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WEATHER   FORECAST
Kootenay: Cloudy with sunny periods and scattered showers. Clearing in evening. Winds light. Low-
high at Cranbrook and Crescent
Valley 32 and 60.
Vol. 56
NELSON, B. C, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, SEPT. 22, 19.58
Not More Than 6c Daily, 10c Saturday
No. 129
Russia Charges U.S. Unreasonable
RESEMBLING A MODERN TUNNEL under construction,
this Impressive cavern Is part of an 11-mlle system of caves recently explored for the first time at spring Valley, Minn. The cavern
Is more than 3,700 feet long, 30 to 40 feet wide, and 60 feet high.
The entire cave system was formed thousands of yean ago by
streams of rushing water; carving through the softer sections of
rock. The photo Is a time exposure, a< aeven flashbulbs were fired off singly at distances of 26 to about 200 yards to Illuminate
the cavern.
Illllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Ideal Teacher Strict
PHILADELPHIA (AP) t- What is an ideal teacher?
Tbe way to find out, one educationist decided, is to ask the
kids themselves..
An English instructor for 30 years, Harry Matlack, asked
130 ninth graders at Wilson Junior High to write a profile of the
Ideal teacher. The results were disclosed Friday.
The pupils agreed widely on a need for strictness — but a
strictness with a twinkle now and then.
A girl wrote:
"Teachers come and teachers go. Some are remembered,
but most are quickly forgotten. The ones I remember pleasantly
are those, odd as it may seem, who have been most strict;"
"No one likes a pushover," said a boy. "You may think you
do, but you really don't. You don't learn anything, and it won't
help you in the long run.".
"A good, teacher knows how to mix work with fun — and
explains clearly," another boy set down.
Many wrote that they look for something special in a
teacher. They were at a loss to spell this out fully.
"Whatever you call It,"- a bright lad said, "you sure know
when a teacher's got it"
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Lebanon Premier
Leaves Country
Two Assassination Attempts, Rising
Tension Drives Solh to Turkey
By TOM MASTEBSON
BEIRUT (AP) — Outgoing Premier Sami Solh slipped
out oi Lebanon Saturday as tensions began mounting anew
in this troubled capital.
Assassins tried to kill the.Moslem premier twice within the last two months. Solh said 10 days ago he planned to
leave until tempers calmed
down.
His departure Saturday was
kept secret. He flew into Adana,
southern Turkey, later in the day
and boarded another plane for
Ankara saying he planned "to
stay a while in Turkey."
Sohl, whose nearly two years
in office as premier is the longest
in the 15-year history of this repubUc, officially still is premier
in the regime of President
Camille Chamoun. But he left behind a written resignation to take
effect Monday. Chamoun steps
aside- Tuesday when Gen. Faud
Chehab takes over as president.
Chehab was elected president
in July after two months of rebellion against the Chamoun regime. After Chehab's election by
parliament, the insurrection
cooled down.
But with the time approaching
for the change of government,
tension is mounting again. A series  of   kidnappings   and   other
PURGE EXPECTED
VIENNA (Reuters) -Hungarian Communist chief Janos Kadar
is engaged in a fierce struggle to
retain power, reports reaching here
disclosed Saturday night.
These reports said Hungary is
likely to see a major purge as a
result of the struggle. The purge
probably will follow Hungarian
elections expected late in November.
lawlessness' forced authorities to
impose a curfew in Beirut and its
suburbs starting at 8 p.m. Monday "until further notice." There
were indications it would last beyond the time' of Chehab's inauguration.
The new tensions have come
about through flare ups between
Falangist party groups supporting Chamoun and rebels opposed
to him. Falangists planned to escort Chamoun from the government palace when he relinquishes
the presidency, but the curfew
may dash those plans.
OPENLY CARRY ARMS
Both Falangists and rebels
were openly carrying arms in
Beirut, posing a new threat of
fighting among a population that
is generally fed up with insurrection and bloodshed.
Revenge kidnappings between
the feuding groups started with
the Falangist charge that rebels
had kidnapped Faud Haddad, columnist of the Falangist news
paper Al Amal. The rebels denied it. Nevertheless, the vendetta snowballed Saturday with
as many as 400 persons being kidnapped.
Then, lest the kidnappings erupt
into serious fighting, the leaders
of both sides met hurriedly with
a mediator and about 200 captives
were, released.
The Falangists are bitterly opposed to President Nasser of the
United Arab Republic and any
moves toward pan-Arabism.
Khrushchev To Qet
Them Back on Farm
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev has
urged a drastic shakeup of the Soviet educational system to take
students out of classrooms and
put them into factories or farms.
He said in a memorandum pub-
Hshed Saturday by the Communist
party newspaper Pravda that present secondary and high schools
are "somewhat divorced from
life."
Under his plan all students will
work in factories or on collective
{arms after seven or eight years of
secondary schooling and high
schools will be transformed into
evening or correspondence colleges.
Pupils of higher educational establishments will, ior tiw first two
or three years, get tuition Only
outside normal factory hours.
The memorandum was endorsed
by the praesidium of the Communist party.
Khrushchev urged that his pro
posals be given nationwide discussion and implemented by the parliaments of the Soviet Republics.
Khrushchev said schools not
only had to give persons a many-
sided education and a good knowledge of the rudiments of science,
but educate those prepared for
systematic manual labor.
Young persons now graduating
from higher educational institutions
had little knowledge of practical
matters and inadequate training
for production, be said.
Khrushchev Says Russia
Working Toward Peace
LEHIIV
MAKES TRIP
Four Men, Dog
Drift 2100 Miles
On Raft
HONOLULU (AP) -Four bearded men and a flea-bitten dog Saturday night ended 69 days of drifting 2100 bobbing miles on an 18- by
28-foot raft from California to Hawaii. They were down to four cans
of spinach and tomatoes but convinced they had proved something.
That something, said Mormon
skipper DeVere Baker, is how the
world's population migrated and
inter-bred thousands of years ago.
For four years, Baker; 42, has
been the laughing stock of the
coast guard while he tried to substantiate the Book of Mormon. It
relates that the Mormon, prophet
Lehi used the drifting method to
get the lost tribes of Israel from
the Red Sea to Central America
in 600 B.C:
Three previous times Baker has
had to be ignominiously rescued
because his rafts Lehi I, II and III
couldn't break free of the coastal
currents.
Saturday night while a tuna boat
towed Lehi IV and its 20-foot square
sail triumphantly into the harbor
of Kahului on the island of Maui,
Baker was already planning another trip next year with a new
raft from the Persian Gulf to Central America to prove his migration theory.
Happiest arrival was the mongrel dog, Targoroa, pet of Baker's
daughter. He had suffered from
flea bites and salt water, so he
barked crazily to crowds lining the
shore.
Khrushchev Raps
De Gaulle Plan
LONDON (Reuters) - Nikita
Khrushchev said Sunday night the
Manger of fascism" has arisen in
France with Premier Charles de
Gaulle in power.
He warned that friendship between "French reactionaries and
West German revenge-mongers"
is "the road to war."
Tlie Soviet Premier, in an interview with the Communist party
newspaper Pravda quoted by Moscow radio in German, said the proposed new French constitution will
mean dictatorship and revived
memories' of Hitler's rise to
power.
Before Sunday night's outburst,
the Russians have been cautious
in their criticism of de Gaulle.
Khrushchev referred to the May
13 takeover by the "public safety
movement" in Algiers, which started the train of events culminating
in de Gaulle's return to power, as
a Fascist "putsch." 	
LONDON (AP) — The Soviet Union said Sunday night
President Eisenhower has shown he is unwilling to "listen to
the voice of reason" by rejecting Premier Khrushchev's latest message on the Formosa
cern for the aggravation of ten-
ion" brought about "as a result of
the aggressive actions of the. American ruling circles" is Formosa,
This has been "assessed by the
public everywhere as another important initiative taken by the
Soviet Union in its consistent struggle for the maintenance and the
strengthening of world peace,"
The U. S. action in returning the
note, the agency said, was another
instance snowing how. little the
United States i respects "the demand of the people to put an end
to the policy oif sabre-rattling that
brought the world to the brink of
war." ,
The Soviet government "will continue actively and consistently to
uphold the cause of maintaining
peace and will speak the truth
whether or not it is the liking of
those whose policy constantly
creates hot-beds of serious international conflicts, now in one part
of the world, now in another,
crisis.
Tass reported the handing bade
of the Soviet premier's letter,
which Eisenhower ordered Saturday on the grounds that it was
"unacceptable."
The agency said:
"Such a step by the United
States government can hardly be
assessed otherwise than as evidence of the unwillingness of the
American ruling circles to heed
the voice of reason.
"As for Hie Soviet government
it will continue actively and consistently to uphold the cause of
maintaining  peace."
Tass said Khrushchev's message
was  "dictated  by  serious, con-
Red China Moves
To Cut Illiteracy
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Communist China has announced her
determination to wipe out illiteracy in the country in three to five
years.
A directive issued jointly by the
government and Communist party
Saturday also called for "productive labor" in factories and farms
as part of every student's education.
The program for combining education and labor, also announced
in Russia Saturday, actually was
launched in Communist China last
year. Saturday's directive spells
out details.
No figures were given for present illiteracy among the nation's
600,000,000 population. Latest reports published in Peiping, however, claim illiteracy has been cut
"from more than 80 per cent to
about 70 per cent in the last few
years."
The Peiping government has set
a.target-.of compulsory primary
education for ail children by 1967.
The joint directive said one of
fhe nation's greatest tasks is to
train tens of millions of intellectuals drawn from the working class
and faithful to communism.  '
The students must not be intellectuals in the bourgeois sense, the
directive said, but must be good
Communists capable of "both mental and manual labor."
NEW RECORD
VANCOUVER - Canadian Pacific Airlines set a new flight record
for the North Pacific route between
Tokyo and Vancouver Sunday, for
the second time in a little over a
month.
A Bristol Britannia jet prop airliner, the Empress of Santa Maria,
arrived here Sunday afternoon at
2:15 p.m. after flying the 4775-mile
distance non-stop in 11 hours 44
minutes with'67 passengers and a
crew of 11 on board.
The previous record time for the
route was established on August 18
when a CPA Bristol Britannia covered the distance in 13 hours and
33 minutes of non-stop flight.
Cars, Food Top
Nelson Spending
(Special to the News)
• NEW YORK - Food was given
high billing last year by residents
of Nelson. More of the money they
spent went for food and beverages
than for any other commodity except automotive equipment.
The facts and figures are revealed in a nationwide survey,
copyrighted by Sales Management,
to determine the spending ability
and the spending habits of people
in all parts of Canada.
Each community was examined,
in this connection, as to its purchase of food, automobiles,1 general merchandise, furniture and
drugs.
In Nelson last year, most local
earnings found their way into the
cash registers of the retail stores,
with 17 per cent of this' volume
going to stores selling food, it
was found.
$3 MILLION FOOD BILL
The actual size of this local food
market is indicated by the total
amount spent. Food purchases, in
the butcher shops, grocery stores,
bakeries, delicatessens and such,
hit (3,089,000 in the year. It exceeded the 1956 figure of $2,769,-
000.
This was equivalent to a healthy
$1,404 per household if divided
equally among the local population.
Not included is the amount
spent in restaurants and in other
places serving food and beverages
for consumption on the premises,
This ability to indulge in more
and better food is one sign of the
trend toward more luxurious living. It was made possible by
better incomes in 1957.
Locally, 17 cents out bf every
retail dollar was spent for food.
To varying degrees, other retail
businesses also profited from the
big spending done in Nelson.
Outlets for motor vehicles and
other automotive equipment accounted for (5,661,000 or 32 cents
of the retail dollar.
General merchandise stores had
sales of $1,707,000, equal to nearly
10 cents.
Home equipment sales came to
$821,000, or 5 cents.
Drug store volume totaled $267;-
000, equivalent to 2 cents.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii
Sawyer-Finn Story
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP>-
A crowd stood on a bridge in
Idaho Falls, watching searchers probe a canal.
The group included two women, mothers of three children reported missing.
The crowd kept getting bigger. So there wasn't much
stir when three youngsters
joined the group to see what
the  excitement was  about.
Not, that is, until someone
recognized them as the objects of the search — five-
year-old Bobby Curran, and
Gail and Mark Walpert, three
and five years old.
Where had they been?
"Way over there," one
managed to reply with an indefinite wave of his arm between hugs and kisses from
his mother.
liflllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllll
Two All But
Beaten lo Death
NEW YORK (AP) - Using fists,
broken milk bottles, garbage cans
and feet, three purported "senior
members" of the Brooklyn Dragons strefet gang early Saturday all
but beat to death two young men
in a savage brawl.
Officers summoned to the scene
were sickened by the sight of the
victims, and one said it was the
most vicious attack he had ever
seen. A husky man, one of a number of spectators who could only
watch helplessly, sat down and
tyept when it was all over.
Even after the three alleged gang
members were subdued and hand-
cuffedby fpur.offioers, police said,
they; i>attlisa >the -patrolmen all the
way to a police station and after
being taken inside.
The victims were identified as
Thomas McCaffrey and Martin
Murray, both 21. nd Brooklyn residents. The cause of the 5, a.m.
battle on the comer of St. Mark's
and Vanderbilt-' Avenues in the
Park Slope area was not learned.
However, acquaintances said McCaffrey and Murray were not members of any gang.
They were taken to Kings County
Hospital n*ar death from what was
described as-fractured skulls, extensive internal injuries and awesome cuts.
BURGLARY, ARSON
INVESTIGATED
AT KELOWNA
KELOWNA (CP) - RCMP
are investigating a case of suspected burglary and arson at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. R.
Owen, 482 Harvey Avenue.
The couple left their house
around 7:30 p.m. Saturday and
when they returned HA hours
later the structure was ablaze.
Mr. Owen entered the front
door, which had been left open
by the alleged burblar, and
called the fire department.
They found every drawer in
the house ransacked and clothes
and household goods scattered
through every room.
US. Rejects Khrushchev Letter
As Threatening. Abusive. False
ByEDCBEAGH
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - The United States threw Russia's latest letter back in Premier Nikita Khrushchev's face
Saturday..calling it too false, abusive and threatening to be
acceptable    under   interna-~
tional standards.
The summer White House announcing this on behalf of President Eisenhower, said it believed
such a rejection. of a note has no
Precedent in the history of U.S.
oviet relations.
Eisenhower's action meant the
U. S. government will ignore
Khrushchev's demand that the
United States pull its forces out
of Formosa and the surrounding
area — and the accompanying
threat that if they are not withdrawn the Chinese Communists,
with Russian support, will drive
them out.
WILL HOLD DEFENCE
The U.S. government has made
it plain, however, it will continue
to defend Formosa, and offshore
territory essential to its defence,
by military action if necessary.
Khrushchev's letter accused the
United States of attempting
"atomic blackmail" in the Far
East. It also warned that an attack on Red China or any of its
offshore islands would mean
world war.
The White House called the
Russian view "grotesque and
dangerous."
The U.S., the statement said,
stands ready to use the peaceful
means specified by the UN charter to settle the Far East crisis
in ambassador-level talks with
the Red Chinese at Warsaw.
NEGOTIATING NOT EASY
"But it is not easy to negotiate
under such threats as the Soviet
Union now makes,"- the White
House said. "We deeply deplore
the use of such threats.
"The United States considers
the Soviet viewpoint to be grotesque and dangerous. Indeed
only ih an 'upside down' world
could it be regarded' that it is
'aggression' when the United
States co-operates with a friendly
government purely for defence,
but that it is 'peace' for the So
vict Union to pledge its support
to the Chinese Communist regime
in its effort to acquire by armed
force territory over which it has
never exercised authority."
This passage, throwing Khrushchev's language back at him, referred to Red China's avowed in
tention to seize control bf Formosa and other Nationalist-held
territory. The Communists have
been pouring shells into the island
of Quemoy since Aug. 23.
On Critical list
Afler Stabbing
NEW YORK (AP) - Rev. Mar-
tin Luther King, Jr., stabbed Saturday by a Negro woman in Harlem, remained on a hospital critical list Sunday. He was described
as resting .as comfortably as possible.
The woman, who attacked King,
Negro leader who stresses non-violence in racial issues, was committed to Bellevue Hospital for
mental observation.
Mrs. Izola Ware Curry, 42, who
plunged a seven-inch steel letter
opener into King's chest as he
autographed copies of his recently
published book in a Harlem department store, stood defiantly before Magistrate Vincent ;Rao as he
said, "This woman is ill."
"I'm not ill," Mrs. Curry said.
"I understand this is the woman who is accused of stabbing
the Rev. Mr. King with a knife,'1
said Rao.
"No, it was a letter opener,"
shouted the defendant.
King, 29, underwent four-hour
20Tminute surgery Saturday night.
Dock Strike Settled
Sons Ask Police
Protection
VANCOUVER (CP) - B. C.'s
Sons of Freedom Daukhbbors Sunday askfd the federal .arid provincial governments for police pro
tection for their homes and families during the remainder of their
stay in Canada.
A brief, signed by six members
of the Freedomite fraternal council, said Freedomites "are fully
aware that a definite conspiracy
does exist wherein.no efforts will
be spared to make us abandon our
plans to migrate to the Soviet
Union."
A brief said sect members are
"finding themselves a target of
extreme adverse publicity and direct intimidation."
The brief, sent to Justice Minister Davie Fulton, and B. C. Attorney-General Robert Bonner, adds:
"We again wish to go on record
by declaring in all Christian sincerity that Doukhobors coming to
Canada and living here for about
60 years, never did deliberately
violate the Canadian laws, nor will
they yviolate them in the future
because Doukhobors, believing Canadian laws are based on a Christian doctrine which to them was
always sacred, came to this country with the purpose of fulfilling,
not violating them."
In explaining plans to relocate
the sect in Siberia, the brief later
said: "We have ceased expecting
justice or recognition of our human
and religious rights in this country
or any sympathetic hearing of our
grievances; hence our only hope
is migration."
THE AERIALS of what will be the biggest Interference radio,
telescope In Russia loom against the sky, as the structure nears
completion at the Astrophyslcal observatory in Biurakan. The
radiotelescope will be used for research Into the sources of radiation of celestial bodies and remote star systems. After the assembly It completed, the mirror surface of the radiotelescope will
measure about 50,000 square feet
VANCOUVER (CP) — Federal mediator Eric G. Tay.
lor announced Sunday night that an agreement has been
reached in the crippling month-old British Columbia long.
shoremen's strike.
Mr. Taylor made the announcement following day - long talks
among himself and representatives of the Shipping Federation
of B.C.' and tbe International Longshoreman's and Warehousemen's
Union;    -^-- --•.--..> ...•.■..:.-
The 1,500 union members involved will begin voting on the
agreement today. Results of the
vote will be known at noon Tues
day.
William Henderson; chairman of
the union negotiating committee,
said: "We are recommending that
our members accept this settlement."
KIMBERLEY NURSE
ON MISSING PLANE
VANCOUVER (CP) - A Kimberley, B. C. nurse, who went to
Honolulu a year ago to work is
missing in the Hawaiian Islands
in a plane carrying three others
She is Elizabeth Morrison, 25;
who graduated from St. Paul's Hospital here in April, 1955. Her sister, Georgina, graduated in 1957
and went to the islands two weeks
ago.
Their father, Charles Morrison,
who owns a store in the Kootenay
centre of Kimberley, said Sunday
Georgina had written him last
Wednesday, telling him they were
taking a plane trip around the islands. It was not immediately
known why Georgina was not on
the plane with her sister.
The aircraft is a single engine
Tri-Pacer, chartered, and piloted
by Thomas Sharpnack, 31, a sailor. Others on board were Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Finch.
MONTREAL (CP) - Canada
may place some large defence
orders in' Britain in return for
Britain's reduction of import restrictions on Canadian goods, it
was learned Sunday.
Dock workers at Vancouver,
New Westminster, Chemainus,
Port Alberni and Victoria walked
off the job Aug. 21 to support
demands for a wage increase and
an improved pension sheme.
Dockers at Prince Rupert subsequently walked out in sympathy.
The strike has tied up dozens
of deepsea vessels and crippled
the export business through B.C.
ports. Estimates of the value of
goods tied up by the strike range
to $50,000,000.
Wages under the. proposed set-
tlement will go up seven cents
an hour immediately another seven cents next May 31, and a further seven cents Nov. 31, 1959.
The union had asked a straight
24-cents hourly increase on the
present rate of $2.57.   .
It was understood that a pension agreement also was reached.
Details were not disclosed. The
union held that pensions were the
main issue in the contract dispute.
SEVEN DIE AS
BOMBER CRASHES
NEWARK, England (Reuters) -
A big British jet bomber showing
its paces at an air show crashed
Saturday during a low run and
killed seven persons.
The four-jet, delta - winged Vulcan swept down for .a fast, low
run across Syerston Royal Air
Force base near here and stunned
thousands of spectators when it
crashed off the end of the runway.
The crew of four and three RAF
men on the -ground were killed as
the bomber struck a control tower
and a rescue vehicle before bursting into flame. Another one of the
ground crew was badly injured.
None of the crowd gathered for
the display marking the 18th an-
niversity of the Battle of Britain
was hurt.
And in This Corner...
BELLEVILLE, N.J. (AP) — A 65-year-old grandmother hat
landed a jail sentence — all because she Inherited her husband's
bookmaking business.
Magistrate Edward J. Abi-omson Friday aentenced Mrs. Gertrude Terry to a year on a charge of selling lottery tickets In town.
He then suspended all but 10 days of the term.
Mrs. Terry told the judge she Inherited the business from her
husband, John, who died Aug. 26.
MEXICO, Mo. (AP) — Henry Brooks was
from Anna Lee Brooks Friday on the ground of
Brooks said his wife left him for another man in 1917,
ranted a divorce
esertion.
HUNTINGTON W. Va. (AP) — Mayor Harold Frankel, who
presents golden keys to the city to visiting dignitaries, haa found
the cupboard bare.
He has no more keys and former president Harry S. Truman
la visiting   Huntington today tor a Democratic campaign speech.
Frankel sent an emergency order to the manufacturer, but he
aald he doubts that the new supply of keys will arrive In time.
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Mrs. Vernon Hornung encountered an unexpected hazard while working in her garden Friday. An alligator
bit her.
Mrs. Hornung was making cuttings for fall planting when she
felt a sharp pain in her thumb. Parting the bushes, she looked into
i eyes ol a 17-inch gator.
Mrs. Hornung still hasn't found out where the alligator oame
from.
LOS ANGELE8 (AP) — There was some shedding of clothing
when Gypsy Rose Lee showed up in court.
Hot weather was the cause however.
The stripper appeared Friday to testify as a witness for her
sister, actress June Havoc, who is suing for $87,914 over an Involved real estate transaction. Miss Havoc said the deal never came off
and named Mr. and Mrs, J. M. Friedman as defendants.
Miss Lee, comparatively cool In a blue polka dot dress, watched sympathetically as the men present accepted the judge's Invitation to remove their coats,
"In this weather, anybody would want to peel," aald Miss Lee.
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — The Phoenix barbers union local rejected a proposed disco.unt for balding customers.
"There isn't so much to cut," explained a union official, "but
it takes longer to find it."
 —
—
^___
	
2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 1958
»-
| ODEOIL
?12S^
ft HI
DRIVE-IN
I   TONIGHT;TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
I        Show Starts 8:00 — Last Complete Show 8:50
!BOMBSHEU!
I
I    PLUS —
Featurette
'Going South With Prince Philip'
CASTLE THEATRE
CASTLEGAR, B. C.
. Tonight and Tuesday
"THE VINTAGE"  (Cine-Color)
Pier Angeli - Mel Ferrer
NEWS
PHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED
Auto-Vue  Drive-In
TRAIL. li.C.
Showing Today Thru Saturday
"MOM AND DAD"
Extra Special—On Stage in Person
ElUot Forbes,  Famous
'Hygiene Commentator
Adult Entertainment Only
Jim Grant of Trail
Heads District Jaycees
A Trail man, Jim Grant, was Installed as District President of the
Junior Chamber of Commerce here
.rid ay.
The official Installation was con-
Mrs. Swanson
Dies al 78
Mrs. Florence Annie Swanson,
pioneer resident of Kinnaird and
Castlegar, died in Castlegar hospital Friday. She was 78. . '
Born in Croydon, England, ln
1880, Mrs. Swanson migrated with
her parents to Saskatchewan in
1883 to live near Regina. She later
moved to Saskatoon in 1902 and
lived there until 1914 when she
moved to Kinnaird.
In 1925 she married Peter N.
Swanson, owner of a ranch in Kinnaird.
Following her husband's death in
1942 she took up residence with
her sister, Mrs. Lillian Killough,
in Castlegar and has lived there
for the past 16 years.
Mrs, Swanson held a life membership in the Anglican Women's
Auxiliary and was an active church
member in her earlier days. She
was for many years a Sunday
school teacher and organized one
of the first Sunday schools ln Kinnaird, holding the classes in her
own home.
At the recent banquet given by.
the Robson Centennial Committee
to honor pioneers, Mrs. Swanson
received a scroll awarded to old-
time residents. She had been in
the district for 44 years.
Mrs. Swanson is survived by her
sister, Mrs. L. E. Killough, in
Castlegar.
Funeral services will be held today in Castlegar#	
YOUR
WEEKEND FILMS
(Black and White
or Color)
Given Prompt
Professional Service
NELSON
PHARMACY
"Your Fortress of Health"
4S3 Josephine St., Phone IMS
Libs Defer Convention;
Ask Sommers To Resign
TRAIL — The Rossland-Trail
Liberal Association Saturday de-
decided to defer its nominating convention until a later date.
The vote waa almost unanimous
to support a resolution submitted
by Douglas Wetmore, a former
provincial candidate. ■	
PAST AND PRESENT zone chairmen ol Lions International are pictured here with
Nelson Lions Club president Frank Beresford, centre, at the club's 13th annual charter
anniversary Saturday night. At left, past chairman Cecil Griffiths, and right, E. Johnson, both of Spokane.
140 Lions and Guests Celebrate
13th Annual Charter Anniversary
ducted by (Jerry Woodside, B.C,
and Yukon regional president of
the organization who was iii Nelson for the district meeting as part
of a provincial tour of Jaycee clubs.
Representatives from Trail, Nelson, Creston and Cranbrook attended the meeting,- which was
opened by Mayor T. S. Shorthouse
with a speech of welcome to the
visitors. .
A visiting delegation from Colville, Washington, was headed by
Pat Graham, president of the
Washington club. Past president of
the Kitimat Jaycees, George Ho-
konson, now living in Nelson, also
attended the meeting.
Mayor Shorthouse was installed
as honorary president of the Nelson Jaycees. Danny McKay, named
earlier as Jaycees' Citizen of the
Year, was presented with an honorary membership.
Mr. Woodside, who has travelled
almost 8000 miles in the past two
weeks, addressed the group with a
talk on the Jaycees' movement and
outlined plans for the coming year.
It was decided also that Nelson
will be the host city,.probably in
June, for the B.C. and Yukon convention which is usually attended
by about 200 delegates and t h e i r
wives. ,
Among other visitors at the meeting were Doug Smith, president of
the Cranbrook Jaycees, Bill Whal-
ley, president of the Creston Jaycees, and Jack Wilks, Creston vice-
president. They were guests of
Mayor Shorthouse and Mr. McKay.
The club presidents presented
their reports.
J. POLOVNIKOFF
PASSES AT 55
Long a resident of the district,
John Polovnikoff, 55, of Slocan
Park, died at Kootenay Lake General Hospital Sunday.
Born in Canora, Sask,, he came
to Winlaw With his parents and
after working with his father in
logging a few years, moved to
Rossland, where he logged for II
years. He moved to Slocan Park
in 1930 and has been there since.
In 1920, he married Helen Kalmo-
koff of Winlaw.
He is survived by his wife, two
sons, John and William, Slocan
Park; one daughter, Mrs. Mary
Rilkoff Castlegar; his mother,
Mrs. Mary Polovnikoff, Slocan
Park; a brother, Jacob, Thrums;
a sister, Mrs. Annie Evln, Slocan Park, and three grandchildren.
For Service
Call...
Kootenay Plumbing & Heating
Co. Ltd.
351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.        ..Phone 666
i        A Complete Plumbing and Heating Serviee
"If we want our community to
enjoy progress and prosperity, we
should be ready to take our share
of work, responsibility and self sacrifice," a gathering of 140 Lions,
their wives and guests, were told
Saturday night.
The speaker was Lions International zone chairman E. Johnson
of Spokane, who was addressing the
Nelson Lions Chib 13th annual
charter anniversary banquet at the
Hume Silver Room.
The banquet was also marked by
presentation of a cheque for $350
to A. K. McAdams, Kootenay Lake
General Hospital finance chairman.
The money will go towards furnishing of a ward in the new hospital
and final total will be about $1400.
Earlier, Mr. Johnson had presided over a meeting of Zone 19E1
in the Chamber of Commerce
room, where 10 of 13 district clubs
were represented by their presidents and secretaries.
At the conference, first of four
held each year, fund raising campaigns and other work were discussed and arrangements made for
a district mid-winter conference in
Wenatchee November 14-15.
Mr. Johnson, in his banquet address, stressed the importance of
members' wives to Lions clubs.
Their inspiration, he said, "is reflected in your husband." This
made the husband a better member and as a result the club was
improved.
He urged members to make their
clubs "felt" in their communities,
to become recognized as "doers".
This could be accomplished by
teamwork only; "there are no individual stars."
"Only those are happy who have
found how to serve," he said in
quoting from one of Dr. Albert
Sweitzer's sayings. He used the
reference in . answering the club
member's query, "what's in Lions
for me?"
HERRIDGE
VISITS CITY
H. W. Herridge, MP for Kootenay
West, arrived in Nelson Monday
night from Kimberley. He is visiting the district during prorogation
of the House of Commons.
Mr. Herridge is to speak to CCF
supporters at a meeting in Nelson
tonight. He will be in the city until
Tuesday afternoon, and will speak
to the Slocan district Board of
Trade that night.
THE WEATHER
NELSON     41
NELSON (Sat.)   44
Toronto    57
Edmonton     38
Vancouver   49
.11
Congratulations on behalf of the
city and citizens were extended to
the club by Mayor T. S. Shorthouse
and he also welcomed visitors who
came from Spokane, Colville,
Cheney, Wash., and Trail.
The visits from south of the border "mean much to the friendship
and mutual understanding of our
countries." He praised the Lions
Club for setting an example in civic
pride and spirit.
Past zone chairman Cecil Griffiths of Spokane replied and said
the U.S. visitors looked forward
each year to the charter event at
Nelson because of the city's "generous hospitality".
President Frank Beresford, chairman, Introduced Walter J. Ebdon,
immediate past president! and also
thanked Mrs. Gordon Olson and
the Lady Lions for the dinner
flower arrangements.
Toast to two charter members,
Fred Carmichael and Henry Stevenson, was made by Bill Olson,
and Mr. Carmichael responded. ■
Prior to a dance, some impromptu entertainment was given
by Mayor Shorthouse, accompanied
at the piano by Mrs, Shorthouse,
and a member of the Spokane
delegation sang Irish numbers, Organ music was played by Merlin
Bunt during the dinner.
Mrs. Konkin Castlegar
Fair Aggregate Winner
CASTLEGAR - Mrs. Fred Konkin of Slocan Park, fresh from victory in the West Kootenay Exhibition at Nelson, captured the grand
aggregate prizes at Castlegar's
Fall Fair here Saturday.
Mrs. Konkin received the Castlegar Chamber of Commerce Challenge Trophy and the chamber's
Memento Cup. She had 89 entries
in the fair,' the largest number.
Section aggregate prize winners
were:
Vegetables — Mrs. Konkin, Pitts
Drug Challenge Trophy and Robson Farmers' Institute Memento.
Fruits — R. Oborne, three 80-
pound bags of fertilizer from Cominco.
Flowers — Mrs. R. Baglo, Kinnaird, Leo Bosse Challenege Trophy and H. W. Herridge Rose Bowl.
Dairy Products — Mrs. ,J. H.'
Pederson, Castlegar, 100 bags of
daily mash, Canada Packers.
Canning — Mrs. J. S. Hunter,
Robson, IODE- Challenge Trophy
and Fall Fair Board Memento
Cup.
Home Cooking — Mrs. N. Oswald, Castlegar, Pythian Sisters
Challenge Trophy and Fall Fair
Board Memento Cup.
Needlework — Mrs. Helen Arm-
CELGAR WORKERS
WALK OFF JOBS
A night shift at the Celgar sawmill at Castlegar walked off their
jobs early Friday morning after a
minor dispute between workers and
a company foreman.
The difficulty was encountered
with workers at the mill's green
chain. All men returned to work at
__ 7 a.m. Friday, only a few hours
12 after the walk-out.
GERRY WOODSIDE, president of the B.C. and Yukon Chambers Of Commerce Friday urged greater membership In the organization of "young Men of action." In in address to district
clubs at Nelson He appealed to the Jaycees to make this a year
of determined accomplishment and pointed to the need for continued work in the community. In connection with the Nelson
ski hill project, Mr, Woodside suggested the setting up of a
pledge system for voluntary work and cited the Prince Rupert
swimming pool project as an example of the system. He said he
Is looking forward to establishment of • Junior Chamber of Commerce In Castlegar this year. A Prince Rupert man, Mr. Wood-
side .used through Nelson on his return from a meeting of the
National Board of Directors of the Jaycees of Canada at Montreal. It was his first visit to the Kootenays.
strong, Nelson, Kinnaird Women's
Institute Challenge Trophy and Rotary. Club Memento Cup.
Handicrafts — Mrs. R. H.. Pratt,
Castlegar, LA to Canadian Legion
Rose Bowl Challenge and Robson
Women's Institute Memento Cup.
Boys and girls — Gail Konkin, 7,
Slocan Park, Castlegar Kiwanis
Challenge Trophy and R. E. Sommers Memento Cup.
Three Mishaps
In Kootenays
A Gibson Creek man escaped
unhurt from his heavily damaged
car early Saturday night after it
careened out-of-controi from the
South Slocan highway one mile
west of Taghum.
RCMP at Nelson said Tim Repin
was found unconscious in the
wrecked car but was released
from Kootenay Lake General Hospital a few hours later after treatment.
Police said the driver apparently
lost control of the vehicle. *
The accident was the second reported to RCMP in this area in
the past three days.
On Friday night a car appar
entl'y plunged over an embankment near the Brilliant dam, but
RCMP at Castlegar said the investigating officer was.not available for contact. No further details were available Sunday night.
At Kimberley, a small, late
model car driven by George Pois-
son of Golden left the highway between Kimberley and Marysville
about midnight Friday.
The car which went into a ditch
and continued a short way up an
embankment before rolling back,
was extensively damaged. Pois-
son and his passenger, Gordon
Eles, also of Golden, were travelling toward Marysville when the
mishap occurred.
Both men were slightly injured
but neither was admitted to hospital.
To Visit
Lardeau
Hon. N. P. Steacy, provincial
Minister of Agriculture, was in
Nelson Sunday en route to Kasio
and the Lardeau Valley for a firsthand inspection of agricultural possibilities in the sparsely populated
region.
During an Interview Sunday
night, Mr. Steacy said he hopes to
learn why agriculture in the West
Kootenay district has fallen off
during the past several years and
to study the possibilities of setting
up new farming areas in this district.
He has just completed a similar
survey in the Edgewood district.
The agriculture minister said he
would also like to see the establishment of feeder lots, either in East
or West Kootenay, where livestock
producers could send their produce. If feeder lots could be organized, he said, livestock would no
longer have to be freighted to Alberta.
"We must build for the future
and we are studying the situation
now," he said.
Mr. Steacy said also that the
farm management plan which has
been instituted on Vancouver Island and in the Fraser Valley will
likely cover the entire province
within the next two years.
He said the scheme, which uses
one farm in each area as an experiment, will enable farmers to
learn about operating costs, costs
of production and profits. He said
that most farmers today are not
completely aware of those important points of farming.
Mr. Steacy urged more contact
between farmers and district agriculturists, particularly at times
when farmers are acquiring new
land.
He cited an extension education
program of agriculturists which is
relaying valuable farming information to producers. The experts are
taking part in three-week courses
at Pullman, Washington, under the
auspices of the U.S. federal agriculture department and all western states.
The course brings agriculturists
up to date on the latest scientific
farming developments and this
information is in turn passed on
to the farmers, Mr. Steacy said.
The minister added that he
would like to see the poultrymen
get together in some organization
so their produce could be properly
sold.
Mr. Wetmore laid that ln View
of a forthcoming provincial leadership and policy convention' the
Rossland-Trail convention should
be deferred.
Support (or the resolution came
from Trail Liberal Association president Jaimer Hall, the only announced candidate for the nomination. Former Federal candidate
Bill McLoughlin, who has stated
that he will decline tbe nomination
if asked to accept it, spoke in support of the motion, Mr. McLoughlin said he feels that he is obligated to more than the Rossland-Trail
area, and should devote his efforts
to the Federal field at this time.
W. T. Waldie of Castlegar, a former provincial candidate, also supported the motion.
A resolution asking that Rossland-Trail MLA R. E. Sommers resign was submitted by former
Castlegar Liberal Association president Murray Little. The resolution was supported by the association. Mr. Little said that Rossland-
Trail had not been getting the representation in the provincial House
that it was entitled to under democratic principles of government.
The resolution will be forwarded to
Premier W. A. C. Bennett.
The question of the democratic
right of appeal ..came up during the
convention when Trail lawyer Jack
Varcoe urged the delegates to consider "the continual chopping
away" of these rights.
Mr. Varcoe, who is vice-presi
dent of the Trail Liberal Association, reminded the delegates that
as Liberals they .should be "very
much concerned with anything
that indicates denial of personal
liberties, the right of appeal or any
rights which we expect to exercise
in a democratic society.."
The Rossland-Trail Association
will hold its annual meeting in October when election of officers will
be held and resolutions for the
provincial leadership convention
will be discussed. '•• -
Trailite Heads
Athletic Body
George Bloor of Trail Junior
High School succeeded Tom Naka
of L. V. Rogers High School, Nelson, as president of the West Koo
tenay High School Athletic Assoc
iation Saturday.
The association meeting was
held in J. Lloyd Crowe High School
ln Trail.
Lloyd Wilkinson of Trail Senior
High is vice-president and Mrs.
Mary Jean Elliott of Trail Junior
High secretary-treasureri
The association decided to become affiliated with the Canadian
Association of Health, Physical Education and Recreation as the
West Kootenay. branch. Mr. Wilkinson was elected chairman.
Doukhobors
Sign Forms
An estimated 40 Doukhobors
from Crescent Valley and Wynndel filed into the court house here
Saturday to secure a witness to
the signing of application forms for
migration to Russia.
Government Agent K. D. McRae
said he was called to his office by
a group spokesman who said the
Doukhobors were unable to obtain
witnesses in their local communities.   .
• The group made a special trip to
the city to have the forms witnessed.
They had earlier signed the
forms without witnesses.
The application forms for the
proposed move to Russia are the
first to be turned in to the Government Agent's Office in Nelson.
However, some 300 Freedomites
from Krestova signed up last week
in front of a Crescent Valley storekeeper who acted as a witness.
Teacher Group
Begins Fall
District Work
The new executive members bf
the Nelson District Teachers' Association have begun work on their
official'capacities:
President D. C. MacKinnon of
L.V. Rogers High School; Vice-
President, P. Klassen, L. V,
Rogers High School; secretary, B.
Evln, Hume Elementary; treasurer, J. S. Todd, Nelson Junior
High, and public relations officer,
Mrs. D. L, Irwin, Hume Elementary.
It is Mr. MacKinnon's second
term as president.'
Committees, . with representation from all five city schools and
the two Salmo schools, are busy
with fall planning.
One brief to the Royal Commission has been submitted by the
Salmo   Committee,   headed   by
F. E. Parsons. A aecond brief by
the Nelson Committee, of which
G. E. MacNeill is chairman, is
in the preparatory stage.
The Fall Convention Planning
Committee under the direction of
R. J. Patrick, has set Nov. 21 and
22 as tentative Convention dates,
to coincide with Canada Book
Week.
P. Klassen, with the co-operation of Inspector Nelson A. Allen,
ia working on plans for an in-service course in English 200.
Chairman of the N.D.T.A. Bursary Fund ls E. S. Jorgensen and
of the Salary Committee, A. L,
Cartier.
Over 75 teachers met at the
Hume. School to hear committee
reports, together with an account
of the B.C.T.F. Summer Work-1
shop, which was held in Nelson
during the last week of August.
Coffee and a social hour concluded
the September meeting.	
AINSWORTH HOT
SPRINGS POOL
will be open ALL WINTER
BETTY OLSON /
Jewellery Theft
Investigated
City police are investigating the
theft of jewellery from the window display of H. Butterfield Jewellers at 431 Baker Street.
Thieves gained admittance to
articles by breaking a window and
it is believed watches and diamond
rings were stolen. The break-In occurred early Saturday morning.
Roads, Jail, Law, Asked
At Socred Convention
The Nelson-Creston Social Credit Association Saturday approved resolutions calling for continued highway
improvements in this constituency and for stricter enforcement  of   the  Herd  Law  in
British Columbia.
At the One-day convention in
Creston where Ben Wills, a Creston man, was elected president of
the group, 60 accredited delegates
from all parts of the constituency
also moved their support behind a
resolution asking the federal government to give serious consideration to placing a federal penitentiary at Fernie.
Resolutions dealing with highway
improvement and construction immediately were handed to Hon. W.
D. Black, provincial secretary and
Minister of Municipal Affairs, who
was at the meeting with his wife.
He will give them consideration for
next year's estimates.
The requests urge continued
work on the Salmo-Creston and
Blueberry-Paulson cutoffs, and for
improvements to the South Slocan
highway and local roads in the Canyon and Erickson districts.
Stricter enforcement of the fcerd
Law was emphasized, particularly
after the number of fatal accidents
that have occurred jn East Kootenay where animals have been involved.
The delegates said the law should
be strictly enforced or, as an alternative, the animal owners should
be subject to prosecution to recover
damages.
Mr. Black gave a brief talk on
the government's achievements
since election and asked for continued co-operation and support
from local Social Credit organizations.
In other elections, Mrs. Edith
Van Maarion, chairman of the convention, who served as president of
the group for the past four years,
was installed as immediate past
president. She did not stand for
re-election,
Floyd Searle 6f the North Shore
was elected first vice-president and
other vice-presidents elected, in
order, were Frank. Merriam of
Wynndel, Herb Harrop of Nelson,
Mrs. Amy Erickson-of Creston, J.
A. Wilson of Nelson, and John Hob-
son, North Shore.
REGISTER NOW!
'for' '"-
Nelson School District No. 7
NIGHT SCHOOL CLASSES
Courses in . . .
Salmo Nelson
( 1) Square Dancing
( 2) Woodworking
( 3) Sewing, Dressmaking (Beginners)
( 4) Sewing, Dressmaking (Advanced)
( 5) English for New Canadians
( 6) Typing
( 7) Prospecting and Elementary Geology
( 8) Small Boat Building
( 9) Motor Mechanics
(10) Spanish for Beginners
(11) Russian for Beginners
(12) Wood Carving
(13) Metal Work
(14) Draughting
(15) Home Construction
(16) Bookkeeping
(17) Office Practice
(18) Ceramics
(19) Fabric Design end Printing
(20) Figure Drawing
(21) Oil and Water Colour Painting
Initial Registration In
NELSON JR. HIGH and SALMO JR.-SR. HIGH
MONDAY and TUESDAY—Oct. 6-7
7:30 P.M.
Phone: Salmo 95 (Days) — Nelson 227 (Days)
Or Mall Coupon Below to:—
Night Classes — e/o Jr. High School, Nelson, B.C.
or Salmo, B.C.
x
x x
x x
x x
x x
x x
x
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x
X
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X
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X
F
Nelson School District No. 7
NIGHT SCHOOL CLASSES
I Nome  _l	
. Address	
Phone No. 	
I Course Choice
I	
(1)
(2)
CLASSES WILL BE HELD EVERY TUESDAY
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE \
 ^IfPPSPlPpw
<5H3l
family ol Three
Found Dead in
Surrey Home
CLOVERDALE, B.C. (CP)-A
family of three was found dead
early Saturday in a nearby Surrey
home and police said it appeared
to be a case of murder and suicide.
The mother and 13-year-old son
had been strangled with bedding.
The father was found hanging by
a bed sheet from a rafter.
Neighbors said the father had
been in a mental home twice and
had frequently threatened to murder his wife.
They said she had tried and
faueu to have him committed
again. (-
uead are John Melnychuk, 33-
year-oid mill worker, his wife,
Pauline, also 33, and their son,
Raymond.
Police were called to the four-
room bungalow on the outskirts
of Vancouver by neighbor Russ
Kwas, who said he hao seen nothing of the Melnychuk family
since Wednesday night.
Police found Raymond dressed
in pyjamas, lying on his bedroom
floor with a twisted pillow case
around his neck. His mother,
dressed partly in street clothes
and partly in pyjamas, was found
strangled with a bedsheet in the
main bedroom.
TIED TO RAFTER
Mr. Melnychuk was hanging
from a sheet tied to an attic
rafter and passing through a trap
door in the front hall.
The family moved into the
orange-trimmed, white bungalow
two years ago. Neighbors said
the father terrorized the neighborhood with his drinking.
Mr. and Mrs. Kwas said they
heard him threaten the life of his
wife three times.
Mr. Kwas added: "She tried to
get him committed to a mental
home and said she would be murdered if he didn't go." •
The man was in a mental institution last Christmas as a voluntary patient but came out about
February.
No date was set for an inquest.
Ratepayers Want
To Hear Board,
Teacher Negotiations
KIMBERLEY - Kimberley
Ratepayers Association, active for
more than a year as watchdog of
civic affairs with particular reference to tax matters, is seeking
permission to have its representatives sit in on the annual negotiations of the Kimberley School District board-teacher contract negotiations.
Its request to the school board
»,has been considered by the board
' and handed on to the Kimberley
Teachers' Association for its consideration:.- '   ;".  '•
Under the new School Act negotiations for renewal must get
under way September 30 so that
In the event no agreement is
reached proper interval is allowed
for conciliation efforts and finally
arbitration with final settlement
by December 31.
Odds...
and Ends
..by M.D.B.
I have had quite a number of
things jotted down to write to you
about but have just got around to
getting them down in legible form.
Things to be noticed around town:
The new steps up Hendryx Street
from Baker will give safer footing
this winter. Bethel Tabernacle
Church, familiar Baker Street
building for many years, is being
torn down, the congregation having moved to the former St. Paul's
United Church building, at the corner of Stanley and Silica.
* #  *
The tourist park has been put to
"bed" for the winter. The building
is locked and shuttered and not
too long ago I saw city trucks
there, so I guess electrical and
plumbing facilities have ■ been
taken care of. A short low cement
wall has been built along the street
side of the park and I must check
to see what its purpose is.
* *  *
My favorite maple trees are
turning to their glorious fall red—
the one on the Baker Street boulevard near the cenotaph and one I
pass on my way to work at the
corner of Nelson Avenue and
Chatham Streets. Of course there
are many others here-and-abouts—
probably even lovelier.'.
* * »
The snow berries are ripe for
popping and chestnut trees are
dropping their prickly hoard.
Whether they are actually dropping them or whether they are
being knocked down by small boys
who like to play that chestnut
game with a string through the
chestnut I am not sure. At any
rate it won't be long before every
sidewalk under these trees will be
rusty and squishy with leaves and
chestnut overcoats.
* *  *
I got a smile out of a small
boy and a small girl (probably
from Grade One on their way home
from school. The boy apparently
asked the girl what sidewalk she
wanted to walk on — the one on
the right or the one on the left.
"You say which one," she kept
repeating and finally the little
chap said he thought he'd go on
this one. "Then I'll go on this one
too," the little girl replied, "any
side you go on I'll go on," she
said, looking at him with all the
winsome guile of a six-year-old.
The little boy smiled and looked
rather pleased and almost took
her hand. Just think, in about a
year's tune he will think little
girls are poison and it will be
about ten years before he'll look
on any of them again as he did the
other day;
CARTOONIST DIES
MARTHA'S VINEYARD, Mass.
<AP)—Denys Wortman, 72, former cartoonist for the old New
•York World and the New York
World-Telegram and Sun, died today at his home here. He suffered a heart attack in his sleep.
'Wortman retired two years ago
from  The  World-Telegram   and
Kimberley School
Schedule Drawn Up
KIMBERLEY - Kimberley Credit Union ladies' volunteer committee which supervises the School
Savings Plan in Kimberley
schools, has 'drawn up its schedule for taking deposits and entering amounts in books in weekly
school sessions. This is the fifth
consecutive year of operations for
the plan, and it now lists 913 members, more than one-third the student body, whose' savings now
amount to $30,200.
Kimberley Credit Union, which
last year completed and opened
its own. business building in the
city, has advanced another step
this month with appointment of a
full-time treasurer to man the office in working hours. He is Vic
Rice, formerly of Vancouver.
William S. Hart Park Honors
Star of Moviedom's History
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Los Angeles County formally opens William S. Hart Park Saturday
morning one of the few official
recognitions of moviedom's pas.t
I There are a few things of permanence to mark Hollywood's
history. Now, 33 years after Bill
Hart retired from the screen, his
Newhall ranch is being opened to
Uie public as a haven for the lore
Of silent Westerns.
, Here's what you'll see if you
make the 25-mile journey from
Hollywood to Newhall: The Spanish-style house Hart built overlooking his 220 acres; Western
paintings by Charles M. Russell
and James Montgomery Flagg;
^Hart's 39-year-old mount, King
{Valentine; the actor's gun collec-
tion, makeup kit and so on, .
.HE WAS SENTIMENTAL
' Bill Hart was a sentimental
'man. Before he died at 81 in 1946,
he said at his ranch: "To give
this place to the public is the
least I can bequest to show my
appreciation for the support they
gave me during my long movie
tareer."
'_. Now his wish is being carried
rout, though a couple of generations have grown up   since   he
faded from the screen. The reason for the delay was a long and
unsuccessful attempt by Hart's
son to break the will feat gave
most of a $1,170,000 estate to the
county for the park.
Hart's movie career extended
only 11 years. Born in Newburgh,
N.Y., he was reared in Wisconsin
and Minnesota and when he became an actor played in Shakespeare and other classics.
DEBUT IN 1914
He also did western plays such
as The Squaw Man and The Virginian, and these led to his film
debut as a cowboy in 1914.
Broncho Billy Anderson then ruled
the two-reel western, but he faded
from popularity when Hart began
making features. Hart started at
$75 a week, once earned $2,225,-
000 for nine pictures in, two years.
His last film was Tumbleweeds
in 1925. He sued United Artists
on the claim that it wasn't properly exploited and collected $85,-
000 in 1936.
By that time, Hollywood had
long passed him by. Hart lived out
his years at the Newhall ranch,
showing occasional visitors the
trappings of his movie fame.
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PRESENTATIONS of bravery aWarda featured opening of Castlegar's Fall Fair
Friday night. Here, Village Commission chairman N. T. Oglow presents Royal Humane
Society of Canada medal.to A. Zuckerberg, who rescued two boys in difficulties in a
swimming accident at Castlegar last year. Cpl. A. McDonald, RCMP, is in background.
SECOND MEDAL is pinned on jacket of Robert Ben-
ware, 11, who went to rescue of Paul Cohent, 8, who got
into.difficulties while swimming. Both boys were aided
by Mr. Zuckerberg.
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C. S. YOUNG
OF KIMBERLEY
PASSES AT 62
KIMBERLEY - Canon R. E. M.
Yerburgh officiated at the funeral
service Friday for Charles Samuel
Young, who died suddenly Tuesday after completing his shift as
mechanic and repairman at the
Sullivan mine.
Mr. Young was born 62 years
ago at Lansing, Mich, He came to
Canada as a child and lived in
this province for 20 years, all of
which he spent In employment
with Cominco.
Surviving him are his wife, Marie, at home, three brothers, Elmer at White Rock, Robert and
William in Detroit and also two
sisters in Detroit.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 1958 — 3
Crowe's Altitude lo Church and
Staff Said Cause of Dismissal
WINNIPEG (CP)-Prof. Harry
Crowe of United College was
fired because of his "attitude toward religion and to his colleagues on the staff," the board
of regents said Friday night.
The board said in a prepared
statement that a letter written
by the history professor revealed an attitude toward religion which is "incompatible
with the traditions and objectives,
of United College."
Unexpected Comeback Led
U.S. Business last Week
Hospital Cooks
To Brush Up in
Cranbrook Course
CRANBROOK — Cranbrook has
been selected by the provincial department of Health and the B. C.
Hospital Insurance Commission for
an Institute of Hospital Cooking
which will open Tuesday, October
14, and continue to the end of that
week.
The course is for staff cooking
personnel of hospitals of the Okanagan and East and West Kootenay, with an enrolment of approximately 40 expected. It will take
place at St. Eugene Hospital.
Lectures and demonstrations will
be by experts from various, government departments and courses
will include menu planning for hospitals, therapeutic diets, good purchasing methods, and food sanitation and preparation.
ACTRESS DIES
LONDON (AP) - Yvonne Ar-
naud, French-born actress and
comedienne, died in hospital after an illness caused by a
cerebral hameorrhage. She was
62, Miss Arnaud whose best parts
were comedy roles, appeared on
Broadway in 1027 and 1930 and
.played.in a, number of movies
since 1924.  , ,
By WALTER BREDDE JR.
NEW YORK (AP) - Massive
evidence of a stronger-than-ex-
pected comeback from recession
dominated the U.S. business
scene last week.
Some said it was almost too
good to be true.
The stock market took off into
the stratosphere, crashing
through to new highs.
Bankers around che country reported an upsurge of confidence
among consumers. People seem
to have lost their fear of going
into hock and are mortgaging future incomes enthusiastically via
the instalment plan.
Settlement of the Ford strike
brightened prospects for labor
peace in the auto industry, just
as Detroit unveiled the first of its
new 1959 cars.
Another sign of buoyant confidence at the top management
level came from Hat Corporation
of America. The company said
New York business executives
are splurging as never before on
$40 hats.
SHOPPERS SPEND MORE
The Federal Reserve Board
said shoppers in the department
stores spent four per cent more
than in the same week of last
year.
Meanwhile the industrial pulse
beat more strongly.
Steel output for the week shot
up to 1,780,000 tons—still well De-
low a year ago but the best in
nine months.
Increased shipments of coal,
coke, iron ore, livestock, grain
and lumber boosted freight traffic on railroads to a weekly high
for the year. Freight carloadings
totalled 665,999 cars, trailing the
corresponding 1957 week by only
10 per cent.
Personal incomes of Americans
climbed to a record annual rate
of more than $355,500,000,000. The
U.S. department of agriculture
said income of farmers so far this
year has topped 1957 by 19 per
cent, despite higher costs.
What's the trend in living
costs?  The government's expert
in this field says over-all living
costs will remain close to highs.
It costs 2.2 per cent more to
live than at the same time last
year and six per cent more than
two years ago.
Coal Workers
Gain Increase
CALGARY (CP) - Agreement
has been reached on a new two-
year contract between district 18
of United Mine Workers of America and the Coal Operators Association of western Canada.
The agreement followed lengthy
and difficult negotiations during
which little information was released publicly.
In a joint statement, the Association and union said the new
agreement will be retroactive to
July 3 and the contract will run
to July 2, 1960.
The contract was reached on the
basis of a recent award by a conciliation board set up by Alberta
and British Columbia labor departments.
It provides for a five-cents-an
hour wage increase in the first
year and a further five-cent hourly
hike in the second year on the
basis of an eight-hour working
day.
New rates range from $13.47 a
day for unskilled labor to $14.35
for skilled labor.
The operators' contribution to
the welfare and retirement fund
is increased by four cents a ton
of coal produced, effective from
last July 3.
The agreement also provides for
several minor changes in working
conditions.
District 18 covers 90 per cent
of the coal production in Alberta
and B.C. and two operations in
Saskatchewan and involves about
2,500 men working for 12 companies.
Negotiations in the-dispute-had
begun last' May.
Prof. Crowe was fired Monday
following a dispute with the college over a private letter he had
written to another teacher at the
college.
Prof. Crowe said later he had
not had time to prepare a detailed reply.
"However Mr. Watson's statement contains mis-statements of
facts, misdating of letters and
omissions of essential pieces of
information," he said.
"By far the most important
point is that nothing in Mr. Watson's statement changes the simple fact that a private letter to a
colleague was read, retained, photostated and used by the principal to my serious detriment."
PROBE ORDERED
The United Church of Canada
has ordered an investigation into
the firing. A three-man committee of the Canadian Association of,
University Teachers also is investigating the matter, including
charges that there had been a
breach of academic freedom in
the handling of the letter.
The board said codes of academic freedom and tenure in the
United States recognize that at
institutions with religious affiliations faculty members are under "certain restraints" as compared with secular institutions.
It added that it agrees with
those who hold that a faculty
member "who questions the basic tenets of religion" in such an
institution should seek a job elsewhere.
The board said it failed to see,
any conceivable connection between the Crowe case and "any
concept of academic liberty."
The statement ended with a,
declaration of confidence in the
integrity of Dr. Lockhart who
had acted in a "right and responsible manner" in dealing
with the disputed letter.
RADIUM DIAL
SERVICE OPENS
Twb small communities last
week became the eighth and ninth
centres in the B. C. Telephone
Company's system to receive
automatic service during 1958.
They are Rradium and Pemberton. Total costs were $76,000 and
$125,000 respectively. Both centres
have about 100 telephones.
Subscribers at Radium received
telephone numbers starting with
the prefix JUniper 7 and at Pemberton. Twinoaks 4.
Other offices already converted
to dial operation this year include
Port Coquitlam, Ladner, Port
Moody, Dexter, Oliver, Agassis,
and Creston. Ladysmith office converts September 30 and Gabriola
is slated to "go dial"'later this
year.
H. W. HERRIDGE, MP for Kootenay West, opened
the fair, pictured here as he addressed a crowd. Fair
drew more than 1400 entries.—Gordon Petfit photos.
Kimberley News Begins
Twice Weekly Publication
KIMBERLEY - The weekly
Kimberley News this week begins
twice-a-week publication.
Beginning today, the paper will
be published Mondays and Thursdays.
New manager and publisher of
the Kimberley News is W i 11 i a m
Brown, a former well-known Nelsonite. He succeeds Ronald Ede,
who has moved to the Valley Echo,
Windermere Valley weekly.
In charge of editorial department
duties is John Short, until recently
sports editor of the Nelson Daily
News.
Mr. Brown has had 31 years of
newspaper experience, 20 of them
with the Nelson Daily News. He
was educated in Nelson, where he
came at the age of seven from
England, and began his newspaper
career there.
He worked in the press room,
composing'room and job printing
and advertising departments. Later
he joined papers at North Battle-
ford, Sask., Moose Jaw, Sask., and
Vernon. For the past eight years he
had been sales manager of the
Vernon paper.
Mr. Short was with the Daily
News for more than two years. He
came to Nelson from Ontario after
three years' experience with newspapers in Toronto, Brampton and
Welland-Port Colborne.
Kimberley Engineer
Attends. Convention
KIMBERLEY - Attending the
16th annual convention of the Municipal Engineers division of the Association of Professional Engineers
of B.C. in Prince George last week
was Kimberley works superintendent D. L. Munser.
More than 200 city and municipal
engineers, representatives of supply firms and their wives represented 51 British Columbia communities at Uie three-day gathering.*
I
There Is Real
Satisfaction
In Reading the
NEWS
When It Is
NEWS
Have the
NELSON
DAILY NEWS
Delivered To Your Door
By a Reliable, Courteous
Carrier Boy
Phone 1844
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Inferior British Columbia's Largest Daily'Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday and statutory
holidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY
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MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS.
The Canadian Press is exclusively enUtled to the use tor republication ot all news
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press qr Reuters in this paper,
and also the local news published therein.
. Monday, Sept. 22, 1958    ~
City Traffic Problems Need Some Attention
It seems not enough traffic law
enforcement is being carried out in
Nelson with regard to school crossings. At school entering and leaving
times many youngsters can be seen
standing at the curb waiting to cross
while car after car flashes by, many
of them exceeding the school zone
speed limit, without attempting to stop
and let the youngsters cross.
If motorists persist in such danger-
out and selfish roadhogging lt appears
that the city police should take a hand;
a few spot checks at school crossings
and a few prosecutions may assist
these motorists to think more of the
kiddies trying to get across the road.
But motorists are not the only traffic offenders — many Nelson pedestrians risk their lives every time they
cross the street—and quite often those
thoughtless jaywalkers are endangering the lives of others. Baker Street
Is dally the scene of near accidents
as pedestrians step off curbs oblivious
to traffic, crash the lights and dash
across the road. Perhaps some prosecutions for jaywalking will help in
this respect also.
And City Council could contribute
a measure of safety to walking and
driving in the city if Nelson's traffic
signals were better organized. When
pedestrians and automobiles share the
same green lights, accidents are liable
to happen. More and more the use
of pedestrian walk lights is coming
into effect in cities across Canada.
These could well be introduced ln
Nelson, if only on Baker Street.
The use of such signals would obviate the need for cars turning into
green light intersections at the same
time that pedestrians are trying to
cross and since it is necessary for
pedestrians on a crossing to have the
right of way, the walk lights would
do away with the traffic hazard of
one or two vehicles stopped in the
middle of an intersection waiting ior
pedestrians to complete the crossing.
Walk signals are a sensible means
of cutting down accident hazards and
of ensuring a more even flow of traffic.
Nelson could use some on Baker
Street.
What ls the best thing for a best man to
say? With all the mothef-in law stories that
past (or wit or wisdom, you would think that
somebody by now would have provided the
best man with a prefabricated sense Of
humor, or at least with a vocabulary clearer
than bridegroom's mumble.
. But here is s cast where supply appears
to have jilted demand. Libraries report a
regular summer rush on them by people who
want them to know what to say at wedding
parties. But librarians say there are no adequate reference books to help,
Perhaps the difficulties of compiling
such a volume account for the coyness Of
authors in this field, You can't put down the
first thing that comes into your head when
writing a book like that. After all, this subject isn't politics, or even history. You have
to be careful,
For example, "many happy returns Ofl
the day" won't do. Also, "I DO hope you'll
be happy" doesn't ring just-right. "I helped
you to get into this and I'll help you to get
out" may sound loyal, but is it timely?
No, a book on "How To Be a Better Best
Man" is hard to write. The "Best Man's Companion" might soon have to be rewritten as
"The Best Man's Wife." And "The Perfect
Best Man" would be downright subjunctive.
We give it up. There seems no future in helping best men, except for their better halves.
—The Christian Science Monitor
Vour Individual
HOROSCOPE
1 By Vttmmtm Drak*
Interpreting the News
By JOSEPH MacSWEEN
Canadian Press Staff Writer
United Nations discussions of the Formosan crisis started out sharply, with no
Immediate signs of a meeting of minds, but
perhaps in the background a few glimmers
of hope can be seen.
The UN—with all Its faults artd weaknesses—can point to successes, peace victories achieved through imagination and
skill.
Aa John Foster Dulles of the United
States and Andrei Gromyko of Russia spoke
on the Far East in the General Assembly,
UN sources reported qualified success In
another critical area—the Middle East.
UN "PRESENCE"
While the current tension swirls around
the Quemoys and Matsus ln the Formosan
Straits, it's easy to forget that only a few
months ago people were talking freely of
Imminent general war In the Middle East,
The United Arab Republic on the erne
hand and Jordan and Lebanon on the othW
now are reported to have agreed on a plan
for a UN "peace presence" in their territories.
No hard facts are known on just what
form the "presence" will take, but even the
term shows ingenuity,- obviously designed to
take the sting out of the watchdog idea.
BREATHING SPELL?
Everyone knows that one main purpose
ls to keep an eye on the ambitions of Gamal
Abdel Nasser, but even he is reported agreeable to the plan, providing the "presence"
Is based in Damascus, not Cairo.
One view may be that Nasser is merely
giving himself a breathing spell after his
successes. But International diplomats in
the nuclear age are liable to be willing-
even eager—to settle for the imperfect.
Hammarskjold's technique in the Middle
East is something new in UN experience.
The authors of the UN charter envisaged
an international police force but nothing so
subtle as a "presence."
CHANGING CONCEPT
The idea of a permanent International
force remains but is beset by difficulties,
mostly because of the overriding power of
the U.S. and Russia. In this field the middle
and smaller powers play a great role, such
as Canada's part in the formation of the
United Nations Emergency Force that intervened in the Suez crisis.
In Korea, a hastily-organized international force fought a bloody war with Inconclusive results, and since then the concent
of world policing has gradually evolved to
meet the need of the moment.
The UNEF, for Instance, was charged
with a vastly different job from that of the
Korean expedition. And in the recent Middle
East flareups, it was a group classed simply
as "observers" that was sent to Lebanon.
Should the current Warsaw talks fail
between the U.S. and Red China, perhaps
the UN will come up with yet another workable plan for the embattled Quemoys and
Matsus.   '     ,
Pepper Shaker Protest
Ever'since Sputnik I and the ensuing
commotion, we have secretly feared that
Canadians might succumb to a blind, unquestioning worship of science and technology. It was reassuring, then, to discover at
|unch recently a Medicine Hat businessman
with a stimulating disdain for technological
progress.
His disdain, voiced strongly and bitterly,
centred on pepper-shakers — specifically,
the holes in tops thereof. During thousands
of meals over the years, this man has been
driven to a point of frenzy over the complete
inefficiency of the holes in the tops ofpep-
per-shakers. To put it simply, they're too
small, What the scientists should do, he
implied, was to leave off those moon rockets
for long enough to come up with a pepper-'
shaker top containing holes through which
pepper will flow easily and evenly.
We heartily endorse this man's challenge to science to come up with a decent
job of pepper-shaker-top calibration. And
while science is at it, it might also seek to
fashion a device — other than a ligament-
strained right arm — to indicate when the
things are empty. — The Medicine Hat News.
Look In tne section ln which your
birthday comes and find what your
outlook is, according to the stars,
For Tuesday, sept. 39, MM
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)
—Stand firmly for your p rinciples.
Don't lose faith if faced with setbacks, but keep going forward with
ambitious hope,
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)
Give careful thought to your work
but do not worry to the extent of
jeopardizing nerves, mind, health,
Try to vary the monotony of routine. At leisure time try something different; it eases tension.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -
Don't make rash decisions now.
Deliberate  carefully;   weigh  the
8ros and cons of all matters, peal
loughtfully with superiors, elderly people.
JUNE 22 to JULY 22 (Canoer)-
Perceivo, observe. Moon's position
inspires those who are ln positions
of trust; who are responsible for
making Important decisions.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-
When taking on a new task, consider it carefully. If at a new
place, study the advantages of the
locale, the people. Sun influences
encourage action.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23
(Virgo) — Try to improve your
personality now. Don't let jealousy
dominate your thoughts. Be your
cheerful self; don't' argue too
forcefully. Use talents to best advantage.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra)—Today the individualist is newly favored, if he remains
reasonable. Use your Imagination
to achieve better returns.
OCTOBER 24 tO NOVEMBER 22
(Scorpio) ~ Lino up some varied
activities. Spend some part of the
day on a hobby. If you do mental
work regularly, get some physical
exercise in free hours, and vice
versa.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER
II (Sagittarius) — Don't take "no"
for an answer if you are certain
your objective can be achieved. A
good period for making improvements.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20
(Capricorn) — Turn a deaf ear to
those who would-dlsrupt your schedule. Hel pwlth ideas to improve
home, office, factory, field, anywhere you can—and you can. ,
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19
(Aquarius) - Speak up for what
Is right; don't be afraid of what
people are going to say. If you
have a big problem, ask advice-of
experts—not casual acquaintances.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces)—A pleasant, gainful day
either for finishing Incompleted
matters or for planning new projects. Make time for healthy recreation fo rthe sake Of health.
YOU BORN TODAY ara endowed with versatility, artistry, willingness to work hard, steadiness
of intent, keenness and a fine memory. You are sometimes an extremist, especially about foods, or
things y ou like. Always sincere
about causes you back, you are,
however, often adamant about
having your own way. Thoroughness can bring you top rewards
but do not permit it to make you
picayune or fussy about details.
Trade Meet to Deal
With Food Surpluses
RCAF Ghost Squadron Blasts
Near-Perfect Rocket Shots
It's Be .fi Said
Mediocrity can talk; but it is for genius
to observe.
—Benjamin Disraeli, British statesman.
Pestered Into Exile
It is more than five years since Princess
Margaret's name was romantically associated with that of Mr. Peter Townsend; almost
three years since her formal renunciation.
It took the bravery of that public decision
to shame the sensational press, ln London
and elsewhere, which had held a perpetual
field day on both.
It was not shamed for long. Princess
Margaret was shielded to some extent by
protocol; but wherever Mr. Townsend went
he was a marked man whose every word
or action, or even total silence, was pounced
on and proclaimed in suggestive headlines.
The hue and cry reached new heights when
he ventured back to his native country.
So now has come the climax: Giving out
a. statement in Paris about a projected film
dealing with his world travels, Mr. Towns-
end said, to "put an end to further speculation," that he has no intention of returning-
to England — thus apparently making permanent an exile which the rumor factories
had already imposed on him. There are
many things of which the Fourth Estate can
be proud; but the persecution of Mr. Towns-
end by its lunatic fringe is not one of them.
„ Watch Your Language
SATANIC-(sa-TA_-lk)-adjective; also
satanical; pertaining to or like Satan; infernal; devilish. Origin: Hebrew-satan, adversary.
By GERRY McNEIL
Canadian Press Staff Writer
COLD LAKE, Alta. (CP)-The
crack 428 Ghost Squadron from
Ottawa's Uplands RCAF base
blasted near-perfect rocket shots
ail weeks at this massive air
force base and beat out eight
other CF - 100' jet interceptor
squadrons for honors in the Air
Defence Command's annual
rocket meet.
The squadron took the Air Vice-
Marshal W. R, MacBrien Trophy
Friday by comoiling a percentage of 93.7 in five missions. The
trophy was won for Uplands
RCAF base last year, too, when
410 Cougar Squadron won.
Runner - up was the Alouette
Sauadron from St. Hubert, Que,,
with 91.5 per cent. Squadrons
competing included two each
from Uplands, St. Hubert, Bngot-
ville, Que,, and North Bav, Ont.,
and one from Comox, B.C.
Each squadron, aided by a
radar controller at this air base
185 miles northeast of Edmonton,
carried six 2.75-inch rockets on
the wings of Its two CF-lOOs to
blast at a target trailed behind a
tow plane.
Success of the squadrons depended a great deal on the radar
man, who guided them to within
20 miles of the target, and ground
crews, who tried to keep the
delicate mechanisms ln the CF-
lOOs in top order.
ALMOST   500-POINT  EDGE
The Ghost group's ground crew
amassed 10.320 points to beat out
the Alouette crew by 494 points
for the Aircraft Maintenance Ef-
They'll Do It Every Time
•em.      By Jimmy Hatlo
f. NVBODV 1H4T DOMT TAKE Y HE'D R4THER^
A V_C_TION"-VOU KNOW WHAT] SPEND HIS TIME    '
THEY S4y™Hrs _FR4ID   /■OGOWHERETHdN
SOMEBODy MIGHT ,    1 PUrV DOGHOUSE
EXAMINE HIS BOOKS.'-^V  WITH HIS OL'
TODAY'S BIBLE
THOUGHT
How shall I defy whom the Lord
hath not defiled?—Numbers 23:8.
If you think you can work against
the Infinite try sweeping back the
sea with a broom. A king tried
that once, with poor results.
(hmLdisL
0ETTING THE GIT/
WHO NEVER? T_KES
A Didy OFF TO6IVE
THE WHY AHD.
THAN* AND A HAT TIP
TO HAROLD Q.ANDREW,
veeo Beach,
FLORIDA
I reckon I'd take alimony. I'd
be too proud to ask for it, but if I
was mad enough to divorce Pa,
I'd want to make him pay for it.
H
E
N
R
Y
BRITISH RUGBY
LONDON 'Reuters) — Results of
rugby games played in the United
Kingdom Saturday:
RUGBY LEAGUE
Batley 30, Keighley 4
Blackpool Borough 8, Leigh 7
Bramley 11, Barrow 0
Doncaster 14, Dewsbury 5
Halifax 20, Hull 15
Hull Kingston Rovers  13,  Sal-
ford 2f
HunSlet 32, Huddersfield 14 ,
Liverpool City 16, Castleford 7
Rochdale Hornets 13, Oldham 14
Swlnton 26, Whitehaven 10
Wakefield Trinity 22, Leeds 33
Warrington 15, St. Helen's 29
Wigan 46, Featherstone Rovers 5
Workington Town 14, Widnes 34
York 3, Bradford Northern 20
RUGBY UNION
Cheltenham 11, Stroud 11
Ebbw Vale 16, Rugby 5
Exeter 9, Torquay Athletic 6
Gloucester 9, Mbseley 6
HaUfax 0, Bradford 29
Leicester 18, Plymouth Albion 5
Llanelly 3, Aberavon 0
Maestcg 17, Nuneaton 14
Manchester 23, Headingl ey 16
New Brighton 6, Abertlllery 26
Newport 14, Neath 0
Northampton 14, Richmond n
Harlequins  35,  St.   Miry  Hospital 6
London Irish 17, United Services
Portsmouth 5
London  Scottish  0,   Edinburgh
Academicals 11
Metropolital Police 13, St. Thomas's Hospital 13
Old   Blues  8,   United   Services
Chatham 11
Old Merchant-Taylors 3, Black-
heath 20
Saracens 8, Bridgend 17
. Wasps 32, Milan (Italy) 6
Barnstaple 12, Old Cranleighans 3
Bath 9, Devonport Services 3
Bedford 11, NOtts 6
Bristol 17, Swansea 11
Cardiff 13, Coventry 19
Oxford 17, Clifton 16
Old Belvedere 5, Watsoniane 9
Penzance and Newlyn 5, Pontypridd 10
Taunton 9, Glamorgan Wanderers 11
Weston.Super Mare 8, Pertarth 6
Aberdeen Grammar School Former   Pupils   3,   Heriots   Former
Puoils 16
GlaBgow   High   School   Former
Punils 31, East of Scotland 3
Hillhead   High   School'  Fonmer
Pupils 9", Glasgow Academrcaro 12
ficlency. Trophy. It was presented by USAF Maj.-Gen. Edward H. Underhlll, eastern division chief of the North American
Air Defence Command.
FO John Desbrlsay. 28, of Ottawa, Ghost Squadron's radar
controller, took honors in that de-
Unlted States Air Division Award
and another prize as radar guide
for the top squadron.
Only other major award went
to the oldest pilot in the meet,
Wing Cmdr. Eric Wilson, 43, of
Rapid City, Man., who flew with
North Bay's Black Knight Squadron.
He and FO John A. Emon, 24,
of St. Almonte, Ont., his' navigator, took the Vincent USAF
Base Award for the individual
crew with the most points.
Wing Cmdr. Wilson, who began
flying CF-lOOs two years ago,
said the pilot's job lasts only 90
seconds in a rocket mission.
Speeding at 500 miles an hour,
he must keep his aircraft steady
on the target after the navigator's radar picks it up. When
the CF-100 ls within 800 feet of
the target—a seven - foot, egg-
shaped affair—the rockets fire
automatically.
SAYS MEET ESSENTIAL
Air Vice - Marshal MacBrien,
who presented the award to the
winners, said the meet "fosters
a spirit of competition essential
to the fighters" and gives the air
force "opportunity to measure
the ability of the teams to perform their prime role—to destroy
enemy aircraft.
"This meet separates the men
from the boys," he added.
Sub-Lt. Frank Greenway, 36.
of Victoria, snd Flt.-Lt. Fred
Hastings, 35, Orover City, Calif.,
the pilots and Flt.-Lt. Frank Dun-
ster, 37, Ottawa and FO Donsld
Lawrie, 24, Stonewall, Man., the
Souadron crew.
' Cold Lake air base, Canada's
largest ,alr installation, was built'
primarily to give jet oilots a
chance to use rockets. More than
5,000 persons live. at the base,
making it Alberta's ninth largest
community.
The meet was he'd 12,000 to 3n,-
000 feet above a desolate 40.000-
square-mi'e area north of here,
roped off as an aerial rocket
range.
Observers, among them . tense
ground crews, watched the aerial
action by radar as it was too far
away to see. Judges poured over
films of each shot to decide its
value. Wingtip cameras on the
CF-lOOs recorded the shots
By HAROLD MORRISON
Canadian Press Staff Writer
MONTREAL (CP)-The Commonwealth completed the first
week of its trade deliberations
with some far-reaching decisions
but appeared to be heading into a
split on the sticky food surplus
issue.
New Zealand failed to sway the
trade conference Friday with her
appeal for a gradual reduction of
food price supports. Britain
balked but Canada stepped in
with a compromise proposal that
may finally resolve part of the
issue.
Canada proposed that, to prevent price supports from rising
too, the spread between them and
lower world prices be fixed by
international agreement. This
would tend to discourage uneconomical dumping.
Earlier in the week Canada attacked Britain's controls on imports from the dollar area, and
Britain almost immediately replied with a sharp reduction that
won the praise of all member
countries. Next week the conference begins specific study of
ways of expandnlg trade and
providing more capital for needy
countries, and Canada may come
through with some announcements on her current Colombo
Plan and other contributions.
In other major developments,
the 11 member countries - tentatively agreed to seek Sino-Sovlet
participation in inter national
commodity agreements as
a mearts of ending cut - throat
competition in such basic products as jute, tin, aluminum, and
textiles.
They also enthusiastically endorsed a Canadian plan to set up
1,000 scholarships' for an exchange of students and teachers
among Commonwealth countries.
Britain will pay for one-half of
these; Canada for one-quarter.
Food surpluses provided a major stumbling block. New Zealand, which lives by its dairy and
meat exports, has accused certain countries inside and outside
the Commonwealth of barring
New Zealand products by Import
quotas and embargoes and at the
same time granting high price
supports for domestic producers.
It urged the Commonwealth to
endorse the idea of reducing the
supports to the level of prevailing competitive world prices.
Australia gave her support but
Britain maintained she couldn't.
A New Zealand spokesman also
criticized Canada for banning
New Zealand products, maintain
ing high price supports and in
recent years having "dumped"
some butter in Communist mar*
kets in Europe.
Canada's Trade Minis ter
Churchill said Canada would ba
happy to join any well-considered
international body designed to
overcome violent price fluctuations and develop means of consultation among producing countries to avoid dumping.
Along with his suggestion of a
fixed spread between federal
price supports and world prices,
Mr. Churchill asked that Prim*
Minister Diefenbaker's call for an
International food bank, to store
and rechannel surpluses into
areas where they are needed, be
given serious consideration.
New Zealand charged that
many of the farm trade problems resulted from member
countries of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trades
granting the United States t
waiver on her food import commitments. As it now; stood, GATT
was too weak to deal with agricultural protectionism, New Zealand added.
Civil Servants
Ask lor Coast
Cabinet Meeting
VANCOUVER (CP) - British
Columbia civil servants Saturday
requested an early meeting with
the provincial cabinet to discuss
their salary demands.
Ed O'connor, general secretary .
of the B.C. Government Employees' Association, Bald balloting
held in the organization's
branches gave the executive
authority to set a date for a
strike vote should it find- such
action necessary.
"But our first step Is to seek
what is generally considered to
be the right of all employees, the
opportunity to sit around the
table and discuss this matter
with our employer," said O'Connor.
"There have been meetings before, but the premier has ruled
that we may only present our
brief and that there should be
no discussion."
The civil servants are seeking
an 11-per-cent increase to bring
salaries up to those prevailing in
comparable private jobs.
Rankin Inlet Experiment
Seen as "Shining Light"
By ARCH MacKENZIE
Canadian Press Staff Writer
OTTAWA (CP) — The Eskimo
may become a big factor in exploiting the mineral resources of
northern Canada.
Evidence that he may.be a decided economic asset is being
steadily produced in operations at
the Rankin Inlet nickel mine in
the Northwest Territories, on the
western  coast of Hudson Bay.
There, Eskimos are shaping up
«s an excellent on-the-snot labor
force both on the surface and
underground. The company now
has about 80 of them employed
at regular wane scales and plans
eventually to have more than 100
on the payroll, reducing whites
to about 20.
This adds to Eskimo achievements already recorded On radar
line construction and other projects as laborers and skilled personnel.
BRIGHT LIGHT
Northern affairs department officials here Call the Rankin experiment a "bright shining light"
against the general background
of the Eskimo problem. Sustained
success would mean a lot in the
program to integrate the Eskimo
from his stone-age past into the
'time clock" world. No Rankin
employee had previous experience.
The Rankin mine, a small, efficient operation which began last
year, has cut costs by stopping
the turnover of white labor, entailing transport in and out. The
Eskimo turnover has been small
and the men have mastered most
mine operations including several
hish-skiiled jobs,
They are credited with picking
Pleads For Help at Home
With Retarded Children
CALGARY (CP)-A plea for cooperation from the home, the
community and all levels of government to help retarded children has come from the first
national conference of the Canadian Association for Retarded
Children.
"We -have a right to be heard
and to speak so that the tall and
thick wall that society and the
world has erected around our
children trembles and falls and
that a new world will be built
for them," said J, T. Weingold
of New York in a moving address
to the 200 delegates and observers who attended tha three-day
conference.
"Although there is some doubt
abOut how much we can change
our children for the world's sake"
said Mr, Weingold, executive director of the New York State
Association for Retarded Children, "there is no doubt how
much we must change the world
for our children's sake."
He urged parents to speak out
for all types of retarded persons,
not for one kind but for the myriad of those affected.
"It becomes clearer and
clearer to me that whatever we
do for the other fellow's child we
are doing for our own ... or
for the generation* yet unborn
who may even be part of our
own families."
NEED ORGANIZATION
Mr. Weingold said organization
into local, provincial and national
groups is necessary to develop the
fullest possible resources for j retarded children and adults.
He described mental retardation as a chronic condition with
a "drama of life" possibly more
terrible than death and said the
immediate task is to create "a
climate of acceptance for our
children" to make an earnest effort to return them to the community if possible or to leave
them with humane car* in institutions.
President Laurie H. Hall of
Montreal announced that Nov. 16-
27 will be Canadian Retarded
Children's Week and added that
the association will hold its second national conference in Char-
lottetown before April, 1960.
The conference's closing sessions received best wishes from
who said in a letter that "it is
encouraging to know that something constructive is being done
to develop new concepts to meet
the needs" of retarded persons—
and from Health Minister Monteith.
up what they need to know in
about half the time lt takes an
inexperienced white.
Officials here say that the big
iron ore project at Hope's Advance Bay in Ungava may be the
next place where the Eskimo
catches on as a miner. No decision has been taken-yet but representatives of the project, financed by Cyrus Eaton, will visit
Rankin to look at the Eskimo experiment.
TWO FACTORS
Rankin's success is credited to
two factors.
The first is what officials here
call a "very enlightened mine
policy" and the second-is the fact
that most of the Eskimos have '
been in contact with civilization
to some degree for years.
They still are allowed time off
to hunt caribou—when they are
available — and coastal game.
Further inland, where the roaming nomad Keewatin peoples are
less in contact with whites, about
25 deaths occurred last, year due .
to the caribou decline.
Some of these peoples will be
brought to a project further-south
on. the Hudson Bay coast fbr
training. Eventually, they should
be of use for industrial work if
this is available.
Some Rankin inlet Eskimos
have refused to work underground but, it Is emphasised,
these are mainly workers who
don't speak English.
Tax Board Decides
Against Coast Firm
OTTAWA (CP) - The income
tax appeal board has ruled that
a Vancouver auto repair firm must
pay $1655 in taxes for 1955 income
—instead of one at all as the company had claimed.
A judgment by board member
Maurice Beisvert, made public
Saturday, dismissed the appeal by
Auto House Limited.
The company had claimed a
loss on 1956 Operations by deducting, from its 9320B profits on auto
repairing, a loss of $3026 which it
claimed resulted from sale of its
business property. The company
sold the property in 1955 for $31,500,
and then rented it for three years
from the new oWner.
The company said that the sale
actually resulted in a loss on its
investment in the building Itself.
The appeal board ruling dismissed the claim of an investment
loss, saying capital losses cannot
be deducted from income. It also
backed up the revenue department's action in charging the company with tax on 1955 taxable income of $8181. That amount, the
department said, includes $4973 in
capital cost allowance granted the
company in the previous five
years.
UNIQUE  DISHWASHER
BERLIN (Reuters) - ReStau-'
rant operator Jchanne Wehnisch,
57, drew a five-month suspended
sentence Friday for letting her
dog lick the plates clean insl-ad
of washing them. Many of !i?r
customers were officials at t_«
main West Berlin court building
where her case was hqard.
  "
5H55
About the Town
PHONE 1844   "
Mr. and-Mrs, J. C. Chambers,
805 Victoria Street, who accompanied their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. ■ Dal Makay of
Trail, on a holiday top to Vancouver, have returned home,
♦ ■ ♦  *
Mrs. R.B. Smith, Sr„ 917 SUica
Street! is visiting her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas A. Smith of Cranbrook,
for two weeks.
■ *  *  ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Mclvor of
Salmon Arm left Saturday after a
week's visit at the home of Mrs.
Mclvor's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson A. Allen, 621 Gore Street.
* *M *
Nelson School Board trustees
and their wives who have left f*
the B.C. School Trustees Association conveniton in Kelowna are
Mr. and Mrs. D. G. R. Sargent,
Mr. and Mrs, Louis Hanic, F. M.
Emmott, Mrs. R. Palmer, J. S.
Livingstone and Schools Inspector
Parcel for Korea
Being Packed By
Fruitvale WA
FRUITVALE - A used clothing
parcel will be. packed soon by
women of St. Paul's United Church
W.A. it was learned at the first
fall meeting; with donations to be
left at the church.
Plans for the fall sale in late
November were discussed and a
report of sewing convener Mrs.
Frank Halifax showed what sewing is already being done and what
material is at hand.
Of the W.A. circles, it was reported that Circles Two and Three
have held meetings at the homes
of Mrs. L. Leyland and Mrs. Jule
Lewis, Circle Four is being reorganized and Circle Five has been
disbanded.
President Mrs. N. Moller conducted the meeting and hostess for
the afternoon was Mrs. Mauchlin.
Fruitvale Notes
FRUITVALE — Among those
leaving for the Coast to continue
studies are: James Peitzsche.'who
will enter his third year in geology,
Rodney Hanson, who is in his
aecond year Arts course and Miss
Jean Dovey, who will attend Victoria College in Victoria.
Donald Peitzsche returned this
week from Kimberley where he
has been working during the
summer months.
and Mrs. Nelson A. Allen, who
will attend the convention en route
home from the Canadian Education Convention in Victoria.
* .  *
Mrs. Alan R. Ramsden, Eric and
Janice, 816 Ninth Street, left
Saturday for Estevan, Sask., with
Mrs, Ramsden's sister, Miss Edith
Houde and Wayne North. Mrs.
Ramsden's brother, R. L. Houde
of Estevan, will meet his sisters
at Medicine Hat, Alta.
* *  *•
Members  of  St.' PauTsVTrinity
United Church choir were entertained Saturday with a social evening, held at the North Shore home
of Mr. and Mrs. Hector A. Mackenzie.
* *  *
Staying at Paradise Camp at
Shutty Bench, Mr. and Mrs. Danny
McKay and boys of Nelson and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morris of Spokane recently enjoyed a weekend
fishing trip on Kootenay Lake.
* *  *
Mr. and Mxfi. R. J. Guillemaud
and children of the Norht Shore
have left for Victoria, where they
will take up residence.
* * ■ *
Alderman and Mrs. C. E. Bradshaw leave today by plane for
Nanaimo where Alderman Bradshaw will attend the B.C. Civil
Defence convention prior to the
Convention of Union of B.C. Municipalities to be held in Nanaimo
starting Wednesday. At the conclusion of the UBCM convention
Alderman Bradshaw will attend a
meeting of the Aviation Council of
B.C. in Victoria, replacing Mrs. W.
J. Van Maarion, who will be
unable to be present.
* *  *.
Mayor and Mrs. T. S. Short-
house, Alderman and Mrs. W.- S.
Ramsay, City Clerk and Mrs. C.
W. R. Harper and Alderman
George Mermet left Sunday by car
for Nanaimo where they will
attend the convention of the Union
of B.C. Municipalities. Alderman
Mermet will also' attend the B.C.
Civil Defence convention in Nanaimo prior to the UBCM meet.
* *  * /
Mr. and Mrs. Colin A. Moir of
Medicine Hat are guests at the
home of Mrs. Moir's sister, Mrs.
A, E. Murphy, on the North Shore.
' *  ♦  *
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Monte Lock  of
Victoria,   one-time   residents of
Nelsbn,  were  recent  guests for
several days at the home of Mr.
and Mrs.  W.  Desjardins of the
North Shore and' Mrs. A. E.
Murphy.
"They're the very newest,
Snap lacks, I mean...
slip on... Slav en!"
Holiday Casuals
Dressy, yet with aH the
eomfort of a "casual".
Snap open, and snap
shut for a snug lit.
$522
R. Andrew & Co*
LEADERS -iN FOOTFASHION
Established Since 1902'
Graduates of the home nursing class "of
Nelson civil defence workers were presented
with certificates at a meeting Friday. In the old
post office. Pictured here at classes are, clock
wise,-Doreen Freed, Betty Fletcher, Mn. Stella
Rdwan, Mlas Flora McLean, J. A. Wilson, civil
defence coordinator, Mrs. Mary Darwin, Rosena
Klein, Shirley McNown and Dlerdre Balding,
82'Year'Old Ex<Teacher Taught
uNicest Children Ever Born"
CALGARY (CP) —It is absolutely necessary to be fon,d of
children if you want to be a good
teacher, says Miss Sara Shepherd,
"Goodness," she recalls, "the
children I taught now are grandfathers."
Miss Shepherd, 83, believes
she is the oldest living ex-teacher
in Calgary. She spent almost 40
years on the public school board
staff, all of them as a teacher in
Grade 2.
"If I had any success," she
says, "it was because I had fine
children to teach. I tnihk I had
some of the nicest children that
ever were born.
"I always taught little children,
LA Active During
Summer Months
NEW DENVER — During summer recess, members of the Slocan Community Hospital Ladies
Auxiliary bought items for the
hospital and made articles for use
of patients. .
Mrs. James A. Greer reported
for the buying committee at the
meeting which was held at the
home of Mrs. A. L. Levy, conducted by president Mrs. John
Taylor. Mrs. Greer said garden
furniture had been purchased during the summer and was used
frequently by patients. Inventory
of hospital linens had been Undertaken by Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. J. A.
Greer, Mrs. Stanley Pedley and
Miss Marjorie Butlin, who threw
out worn linen and replaced it
from the reserve cupboard.
Reporting for the sewing committee, Mrs. Levy said plastic
draw sheets and a seat for a baby
tender had been made. A list of
discarded linen was given to secretary Miss Butlin.
Mrs. Bedley will be the hospital
board meeting representative and
Mrs. Levy will visit patients during September. Mrs. Taylor was.
appointed to attend the annual
hospital auxiliary convention in
Vancouver with alternate delegate being Mrs. Q. A. Forsythe.
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who thought the teacher knew
everything. That is much the
nicest age."
Miss Shepherd retired from
teaching 18 years ago, but her
memories bring her to the conclusion that teachers today have
life on a velvet cushion in comparison. Even in 1902 when
schools were a novelty in the
West, teachers had to have local,
certification and rural experience
before being posted to a frontier
town such .as Calgary was then.
Mis sShepherd reinforced her
Ontario training by equipping
herself with a Northwest Territories teaching certificate in Regina, before the western prov-
vinces were formed. Then she
answered a newspaper ad for a
school at Everets, 25 miles West
of Red Deer in central Alberta.
She recalls she stepped down
to the Red Deer train platform
at twilight. A man who spoke no
English gestured her into' a
wagon—"so high I didn't think I
could possibly climb aboard."
A sick boy was lying in the
back of the- v^agon. "It was pouring rain and we had to drive, 20
miles."
As the wagon lumbered" into the
night over a trail cut through
woods, Miss Shepherd recalls, "I
became more and more uneasy."
SILENT WELCOME
The wagon' stopped before a
log cabin. "A door opened and
six tall, bearded men appeared.
I could see six rifles han'ging
from the rafters. I became quite
terrified."   -
She said she was sent up a ladder to a loft that night and the
six bearded men retired to bunks
below.' "Nobody spoke a word to
me. I was scared to death."'
After a sleepless night she was
escorted 214 miles to another log-
cabin home, selected for the first
teacher in the district.
Her little school was equipped
only with one piece of chalk and
didn't have a bell, "but the children were the best I ever saw.
All I had to say was 'come children' and they lined up perfectly,
I never had to speak a cross
word."
Her next stint was in a school
on the outskirts of Calgary, just
far enough away that she lived
in the city and rode to school
on horseback each day.
"The children would come to
meet me on horseback and we'd
all race to school, together," she
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 1958 — 5
Hard Work Pays Off
For Auxiliary Qroup
SWEETSBURG, Que. (CP) -
The women's auxiliary of the
Brome - Mlssisquoi - Perkins Hospital, a 40-member group, has a
simple formula for raising
money. They all work hard.
In three years the'auxiliary has
raised more than $15,000 for hospital improvements, perhaps a
record for a Canadian group of
their size.
"We're a working membership," said Mrs. Isabel Scott,
president of the auxiliary. "We
have  no  room  for   deadwood.
At Legion WA
First Fall Meet
NEW.DENVER - At. the first
fall meeting of the W.A. to Canadian Legion Branch No. 101, New
Denver - Silverton delegates were
appointed to attend the zone convention at Castlegar October 11
and 12. •
Mrs. II. W. Mathewson and Mrs.
P. J. McCrory will be delegates
to the convention. The West Kootenay District Council meet at
Nakusp was reported by Mrs. M.
Wright, and plans were made for,
a whist drive to be held September 26 in the Legion Hall.
Application for membership was
received from Mrs. Irene Borodula and Mrs. J. McKellar.
Hostesses for the evening were
Mrs. Wright and Mrs. T. Wilko-
ski. President Mrs. A. Schnaebele
conducted the meeting.
NATIVE POET
Oliver Goldsmith, Canada's first
native+orn poet, was a grand-
nephew of the Irish poet of the
same name.
Museum Collects
One Fashion
Of Each Era
TORONTO (CP) -Women's
fashions really go around in
circles from one era to the next,
and today they reflect the world's
instability, says Mrs.' K. B.
(Betty) Brett.
She is In charge of the textile
and costume department of the
Royal Ontario Museum, and her
job includes acquiring costumes
typical of every period.
"The last year or so has
shown a tremendous turnover in
style," she said. "Women are
leaping at extremes in fashion,
which may be because' we are
uncertain, about the future of the
world."
BIG COLLECTION
Mrs. Brett presides over the
biggest collection of fabrics and
garments in Canada. "Designers
come from as far as New York
to study our collection," she
says. Other visitors are art students and fashion consultants,
and of course the general public.
"In recent months the most
popular exhibits have been costumes of the 1920s, because they
are so close to presnt-day
war."
Th collection includes some
historic dresses and accessories,
for instance a coif cap, purse
and gloves of the old Elizabethan
era.
"We are trying to show the history of costume from early
days," she said, "but there are
gaps in our collection. It has
been difficult, for instance, to
obtain clothes of the First World
War period because they were
mostly of poor quality and were
not kept. .    ^
"Attics of old homes in Toronto have yielded dresses for our
collection, some going back to
the 18th century. But these
clothes were usually far better
than the average, and were kept
for that reason."
Mrs. Brett, a former artist
who joined thi museum in 1938,
relies largely on gifts to stock the
fashion department.
The Fashion Group of Toronto,
an organization of'women working with fashions, "spots" really
fine dresses of new styles and
asks the owner to give it to the
museum when she no longer
wants it.
"We try to get a 'name' garment typical of the era, though
we may have to wait 10 years
before it is discarded," she said.
PRINTED PATTERN
M399
Isabel Dobson -
Jor Genevwvt
PROMINENT DESIGNER
The "nlne-to-flve" drew that ean travel on to Informal evenings
— most wearable In any wardrobe — Is done with fresh casual
flair by Isabel Dobson. Bloused above the waist, It "sleeks" to a
new narrowness at the hlpline — a top fashion look In the fall
collections,' Another noteworthy detail Ib the stand-away curve
of the collar pointed up by a tab. In supple knit Jersey, smooth
flannel, vivid mohair, or print cotton, this could be the dress you
choose for a new-Job Interview, college tea, or busy day in town.
Printed directions on each pattern part help you to scissor and
stitch up the newest of fashion with the greatest of ease.
Printed Pattern M399 Is available In Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16
and 18. Size 16 takes 3_i yards 45-inch fabric,
Send ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern M399 to N.D.N.
Prominent Designer Pattern Dept., 60 Front 8t. W., Toronto, Ont.
Please print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE,
STYLE NUMBER and 8IZE.
Next Week — Watch for a  Prominent Designer Pattern by
Kith Head.
Women who just pay their yearly
fees and let it go at that are not
wanted."
NO WASTE TIME
The auxiliary's fund-raising objective is $150 annually for each
member and it leaves little time
for social niceties, Mrs. Scott
said.'
"At our regular meetings, while
business is conducted the members roll bandages and make
dressings for the hospital. Even
our traditional cup of tea is a
hasty affair."
A gift shop and snack bar in
the hospital's front lobby is maintained by the group. Operated by
two members daily, it accounts
for about 40 per cent of the
auxiliary's funds..
"Our work schedule is drawn
up six months in advance so it
leaves members plenty of time
for planning," said Mrs. Scott.
The group also holds a special
tag week in 34 surrounding communities serviced by the hospital,
This year $2,500 was subscribed,
MODERN BUILDING
The hospital, a .modern, three-
storey brick building, has 68 beds.
It was built three years ago replacing a 100 - year - old wooden
structure.
From funds collected, the auxiliary has donated a four - bed
ward and other items ranging
from cardiograph and anaesthetic
equipment to a meat slieer and
steam press.
Recently, the group launched a
new project. It's a remembrance
book. When there is a bereavement in a family,, friends send
a donation to the auxiliary rather
than flowers to the family. A memorial page is then inscribed in
the book.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦4>»
WHITEWOOD
• Chests of Drawers
• Mr. and Mrs.
Dressers
at
"MATTER" SUBJECT
OF- LESSON-SERMON
The truth that man made in the
image and likeness of ■ God has
dominion over sin, sickness, and
limitation was brought out at
Christian Science services Sunday.
John's account of the walking
on the sea by Christ Jesus (John
8:15-21) was included in the Scriptural selections read in the Lesson-
Sermon entitled "Matter."
A correlative passage from "Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy
declared: "In proportion as matter loses to human sense all entity
as man, in that proportion' does
man become its master. He enters
into a diviner sense of the facts,
and comprehends the theology of
Jesus as demonstrated in healing
the sick, raising the dead, and
walking over the wave."
, The   Golden   Text   was   from
A Few Easy Rules
For Cookie-Making
By MARGARET CARR
Soft-dough cookies — dropped,
moulded, or pressed — spread
more on a greased cookie sheet
than on an ungreased one.
Chilling the dough before dropping cookies helps to keep spreading to a minimum.
Cookies which are intended to
spread out during baking, such as
lace cookies, should be dropped at
least 3 inches apart.
Practically all cookies should be
slightly underbaked — taken from
the oven while.still a little soft —
since they continue to bake as long
as they are in contact with the
hot pan.
Use a sharp, thin-bladed knife for
slicing  refrigerator  cookie  roi1"
into thin, even slices.
SOUR CREAM DATE DREAMS
One-quarter cup shortening, Vt
cup brown sugar, Vt teaspoon
vanilla, 1 well-beaten egg, 1V« cups
all-purpose flour, Vt teaspoon soda,
Vt teaspoon baking powder.JA teaspoon salt, Vt teaspoon cinnamon,
V. teapsoon nutmeg, Vt cup sour
cream, 2/3 cup chopped- dates.
Thoroughly cream together shortening, sugar and vanilla. Add egg:
mix well. Sift together dry ingredients. Add to shortening mixture alternately with sour cream.
Stir in dates. Drop from teaspoon
on to greased cookie sheet. Top
each cookie with a walnut half.
Bake in hot-oven (400 degree F.)
about 10 minutes,
SCOTCHIES
One cup all-purpose flour, Vt tea*
spoon soda, Vt teaspoon salt, Vt cup
shortening, 1 cup brown sugar,
egg, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 cup
quick-cooking oats, Vt cup chopped
pecans, 1 cup shredded coconut.
Sift together flour, soda and salt.
Cream shortening; beat in sugar
gradually. Add egg and vanilla
and beat until light and fluffy. Stir
in flour mixture, oats, pecans and
coconut. Drop from teaspoon on
greased "cookie sheet. Flatten each
cookie to Vs inch thickness with
bottom of glass dipped, in flour.
Bake in slow oven (325 degrees F.)
12 to 15 minutes. Remove from
pan immediately.
Parent Teaching
Prime Job of
Home and School
By EDNA USHER
Canadian Press Staff Writer
' TORONTO (CP) - Home and
school associations are trying to
teach parents—they are not just
social organizations bent on holding teas and raising money, says
Mrs. T. M. Weatherhead.
A former teacher, Mrs.
Weatherhead is president of the
Ontario Federation of Home and
School Associations.
"Parents education is as essential as child education in the
modern world because parents
who understand the way their
children think and behave will be
better able to guide them," said
Mrs. Weatherhead.
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM
"Through films, lectures and
discussions, the home and school
associations try to inform parents — and under the rules no
group must hold more than one
money - making function a year
and then only if the cash is
needed for a special purpose," ,
Special purposes usually involve publicizing some aspect of
education. "It is not the local
group's job to buy equipment for
the school—that is strictly the
task of the board of education,"
she said.
Mrs. Weatherhead, 60, wife of
a lawyer and mother of four children, was born on a farm near
Brockville, Ont., attended high
school at Prescott, Ont. and then
attended normal school.
She taught at country schools
while obtaining a degree at
Queen's University in Kingston,
Ont.
Later she taught at a continuation school at Spencerville, Ont.,
where two teachers taught 100
pupils, water was carried by the
bucket from a nearby farm and
youngsters shared one cup.
"It was there I learned the importance  of  knowing
said Mrs. Weatherhead.
TWO REASONS
"In village life, parents visited
the school for two reasons: To
attend the Christmas concert or
to complain.
"There was no home or school
group, but many parents invited
the teacher to tea at least once
during the term."
Mrs. Weatherhead says that the
insight this gave her into the
lives of her pupils helped her to
teach them.
"It is this close contact between teacher, parents and pupils
that home and school groups try
to maintain," she said. "It results in more understanding of
the child, which is the aim of
home and school."
Mrs.   Weatherhead   joined   a
home and school group 20 years
ago, was president of-her local
group in Toronto in 1941-42, and .
School Council in 1950-52.
"Teachers, have a better relationship with parents now than
in the days of once^-term-tea,"
said Mrs. Weatherhead. "Now
-parents and teachers work together toward the full physical,
mental and spiritual development
of a child."
Leviticus: "Turn ye not unto idols,
nor make to yourselves molten
gods: I am the Lord your God."
(19:4).
Sea Rangers on Four Year
Round-the-World
Trip
EDMONTON (CP) - Sheila
Walker of Suffolk, England and
Jean Allan of Queensland, Australia, are spending four years on a
round-the-world trip that has
brought them to Edmonton, the
half-way point.
They met in London through the
Sea Ranger organization, decided
to see the world and left London
in June, 1957, on the first leg.. '
As they travel, they find Girl
Guides, associated with the Rangers, providing contacts and new
friends.
The girls, in their 20s, purchased a British car, spent five
weeks touring continental Europe,
then sailed for Canada. Jean acts
as mechanic.
They worked'In Montreal for a
year, Jean in a clerical post and
Sheila as a teacher in Kindergarten.
Sheila had a language difficulty.
Her five and six-year-old charges
would correct her, explaining it
is "truck" not "lorry" and "garbage can" not "rubbish bin."
This - summer, the travellers
packed their belongings and shipped them to Vancouver. Then with
a seven-foot-squarg tent and a six-
inch-square one-burner cookstove,
they set out to explore.
In 10 weeks they covered 9000
miles, ranging deep into the U.S.
and Mexico, then to Edmonton.
Luggage is simpie. One suitcase
contains1 their Ranger uniforms
and they each have one other case.
Drip-dry fabrics make laundering
easy and they do their own pressing of clothes with a small iron
heated over the cook-stove.
They plan to sail from Vancouver soon for New Zealand and ex-
Eect to reach Jean's Australian
ome for Christmas. She has not
been home since 1956,
Next spring the girls expect to
obtain jobs in South Africa. Sheila
doesn't expect to get back to England for two years.
North Shore
NORTH SHORE - Mr. and Mrs.
E. Stromme have had as guest for
six weeks, Mr. Stromme's mother,
Mrs. M. Stromme of Swift Current.
Mr. and Mrs. F. 8. Hopkins
have returned from two weeks visiting friends and relatives in
Kashmir, Wenatchee and Moses
Lake, Wash. They also spent several days at Grand Forks.
Mrs. Stan Linton has returned
from Vancouver where she was
called by the sudden death of a
cousin, Ralph Quinn.
A tea honoring Mrs. George
Currie of-Edmonton .was held at
the home of Mrs. F. H. Lowe when
12 old time friends and neighbors
attended. During the reception the
honoree was presented with a corsage. ■.	
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6 — NELSOM DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 1958
Algerians Would Rather Be
Corpses Than Subjects
rvvvf
art)—"we would
rafter be 10,000,000 corpses than
10,000,000 subjects."
For'Ferhat Abbas, these words
sum up the battle he and other
Arab nationalists ara conducting
to rid Algeria of French rule.
But there Is an odd twist ln
the life of this 50-year-old Algcr-
lan barber, named Friday as pre-
Hilar of th* "free Algerian government."
Until two years ago, when he
joined the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN) Abbas was
widely regarded as a moderate,
And Abbas, a pharmacist bv
Erofesslon, was raised from child-
ood in the traditions and culture
of France.
HIS wife, the mother Of Abbas's
two adult children, is a Frenchwoman.
Journalists who have met tht
FLN chief say he knows little
Arabic and speaks French With
ho trace Of a North African accent.
WAS IN ARMY
From IMS to 1940 the premier
favored a policy Of French assimilation In Algeria. At the outbreak
af war, th 1939, he joined, the
French aitny.
After the Allies landed ln North
Africa in 1942 Abbas' began to
demand autonomy for Algeria
within a federation with Franca.
He first gained prominence in
1943 when the French interned
him for issuing tit Independence
manifesto.
The Fr*nch let him |6 after 16
dayi. But 6n V-E Day IA 1948
Abbas's manifesto party M a
taid on Algiers. Again he wis
Srrested-«nd (Hli time the price
wts twO y*Ws in prison.
Al late is 1052 Abbis Wis rt-
ported to b« saying his. pirty-
the Democratic Union Of the Al-
Jerlan Manifesto - favored
chlevlni Algerian autonomy
through constitutional m e a ns.
Now he says he gave up long
years of peaceful agitation and
joined the rebels because all political parties'"have become one for
the duration of hostilities against
(ha oppressor"—France,
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General Motors Offers
UAW 3-Year Proposal
iiiMvt (At) - General Motors, object Of Sept, 86 strike
deadline by the United AutO
Workers, today Offered the (JAW
a new three-year proposal which
V
Slid contained
provements.
Specific tm-
The UAW, which Friday night
announced it will also strike
Chrysler If no contract agreement
Is reached soon, got the new contract offer from OM as negotiations resumed Saturday.
GM said the contract would be
effective u of Sept. l and would
carry three annual pay increases
totalling at lent 21 cants per
hour during the life of the con.
BRITISH SOCCER
LONDON (Reuters)—Results of
soccer matches played ln tho
United Kingdom Saturday:
ENGLISH   LEAGUE
Division I
Arsenal 4 Man City 1
Aston Villa 1 Blackpool 1
Bolton 8 Notts F 2
Burnley 9 Luton 2
Everton 8 Leeds 2
Leicester 2 West Brom 2
Man United 2 Tottenham 2
Portsmouth 2 Blackburn 1
Preston 3 Birmln?ham 0
West Ham 4 Chelsea 2
Wolverhampton 1 Newcastle 8
Division It
Barnsley 1 Sheffield U 3
Bristol C 1 Liverpool 3
Cardiff 4 Grimsby 1
Charlton 1 Middlesbrough 0
Fulham 4 Derby 2
Huddersfield 3 Brighton 2    -.
Lincoln 4 Bristol 1
Scunthorpe 2 Rotherham 0
Sheffield W 2 Leyton Or 0
Stoke 3 Swansea 0
Sunderland 0 Inswich 2
Division HI
Bournemouth 1 Doncaster 0
Bradford 2 S"nthampton 3
Brentford 2 Halifax 0
Colchester 2 Plymouth 0
Hull City 4 Accrington 2
Mansfield S Chesterfield 1
Norwich Citv j Rochdale 1
Notts 1 Burv i
Resdln" 0 Tranmere 0
South End 4 Queen's PRO
Swindon 2 Newport 1-
Wrexham 3 Stockport 1
Division IV
Aldershot 0, Port Vale 4,
Barrow 2, Darlington 1
Carlisle 0, Shrewsbury 0 ■
Chester 2. York Citv 2
Hartleno .s 3, Northampton 0
Crystal P 9 Bradford 0
Exeter 2 Torousv 2
Gateshead 1 ,Mlllwall 8
r.UHnghsm*'- Coventry 0
ni*»m 1 Walsall 4
Southport 8 Crewe' Alex 0
Watford 3 Workington 0
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
Division I -
Airdrieonians S Rangers 4
Celtic 3 Ralth 1
Dundee J Kilmarnock 0
Dunfermline 0 Motherwell 4
Hibernian 4 Oueen of S 0-
Partlck 3 Falkirk 1
St. Mltren 1 Hearts 1
Stirling 2 Clyde 1
Thd Lanark 0 Aberdeen 2
Division II
Arbroath 2 Berwick 0    -
Ayr U 1 Cowdenbeath 2
Brechin*2 Stranraer 2
Dumbarton 4 Dundee U"e
East Fife 1 Morton 2.
Dumbarton 4 Dundee U 3
East Fife 1 Morton 2
E Stirling 1 Forfar 8
Hamilton 1 Alloa 0
St, Johnston 0 Queen's Pk 0
Stenhousemuir 2 Albion 0
IRISH LEAGUE
City Cup   -
Ards 2 Cliftonville 1
Ballymena 4 Portadown 2
Coleralne 1 Distillery 3,
Crusaders 2 Defry C 1
Glenavon 1 Glentoran 1
Llnfield 2 Bangor 2
treat. The'first increase would be
effective as of last July 1.
OTHER INCREASES
OM also proposed an additional
eight cents an how for Skilled
trade workers and an Increase of
three cents an hour in cost-of-
living allowances to compensate
for cost-of-llVIng increases durihg
the last four months that 'GM
workers have been without a contract,
OM told the union "a prompt
settlement on the basis proposed
by OM cannot fail to make a
vitally Important contribution to
economic recovery at this critical
time. On the other hand, It is
obvious that a major automobile
strike would have the opposite
effect".
There was no immediate comment from the union on the offer.
PERSONAL COMMAND
, UAW President Walter Reuther
assumed personal command of
with Chrysler Saturday. Tha Chnrs-
ler strike time was left to the discretion ofReuther and other UAW
officials in light nf what orosress
—if any—ls made In efforts to
reach contract agreement
ln the case of GM. the union set
a Tuesday, Sent. 30 deadline for
the walkout. Reuther said the
problem is much tougher since it
has four times at many auto
plants as Chrysler and hundreds
of unsolved grievances In local
General Motors plants.
Reuther made it plain that the
UAW would not peceot at General Motors or Chrysler carbon
copies of the three-year contract
worked out with Ford Wednesday.
That agreement came after a
seven-hnnr strike involving 08,000
Ford workers.
Wcer Stemdinqs
LONDON (AP) - Standings' In
the English and Scottish Soccer
Leagues including games of Sat
urday (leading teams).
W L T Pts.
ENOL SH LEAGUE
Division I
Bolton                     5   1 a IS
Arsenal                   6   3 0  12
Luton                    3- 0 8  12
Man United         '  4   2 3   11
West Brom       "    3   1 5   11
Preston                   4   1 8  11
Wolverhampton        5   3  1  11
West Ham             5   3 1  11
Chelsea                   5   3  1   11
Division II
Fulham               ,   8   0 1  17
Sheffield W             7 .1  1  15
Bristol C                6 >3 0  12
Leyton Or               4  .3  2   10
Stoke'                      5   3  0   10
Charlton                  4   3 2  10
Division HI
Reading                  4   1  4  12
Plymouth                 4   1 4  12
Southampton          4   2 3 11
Swindon                   4   2  8   11
Tranmere               4   2 3 11
Colchester           .    8   2 1  11
Division IV
Shrewsbury             t   1 8 '18
York City                 4   1  4   12
Northampton           8   2 0  12
Port Vale               4 ,2 8  11*
Torquay                  4   2 8   11
QllUngham             4  2 3 11
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
Dvlslon I
Hearts                   8   0 17
Motherwell              8   10    8
Stirling                   2   0 2   8
3eltlc                     2   118
Hibernian               2   11.3
Qnt. Seed Program Calls
For 60 Million Seeds
ARREST PARTY HEAD
ACCRA, Ohsina (Reuters)—Police today arrested opposition
leader R, R. Amponsah at his
home and charged him with sedition. Amponsah, secretary of the
United'Party, was accused of "uttering seditious words" at a party
rally two days ago, The united
Party ls the chief opposition to
Prime Minister Kwame Nkru-
mah's Convention People's Party,
'Peg Supermarkets'
Battle Reaches Peak
By STAN MCABE
Canadian Press Staff Writer
WINNIPEG (CP) - The battle
of the supermarkets is at its peak
here with giant new stores trying everything to lure customers.
prizes ranging from houses and
cars to baskets of groceries are
being offered, Free orchids and
free hot dogs have been given
away at store openings.
- Newcomers such as. Loblaw's,
Dominion Stores and A ahd P
have invaded, territory long dominated by Canada Safeway - Limited, which now has 39 stores: in
the Winnipeg area. Also battling
for the grocery dollar of more
than 450,000 customers ln the
area are Shop-Easy and 1,400 independents.
COSTLY STORES
At least 20 new supermarkets
are expected to be in operation
by next summer and one source
said a conservative estimate of
the expenditure would be
$20,000,000.
They will Include' 10 supermarkets to be opened by Loblaw's, which has'more than 200
stores in Eastern Canada and
more than 300 in'the United
States. There will be at least six
Dominion stores with a value of
$8,000,000 or more and at least
three new supermarkets to be
opened by Safeway.
Within the last two years the
area ln which Safeway operates
haa been invaded by four Shop-
Easy markets and five A and P
stores. Two Loblaw stores and
the first Dominion store were
opened this summer.
A shopping centre worth
$750,000 was opened early this
Sear by the Red River Co-opera-
ve,
Both Loblaw's • and Dominion
plan outlets ih Uie Polo Park
shopping centre now under construction on the site ef tbe city's
old horse-racing track.       •
The suburbs also are getting
their share of the development,
An American firm Is expected to
open a supermarket in suburban
Transeona, northeast of Winnipeg, where Dominion and Safeway also have announced plans
for construction,
Safeway and Dominion also are
expanding in the adjoining city
of St, James.
Openings have been marked by
-a circus atmosphere. Hundreds
lined up long before'the opening
of a new Loblaw store in subur-
bsin Fort Garry, when free coffee was given to early shoppers,
Contests and draws staged tp
keep the customers coming featured prizes such as five new
cars and three mink stoles by
Safeway, five cars given away
by A and P, and a dream summer cottage offered by Dominion.
CHAIN-STORE BATTLE
M. M. Wocks, secretary of the
Manitoba division of the Retail
Merchants Association, said
"supermarket customers are
supermarket customers" and, for
the most part, the chain stores
were taking business from each
other rather than from Independents.
However, he said in a letter of
protest to Attorney-General Sterling Lyon: "Today, the give-away
programs of the giant supermarkets in Greater Winnipeg are
fantastic and. Indeed threaten the
very existence of independent retailers."
He urged Mr. Lyon to speed up
an inquiry into the "semi-lottery
type of promotion scheme" used
by the supermarkets.
One noticeable result of tbe invasion by the eastern firms has
been the increase in the amount
of Ontario fruit and other produce
on the market. One expert said
this would likely cut into the
share of the market held by British Columbia fruit. -
By FRASER MacDOUGALL
Canadian Press Staff "Writer
TORONTO (CP)-A little-known
harvesting operation is running
full tilt now in the obseurlty of
Ontario's woodlands.
The aim is to find enough seed
to produce 60,000,000 new trees
in the province's program of giving Mother Nature a hand ln replenishing the forests.
It means more than finding
60,000,000 seeds, John Ball,
branch supervisor in the reforestation division of the Ontario department of lands and forests,
says his men find they have to
plant .10 black spruce seeds to
germinate one tree. At the other
end of the scale, it takes three
seeds to produce one white pine
tree,
OBJECTIVE DOUBLED
The 60,000,000 target, double present production of 30,000,000 annually in the department's tree
nurseries, is mainly white spruce,
black spruce, white pine, red
pine, jackplne and scotch pine
plus small quantities of white
cedar, red oak and white ash.
The seed crop varies sharply
from year to year: A good seed
year Is usually followed by two
or three with a small supply or
a crop failure. And seed growth
takes time. Pines take two years
to produce cones and oaks two
years to grow acorns. However,
spruce produces its cones ln one
year.
The crop varies by districts too,
Mr. Ball says reports Indicate
white spruce is a gooj crop this
year in the Geraldton district of
northern Ontario and In the
Kemptville area near Ottawa.
Black spruce ls good ln most of
Northwestern Ontario. White pine
seed is plentiful around Chapleau
in Northern Ontario and in the
Hespeler district of Southern Ontario.
The seed program this year
calls for 12,000 bushels of cones,
some collected by department
staff and som by persons working under contract. An individual
spruce may yield one to two bushels of cones, a white pine five.
A bushel1 of cones produces one-
half to three-quarters of, a pound
of seed. Number of seeds In a
pound ranges from 28,000 for
white pine to 400,000 for black
spruce.
TO EXTRACTION PLANT
The seed ls shipped to the department's seed extraction plant
at Angus, near Barrie, 40 miles
north of Toronto and then-to tree
nurseries across the province for
planting.
What are the trees used for?
The department plants some on
Crown lands, mainly ln Northern
Ontario.- And anyone owning two
acres or more of land can obtain
trees for planting at a nominal
price.
Since trees don't grow In a
hurry, there won't be any Immediate Impact on Ontario's forest production, A red pine planta
tion can be thinned for pulpwood
aftOr about 25 years and it wil
make hydro or telephone poles
after 35 years. At the 75 • year
stage It will yield saw logs.
Although 60,000,000 trees sounds
like a high target, Mr. Ball says
it's only a small part of what
nature will do Itself. "We still depend on natural regeneration for
renewal of the forests. Our program ls simply aimed at augmenting natural germination.
The trees are for planting In
areas—such as a place where
there have been a couple ot
forest fires—where -there it. ns
natural reproduction."
Russia Expels
Roy Essoyan
MOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet foreign ministry Saturday ordered A»
sodated Press correspondent Roj
Essoyan, SO, expelled from the
Soviet Union on charges of violating press censorship. Essoyan
has been stationed in Moscow
since Dec. 11, 1055.
The ministry's press department summoned AP bureau chief
Harold K. Milks and informed
him that Essoyan was dlsaccred-
ited, effective immediately, and
must leave the Soviet Union
within a week.
The specific complaint of "a
rude violation of Soviet censorship" concerned a dispatch Essoyan transmitted in early August.
Essoyan, who worked for The
Associated Press in China, Honolulu, and New York before being
assigned to Moscow, will leave
the Soviet Union with his wife
and two children next Friday.
Essoyan is the fourth U.S. correspondent ousted by the Soviet
government since April. 1988.   ,
The Moscow dispatch did not
specify which story by Essoyan
was in question. It may have
been a 650-word interpretive story
filed Aug, 6, which began:
"Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush-.
shev's proposal to throw the
Middle East crisis into the lap of
the UN General Assembly was
regarded by Western diplomats
here today as a major retreat
and, In the long run, possibly a
blow to the personal fortune of
the dynamic Soviet leader."
Transmission of that dlsnatch
was Interrupted twice by Soviet
censors and lt was finally received In full after eight hours
delay. The dispatch was telephoned from the Central Telegraph Agency in Moscow In accordance with a usual custom of
Moscow correspondents.
ROMAN DATES
Practically every civilised state'
has borrowed Its calendar from
that of the Romans,
Broadway Stage Directors
More Than Hard To Please
By WILLIAM GLOVER
NEW YORK (AP)-Broadway't
hit-makers are tough to please,
In getting what they're after,
however, each works differently.
These are conclusions drawn
from an informal qui J. of six of
the best - known directors currently 'steering major productions
toward Broadway,
The participants: George Abbot, now preparing Drink To Me
Only; Harold Clurman, of A
Touch of the Poeti Ella Kazan,
with J. Br, Gene Kelly, dancer-
actor now directing The Flower
Drum Song; Josh Logan of The
World Of Susie Wong; and Cyril
Ritchard, of The Pleasure Ot His
Companyj
Abbott ls the happiest when it
comes to artistic satisfaction,
"I feel that 50 per cent of my
hits have been as perfect as I
could get them," says the veteran
of 78 productions as actor, writer,
producer or director.
Ritchard, actor-dlreetor of elegant grace, replied that he ls
aesthetically at ease "when the
financial results are reasonably
satisfying."
Kazan, usually Involved In
heavy drama, confesses on only
three occasions has he been fully
£ leased, Which they are he ls
coping to himself.
The  other  three  report  they
have never been completely satisfied -with any production.
TOUGHEST TASK
The six disagree when it comes
to naming the toughest task in
the directorial assignment
With Abbott and Logan, audi
ence, considerations rank first)
with Kazan and Kelly, the author
Is most important; Ritchard puts
the actors In front; and Clurman
finds a certain complexity.
"The most difficult task is to
get a good play and a good cast,
he says. "It is barely possible te
do a play in the three weeks' rehearsal tine allowed. After all, it
may take a year or two for the
playwright to develop his concepts."
Abbott replies, however, that
"getting the script right" — in
terms of staging problems and
the response of tryout audiences
—is the most trying chore. With
him, it is the author who must
do the adjusting,
PRIME TASK
Logan Insists the prime task ls
to provide "an experience for the
audience that hat been worth
their time and attention as well
as having given them a feeling
that they have learned something
emotionally."
Kazan pinpoints his role with
the words: ''The most Important
thing Is to come as close In the
staging as possible to what the
author had In mind whew he
wrote,   —        , •
"The French have a wonderful
word for the director — he ls
called the 'readier.' If you don't
succeed in doing this, you have
somehow failed.
From Ritchard comes the opinion that the director's severest
challenge ls "to bring a uniformity of style to a group of actors
who have never previously worked
together as a team."	
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Q^°y>
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
SPURTS Braves Capture Pennant
ii in mn iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hiiiiii mum " ^"^ ^^ pj~
Royals Bring Soccer
Challenge Cup West
VANCOUVER (CP) - New
Westminster Royals, ragged but
aggressive, ran the legs off Wjiuil-
No Hits, No Rum
For Yanks on
Wilhelm Pitching
BALTIMORE (AP) - The American League champion New York
Yankees went without a hit or run
Saturday against the knuckle balls
tossed by 35-year-old Hoyt Wilhelm
of Baltimore Orioles, who won 1-0
on a homer by catcher Gus Triandos.
Only two Yankees reached base,
both on walks, as they swung at
Wilhelm's dancing pitching in a
drizzle of rain. Yankees went down
on strikes eight times.
The homer in the seventh inning
by Triandos was his 30th of the
season. He is tied with Yogi Berra
of the Yankees [or hitting the most
in one year by a catcher.
Wilhelm's no-hit, no-run performance was the second in the major
leagues this year. Jim Bunning of
Detroit did it on July 20 in beating
Boston 3-0.
'Magnetic Film Should
Win an Award' says
TV Actress
peg Scottish Saturday to defeat the
uhscern Cattaaa f Bpresetiiauves
«-u in the suuuun-aeacn tinai tor
tfie- Dominion Challenge soccer
wUP,!
iwyals pressed the attack from
illB opening WAistle. i'ney kept the
jcottisn i. uiou up lil uieir uwu c.u
ior most of the game and When uie
Winnipeg torwai'us did breaic away
die ivtw Westminster aetence stop-
uwl tnem coid,
vniiiupeg goalie John Gawryluk,
thtt oiny caaacilan-oorn piayer on
uu Sqilad, was uie siallduut piayer
i„i' duuuii.ii lu several spectacuiar
sa.ts in cue seconu nan when _.uy-
a.s uegan to ciick on uieir goal
GA. ts.
uudi goals came in the second
hail, uie nisi wnen Winnipeg nau
umy lo men on uie lieiu.
Leucre torwaru I'Oiiy crisp head-
cu uie iirst into the net trom a corner Kicit uy outside leti Ail Bennett at uve minutes. Winnipeg
ii*ilt naif Uuniner ivuio was resting on the sidelines alter injuring
His anuie.
jjcnnea scored the second goal
at 'U minutes, tie took a pass trom
1'ignt nait'tioo Lewis ana, stanaing
_i feet out at a aluicuit angle, lott-
eu the ban over Gawrylucks head,
it grazed the bottom of the crossbar before going in.
From the territorial play, New
Westminster deserved to win by a
wider margin. They outrusned
Winnipeg except for the final 10
minutes but by that time it was
,oo late.
football Standings
By The Canadian Press
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said Kate. By coating every metal
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Winnipeg 	
Edmonton  	
Saskatchewan .
Calgary	
B.C.   .
Hamilton
Ottawa  ...
Montreal
Toronto   .
Sarnia 	
Kitchener
London 	
x-Detroit
F
193
173 140
147 160
173 141
APts
92   14
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x-games with Detroit worth four
points.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 19S8 — 7
Woman Injured
As Williams
Flings Bat
BOSTON (AP) - Ted Williams
added. another chapter to his
stormy baseball career Sunday
when he hit a fan on the head with
a thrown bat.
Furious at himself for looking at
a third strike In the third inning,
the 40-year-old Boston slugger let
his bat fly and hit Mrs. Gladys Heffernan in a box seat 75 feet away.
The woman, housekeeper for Red
Sox general manager Joe Cronin,
suffered a contusion over the left
eye and was taken to a hospital
for x-rays. However, the injury was
not as serious as first feared.
Disciplinary action apparently
will be confined to tha standard
league fine of $280 for bat throwing.
Cronin, shaking and pale after
a dash for the Fenway Park first
aid room, was asked if the club
planned any action against Ted.
"The guy feels bad enough as it
is. He feels terrible," he replied,
Mrs. Heffernan, who didn't want
to leave the park, insisted on seeing Williams before leaving for a
hospital. Ted visited her briefly
during the fifth inning.
She told him, "I know it was an
accident."
Williams, the defending American League batting champion still
In the fight with a .314 going into
the contest, had hit into a double
play his first time up.
After talking to Mrs. Heffernan,
Williams—a study in contrasts
throughout his major league career
—smashed a long double to drive in
a run in the last of the sixth.
Esks Trail Bombers by Four Points
HOAD TO MEET
ROSEWALL IN
CUP FINALS
PARIS (AP) — Australia's Lew
Hoad Sunday defeated Pancho
Gonzales 5-7, 13-11, 6-4. 6-4 fo set
Up an all-Australian final In the
Paris international professional
tennis tournament. Hoad will meet
his former .Davis Cup teammate,
Ken Rosewall.
Stand-In Goalie
To Cul Injuries
ST. CATHARINES, Ont. (CP) -
Rudy Pilous has a new gimmick
for sharpening up' his Chicago
Black Hawk sharpshooters.
The coach's problem, as, the
Hawks opened their National Hockey League training camp here,
was the high risk of getting goalies clobbered by exposing them io
the forwards' artillery before they
got back in shape after the summer layoff.
Pilous set to with hammer and
saw and built a shield of heavy
planking. He suspended it in the
middle of the goalpipes with just
narrow   opening   around   the
"Having just the corners and
edges to shoot at sharpens the forwards up as much as a real live
goalie would," he says.
Commented netminder Olenn
Hall:
"First goalie I ever saw that
couldn't be decoyed."
BASEBALL SCORES
Riders Use 26-13
REGINA (CP) - Edmonton Eskimos exploded for 16 points in the
fourth quarter to turn back Saskatchewan Roughriders 26-13 Saturday afternoon io a Western Interprovincial Football Union game
before 12,789 fans.
The win moved Eskimos into
second place in the league standings, four points behind the first-
place Winnipeg Blue Bombers and
two ahead of Roughriders and Calgary Stampeders.
End Joe Mobra paced Edmonton
with 14 points. He booted four field
goals, a single and one convert.
Fullback Johnny Bright and quarterback Jackie Parker each scored
a touchdown.
Halfback Mike Hagler scored the
lone Saskatchewan major on a brilliant 41-yard punt return. Jack Hill,
the league's leading scorer, converted. The other Rider points
came on a field goal by Reg White-
house, two singles by Larry Isbell
and one by Frank Tripucka.
Eskimos took a 7-0 lead in the
first quarter but Riders were ahead
12-7 at the half. It was 13-10 for
Riders at the end of the third but
Eskimos wrapped up .their fifth win
in eight starts with their 16-point
scoring burst in the final quarter.
HELPED BY WIND
A strong wind from the northwest
favored the team defending the
north end of the field. Riders actually lost the game when they
could only score one point in the
third quarter with the favoring
wind on their backs.
Fumbles and interceptions also
hurt Riders, They lost five fumbles
and had four passes intercepted.
The teams were matched statistically. Riders led the way with 20
first downs, while Esks had 15.
Eskimos outrushed the Riders
232 yards to 198. Parker completed
only three of 10 passes for 42 yards.
Rider quarterback Tripucka completed 11 of 23 aerials for 135 yards.
Baseball Standings
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
American League
W L
New York   89 60
Chicago    „... 79 69
Detroit   74 74
Cleveland    74 74
Boston    74 74
Kansas City .... 71 78
Baltimore     70 77
Washington    61
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National League
Pet
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W    L
xMilwaukee
Pittsburgh     84
S Francisco .... 78
Cincinnati     75
St. Louis   70
Los Angeles .... 69
Chicago        68
Philadelphia .... 63
X—clinched pennant.
Pet
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HOCKEY SCORES
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Exhibition NHL
Toronto 1 Chicago 1.
Exhibition NHL-AHL
Detroit 6 Cleveland 2.
NHL-QHL Exhibition
Montreal 9 Quebec 2.
By The Canadian Press
SUNDAY
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chicago  000 100 010-2 7 0
a   pts| Kansas City  000 000 010-1 3 1
ins i_   Donovan and Battey;  Herbert,
{35   Jo Tomanek (9) and Chiti. L-Herbert.
72   4' HRs:  Chicago — Torgeson (10);
Kansas City—Chiti (7).
Cleveland  SOO 000 000-3 4 0
Detroit    000 O01 000-1 8 2
Narleski, Grant (6) Bell (8) and
Nixon; Bunning, Cicotte (6), Moford (7) and Lau. W — Narleski.
L-Bunning. HRs: Cleveland—Min-
oso (23).
New York  200 000 000—2 9 8
Baltimore   111 000 O0x-3 8 0
Sturdivant, Ditmar (7) and Howard; Pappas and Triandos. L —
Sturdivant.
Washington  000 000 000-0 7 0
Boston 001 001 OOx—2 7 0
Fischer; Hyde (7) and Courtney;
Delock and White. L-Fischer.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Milwaukee  000 040 200-8 10 1
Cincinnati   ... 000 000 500-5  7 2
Spahn, McMahon (7) and Crandall; Lawrence, Acker (6) Pent
(8) and Dotterer. W - Spahn. L—
Lawrence. HRs: "Milwaukee
Aaron (30); ' Cincinnati—Robinson
(31).
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (2)
ppd, rain,
San Francisco .. 030 030 001—7 7 1
St. Louis    200 000 002-4 9 1
Antonelli, Monzant (2) and
Schmidt; Jackson, Wight (3) Brosnan (5), Stobbs (7) and Green. W-
Monzant. L—Jackson. HRs: San
Francisco — Rogers (2); St. Louis
—Burton (1).
Los Angeles  000 000 200-2 9 0
Chicago  000 000 001—1 8 0
Gbl
svi
14V4
WA
UVt
18-
18-
27-
Gbl
VA
UVt
15Vt
19V4
20V4
21Vt
26-
Qood News for New Car Owners
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Nelson, B.C.
Koufax, Craig (8) Kipp (8) Bes-
sent (9) Klippstein (9) and Roseboro; Anderson, Elston (8) and
Nieman, Long (9). W—Koufax. L_
Anderson,
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Toronto 9 Montreal 10
Montreal leads best-of-seven fi'
nals 2-0.
Sunday,- Montreal   at  Toronto,
Sostponetj, rain.
ATURDAY
AMERICAN LEAGUE
First:
Cleveland  000 OOO 002—2   7  0
Detroit    100 000 000-1.8  0
Ferrarese, Woodeschick (8) M.
Martin (9), Grant (9) and Nixon;
Lary and Wilson, Lau (6). W -
Woodeschick.
Second:
Cleveland   000 100 000-1 5 0
Detroit      004 000 00x-4  6   1
Bell, Brodowski (3) Martin (5);
Mossi (7) and Brown; Hoeft and
Lau. L-Bell. HR: Cle-Power (18).
New York  .... 000 000 000—0  0   2
Baltimore       000 000 10x-l 5 0
Larsen, Shantz (7) and Howard;
Wilhelm and Triandos. L-Shantz
HR: Bal-Triandos <3).
Wash 000 000 000-0
Boston     000 000 02x—2
Valentinetti and Fitzgerald;
livan and White.
Chicago   611000 000-2
Kan  City   001 000 llx-3
Pierce and Battey; Grim
Chiti. HRs: KCy-Tuttle (10),
(38).
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles . 000 000 002-2   5  0
Chicago    000 100 101-3  6  0
Drysdale, Klippstein (8) and
Roseboro; Buzhardt and S. Taylor.
HR: LA-Demeter. Chl-Thomson,
(18), Long (19).
Milwaukee    001 013—  5  9  0
Cincinnati , 001 000— 16 0
Burdette and Crandall; Purkey,
Schmidt (6) and Burgess.
Pittsburgh  000 011 10L-4 10   1
Philadelphia .... 000 000 02U-3  9 1
Law, Gross (8) Face (9) and
Foiles; Roberts and Sawatski. HR:
Pitts-Dick Stuart (16).
San Fran    000 013 001—5  9   1
St. Louis  001 000 000-1  3   1
Gomez and Schmidt; Mabe and
Green. HR: St.L-B, G. Smith (1)
4  2
3  0
Sul-
9   1
8   1
and
Cerv
BASSEY TKOs
WILLIE PEP
BOSTON (AP) - Featherweight
champion Hogan (Kid) Bassey
cracked Willie Pep's tricky defence
with overhand rights to floor the
two-time former king twice and
earn a technical knockout in the
ninth round of a scheduled 10-round
non-title bout Saturday night at the
Garden.
Tho 28-year-old titllst from Nigeria weighed 12(1 _ to 129 for Pep.
ST. THOMAS, Ont. (CP) - Detroit Red Wings overpowered Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey League 6-2 Saturday night ln
a rough, penalty-ridden exhibition
game,
Stamps Fall 36-9
WINNIPEG (CP) - The com-
bination of quarterback Jimmy
Van Pelt and end Ernie Pitts
proved too much for Calgary
Stampeders Saturday night as
they went down 86-9 to Winnipeg
Blue Bombers in a Western Interprovincial Football Union
game.
Van Pelt, again subbing for injured Kenny Ploen, threw three
touchdown passes to Pitts and
scored another touchdown himself as Bombers, now with a 7-2
record, maintained their four-
point lead over second-place Edmonton. It was the fourth
straight win for Bombers.
Fullback Charlie Shepard
scored Bombers' other touchdown on a 70-yard run. He also
kicked a single. As well as his
touchdown, Van Pelt converted
twice and booted an 11-yard field
goal for an ll-point performance.
Halfback Chuck Holloway took
a pass from quarterback Nobby
Wirkowski for 90 yards and Stampeders' lone touchdown. Doug
Brown converted. Ted Duncan
added two singles to complete the
scoring.
A crowd of 20,099 — largest of
the season here—watched Bombers take a 3-0 lead in the first
quarter and never look back,
They held a 16-9 margin at the
half and increased it to 30-9 at
the three • quarter mark before
Pitts added an unconverted
touchdown in the final 15 minutes.
SCULLION SENT OFF
Along with t h e spectacular
passing and hard running, the
game was highlighted by some
rugged line play, Calgary defensive end Art Scullion was ejected in the third quarter for slugging Pitts.
Bombers, with Van Pelt mixing
his piays well, were in command
most of the way and had a 25-15
edge in first downs.
Winnipeg outrushed Calgary 347
yards to 94 as Shepard, Bob McNamara, Leo Lewis and John Varone went for big gains, Jim
Bakhtiar was the workhorse along
the ground for Stamps as he went
for 61 yards on 12 carries.
Kelowna Moves
To MBL Finals
SUMMERLAND (CP)-Kelowna
Orioles moved into the Okanagan
Mainline Baseball League finals
Sunday by crushing Summerland
Macs 14-1 in a game here.
The win gave Kelowna the b;st-
of-three semi - final series two
games to none. They took the first
game in Kelowna last Sunday by
a 10-3 score.
Alouettes Tie
Powerful Ticats
By The Canadian Press
No football team in the east has
produced the power to humble
Grey Cup-champion Hamilton Tiger-Cats this year, but Montreal Alouettes came ciose Saturday as
they wiped out a two-touchdown
deficit to end in aa 21-21 tie.
But the draw wasn't good enough
to put Als in second place in the
Big Four football league as Ottawa
Rough Riders moved up with
tumble-filled, uninspired 17-14 decision over the Argonauts at Toronto.
As the 14-game schedule moves
into the halfway mark, the standings show Tiger-Cats at the top
with 11 points on five victories and
Saturday's draw.
Riders, with six points, are one
up on the Als and the panicky Argos, trying to bolster their flagging hopes- with last-minute imports, trail with only two points-
one victory in six starts.
RECORD CROWD
A record Montreal ctowd of 23,
NOTICE
Rod and Gun Club
MEETING
TUESDAY - 8 p.m.
Canadian Legion HaU
Game and Fish Regulations to be
considered. Only by being a member and attending meetings will
you be able to protect and conserve your heritage.
641 saw Als catch up with the Ti-
Cats ear
on Sam
O'Quinn.
IP
in the fourth quarter
tcheverry's pass to Red
From there on in the bitterly
fought game the Als squelched the
vaunted late-finish flourish of the
formidable Cats.
The game was replete with sensational passing, stubborn defensive work, rough play, injuries,
pass interceptions and fumbles.
Bernie Faloney passed for two
of the Cats' three touchdowns.
One came- On a 66-yard pass-and-
run play. A 68-yarder set up another touchdown,
Etcheverry, with a better average on pass completions, fired two
touchdown passes but dropped behind Faloney on yardage.
Hal Patterson, Tom Moran and
O'Quinn scored Montreal's touch
downs and Paul Dekker, Tommy
Grant and Gerry McDougall counted for Hamilton. Bill Bewley of
the Als and Norm Hecker of the
Cats made good on all conversions.
The most serious injuries appeared to be suffered by Patterson and fullback Pat Abbruzzi of
the Als, both in the second quarter.
Patterson left the game with
torn, leg ligaments and didn't return. Abbruzzi was carried off on
a stretcher after suffering a pinoh-
ed nerve in the back but came
back to spark the Als with his ball-
carrying. 	
Second in Row
For Milwaukee
By THE CANADIAN PBESS
Milwaukee clinched its second straight National League pennant Sunday with a 6-5 victory over Cincinnati. The
second-place Pittsburgh Pirates were rained out in a double-
header at Philadelphia.
Don McMahon' had to quiet a
Cincinnati scoring threat before
the Braves, sparked by Hank Aaron's hitting, could nail down the
championship and a return date
with New York Yankees in the
World Series.
The Braves now lead the Pirates
by 514 games with only four to
play.
In other National League action
Sunday, Willie Mays raised his batting average to .342 as San Francisco Giants downed St. Louis 7-4,
while at Chicago, Los Angeles
Dodgers took over sixth place in
the standings by beating Chicago
Cubs 2-1..
YANKS FLOP AGAIN
In the American League, the
New York Yankees, still smarting
from a no-hit loss to Baltimore,
took it on the chin again Sunday
as the Orioles swept the three-
game series.
Pete Runnels picked up three
points in his pursuit of the AL
batting crown and Ted Williams
hit a fan with a thrown bat Sunday
as the Red Sox defeated Washington 2-0.
Minnie Mlnoso hit a three-run
homer in the first and Cleveland
Indians made it stand for a 3-1 win
over Detroit, to move into a tie
with the Tigers for third place.   •
At Kansas City, Dick Donovan-
limited the Athletics to three hit*
as Chicago White Sox defeated the
As 2-1.
It was victory No. 21 for Warren Spahn at Cincinnati, but he
didn't last the route for Milwaukee,
leaving in the seventh for McMahon.
The loss was charged to Brooks
Lawrence.    .
At St. Louis, Mays doubled and
singled in three trips to the plate.
He also walked twice and scored
twice.
The Cards used four pitchers in
the contest, with starter Larry
Jackson being tabbed with the loss.
Reliever Ray Monzant won for
the Giants.
Sandy Koufax won for Los Angeles. He was the first of five'
Dodger pitchers in the contest.
Columbia Beats Sceptre
In First Run of Series
NEWPORT, R.I, (CP) - The
U.S. defender Columbia established herself as the best boat in light
weather Saturday when she defeated the British challenger Sceptre
by a big margin — three-quarters
of a mile — in the first America's
Cup yacht race.
Five tons lighter than Sceptre,
she pointed closely Into the chancy
breezes to make better speed.
The unanswered question after
the slow 24-mile race was: Can
Sceptre do better in heavy
weather?
The strategists for both contestants in the 17th challenge since the
schooner America won it in England 107 years ago agreed that Saturday's first race of a best-of-
seven series was inconclusive.
STILL NOT PROVEN
Olin Stephens, famed designer
of Columbia said:
"Conditions weren't typical and
the breeze was so full of holes that
we still don't really know very
much about Sceptre."
Colin Ratsey, assistant helmsman of the Sceptre, told reporters:
might happen. When we got up to
six knots — though that didn't happen very often — we were holding
Columbia and even doing better.
In Britain, Capt, M. H. Eve-
leigh, secretary of the Royal Yacht
Squadron, said the eight-minute
margin by which Columbia won
was "rather sad" but he added
there was still hope for Sceptre.
Saturday's race was all Columbia's. She took five hours 13 minutes 56 seconds for the journey.
Sceptre's time was 5:21:40.
As expected, the start was crucial. The British sloop had a more
favorable position for a few seconds but Columbia, moving faster,
immediately passed her, moved to
w i n d w a ra and kept between
Sceptre and the tiny four-knot
breeze.
HABS BEAT ACES
QUEBEC (CP) - Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey
League scored five unanswered
goals in the final period Sunday to
crush Quebec Aces 9-2 in an exhibition hockey game.
*►
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 8 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22, 1958
B.
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SUCH A WORTHWHILE PR06R/W.'.
Chubby, Round Zeta Not
As Charming as She Seems
By ALTON BLAKESLEE
HARWELL, England. (AP)-
Zeta is round, chubby, and one
year old.
. ' As babies go, - that's not remarkable. But Zeta happens to be
a particularly renowned infant of
a new age. Zeta is a fusion or
thermonuclear machine.
Nearly a year ago Zeta went to
work, hissing like air escaping
from a punctured tire, and for
flashes of Seconds fused hydrogen
atoms to produce energy.
It marked man's first real step
toward taming the fury of the H-
bomb reaction in order to draw
unlimited electric power from hydrogen atoms in the seas.
IMITATES SUN
Zeta did not quite duplicate the
action of the sun which produces
boundless energy from hydrogen
atoms. But it was a start toward
imitating the sun.
H-power fusion could keep civilization running for millions of
years because there is so much
hydrogen fuel in the oceans. And
mankind is going to need it-
some day we will run out of coal
and oil and firewood, and w
could run short of uranium. Then
H-power could be the great salvation to keep industry running and
homes and schools and streets
lighted.
On Zeta's first birthday there
are some optimistic hopes" that
H-power may be achieved within
10 years. More conservative guesses are 20 to 40.
Zeta was no really howling success. Her name, in fact, means
zero energy thermonuclear ao-
paratus—and Zeta lived un to it.
She produced only a million-millionth of the energy which was
needed to make her fuse atoms in
the first place.
But she was first in fusins even
a few atoms for the British researchers. Some weeks later American scientists performed the
same feat with their "Perhapsa-
tron"—so named in- honest doubt
that it would work.
NATIONS TO SPEAK
Soviet scientists sav thc've
done about the same thing, but
haven't given details. c
All three countries are expected to speak up in the United Nations atoms-for-peace conference
starting soon in Geneva, and to
disolay models of a variety of
fusion machines aimed at doing
the trick.
The job is as difficult as it is
vital to mankind's future.
The sun steadily produces energy and heat by fusing atoms of
hydroge.n into atoms of helium.
In the process, a bit of the mass
of the hydrogen atoms is changed
into prodigious amounts of energy.
H-bombs do this too—but when
one goes off, no apparatus is left
to turn the heat into electrical
power.
The problems are to control the
fusion: and. draw off.thereat to
make steam to run generators to
produce electricity.
HFATS GAS
H- fusion machines like Zeta
heat up the hydrogen with great
WM«t
jolts of electricity. In Zeta the
gas is contained inside a big, hollow, doughnut-shaped tube.
Instead of ordinary hydrogen,
the machine uses deuterium-
double - weight hydrogen. Deuterium is not too hard nor too expensive to get from ordinary sea
water.
Zeta jolts the gas with current
of 230,000 amperes lasting a few
housandths of a second. The hydrogen heats up to 5.000,000 degrees centigrade. This makes
atoms race about at tremendous
speed so they begin colliding violently enough for some of them
to merge or fuse.
The electrical heating sets up a
magnetic field which compresses
the deuterium gas. This makes
(he gas still hotter, which is all
to the good.
COLUMN WRIGGLES
But the compressed column of
gas wriggles like ah angry snake.
If the gas touches the walls of
the tube it loses precious heat
and might also do some damage
to the walls.
So a magnetic field is applied
from the outside to keep the gas
steady. British scientists are concentrating on one p r i n c i p al
method of magnetic confinement,
while United States scientists are
trying four different approaches
simultaneously.
This summer Zeta was beefed
up for more experiments at
higher temperature, perhaps 10,-
000,000 degrees.
That's still far, far too little to
produce useful power. So a really
muscular Zeta II is being built to
create temperatures of 50,000,000
to 100,000,000 degrees, holding it
for one-tenth of a second at a
time.
Britain started earlier on H-fu-
sion than the V. S,, and for a
time both carried on this work in
secret. Now both countries have
removed most of the secrecy bars
and are working together, sharing research progress.
LARGE MACHINE
One main advantage of Zeta is
that it is a big machine, says
Harwell's Dr. Alan Matterson. It
is partially surrounded by laboratories which can stick instruments into'the doughnut, or peer
through quartz windows, to learn
what is going on. The tube measures 10 feet across with a diameter inside of more than three
feet.
Zeta and other fusion machines
produce such heat that they strip
the hydrogen atoms of their electrons. The gas becomes a writhing plasma.
This plasma is the kind of stuff
of which stars are made; it is the
material making up most of all
the real matter in the universe.
Scientists have never been able
to study it at first-hand like this,
So Zeta and her sisters and cousins also offer a new chance to
learn some secrets of the sun and
stars.
Airlines Plan
Lower Fares
LONDON (AP) - The world's
airlines were reported Saturday to
be considering fare cuts in a
drive to persuade more people to
fly.   ■
The air correspondent of the
Financial Times wrote that many
airlines feel air transport has
reached its maximum market at
current fare levels. He'predicted
that 60 airlines belonging to the
International, Air Transport Association may meet the crisis by
lopping fares when they meet at
Cannes next Tuesday.
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
7:45 Good Morning
8:00 For Love or Money *
8:30 Play Your Hunch *
9:00 Godfrey Time *
9:30 Top Dollar *
10:00 Love of Life *
10:30 Search For Tomorrow *
10:45 Guiding Light *
11:00 Science Theater
11:30 As the World Turns *
12:00 Jimmy Dean Show *
12:30 Houseparty *
1:00 Big Payoff »
1:30 Verdict Is Yours *
2:00 Brighter Day *
2:15 Secret Storm
2:30 Edge of Night *
3:00 Bingo
4:00 Early Show
5:15 Doug Edwards *  .
5:30 Robin Hood
6:00 The News  .'
6:10 A Greater Spokane
6:15 Song Shop
6:30 Father Knows Best *
7:00 I Love Lucy *
7:30 Harvey •
9:00 Burns and Allen
9:30 Masquerade Party
10:00 Mr. District Attorney
10:30 Night Edition
10:35 Post Time
10:40 The Late Show
KHQ-TV - Channel 6
:40 Color Test Pattern
:43 Test Pattern
:56 Bible Reading
:59 Program Previews
:00 Dough Re Mi *
:30 Treasure Hunt *
:00 Price Is Right *
:30 Concentration * /
:00 Tic Tac Dough *
:30 It Could Be You »
:00 Truth or Consequences
:30 Haggis Baggis (C) *
00 Today Is Ours »
30 From These Roots *
00 Queen For a Day *
:30 County Fair *
00 My Little Margie
30 Your TV Theatre
3:00 Matinee On Six
"Men Must Fight"
4:30 Four Thirty Movie
"Westbound Limited"
5:45 NBC News *
6:00—1 Led Three Lives
6:30 Weatherwise
Front Page
6:45 Viewpoint
7:00 Restless Gun *
7:30 Tales of Wells Fargo *
8:00 Mr. Pete Gunn *
8:30 Alcoa Theatre •
9:00 Suspicion *
10:00 Silent Service
10:30 Medic
11:00 If You Had a Million
KREM.TV — Channel 2
6:00 Flash Gordon
6:30 Newsbeat
7:00 Star Performance
7:30 Bold Journey »
8:00 Voice of Firestone
8:30 Polka-Go-Round *
9:30 U of W-vs. San Jose
10:30 Nightbeat
10:40 Winners Circle
10:45 John Daly
11:00 Channel 2 Theatre
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
MOTHER'S CONCERN— Else the giraffe eyes
the cameraman suspiciously as she hovers over her first
offspring a few hours after its birth in Copenhagen.zoo.
ON THE AIR
CKLN PRO'  1AMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
(PACIFIC  STANDARD TIME)
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1958
59—Sign On
:00—News
: 05—Wake Up Time .
; 30—News
35-Wake Up Time
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—Varieties
30—All Weathers
35—Varieties
55— Morning Devotion
: 00—News
10—Musicale  •
15—Story Parade
25—Women Today
30—Woman's World
35—Song Serenade
00—News
05—Musicale
15—The Happy Gang
45—Musicale
: 55—News
:00—Morning Melodies
15—Now I Ask You
45—Song Serenade
12:15—Sports News
12:25—News
12:31—Farm Broadcast
12:54—Prairie News
1:00-CKLN Reports
1:15—Matinee
1:45—Sacred Heart
2:00—Portrait of a Woman
2:30—Trans-Canada Matinee
3:30—Pacific News
3:40—B.C. Road Report
3:45—Rocking With Boates
5:00—News
5:05—Rolling Home Show
5:45—Closing Markets
5:50—Rolling Home Show
6:00—News
6:10—Sports News
6:15—Parliament Hill
6:30—Old Favorites
7:00—News
7:30—Hoedown
8:00—Vancouver Theatre.
8:30—Summer Fallow
9:00—International Concert
10:00—News
10:10—Sports and Weather
10:15—The Harris Lancers
10:30—First Person
11:00—News
11:05—Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMS
MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1958
6:00—Sharp at Six
9:00—BBC News
9:15—Morning Concert:.
10:00—Morning Visit
10:15—The Happy Gang
.10:45—Pages From Life
11:00—One Man's Family
11:15—Court of Opinion
11:45—Kindergarten of the Air
12:00—Theme and Variation
15:15—Newa
12:25—Showcase
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55—Five To One
1:00—Afternoon Concert
2-.00-CBC Concert Hall
2:30—Trans-Canada Matinee
3:00—Musical Program     i
3 30—Program Resume   . .
3:45—B.C. Roundup
4:45—Fishermen's Broadcast
5:00—Through the Years
5:30-CBC News
5:40—Neighbourly News
5:45—Sports Desk
5:55—Byline
6:00-The Show That Jack Built
6:30—Roving Reporter
6:40—Mostly Music
6:55—Preface
7:00—News
7:30-Small But Neat
8:00—Drama in Sound
8:30—Science Review
9:00—Jazz Workshop
9:30—Leicester Square
10:00—News
10:15—Critics At Large
10:30—Distinguished Artists
11:00—Midnight Concert
U:57-News
DAILY   CROSSWORD
3. Social
insect
i. Owns
6. Short Inter-
misslon
1. River
(Venez.)
7. Persian elf
8. Dlvenj
9. Southwest
wind
11. Alt Baba's
secret word
16. Part of
"tp ba"
17. Conclude
18. PubUc
notice
21. Kind
of -
window
22. Colombia's
capl
tal
23. Appalling
24. Chief
. deity
(Babyl.)
26. Firearms
27. Climbing
plant
imia ransas
E0BI1BE     QUE
EPJHIBIl    CI0_UL>
annas njj__r
EI3IS@  SDHQE
Saturday'l Aniw
32. Remain
34. Leading;
actor
Greek letter 87. Excla.
30. Lariat motion
31. Manages      38, Rodent
ACROSS
1. Oriental
nurse
8. Spiritual.
istle knocks
8. Turkish
city
10. Fencers'
foils
12. Stockades
13. Arc
14. Bitter vetch
16. Eagles' nests
16, Practice,
as a play
19. Sun god
SO. Mountains
(S.A.)
21. Wheel's
sliding piece
22. Forthright
24. Large bundle
25. Nocturnal
bird .' .
26. Covers with
hoarfrost
29. Germanium
(sym,)
SO. Small
streams
S3. Change
Into bone
35. Encountered
36. The whole
37. Skating are*
39. Daunt
(archaic)
40. Dexterous
41. Epochs
42. Siamese
coin (pi.)
DOWN
1. Worship
2. John —i
Jurist
DAILY CRYrTOQUOTE — Here's how to work lt:
1 A X Y D t B A A X R
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another.   In this sample A tl
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophica, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints.   Each day the code letters are different
f<
1
%
5-
4
^
5
6
7
S
r^t
e
l
IO
II
li
I
13
14
l
^
IS
16
17
IS
^//,
19
§
i
10
§
21
n
23
l
i
%
24
kit
i
2b
27
10
d
^A
19
//<
30
31
32.
35
34
%
^
35
3b
1
37
38
n
1
to
n
■41
1
42.
§
T II £     bo
,WMS.   KBVQ
A Cryptogram Quotation      . .
VQSZ    .MBPtL     BZ     XZ
0"§".
6-)S.
-SKSf
«A.       ft.   j)      IA.
DS      XZQ      DJ
rp
XOZEL^   TV S„N, '„ B'SV
0 £ fl   . I   £    ill KN'?
QSXBGS-OPUZL.
Saturday's Cryptoquotc: O FOR THE TOUCH OF A
VANISH'D HAND, AND THE SOUND OF A VOICE THAT
IS STILL!—TENNYSON.
m tfss. wm tetttmm mm**! -mi        *
•   ' f*
 —
	
3H^
SMALL INVESTMENT   -
LARGE RETURNS
That's the Want Ad Story ~ PHONE   1844
YOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.
BIRTHS
CHARLEBOIS - To Mt.,and
Mrs. Patrick Charlebois, 230 Baker
Street, at Kootenay Lake General
Hospital, Sept. 18, a daughter.
MacINTOSH -. To Mr. and Mrs
William Macintosh, 101$ Fall
Street, at Kootenay Lake General
Hospital, Sept. 19, a daughter.
MACKAVE - To Mr. and Mrs.
John Mackave of Reriiac, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept.
19, a son.
PORTEOUS - To Mr. and MrS,
Donald Porteous, McQuarrie
Avenue, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept. 19, a daughter
ANDERSON - To Mr. and Mrs
Garnet Anderson of Salmo, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept.
19, a son.
MURPHY - To Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Murphy of Riondel, at
Kootenay Lake General Hospital,
Sept. 20, a daughter.
KENZIE - To Mr. and Mrs.
John Kenzie, 60 View Street, at
Kootenay Lake General Hospital,
Sept. 20, a son.
BROWN - To Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Brown of Riondel, at Kaslo
Victorian Hosoital, Sept, 19, a son,
HELP WANTED
LEARN ENGINEERING DRAFT-
Ing or Blueprint Reading by
home study for a secure well-paid
job. Instruments supplied: Diploma awarded. Free folder. Mention course of interest. Primary
School of Drafting, Box 123-G,
Station Q, Toronto
TO REPLACE MEN RETURNING
to University, we require 2 men.
Full time sales work. We train
ydu. Car essential. Write or
phone Fuller Brush Co., Box 1160,
Creston, B.C., or phone ELliot
1-2726,
ONE SEWING MACHINE MEClt-
anlc and 2 salesmen wanted. Full
or part-time. Apply Box 8847,
Nelson Daily News.
STEWARD REQUIRED AT ONCE
for small Legion bar. State age,
experience-and salary expected.
Reply to Box 40, Castlegar, B.C.
BAKER WANTED FOR RETAIL
shop ln West Kootenay. Box 6856,
Daily News.
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
Mothers...
Need Money?
Cash In on the big fall and
Christinas selling season.
Be an
Avon Representative
,    in your community.
Territories in Nelson, Slocan,
Salmo, Ymir. Write
MISS L BRADD
471 Francis Ave.
KELOWNA, B.C.
$100 MONTHLY FOR WEARING
lovely dresses given to you as
bonus. Just show North American Fashion Frocks to friends.
No canvassing, investment or experience necessary. North American Fashion Frocks, Ltd., 3425
Industrial Blvd., Dept. A-3901,
Montreal, P.Q,	
SITUATIONS WANTED
YOUNG HUNGARIAN MAN
needs work by day or week or
permanent. Phone George Csah,
Royal Hotel, Nelson,
HEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT-
ting, appliances, oil burners serviced. Norm' Bowcock, Bonded,
Licenced Gas Fitter, phone 385.
FOR THE BEST IN BODV AND
paint work, see Ted's Auto Body
1 mile Granite Road, or phone
bus 98, res  1186-Y
ROOM AND BOARD
FOR YOUNG BUSINESS MAN -
regular hours. 501 Cedar Street,
phone 1392-X.
ROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG
man with regular hours. Phone
, 284-R.
BOARD AND ROOM FOR YOUNG
gentleman. Mrs. Truscott,, 1179-X
ROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG
gentleman. Close in. Ph. 277-R,
BOARD AND ROOM FOR 1 MAN.
Phone 1231-Y.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES
WANTED - GOOD HOME IN
country for Lab type pup. Phone
1667-Y.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
ASSAYERS AND MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
B   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND,   BC
Assayer Chemist Mine Rep
ENGINEERS   AND   SUHVHYUKS
RAY G. JOHNSON
B.C. Land Surveyor
1015 Eighth St., Nelson, Ph, 144-R
BOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC
BC Land Surveyor P Eng iCivil)
218 Gore St     Nelson    Phone 1238
G W  BAERG  B C.
Land Surveyor
878 Baker St    Nelson    Phone 1118
INSURANCE
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
OPEN
ALL DAY SATURDAY and
SUNDAY UNTIL 11 P.M
FOR GAS and OIL
New
Chevrolet Sedans
New
Chevrolet Pickups
1957 Pontiac Sedan
1957 Oldsmobile Sedon
1956 Chevrolet 2-Dr. HT
1956 Chevrolet 4-Dr. HT
1956 Ford Pickup
1956 Mercury Sedon
1956 Meteor Sedan
1956 Oldsmobile Sedan
1955 Chevrolet Coach
1955 Chevrolet Sedan
1955 Oldsmobile Sedan
1955 Chevrolet Coach
1955 Dodge Sedan
1955 Chev. Sedan Del'y
1954 Plymouth Sedon
1954 Ford Sedan Del'y
1953 Inter. Pickup
1953 Pontiac Hardtop.
1953 Plymouth
Convertible
1953 Morris Sedan
1953 Chev. Sedan Del'y
1952 Ford Pickup    .
1952 Pontiac Coach
1952 G.M.C. Pickup
1952 Chevrolet  Sedan
1952 Pontiac  Sedon
1952 Ford Sedan
1951 Chevrolet HT
1950 Chevrolet Sedan
1949 Pontiac Sedan
Reuben
Buerge
Motors Ltd.
Chevrolet - Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Phone 35-36 323 Vernon St.
Nelson BC.
SPECIALIZING IN. ENGLISH
car repairs Used parts for 1949
to '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-
mans, '50 to '51 Morris Minor,
'47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac, '52
Vanguard, '47 Oldsmobile 6 For
sale, '58 Austin, '47 Olds motor
Cottonwood Wreckage Service,
ph 1363-L-2, Bos 882. 24 Ymir
Road. Nelson '
'56 FAIRLANE AUTOMATIC -
Phone 1689-R after 5 p.m.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC
LIVE FOWL FOR SALE-AVER-
age weight 5 lbs. Price (1.50
each. Phone 1655-Y-l.
HOTELS AND MOTELS
CANADIAN FRIENDS - WHEN
Ui Spokane stop at the Colonial
Hotel, 124'4 Post St., one block
from stores and parking. Phone
Rl-79494
MACHINERY
fm*mp^4mt0tMssM
■  Logging
Equipment
.JUST ARRIVED
The Newest
JOHN DEERE
CRAWLER
TRACTORS
complete with hydraulic
angle dozer, winch and
guard.
5 speeds forward and reverse.
Ask for a demonstration now.
Ask about our easy payment
plan.
ALSO USED^
1-M32 CAT complete
1—D4 CAT complete
1—John Deere CRAWLER
with dozer and winch.
WELDING & EQUIPMENT
CO.,   LTD.
514 Railway St      Nelson. B.C.
PHONE 1402
FOR SALE - GIBSON TRACTOR,
good rubber, motor and transmission in Al condition, With
plow, cultivator and .snow blade.
Price $200. Apply 309 Carbonate
St., Nelson, R, A, Matthews,
KIPPS HERB TABLETS - A NA-
tural laxative. Quick, safe relief
from discomfort of constipation,
biliousness, 35c,. (1.00. At al
druggists
FOR SALE - TRACTOR WINCH,
"Carco", Model F, with 50 feet of
1" line and hook. Price (1250,
Nelson Machinery, Nelson, B.C.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
DEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF
used equipment, mill, mine and
logging supplies, new and used
wire rope, pipe and fittings.
chain, steel plate and shapes
Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250
Prior St., Vancouver. BC- Phone
PAcific 6357
FOR SALE - COMBINATION
gas, coal and wOod range with
two 200-lb. propane tanks and
automatic regulator, (115. Phone
2134-X between 6 and 7 p.m.
RENTALS
' (Continued)
4-ROOM APT., SILICA ST., SOME
furniture, (45; and 4-room self-
contained apt, Vernon St, (45.
T. D. Rosling & Son Ltd., 568
Ward St
FOR RENT - 3-BEDROOM FUR-
nished house, North Shore, 214
miles from bridge. Immediate
occupancy. Phone 95.
TWO LARGE ROOMS, OVER OUR
office, in brick building. White
cabinet sink and 4-burner gas
range, Applyeard.
WE HAVE A NICfc, BRIGHT1,
spacious office tn the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars
phone 77.
HOUSEKEEPING OR SLEElPlriO
rooms: furnished and heated.
Rates by-day, week, monrji —
Allen Hotel, 171 Baker Street.
SELF ■ CONTAINED. HEATED,
modern basement apt., furn.,
very small. North Snore, close
in, Phone 2055.
ONE LIGHT • HOUSEKEEPING
room. Partly furnished. Phone
1341-X after 5 p.m. or between
12 and 1 p.m.
S-BEDROOM HOME - UPHILL
district. Reasonable rent, Apply
Box 3867, Nelson Daily News.
WOULD SHARE MY APART-
ment with business lady. 310
Silica Street
FOR RENT - 3-ROOM APART-
ment, heated and furnished. Ph,
474-L.
3-RM. FURNISHED APT. FRIG.,
gas Stove and heat, hot water
supplied, 171 Baker Street
LAKESIDE BUNGALOW COURT
is now open for winter rentals
Phone 864,
ONE    HOUSEKEEPING    ROOhl,
Private entrance. Call 71 High
Street.' .-   ■     ■ - ;
2  BEDROOMS FOR RENT.  PH.
13U-R,
HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR
rent, heated. 523 Vernon Street,
FOR RENT-SUITE ON NORTH
Shore. Phone 676-L-2,
NORTH   SHORE  .MOTEL   OPEN
for winter rentals. Phone 1684.
2 ROOMS FOR RENT ON BAKER
Street. - Phone 1489-X.  .
FARMS. ETC., FOR SALE
PUBLIC NOTICES
(Continued)
8 SUB-DIVIDED LOTS, 75 X
Phone 1949-L mornings.
PERSONAL
ROADBU1LDING - PIPELINES-
Dykes, etc.,' designed and built
by contract. A, G. Bayes Ltd.,
150 Bennett Ave., Penticton.
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
CLEAN COTTON RAGS WANTED
by the Daily News, 10c per lb.
U.K. Objectors
Picket A-Planl
LONDON (Reuters) - British
campaigners against nuclear
weapons Saturday claimed progress in picketing the' atomic weapons research establishment at Al-
dermaston, 50 miles west of London.
They announced that in nine
weeks of picketing a number of
workers have been persuaded not
to take jobs at the plant and
truck drivers have been talked
into not making deliveries there.
One of the 170 pickets is the son
of one of the establishment's security guards. On the whole, the
workers have beert friendly toward the pickets, says the report
from "the Committee for Direct
Action Against Nuclear War."
The report said 22 workers
have signed a petition urging the
plant should be used only for
peaceful research.
FDR Changed
Mind On Gift
To Russia
OSLO, Norway fAP)—Former
UN secretary-general Trygve Lie
says the Russians asked for a
Norwegian island in the Arctic
after the war and had some support' from President Roosevelt for
making the Norwegian city of
Narvik a free port.
Lie also says in his wartime
memoirs — published Saturday
that the Russians wanted a hand in
governing Norwqy's Spitsbergen
Archipelago in the Arctic Sea.
Lie said he was In Moscow on
the night of Nov. 12, 1944, serving
as foreign minister In the Norwegian exile cabinet, when Soviet
Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov
summoned h!m and the Norwegian ambassador.
After midnight. Lie said, Mol-
otpv suddenly brought up the
question of Bear Island in the
Arctic and demanded that Norway turn It over to Russia. Both
were allies against the Germans
at that time.
"Do you Want to be reasonable
or do you want a conflict" Lie
quoted Molotov.
On March 12, 1943, Lie said, he
met Roosevelt for the first time
and the U.S. president told him
the Russians wanted to use some
Norwegian harbors. He mentioned
the ore port of Narvik, Lie wrote.
"With his most charming
smile," Lie said. "Roosevelt said
lie was interesting in finding a
solution, a compromise which to a
certain degree would give the
Russians what they asked for."
After Lie' cabled his government, Anthony Eden, then British
foreign secretary, took the matter up with Roosevelt. Lie continued:
"The president then was in full
retreat and suddenly did not remember the Russian demand."
Climatologlsts find the World has
been getting warmer during the
past half-century.
Labor Losing
Ground in U.K.?
LONDON (Reuters) — The Labor party gathers for Its annual
conference ' today' amid growing
fears that Labor's chances of
winning the next general election
are steadly receding.
A year ago, when the Conserv-
atvie government's stock was at
a spectacularly low level following the Suez crisis the Labor
party was spoiling for a fight
But today the prestige of British Prime Minister Macmillan's
administration is shown by public
apinion polls to be steadly rising,
and the Labor party is worried.
Its despondency over failure to
increase socialist popularity with
voters will be reflected in resolutions to be discussed at the week-
long delegate conference at Scarborough.
The Conservative recovery is
believed due mainly .to the recent
strong improvement in the national econ, which has allowed
the government to relax the tight
domestic credit squeeze.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22,1958 — 9
Co-Inventor of Iroquois
Flame-Thrower to Retire
MEDICINE HAT, Alta. (CP) -
Danish-born Major Henry Sorenson, 48, is retiring in October after
19 years in the Canadian Army.
He will be remembered for his
part in the invention and development of a new type of flamethrower.
Known as the "Iroquois," the
flamethrower is considered by experts to be the most effective
tactical weapon in flame warfare.
Major Sorenson, whose interest
in fire extends to a personal collection bf 25 lighters and hundreds
of match boxes, was awarded
(5000 gratuity three years ago for
his part in the invention—the largest amount ever given a Canadian
army officer.
STARTED IN ENGLAND
The major's army, career began with the Royal Engineers in
England and he will retire as
head of the flame section at the
Suffix Experimental Station here.
He shares the credit for the invention.
"I want people to know I
couldn't have done the work with;
out the help of people like Alec
Niblock, Lawrence Sween and William Palmer, technicans at the
Defence Research Board," he
said.
Major Sorenson described the
Iroquois as a "demoralizing
weapon."
"People are afraid of different
things," he said, "but most people are afraid of fire."
Tactically it will be used to
sear out pockets of resistance
otherwise inaccessible to ground
attack.
First used by the Germans is
1915, the modern flamethrower
was picked up and developed in
a joint British and Canadian effort during the Second World War.
But the major points out that a
flame attack is almost as old as
war itself.
Flame attack was described In
China as early as 514 B.C. The
Greeks, Byzantines and Phlllls-
tlnes used fire in fighting, while
the flaming arrow of medieval
Europe was employed with scorching effect.
Major Sorenson did not commit himself on the weapon's value
in a nuclear war. -
"Many people would consider It
ineffective," he said. "All I can
say is that in a conventional war
it would be invaluable." ,
BLOOD PIGMENT
Hematln, a coloring pigment of
the blood, Is related chemically to
chlorophyl.
WANTED
By Well Established Mill In the East Kootenay
EXPERIENCED SAWYER
who must be familiar with cutting cant*.
Left handed mill. Daily capacity 35M feet-
APPLY BOX No. 3883
HOUSEKEEPING    ROOM     FOR
youna.man. 578 Raker St. ADt. B
BUILDING SUPPLIES
USED, GALVANIZED, CORRU-
gated roofing sheets. Good condition. Large quantity. Reasonable prices. Various lengths. Co-
lumbia Trading, 902 Front.
UStiU OUTBOARD . REFK1GER-
ators, washing machines Make
us an offer. Jeffery Radio and
Appliances Ltd., phone 1302, 446
Ward St.. Nelson, BC.
FOR SALE-McINTOSH APPLES.
Bring your container. Pick your
own. (l box. J. Sewell, Sunshine
Bay, B.C,
6 ONLY OIL KITCHEN RANGES
with blowers and controls, priced
to sell. Columbia Trading, 902
Front St,
MORRIS PIANO, EXCELLENT
for student, (125. Also standard
Singer sewing machine with motor, (35. Phone 1984-L.
GUNS, NEW AND USED, RE-
loading supplies, custom loads.
Norm Bowcock, 171 Baker St.,
Phone 385.
WALNUT DINING SUITE, IN-
cluding buffet and six chairs, (50.
Phone 1430-L.     ' -
McCLARY FURNACE WITH
Iron Fireman automatic stoker
and controls. Ph. 1996-R or 120,
WAWANESA MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO.
Agent, 554 Ward St.
McHardy Aeencies Ltd
TIMBER CRUISING
E. H. Hird,
Slocan City, B.C.
TRAVEL
Rail, air. steamship tickets.
Set Jim or Betty Vipond.
GlAllE AGENCIES LIMITED
1146 CSar Ave.    Trail    Pb. 2345
Nrtam SaUg Hme
Circulation Dept., Phone 1844
Price per single copy 5c Monday
to Friday, 10c on Saturday.
By Carrier per week
in advance.
Subscription Rates
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         ( 1.75
Three months ^_   ( 5.00
Six months  —    ( 0.00
One year    (18.00
Where extfa postage is required
above rates plus postage.
For delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely.
In Kimberley, A. W. Brown.
In Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.
EXCELLENT TAPE RECORDER,
(100.00, Phone 284-R.
73,000 BTU OIL HEATER, USED
one year. Phone 1662-X
HEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN
day and evenings 924 Davies St
GAS STOVE, IN GOOD CONDI
tion, (25. Phone 1542.
RENTALS
SUITE, THREE ROOMS WITH
kitchen and bathroom, unfurnished, gas available, central, no
hills, near hospital; High Street
(55 per month. 1-373 Baker St.,
or phone 662 business hours.
2-BEDROOM COTTAGE AT 11-
Mile, on beach. Wired for range.
Full bathroom. Living-kitchen
combined. Veranda. Fully insulated, Phone 409-R weekends or
evenings.  . /
STORAGE SPACE FOR RENT IN
good basement centrally located,
(15.00 to (20.00 a month according to space required. Apply
Appleyard, 421 fiaker St.
Nelson Ready Mix
-CONCRETE
FOR ALL  Pllltl'USES
PHONE 871
PREMIER SAND & GRAVEL
For
Sand. Gravel. Crushed Rock.
Fill   Cement and
Pea Gravel for Rooting
PHONE 1368 ot 871
ESMOND LUMMSH CO LTD
for all Building Supplies Spe
ciaiizing in Plywood Conlrac
tors enquiries solicited Phone 01
wire orders collect 36(K> E Has
tings St., Vancouver BC GLen
burn 1500
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
THRIVING CAFE BUSINESS FOR
sale, including all fixtures, and
kitchen equipment Also stock.
Centrally located, 8 small booths.
3 large booths, 24 stools. Newly
decorated. For further information, contact Commodore Cafe,
Baker St.. Nelson. B.C,
FOR SALc) Oii RENT-MONT-
rose. B C. Small, well equipped grocery and confectionery
store, with living quarters attached. Six miles from Trail on
No. 3A Hi'hway. Immediate possession. Ph. 2476 or 2343, P. O.
Box 43.
SWAP MODERN TEXACO STA-
tion for lease. Good going concern on 3A ahd 6 highways.
Stock, fixtures, equipment (4000.
Consider trade late model car,
or property, Box 48, Msd's Service, Salmo, B.C.
PROPERTY, HOU52S",
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
FOR SALE-COTTAGE AT SOUTH
Slocan, on Highway. 5 rooms,
full bathroom and hot water. An-
Sly to Mrs. C. P. Martin, P, O.
ox  1569,  Rossland,  B.  C.  or
Phone 6-3540,	
FURNISHED 5 • ROOM H'tfU STE
with automatic washer and dryer, With good dowh payriieat and
balance as rent. Phone 411-Y
Selling—Renting
lour Classified Want Ad on This Handy
ORDER FORM
LOT 80 X 200 FOR SALE, NlMi'H
Shore Overlooks city Water
pbwer, TV to property P h 0 n 1
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Nelson Daily News
Classified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.
 ^       :     sT"
10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 22; 1958   -     --«--■
And
When Your Doctor
Writes Your
PRESCRIPTION
Let Your First Thought Be
MANN
News of the Day
RATES: 30c Une, 40c line black face type; larger typo rates on
request. Minimum, two Unea. 10% discount for prompt payment.
ELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE     Craft and Hobby Classes soon,
512 Richards St., phone 1108.     HOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT
OPEN TODAY UNTIL 12 NOON.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
DANCE AT PLAYMOR
SATURDAY, SEPT. 27.
Rotary Luncheon Monday, 12:15
p.m., Hume Hotel.
Phone 263
SNAPPY SERVICE
For your hauling needs.
For repairing washing machines,
Phone 2190, or write Box No. 314,
Nelson, B.C.
Mary Maxim wools and patterns
for Indian-type sweaters.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
FALL WHIST  DRIVE  TONIGHT
Sacred Heart Hall, Hall Mines Rd.,
at 8 p.m.
Cotton-filled comforters, 60x72, in
pretty prints.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
EAGLES AND AUXILIARY special
joint meeting tonight. Meet Provincial President. Refreshments
and dance following.
Winter is near, and we have reduced our new and used oil heaters
to clear.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
Running shoes in all sizes for girls
from 89c; in boys' boot styles, $1.49
up.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
Phone%160 for plumbing and hot
water heating. Top quality work,
aU work guaranteed. Pat May
Plumbing, Nelson.
WED., OCT. 1—Banquet, St. Sa
viour's Parish Hall, for the "
ery of the West Kootenay.  The
public is cordially invited to attend.
We clean and put your storm
windows on. We fix- all your paint
work, clean and keep up yoUr
gardens. — Phone 2190.
FOR YOUR SUN-DAMAGED
HAIR — phone 1922. Reconditioning
Treatment, Styling and your
Special Fall Perms.
Charm Beauty Salon
Blocking the entrance to the front of thjs house on Edgewood Avenue is this mountain ash which fell victim, to the sudden storm that swept the Nelson district Friday. A
large trunk of the old willow tree next door to this house broke off and landed on the
road obstructing traffic for some time. Trees were damaged again. Sunday afternoon
by a new windand rain Storm.—Daily News photo.
Copper, Lead Prices
Inch Up, Tin Drops
Last Ladies' Golf Club luncheon
Tuesday.
H. W. Herridge, MP for Kootenay
West, will be at the Hume Monday
and until 3 p.m. Tuesday,
CCF meeting tonight at 8 p.m. at
Mrs. Drew's home, 37 View Street.
Mr. Herridge, MP, will address the
meeting.
ATTENTION, PLEASE
Anyone witnessing the hit and
run accident in front of Imperial
Bank on Baker St., at approximately 11:30 p.m., Sept. 17, please contact Box 1108, Cranbrook, B.C.
MOVIE - COLOR - B&W FILM.
A wide selection of cameras of all
kinds, reasonably priced—
AT CUSTOM CAMERAS
Stanley St. opposite "The Bay"
Color or BfeW Film developed.
Storm windows keep heating costs
down and make your home more
comfortable. For a free estimate
call 156.
T. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.
FUNERAL NOTICE
' SWANSON - At Jhe. Castlegar
and District Hospital on Sept. 19,
Florence Annie, of Castlegar, in
her 78th year, beloved sister of
Lillian Killough. Funeral services
will be held Monday, Sept. 22, at 3
p.m., from St. Alban's Anglican
Church, Castlegar, Rev. Archdeacon B, A. Resker officiating. Interment in the family plot at Rob-
dean-^011 Memorial Cemetery. Arrangements entrusted to the Castlegar
Funeral Home.
NEW YORK (AP)-Prices of
copper and lead inched upward
last week but tin's price dived
after the International Tin Council removed the props that had
supported it.
The copper increase was by
custom smelters, who pushed
their quotation up to 20% cents a
pound—equal with the major producers' price—in two small nudges. The move was attributed in
the trade to a sharp drop in
stocks of copper, higher foreign
prices and labor unrest in Rhodesia and Canada. A strike deadline by International Nickel Company workers at Sudbury and
Port Colborne, Ont., is set for
Wednesday.
Lead went up Vt of a cent to 11
cents a pound, following a
stronger foreign trend, and
United States producers of both
lead and zinc were heartened at
a report the government will impose quotas on imports of the two
metals.
TIN DOWN
Tin had remained stable for
some months as the tin council's
buffer pool purchased enough
metal on the London Metal Exchange to maintain the agreed-
upon minimum of UFA cents a
pounu., When the council announced Thursday that such buying  would   be  discontinued,   at
least for the present, prices as
low as 78% cents a pound were
reported and (he metal closed the
week at 84% cents. '
Demand for. lead and zinc was
reported strengthening. Imposition of quotas on lead-zinc imports, which may be announced
Monday by, secretary of the interior Fred Seaton, were recommended last April by Republican
members of the tariff commission.
The government has been torn
•between a desire to help the
mining industry in the West and
a desire not to offend countries
such as Canada, Peru, Mexico
and others who export large
amounts of lead and zinc here,
Major metals prices:
Copper—2614 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign 26%. cents, nominal, New York.
Lead—11 cents a pound,. New
York; 10.8 cents, St. Louis.
Zinc—10 cents a pound, east St.
Louis; 1014 cents< New York.
Aluminum—26.8 cents a pound
ingots, shipping point (freight
allowed). Pigs 24.7 cents.
Nickel—74 cents a pound, electrolytic cathodes, Port Colborne.
Ont;, U.S. duty included.
Silver—88% cents an ounce,
New York; 76% pence, London.
Tin—86V4 cents a pound, New
York.
FUNERAL NOTICE
POLOVNIKOFF - Funeral services for the late John Polovnikoff
of Slocan Park will be held Tuesday,at 1:30 p.m. from the family
residence. Interment will be in the
Slocan Park Community Cemetery.
Thompson Funeral Service.
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.. OTARION LISTENER  OF  BRITISH  COLUMBIA
Markets Score Strongest
Advance In Recent Years
By ROY ANDREWS ,
Canadian Press Staff Writer
Canadian stock markets last
week burned up the fuel fed them
by Wall Street as 'they scored one
of their strongest advances in recent months.
With industrials leading the
way, the Canadian markets
started the rise slowly Monday
and shot ahead Tuesday in one
of the best single-session gains of
the year.
Some profit-taking was responsible for losses during the next
two sessions but by Friday the
markets were on the rise again.
Behind the advance was the
rally recorded on the New York
market .where the industrial average broke through to a record
high early in the week and then
set new-marks almost every day
thereafter.
Coppers helped swing the mining lists higher as the world market-price increased in Canada,
•United States and Belgium. International Nickel Company of Canada Ltd. announced two small increases during the week in their
copper prices.
The industrial index at Toronto
touched a 1958 high at the close
Monday, and before the week was
over it had broken and reset the
mark seven times. It gained 4.40
Tuesday.
COPPERS ACTIVE
The base metal index on-the
Toronto market also pushed
through to a 1958 high as coppers sparked an advance. Western oils tried to follow the rest
of the sections but were met by
profit-taking several times and in
the five sessions they showed
little change on their index.
Individual price changes
ranged to nearly $5 and most of
these were gains at Toronto.
Interest in the low-priced spec-
HAIGH
TRU-ART
Be«"ity Solon
Phone W
576 Baker St.
Have The Job Done Right
WIC GRAVEC
™        LIMITED        W
PHONE 815
MASTER PLUMBER
ulatiVe mines was down from recent weeks and only one stock-
New Mylamaque—had a volume
of more than 1,000,000 shares.
New Mylamaque gained eight
cents at 63 cents.
Western oils had a few big
changes.  (
Index changes at Toronto: Industrials up 8.11 to 487.14; golds
up .19 to 83.54; base metals up
3.50 to 168.42; western oils up .66
to 137.56. Of 972 issues traded, 386
advanced, 324 declined and 262
were unchanged.
Index changes at Montreal:
Banks up .28 to 51.55; utilities off
.1 to 148; industrials up 2.4 to
284.1; combined up 1.6 to 238.8;
papers new up 2.5 to 421.7;
papers old up 16.51 to 1297.72;
golds off .76 to 73.38.
Hungary Plans
First Election
BUDAPEST (Rehters) - - Hungarians will in Ijlovember have
their first elections since the
Communists took, control of the.
country 10 years' ago, informed
sources said here Saturday.
The elections t originally were
scheduled for Tflay of 1957, but
were called off in the aftermath
of the Hungarian uprising.
Observers said it is likely the
voters will be presented with an
approved list of candidates and
that Uttle or no change will occur
in government or parliament.
The Hungarian Socialist Workers (Communist) party is the
only one in existence in Hungary.
Some-, sources here, however,
said there may be a move to increase the number of Roman
Catholic priests who have parliamentary seats. At present there
are three—all excommunicated
by the Vatican for political activities.
CHILDREN   LEFT   ORPHANS
PETERSVILLE, N.B. (CP)-A
mother and father were killed and
their four young children and the
driver of the second car injured
in a head-on collision here Friday
night. RCMP were unable to notify next-of-kin in Saint John and
declined to release names of the
victims. The children were not
seriously hurt.
Sgt. Preston
Of TV Fame
Mas New Job
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Sergeant
Preston of the Yukon has a new
outfit to go with his scarlet jacket
-^a grey flannel suit. -
"Sgt. Preston, the handsome,
stalwart peace officer of the
North, is Richard Simmons. This
week he was signed for another
26 TV shows in the series and
also as executive of the Jack
Wrather organization.
The new setup came about
when Dick's contract was up for
renewal. TV tycoon Wrather took
into , account the actor's many
trips' to win friends' for the show
and its sponsor.
So besides keeping the sourdoughs in line, Dick will serve
as liaison between the Wrather
company and the new stations
and sponsors of the show, which
now is going into syndication. He
also hopes to get into the production eiid. i
NONE OF IT, NEW
"This is just an extension of
the work I used to do at MGM,"
he said. "I was signed as an
actor, but I ended up emceeing
all the studio's premieres, greeting exhibitors, recording 14 radio
shows a week, etc."
So begins a new phase of a
career that has had its ups and
downs. "But I can't complain,"
he said, "it has been a good living."
HO started in Hollywood in 1940,
when he was spotted in a Palm
Springs rodeo. Louis B. Mayer
had the Hardy, Kildare and
Maisie, series going and envisaged
an action series for Dick. But it
never came about.'
" "Instead, they put me into
drawing room parts," he recalled.
"I wore out nine tuxedos."
QUIT STUDIO IN '52
Dick finally left the studio in
1952, when the freeze was   on.
Favor Giving Up H-Bomb ...
British Liberals Would Pool
Defence Resources Wilh U.S.
TORQUAY, England (Reuters)
Britain should pool her defence
resources with the United States
and give up theH-bomb, Liberal
party leader Joseph Grimond said
Saturday.. .   -.   .   •.-'  -.
By resigning as, a nuclear
power, Britain then could give
"genuine help and advice"- to
Asia and Africa, Grimond said in
his windup address to the party's
annual conference here..- ?_■ '.." -
Grimond, one of the five Liberal members of the 630-member
House of Commons, said Britain's
foreign policy is "a prolonged and
unmitigated disaster."
i It-was out of date and quite inadequate in the present day,..he
said. The Russians, Arabs, Chinese, Africans and Indians all had
an aim but Britain had none.
He called oh the government to
abandon "at once" many of the
outposts of military power "which
we strain our efforts to: maintain."
If Britain gave up her H-bomb,
he argued, she then could help
Asia and Africa improve their
standard of,living and political
management'.
"We should infiltrate argument,
liberal reason and ideas into the
neutral world," he said. "Tq at-
temot to outlaw subversions While
clinging ■ to massive armaments
just shows how far behind; our
government is. ' '.
SHOOT, HECTOR, BULLY
"To believe that you can shoot,
hector or bully smaller nations
today, as we have tried tp do in
Iceland, is like, a 19th century
landlord clinging .to the belief
that he can forever oppress his
tenantry:"     I.S
When the Liberal chief finished
speaking delegates stood and
cheered him for a fiill two minutes,. •
Earlier, the conference had
urged the government to support
the establishment of an international United Nations police force.
An emergency resolution condemning recent racial disturbances in Notting Hill,' West London, and Nottingham was. carried
by an overwhelming majority.
The resolution totally rejected
color digenation and restriction of immigration declaring the
latter an expedient which would
destroy the British Commonwealth's liberal foundation.
Russ Doctor Says Vodka
And Caviar Shorten Life
By ALTON BLAKESLEE
AP SCIENCE WRITER
Vodka and caviar—two famous
Russian items-tan cut years off
your life, says a Soviet physician.
So can smoking, especially cigars, Dr. Ivan Vasilevich Strelchuk told me in an interview in
Moscow.
"People who smoke and drink
age faster,' and they don't live as
long as those who don't," he says.
Too much fatty1 foods, "such its
butter" and caviar," clog up -arteries with cholesterol and shorten
life, he believes.
But he has secret pills which
he has very high hopes are overcoming or preventing the deadly
artery disease.     ',. < '.
PAVLOVIAN IDEA
Dr. Strelchuk is assistant director of the Institute of Higher
Nervous Activity. This institute is
dedicated to the "Pavlovian idea
that conditioned reflexes or training are the key to mysteries of
human learning and human behavior.
Dr. Strelchuk, an authority ott
alcholoism and drug addiction,
says he now is studying causes of
prematiire aging.
"Smoking shortens life, but I
don't know by just how much,"
he says. "My studies indicate
that cigars are especially bad.
Smokers are 10 times, more likely
to get cancer of the lung than
non-smoksrs."
(This statistic is most interesting, even though Dr. Strelchuk is
not a cancer specialist. It is the
first comparison of smokers and
non-smokers in the Soviet Union
that I have heard of. It jibes with
some U, S. and' British smoking
studies.
Fortunately, TV was getting into
full swing, and he started getting good roles in home - screen
dramas. He was doing well in TV
and occasional films when Sgt.
Preston came along to monopolize his time.
"It's aimed at a special audience'— the youngsters," Dick
said, "but strangely enough, we
have developed an amazing following of adults, too."
■ Now he's out to track down
even more fans, and he'll do his
work behind a gun and a desk
as well.
(At a cancer congress in London in July, Dr. Alexander Ra-
kov, a Soviet cancer expert, said
only that lung cancer was not so
serious in Russia as in other
countries. Smoking plays a part
in lung cancer, he said, but is
not the main cause.)
"Alcholic drinks make a person
age faster, and affect the nervous
system," Dr. Strelchuk continued.
"It is necessary tostruggle
against smoking and alcohol.
People who drink and smoke
have less defensive force against
various sicknesses."
He says his estimates are based
upon many years' study of some
15,000 persons in and out of
clinics.   .   ■• '•'.'''-
From a locked cabinet, Dr.
Strelchuk produced a bottle of
little brown pills that smelled a
bit like chocolate.
SPECIAL MEDICINE
He said they are a special medicine to prevent or overcome
arteriosclerosis, the process of
fattening and narrowing inside
arteries, which is blamed as the
Underlying mechanism in heart
attacks.
"It is from a plant grown in
the Caucasus," he says, but he
will not name the plant yet.
The medicine worked well in
animals, and humans are taking
it now with promising results, he
says.
"The pills reduce the amount of
cholesterol (a fat - like material
found in many foods) in the
blood, they bring blood pressure
down toward normal, and improve the blood system."
His description makes the mystery medicine sound Uke other
plant extracts being tested elsewhere, which are credited with
reducing the amount of cholesterol in the bloodstream.
EXCHANGE  CHARGES
PANMUNJOM, Korea <AP)-
The North Korean Communists
today accused the UN command
of planting a dead body in the
demilitarized zone to trump up an
incident. The UN command
charged he was a Communist
agent. The body was found last
Saturday near Chorwon, about 50
miles northeast of Seoul. The man
was killed by a mine.
Time
for
Topcoats
With- cooler weather in
the air, it's time to be
looking for warmer
clothes see our
• TWEEDS
• LHASAS
• GABS
• AUSTRIAN
LODENS
We'll be glad to put one
oway for you.
EMORY'S
LTD.     ^
"THE MAN'S STORE"
A
Young Girl
Cleared
Of Slaying
BUFFALO, N;Y. (AP)-A missing girl was returned to Buffalo
from Toronto early Saturday and
immediately cleared of any connection with the slaying of Fred
and Frank Aquino.
Betty Ann Miklos, 18, of Lackawanna, N.Y., who disappeared
Aug. 24, had been sought by police on the basis of reports she
knew the Aquinos. Police had expressed fears for her life.
But police said she denied any
knowledge of the Aquinos or of
any of the associates of the two
brothers.
• Betty Ann was found in a Tor--
onto restaurant after Toronto police informed authorities here
that she had been seen there.
She was held by police on a
warrant obtained last month by
her mother, Mrs. Angeline Miklos Gergely, who accused her of
being an ungovernable child. Police said she had run away from
home.
The two Aquinos were slain
gangster-style. Frank, 28, was
found beaten and shot to death
last Saturday in the front seat of
an automobile in Lackawanna.
Fred, 25, was discovered Wednesday night in a field in Tona-
wanda. He apparently died from
strangulation, but his head and
shoulders were then bathed with
sulphuric acid, Whalen said.
BEER TO FLOW
MUNICH, Germany (Reuters I
Munich today plunged into 15
foaming days of an annual beer-
drinking marathon called the
Oktoberfest. An estimated 4,500,-
000 visitors are expected to attend the 125th Oktoberfest, whir*
theoretically celebrates a good
crop. The feasting and drinking
started on a 300-acre meadow
after the traditional 12 cannon
shots and ritual broaching of the
first cask by the lord mayor.
10% OFF
ALL LUGGAGE
We Have a
Smart Assortment  of
OVERNIGHT BAGS,
TRAIN  CASES,  HAT   CASES,
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HOME
IMPROVEMENT
LOAN
We, of course, wanted to fix ourselves
a recreation room, but there's all manner of fhingt
you can do with a Home Improvement Loan.
You can build a garage, for example, paint
pour house, or landscape your lot.
Home Improvement Loam, from Imperial
Bank of Canada, are made available
to homeowners who wish to make additions
or improvements to their property, but havent
ready cash to go ahead. The interest rate
is low, and convenient monthly payments
ean be arranged. See the manage' at any
brarljfi of Imperial Bank about
your xlome Improvement Loan.
IMPERIAL
_BANK
