A. Knipe officiated and
pallbearers were J. Firth, E. A.
Hackett, Lewis Abbott, Whitfield
Abbott, George Lowery and Ad.
Hagen.
Mr, Lowden was born in Ben-
brooke County near Hamilton, Ont.
in 1882. He came west and home-
steaded in the Pincher Creek-Mac-
leod area, where he remained until 1940 when he decided to try
fruit farming and moved to Wynndel. Mr. Lo\yden loved the land
and was a farmer all his life. In
1910 he married Sarah Elizabeth
Hewitt and they had three children, Leila, Mrs. G. Bustard of
Brocket, Alta., George W. Lovyden
of Red Deer, Alta., and Mabel,
Mrs. M. Carter of Sacramento, Cal.
There are three grandchildren, Karen Bustard and Larene and Bonnie Carter and three step-grand-
chlidren, Mrs. Jean Hart, Darlene
and Drew Helme'r and a great
grandson Paddy Hart. Mr. Lowden also has three brothers, Lafy
ette, Emerson and Ernest and a
sister, Mrs. Bertha Lowden, all in
Ontario.
need for public co-operation in the
annual Christmas mail rush which
is now under way, intensified this
year as the first Christmas under
the new truck carrier mail conveyance. The permanent staff of
14 people will be more than doubled during the pressure season,
with extra trucks carrying the
mail in addition to scheduled
trucks and special railway reefer
cars for parcel post between Medicine Hat and Nelson daily.
Special receptacles have been
placed in the post office lobby, one
for local and one for out-of-town
Christmas cards travelling on two^
cent stamps, and use of these is
strongly recommended for quicker
service. The post office reports
good public co-operation, except
from people who are putting first
class mail into them.
SOUTH SLOCAN
FIREMEN BUY
EQUIPMENT
SOUTH SLOCAN - Purchases
to be made with $250 voted to the
fire department by ratepayers
were decided on at a meeting of
firemen. The money will be used
to buy several pieces of equipment
including 200 feet of one and a
quarter inch hose, an electric lantern, first aid kit, fog nozzle, etc.
Fire drill will be held at Mount
Sentinel high and elementary
schools once a month.
The firemen also discussed plans
for holding a smoker after Christmas to try to create more interest
in the brigade.
Cranbrook Lumber
Worker Reinstated
CRANBROOK — Immediate reinstatement of Bernard Chevous to
his job as planer feeder at the
Crestbrook Timber Ltd. plant at
Cranbrook has been ruled by R.
J. S. Moir of Vancouver, with payment of wages since his dismissal
November 22.
The company in dismissing him
alleged neglect in performance of
duties, which the International
Woodworkers of America denied
on his behalf. Mr. Moir was chairman of the arbitration board which
heard the dispute Monday, with
L. J. S. Rees of Penticton on the
board representing the company
and Joe Madden of New Westminster the union. Ben Murgatroyd of
Cranbrook presented the company's case, and Clayton Wells of
Kelowna the union's case, and Mr.
Moir ruled that the dismissal of
Mr. Chevous was without proper
cause.
Legion Sponsors
Turkey Shoot
NEW DENVER - Fat gobblers
went to several marksmen at a
turkey shoot sponsored by the New
Denver-Silverton branch of the Canadian Legion.
J. L. Irwin, W. Ward, W. Gregory, C. Gregory, M. McQuair, E.
Pakula and D. Roberts each won
two turkeys and J. A. Greer, one.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 — 3
CASTLEGAR KIWANIS
TO HONOR BEST CITIZEN
CASTLEGAR—The Castlegar Kiwanis, feeling that recognition be
given for outstanding community
service, has decided to make a
"Best Citizen Award" for 1957.
An initial list of candidates for
this award has been presented for
consideration, as follows: Lloyd
Groutage, Lawrence Grunrod, Ma-
Would Improve
City Approach
CRANBROOK — Junior' Chamber of Commerce request to the
city for beautification of the South
Van Home Street approach to the
city has been referred back by city
council, which pointed out that
the area in question is outside city
limits. The Jaycees' complaint
dealt with the swamp area between
the street and railway tracks.
About 20 years ago an early Jaycee group planted leaf trees along
this route, and those that survived
have improved the location, but
most of the trees planted near the
highway entrance to the city died.
The Salvation Army was granted
city permission to have its kettle
set up at Tenth and Baker Street
corner to solicit contributions for
the Christmas help it extends.
Tenders will be called by the
city shortly for supply of all its
oil, diesel'fuel and gasoline needs
for 1958.
Necessary readings were given
a streets and traffic bylaw amendment which will forbid U-turns on
Tenth Avenue at First Street.
William Street Heads
Windermere Farmers
INVERMERE -William Street
of Windermere was elected president of the Windermere District
Farmers' Institute for a second
term and N. M. Marples of Invermere was elected honorary president. Vice-presidents are K. M,
Marples and Hubert Statham and
the appointments of secretary and
treasurer will be made shortly.
Directors are George Annis, Ewan
Mcintosh, Capt. J. R. Ogilvy-Wills
and Michael Hollybow;
jor John Moll, Mrs. Evedyn Burrows, Sandy Sanderson, William
Reed, Lou Korody, Steve Jankola
and Rennie Mitchell.
The club is anxious that no
worthy candidates be overlooked,
and is asking the public and all organizations in the area, including
Kinnaird and Robson, to co-operate
by making nominations for the
award. All nominations made will
receive careful consideration. Ki-
wanians are not eligible.
The presentation will be made at
the Kiwanis annual meeting and
installation.^ officers January 24.
SPEEDWAY
SERVICE  &  GARAGE  LTD
Sales and Service
Mercury    Lincoln     Meteor
Cedar and Farwoll Sts.        Trail
PHONE 834
FIBERGLAS
REINFORCED PLASTICS
For Boats, etc.
Write tor full information ta
M. E. OBAL
SASH   &   DOOR   CO.   LTD.
Phone 2065   Trail, B.C.   Box 122
New NORGE
Automatic Dryer and Washer
MODERN ELECTRIC
PHONE 133
1632 Bay Ave. Trail, B.C. .
HAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.
Prescriptions,
Stationery. Toiletries, Books
Trail, B.C.
943 Spokane St.,      Phone 11
LOWEST PRICED SEWING
MACHINES
In the Kootenays
UNION-PETERS
DISTRIBUTORS LTD.
1510 Bay Ave.. Trail - Phone 208O
PARSLOW'S
GUNSMITHINCl
LOCKSMITHING
FISHING SUPPLIES
1319 Bay Ave. Phone 1998
TRAIL, B.C.
SPECIAL
ON  LUBRICATION AND OIL CHANGES
We will pay toll on all lubrication and oil changes
on presentation of toll receipts.
Tractionizing Only $2.00 Wheel—All Four $7.00
Open 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. {very Day
Except Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.      ,
"MECHANICS ON DUTY ALL HOURS"
North Shore Service
JUST ACROSS THE BRIDGE
Phone  1841 North Shore
ATTENTION FATHERS!!
PLYWOOD
Is Inexpensive...
CHOOSE YOUR TAKE HOME PANELS NOW!!
ASK US ABOUT THE MANY PLANS
WHICH CAN BE CUT OUT OF
PLYWOOD
such as Santa and Reindeers, Christmas Trees, etc.
1/4" GIS
!/2"GIS
3/4"GIS
24"x36" ....
24"x48" 	
24"x60" 	
36"x36" 	
36"x48" 	
36"x60" 	
PHONE
1180
$ .90 24"x36" ,	
1.20 24"x48"	
l.SO 24"x60" 	
1.3S 36"x36" 	
1.80 36"x48" ,	
2.25 36"x60" 	
$1.56 24"x36"
2.08 24"x48"
2.60 24"x60"
2.34 36"x36"
3.12 36"x48"
3.90 36"x60"
$2.10
2.80
3.50
3.15
4.20
5.25
BURNS
Lumber Company
PHONE
1180
PHONE,      "Everything /or Ihe Builder"
118(r        602 Baker St.    Nelson, B.C.
PHONE
1181
 Established April 32, 1902.
Inferior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday and statutory
holidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
LIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.
Authorized as Second Class Malt, Post Office Department, Ottawa.
MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS.
The Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ot all n«w§
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,
and also the local news published therein.
Friday, December 13, 1357
B.C. Trade Mission Practical Idea
Canadians are re-discovering Britain and Europe in large numbers and
a surprisingly large number of the
younger ones are making their homes
in London. This may appear as most
unusual to those Canadians who have
always believed that no one could be
tempted to live outside of North
America.
An increasingly large number of
our younger actors and actresses are
going to England and establishing
themselves there, largely because they
are received with a sympathy and
understanding which enables them to
develop their abilities.
This is all to the good. We need a
greater mixing and a greater knowledge of one another. We have not yet
entirely divested ourselves of our colonialism and are apt to think that no
good thing can come out of Europe.
The truth is, as the Russians have
most unfortunately demonstrated, that
the Europeans are not backward
peoples. Europe's many races are
made up of virile people, highly
skilled in manufacture, inventive and
cultured and with all the amenities of
life.
It is therefore not unexpected   to
find that the .trade mission from
Canada to Britain is finding much to
admire in the factories of Britain, and
that there are hopes that more will be
bought from that country.
Trade missions usually set out to
sell but this one set out to buy. It is
an innovation with much to recommend it. It says much for the economic
vision of the provincial government
that it realized that Britain could not
be expected to buy our'apples unless
she could also sell to us, and it says
more for their practicality that they
did something about it.
The mission has received a rousing welcome in Britain, mostly we like
to think, because Canada has a special
place in tfie affections of Britons. The
inter-change - of ideas between the
mission and its hosts must be highly
beneficial to both, and the knowledge
of British products which the mission
will bring back will enable our,importers to enlarge the range of goods
they purchase from Britain. This is by
no means an unimportant thing. There
are many things produced not only in
England, but in the rest of Europe, in
advance of those on this continent.
Sovereignty Is Irrelevant
Discussions of joint Canadian-American
defense arrangements is often a little unreal
when it touches on sovereignty. Full national
sovereignty in military matters is becoming
obsolete; it has already ceased to exist for
countries in Canada's position.
Canada and the U. S. recently decided to
set up a single command for North American
ail defense. This is obviously a sound proposition, in the present state of the world: and
It's no doubt equally sound, in view of disparity of strength, that an American general
Motl-
tiers
Readjustment
Half of a woman's life Is lived after
her youngest child goes to school, and one-
third after the youngest child is married,
according to Canadian Home Journal.
Many women find this fact hard to take.
It means a readjustment of their lives, without their children. This readjustment is
largely an emotional one, and if not dealt
with maturely, may result in a serious problem for both mother and children.
After years of motherhood, a woman
must take stock of her assets—and subtract
her children. For some women, this second
weaning is an unhappy experience, for some,
a serious trial—and for some, an impossibility.
Dr. Paul Popenoe, director of the American Institute of Family Relations, says, "Her
over-mothering may be due to a misnlaced
sense of duty, a false feeling of virtue, an
attempt to live her life over again. Or it
may be due to an overpossessive nature, a
lack of imagination and inner resources. It
may also be due to neglect by her husband."
A different life for a newly independent
mother need not overtax her imagination
in this day and age. Exciitng jobs, hobbies,
courses, travel, community service, neglected old friends and stimulating new ones are
all there for the asking.
She has her children loo, but as peers,
not dependents. If she will let herself, she
can now enjoy her children more than ever
before, as people and companions. And at
the same time, she can begin to realize
those "someday" dreams, that the pressure
of raising a family never allowed her.
should head the organization, with a Canadian as his deputy.
But in Ottawa the other day Opposition
members asked: Had Canada handed over
part of its sovereignty without Parliament's
consent? Had the U.S. or a U.S. officer acquired the right to send Canadian forces into
battle without consultation?
The Conservatives, who took a strong line
on Parliament's rights and on undue American influence when they were in the Opposition, must now expect to be challenged
on these issues themselves when the occasion
arises. They are likely to be questioned again
about the defense agreement since their recent answers were not entirely clear.
There will be no harm in this. Within
safety limits, it's right and proper that the
public should know how the single command
is going to work and be assured that the
protocal is in order. But there's not much
practical value left in scruples about military
sovereignty in the present context of world
affairs.
For better or for worse, Canada and the
U.S. are now bound in a defensive partnership that's far stronger than any mere alliance. The North American geographical
unit is also, necessarily and irrevocably, a
military unit in the atomic-ballistic era.
There's an excellent chance that a third
world, war will not happen. If it does, Canada
and the U.S. will inevitably be in it together
from the first day, hour or five minutes, with
due regard, one may hope, to each other's
national dignity bpt absolutely without delay.
Canada's military independence would
then be wholly irrelevant for the duration;
though it's reasonable to hope that Canadian
views on the conduct of hostilities would
carry some weight.
There are fields of policy in which Can-
ad 's separate national rights need to be
asserted, but at the present time defense
Isi.'t one of them. Canada in this sphere of
action, has surrendered some .of its freedom
of action. So, of course, have its allies. Sacrifice of this kind will probably have to continue, even to the point of global co-operation
in the control of arms, if the world is to become safe again. Wholly new ideas about the
ust or rather non-use of weapons may be
essential for human survival.
—Financial Post.
? Questions?
ANSWERS
Open to any reader. Names ot '
paroono asking quoctlons will not be
published. There ia no charge tor this
•ervlce, QUESTIONS WILL, NOT BE
ANSWERED BV MAIL except where
there ti obvloup necessity tor privacy
M. M. L„ Nelson—Would you please give me
instructions for making papier maclie?
The following are the ingredients necessary to make a lump of papier mache a little
larger than an ordinary baseball: Wet paper
pulp (dry paper, one ounce; water, three
ounces), four ounces avoirdupois; dry plaster
of paris, eight ounces avoirdupois; hot glue,
half gill, or four and one-half tablespoonsful.
While the paper pulp is being prepared melt
some best Irish glue in gluepot and make it of
the same thickness, and consistency as that
used by cabinetmakers. Measure different ingredients to be used until the result teaches
you what good papier mache is like, and after
that you can be guided by your own judgment
as you proceed. On taking the paper pulp
from the water give it a gentle squeeze, but
by no means squeeze it as dry as you can.
Now put it in a bowl, put over it three table-
spoonsful of your hot glue, and stir mass into
soft and sticky paste. Next add plaster of
paris and mix in thoroughly. By the time you
have used about throe ounces of the plaster
the mass should be so dry and thick you can
hardly work it. Now add remainder of glue,
work it up until it becomes sticky again, then
add the rest of the plaster. Squeeze vigorously
through your fingers to thoroughly mix the
mass and work it until it is free from lumps,
is finely kneaded, and is sticky enough to
stick fast to the surface of a planed board
when you rub a bit on it by firm pressure of
the finger. If it is too dry to stick fast, add a
few drops of either glue or water (It makes
little difference which), and work up again.
In using, the lump should be kept moist by
means of wet cloth laid over it. When rubbed
upon a pane of glass Ihe papier mache made
as above stuck tightly and dried hard in
three hours without cracking, and could only
be removed with a knife. When spread thin,
as paper, it dried hardenougli in 18 hours to
wax. and, without 'cracking, was as hard as
wood.
M. 0., Slocan Park—Where should one apply
for employment as janitor or fireman for
steam heating at the new hospital in
Nelson which is being built?
Apply at the National Employment Offices, Gray Building, Vernon Street, Nelson.
Letters to The
Editor
Letters to the Editor on any topic of
genuine Interest are welcome if they are
brief, goourate and fair. No letter will be
inserted In whole, or In part, except over
the signature and address of the writer.
Unsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.
Suggest Wage Rates
Cut Winter Employment
TO the Editor:
Sir—In reference to your editorial of
November 26 which states that doing the
job now will reduce unemployment, I would
like to say that there are a lot of elderly
people who would like to have jobs done for
them if they could afford to pay the wages
demanded nowadays. The man who is out
of work is prevented from taking a job at
a lower rate than that set by his particular
union, and fears that what he receives may
be deducted from his unemployment insurance.
Elderly people of limited incomes, pensioners or those unable to do these jobs for
themselves, cannot pay $20,. a day for a
carpenter, or the present rates demanded
by plumbers, paintors, etc. There was a
time when men saved part of their Summer
wages to tide them over the Winter. That,
under present circumstances, is next to impossible.
With so many things offered for sale on
the installment plan, the high cost of living
is blamed for high wages. It Is also a fact
that we live too extravagantly, buying from
hand to mouth. We are constantly offered
temptations to buy goods in packages which
contain premiums intended to deceive us
into thinking we are getting something for
nothing, forgetting that the price of thi
premium reduces Ihe value of the article
bought.
CHARLES BEBBINGTON
Nelson, B.C.
To love life through labor is to be intimate with life's inmost secret.
-KahlH Gibran.
They'll Do It Every Time       .»-.«,..,-,       By Jimmy Hatlol
IOOCSK4TE, THE
BUYER, IS VERy
CONSIDERATE OF
THE SALESMEN ••>
HE SETS ASIDE
AH ALLOTTED
TIME TO SEE
THEM ALL-'
TODAY'S BIBLE
THOUGHT
I have learned in whatsoever
state I am, therewith to be Content. Pliilllppliui.n 4:11.
Some measure happiness and
contentment by the satisfaction of
their appetites. Paul kopt his body
under and his soul dominant.
fluni dtsL
Then just at
the appointed
time all the
brass barge
in,and the
SALESBOys
HAVEN'T GOT
A CHANCE «■»
Okawt ANO A TIP OF THE
hatuoh/ittosam~\\
Alexander.,,
IZ6B.LMST,
HAUTTODIZ,.
Cotw.^ jf,
Our old car is like my old hat.
It's still gat 1 lot of service in ft,
but It's quit makin' me feel respectable.
Your Individual
HOROSCOPE
——By Frame* Drake———
Look in the section in which your
birthday comes and find what your
outlook Is, according to the stars,
For Saturday, Dec. 14, 1957
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)
—Generous Influences encourage
artistic skills, delicate matters,
home decorative activities. Avoid
irritability ahd carelessness, however,
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-
Encouraging rays for personal
matters; also for gain in your occupation or business. You will
attain quicker advancement if you
keep disposition cheerful and move
with decisiveness, however.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -
This day invites vigor and enterprise. Be your skillful self and you
It's Up To Ike
Says Senator
WASHINGTON (AP)-Senator
Mike Mansfield said Thurs. President Eisenhower faces the job in
Paris of making NATO into a
"going concern" instead of "a
symbol of defence."
Mansfield, assistant Democratic leader from Montana and
a member of the Senate foreign relations committee, returned from a European survey
with the convictioft that the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization is
disintegrating.
Senator Theodore Green, chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, took a different
view Wednesday. He said his observations in Europe indicated to
him that NATO is not falling
apart. But Green said Eisenhower ought to provide some dramatic demonstration of leadership at the.Paris conference to
give the alliance new life.
Mansfield said he thinks Eisen-
ower's presence is likely to spur
the forthcoming NATO summit
conference to greater efforts than
otherwise might have been made
toward unifying and expanding
the West's defences. But Mansfield said in an interview the job
of making NATO effective Is
going to be difficult.
TIME FOR ACTION
"The president still *has a
great amount of prestige in Europe," Mansfield said. "But he is
going to have to get down to bedrock with our allies. NATO can't
continue to exist as a symbol of
defence and not a shield.
"The president has got to see
that it is made a going concern.
He has got to see that it becomes
a really mutual defence organization."
Eisenhower will fly to Paris
Friday.
Mansfield expressed the hope
that at, that conference Eisenhower "will insist on the establishment of a NATO scientific
pool ■which will bring together the
collective talents of the Western
nations as the first step in remaking the organization."
Mansfield said he believes Eisenhower can count on the support
of Congress if any legislation is
needed.
Before Eisenhower can promise to give other NATO nations
information on the actual 'fabrication of nuclear weapons, Congress will, have to change restrictions in the present law.
teer D$mpe
SEATTLE (AP) - Deer are
causing extensive damage to Ea-
cific Northwest timberlands but
it can be effectively prevented,
a forester told delegates to the
Western Forestry Conference
here Thursday.
F. Dave Dobbins, forester for
BOoth-Kelly Lumber Co., Springfield, Ore., said his own firm estimated its annual loss of young
trees damaged by deer at $200,
000.
"Somewhere along the line
Mother' Nature or we as forest
and wildlife managers have allowed a cog to slip in the delicate balance between trees and
animals."  Dobbins said.
Speaking before more than 500
American and Canadian lumbermen, Dobbins said the "secret"
Of preventing deer overpopulation
appears to be the killing of an
adequate number of deer before
the animals' range is depleted.
Among other talks today was
one by E. G. Marples of Powell
River Co, Ltd., Vancouver, who
urged a research program be
conducted to develop insecticides
strong enough to exterminate
timber-killing insects and non-
ttxic to fish life.
He said research groups on
both sides of the border should
co-operate in such a project.
"If we don't find an answer,
misinformed public opinion, fostered by minority pressure
groups, may seek legislation preventing spraying of insects," he
said.
should succeed in worthwhile activities. Some tasks may puzzle
you a bit but you will enjoy working them out successfully.
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancerl-
Capitalize on talents, creative
ideas, Have faith in your ability.
Go forward with sound determination, consistency.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-
Whatever your schedule, things
will move more smoothly if 'you
are diplomatic, serene, and cheery.
A fine period for self-expression,
artistry, family matters. Don't
overtax yourself, however.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23
(Virgo) — New gains likely now.
Don't be stymied by being too
reserved or by lack of faith in
your own ability. Make some time
for rest and relaxation.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra) — A happy outlook for
heart interests, domestic matters,
the arts, music, reading, intellectual pursuits. Be up-to-the-minute
in thoughts, objectives, effort. Good
humor important, too.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22
(Scorpio) — A resolute heart never
rejects good counsel or doubts the
outcome of earnest endeavor. Day
has booth advantages and disadvantages. You be the wise judge.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER
21 (Sagittarius) — A sensible
thought for today: Contradiction
should awaken attention — not
anger. Be your most gracious self
and you will w/n.
DECEMBER 22 tO JANUARY 20
(Capricorn) — Though charity begins at home, don't let it end
there. Spread it around; others
will be better off and you will be
the richer for it. Also be steadily
attentive to duties.
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19
(Aquarius) — Speed up necessary
tasks, thereby earning more leisure time. Participate in a healthy
sport, a hobby, a do-it-yourself
project. Watch out for careless
mistakes, however, and be alert
against schemers.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces) — Gentleness and tolerance (both innate assets of yours)
will aid you tremendously during
this challenging period. Finish
routine tasks and take some time
for pleasant diversion. Avoid
worry.
YOU BORN TODAY are cheerful, initiative, generous. You are
often humorous and are generally
well liked because of your practical, sympathetic nature. But your
quality of frankness can get you
into some tight spots if you let
outspokenness outweigh discretion.
Versatility is high in this sector
and, with your industriousness
added, there should be no limits to
your achievement — in more than
one direction, too. Keep your head
when sympathies are aroused, and
don't let your, great energy turn
into over-zealoiisness. Birthdate of:
Tychj Brahe, Danish agronomer:
General James Doolittre, noted
U.S. flyer.
King Features
British Paper Backs Pearson
LONDON «JP) - The News
Chronicle supports the call by
L. B. Pearson, former Canadian
external affairs minister, for a
fresh initiative in international
affairs.
The Liberal newspaper, which
gives prominence to Pearson's
speech in Oslo Wednesday, says
editorially it "agrees" with the
Nobel Peace Prize winner that
allied statesmen have concentrated too much on rockets and
not .enough on economic aid, too
little on diplomacy and too much
on divisions.
"What is wanted in the West,"
says the paper, "and especially
hi Washington, is a reawakening
of the imaginative spirit of the
immediate post-war years when
the Marshall Plan saved western
Europe from collapse and communism."
Pearson waS expected in London on his way back to
Canada. He and Mrs. Pearson are
to stay for a few days at the official residence of the Canadian
high commissioner George Drew.
IT'S ALL COUGH-FIGHTING
MEDICATION
B
UCKLEY'O
MIXTURE 0
Top Qualify....
DOG FOODS
Give Your Dog a Treat . . .
Dr. Bollards New
BURGERBITS
A meatier dog food. Provides all essential food elements
your dog normally needs to keep happy and healthy.
2 Ib. package     .42
25 Ib. bag          4.10
New Instant THRIVO Pre-Baked
DOG FOOD CRUMBLES
The complete food — for all dogs.
5 Ib. package  :  .85
10 Ib. package   $1.50
25 Ib. bag     $3.20
Buckerfields
Homogenized Dog Meal Crumbles
"The food of champions."
5 Ib. pkg 60     10 Ib. pkg 1.17
25 Ib. bag  2.60    50 Ib. bag   4.90
Keep your dog healthy and happy by feeding this
ECONOMICAL,   HANDY   and   PROVEN   DOG   FOOD.
ICE
Works 30 times faster than salt.
goes a long way. 10-lb..bag 	
CHASER
A little
$3.49
Worpt Plastic Window Materials
Hold in heat. — Keep out cold.
Unaffected by great temperature extremes.
8ISALGLAZE — Clean, flexible, strong. Q£Llf'
36" wide. Lineal yard  *    jOt
42" wide. Lineal yard   $1.12
GLASS-O-NET — *5Q^
36" wide. Lineal foot  _   JL S'r'
FLEX-O-GLASS — *> Qlt
36" wide. Lineal foot  _   A,/!*
WYR-0-GLA8S — CQ«t
36" wide. Lineal foot  _    3/r
SNOW SHOVELS
D-Handle "King", black iron   $3.70
D-Handle,  aluminum     $4.50
Lang Handle "Prince"   $3.18
Nelson Farmers Supply
LIMITED
524 Railway St. —
OPEN    MONDAYS   TILL   NOON
Phone 174
iO HOME FOR    1
via GREYHOUND
for savings and safety!
Settle back in a well-heated Greyhound bus
... and enjoy the passing Christmas scenery
as one of the world's finest chauffeurs drives '
you homel Remember, National Safety
Council and Greyhound records prove you
are 54 times safer by Greyhound than by car!
BARGAIN CHRISTMAS FARES
from NELSON to:
One Way Round Trip
Calgary   .$12.25 $22.05
^enficton _,~     7.75 13.95
Vancouver «.. 13.15 23.70
{|' For full information contact the Greyhound Bus
Depot, 686 Baker Street, Nelson, or Telephone
800, or see your local Greyhound Agent.
GREYHOUND
\  Today's Best Buy ut, Ck/&fy*as //otiday 7ta4>vC /
\
\,
illllimmmiimiimiii
AlUlinUimimiiulllUllU'
 2>3°i
L
A bout-the Town
PHONE 1844
A miscellaneous shower honoring
Miss Barbara Brown who is to
be married lo William Lees Beatty
on Saturday, December 28, was
held at the home of Mrs. H. M.
Whimster, 407 Third  Street.  Co-
Mrs. Sinclair
Heads Group
The Fellowship Study Group of
the First Presbyterian Church held
its annual meeting Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. L. Johnson, 309
Hall Mines Road. Mrs. A. G. Sinclair was reelected as president
for the new term, and those chosen
to assist her were vice-president,
Mrs. R. McCreight; secretary, Mrs.
J. Klein, and treasurer Mrs. A.
Euerby. Committee conveners will
be, study, Mrs. A. Peters, sewing
Mrs. M. Terry and visiting, Mrs.
L. Johnson. At the close of a very
successful year plans were made
for projects to be undertaken in
1958.
YULE PARTY
TO BE GIVEN
SALMO GUIDES
SALMO — Arrangements for a
Christmas party to be sponsored
again this year for Guides and
Brownies were made by members
of the Salmo Guide Association at
their monthly meeting at the home
of Mrs. C. M. Esche.
The Association will also donate
funds to the girls for the purchase
of handicraft materials. A discussion took place in regard to the
annual mother and daughter banquet to be held in February.
Members decided to send o 1 d
clothing, left from a rummage sale,
to a factory to be made into a
sleeping bag which will be offered in a contest in the spring.
hostesses were Mrs. G. B. Arnesen,
Mrs. G. C. Arnesen, and Miss
Molly Arnesen.
* *  *
Rev. and Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson,
504 Mill Street, have returned from
the Coast where they visited their
son in Vancouver and their daughter in Victoria.
* #  * .
Thomas Hunt of Lethbridge, who
spent several weeks in Nelson
while with, the RAF during the
war years, was in the city Thursday renewing old acquaintances.
* *  *
Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Phillips
and small son, formerly of Vancouver, have taken up residence at
410 Richards Street. •
* *   * .
George Green, 556 Ward Street,
leaves today to visit his sister in
San Mateo, California.
EDGEWATER LA
TO IMPROVE
V-^'ON  HALL
INVERMERE - Mrs. Monty
Tegart was elected president of
the Ladies' Auxiliary to Edgewater
branch, Canadian Legion, at the
annual meeting. Vice-president is
Mrs. T. Romane, secretary-treasurer, Mrs. B. Neilson, and serg-
eant-at-arms, Mrs. D. Tegart.
Executive members are Mrs. R.
W. Beamish, Mrs. E. Hanson and
Mrs. G. Lutz. Standard bearer is
Mrs. F. Neraasen,
The presidents report included
donations to the Girl Guides, to
the Edgewater Clinic, the Edge-
water Community Hall, the Edge-
water PTA scholarship, Legion
Zone Council, Shaughnessy Military Hospital, Essondale and
Tranquille.
This year the group will concentrate on the Legion hall as a
project.
Mrs. Beamish presented the
past president's pin to retiring
president, Mrs. E. Bolinski.
QUEEN ELIZABETH carefully scrutinizes a statue of herself which has stirred a contorvcrsy in London art circles. Now
on exhibition at the 228th exhibition of the Royal Society of British
Artists, the work is that of a Nigerian artist, Benedict Enwonwu.
One critic Insisted that he felt "a distinct Africanization of the
features." ..
f«f<t<f<t<c<<<ttctecttt<wctg!ctftc!ftct<tftf^
at-home fashions
she'll love
Just about the nicest way's we
know of to wish her a happy
Yuletide . . . these lovely, love-
able at-home fashions — pants
and jacket duos as comfortable
to lounge in as they are good to
look at! $| J  Q c
Priced from       13.V2
Robes - Dusters
Robes as festive as the holiday season, as
warm as your holiday wishes, and as fash-
ji, iooable as he tould wish for.
.«.      NYLON   DUSTERS
.IT^   from  	
|\      '  QUILTED DUSTERS
»*       from   	
ROBES
from   ....
8.98
1K95
14.95
*s
i«!gi€!«te<ei«nti«'si«-i«i«isie«iai8ieiEisiaieia<t<si«i«iirI
I SPECIAL TO MALES!
{ Special assistance in solving your
| problems and Gift Wrapped too
_Mtk»itiMiMMiMMlM)iMtKMi>*MiBili>^
Slips
Just about the nicest ways
we know to wish her a happy
Yuletide. A slip is always
welcome. ^   OC
Prices from     3.SJ
Wl Elects
Mrs. Brewster
SOUTH SLOCAN - Election oi
officers was the main business of
the annual meeting of the Women's
Institute held in the hall here.
Honorary president is Mrs. J. D.
Yeatman, honorary vice-president;
Mrs. Kenna^gh of Nelson; president Mrs, N. Brewster; vice-president, Mrs. H. E. Dahlquist; treasurer, Mrs. Axworthy; secretary,
Mrs. C. M. Murray and director,
Mrs. Baker, Sr.
The institute will sponsor a drive
to collect clothing and comforts
for the Nelson Hostel for Aged
Men.
The secretary reported a successful year with all commitments
met.
Christening Held
For Boswell Children
BOSWELL—A double christening
ceremony was performed here by
Rev. R. N. S. Craig of Creston.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
N. E. Bainbridge was given the
names Carol Elizabeth. Her godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Bainbridge and Mrs. E. Whitney. The
young son of Mr. and Mrs. W.
Hewitt received the names Donald
Lawrence, and those named as
godparents were Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Koch and W. Hewitt. Later Mrs.
#ainbridge and Mrs: Hewitt were
joint hostesses at a christening
party at the Hewitt home.
Boswell Man Weds
In California
BOSWELL-Of interest to Boswell is the marriage in California
of Richard D. Embrec of Sacramento and Boswell, and Alicia Sue
Daishi of Los Angeles.
The newlyweds expect to spend
a weeks at Christmas' time at the
home of the groom's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. Embree of Boswell.
'%udbi£Aa#L
PRACTICAL GIFT
Capture this butterfly with your
crochet hook. The plain filet crochet is set off by touches of the
lace stitch.
Pattern 609; crochet directions
[or chair back 1214 x 16 inches, arm
rest 6 x 12—in No. 50 cotton. Use
for scarf ends, buffet sets.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
tor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,
NDN, 60 Frpnt St., W., Toronto
6nt. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.
Our gift to you—two wonderful
patlrens for yourself, your home
— printed in our Laura Wheeler
Needlecraft Book, plus dozens of
other new designs to order —
crochet, knitting, embroidery, iron
ons, novelties. Send 25 cents for
your copy of this book NOW —
with gift pattern printed In itl
*i»k>ii!tJiSiSi»i:
TALK ON FAITH GIVEN
TO PYTHIAN SISTERS
At a well-attended meeting this
week, Mrs. Olive Jansen, district
deputy grand chief, paid her official visit to Nelson temple, Pythian Sisters. The theme for her inspiring address was "Faith and
Friendship."
New officers were elected for the
coming term. Installation will take
place in January.
Mrs. James Bereau reported on
tWfe financial assistance for physiotherapy being given to a cerebral
palsy-child at Krestova.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Mrs. L. Ott and Mrs. Laura Kirby.
Presbyterian Bazaar
Has Festive Setting
With a bowl of white chrysanthemums and red carnations centering the tea table, and sparkling
littlerChristmas trees and bouquets
setting off the guests' tables, the
Refrigerator
Desserts Among
Easiest To Make
By MARGARET CARR
Cool and lusciously rich, refrigerator desserts are easier to make
than many desserts. Best of all,
they can be made well ahead of
time.
Today's two new recipes you
will want to keep in your card
file. Both use cereal as a crust
or a crunchy topping. If you have
shied away from cereal desserts,
reconsider — although similar' to
graham cracker crusts, the cereal
is flavorful and delicious as well
as' extra good in nutritional value.
Crust
CHOCOLATE MOUSSE PIE
One-third cup butter, melted;
IVi cups crushed sugar-coated
cereal, 2 tablespoons sugar.
Mix all ingredients. Press evenly
into 8 or 9-inch pie pan. Bake at
375 degrees F. for,8 to 10 minutes.
Chill. Fill with chocolate mousse,
Filling
One tablespoon unflavored gelatin, 3 tablespoons water, 1 cup
chocolate syrup, 2 cups whipping
cream, M. cup sifted icing sugar
Vi teaspoon salt.
Soften gelatin in water and dissolve over hot water. Stir into chocolate syrup. Combine cream, icing
sugar, salt in chilled bowl and whip
until stiff. Fold into chocolate mixture. Pour into pie crust. Chill 3
to 4 hours.
LEMONDOWN FANCY
One-quarter cup butter, 1-3 cup
brown sugar (packed), 114 cups
wheat flakes, 1-3 cup chopped nuts,
3 egg whites, Vi cup sugar, 3 egg
yolks, 1 cup whipping cream, grated rind of 1 lemon, juice of 1
lemon (4 tablespoons).
Melt butter in saucepan. Blend
in brown sugar. Cook over low
heat, stirring constantly to "crack'
stage, 250 degrees F. (temperature
at which a small amount cracks
against side of cup when dropped
in cold water). Take from heat.
Add wheat flakes, nuts. Stir until
well coated. Spread mixture thin
on baking sheet. Cool.
Beat egg whites until stiff. Gradually add sugar. Beat egg yolks
until thick and lemon-colored; fold
into meringue. Mix the whipping
cream, lemon rind and juice and
beat until stiff. Fold into egg mixture. Butter -8-inch square pan or
7 x 10-inch refrigerator,tray. Crum
ble nut crunch .'mixture into small
pieces. Sprinkle half into pan. Pour
in filling and sprinkle rest of nut
crunch mixture on top. Freeze
quickly until firm. Cut into squares
or slices. Serves 9 to 12.
hall of the Trinity-St. Paul's
United Church had a festive air for
the Presbyterian Church Christmas
tea and bazaar on Wednesday
afternoon. The tea, which was well
attended, was convened by Mrs.
W. A. Manson. Mrs. D. T. Heddle
received the guests.
Pouring were Mrs. G. Sinclair,
Mrs. A. R. Peters, and Mrs. N.
Winlaw. Serving the tea were Mrs.
W. F. Cox, Mrs. B. McCreight,
Mrs. Jackson, and Mrs. F. Selby.
At the bake table, goods were
sold by Mrs. E. C. Douglas and
Mrs. Crimmond. The work table
was attended by Mrs. R. Wallace
and Mrs. F. J. Klein. At the candy
counter, Mrs. W. Grainger and
Miss Mary Heddle sold candy
which had been made by the Sunday School girls and their mothers.
In charge of the tea and refreshments were Mrs. R. McCreight,
Mrs. H. H. Currie, and Mrs. A.
Euerby.
"Baby Doll
Pyjamas
Because the lady you have
in mind likes to feel pampered ... Gifts from our lingerie
department — so pretty, yet
practical. Baby
Doll Pyjamas
>i»ftifia^».>I'.!:>.3:JJ.a_!,.!'.S,5A!>rJi»lgl«*»t»S)Jf»3iS!,feaj,
ANDREW'S
8LIPPER SALE
It Is not too late to take ad.
vantage of the outstanding
values offered at Andrew's during our Christmas Slipper Sale,
We have quality slippers that
you will be proud to give as a
gift, at prices that you really
can afford. For example, our
Daniel Green slippers are all
priced at $5.95 and these were
all originally $7.95 to $9.96,
There are corduroys In green,
yellow, red, black and satin
numbers In pink and light
blue to choose from,
Wo have hundreds of other
quality women's slippers which
are priced from $1.95 to $5,50
which have all been reduced
In price for this event.
Our children's seleotlon of
slippers have been reduced to
$1.00 to $2.95.
The boys' slippers are now
plrced from $1.95 to $3,95.
The men's slipper section has
real values to offer. Our prices
on the men's slippers start at
$1.95 to $8.95. We have top
quality men's kid leather opera
slippers which have been reduced over $2.00 a pair. The
$1.95 lines were erlglnally $4.95,
We also have Gift Certificates which can be used for
all members of the family. We
have special certificates for
Naturallzer shoes which Include a miniature shoe box containing a tiny shoe. We also
have gift certificates for Hartt
men's shoes so that the man
In your life can rr)ake his own
selection  later on.
This year give a gift that Is
remembered all year, SLIPPERS.
Our Square Dance Shoes
have Just arrived, Black or
white kid Inathor. This Is the
regulation shoe worn In Vancouver,
ANDREW'S
679 Bakor St. Phone 633
PYTHIAN SISTER
SLATE NAMED
SALMO — Officers were elected
at the annual meeting of Twin
Temple, Pythian Sister. Mrs. C.
Fletcher is past chief pro tern,
Mrs. C. Morris, chief; Mrs, R.
Piper, senior; Mrs. I. Esche, junior; Mrs. M. Peters, manager;
Mrs. V. Ponti, guard; Mrs. F.
Papeau, protector; Mrs. F. Henderson, secretary; Mrs. ,M. Dixon,
treasurer, and Mrs. Motley, pianist.
Members decided to accept an
invitation from the Knights of
Pythias to hold a joint installation
in January. Mrs. M. John was
elected as installing officer, with
Mrs. V. Gibbon and Mrs. B. Harris as her assitants.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 — S
Minister Speaks
To Church Circle
Rev. K. Imayoshi was guest
speaker when the Dorothy Franklin Mission Circle held its December meeting at the home of Mrs.
Frank Aikins, 301 Beasley Street.
Three members of the senior
mission circle were welcomed as
visitors. Mrs.. B. J. Hoskins and
Mrs. W. J. Haldane were in charge
of the devotional "period.
0HLL lip, With.
Wcudan. WlaAiitL
Printed Pattern
FOR HALF-SIZERS
Rows of tucking soften the neckline of this printed Patern for half-
sizers. The skirt has an easy flare
that is fashionable, graceful. Proportioned to ' fit — no alteration
problems.
Printed Pattern 9084: Half Sizes
14V4, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22V4, 24%.
Size 16% requires 4% yards 35-
inch fabric.
Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.
Send FIFTY CENTS (50c) In
coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please
print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.
Send your order to MARIAN
MARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.
Toronto, Ont.
ART FESTIVAL
Vancouver's first annual arts
festival starting July 19 is among
features of British Columbia's 1958
centennial.
Last Two Days
of Our
22nd Birthday Sale
FREE TURKEY WITH ALL BELOW
Chesterfield and Lounge Suites
2 Chairs, Sofa, 2 Step
$299.00
$169.50
6 pc. Sofa Suite in plastic
Tables, Coffee Table.
FREE TURKEY -..._	
2 pc.   Lounge Suite in hard wearing freize. Chair
is Rocker.
FREE TURKEY	
3 fie. Sectional Suite in a very attractive green
freize and d*0£A CA
FREE TURKEY     $007.DU
2 pc. Sofa Suite covered in your choice of chocolate
or beige Mohair freize. d»OOA CA
and FREE TURKEY _'_ $OoV.DU
2 pc. Suite, airfoam cushions, smart looking lovely
green freize and FREE TURKEY.
And Many Other Birthday Values With a
FREE TURKEY
Bedroom   Suites
Beautiful 3 pc. double dresser suite in Desert Sand
FREE TURKEY   _ $279.50
Terrific value in this Three-Piece Suite in gorgeou*
Sand Mahogany.
and FREE TURKEY	
Eastern    Hardwood
Mahogany.
FREE TURKEY	
$179.50
Suits   In  glowing  Cordovan
 $279.50
3 pc. Suite in.glowing Tanbark Mahogany, all Eastern hardwood construction. (tO^ft OO
and FREE TURKEY $ JOt.OO
French Provincial at its best. This lovely suite is In
fine mellow Cherrywood. & Af\ft AA
and FREE TURKEY $4U7.UU
Above Are a Few ef the Many
OUTSTANDING VALUES IN OUR GIANT
BIRTHDAY SALE
SAVE ON YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
FROM THE STORE
WHERE YOUR DOLLARS BUY MORE
Jhssmw/iL
Santa To Visit
Windermere Party
INVERMERE - The annual
Windermere District Women's Institute Christmas party for all
children of the district will be
staged here Tuesday. The highlight
■will be the visit of Santa Claus
FAMED EXPLORERS
First white men to visit the site
of Winnipeg were Sieur de la
Verendrye and two of his sons in
1738.
which will follow a program of
children's films. Convener of the
event is Mrs. Charles Osterloh.
IRENE'S
569 Ward St
MILLINERY AND
DRESS  SHOP
Phone 50
Pre-Christmas
Dress Clearance
Group 1
Values  to $12.93
Only
$5.95
Group 2
Values to $19.95
Only
$9.95
++       Friday Night Special       ++
10% OFF WINTER COATS
Practical.. . . Sure to Please
£nsi
w
FOR   HER
Slippers
Skates
Purses
Dress Shoes
Ski-Boots
Snow-Boots
Curling Boots
Featuring the famous
Ken Watson Curling Boot
THE     WHOLE     FAMILY
FOR   HIM
Slippers
Dress Shoes
Ski-Boots
Skates
Snow Boots
Ripons
for the Children
+    SLIPPERS *   COWBOY BOOTS
SKATES
RIPONS
ENGINEER BOOTS
PARTY SHOES
This year choose a practical, welcome gift- — from the
large stock at Lyons, , . , Something tor every member
ot the family, be It for Mom, Dad, Sister, Brother.
ALL GIFTS EXCHANGEABLE
411
Baker  St.
Phong
1114*
 6 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957
MACMILLAN'S
GRANDCHILDREN
ENJOY WESTERNS
LONDON (CP)-Prime Minister Maemillan, a proud grandfather, has a ready-made group
for children's parties during the
Christmas season.
His grandchildren—all 12 of
them—are in the age range for
yuletide revels.
The festivities started Wednesday with a tea party at 10 Downing Street, the premier's residence and a most unlikely spot
for high jinks.
But  after  the   tea   and  sand-
TOYMAKE11S GET RAISE
LONDON (Reuters) - British
toymakers today won an early
present for their own Christmas
stockings. The 30,000 men who
fill Santa Claus's sleigh were
awarded pay raises of up to nine
shillings and fourpence ($1,311 a
proved by Labor Minister Iain
week, in a labor agreement ap-
Macledd.
wiches — Lady Dorothy Macmillan's idea—a western film put
the youngsters in a mood for
cowboys and Indians.
Downing Street inlormants  report the noise was terrific.
What has age to do
with borrowing money?
Age in a company spells experience.
BecauBe HFC is backed by 79 years'
experience, you may borrow with confidence. You get prompt attention,
repayment terms tailored to your needs,
peace of mind about money matters. Do
as two generations have done, Borrow
with confidence from Household Finance.
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
CM/rttd&M rf Ccuuuto>
S. G. Bernard, Manager
608 Balcer Street Telephone 1890
NELSON
lew York's Resiles* Millions
Suffer From Strike Results
By JOSEPH MacSWEEN
Canadian Press Staff Writer
NEW YORK (CP)—A complete
stall of this city's subway system could be almost compared
to a blocked artery in the brain.
Sudden paralysis would result.
New    York's    restless    millions
would have no  way  to get between their homes and their jobs,
to say nothing of their other pursuits.
Perhaps no other city is so
much at the mercy of its transit
system as New York, especially
the island borough of Manhattan,
which swallows hordes of humans daily, then disgorges them
to the sister boroughs. and suburbs each evening.
The 238-mile subway system
carries 4,500,000 persons daily
and 3,548,333,000 annually—more
than all the railways of the
United States put together.
SWEARED AT, PRAISED
The three subway companies-
integrated since 1940 into one
municipaliy-owned system — is
criticized, and even cursed, by
its patrons, who- nevertheless
swear that it is the fastest and
safest way known to get around.
In Brooklyn alone, the biggest
of the five boroughs wilh a population of 2,800,000, the subways
carry an estimated 1,200,000 per
sons each working day. New
York's total population is 8,000,-
000.
The Transit Authority says a
10-car train carries about 2,500
at the rush hour. Rocking along
in the narrow tunnels, the trains
give the impression of reckless
speed, but the limit is set at 50
miles an hour.
OTHER TRANSPORTATION
Besides the subway commuters, many thousands of folk converge on Manhattan each day by
means of the New York Central
Railway, the Long Island Railroad, buses and their own cars.
But many of these, including
New York Central passengers
from wealthy Westchester County
to the north, depend on the subways to get them from the rail
terminal to their offices.
The Transit Authority operates
many bus routes—69 in Brooklyn and 32 in Queens—but, these
are concerned mostly with getting passengers to subway stops.
Buses are unable to cope with
the inter-borough crowds.
The Long Island Railroad, trying to take up the slack in the
subway strike in Queens and dozens of Long Island towns, put all
available gear into .'service. But
it could not match the service of
subway trains which were scheduled for every three minutes.
mmmsm
\................ j
EXTRA...
the gasoline that stops both
cold weather stalling and gas
line freezing is available
only at the pumps of
Imperial Esso Dealers.
Canada's first gasoline
designed specifically
to overcome these common
hazards, it has been used
and approved by hundreds of
thousands of motorists
since it was introduced
three years ago.
Get trouble-free driving all winter-
fill up today with ESSO
always LOOK TO IMPERIAL for the best
IMPERIAL
£sso
DEALER
Christmas Trade Low
For Powell River
PM To Protest Boost In
U.S. Lead-Zinc Tariffs
POWELL RIVER, B.C. (CP) -
The first pinch of an economic
slump resulting from closure of
the world's largest newsprint mill
is being felt at this British Columbia coastal town.
The mill, operated by the Powell
River Company and employing
1800 of the. town's 10,000 residents,
has been idle for a month through
a strike of B.C. pulp and paper
workers. With the drying up of
the company's $800,000 monthly
payroll, smaller businesses fear
they also may be forced to close.
Estimates of the business slump
range from 20 to 75 per cent, depending: on the type of business.
"Business is bad," says Jim
Mavis, president of the board of
trade and part owner of an oi! distributing firm. "Everything was
dependent on the mill. The strike
could' break us," '
HOTEL LAYS OFF 40
Across the street from the mill,
which produces five per cent of
the newsprint supply, is the town's
second largest business — the
Hotel Rodmay. Owner Charlie
Mantoani is slinging beer himself
after being forced to.lay off 40 of
his 70 employees. "I've never
known anything so tough."
Chuck W. Harrison, owner of
a furniture store, looks ruefully
at the stock he laid in for Christmas. There is no Christmas trade.
He has cut his staff to five from 11.
Herb Entress, owner of Cranberry Motors, had six employees'
a year ago. Now only he is left.
His brother, a part owner, is pulling out.
Powell River is 75 miles up-
coast from Vancouver. The mill
is one of nine throughout B.C., was
closed Nov. 14 by a strike of 6000
members of the International
Brotherhood of Pulp and Sulphite
Workers and the United Paper-
makers and Paper Mill Workers.
The.unions are demanding a 12
per cent wage increase. They rejected an offer by the seven companies involved of VA per cent.
FEW LEAVE TOWN
Murray Mouat, president of
Local 76 of the pulp-sulphite
workers, says the morale of the
strikers is good. Only 3d or 40
men have left town and "we are
quite satisfied with the situation
at the present time."
But the union is apparently taking no chances. A strike bulletin
admonished "a number of dissenters within our ranks" and one
businessman said:
"I.have to watch what I say. If
I criticised the union I wouldn't
have any business."
Many merchants, however,_ are
helping the strikers. A ba'kery
supplies doughnuts to a canteen
set up for pickets outside the mill.
A barber gives free haircuts. A
taxi firm offers to take expectant
mothers to hospital free of charge.
The strikers, who get union
strike pay of $10 a week if they
are single and $15 plus $1 for each
dependent if they are married, are
making their own contributions.
VENISON IN STORAGE
, A record number of deer were
shot during the season and much
of the venison is in deep-freeze
storage. The men are repairing
broken toys for the children of
needy families.
The welfare committee of Local
76 is planning a Christmas party
for the children of its 1500 members. As usual, there'll be Santa
Claus, a tree, and candy for the
youngsters. But this year, there'll
be no gifts.
OTTAWA (CP)-Any move by
the United States to increase
customs tariffs on lead and zinc
will meet with representations
from the Canadian government,
Prime Minister Diefenbaker said
today.
He was replying in the Commons to a question from James
Byrne (L—Kootenay East), in
whose British Columbia riding
base metals are smelted.
■ Mr. Byrne said a New York
Times story had indicated that
the tariff on nickel Was to be reduced to "mollify" Canadians for
a prospective boost in the U.S.
duty on lead and zinc. He
wanted the government to, inform the U.S. state department
12th Series Bonds
fa* A'l-TSe His!)
OTTAWA (CP) - Finance Minister Donald Fleming announced
in the Commons Thursday that the
12th series of Canada savings
bonds reached an all-time subscription peak of $1,169,421,000 by
Dec. 10. The issue will be withdrawn from sale Dec. 31.
He said payroll-deduction subscriptions also reached the peak
of $215,000,000 with 700,000 employees  participating.
that a e rdctuion in the nickel
tariff; would not compensate for
boosts on lead and zinc.
He. also asked that the Canadian government warn the U.S.
ot "drastic retaliatory action" in
the event of lead-zinc increases.
TOO SPORTY
, FT. DIX, N.J. (AP) - The U.S.
Army is investigating reports that
some spit 'n' polish soldiers are
going so far as to shine the bottoms of their shoes. A statement
issued here Wednesday emphasized that this is not army1 policy.
Price Spreads
Commission May
Open February
EDMONTON <CP) - Dr. Andrew Stewart, chairman of the
newly - appointed royal commission on price spreads, said Thursday the commission may begin
hearings in February.
Dr. Stewart, president of the
University of Alberta, returned
here Wednesday from Ottawa,
where appointment of the seven-
man body was announced Tuesday by Prime Minister Diefenbaker.
The commission will investigate the spread of prices received
by producers and prices paid by
consumers.
Dr. Stewart said he hopes a
preliminary meeting of commission members can be held early
in January to discuss plans for
the hearings.
Public hearings probably
would be held in . every , region
across Canada, if. not in every
province.
He said no deadline has. been
set by the government for completion of the report.
Drives Good
Oil Bargain
TOKYO (Reuters)—A Japanese
oil company has formally signed
a contract with Saudi Arabia giving the Red Sea kingdom a 56-
per-cent cut of all potential oil
profits, it was announced Thursday.
Keen competition from Western
oil companies forced the Japanese to abandon their original 50-50
offer of a profit split, a spokesman for the Japan-Arabian Oil
Company said.
The 40-year contract, signed in
Riyadh Tuesday, allows the Japanese 44 per cent of all their future oil profits from exploration
of the Persian Gulf off the neutral zone between Kuwait" and
Saudi Arabia.
RENTAL PLUS BONUS
For this the Japanese company
will pay a yearly rental of $3,-
000,000. If oil is found, the company will pay an annual bonus
of $2,000,000 to Saudi Arabia from
the time exploration started.
Taro Yamashita, chief Japanese negotiator who signed the contract, has left Riyadh for Kuwait
to sign another contract with Kuwait authorities.
The Japanese spokesman said
his company first sought a
50-50 profits split following the
pattern of. arrangements concluded between the United States
and Venezuela.
But the Saudi Arabian authorities insisted on 56. per cent of the
profit?,   he   said,   which   they,|
claimed was applicable to  contracts with European nations.
Britons View
Toronto Play
LONDON (CP) - For the second time this year, a play with
a Toronto setting opened in London's West End Wednesday night.
Like its predecessor, J. B.
Priestley's The Glass Cage,
which opened a month's run here
last April, the new production
emanates from Toronto's Crest
Theatre. But Be My Guest? is a
Torontonian's view of her native
city. .
Mary Jukes,- a Toronto Globe
and Mail columnist who worked
for the consumer relations
branch of the prices board during
the i Second World War, was in
Britain last October to launch her
first play on a six-week, provincial tour at Brighton.
In a sense, Be My Guest? is a
comedy version of the recent
Broadway thriller, The Desperate
Hours, depicting the invasion of
a home in Toronto's Rosedale
district by a pair of crooks. The
accent is on intrigue rather than
menace.
Unlike The Glass Cage, which
came over from Canada with its
original Crest Theatre cast, Be
My Guest? has been freshly
staged by British producer Anna
Deere Wiman, who acquired the
play after seeing it performed in
Toronto.
Its only Canadian actor is Winnipeg-born Gordon Tanner, who
has been in Britain since 1948.
NEW TRANS-PORTABLE RADIO
adds a new measure of listening pleasure to
OLDSm
Music in the car...
or wherever
you are!   ,
Oldsmobile's new Trans-
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your regular car radio, but
can also be unlocked and
used as a lightweight, 160-
hour-battery-powered
portable!
.   'Optional al extra etti
NOW! SEETHE FEATURES OF THE FUTURE AT YOUR
AUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER'S!
Hooray! Buffet-
with Seven-Up!
Nothing does it like Seven-Up!
 32^3
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 — 7
SLEIGH LOADS
OF CHRISTMAS
Prices
Effective
To
Dec. 21st
YOUR OVERWAITEA STORE
To Get the Finest
TURKEY
ORDER
TOBAt!
Swift's Butter Ball Grade 'A' Eviscerated---Ready for
The Oven
TURKEYS
20 Ibs. and Over
ib. 5 5
16 to 20 lbs.
ib. 57'
10 to 16 Ibs.
Ib.
1
Buy Your Turkey From Overwaitea and Get a FREE Chance On
The two winners will be asked a simplt
qualifying question. Draw noon Dec. 24,
Two Panda Dolls-Value $4.75 Each.The *winne,s "i"be asked',impU
Fresh Pork Riblets
Economical Spore Ribs;
Finest Select Quality
MIXED NUTS
Fresh Sausage        3!bs
Homemade. Our own recipe. H.C.     VAw.
Round Bone Roast Ik lO
Grade "A" Red   I U«  4#   AT
Delicated. Grade "A" Red.
Cube Steak      |h 59c
No Fat — No Sinew.
GIFT SUGGESTIONS
ENGLISH BISCUITS in beautiful tins of every shape and size,
BOXED CHOCOLATES, Moir's, Lowney's, Ganong's, ere,
CIGARETTES in fancy Christmas wraps, JAPANESE ORANGES
as family gifts, and ASSORTED CHRISTMAS FOODS to make
up gift parcels. Our selection is the best ever. We invite you to
check it over.
Overwaitea
MARGARINE    % Ib. pkg. 5 9
2ib<85
King Oscar. .
Sardines     2,ins57e
vaitea
Salad Dressing*- 69c
Brilliants and Ribbons
Hard Mixed Candy 2»»69c
1957 BONUS PLAN WINNERS
The following had their names drawn, answered the qualifying questions
and were awarded large $10.00 grocery hampers.
Nov. 30—Mrs. J. C. Taylor, 224 Innes St., City.
Dec.   7—Mrs. M. R. Burills, 1303 Robertson Ave., City.
Overwaitea
NOVEMBER     Mrs.E.Marza, ,     ■
Total ji»
912B-6th St.     Value $
City. of Award. _
JUMBO
WINNER
36
59
CHRISTIE'S
Christmas Napkins: 2 pkgs. Z7i
RitzBiscuits 21c 3 9C
Chocolates £*-"■ — 2,/2 |b' b°x $2-19
p EAS tAC"::- - — -    2tim 4 3c
Grand Forks Gems
Potatoes   25 lb. bag 89c
Free Parking at OVERWAITEA
 8 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957
New Funeral Home, Opens in Nelson
DEATHS
By The Canadian Press
Windsor, Ont. — Professor Ernest Wilby, 89, one ot North
America's most distinguished architects.
London, Ont.—Dr. William Joseph Tillmann, 8i, physician for
60 years and specialist in obstetrics and children's illnesses.
Hemmingford, Que. — Dr. Arthur Henry Egerton, 66, one ol
Canada's outstanding music scholars.
Winnipeg — Lt.-Col. George Edward Cole, 78, former director of
the Manitoba mines branch.
White River, South Africa—Col.
James Stevenson-Hamilton, one of
the. world's greatest authorities on
African, wild life.'   .-.- '
NORWEGIAN TREES
Seventy-five per cent of Norway's forests consist of evergreen
spruce and pine.
BEST WISHES ,
To The
Nelson Funeral Home
AND AMBULANCE SERVICE
Spokane Casket Company
Box 1255 Spokane, Wash.
Congratulations
To The
Nelson Funeral Home
and Ambulance Service
It Was Our Pleasure To Install The
"Lennox"  Heating  System
In This Magnificent, New Funeral Home.
BENNETTS LTD.
MACHINE SHOP
324 VERNON ST.     NELSON, B.C.     PHONE 593
Attractive Building
Has Latest Equipment
One of several modern new buifdings to rise in Nelson
during 1957, Nelson Funeral Home and Ambulance Service
opens its doors Saturday. :. .
Its owners, Frank Richardson and. K. W. Rigby, well
known Castlegar men, describe it as one of the modern
funeral homes in southeastern British Columbia.   .
The building, at the corner of Ward arid Silica Streets,
will be open to public inspection all day Saturday,and
during the evening.
Built at a cost of about ;$34,000 during a three-month
period, the funeral home features effective use of carpeting,
acoustic tile, drapes and ceil
ing and floor lighting.
Mr. Richardson, who will be
manager, is a Kootenay resident
of about 20 years, and Mr.' Rigby,
will be in charge of the ambulance
service, has spent all his life in the
Kootenays. An employee, Walter
Arnsdorf, is well known in Nelson
where he learned the undertaking
profession during the last seven
years.
In connection with the ambulance
service, the two owners and Mr.
Arnsdorf all have first aid and oxy.
gen therapy certificates, and when
desired, arrangements .will be
made to have a registered nurse,
especially on longer trips. Application has been made for two-way
radio sets, giving fast communication for protection of patients.
One vehicle will be completely
equipped, including stretcher, oxygen equipment, siren and red
flasher light for exclusive use as
an ambulance, and other vehicles
can be converted to ambulances
if necessary.
Entering the home from Ward
Street, one comes upon the office
and waiting room. Beside a door
to the chapel is a drinking fountain
for the convenience of those attending services. The chapel will
seat about 200 persons on wicker-
type settees. At the back is a foyer,
which can be used, to seat overflow crowds.
A three - dimensional, electrically lighted picture of "The Prince
of Peace" is in front of the chapel
facing a cross. The family.room
is situated so that the' family "will,
be able to hear the service and see.
the congregation, yet remain apart,
Tones of an electric organ will
add to the beauty and dignity of
the chapel and service. The organ.
of Nelson,'will be located beside
the family room, out of view of
minister and congregation, with
accommodation there for a soloist.
When he enters the chapel, the
minister will press a switch. An
electric-light flashing on the organ wiil indicate, the beginning of
the service.
One unusual feature of the building is the curved driveway-garage
beside the chapel. This will permit a family to leave the service
privately and comfortably, no matter what the weather.    ../...'.
One door of the garage opens
on Silica Street, one on Ward
Street. Off-street parking is provided for about 25 cars. ■
Golden spruce trees, grown in
Nelson, have been planted outside
the home for added effect.
Two reposing rooms have been
provided where family members
can spend time. These and the
family room, seating about 25, are
furnished with hostess chairs, and
are wired for telephones.
Downstairs; one of the largest
selection rooms in B.C. will feature caskets from Vancouver, Spokane and other centres. The company will also supply grave
plaques.
Also downstairs are the preparation room, storage room and furnace room, using gas and forced
air heating. A freight elevator has
been installed.
Cremations will be by a Spokane
funeral home with modern, scientific equipment, and arrangements
can be made for services at the
Crematorium.
Contractor was Laurence Simpson of Nelson and cinder blocks
for exterior construction were
from Korpack Cements Products
of Trail. Greer's Electric of Castle-
to be played by Mrs. R. Percival gar was electrical contractor.
Foot's Approach
Pleases Cypriots
NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) -
Cyprus' new British governor.
Sir Hugh Foot, Thursday amazed
the local populace by walking
through the streets of Nicosia
with only a couple of plaincloth-
esmen.
It was the first time in years,
and certainly during the two-
year-old emergency, that a British governor has gone around on
foot. The walk took place as rioting throughout the island went
ipto its sixth successive day.
Police fired at demonstrating
students in the West Cypriot town
of Polemi, w o u n 1 i n g a schoolboy and narrowly missing
the school headmaster.
During his walk, Foot paused
to talk to the people and at one
spot near the no-man's land that
divides the Greek and Turkish
sectors of town he listened while
a Greek vendor pointed out the
daipage done to his store by
Turks.
Occasionally Cypriots stopped
to shake his hand. Most of
them expressed mazement at his
courage in walking through the
streets without a heavy military
escort.
Cypriot students also stoned police and security forces at two
other Cyprus villages but
without any casualties, a communique said.
At Kharacha, North Cyprus,
boys and girls twice stoned security forces and at one stage they
used an iron bar.
Four women were injured by
stones. Later a number of persons, including girls, were arrested.
At Lefkara village, south oi
Nicosia, students stoning the police shut themselves inside the
village church when reinforcements arrived.
Police waited outside and when
the pupils started to come out
they arrested a number of them
Other security forces were
stoned by youths in Yialousa vil
lage in the island's northeastern
Panhandle Peninsula.
The youths erected a roadblock of chunks of rock and
stoned- the troops when their vehicle halted. They were dispersed
without force.
Our Best Wishes and
Congratulations Are Extended to the
NELSON FUNERAL HOME
and
AMBULANCE SERVICE
On the Completion and Opening of
Their New Premises
Burns Lumber Co.
Suppliers of
"EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER"
Canada has about 27,000 firefighters, including 7000 professional
and 20,000 volunteers.      ■    ■
Best Wishes
TtfThe
Nelson Funeral Home
AND AMBULANCE SERVICE
We are proud to have had a part
in the construction of this new and
beautiful Funeral Home.
Greer's Electric
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
You Are Cordially Invited to Attend the
Official Opening of the New and Ultra-Modern
NELSON
FUNERAL HOME
and
Ambulance Service
On Saturday, December 14 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
»«te*
We wish to extend our thanks and appreciation to the. contractor, sub-contractors and suppliers
for their splendid co-operation during the period of construction
Mrs. R. Percival
Organist
Mr. W. Arnsdorf
Assistant
FAMILY ROOM
The capable and courteous management and staff are
backed by years of experience and are proficient in their
services with the utmost consideration to the families
concerned.       ,   ,
CHAPEL
The above photograph shows the beautiful chapel with a seating capacity of approximately 200 and is furnished with modern furniture designed especially for
th* utmost in beauty and comfort.
RECEPTION ROOM
The Nelson Funeral Home is designed with a spacious and
comfortable reception room.
A large family room capable of seating up to thirty persons
is also provided for the immediate family and relatives
assuring them of personal attention and privacy.
 Favors TV Link
For (anada-U.K.
LONDON (Reuters)—The News
Chronicle Thursday viewed the suggestion for a television link between Britain and Canada as a
means of strengthening a bond
within the commonwealth and a
stimulation of the desire to buy
British.
Charles Stanley, chairman of
the Pye group of radio and television companies, had urged the
British government to lay a
transatlantic television cable to
boost British-Canadian  trade.
"Reception of American television programs has probably
done more to swing Canadian
trade away from Britain towards
America than any other single
factor," he saicl,
Russia Says Fate of Peace
May Be in Hands of U.S. Airmen
By PAMELA MATTHEWS
LONDON (Reuters) - Soviet
Premier Bulganin told Britain in
a message published Thursday
night that the fate of peace* in
Europe and elsewhere might well
depend on an "individual American airman."
This situation, he said, results
from U. S. plane patrols over'
Britain with hydrogen bombs.
Bulganin's letter to Prime Minister Maemillan was one of sev-'
eral personal messages he forwarded to Western heads of government only a few days before
the Paris summit conference.
The letter is similar to the one
forwarded   to   President   Eisen-
Congratulations
To The
Nelson Funeral Home
AND AMBULANCE SERVICE
The Top Quality Pipe and Fittings
Used in the Construction of This
Modern Funeral Home
WERE SUPPLIED BY
Columbia Trading Co.
902 Front St.
Nelson, B.C.
hower. It varies mainly in its references to the American H-bomb
patrols and Britain's "vulnerable" geographical position in the
event of war.
EXPLOITS LABOR CONCERN
The Soviet premier exploited to
the full British Labor party concern over the H-bomb patrols.
Only a few hours earlier, Maemillan faced another Socialist
barrage of questions on the subject in the House of Commons.
Maemillan told questioners U.S.
bomber pilots are under specific
orders not to fuse H-bombs for
acition except in case of war.
On this issue, Bulganin said:
"It can not be denied that flights
by American planes carrying atom arid hydrogen bombs
create a situation where the fate
of the peace in Europe—and not
only in Europe—depends to a
large extent not only on any
given commander, but even on
any individual airman."-
Soviet leaders have expounded
this idea previously in speeches.
CAN'T UNDERSTAND
Bulganin added:
"I must say, Mr. Prime Minister, without beating about t h e
bush, we find it diffipult to understand what leads the government
of a country like Britain, which
is not only in an extremely vulnerable position by reason of its
geographical situation, but which
—as its official representatives'
admit—has 'no effective means of
.defence against modern weapons
to participate in the carrying out
of such a policy.
"There can not indeed be any
defence against such weapons."
Bulganin reminded Britain that
in his visit here in April, 1956,
British leaders. joined in a joint
Anglo-Soviet declaration support-
CONGRATULATIONS
Nelson Funeral Home
and Ambulance Service
We wish to compliment the management of the
Nelson Funeral Home on their excellent choice of
furnishings.
We are proud to have been the supplier of these
beautiful furnishings.
Congratulations
and
Best Wishes
To The
Nelson Funeral Home
AND AMBULANCE SERVICE
From the
MANAGEMENT AND STAFF
of
THE CHAMPION CO.
Springfield, Ohio,
U.S.A.
ing peaceful coexistence.
"If we are to base ourselves on
the interests of world peace, we
must in our opinion, see with
complete clarity the situation
that has arisen in the world today where there exist capitalist
and socialist states," he said.
DJRE CONSEQUENCES
"We must all bear in mind that
any attempt to change this situation by force from outside, to violate the status quo, any attempt
to impose any territorial changes
would have> catastrophic consequences."
Bulganin also said any attempt
to link NATO with the Baghdad
and Southeast Asia defence pacts
in a global military grouping
would amount to renunciation of
United Nations principles.   .
"Realization of such a plan
would shake the foundations of
the United Nations and do serious
harm to the cause of peace," he
said.
The Soviet premier warned
against extending the NATO principle of interdependence to West
Germany. Britain^nd other
NATO members, he said, have
"more than once had personal
experience of what the German
militarists' appetites are like
when they have control of a sufficiently - powerful military machine."
BLASTS AGREEMENT
Bulganin blasted the Maemillan - Eisenhower agreement to
provide American missiles
to Britain and efforts to introduce these weapons on the European continent.
As in his letter to Eisenhower,
he repeated proposals to halt nuclear tests for two or three years
and to create an atom free zone
in Central Europe. s
An important difference in the
letter as compared with the one
to Eisenhower is the absence of
any proposal for the conclusion
of a bilateral friendship treaty.
A Soviet-Amfrican treaty is proposed by Bulganin in his letter to
Eisenhower.
The former Anglo • Soviet'
Friendship Pact of May, 1942,
was denounced by the Soviet government because Britain ratified
the Paris agreements of October,
1954, permitting West German
membership in NATO.
Bulganin also omitted the proposal for an East - West summit
conference in his letter to Maemillan.
A foreign office spokesman
said Maemillan will answer Bulganin's letter "in due course."
Canada, Norway,
Denmark Join
'n Cvorus Issue
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP
Canada, Denmark and Norway
agreed Thursday to sponsor a compromise on Cyprus in the hope
of avoiding a showdown on a
Greek "self-determination" resolution.
The compromise would amend
the Greek proposal which would
have tHe UN affirm the right of
Cypriots to determine their own
political future.
It is understood to have run
into strong opposition from
Greece,
The amendments would delete
all reference to the question of
self-determination, and instead
would express regret that private
negotiations so far had made
little progress and would call for
new negotiations.
Mercury Down
Across Canada
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Winter gripped Central Canada
Thurs., with the mercury down to
37 degrees below zero at Armstrong in Northern Ontario and
heavy snow in Montreal.
Temperatures across Ontario
during the night were the lowest
this season. It was 34 below at
White River, 19 below at North
Bay and 16 below at Port Arthur.
In Montreal, three inches of
snow had fallen in the early
morning and more was expected.
Traffic was snarled and poiice reported scores of minor accidents.
In Toronto, the mercury fell
to a zero during the night, the
lowest this season. The mercury
was expected to climb to 20 during the day and fall again at night
to 10.
By contrast, the Maritime
provinces  reported  balmy  overnight.  But wintry weather was
expected Thursday njght.
COOL IN WEST    '
Temperatures in the 30s were
recorded in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In Alberta, the mercury was in the 40s during the
night.
British Columbia faced another
storm. Rain and strong winds are
expected along the northern coast.
Precipitation was reported light
during the night. In Prince George
the temperature was down to 32.
Vancouver had a tow of 43.
The heavy snow at Montreal brought to eight inches the
total snowfall in the last two
days.
In Toronto, the public weather
office said "very cold air now
grips the entire eastern part of
of the continent." Moderation is
expected Friday "as a developing storm now over Saskatchewan and Alberta moves into
Northern Ontario." Snow is expected in most Ontario regions
tomorrow.
Heavy Frosts
Hit Florida
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) _ The
worst freeze in 10 years struck
Florida Wednesday night and
Thursday, damaging its farms and
groves.
More freezing weather is in
store for the state tonight.
What was left of the winter,
vegetable crop in the truck growing section around Plant City
appeared to be wiped out. Strawberries in this area which calls
itself the winter strawberry capital of the world were badly hurt.
D. H. Storms, co-ordinator for
vocational agriculture education
in the Plant City region, said the
official temperature was below
30 degrees for more than six
hours.
Ripe oranges will begin to
freeze in one or two hours of 27
or 2D degree weather.
Ice was a common sight in the
central and northern sectors of
the widespread citrus belt.
At Lakeland there were lows
running between 22 and 24 degrees with outlying sections even
lower.
The weather bureau said Thursday night it was severe again with
temperatures ranging from 22 to
25 degrees in the northern interior to 32 to 36 in the southern
interior.
Early morning temperatures
ranged from 18 degrees at Crest-
view to 29 at Tampa, 35 at Miami and 50 at Key West.
Buy and Sell With Classified!
Congratulations
to the
NELSON FUNERAL
HOME
and
AMBULANCE SERVICE
We are happy to have taken part in
supplying materials
for the construction of this
,;   modern building.
W.W. Powell
COMPANY LIMITED
Notion, B.C.
2>3AS
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 73, 1957 — 9
Canada Concerned Over U.S.-Russ
Stalemate, Plans for NATO Meet
By DAVE McINTOSH
Canadian Press Staff Writer'
OTTAWA (CP) - Canada will
press for East-West exchariges. of
view on world problems at the
NATO summit meeting in Paris
next week, it was learned Thursday.
Officials here have expressed,
concern at the stalemate in negotiations between the Western
powers and Russia, particularly
in the disarmament field.
External Affairs Minister Sidney Smith has said twice in the
last week that Russian proposals
should not be rejected out of
hand and .'he has deplored what
he said was Washington's tendency to do this.
Mr. Smith left Thursday night
for London where he will confer
with Canadian ambassadors from
European capitals in advance of
the Paris conference which opens
Monday. •
MAIN POINT
Prime Minister Diefenbaker,
head of the Canadian delegation,
Defence Minister G. R. Pearkes
and Finance Minister Donald
Fleming will leave tonight.
Other matters expected to be
discussed by Canada at Paris
are:
1. Increased economic co • operation among the 15 NATO
members. Mr. Diefenbaker has
indicated this likely will be the
most important point Canada will
have to make.
2. More exchange of scientific
information within the alliance to
reduce, duplication of effort.
3. The possibility of stockpiling
American nuclear warheads in
Canada for anti-aircraft defence.
4. Re-equipping of the 300-plane
RCAF air division -in Europe,
possibly with guided missiles.   ,
5. The Middle East. Canada
contributes the largest contingent
to the United Nations Emergency
Force in Egypt.1
SAME POLICY'
It mil be the first time that
the new Progressive Conservative government has spoken for
Canada at a NATO council meeting.
But there _is every indication'
that Canadian policy will be unchanged from what it was under
the Liberal administration of Rt.
Hon. Louis St. Laurent.
The Liberals, for instance, were
always interested in impressing
on the- NATO council's ^European
members that defence of' North
America is just as' important to
NATO as the defence of Europe
itsell.
The new Conservative government has contended that the joint
Canada-United States air defence
command' at Colorado Springs
Colo., is, in effect, a NATO command and Mr. Diefenbaker and
his colleagues want to soliBify
this position during the Paris
meeting. ■"
MUTUAL PROGRAM
Thursday a private ;roup, in
cluding members of Parliament,
business, church and labor leaders, asked Mr. Diefenbaker in a
written submission . to propose
three matters to the NATO meeting:
1. A mutual program for lowering tariffs and freeing currencies.
2. Pooling of scientific knowledge.
3. Consultations leading to
esSablishment of a supranational
authority for the Atlantic community.
The private group was formed
in 1954 and issued a "declaration
of Atlantic unity." One of the
signers of this declaration was
Mr. Diefenbaker himself.
Those making the  submission
included CCF Leader M. J. Cold-
we 1; Claude Jodoin, president of
the Canadian Labor Congress
Rev. J. M. Belartger, director of
the school of political, economic
and social sciences, University of
Ottawa; Lester B. Pearson, former external affairs minister;
Senator Wishart Robertson, honorary president f the NATO parliamentary conference; George
Hahn, Social Credit member of,
Parliament for New Westminster
and Paul Martin, former health
minister.
NORTHERN GATEWAY    .
The Pas, Man., 475 miles northwest of Winnipeg, is the start of
tlie Hudson Bay railway to the
seaport of Churchill.
Congratulations
to
Nelson Funeral Home
and Ambulance Service
Another moSern building
gracing the City of Nelson
made possible with the use
of Korpack Cinder Blocks
KORPACK
CEMENT
PRODUCTS
CO. LTD.
154 Wellington St., Trail
Phone 2105
Our Best Wishes
and Congratulations
To The
Nelson
Funeral Home
and
AMBULANCE SERVICE
We are proud and honored to have been the
General Contractor in the construction-of
this new and modern Funeral Home which is
one of the most up-to-date in Western Canada, and a credit to the City of Nelson.
LAURENCE SIMPSON
General Contractor
BOX 470
NELSON, B.C.
 10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957
Students Sound Call
To Arms In Jakarta
JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters)
—Indonesian student and veteran
groups Thurs. were reported mobilizing throughout this 3000-island
nation in preparation for a military
campaign to oust the Netherlands
from West Irian (Dutch New
Guinea).
In the capital, student clubs
agreed to set up a "supreme command of student fighters of Jakarta."
KBandjarmasin, South Borneo
1000 veterans were reported to
have registered for a volunteer
brigade to fight in Dutch New
Guinea.
But as the call to arms sounded,
a Masjumi (Moslem) party member warned that the Indonesian
Communist party, which dominates
the populous island of Java, plans
to make Indonesia "into a second
Korea."
RIGHTS TRAMPLED
Kia Isa Anshary, Moslem chairman of the Indonesian "anti-Communist front," said here Wednesday night he was greatly concerned with the present situation
in Indonesia where "fundamental
human rights are being trampled
On." i
The Communist plan is "In line
trith the Moscow manifesto of
Nov. 19 signed by 65 representa
tives of Communist parties
throughout the world," he said.
' The Indonesian' Army meanwhile announced all its men have
been "confined to barracks."
Army spokesman Maj. Harsone,
refused to give-any explanation.
In Melbourne, the Australian
government issued a statement
urging' the Jakarta govern;
ment not to do anything which
would impair democracy in Indonesia.
HUNGER SAID NEAR
In Jakarta observers pointed to
a number of economic factors,
which, they said, could become
"quite explosive," in the continuing crisis. The chief of these was
the continually rising price of rice,
the staple diet of Indonesia.
Observers said the chaos in the
inter-island shipping situation following the seizure of some Dutch
ships could mean hunger, poverty
and hardship for many Indonesians.
The ships belonged to the confiscated Dutch KPM shipping
company. More than 30 of the'
company's ships now are at anchor in Singapore and Penang,
Malaya.
, The rubber market in Indonesia,
one of the most important in the
world, also has been almost paralyzed by Indonesia's anti-Dutch
reprisals, observers said.
TIPPI, a miniature Dachshund who suffered paralysis of her
hind quarters more than a year ago, moves about In New York
on plastic roller skates attached to a linlil harness, provided by
her owner,' Roy Porter, a florist. She has regained partial use
of her affected legs and may be able to use them again.
Distillery Workers On Probation ., .
AFL-CIO Expels Bakery,
Laundry Workers Union
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)-
The AFL-CIO Thurs. expelled the
Laundry and Bakery Workers
Unions for corrupt practices, and
kept the Distillery Workers Union
on probation pending promised
reforms.
These actions at concluding
sessions of the AFL-CIO convention further demonstrated the
federation's   tough   attitude   in
union-fund  thievery
racketeering   influ-
dealing with
and labor's
ences.
At the same time, the convention adopted a series of resolutions carrying out positions
worked out in debate at earlier
sessions condemning congressional rackets investigators
for alleged one-sided attention to
labor corruption without equal
spotlighting on business.
Another resolution said the
AFL-CIO will accept legislative
proposals to help labor clean out
corruption but will fight any
moves to enact laws pretending
to correct labor abuses but designed to cripple unions.
MEMBERSHIP DROPPING
Final ouster actions against the
laundry and bakery groups
stripped the AFL-CIO of another
200.000 members. This, along with
earlier expulsion of the giant,
1,500,000 - member Teamsters
Union, reduces AFL - CIO membership to about 13,500,000.
The ousted unions have denied
any move to combine in a rival
federation, or join with unions
already outside the AFL-CIO.
The convention adjourned after
delegates unanimously re-elected
George Meany to a new two-year
term as president and William
Schnitzler as secretary-treasurer.
EXPULSION . . . ,para 3-114
AID FOR TRAFFIC
LONDON (Reuters) - The
House of Commons Wednesday
night approved a y.4,550,000 plan
to speed traffic at Hyde Park
corner, London's busiest intersection. It gave the London County
council authority to build 10 passenger subways and a 330-yard
two-lane traffic underpass between Piccadilly and Knights-
bridge.
Tandem Mines Announce
New Iron-Ore Process
TORONTO (CP) - Tandem
Mines Ltd. of Toronto have announced a new iron-ore smelting
process which, the company
states, may turn into commercial ore large deposits of iron
ore now considered valuless because of their titanium content.
■ The process is the invention of
Dr. Roya A. Halverson of Detroit.
Following laboratory tests carried out at the University of Wisconsin he was granted a United
States patent on the "process in
May. It is stated that patents
now are pending in Canada, the
United Kingdom and other countries.
Announcement of the process
was made here Wednesday at a
meeting attended by about 100
representatives of the mining and
financial community, and the
press.
METHOD  DESCRIBED
A press release, describing
tests made by Tandem Mines,
said:
"Ore from the Madoc area of
Eastern Ontario was treated in
a large cupola furnace under
conditions as close as possible to
commercial operation.
"The ore contained 50 per cent
iron and between six and nine
per cent titanium.
"Six successive tests on this
yielded iron with only an unimportant trace-rl-10th bf one per
cent — of titanium. Analysis
showed that all other titanium
had been freely floated off in the
slag, which was extremely fluid
and did not contaminate the furnace.
"By substituting common salt
for part of the limestone it Is apparent that ores high in impurities, such as titanium, phosphorus and sulnhur, may be successfully handled.
"The process Involves the introduction of an alkali flux in the
form of salt into the oxidizing
zone of the reducing furnace in
controlled' nuantities, by compressed air."
Control recentl" chan°ed hands
and Donald A. Keith, its president, says the company plans a
reorganization and to proceed,
as soon ,as possible, with financing.
Its aim would be to go into production of commercial pig iron,
lt would also consider licensing
arrangements with other companies.
Dr. Halverson said he thought
the process would have particular application in Canada, because of Canada's growing economy and the presence of ore
bodies suitable for Its use.
SUDDENLY  VALUABLE
Walter Sharpe, president of
Sliarpe Geophysic Surveys Ltd.,
Toronto, was quoted as saying
that several deposits of iron ore
of vast tonnage—of high grade
but containing impurities—would,
under the Halverson process, become extremely valuable commercially.
"One such deposit," he said,
"exists in Ontario's Rainy River
district and is estimated to contain 760;000,000 tons of 46-percent iron and four-per-cent titanium. Other deposits are located
on the north shore of the St.
Lawrence River, in the Red Lake
area, in the St. Joseph Lake area
of  Quebec  and  ip  southeastern
Cnleiorv Livestock
CALGARY (CP) - Cattle offer,
ings of 2000 cattle and 300 calves at
the Calgary yards were about
evenly divided between good and
choice butcher steers and heifers,
and medium to good replacement
cattle. Trade was active.
Choice butcher steers continued
to meet good American and Canadian demand at steady prices.
Medium to good kinds a shade
easier.
Good and choice heifers also met
good demand at strong rates. Common and medium grades fully
steady.
All classes of cows were In keen
demand. Prices were strong to a
shade higher with odd sales up to
12. Bulls steady.
All classes of replacement steers
met keen demand from U.S., eastern and local buyers — prices were
steady at the week's advance.
Stock, steer calves also met keen
competition from the same sources,
at prices fully steady at the week's
advance, with odd sales up to 22.10.
All classes of butcher calves
sold steady at the week's higher
levels.
Choice butcher steers 13.50-19.50:
good 17-18.50; medium 15.50-16.50:
common 13-15; choice heifers 17.25-
18; good 16-17; medium 14-15.50;
common 10-13.50.
'Good cows 11-11.75; medium
10 25-10.75; common 9.50-10; canners and cutters 6-9.50; good bulls
12.50-13.50; common to medium 8-
12.
Good feeder steers 17.50-18.50;
good stock steers 16.50-17.50; common to medium 12-16; good stock
steer calves 20-22.
Good butcherweight heifer calves
17.50 - 19; medium to good veal
18-19.50.
Two loads of hogs sold Wednesday at 18.70 liveweight rail grades
to apply; a few sold at 24 A grade;
sows 50 cents higher at 13.50-16.60,
average 14.85 liveweight.
Lambs steady; good lambs 18.75-
19.50.
MARGARET HONORED
LOtfDON (API—Princess Margaret became an honorary fellow
of the Royal Society of Medicine
Wednesday. Lord Evans, one of
Queen Elizabeth's phxsiciuns,
awarded the diploma ind praised
Margaret's contributions to medical welfare during her overseas
journeys.
U.K. Press Holds Mixed
Views On Russia's Letter
LONDON (Reuters) — Some
British newspapers Thursday urged
the West to negotiate, with Russia
on some of the proposals made
by (Premier Bulganin in letters
to. the Western Big Three leaders
and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
of West Germany.
French political commentators,
however, treat the Soviet premier's diplomatic offensive as an
attempt to exploit cracks in the
Atlantic alliance.
The London Times believes the
letters are designed to back up
the ,Russian thesis that NATO is
obsolete and aggressive.
After drawing attention to Bulganin's idea of a zone in Central
Europe free of nuclear weapons,
The Times adds:
"Nothing would do more to
cast doubts on the West's sincerity than to give the Impression
that it fights shy of an idea simply because it is echoed in Russia."
FOLLY TO IGNORE
The Daily Herald (Labor) comments: "It will be tragic folly if
the West dismisses Russia's
move as propaganda.
"There is danger of rival H-
rocket bases being established in
the two halves of Germany."
"The most urgent talks of the
alliance is to agree—quicker than
rockets—on a common policy for
negotiations. The West must be
ready for talks with Russia."
The Manchester Guardian
(Liberal)' believes that with  the.
Russians renewing the warning
to the Germans and others that
to become a base for the new
U.S. ballistic missiles is to invite
the worst devastation in wartime, the nerves of NATO are
again being tested.
"There is no reason to believe
that they will be any mote frail
than those of the Norwegians and
the Turks were during the last
round of notes."
FIGARO VIEWS
The diplomatic correspondent
of the Conservative Paris newspaper Figaro writes:
"Soviet diplomacy is quite naturally exploiting the hesitations
of the European partners of the
alliance before the perspectives
opening for Ihem from the necessary reorganization of the de
tensive system of NATO notably
by the installation of platform!
for intermediate range rockets."
In the right - wing radical
Aurore, Maurice Ferro writes
that "this epistolary debauche''
is more than propaganda. It is
part of a long-term strategic operation to isolate the United
States politically and militarily
and assure a Soviet sphere of Influence in Western Europe.
He said it is an "imperious
necessity" that NATO modify ils
military and political structure to
allay fears that installations of
missile launching sites and stockpiling nuclear weapons in Europe
will expose Europe to Soviet reprisals.
Gary Cooper and Family Find
Fun in Underwater Explorina
fore   nails   were   manufacture.
round.
NOT A GALLEON
"No, I don't think it was a
Spanish ship. More likely one ol
the boats that brought the forty-
niners up from the isthmus to
San Francisco."
The actor • diver said he ha.-
»210,0P0?
$-7^
*125,O0o«?
poo?
siso.ooo*?
$100,OOOT»
$270,000?
$150,000?
How much will
you earn in the
next 20 years?
Let's say that you earn $5,000 a year. In twenty
years you will have earned $100,000 — without taking into account any future increases.
Whatever the exact figure, you will have earned
a sizeable fortune.
Have you ever stopped to figure out just how
much you can save for your family or your retire-
' ment years ?
By its very nature, life insurance can help you to
preserve a part of that fortune. For, with the payment of one premium, life insurance automatically
creates an immediate estate to guarantee income to
your family in the event of your death. At the same
time, life insurance can be building a fund to provide you with a lifetime income for your retirement
years if you survive.
Your Sun Life agent will be glad to
discuss this important point with you
and explain in greater detail how part
of your own personal 'fortune' can be
preserved through life insurance.
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA
H. A. Shannon, Branch Manager
West  Kootenay  Bldg., Trail,  B.C.
J. D. Forbes, Unit Supervisor
Salmo, B.C.
J. ft. Fleming, Nelson; II. E. Yolland, Nakuip; R. S. George, Trail;
A. H. Pisapio, Trail; A. R. Olson, Fruitvale; 0. P. Larsen, Salmo.
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Looking
for something the whole family
can do together? Try underwater
exploration.
The Gary Cooper family does
it, and they have the time of their
lives.
Coop, his wife and their daughter took it up at Antibes last
summer* on a European vacation.
Now they're exploring the southern California coast..
COOL WATER '
You'll find them on weekends
off the coast of Palos Verdes or
Catalina Island. And in water
that is a chilling 60 degrees on
the surface and as low as 45 degrees below.
■ "But you don't notice the cold,"
he explained. "You wear rubber
suits that cover you completely
and keep the cold out."
Cooper explained that his family got their training for diving
at the bottom of a swimming
pool.
"There are several steps you
must learn," he said. "How to
empty your mask of water when
you are beneath the surface.
How to take off the mask underwater and put it Back on again.
How to remove the breathing
gear in case of emergency. How
to tell when your air supply is
giving out.
GRADUATION EXERCISE
"The graduation comes when
you get a bunch of people to sit'
in a circle at the bottom of the
swimming pool. Each one takes
off his breathing gear and hands
it to the next person, who puts it
on himself."
Having graduated, the Coopers
now are plying the Pacific waters. Just two weeks ago, they
came across the remains of a
wreck off the Palos Verdes cliffs.
"It was scattered all over the
ocean bottom," he ' related. "I
brought up a long nail from it,
and the thing was square shaped,
indicating it had been made be-
been down as low as 60 feet, bv<
prefers to remain at around 41
feet because of sensitive ears. Al
any depth, he said, the diver is
inclined to lose track of time and
space.
"You've got to keep track of
your distance from the boat," he
remarked, "or you might surface and. find yourself a half-
mile away. You should wear a
depth guage and watch, too. then
you can tell how much longer
your air supply will last and
whether you'll have time to sur-%~
face."
Sajs Sputnik
MONTREAL (CP> - Russia';
Sputniks are outstanding engineering achievements, but the scientific
theory behind them was developec
almost three centuries ago, Dr.
Henry F. Hall, principal of S i i
George Williams College, said
Wednesday night.
"Nearly 300 years ago Keppler
and Newton worked out the scientific, principles and mathematical
data as to how high and how fast
a rocket must go to reach outer
space," he told members of the
Temple Emanuel Brotherhood.
"Newton even drew a rough but
accurate sltetch of a rocket similar to the one launched by the
Soviet Union."
CANADIAN OIL
Canadian production of oil
amounted to 66 per cent of the
domestic demand in 1956, against
9.4 per cent in 1946.
Water  Reveals
Water (plain or sparkling) is your most reliable
guide to the whole truth about any whisky. Water
adds nothing, detracts nothing, but reveals a
whisky's true natural flavour and bouquet.
"83"
tStatU&M <Z&tee, fSS/
This advertisement is not published or displayed by
the Liquor Control Board or by Ihe Government of British Columbia.
 32Po
Views
'      from the
News Front
By ED  SIMON
Canadian Press. Staff Writer
It has become almost part of
the rules of the game for an aggrieved party with a complaint on
the United Nations agenda to engineer an outbreak of violence in
the area under discussion as a
prelude to the debate.
The new wave of riots that began in Cyprus last weekend after
months of quiescence obviously
was timed to influence members
of 5he UN assembly. But in a
small and emotionally charged island there is always the danger
that organized disorder may slip
from the control of its sponsors
With the arrival-of Sir Hugh
Foot, a civilian known for his liberal views, to replace Gen. Sir
John Harding as governor of the
British - held island, there were
widespread hopes of renewing negotiations on the future status of
the strife • ridden colony. If a
solution for the conflicting claims
of its Greek and Turkish residents was not yet in sight, the
atmosphere, at least, had cooled:
DUBIOUS SOLUTION
Now violence by the EOKA extremists, dedicated to union wiUi
Greece, has been met by violence
from the Turkish community,
which demands partition into national segments. British, troops
have received and caused casualties in their efforts to curb the
riots.
Partition of an area smaller
than Cape Breton Island and with
three times its population is a dubious solution, complicated by the
mingling of Greek and Turkish
settlements throughout the colony.
But the turbulence of the last few
years has done little to convince
the 20-per-cent Turkish minority
that it would benefit from Greek
rule.
Inflaming the relationships of
the Cypriots is the political emphasis on the dispute in Turkey
and Greece, both with governments which feel their hand
forced by an aggressively nationalist Opposition.
DEFENCE FACTOR
Britain's reliance on Cyprus as
a Mediterranean bastion has been
reduced in recent defence plan-
ri"". but it remains an imoortant
factor in the North Atlantic
Treaty framework. More important, a solution of the island's
problems is vital to Britain to
counteract unfavorable reactions
abtoad.
Discussions at next week's
NATO summit c o n f e r ence in
' Paris, where the disputants can
get down to cases in private after
the exchange of propaganda
blasts in the UN Assembly, may
relieve the situation at least temporarily.
But Sir Hugh Foot's ultimate
task of bringing the parties together has not been made easier
bv the rekindling of old grudges
wilh fresh bloodshed.
MAKARIOS  ROLE
A likely first step would be the
return of Archbishop Makarios.
the ' Greek Cypriot leader, who
W>s exiled by Harding nearly two
years ago, and a relaxation of restrictive emergency regulations.
EOKA leaders insist that Makarios must represent them in any
talks on the island's future.
Once negotiations started, Brit-
sin would try to work out a plan
for eventual self-government with
guarantees of minority rights and
a nrovision for maintenance of the
Island's defence installations by
British or NATO forces.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 — IT
MARKET TRENDS
Best Days Lie
-Drew
IONDON (CP)—George Drew,
Canadian high commissioner to
the United Kingdom, said Thursday
that the greatest days of both
Britain and Canada may lie
ahead if the two countries exploit to Ihe full th'e possibilities
of  their  "natural  partnership"
Speaking at a Royal Empire
Society luncheon, Drew said Canadians believe in the "power, endurance and expansion" of the
United Kingdom and that "there
Is a natural association, quite
apart from sentimental ties" between the two countries which
could lead to a decisive moment
In history.
"The things we have are
reeded for industrial prodctoiun
In the United Kingdom. This becomes a natural partnership . . .
our raw materials are waiting to
be taken and used."
Drew, who accompanied Canada's Sfi-man trade mission on
Its month-long tour of British industrial centres, said an important part of its purpose was to
convince Britons of the greatness
ef the growing market available
lo them in Canada, which had
potentialities unrealized even by
most Canadians.
He said every member of the
Canadian mission is returning
home convinced that British
plants are as efficient as any in
the world and'that (heir rate of
production is as high as in the
United States, Germany or anywhere else.
NEW YORK (AP)-Rail stocks
enjoyed an unusual burst of popularity Thursday, speeding ahead
fractions to 2 points or more
while the rest of the market
turned in an irregular performance.
Such major groups as rubbers,
chemicals, metals and motors
ended mixed with gains and losses ranging from fractions to
about 1 point. In a few cases
price changes ran beyond the 1
point mark.
Steels were mostly a bit higher,
rallying toward the finish, while
aircraft-missile firms ended definitely lower.
In The Associated Press average of 60 stocks, which closed
90 cents higher at $156.70, the rail
section boomed $4.40. Industrials
declined 30 cents and utilities advanced 10 cents.
Except for the activity in the
rails trading was rather slow. Volume totalled 2,330,000 shares compared with 2,240,000 Wednesday.
Canadian gainers on the New
York exchange included Aluminium Ltd., up % on 9,500 shares;
Canadian Pacific and Mclntyre
Porcupine, Vt. Losers included International Nickel, off 1% on 4,100
shares; Walker - Gooderham, Va;
Hudson Bay Mining, %, and Dome
Mines, 'A.
Fargo Oil, up 1-16 on 2,500
shares was one of the few Canadian gainers on the American exchange. Losers included Shawini-
San off %, Canadian Marconi.
'A; Preston East Dome, V6 and
Scurry-Rainbow Oil, down 1-16
on 6,000 shares.
TORONTO (CP) - The stock
market Thursday closed mixed
to lower after 5'A hours of slow
trading in which few interesting
developments occurred.
Base metals had the biggest index - change, down more than
three-quarters of a point. Industrials were one-quarter of a point
lower while western oils had little change. Golds were narrowly
higher.
Brokers said most investors
seemed to be more concerned
with outside interests, such as
Christmas shopping and year-end
problems, than they were with
the market because of a lack of
encouraging news from the financial world.
International Pete lost 2
points at 39.
Mines and western oils were
thoroughly mixed on average although senior base metals had a
majority of losses. Most declines
were confined to fractions or 20
cents. A few gains of 15-30 cents
were recorded among lightly-
traded stocks.
MONTREAL (CP)-The Montreal and Canadian stock markets
Thursday moved generally lower
in light trading. Losses extended
to two points.
Utility stocks led the decline.
International Utilities dropped 2
points to 22.4 and Calgary Power,
selling  ex-dividend,  VA  to  S5'A.
In a mixed refinery group
Trans - Mountain Pipeline lost a
point at 65 and McColl Oil gained
XA at 55'/z. Newsprints and banks
were. mixed. International Paper
advanced a point to WA and
Fraser slipped 'A to 23. Hudson
Bay lost '4 in a fractionally'
mixed base metal group.
In the mines and oils section
Campbell Chib gained 10 cents at
5.10 and Opemiska Copper five
cents at 6.30..
Industrial   volume   was   37,300
shares; mines and oils 332,600.
DIVIDENDS
By The Canadian Press
Dalex Co.' Ltd. pfd. $1.76 • Jan.
1, record Dec. 20.
.Aluminium Co. of Canada Ltd.
1st pfd. 25 cents, March 1, record
Feb. 7, 2nd pfd. 56 cents Feb. 28,
record Feb. 7.
Imperial Bank of Canada 35
cents Feb. 1, record Dec. 31.
P. L. Robertson Mfg. Co. Ltd.
common 20 cents, $1 pfd. 25 cents
Jan. 2, record Dec. 20.
Wood Alexander Ltd. 30 cents,
Dec. 31, record Dec. 18.
The first post office in Canada
was established at Halifax in 1755.
Reporters Greet
L. B. Pearson
LONDON (Reuters)' - L. B,
Pearson, former Canadian external affairs minister, arrived
by air Thursday on his way home
from Oslo after receiving the
Nobel Peace Prize.
Talking to repoHers at London
would be a good thing if we in
North America recognized that
there are certain problems in the
world that cannot be solved satisfactorily without the participation of Soviet Russia."
Britain, he said, is a country
of great wisdom and experience
"acting as a mediating influence
between the United States and
the European countries, and
those behind the Iron Curtain."
LONDON (CP)^-A British firm
is 'to make a 2OJ,000-square-mile
photographic survey of Burma by
air at a cost of £1 per square mile.
The survey will take five months.
'goif 7 p.m.
SPECIALS
LIMITED QUANTITIES—PERSONAL SHOPPING
ON SALE AT 7 P. M. SHARP
Reg. .69 Women's
Briefs
Fancy rayon briefs, printed
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Sizes S-M-L. .... L for   T I
Baby Blankets
Soft, fleecy flannelette baby
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Pink or yellow    *^ I
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Bedjaekets
Snuggledown bedjaekets —
cosy and warm. Attractive
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make a wonderful | AA
gift. Sizes M-li    I •7 7
Reg. 12.95
Lanerossi Sport Shirts
19 Only of these fine quality
wool and Fiocco sport shirts
made by Canada's leading
manufacturer. Assorted patterns and colors, m QQ
Sizes S-M-L-XL.    / • 73*
Men's Leather
Dress Gloves
Brown only. Wool lined slip-
on style. Sizes >% aa
8 to 10%    'Jm'eWJW.
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Reg. 1.90 Angora
Bonnet and Glove Sets
Colors of white, red, blue
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12 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, PEC. 13, 1957
CAKE FOR THE CORPS- Famed French pastry
cook Pierre Franchlolo looks over the (riant cake he made In
Paris for 182nd birthday anniversary of the I). S. Marine Corps.
Nehru Urges Get Together
NEW DELHI (Reu ter si-
Prime Minister Nehru Thursday
urged East and West to get out
of their cold war rut and adopt
a new mental approach to the
problems of peace in the nuclear
age.
Speaking In the upper house,
Nehru said it had become obvious that "policies of toughness,
threats and brandishing of the
iword" do not lead anywhere.
Nehru also gave India's support to Indonesia's claim to
Dutch-held West New  Guinea.
Nehru said the United Nations
assembly'a failure to approve a
resolution urging negotiations between the Netherlands and Indonesia "was a great blow to the
Indonesian people."
QUOTES OPINIONS
Nehru referred to recent proposals by George Kennan, former
U.S. ambassador to Moscow, and
British socialist leader Hugh
Gaitskell for an attempt at "disengagement or detente" by with
drawing troops from foreign
bases.
He said the world situation was
not improved by the Sputniks,
which opened the possibility of
even more destructive weapons.
Thoughts such as these, he said,
made him issue his recent appeal to United States and Soviet
leaders for a "new approach" including the suspension of atomic
tests.
Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin sent Nehru a reply to this
letter last weekend in which he
reaffirmed Russia's willingness to
drop tests if the United States and
Britain did the same.
Nehru said he was grateful to Bulganin for this suggestion.
Nehru urged an international
"coming together."
Coast Voters Give Sunday
Sport Overwhelming Support
RUSSIAN FISHERIES
Production from the Soviet
Union fisheries in 1956 reached
2,617,000 tons, compared with Canada's 1,077,000 tons.
VANCOUVER- (CP) - Supporters of Sunday sport have put
four plebiscites before civic voters here in the last seven years.
Their fourth effort indicates that
success may be at hand.
Asked whether they favor professional sports between 1:30
p.m. and 6 p.m. on Sundays, 62,-
043 voters Wednesday cast "for"
ballots while only 34,446 were opposed.
Two years ago the same issue
drew a total of 75,000 votes with
only a 2,000 margin in favor.
The plebiscite is only an assessment of public opinion but
Attorney-General Robert Bonner
said Thursday the B. C. government will do its part to grant
Vancouver professional Sunday
sport.
TEST VALIDITY
"If the City Of Vancouver requests a city charter change as a
result of this plebiscite, confined
5o this narrow issue, I am prepared to recommend a bill to the
government to give effect to the
plebiscite," he said.
Any bill agreed to by the government would only be a "proclamation measure and will be
submitted to the courts to test '
the constitutional validity prior to
being proclaimed."
This spring the B; C. legislature defeated 33 ■ 12 an amendment to a bill revising Vancouver's charter to include Sunday
sport. ■
In 1951 and 1952 civic voters
rejected plebiscites which would
have permitted operation of theatres, dance halls and horse races
as well as baseball and other
sports.
RECORD VOTE
Under the Lord's Day Act of
1907, the ban on commercialized
Sunday sport is Canada-wide but
enforcement is left to the attorneys-general.
The Sunday/ sport plebiscite
was one of four put to voters
Wednesday. All were passed.
They fanned interest in the election which saw 98.344 voters cast
ballots, 23,000 more than the previous high in 1955—another Sunday sport plebiscite year.
Mayor Fred Hume's position
was not at stake as his two-year
term is not up until December,
1958.
A bylaw authorizing the spending of $72,500,000 in the next five
years   got  70-per-cent   approval.
The school board's bylaw for a
$18,500,000 three-year school construction program won 75 per
cent.
The five-year-plan received 42,-
191 votes favoring it and 17,966
against. The school construction
program was approved by 42,025
voters and turned down by 15,049.
Only 55.8 per cent voted in favor of fluoridation of city water
supplies in the first plebiscite on
this controversial issue here.
The B. C.legislature must pass
enabling legislation if fluoridation is to become effective in the
Vancouver metropolitan area.
DOMINATION BROKEN
The 20-year domination of candidates run by the Non-Parlisan
Association in the aldermanic
race was broken when two candidates backed by the Civic Voters Association tormed the poll in
the 19-man race for six seats.
High school principal Tom Alsbury and Evelyn Caldwell, Vancouver Sun columnist who uses
the pen-name Penny Wise, polled
57,932 and 53,739 votes respectively. Both were new highs fotr
votes polled In aldermanic contests.
Fred   Rowell,   who   managed
Overseas Wheal
Clearance Up
OTTAWA (CP) - Overseas
clearances of Canadian wheat in
the week ended Nov. 27- totalled
7,379,000 bushels, up from 4,634,-
000 bushels in the corresponding
week a year ago, the bureau of
statistics reported today.
Shipments during the first four
months of the current crop year
which started Aug. 1 were 5.1 per
cent lower than last year at 85.-
875,000 bushels compared with
90,496,000.
Deliveries from prairie farms
were 6,827,000 bu s h e 1 s, down
from 8,145,000 bushels in 1956.
The cumulative total for the current crop year was 76,435,000
bushels, a sharp drop from the
102,165,000 delivered a year ago.
Visible supplies of wheat in all
North American positions at Nov,
27 totalled 366,705,000 bushels,
roughly four per cent more than
last year's total of 352,542,000
bushels.
Canada's 1948 Olympic team and
also the entry in the 1954 British
Empire Games, made his first
bid for civic office a winning one.
He ran fourth in the five - man
race for four school board posts,
The two-to-one majority in favor of professional sport "tickled to death" the president of
Vancouver,Mounties of the Pacific Coast Baseball League.
"The majority should force the
government to take action," said
president Nat Bailey.
Earlier this year his club was
fined $50 on each of the three
charges under the Lord's Day
Act for playing baseball on Sunday last spring.
SAYS CAR TAX CUT
'EXERCISE DUDNIK'
OTTAWA (CP) - Don Brown
L-Essex West) Thursday described
the excise tax reduction on new
cars to VA per cent. from 10 as
an  "abortion"  and "a crumb."
Mr. Brown, who represents the
automobile-manufacturing city of
Windsor, Ont., said in the Commons that the reduction was an
"excise dudnik" fired by Finance
Minister Donald Fleming. There
was a lot of fire and smoke but
it fell flat.
It was of no help to the auto
industry or in putting unemployed back to work.
Stanley Knowles (CCF—Winnipeg North Centre) said he was
amazed the reduction was so
small after the government's
fanfare.
Mr. Knowles also said Mr:
Fleming was being "dishonest
with Parliament in not presenting a budget and thus giving a
full financial accounting of where
Canada stands.
Mr. Fleming demanded that
Mr. Knowles withdraw the word
"dishonest."
Henri Courtemanche, deputy
Speaker, said he didn't believe
Mr. Knowles meant to Insult the
minister.
Mr. Knowles agreed and said
Ihe remark was not a personal
reflection  on  Mr. Fleming.
Mr. Fleming said the remark
was unparliamentary and that
Mr. Knowles couldn't "skate
around" the meaning of the word
"dishonest."*
At that point, Mr. Courtemanche called the 1 p.m. adjournment for lunch.
Future Holds More Power
For Women-Fairclough
TORONTO (CP) — Secretary
of State Ellen Fairclough Thursday
predicted the next 10 years will
see "great changes in the acceptance of women in responsible
posts."
Canada's first woman federal
cabinet minister told the Empire
Club's "ladies day" luncheon
most of Canada already has
adopted equal pay for equal work
legislation. But the principle 'of
equal opportunity for women had
not yet generally been accepted.
"It is my opinion that women
themselves must show their willingness to accept responsibility to
a greater degree than they have
done heretofore."
Some women had hesitated to
offer themselves for election to
provincial legislatures or the
House of Commons because of the
distance they must travel to discharge their  duties.  But about
Convicted on
Election List
Padding Charges
TORONTO (CP)—Bernice Price,
27, one of five persons charged in
alleged padding of voters' lists in
the Toronto riding of St. Paul's for
the June 10 general election,
was convicted on 17 charges
of forgery, uttering and violating
the Canada Elections Act.
Magistrate T. S. Elmore reserved
judgment on an 18th count, that
of forgery, until Dec. 17 so that
Miss Price could be released on
$1000 bail.
Mrs. Kathleen Vollum, 50, was
committed for trial on six charges.
Mrs. Nora Gamble, 44, was remanded to Dec. 17 for preliminary
hearing on 17 charges.
Remanded until Dec. 18 were
George Ewing, 57, who faces. 12
charges: and Thomas Middleton,
48, on 32 charges.
Miss Price pleaded not guilty on
all 18 charges and refused legal
aid.
She testified she signed names
arid addresses to election forms
used for making additions to voters'
lists. She said she did so at the
request of Mrs. Gamble.
"I didn't know I was doing anything wrong," Miss Price testified.
"I guess I just trusted Nora too
much."
POLEBROOK, England (CP) -
William Tinman, 90, of this Cambridgeshire town, still appears
every Sunday wearing the same
pair of black boots in which he
was married 60 years ago.
1,200 worn <m now served on municipal governments. More were
contributing through non-elective
national and international organizations. .
Reasons often given for not admitting women to certain groups
included the plea that men some-
limes talked in "rather rich language" and that women tended
to monopolize conversations.
Speaking from 12 years' exper-
ince in elective posts—often as
the lone woman in a group of men
who "pulled no punches"—Mrs.
Fairclough assured her audience
". . . in that whole period I never
learned one new word."
She made a crisp "no comment" to the second allegation.
The statements were included
in a text of the speech issued to
the press before delivery.
Japanese Pigeon
Owner Proud Man
TOKYO (AP) - The Japanese
owner of a pigeon that travelled
10,000 miles from Japan to New
Jersey in 4.4 years was the
proudest man in Japan Thursday.
"Atta boy! I am so proud of
it," said beaming Masao Otsuka,
33, a high school gymnastics
teacher.
Otsuka said lie was a sad man
when the bird disappeared alter
it was released at Ominato, Ao-
mori, for a 4O0-mile race to
Tokyo May 5, 1953.
H. Warner Doremus, a Madison, N.J., lawyer, recently discovered the pigeon in his flock,
its identity band on its right leg.
PORT HOPE, Ont. (CP)-Gov-
ernor-General Massey is holidaying at his family home. He will
remain here until after Christmas, except for a brief return to
Ottawa for the annual Government House -staff part.
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Soccer Team Goes To Dogs
BLACKPOOL, England (Reuters)—Blackpool's police
soccer team Thursday credited its 3-2 victory over the
Nomad club to a dog.
The police were behind 2-0 Wednesday when a
German shepherd dog ran on the field and sank its teeth
ln{o the right thigh of the rival team's star. With the
star forced out of the game, the police squad romped to
victory.
A police officer said Thursday it is "unlikely" the
dog's owner will be prosecuted.
4lllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllli.iiillllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllll.illlllll
Habs, Wings Topple
Rangers, Beantowners
23Fft.
By The Canadian Press
Montreal Canadiens scored th?ir
first victory of the National Hockey
League season over New York
Rangers Thursday night, a 3-2 verdict chalked up on Montreal ice.
At Detroit, Gordie Howe scored
two goals and assisted on another
as the Red Wings edged Boston
Bruins 3-2. It was Detroit's first'
triumph on home ice in eight
games.
The league - leading Canadiens
outshot Rangers but needed the
first-period goals by Don Marshall,
Bernie Geoffrion and Marcel Bonin to scrape through.
HEAVY SHOOTING
Bill Gadsby counted for New
York in the first period after Mont
real had taken a 2-0 lead' and Dean
Prentice scored for the Rangers in
the second period.
Canadiens poured 48 shots at
goalie Marcel Paille of Rangers
while Jacques Plante of Montreal
faced 26.
The Ranger loss left them in
second place, trailing Canadiens
by nine points.
Don McKenney put Boston In
front in the second period but Howe
evened it up 25 seconds later. Howe
and Norm Ullman gave Detroit a
3-1 lead before Allen Stanley narrowed the gap in the third period.
Jean Beliveau of Montreal was
taken to hospital after the game
with what was reported to be a
rib separation suffered sometime
in the third period.'
FLAM, SEIXAS
TOP BELGIANS
IN FIRST ROUND
BRISBANE (AP) - A comeback
victory by Herbie Flam and a
workmanlike straight-set sweep
by veteran Vic Seixas sent the
United States into a 2-0 lead over
Belgium Thursday in. the interzone
Davis Cup tennis finals.
The U.S. can clinch the round
by winning Friday's doubles event,
making the final twp singles mere
formalities.
Flam, whose bouts of mental
depression made his appearance
on the court uncertain until the final moments, won a marathon
from Belgium's'" Jackie Brichant
6-3, 4-6, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3. Then Seixas,
playing the 55th Davis Cup match
of his career, smashed the classy
Philippe Washer into quick submission 6-0, 6-3, 6-4.
Seixas and 44-year-old Gardnar
Mulloy will face the seasoned
team of Washer and Brichant in
the doubles.
Two hours before the match
Flam was visited by a doctor and
U.S. team captain Bill Talbert was
contemplating a request that he
be permitted to substitute Mulloy.
Woner Recovered
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Paul
Waner, member of the baseball
hall of fame, was to be released
from a tuberculosis hospital Wednesday—recovered.
Waner, who -gained baseball
fame with his hitting for Pitts-
burgh Pirates, entered hospital
Sept. 4. For several years he has
been with Milwaukee Braves, serving as batting instructor for the
minor league teams.
Lo-Llfes
(outside beams)
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Smokies Whip Warriors 4-1
To End Six-Game Loss Skein
TRAIL — Trail Smoke Eaters
erupted with a solid two-way performance here Thursday night to
shatter a six-game losing streak
and move within two points of
Rossland Warriors in the battle for
third place in the WIHL.
Garth Hayes potted two goals in
the 4-1 victory over Rossland in
which Trail was never headed with
Adolf Tambeilini and Gord Robertson adding singles.
Nimble Norm Lenardon, hard -
seating Rossland rightwinger combined with Alex Birukow and Leo
Lucchini to ruin the shutout bid
of Smokies' ace netminder Seth
Martin.
Martin kicked out 27 shots, including 12 in the second period,
while Rossland goalie Reno Zanier
blocked 29. In the first stanza, Reno
was forced to stop 13 shots. He had
little chance on the goals that
eluded him.
Smoke Eater coach Gerry Thomson, desperate to end the losing
streak that dropped Smokies from
a three-way tie for second place
into sole possession of the cellar,
juggled his lines and wound up
with Tambeilini at centre between
Ha^es and Cal Hockley. The formation took charge whenever it
appeared on the ice and figured in
every goal.
Smokies, in direct contrast to
their recent games, failed to panic
under pressure, with Ray Hamilton, in particular, steadying the
defence. Late in the game, Hamilton launched a tremendous check
at Warrior forward Steve Chorney
and decked him cleanly behind the
net.
Robertson's tally, the eventual
winner, came as Gord trailed Hockley and Hayes into the Warrior
zone and converted a pass in front
of (he net with a quick-slap that
gave Zanier no chance.
Only six penalties, four in the
second period. Warriors, a well-
coached aggregation that is always
tough to beat, drew three.
Rossland—goal: Zanier; defence,
Lofvendahl, Kraiger, Ferguson,
McCabe; forwards; Lenardon, Birukow, Lucchini, Andrews, Turik,
Desrosiers, Mclntyre, Demore,
Jones, Chorney.
Trail—goal: Martin; defence, Ro-
.. .your Centennial project.
... yourself to a real bargain.
... make Nelson a better community.
Former Coleman Electric Store
Anderson, Cooper
Stop Fraser, Rose
MELBOURNE (AP) - Mai Anderson and Ashley Cooper Thursday defeated their main rivals in.
singles to boost their chances of
representing Australia in the Davis Cup challenge round later this
month.
Anderson, young Queenslander
who won the United States tennis
championship, eliminated left
handed Neale Fraser 7-5, 6-3 7-9,
6-4 in the semi-finals of the Victorian tennis championships.
Cooper, Australian champion,
overcame Mervyn Rose, another
southpaw, 1-6, 64, 9-7, 6-4 in the
other semi-final. The final will be
played Saturday.
Hawks Call Barkley
To Replace Vasko
CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago
Black Hawks of-the National Hockey League Thursday called up dft
fenceman Doug Barkley from their
Buffalo Bisons' club in the Amer-
ican Hockey League.
Barkley will replace injured Elmer (Moose) Vasko and will join
the Hawks in time for their match
against the Maple Leafs at Toronto Saturday.
The 20-year-old Barkley is a native of Lethbridge, ^lta., and was
assigned to the Bisons last fall.
bertson, Conn, Andre, Hanillton;
forwards, Tambeilini, Penner, Rypien, Hicks, Hayes, Hockley, Godfrey, Bursaw, Cook.
First period—1, Trail, Hayes
(Tambeilini, Hockley) 4:05; 2,
Rossland — Lenardon (Birukow,
Lucchini) 17:14; 3, Trail - Robertson (Hockley, Hayes) 18:16.
Penalty—Ferguson 8:30.
Second period—4, Trail—Hayes
(Hockley, Hamilton) 10:15, 5, Trail
-Tambeilini (Conn) 17:01.
Penalty—Godfrey 12:58.
Third,period—No scoring.
Penalties—Andre 12:08; Kraiger
18:55; Lofvendahl 18:55; Rypien
19:29.
Barnes Seeks
Big Guarantee
SYDNEY (AP) - George Barnes
of Australia, British Empire welterweight boxing champion, wants
a $6000 guarantee to fight in the
United States in the world title
eliminatoin series.
Barnes said Thursday night he
also will ask the International Boxing Club for return fares for himself and his manager, Jim Barker.
Barnes was one of six welterweights named to participate on an
elimination" tournament. Isaac Logart of Havana defeated Gaspar
Ortega of Mexico last Friday in
the first match.
Vince Martinez of Paterson,
N.J., and Gil Turner of Philadelphia are paired Jan. 15. Virgil
Akins of St. Louis and Barnes are
the other two men.
SPT—Milwaukee Monopoly 2-42T
HOCKEY SCORES
By The Canadian Press
QUEBEC LEAGUE
Trois - Rivieres   0,   Shawinigan
Falls 3
Montreal 4, Quebec 3
OHA-NOHA
Sudbury 2, Soo 8
Kitchener 6, North Bay 8
ONTARIO JUNIOR A
Ottawa-Hull 4, Hamilton 3
St. Catharines 0, Peterborough 2
THUNDER BAY JUNIOR
Port Arthur North Stars 2, Fort
William Hurricanes 4
SASKATCHEWAN JUNIOR
Flin Flon 3, Melville 3
Lions Advocate
Holding Game in
Middle of Year
VANCOUVER (CP) - British
Columbia Lions will suggest at the
Canadian Football Council's annual meeting in Winnipeg January that the Shrine East-West all-
star game be played at the midway point of the Wetstern Interprovincial Football Union and Big
Four seasons.
Despite rumors that next year's
game will be played in July or
August to escape the aquatic conditions that have plagued the
Shrine's three December games,
Lions manager Herb Capozzi favors the mid-season date,
I think it has fewer disadvantages than a pre-season game," he
said. "It will certainly be discussed at the CFC meeting."
Canadiens Get
Top Salaries;
Hawks Lowest
TORONTO (CP) - Montreal is
the highest paid team in the National Hockey League and Chicago the lowest, Milton Mound,
counsel for the NHL Players As-
spciation, said Wednesday.
His statement was' based on a
recent report on organized professional team sports; prepared by
an antitrust subcommittee of the
United States House of Representatives.
The findings were based on testimony furnished Aug. 8 by league President Clarence Campbell, James D. Norris of Chicago
Black Hawks and players Ted
Lindsay and Doug Harvey.
Salaries for the 1956-57 season
with the average for each player
in brackets:
Montreal $192,000 ($10,670); Detroit $180,750 ($10,040); Boston,
$161,250 ($8960); New York $155,
000 ($8,640); Toronto, $152,000
($8,440); Chicago, $151,500) ($8,-
420).
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1937 — IS
Braves' Monopoly
May Last Long Time
Ski Slants
By Sitzmark
Names will not be mentioned In
this column any more. It is difficult to remember and give credit
to everyone who helps us on the
ski lift project. And it has b e e n
brought to my attention that it is
unfair to mention one and'not another.
i So we wish to say "thanks" to
everyone who has helped us, as
well as those who will help in the
future.
We were very elated the first of
this week when our upper bull-
wheel arrived and we expect to
transport and instal it this weekend. We were deflated, however,
when we discovered two bearings
were missing. There is nothing we
can do now about installing the
wheel until the bearings come.
However, this will give us a
chance to finish off the bottom
drive-shed and the cabin.
During the week, quite a lot of
clearing has been done and now
we have a swath cleared from the
bench above the California Road
about 100 to 150 feet wide.
Remember, there's still plenty
to do down at the lower shed and
cabin, -so let's see you there Sunday morning to give us a hand.
Farenholtz, Harvey
Advance Past Foes
In Thursday night's play at the
Nelson Curling Club, Frizt Far-
enholtb, winner of section A, beat
Art Waters, winner of section C,
10-4. In section B playoffs, J. Harvey beat A. Jeffries 12-4.
Walter Wait beat J. Harvey 8-4
in section B tie playoffs. Friday
night Wait meets Harold Moore at
7 p.m., with the winner of that
match playing against Farenholtz
at 9 p.m. in the first competition
final.
MAY POSTPONE TITLE SCRAP
LONDON (AP) - South African lightweight Willie Toweel, seeking a world title shot at Joe Brown
of the U. S,, has signed to meet
Orlando Zulueta of Cuba at London's Empress hall Jan. 14. Toweel
is the British Empire champion.
The fight will be at 137 pounds
over 10 rounds.
Harry Levene who is trying to
line up a world heavyweight title
fight for Britain in June or July,
will promote the Toweel-Zulueta
fight.
DETROIT (AP) — Joe Spieser,
brother - manager of light-heavyweight Chuck Spieser, said Thursday the title bout between champion Archie Moore ahd Spieser will
be postponed at least until .late
February.
Local independent promoters
have had difficulty lining up television coverage and raising money
for the fight that originally was
announced las,t October and scheduled for late January in Detroit,
Spieser said Wednesday that the
International Boxing Commission
had blocked two tentative deals to
televise the fight. An IBC spokesman in New York denied the
charge.
Spieser also said the promoters
DAVE  STEWART
SENIOR
HOCKEY
SATURDAY
Civic Arena
8:00 p.m.
Reserved Seat Sale
Kootenay Stationer!
TODAY
10 a.m. -5 p.m.
Reserve $1.28
Adults $1.00 .
Students 35«£
SPOKANE vs. NELSON
FLYERS
MAPLE LEAFS
were about $35,000 short of the
$100,000 guarantee given Moore,
Jack (Doc) Kearns, one of Moore's
managers, ' indicated Wednesday
that the promoters would be given
more time to try to raise the
Money, saying that Moore was
"anxious" that the fight be held.
By BEN OLAN
NEW YORK (AP) - The Milwaukee Braves have been baseball's champions of the world for
only two months and already the
cry is being sent up: "Break up
the Braves."
Time was when they said t h e
same thing about the New York
Yankees. But the apparent
strengthening of the Chicago White
Sox and several other American
League clubs in recent trades has
cut short the clamor.
Last week's deal that moved
pitchers Bob Rush, Don Kaiser
and outfielder Ed Haas from Chicago to Milwaukee served to
strengthen the Braves' chances of
winning the 1958 National League
pennant and, for that matter, could
result In their monopolizing the
title for many years to come.
Vice - president Buzzie Bavasi
of the Los Angeles Dodgers was
one of the first to admit the situation for the rest of the senior circuit teams looked ominous.
"Let's face lt," he said. "It
makes it that much tougher for
us next year."
the Philadelphia Phillies, chipped
in with, "Guess I'll have to go to
work and do something now. But
PERU REFUSES
TO MEET ISRAEL
LIMA, Peru (AP) - The Peruvian Soccer Federation Thursday
refused to take part in a drawing
to choose a national team to meet
Israel in the World Soccer Cup
championship eliminations.
The federation said it will send
the International Soccer Federation (FIFA) an explanation.
Arab nations pitted against Israel in the regional eliminations
for next year's world championship refused to play the Israelis.
Rather than have Israel, which has
a weak team, win by default, the
FIFA arranged a draw to pick
elimination - round opponents for
Israel. The draw would have Included a number of Latin American teams which lost in the preliminary rounds.
The Peruvian federation said the
conditions for participation in the
draw were too difficult. It added
that the FIFA has broken standing
regulations in trying to pick new
opponents for Israel.
Proceedings
Please Frank
Shaughnessy
MONTREAL (CP) - Frank
Shaughnessy, president of the International Baseball League, said
Thursday the major leagues "have
had the green light so far in rulings by the U.S. department of
justice but now tha green light
may turn against them."
Shaughnessy was pleased over
moves that may block the majors'
plans for televising Sunday games.
"Now lt looks as if we're getting somewhere," he said in reference to Washington reports that
representatives Celler and Keating may take anti-trust action as
heads of a congressional committee.
Shaughnessy led opposition to
[the majors' plan at the resent
baseball meeting in Colorado
Springs.
NHL STANDINGS
By The Canadian Press
P W LT FAPts
Montreal 26 17   5  4 94 52
New York .... 29 12 12  5 67 66
Boston  27 12 12  3 75 69
Toronto  27  9 12  6 71 73
Detroit 27   9 13  5 52 79
Chicago 26  8 13 5 46 66
Games Saturday, Dec. 14:
Boston at Montreal
Chicago at Toronto
New York at Detroit.
Phils Buy Philley
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The
Philadelphia Phillies Wednesday
announced the purchase of Dave
Philley from the Detroit Tigers
in a straight cash deal. The price
was not disclosed.
General manager Roy Hamey
said the Phils wanted Philley as
a pinch-hitter as well as utility
I guarantee you that I won't let the
Braves catch me in that vise of
theirs."
Many other baseball men also
feel the transaction which sent
pitcher Taylor Phillips and catcher
Sam Taylor to the Cubs for Rush
and the others was one-sided.
At any rate, the other clubs
have a lot of catching up to do.
COURSE RECORD
FALLS TO MOSEL
SANFORD, Fla. (AP) - Dan
Mosel, a 25-year-old transplanted
Texan, shattered tha competitive
course record Thursday with an
eight-under-par 62 and opened up
a wide lead in the first round of
the Sanford open golf tournament.
Mosel was never over par while
bagging six birdies and an eagle
for his record 33-29—62.
. The previous mark of 68 was
set in 1955 by Don Fairfield of
Casey, 111., and equalled by last
year's winner, Mike Fetchick of
Yonkers, N.Y.
Al Balding of Toronto, 1955 winner and a pre-tournament favorite, had 35-35-70.
Jay Hebert finished late with a
66, good for second place.»There
was a four-way tie for third at 68
and seven others in the field of 146
finishers shot one-under-par 69s.
The 68 shooters were Ed Fur-
gol, former U.S. national open
champion from St. Andrews, 111.;
Bernie Boros of Mid Pines, N.C.;
and Gay Brewer of Cincinnati,
Ohio.
BOXER'S WIDOW DIES
CLEVELAND (API-Mrs. Irene
Kilbane, 69, widow of Johnny Kil-
bane, former world featherweight
boxing champion, died at St. John's
hospital Thursday. Her husband,
who was featherweight champion
from 1912 to 1923, died here last
May 31.
Diering, Besana
To Association
VANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver
Mounties made room for two more
players on their PCL baseball roster Wednesday, shipping a couple
of "expendables" off to Louisville.
Departing to die American Association club are outfielder Chuck
Diering and pitcher Fred Besana.
The veteran Diering, whose home
is in St. Louis and who wasn't
anxious to return to the coast, batted .271 in 65 games with the
Mounties last summer.-
Besana, an erratic lefthander,
had a 1-13 mark with Vancouver to
1956. He finished last season with
the Class A Knoxville club after
failing to make the grade here in
the spring.
"That leaves us room to maneon-
vre," said general manager Cedri*
Tallis of the Mounties.
This advertisement ir. not published or displayed by the Liquor
Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
 14— NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957
STOCK QUOTATIONS
Ths Daily News doei not hold  itself responsible in the event
of an error in the following lists,  .    :.
TORONTO  STOCKS
(Closing Prices')
MINES
Algom Uranium	
Anacon Lead	
Anglo Rouen	
Aumacho	
Base Metals	
Bibis Yukon	
Broulan 	
Brunswick 	
Buff Red Lake	
Campbell C 	
Can Met	
Cassiar      	
Central Patricia	
Chimo	
Cons Denison	
Cons. Discovery 	
Cons Halliwell    	
Cons Mining & Smelting . .
Con Sub	
Conwest     	
Copper Corp 	
Copper Man	
D'Aragon	
Donalda  	
East Amphi	
East Malartic	
East Sullivan 	
Falconbridge  	
Faraday     	
Frobisher 	
Geco 	
Giant Yel. 	
Glen Uranium	
Gunnar Gold	
Harminerals 	
Headway  	
Hollinger  	
Hudson Bay 	
Inspiration 	
Int. Nickel 	
Iron Bay	
Joliet Que	
Jonsmith    	
R JJowsey	
Kerr Addison 	
Labrador        	
Lake Lingman 	
Lakeshore  ' :	
Lexindin       	
Little Long Lac	
Lorado    	
Macassa    	
MacDonaW 	
14.37%
.49
.22
.WA
.58
2.80
.06.4
5.10
1.65
6.00
.71
.45 .
10.25
2.40
.28V4
17.3714
.51
2.65
.24
.08
.1114
.07 <4
.07
1.55
1.89
22.50
1.25
1.34
8.15
3.95
.12
13.25
.09
.37
21.00
45.50
.42
69.50
1.95
.20
14.3714
15.25
.06 V4
3.90
.04.4
1.47
.54
2.32
.25
FIRST COAL MINE
The first regular coal-mining
operation in Canada was near
Glace Bay, N.S., in 1720.
l.f
.58
ijftle 6"*
•* ' Take home
Christmas Family Packs of
refreshing, delicious
Wrigley's Spearmint Gum.
It's a treat the
whole familywill enjoy.
Madsen R. L	
Maneast	
Maritime Mining	
McLeod  88
Milliken    '.     1.86
Mining Corp   10.50
Mogul 46
New Alger .! 06 '
New Bidlamaque 05
New Delhi 37
New Fortune  ll'/z
New Highridge      .12
New Harricana  13
New Jason 07i4
New Lund  16
Nisto  05
Noranda New    35.6214
Norgold  05
Normetals       2.75
Norpax   „ 29.4
North Can     1.02
North Rankin  45
Opemiska        6.40
Pickle Crow 98
Placer Devel     8.00
Preston E. D     4.55
Quebec Lithium     6.50
Quebec Metallurgical 76
Quemont      7.50
Radiore   39
Sherritt Gordon     4.45
Silver Miller  26
Sullivan Con      1.95
Sylvanite     1.05
Teck Hughes      1.35
Temagami       1.20
Thomp-Lund  75
Tombill  19
Ventures     22.75
Vicour  04.4
Violamac       1.32
Waite Amulet     6.35
Wiltsey Goglin  16
Wright Hargreaves ....:     1.27
Yale  10
Yellowknife Bear  75
OILS
American Leduc 	
Banff Oils      1,
Bailey Selburn     7
Calgary and Edmonton ....   20
Cdn Atlantic   ....         4
Canadian Collieries      4
Canadian Devonian     .5
Can Decalta 	
Duvex	
Home A      15.
Liberal Pete      1.29
Long Island Pete  08
Midcon 52
New Continental  24
Okalta       1.33
Pacific Pete    19.50
Ponder       .25
Prov Gas      2.72
Royalite      14.00
Spooner  1714
Stanwell Oil 80
Triad     4.80
United Oils     2
Yank Canuck 	
Western Pacific 	
Bell Telephone	
Brazilian	
B.C. Electric 4s	
B.C. Electric 4%s	
B.C. Forest      	
B.C.- Packers A	
B.C. Power A	
Burns A	
Burrard A	
Canadian Breweries 	
Canadian Canners 	
Canadian Celanese	
Can Chem Co	
Can Oil  	
Canadian Pacific Rly....
Can Packers B	
Cockshutt 	
Cons Gas 	
Dist. Seagram	
Dom. Foundries 	
Dom Magnesium	
Dom. Steel Ord.	
Dom. Stores  ',.
Dom. Tar & Chemical.
Famous Players 	
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi 	
Algoma Steel ...
Aluminum
Argus 2nd pfd ...
Atlas St	
B.A. Oil	
49
.07
.18
26Y4
23.4
29%
45
17
36'/4
TELEVISION   FOR TODAY
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
9:00 Good Morning
9:30 Search For Tomorrow *
9:45 Guiding Light * .
10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan
10:15 Love of Life
10:30 As The World Turns *
11:00 Beat The Clock *
11:30 Houseparty *
12:00 Big Payoff •
12:30 Verdict Is Yours *
1:00 Brighter Day **
1:15 Secret Storm *
1:30 Edge of Night »
2:00 Garry Moore *
3:00 Fun At Home
3:30 Strike It Rich *
4:00 The Early Show
5:30 Song Shop
6:00 The News
6:15 Doug Edwards News *
6:30 Leave It To Beaver *
7:00 Trackdown *
7:30 Zane Grey Theater *
8:00 Mr. Adam and Eve «
8:30 Men of Annapolis
9:00 The Line Up »
9:30 Sheriff of Cochise
10:00 Jane Wyman Theater
10:30 The News
10:35 The Late Show
KHQ-TV - Channel 6
10 Color Test Pattern
12 Test Pattern
25 NARTB .     •
26 Bible Reading
29 Program Previews
30 O-Tunes
00. Tic Tac Dough *
30 It Could Be You *
00 Arlene Francis Show *
30 Fun To Reduce
45 Your Own Home
00 Price Is Right *
30 Bride and Grootfl *
00 Matinee Theatre (C) *
00 Queen For a Day *
45 Modern Romances *
00 Blondie *
30 Truth or Consequences <
00 Matinee On Six
"Married Bachelor"
.00 Five o'clock Movie
"Junior Miss"
30 Woalherwise
The Front Page   .
; 45-NBC News *
:00 Cavalcade of Sports *
:45 Decorating Ideas
:00 Court of Last Resort *
:30 Life of Riley *
:00 M-Squad *
:30 Thin Man *
:00 Silent Service
:30 Lale Movie
"Night Must Fall"
KREM-TV - Channel 2
Liberace
American Bandstand *
Do You Trust Your Wife '
American Bandstand *
Popeye
Buccaneers *
Mickey Mouse Club *
76 Sports Club
Newsroom
Weather Sketch
6:45 Phillips World News
6:55 Sports Spotlight
7:00 Kit Carson
7:30 Rin Tin Tin *
8:00 Jim Bowie *
8:30 Palrice Munsel Show *
9:00 Frank Sinatra Show *
9:30 Dale With The Angels *
10:00 Colt .45
10:30 Command Performance
614
ItVs
sm
8'A
13'/4
38Y4
5%
7
25'/i
13%
14%
• 5
27'4
23 'A
33V4
8V4
2914
2SYs
25
SVi
18%
49V4
10
15
Fanny Farmer    1714
Ford A  70
Gatineau   28>/i
Gypsum Lime  27
Imperial Oil   42     }
Imp. Tobacco  11H'»
Int. Pete .'. : 39 I *
Laura Secord   19.4
Loblaw A   2114
Loblaw B :... 2114
Massey Harris      6%
McColl Frontenac ..'  5414
Mont. Loco. ..'.  1514
Moore Corp  6414
Nat. Steel Car   21%
Page Hershey   10714
Powell River  32
Russ. Industries          714
Shawinigan   23
Sicks Brew  20
Simpsons A   18
Standard Paving  3314
Steel of Canada   46
Taylor Pearson         814
Union Gas of Canada  6914
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL
(PACIFIC  STANDARD TIME)
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13,  1957
55—Farm Fare
00—Chapel in the Sky
15—Wake-Up Time
25—Sports News
30—News
35—Wake Up Time
00—News
10—Sports News
15—Opening Markets
20—Breakfast Varieties
55—Morning Devotions
00—News
05—Shoppers' Guide
00—News
05—Story Parade
15—Happy Gang
: 45—Tex and Jinx
55—News
: 00—Christmas Cavalcade
:30—Seven Come Eleven
: 00—The Dinner Bell
15—Sports News
:25—News
: 30—Farm Broadcast
12:55—Prairie News
1:00-CKLN Reports
1:15—Sacred Heart
1:30—Pacific Playhouse
2:00—School Broadcast
2:30—Trans-Canada Matinee
3:30—Pacific News
31:45—Rocking With Boate*
4:45—Round About
5:00—Rolling Home Show
6:00—News
6:10—Sports News
6:15—Closing Markets
6:20—Mantoyani
6:30—Christian Science
■ 6:45—After Dinner Music
6:55—Bob Bowman
7:00—News
7:30—Tapestry In Music
8:00—A Touch of Greasepaint
8:30—Songs for You
8:15—Piano Music
10:00—News
10:15—Talk
10:30-Sign Off
CBC   PROGRAMS
(PACIFIC STANDARD  TIME)
SATURDAY,
7:00—Marine  Weather
7:05—Musical Minutes
7:30—News, Musical Minutes
7:40—Morning Devotions
7:55—Saturday March Past
8:00—News and Weather
8:10—Sports News
8:15—Stu Davis
8:30—Program Resume
9:00—BBC News
9:15—Saturday  Serenae
9:30—Stamp Club
9:45—Kerry Wood
10:00-Postmark U K
10:30—World Church News
10:45—News and Weather
11:00—Metropolitan Opera
2:30—Don Messer
3:00—News
3:10—Weekend Listening
3:15—Speaker's Choice
DECEMBER 14,  1957
3:30—Now I Ask You
4:00—Presenting Pozy
4:30-This Week
4:45—Sports College
5:00—Moods in Modern
5:25—News
5:30—Hockey
7:00—Organ Music
7:30—News
7:35—Western  Roundup
8:00—Saturday Night Date
8:15—Armdale Chorus
8:30—Prairie Schooner
9:00—Music from Montreal
9:30—Winnipeg Pops Concert
10: Oil-News
10:1!>—Parade of Choirs
10:45—Satellite Serenade
11:00—Hot Air
ll:57-News
DAILY  CROSSWORD
DOWN
1. Satellite
carrier
2. Molding
edgn
S. River
(S.A.)
4. Esdtipo
' (slang)
5. Faint
6. Disembark
7. Halt ems
8. Beetle
11. Couch
13. Browns
15. Flying aloft
18. Story
19. Gold
(Sp.)
20. Dumped
in
Boston
Harbor
S3. Old
Norse
work
24. Merriment
25. Writing
fluid
28. Food
(slang)
27. Wolfish
29. "A .
Angel"
30. Capital
(Nor.)
32. Assistants
ansa asaa
aaauia hqqqc
annus hhhci.=
aQH raata nan
3n aantaH
hqhh Hssasi?
HBIIBH   KHEJiK
aaaniEiH hhhbi
aara Eian ana
a suns a HErsafs
aatinra stasias
OaUEl   HHHB
ta-i»
Yesterday's Annuel"
33. Valley of
the moon
35. Plunge
into water
38. Girl's nam* *
39. Leg joint
40. Poem
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
ACROSS
1. Means of
travel
ii. Killed
8. The
killer
whale
10. Diminish
11. Beat it!
12. Beginning
1-1. Iroquoian
spirit
15. Turf
16. Veterans
Administration (abbr.)
17. A garland
20. Metal
21. Near to
22. Constellation
23. Lampreys
24. Sen.
Smather'g
state
26. Adhesive
28. India (poet.)
29. Buddha
(Chin.)
31. Flow
32. Turkey's
capital
(poss.)
34. Overhead
35. Excavate
36. Sick
37. Divided into
two equal
lobes
39. A shout
41. Hub of
wheel
42. Not
working
43. Potato
buds
44. End of
a hammer
DAILY CHYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work itt
1 AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.   Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*
' Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
BLEUAXRT    XR    BPU    FLRSXIURFB
LS     BEURBN-LRU — DLPRKLR.
YCBtcrday's Cryptot|iiot«—EVERY ONE THAT FLATTER!'
THEE IS NO FRIEND IN MISERY—BARNFIELD.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
1
\
2.
3
a
1
s
6
r
6
U
%
y
%
10
%
II
%
11
13
14
%
'^
15
%
lb
"7
18
19
%
2o'
21
k
21
|
23
i
%
24
25"
%
%
26
27
m
25
f/,
v>
3°
51
|
31
33
^
3i
%
%
3f
61
30
1
35
AO
1
41
1
Ar
%
%
43
%
w"
%
I
2-13
 2^01-
SMALL INVESTMENT  -   LARGE RETURNS
That's the Want Ad Story  —  PHONE   1844
HELP WANTED
FOR EXTRA CASH INCOME -
write for details about easy
starting plans for selling Raw-
leigh's famous line of household
necessities. Full time city districts and rural localities also
available. W. T. Rawleigh Co.
Ltd., Dept. KK-153, 589 Henry
Ave., Winnipeg 2, Man.	
WANTED - SALESMEN-AGENTS
50% profit on direct selling or
mail order item on Personalized
"BLITZ-SHAVE". No brush, no
lather. Every shaver a prospect.
Full year's supply only $1. Free
details and samples of literature.
No obligation. Apply Box 8289,
Nelson Daily News
EXPERIENCED SEWING MACH-
irie salesman for Nelson and vicinity. Apply Box 9307, Daily
News.
SITUATIONS WANTED
ACCOUNTANT AND STENO-
grapher of 16VI years experience
desires position. Highest credentials. Apply stating salary to
Box 9222, Daily News.
FOR HIRE - TANDEM DUMP
truck, 10 yd, capacity. Phone
1757-R.
FOR   ANY   ODD   JOBS   PHONE
h-^'-mrn. 256-R
RENTALS
THREE ROOMS JOHNSTONE
Block. Stove and fridge supplied,
heated, $55. Four-roomed furnished apartment, two bedrooms,
own furnace, $50. Three bedroom family home Lower Rosemont, exceptionally large living
voom and dining room. Large
deep-freeze In basement, o i 1
furnace, $65 per month, immediate occupancy. T. D. Rosling
and Son Ltd., 568 Ward St.
FOUR ROOM SUITE NEAR Hospital High Street. Gas piped in.
Immediate occupancy. A p o I y
Ferguson and Ferguson, 1-373
Baker St.
GROUND FLOOR APT. LARGE
living room with fireplace. Dinette, kitchen, l bedroom. Fridge
and stove only. Heated. Phone
542-R.
MODERN 2-B.R. APT. WOULD
share with business lady. Away
weekends and holidays. Phone
1216-X. 519 Silica Street:       ,
WE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,
spacious office in the Truck Terminal BIdg. For p a r t i c u-
lars phone 77.
HOUSE FOR RENT. SUITABLE
for Nelson workers. Low rent.
Apply M. Cunningham, Crescent
9"      Valley. Phone 206,
huu^i<;kc;i';ijiN(; or sleeping
rooms, furnished, weekly oi
monthly rates Allen Hotel. 171
B?'.er Street	
tJNFURN. DUPLEX, 5 WARM
rooms, beautiful view, self contained. Gas stove. Adults. Phone
335-X.
WARM, LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING
room for young man. Corner of
Baker. 526 Josephine, ph. 321-R,
FOR RENT - UNFURNISHED 5-
room apt., $55 per month. Available immediately. Phone 231.
FOR RENT - MODERN 3-RM.
apartment, heated. Adults. Apply 1019 Latimer.
Partly furnished 2 bedr.
house. S. P. Pond, 1019 Fall St.,
pr phone 1421-Y.	
A HOME AWAY FROM HOME-
Brad's Auto Court. Winter rentals. Phone 1680.
DELUXE MODERN 3-RM. APT.,
1 BR., ground floor, self - con-
tained. Phone 130.
LARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM,
heated, fully furn., and fridge,
for 1 or 2. 171 Baker Street.
APT. 3 RMS. AND BATH. PART-
ly furnished. 210 Vernon Street.
FOR RENT - CENTRALLY Located unfurn, apt. Phone 933-X.
DOUBLE AND SINGLE UNITS.
North Shore Motel   Ph. 1684:
SOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR
rent. 606 Front St.
2   RM.   SUITE,   PARTLY   FUR-
nished. Phone 1341-X
PETS, CANARIES,  BEFS
FOR SALE - GERMAN SHEP-
herd pups. Phone 964-R,
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
ASSAYERS AND MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
E. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.
Assayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson
. H   S   ELMES,   ROSSLAND. B.C.
Assayer Chemist Mine Rep
ENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS
M C. McCORQUODALE. B.C.L.S.
Land and Engineering Surveys,
1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr„ Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,
1015-Sth St., Nelson.   Phone 144-R.
BOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC
BC. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (CivilI
218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238
G. W. BAERG, B.C.
Land Surveyor
373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118
INSURANCE
Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Co.
Agent, 554 Ward St.,
McHardy Agencies Ltd.
 MACHINISTS
BENNETT'S LIMITED
Machine Shop Acetylene and
electric welding, motor rewinding  Phone 593.      324 Vernon St.
WATKINS PRODUCTS
WATKINS QUALITY PRODUCTS.
Phone 469-Y.
H
I
A
N
D
L
O
I
S
PUBLIC NOTICES^
TENDERS WANTED
Bids will be received up to 3 p.m,
Friday, Dec. 13th, 1957, for a hot
water boiler as is and where is.
May be seen at the Nelson Civic
Centre, 719 Vernon St.
The highest or any bid not neces
sarlly accented.
Jack Morgan, Manager,
Nelson Civic Centre,
Nelson, B.C.
I, ABRAHAM ADRIAN, OF
Grand Forks, B.C., will not be
responsible for any debts made
by my wife, Mrs. Joyce B.
Adrian, before or after this date,
Dec. 10, 1957, at Nelson, or anywhere else.
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
Specials
TRACTIONIZING
TIRES,  CHAlMS
ANTI-FREEZE
AFTER HOURS
By Appointment
Only 7 Brand New
'57 PICKUPS
At o Discount of
If Trade Involved We Are
GENEROUS
OLDS. -CHEVS.
THE   LARGEST
BODY AND FENDER SHOP
IN THE INTERIOR
Wheel Balancing
and Wheel Alignment
A-l CARS in A-l
Condition-All Makes
.    SPECIALS
1957 Chev. Station
Wagon
With.Positraction
Pre Christinas
1953 Pontiac Deluxe
Volkswagen  1955
Austin   1955
Zephyr  1955
Borg Ward ...... 1957
Nash Met. Hard Top
Coupe   .  1957
e
Ltd.
Phone 35
SPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH
car repairs and "do it yourself"
Used parts for 1949 to '52 Austins, '49 to '51 Hillamns, '50 to
'51 Morris Minor, '47 Studebaker,
'47 Pontiac. For sale, '53 Austin.
Cottonwood Wreckage Service,
ph. 1363-L-2, Box 382, 24 Ymir
Road, Nelson.
FOR SALE - PARTS FOR '47
Ford. Phone 1885-L-2,
(Continued in Next Column)
.   AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
(Continued)
Hi Value
Used
1956 I.H.C. S182
Steel Lumber Dedt.
190-inch wheelbase.
As new condition.
1952 I.H.C. L180
Cab and Chassis.
172-inch wheelbase.
■ 1953 Willys Jeep Pickup
Four Wheel Drive.
GMC Tandem Flat Deck
With Boom and Winch.
I.H.C.  KBS8
With Trailer, Logging Bunks.
White WB 22
With Trailer, Logging Bunks.
TRUCK
& Equipment Co. Ltd.
702 Front St.
Phone  1810- 100
'49 MERC. HALF TON PICKUP
with built-in box. R & H. New
tires and battery, $275. Phone
1581-R-2. .
1949  FORD  - LOW   MILEAGE,
good condtion. Phone 1841.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
DEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF
.used equipment, mill, mine and
logging supplies, new and used
wire rope, pipo and fittings,
chain, steel plate and shapes.
Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250
Prior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph.
PAcific   6357
FOR SALE - KENMORE WASH-
er and Kenmore' propane gas
stove. Both 1 yr. old. Also small
baby crib. Phone 352-L.
2 GOOD USED OIL SPACE HEAT-
ers, 32,000 BTU, $30; 45,000 BTU,
$50. Columbia Trading, 902 Front
Street.
COMB. GAS AND COAL STOVE
with gas tank heater, $95, Lloyd
baby carriage as new, $25. Ph.
1245-R.
BEAUTIFUL ELECTRIC TRAIN
set. Remote control switches.
Remote coupler station, etc. Ph.
1121-R.
1 SUNSHINE RANGETTE IN
good order. Can be seen at 531
Baker St. W. Beet, ph. 241-X-2.
FOR SALE-TWO LETTER-SIZE
steel filing cabinets. Phone 747-L
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or evenings.
POTATOES, NO. 1 GEMS, $2.50;
j Turnips, $3.25 per 100 lbs.. R.
Kosiancic, Crescent Vallev
PROPANE GAS RANGE, COM-
plete. Can be converted to nat
ural gas. Phone 1280-X.
CHRISTMAS TREES, 3 MI. WEST
Granite Rd. Open to 10 o'clock.
Right beside highway.
LAMONTE CLARINET, $45. LIKE
new. Can be seen at 509 Latimer
or phone 1596-R
FOR SALE - 4-BURNER ELEC-
trie range in good condition. Ph.
Mr. Trottier, 686.
WANTED - CLEAN COTTON
rags, 10c per lb. Nelson Daily
News.
HEALTH  FOOD CENTRE OPEN
dav and evening  924 Davies Si
FQR SALE - 51,000 BTU COLE-
man oil heater: Phone 2146.
THOR GLADIRON,   AUTOMATIC
ironer. Phone 1854-L.
TRAILERS
KOOT^NEE
Mobile Homes
Ca6tlegar, Phone 2701
Cr»nbrook, Phone JU-6-2270
NOW ON DISPLAY
THE ALL NEW "REX"
10 ft. wide, 45 ft. long.
Many Other Models on Display
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
EXTRA
HOME VALUE
VIEW LOCATION
Newly well-built Cape Cod 2-
B.R. home; except your choice
o£ interior finishing, convenient kitchen, lull basement,
laundry facilities. Landscaped
lot, 60' x 120'. CgOOO
Amazing price  *r
TRY YOUR OWN
DOWN PAYMENT
READY TO  OCCUPY
3   BLOCKS  FROM
BAKER STREET
Newly decorated 3-B.R. home.
New Duroid roof and siding.
Well planned kitchen wifli
tile floor; also living room.
Basement and laundry facil-
i&   *6900
Down payment $1890.
Monthly Payment $35   per
month, plus 6%
HOME WITH A FUTURE
Rebuilt 2-B.R. home. Sylvaply
planter divider of living room
and dining room. Family
kitchen. Insulated. Full basement with extra bedroom. Lot
37.y x 120'.        stsQnn
Selling price .......   •P0{'«u
Convenient terms.
FAMILY HOME
View location. Compact 4-B.R.
well-planned home. Features
dining area, fireplace L.R., also
fireplace in rumpus room. 2
bathrooms, smartly appointed
kitchen   and   B.   nook.   Full
naofsPto"    $17,500
REASONABLE TERMS.
REAL ESTATE AGENTS
Phone 99 - Eves., 1821-L
3-BEDROOM MODERN BUNGA-
low, over 1500 sq. ft. plus large
attached garage and sundeck.
Broadloom carpet, colored
plumbing, two fireplaces, gas
hot water heat, finished, rumpus
room, 80 x 130 ft. landscaped
lot in new district. Ph. 1739-R.
LAND FOR SALE BY THE ACRE
at 6 Miles, 'North Shore, on Blk.
41, good garden land, overlooking city of Nelson. Apply Box
9312, Daily News.	
WANT A REAL BARGAIN? 5-RM.
house, lights, water, 2 lots, fruit
trees, garden, in Slocan 0 i t y,
$1500. E. Maher, Genesee, Alta.
TWO ACRES ON ROSEMONT -
Phone 185-R-l.	
PERSONAL
ALCOHOLICS A N oFY M O U S.
Fridays. Ph. 366-R or 483-R.
GREY HAIR TROUBLING YOU?
Use Angelique Grey Hair Restorer to return natural color,
beauty, to your hair. $1.50 at
Mann Drugs Ltd., Nelson, and
all druggists.	
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED-YOUNG PUPS, SMALL
breed; also hamsters. Please
quote price. Write Box 9211,
Daily News.	
BABY CRIB WITH DRAWER,
and double dresser, good condition. Box 1265, Daily News.
Nelamt iatlti Nana
Circulation Dept. Phone 1844
Price per single copy 6c Monday
to Friday.. 10c oh Saturday.
Subscription Rates
By Carrier per week
in  advance 35c
By Mail in Canada Outside Nelson;
One month            $ 1.25
Three months       $ 3.50
Six months   $6.50
One year               $12 00
By mail to United Kingdom or
the United States
One month            $ 175
Three months     $ 5.00
Six  months     $ 9.50
One year $18 00
Where extra postage Is required
i above rates plus postage.
For delivery by carrier in Cranbrook phone Mrs. Wm Stevely;
In Kimberley A. W Brown;
In Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner    t
and
In. Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry
MACHINERY
POWER UNITS
With
Power Take-Off and Skids
DIESEL UNITS
Cat. D17000, 170 h.p. $4750
G.M. 6:71, 150 h.p. $3900
•G.M. 4:71, 100 h.p. $3200
♦Int. UD18A, 115 h.p: $3500
Buda 1879, 260 h.p. $5700
Hercules DFXE $3500
170 h.p.
Hercules DJXC, 75 h.p. $750
•Ford R45279, 40 h.p. $995
Buda 6DC844, $2900
150 h.p.
Murphy ME66, $7500
165 h.p.
GAS UNITS
•Buda 326, 70 h.p. $850
•Minneapolis-Moline  2834A,
65 h.p. $745
G.M.C. 270, 65 h.p. $695
LIGHT PLANTS
Kholer $325
1500 Watt, 115 Volt, D.C.
G.E. $2950
20 KW, 110/220 Volt, A.C.
Single Phase, Diesel Powered
•Onan $595
3 KW, 115 Volt, A.C.
Lister Diesel $745
3 KW, 110/220 Volt, A.C.
North lite
5.5, 10, 12, 18, 20 KW, A.C, Dual
Voltage, Single or Three Phase,
Diesel Powered, for Instant Use
• Enclosed  Units
All Units in Guaranteed
Condition        ,
WRITE - PHONE - CALL
Northern Engine
& Equipment Co. Ltd.
10330, 63 Avenue, Edmonton, 393947
24 Hour Continuous Service
Equipment
1955   INTERNATIONAL
TDM
I.H.C. direct lift angledozer,
6-roller track frame, logging
winch,   operator's   guard.   —
%l mm
1955   INTERNATIONAL
TD9
Hydraulic angledozer, logging
winch, operator's guard. Only
1100 hours. Like new condi-
^son-°:b: $9200
1949   INTERNATIONAL
TD9
Bucyrus-Erie front end shovel,
6-roller track frame, bulldozer
blade attachment. Good condi-
K:°*: $6000
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 — 15
VANCOUVER STOCKS
(Closing Prices) [Silver Ridge 	
MINES | Silver Standard	
Sunshine Lardeau ...
Trojan 	
OILS
Altex
3eaver Lodge 	
Bralorne 	
Canusa 	
Cariboo Gold	
.12
4.45
.02
 47
Farwest Tungsten
Giant Mascot	
.08
 11
Granduc 	
Hamil Sil	
1.20
.02
Highland Bell	
National Ex 	
Pioneer Gold    	
1.10
.15
      1,02
Premier Border	
Quatsino          	
.04
 28
Sheep Creek    	
 32
Silback Premier 	
 04l<,
■ TRUCK
& Equipment Co. Ltd.
702 Front St.
Phone   1810-100
USED CHAIN SAWS
EZ HOMELITE - HM IEL
D44 McCULLOCH
73 McCULLOCH
See
• H.  "Fritz"  Farenholtz,
Charlie Ross or Alex McDonald
MAC'S V-.
Welding & Equipment Co.
Ltd. •'■
PHONE 1402
614 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.
BUILDING   SUPPLIES
ESMOND LUMBER CO LTD
for all Building Supplies Specializing In Plywood Contrac
tors enquiries solicited Phone or
wire orders coIIpcI 3000 E Has-
. tings SI . Vancouver, B.C., GLen
burn 1500.
HOTELS AND MOTELS
WANTED - A FEW MORE RE-
servations at the V O L N E Y
HOTEL, Spokane, Wash When
you come down for the Hockey
Games and Shopping, drive up to
our door, we will look after your
car.
WILL YOU .BE OUR GUEST
when in Spokane, Washington?
City centre, parking one block.
Comfortable rooms w'wo hath at
low, low rates   Colonial Hotel.
ROOM AND BOARD
WANTED - BOARD AND ROOM
for young man. Apply Box 9203,
Daiy News.
ROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2
young gentlemen. Phone II79-X
LOST  AND  FOUND
LOST t- GOLD PENDANT, PUR-
ple stone. Vicinity Ward and
Baker Sts. Phone 1552.
LOST - TURQUOISE PENDANT
with pearls, vicinity Hume Hote.1
Plione 1007-Y.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
WANTED TO TRADE:' WHEAT,
oats, crush, oats, laymash, for
cattle and pigs. Apply Box 9212,
Daily News.
.01
.1214
.\2Vt
.18%
.17
Calgary and Edmonton    19.50
Home   14.50
New Gas Ex     1.30
Pacific Pete     19.25
Peace River Gas 44
Sparmac  12
United       2.45
Vantor      1.25
INDUSTRIALS
Alberta Distillers         1.30
Alberta Distillers Vt     1.10
B C Foresls      8.37M.
B C Telephone           38.00
Crown Zeller (Can)     14.12.4
Int Brew B      3.85
Inland Nat Gas      7.62.4
Lucky Lager      . .: 4.25
MacM & Bloedel B     23.50
Mid Western        1.40
Powell River    31.25
Trans Mtn    65.00
Westminster Paper    21.50
'"   '        10.25
Ask
25.75
66.00
27.25
Western Plywoods
UNLISTED
Alta Gas Trunk ..
Trans Can Com ..
Trans Mtn Unit ..
Westcoast Com ..
Anuwon    .
BANKS
Bank of Montreal
Can Bank of Com
Imp Bank of Can
Roy Bank of Can
FUNDS
Can. Inv. Fund ..
Commonw'lth Int.
Grouped Income..
Investors Mutual
Leverage 	
Trans Can "C" ..
Bid
12.75
25.25
65.00
26.75
.03
40.00
41.00
43.00
58.50
7.81
6.46
3.15
9.04
4.28
4.75
41.00
42.00
45.00
60.00
8.57
7.10
3.44
9.78
4.70
5.15
RAIL DISPUTE SETTLED
OTTAWA (CP)-A disputi between the Algoma Central and
Hudson Bay Railway , and the
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen has been settled. Details of
the settlement, involving 65 employees, were not available here.
SEE...TEST DRIVE
The   New
AUSTIN for »58
With
FULLY AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
,-    and Overdrive
Be sure to see and test-drive this amazing
1958 Austin A-95 Custom.
AT
cElroy Mptors
AUSTIN - MORRIS SALES and SERVICE
Baker and Hendryx St. Phone 2000
Pope Praises
Hunters' Assoc.
VATICAN CITY (Reuters)-
The Pope Thurs. praised members
of an International Hunters Association for their aim of "protecting and multiplying" game
throughout the world.
"It has, unfortunately, happened that unrestrained and wild
hunting has exterminated certain
kinds of animals and birds, whose
disappearance is regrettable, not
only from the naturalists' point
of view, but also because it
breaks the harmonious balance
between fauna and flora in various regions," the Pope told a delegation from the International
Hunters Council.
With their work, members of
the council contributed to ths
"conservation of this precious
patrimony of humanity," Ui«
Ppe concluded.
PEEBLEi
TODAY'S BARGAIN
1952 VANGUARD SEDAN
Motor Overhauled.
Regular $450.00 Value
TODAY $333
PEEBlti
Give You
Mora
For Your Money
Simple, rugged, durable.
The only Sheave Block
with manganese s r e e I
sheaves and side frames
for toughness, shock resistance and long life.
Sizes 6", 8", 10" and 12"
8 Models.
Sold and Serviced by
Machinery
Co. Ltd.
P.O. Box 230 Phone 18
NELSON, B. C.
Haldane Motors
New and .Used Cars
301 Vernon St.
PHONE 2135
Nelson, B. C.
Phone 2136
1957 CHEVROLET 1/2-TON
1956 METEOR RIDEAU SEDAN
1955 BUICK SEDAN
1955 CHEVROLET SEDAN
1955 PONTIAC SEDAN, Special $1785
1955 PONTIAC COACH
1953 FORD SEDAN
1953 CHEVROLET COACH, Special $985
1952 FORD SEDAN
1951   FORD /2-TON PANEL, Special $450
1951   PONTIAC SEDAN
YOUR   MERCEDES-BENZ   DEALER
Ira for a
Guaranteed 45 miles to a gallon.
See the UNIMOG Diesel-Operated 4-Wheel Drive.
 16 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, .1957
Delightfully Fresh
ie Crunchy  Nut .  ir Smooth: Creams
if Tasty Ginger      ir Nippy Peppermint
■ <   '   if Luscious Liqueurs
In The
Christmas
Boxed Chocolates
You Get at MANN'S
in
• MOIR'S •  NEILSON'S
• SMILES 'N' CHUCKLES
• URNEY (New.Irish Chocs)
• CADBURY'S
• ROWNTREE
• GANONG
YUMMY...YUM . ..YUM
(s*»&>y
MANN
DRUGS LTD.
Firemen Answer 13 Calls
Nelson Fire Department during.   Increased attention to the elim-
November   answered
13 alarms,
one of them to a house outside the
City.
Chief E. S. Owens said the lone
call outside of the boundaries was
_ to the,Ymir Road, where a home
' owned by S. Skok was destroyed.
The fire was caused by overheated
stove pipes, resulting in $4000
damage. Mr. Skok was assessed
$250 for the call, the report said.
There were no actual losses in
the 12 City alarms, which called
the trucks to properties wojth a
total Of $58,400.
ination of dwelling, mercantile,
and industrial hazards was "one
of the most gratifying in the local
field of fire waste reduction," tlie
report continued.
The department was carrying on
a home fire prevention campaign,
involving a fire fighter telephoning
"every home in Nelson" and presenting a fire prevention message,
the report said.
Venezuela has four climatic
zones — tropical, moderate, cool
and cold.
NAVY RUM
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or„by the Government of British Columbia
SUGGESTS COUNCIL NAME
COMMISSION MEMBERS
Members of the recreation commission "may feel they're more
obligated" if they were appointed
by City Council rather than asked
by the commission chairman to
serve, recreation commission
chairman A. D. Schneider said
Wednesday.
He' also thought. the Council
representative should chair the
commission, as under the original
setup, and hoped Aid. George
Mermet would continue as city
representative.
Terms of Mrs. G. V. Frederiksen and B. B. Crawford expire this
year, and recreation director J. Rr
Johnson said Len.Cutler and L.
M.. Johnston have agreed to act.
He thought the school board should
be represented on the commission.
The commission has been a
"heartbreaker" to Mr. Schneider,
said Aid. Mermet, looking for improved recreational facilities.
A "very good number" of people
had taken part in recreational programs considering the number of
other civic events and television,
Mr. Schneider thought, adding the
recreation director "should have
something to look forward to in the
years to come" in the way of increased renumeration, because the
program "can't improve with a
new director every year or two."
REPORTS RECEIVED
. Several reports were received,
and council voted to place them
on record for study and refer to
incoming councillors.
Statistics place the population of
greater Nelson at 11,000, including
2543 under six years of age, 1540
six to 12 years old, 1372 13 to 18
years old, and 6000 over 18 years
old. Number of recreation participants was enumerated as follows:
(number of adults is given first,
then number of children): hockey,
120, 350; curling, 225, 32; badminton, 80, 88; keep-fit, 65, none;
tumbling, 10, 40; judo, 20, six;
basketball, 50, 320; bowling, 250,
50; senior citizens, 30, none; skiing, 78, 180; businessmen's club,
250, none; snooker, pool, and billiards, 200, 100.
Square dancing, 130, 30; brownies, three, 102; guides, five, 84;
figure-skating, one, 52; sea cadets,
six, 40; army cadets, four, 45;
air cadets, nine, 45; Canadian Girls
in Training, six, 65; teen town,
one, 100; explorers, two, 24; cubs,
four, 149; scouts, two, 160.
Mayor Joseph Kary observed
there "just isn't too much enthusi
asm ^towards recreation."
According to figures, there is one
television set for every three Nel
son homes.
"WORKED HARD"
During his 18 months here, Mr
Johnson had worked day and night
to build up the program, Mr.
Schneider said. It was stated he
could begin teaching here and had
been offered positions elsewhere at
more than his present salary. Before coming to Nelson, Mr. Johnson had six years teaching in Scotland and one year in Canada, and
was a navy recreation director,
Report that Mr. Johnson has not
asked for or taken any holidays
since being here caused Mayor
Kary to remark city employees
should always take holidays. Mr.
Johnson had received time off to
return to Scotland last year, also
^espoR
ip
SKIS
For All Ages
Ski Poles,
Harness, Waxes,
etc
Flying Saucers
Time Is Short!
Get Yours Now!
$4.75
to travel with soccer teams and on
recreation commission business.
Aid. Mermet agreed tlie director
"has worked hard."
Council's desire for a "good
recreation program" and their
knowledge of Mr. Schneider's
problems were voiced by Mayor
Kary. Aid. Mermet thought teachers and students over 18. who take
part in recreation programs might
be included on the commission.
Toys, mechanical and pull, games for young and old, dolls, doll prams, wagons,
tricycles, bicycles, hockey games, table tennis sets, fishing equipment, figure and
hockey skate outfits, hockey sticks and equipment, sets of boxing gloves, roller
skates, etc.
Spalding Badminton SLEDS
Reeguets ■ . .._...■■■■ .   *;    .  *?,
Steel Shafted ,   «,>wM    ufifitiffiSfa,
47"—$6.95
$8.50 - $9.95
$17.50
Spalding Blue
Streak Shuttlecocks
il TOBOGGANS
4-foot
5-foot
6-foot
$ 6.95
$ 8.95
$10.95
MARSHALL-WELLS STORE
HIPPERSON HARDWARE
395 Baker St.
(Owners)
Nelson, B.C.
POWER PLANT
FIGURES UP
Net output at Bonnington power
plant last month was 3,513,350 kilowatt hours', against 3,372,300 KWH
for November, 1956, according to
a report read at City' Council
meeting.
Total KWH generated was 3,-
523,200. Other figures, with November, 1956, comparisons bracket-
ted, were: station service KW,
10,050 (9200); average load KW,
4879 (4684); peak load KW, 8500
(8100); minimum load KW, 2320
(2100); 30-minute average load
KW, 8325 (7933).
News of the Day
RATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on
request Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.
Mary Maxim Sweater Wools.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
FOR ELECTROLUX SALES
and service, phone 1108.
Fisherman's  Headquarters
TILLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C.
FLEURY'S DRUG STORE
Open until 9 p.m. Tonight.
BINGO
EAGLE  HALL TONIGHT.
Annual Kiwanis turkey shoot this
week, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, in the Armoury.
Gas or oil heating, sold, installed,
serviced. Licensed, bonded gas
fitter. Norm Bowcock, ph. 385.
Glass Shelves and Brackets.
T. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.
Phone 156   101 Hall St.   Nelson
Your family allowance cheque is
worth 10% more at
TOT 'N* TEEN SHOP
Ladies Winter Dresses
Smart new styles for Christmas.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
Cocktail Party Hats in creations
you will adore.
ADRIAN MILLINERY
Phone 263
SNAPPY SERVICE
For your hauling needs.
2-piece new davenport and chair.
Reg. $199.50, Special $179.00.
BIRCH'S FURNITURE
KINAUCTIONS
Capitol Theatre box office will be
open today, 2 to 5, 7 to 9, Saturday,
2 to 5, for payment of raffle and
merchandise tickets.
Hand-carved Purses and Wallets,
HOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT
EAGLE HALL .FOR RENT FOR
DANCES, PARTIES, ETC. PH. 288
OR 1088-L.
Canadian Legion Children's
Christmas party, Sat., Dec. 21.
Please register children up to 12
years with secretary, phone 546.
REMEMBER general meeting of
John Howard Society, Nelson
branch, Silver Room, Hume Hotel,
12:15 Today. Luncheon $1.25.
Beautiful Eiderdown Comforters
in gold, rose, blue, green,
$34.50 to $39.95.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
COR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING
Si permanents try the Charm
Beauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.
Sic ■■11   Phone 1922.
FLEURY'S
Pharmacy
enjoy   \
the feeling
that goes
with giving
ShearferS
WHITE DOT
SNORKEL PEN
Phone 497
Statesman
Ensemble, S22.7S
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nothing to take apart
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FLEURY'S
Pharmacy
PHONE 25
Nelson, B.C.
No shopping problem when you
"Say It With Flowers" from
COVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP
Phone 962.
Odds...
™* Ends
...by M.D.B.
SWEATER CLEARANCE
REGULAR $8.95 — SALE $3.95
REGULAR $5.95 - SALE $.95
IRENE'S MILLINERY
Smart new togs make the most
appreciated Christmas presents
for style - conscious youngsters.
For the smartest in town, make
your Selections now at—
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
IT'S HERE
A mobile dream home—for modern
spacious living. A warm welcome
is extended to all to inspect our
new "Rex" 10-ft. wide. Koot-Nee
Mobile Homes, Castlegar, B.C.
France Warned
By Bulganin
PARIS (AP) — Government
sources said Thurs. Soviet Premier
Nikolai Bulganin has warned
France against joining in an Anglo-
Saxon "policy of force."
The warning was contained in a
19-page letter from Bulganin to
Premier Felix Gaillard. Government sources said it was an attempt to split France from its
allies on the eve. of the North Atlantic alliance summit meeting.
Why thee call it casting your
ballot is more than I can figure
out. Do you figuratively toss out
your line and hope for a good sized
fish to nab it? I do know if you
same out of a polling, booth and
tried to toss those slips of paper
in the ballot box you wouldn't have
a chance. Why all year round I try
tossing cores from the rolls of
teletype paper into the wastepaper
basket as practice for fair time
when they have those ring-tossing
and coin-tossing games, It never
does any good, though, I never win
a thing so you can see what chance
I'd have if my vote only counted
if I managed to toss the ballots
in at say 10 paces.
* *  *
Nevertheless, I went and marked
my four Xs (sounds like a bakery
ad) and may the best men win
(this includes the one feminine candidate). This was at 3:30 p.m. and
Mr. Draper, custodian of., the .ballot boxes, said the voting hhd been
steady since eight o'clock with all
the booths filled and people waiting
at times.
* *  *
As we talked he was kept busy
directing people as to which ballot
went in which box and he said he
had the hardest time with the men,
they simply wouldn't put them in
the right boxes. He said he thought
some of them must be color blind.
Even while I was there a man
came out with his ballots'unfolded,
and all the world might have seen,
but no one looked while he folded
them so they could go in the boxes.
* ♦ *
Of course, by the time you read
this we will all know who got thfeir
Christmas presents early this year,
but right now everyone is dying of
curiosity. No one around the office
would lay his money on any of
them and as, one shopper said, I
think I'll have to play tick-tack-toe
when it. comes to voting for aldermen.
* •  *
We all figured it would be a
mighty close race, but who knows,
perhaps when the last ballot is
counted the vote may prove quite
decisive. I for one hope so, I like
to see candidates go in with flying
colors and it must give them quite
a boost too.
Howard Society
Public Meeting
Planned Today
The John Howard Society Nelson
and District branch is inviting the
general public and service clubs to
attend a luncheon meeting at the
Hume Hotel today at noon.      . .
Problems met with in the course
of their work in the Society will
be discussed by members, and it
is hoped to interest more residents
of Nelson in the tremendous task
of combatting juvenile delinquency,
assisting in rehabilitation and ajl
related problems.
The need for the establishment
of a branch of the society in Nelson
was realized fully after its organization in November, when the
various committees began to function. The John Howard Society is
a citizens' committee, and whatever success it achieves is reflected in the community, officials
stated. •
CLASS ADS GET RESULTS!
CHRISTMAS CARDS
Output of Christmas cards in
Britain alone reaches an estimated
700,000,000 a year.
MISSIONARY
FROM JAPAN
TO SPEAK HERE
Rev. R. N. Savary, an Anglican
missionary in Japan now home in
Canada on furlough, will visit
Nelson Sunday in the course of a
tour of part of, the Diocese of
Kootenay. ,
He will address the congregations of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral
and Church of the Redeemer.
At one time during his ministry,
he served at New Denver. A native
of Kingston, Ont., he served the
church in Japan before the Second
World War and returned afterwards. For the last five years he
has been the only foreign missionary on Sh'ikoku Island, one of the
four main islands of Japan. At
Tokushima, with his Japanese colleagues, he has built up one of the
strongest self-supporting congregations in Japan.
HUGE EXPORT
Venezuela's oil exports reached
a total value of $2,200,000,000 in
1958.
HAIGH
TRU-ART
Beauty   Salon
S76 Baker St
Phone 327
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A "        LIMITED        **
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give.
No one ever te&tetted
buying Quality"'-reg'D
EMORY'S
"THE MAN'S STORE"
Time to Stock Up on
Royal Crown
Derby
We Have Various Patterns
2451—Blue' Mikado.
Posy—Dresdon Flowers
We Invite You to Look
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Your Rexall  Pharmacy
City Drug
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