 TEMPERATURES
Nelson   40 51
Toronto   40 60
Calgary ......:...:.......:..... 35 71
Pcnticton   42 57
Vancouver  54 59
Whitehorse  47 54
Spokane  51 4
om
$m
FORECAST
Cloudy with a few showers.
Clearing this evening. Little
change in temperature, winds
light. Low-high at Cranbrook 35
and 55; Crescent Valley 40 and
58. Saturday: Sunny.
Published at Nelson, government, financial trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area
Vol. 63
NELSON, B. C, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 9, 1964
10 Cents
No. 143
Defence Department To Come Under Scrutiny
Money Not the Problem,
Martin Tells Hospitals
Health Minister Says Gov't
Waiting tor Completion of Survey
VICTORIA (CP) — Health Minister Eric Martin
said Thursday it is "strictly-untrue" there is a shortage
of hospital beds here because the provincial government
is with-holding money.
"Money is not the problem," he said.
Mr. Martin's comment followed a complaint Wednesday by officials of the city's two major hospitals,
Royal Jubilee and St. Joseph's, they have had to close
down 125 beds at a time when 1,200 are on the hospital
waiting lists .
They blamed a shortage of nurses and operating
funds and laid responsibility at the door of Mr. Martin
and the B.C. Hospital Insur
ance Service.
"For a doctor or anyone else
to say we're withholding money
for beds is strictly untrue," said
Mr. Martin.
He said there had been a fall-
off in the number of patient days
in the hospitals this year because
of other factors.
"There were fewer beds available because of renovations under way at the hospitals and be-
Bandits Get
$18,000 From
Coast Bank
VANCOUVER (CP) - Two
men grabbed more than $18,000
in an' armed bank holdup here
Thursday.
Police said their getaway car
linked them with a Moose Jaw
service station robbery Sept. 28.
Descriptions of the suspects
in the prairie holdup were broadcast to patrolmen already on the
lookout for a late-model white
luxury car bearing Alberta licence plates.
The bank holdup came just after closing time at a Bank of
Montreal branch in south-central
Vancouver. Armed with three
revolvers, the men somehow
gained entrance, rifled all cash
drawers, and made thier way
into the vault.
In the Moose Jaw incident, attendant Ray Burnett was forced
into a car by two men, ordered
to drive a mile from his service
station, and let go. The men escaped with $206 in a car that
matched the description of the
car used here Thursday.
Home, Hogg Get
Police Escort
LONDON (CP) - Police had
to escort Prime Minister Sir Alec
Douglas-Home from a political
rally in Brimingham Thursday
night after he was shouted down
by noisy hecklers.
"After this exhibition here,"
the prime minister said, "I
doubt whether people who depend on this kind of support are
fit to govern Britain."
Science Minister Quintin Hogg
got even rougher tratment. His
car was mobbed by a jeering
crowd in London and police had
to clear a path for him.
cause some beds could no longer
be used. They have been found
obsolete," he said.
Mr. Martin said a study of hospital problems was started by
local hospital authorities at his
suggestion last June, and that
he is expecting a report on the
situation by the end of this
month.
The hospital officials said 105
beds in Royal Jubilee haven't
been used for more than a year
and 20 beds at St. Joseph's have
been out of use since mid-summer.
A Royal Jubilee spokesman
said the beds are empty because
of a lack of nurses even though
the. BCHIS maintains there are
32 too many graduate nurses at
the hospital at present.
"The government is withholding approval for using the extra
beds until the hospital survey is
complete," said Mr. Martin.
Hold Line
On Fees,
Students Urge
SAANISH (CP' - The student
council at the University of Victoria has asked the board of governors to hold the line on tuition
fees in the 1965-66 academic year.
An alma mater society brief,
based on a student survey conducted by questionaire and representing 20 per cent of the student enrolment last year, shows
24.9 per cent of students held part
time jobs through the university
year.
The survey was made after the
board of governors announced
earlier this year that fees would
be increased $50 to $402.
No announcement has yet been
made of a possible increase in
next year's fees.
It also said 11 per cent of the
students must interrupt studies
for financial reasons.
Summer employment was listed by 58.3 per cent of students as
their most important source of
income, 13.4 per cent had no
summer job during the 1963 season and 26.5 per cent only had
work for part of the summer.
The average summer earnings
were $595.40, compared to the
average spending per student
each academic year of $1,142.
25 Return
To Embassies
LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters) -
Twenty-five Egyptians and five
Algerians left here by boat for
Brazaville across the Congo
River Thursday night after the
Congolese ended a "lock-up" of
their embassies.
President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic
was reported to have made the
ending of the "siege" of the two
embassies a condition for freeing
Congolese Premier Moise Tshom-
be from virtual imprisonment in
the Aruba Palace near Cairo.
Cairo airport sources said earlier the Leopoldville government
had asked Egyptian officials for
permission to land a special
plane there. There was speculation Tshombe, barred from the
Cairo conference of non-aligned
nations, may leave aboard the
special plane.
PARKS BEING
INVADED FOR
"EASY MONEY"
VANCOUVER (CP)- Naturalist and author Roderick Haig-
Brown charged Thursday that
the B.C. government is going to
permit logging and mining in
provincial parks simply to make
some more easy money.
He told the annual convention
of the B.C. Federation of Labor
that British Columbians can ex-
pext further legislation which
will favor industry and not the
provincial parks.
Mr. Haig-Brown said B.C.'s
Class "A" parks should not be
sacrificed to get stumpage and
mineral royalties.
"We need to be considering
how to protect and manage and
develop these areas, not wondering how we can keep the government from ripping the guts out
of them for a few quick dollars."
LOOK AIIKES--former President Eisenhower stands beside a
bronze bust ot himself at Its unveiling at Columbia University in New York. The bust depicts Eisenhower as he appeared when he was president ot Columbia.
Nuclear Deterrent
Main Election Issue
By DOUG MARSHALL
LONDON (CP)-The British
election enters its countdown
stage—six days to zero—with
Conservative leaders concentrating more and more on
the nuclear deterrent issue.
A central theme of almost all
Prime .Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home's recent speeches is
that Labor's defence plans will
betray Britain by stripping her
of her independent deterrent.
Other Tory leaders also hammered away at this point, despite the evidence most voters
are far more concerned with
the price of houses or.the condition of schools than they are
with foreign affairs.
But Douglas • Home's argument, observers believe, carries a powerful emotional punch
to it when he claims Labor is
taking "a completely unreal
view" of world politics.
Voters who couldn't care less
about the complex question of
whether Britain should join the
NATO mixed-ban force still react strongly to suggestions that
British influence and power in
the world might be further diminished.
Meanwhile there are signs
that the Labor party machine
illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllll
Escaped Python
Didn't Make Her Talk
LONDON (Reuters) — Police Thursday hunted a seven-foot
python whic hescaped Wednesday night from the home of a
London woman doctor — but this was only part of the trouble.
They had the utmost difficulty getting the facts from the
python's keeper. On Wednesdays 54-year-old Mrs. Rachel Pin-
ney never speaks to anyone.
Dr. Pinney, daughter of a British Army general, is a pacifist. Four years ago she took a vow never to speak on Wednesdays, as. a. protest against Britain's possession of nuclear weapons.
Only in emergencies will she break the pledge, and a lost
python, she decided, was not an emergency.
So the policemen's questions Wednesday night were answered with an apologetic smile, graphic gestures and a scribbled
note from the doctor.
Police Thursday described the non-poisonous python as dangerous, adding: "Although he Is a crushing snake, a bite could
prove serious."
Dr. Pinney had been looking after the snake for a friend.
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Olympic Games Hit by Politics
TOKYO (CP) - International
political bickering which seems
to hover over the Olympics
every four years like the plague
broke out again Thursday, just
two days before the 1964 Games
open in Tokyo, when North
Korea withdrew its entire team
and Indonesia threatened to follow suit.
While rain fell most of the
day from sullen skies and more
was predicted for today, the
North Koreans announced they
were pulling out their 144-mem-
ber delegation from the first
Olympics ever held in Asia because of a row over last year's
Games in the New Emerging
Forces held in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital.
International sports federations outlawed Ganefo because
competitors from Israel and
Nationalist China were refused
visas to Indonesia for the Asian
Games there the previous year.
The International Olympic
Committee and other world athletic bodies subsequently barred
all who competed in track and
field and swimming at Jakarta
from the Olympics.
REAFFIRM DECISION
Thursday, the international
bodies meeting in Tokyo reaffirmed that decision. North
Korea withdrew after calling
the sanctions against Ganefo
"improper."
Avery Brundage of the United
States, newly re-elected IOC
president, said only six track
and field athletes and four
swimmers from North Korea
were barred from the Olympics, but they included Sin Kim
Dan, the world's fastest woman
runner over 400 and 800 metres.
It seemed certain that Indonesia would withdraw unless
there is a last-minute change
of heart by the International
Amateur Athletic Federation,
and the International Swimming
Federation;
Indonesian officials claimed
the support of Russia, the
United Arab Republic and some
Asian countries in their bid to
get the ban lifted. Twenty Indonesians have been barred from
the Olympics for competing in
Ganefo. Nine of them — five
track and field and four swimmers—are in Tokyo with the
134-member Indonesian team.
DOUBT RUSSIAN QUIT
But the Indonesian officials
admitted it is doubtful whether
Russia would walk out of the
Olympics over Indonesia's
plight and give up the many
medals it is expected to win.
Meanwhile, the rainy weather
had hampered outdoor training.
But the Canadian swimming
team were in high spirits and
the Canadian basketballers
found the 4,200-seat gym where
the hoop competition will be
held "a real, fine place to
play."
The Canadians, who qualified
for the Olympic tournament by
finishing third in a pre-Olympic
tournament in Yokohama, drew
Russia as their first opponent
in the Olympic preliminaries
starting Sunday. The Canadians
play in Group A with Russia,
Italy, Poland, Hungary, Puerto
Rico, Mexico and Japan.
The Canadian track and field
team got in some practice but
by mid-afternoon Thursday the
training track was soaked,
making it dangerous for sprinters.
U.S. military authorities said
the rain might continue for 10
days but the Tokyo meteorological bureau said the weather
would be good by Saturday.
is changing directions for the final push.
Up until now Labor Leader
Harold Wilson has spent most
of his time shooting holes in the
Tory prosperity claims, stressing that an economic crisis
looms.
Next week he will switch to
what Labor spokesmen call the
"creative phase"—the program
the socialists have prepared to
meet the challenge of the scientific revolution.
Shift Bosses
Quit at
BRITANNIA BEACH, B.C.
(CP' — Fourteen shift bosses at
the strikebound copper mine here
quit their jobs Thursday, said B.
B. Greenlee, general manager of
the Anaconda Company (Canada) Limited.
Mr. Greenlee said the men left
their jobs in a dispute over removal of equipment from inside
the mine which is being closed
by Anaconda because of failure
to settle a strike by 350 employees.
Only one shift boss stayed on
the job along with five foremen
who were not involved in the dispute.
Mr. Greenlee said the supervisory staff members were asked to remove mine cars, locomotives, battery charging equipment and other underground
equipment in preparation for
closing the mine.
"When they refused, they were
told there was nothing else for
them to do and either they go to
work or resign."
He said the bosses, none of
them union members, chose to
quit. .
The striking International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter
Workers (Ind) was asked Monday to provide men to remove
the machinery, but the union
told the company there would
have to be a shutdown contract.
Mr. Greenlee said he took this
to mean the union refused and,
as a result, supervisory personnel were asked to do the work.
a;....v...g-
Hunter's
Body Found
PRINCE GEORGE (CP) -
The body of missing hunter Rudy
Muschket has been found at the
foot of a cliff on Dome Mountain, about 80 miles east of here,
The body was discovered early
Wednesday and it took searchers until Thursday afternoon to
hike down from the mountain of
perpetual snow to break news of
the discovery.
An RCMP constable and another searcher stayed at the
scene, believed to be about 4000
feet up the 6000-foot mountain.
Staff Sgt. Ed Rosbert said a
helicopter will be sent into the
area today.
Auto Strike
Deadline
Oct. 15
DETROIT (AP) - The threat
of a new strike loomed over the
U.S. auto industry Thursday as
negotiators continued efforts to
settle local plant demands and
end a U.S.-wide walkout against
General Motors in its 16th day.
Fewer than 20 GM settlements
were reported at some 130 bargaining units around the country.
National contract bargaining
was broken off Wednesday between the United Auto Workers
and American Motors Corporation, when the talks bogged down
in disagreement over retaining
a unique profit sharing provision.
Douglas Fraser, who heads the
UAW negotiation team, said that
there is still time to reach a settlement before the AMC contract expires at midnight Oct.
15, but if no agreement is reached by that time, "there will be a
strike."
Winter Works
Policy Stands
-Bennett
VICTORIA (OP) - The B.C.
government will not review its
new winter works policy, Premier W. A. C. Bennett indicated
Thursday.
"I think it is a definite policy,"
Mr. Bennett said.   	
The: policy, announced last
summer, is that the province will
only pay winter works aid to
municipalities who hire workmen who have been on welfare
for three months.
Municipalities protested that
their winter works programs
would be seriously reduced by
the policy, and municipal affairs
minister Dan Campbell last
month promised the Union of
B.C. Municipalities he would
submit its request for a change
to the cabinet.
Mr. Bennett said the policy
was designed to get able bodied
unemployed people "back into
the bloodstream."
PGE in Red
This Year
VICTORIA (CP) - The Pacific
Great Eastern Railway will lose
money this year but other provincial government revenues
will be bigger than ever, Premier Bennett said Thursday.
He had earlier predicted the
railway would make $500,000 profit.
"It's because of the rain," he
said. "The rain that has done so
much good for our forests has interfered with the moving of logs
and cut down traffic."
The railway depends on the
shippih gof lumber from north-
central B.C. to North Vancouver
for a large part of its revenue.
Mr. Bennett said he could not
predict the size of the deficit at
this time, *"but I want to report
this to the public as early as
possible because I gave the impression there would be a profit," he said.
Last year the railway made
its first-ever over-all profit of
$7,014.
The premier said the PGE is
the only part of B.C.'s economy
that is not. moving ahead this
year, but he predicted the future
of the PGE will be "brighter
than ever."
MERCY FLIGHT
VANCOUVER (CP)-Joe Par-
nouse, 16, of Kamloops, was in
fair condition in hospital Thursday night suffering from undisclosed injuries. ;  .
The youth was flown to hospital here from Kamloops by the
RCAF.
DOLLAR UP
NEW YORK (CP) - Canadian
dollar up 1-64 at 92 61-64 in
terms of U.S. funds. Week ago
92 63-64. Pound sterling down
1.32 at 32.78 21-64.
Commons Committee
Feels "Something Wrong,"
Plans To Ferret It Out
MAYOR BEATS
CORRUPTION
CHARGE
SUDBURY (CP) -Mr. Justice
Leo Landreville of the Ontario
Supreme Court, former mayor of
Sudbury, was cleared Thursday
of charges of municipal corruption in a judgment by Magistrate
Albert Marck.
The magistrate discharged Mr.
Justice Landreville at the end of
a preliminary hearing of charges
that began Sept. 29, declining to
send him to trial in a higher
court.
Mr. Justice Landreville, mayor
of Sudbury from 1955 until late
1956, was charged with accepting shares of Northern Ontario
Natural Gas as a consideration
for getting NONG franchise for
Sudbury through city council
when he was mayor and with
agreeing to accept NONG shares
for signing the agreement.
Evidence at the hearing was
that Mr. Justice Landreville
made a profit of $117,000 on the
sale of NONG shares a year, after he resigned as mayor to become a Supreme Court justice.
"In my opinion a properly
charged jury could not find the
accused guilty and I cannot find
sufficient evidence to place him
on trial," the magistrate said. "I
discharge the accused on all
counts." . ■;,-■
Commented the Supreme Court
justice afterwards:
"This strengthens my faith in
justice.".
GM Lays Off
500 Workers
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
General Motors of Canada laid
off 500 more hourly-rated workers at its Oshawa plant Thursday bringing the total number to
about 8,500 since the United
Auto Workers walked off their
jobs in GM plants in the United
States two weeks ago.
The plant, where there were
13,500 working when layoffs started, lacks parts normally made in
the U.S.
McKinnon Industries Limited
in St. Catharines announced
Thursday that 1,450 hourly-rated employees will be laid off
there next week because of a production cut-back resulting from
the U.S. strike.
This would bring total layoffs
at McKinnon's two plants to
1,750. At peak employment 6,100
workers are involved in production of engines and components
at McKinnon, most of which go
to the Oshawa plant.
Human Factor
Being Ignored,
Labor
Says
VANCOUVER (CP) - Ma-
chines are moving too fast and
are endangering human life, the
B.C. Federation of Labor was
told Thursday.
"The working men and women
of B.C. are embroiled now in a
productivity race which has
largely discarded human values
with consequent damage to life,"
said the Federation's safety and
compensation report.
The report, endorsed Thursday
by the union convention, urged
health minister Eric Martin to
gather union, industry and workmen's compensation board representatives together to study the
effects of automation and productivity speedups on health and
safety of workers.
It also called for a federal investigation of safety regulations
in activities under federal jurisdiction.
The report said speed levels at
which machines operate should
be reduced, new workers should
receive special safety training,
re-training programs should follow technological changes, and
union, management and government responsibilities in accident
prevention should be clearly defined.
By DAVE MclNTOSH ...
OTTAWA (CP) — The 24-member Commonside-
fence committee, which has become about as non-partisan as politicians can get, is planning the most searching
investigation ever undertaken into the defence production department. .■•■--
Committee members said privately Thursday, that
there is something wrong in the department and they intend to find out what it is.
Specifically, they want to find
out, for instance, why it took
10 years to produce prototypes
of the Bobcat armored troop
carrier. The vehicle was finally
scrapped because it was far behind similar developments in
other NATO countries and twice
as expansive.
The committee also intends
to investigate all circumstances
surrounding the construction of
the Provider, the navy's new
supply ship.
Defence Production Minister
Drury informed the Commons
July 6 that after the navy ac-
Parliament
Thursday
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
During debate of trade department estimates, Alvin Hamilton
(PC — Qu'Appelle) called for
higher prices in Canada on tropical products to aid underdeveloped countries.
Reid Scott'(NDP — Toronto
Danforth) sought formation of
a new ministry of consumer affairs to protect and speaf for
consumers. ,-.':::■
Eldoa-JWwliam* (PC — Bow
River), sought lower transportation costs for coal.
The Creditiste and NDP blockade against a routine private bill
sought by the Bell Telephone
Company continued as the measure to add directors to the company's board was talked out for
another week.
cepted the ship from the builder.
Davie Shipbuilding Company of
Lauzon, Que.,* defects appeared
in some of the vessel's winch
pumps and motors.    " iVr
Mr. Drury also revealed that
the contract price .was..hot',
agreed upon by the'builder until the ship was accepted by the'
navy. This price was. $16,382,-
904. The initial tender was $11,-
040,960 but certain extras were
permitted.
One committee member said
the Provider has a vibration
problem, something which
should never have happened
after all the years of. Canadian
experience in building hulls and
propellers for ships.
Presentation of defence appropriations to the Commons,
probably? next week, will give
the committee an opportunity
to get down to work again.
The committee expects to
call Defence-Minister Hellyer
for an Up-to-date accounting ot
moves toward armed forces integration and implementation
of the white paper on defence
published in March.
It will also study the concentration of the four main defence
industries — aircraft, electronics, instruments and ships—in
the Montreal and southern Ontario regions.
Another item the committee
wants to look at: why the. number' of. personnel in the defence
production departnjej]tJ"». increased to 1,829 from 1,476 between 1960 and 1964 while de-
fen c e equipment purchases
have been falling to some $200,-
000,000 from $300,000,000 a year.
Quebec Polishes Up
For Her Majesty
QUEBEC (GP)-Although se-
curity measures already are being put into effect,-this old city
is all aflutter as the weekend
visit of Queen Elizabeth -and
Prince Philip approaches.,
Gardeners are primping
shrubbery, trees and lawns
about the Legislature Building.
New carpets and fresh varnish
have appeared in the legislative
council chamber, where the
Queen will speak Saturday.
Bois des Coulognes, residence
of Lieutenant - Governor Paul
Comtois, is getting a face-lifting. The Queen and the Prince
will lunch there Saturday.
Meanwhile, Quebec Provincial
Police began Thursday stopping
cars at all entrances to the city,
checking closely any that appeared suspicious and making
drivers identify themselves
through driving permits and
registration licences.
Passengers arriving at railroad stations or airports were
not checked except that police
kept watch for any known separatists or terrorists. No arrests had been made up to early
Thursday night.
About 800 police and soldiers
will surround the legislature
building Saturday.
When the royal yacht Britannia arrives at Wolfe's Cove
Saturday, frogmen will keep an
eye on its hull.
Police have warned that demonstrations will not be tolerated. At the same: time nothing
more serious than possible scuf- .
ties is expected.
Crisp, clear weather is expected to enhance the city's
October beauty during the
weekend. The weather office
forecasts bright. i skies,; with
night temperatures below freezing and daytime temperatures
in the 40s. .
Rousing cheers and volleys of
rifle fire echo from la Citadelle
as soldiers of the Royal 22nd
Regiment practise welcoming
their colohel-in-chief. She will
dedicate; a •.tflertjorial to members of the regiment who have
fallen in battle in the last 20
years.
The towering Chateau Fron-
tenac, where.270 guests- have
been invited to a state dinner
for the Queen Saturday night, is
crawling with reporters, photographers and television .technicians making it a home base
for the royal visit.
The yellow barriers' that, will
hold back the crowds as the
royal party moves across the
Plains of Abraham already are
in place, and: four .RCMP and
two Quebec Provincial Police,
all in plainclothes, .are. patrolling the plains with powerful
police dogs on short leashes.
And iri This Corner ♦; .
PAIGNTON, England (AP) — Mrs. Vlvienna Proctor knew
what to do when faced with a gnu. She called the we.
"Have you lost a gnu?" she asked. "Because there's one
right here in my back garden."
The gnu, aged two, was absent without.leave from the zoo.
The chap at the zoo said: "Leave it alone. It may be
dangerous."     -	
The gnu, a large African antelope prized by compilers of
crossword puzzles, can have a savage temper,
The men came from the zoo and caught the gnu with a laiso.
CINCINNATI (AP) — Love was a shattering experience
for 14-year-old William Bluner.
The youth knocked out a plate glass window Wednesday
night and triggered a burglar alarm in a drugstore.
The police arrived, and the youth explained he was only
trying to escape from his 13-year-old girl friend.
"I jumped back and struck the window when she tried to
kiss me," the embarrassed boy said.
 mmm
2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, P.iDAY, OCT. 9, 1964
Celgar Logging Road
Funds Now Available
The money has now been allocated .by the provincial treasury
board for Improvements to the
Celgaf logging road, which will
be taken over by the department
of highways as soon as the work
is completed.
This news was telephoned to
Dun c e
SATURDAY
Coming From
NASHVILLE
Famous Recording Artist
—-—Shorty	
BARNHILL
Singing Waltz of the
Mountains, Beautiful Caro-
linas, Sad Sack, Every
Hour of the Day, Many
Other Favorites.
And Featuring
LOU McCOY
and His Country
Mountain Beys
Including
MARTY WRIGHT
The Flddlln' Fool
9-1 Adm. $1.25
LAYNO
Castlegar newsman Burt Campbell Thursday afternoon by Hon.
P. A. Gaglardi, minister of highways.
The 45-mile-long road is a private logging road from Nakusp
to Galena Bay, where a ferry
connects with Arrowhead.
A detailed survey carried out
on the road earlier this year by
the department estimated that
the basic work in improving the
road would cost in excess of
$300,000. This includes the cost
of the necessary bridge and
grading to cross Halfway Creek
and grade and width improvements. The cost of the bridge and
related work has been estimated
at $150,000.
Mr. Gaglardi has long been
adamant that despite pressures
on him to take over the road, he
would not do so unless he had
the money available "to bring
it up to a safe travel standard."
Students Win
NDTA Award
Joint recipients of the Nelson
District Teachers' Association
Scholarship are Gus Bos of Nel
son and Denis' P. Powers of
Salmo.
This announcement was made
at the first general meeting of
the Nelson District Teachers'
Association Wednesday night
The award of $215 is made an
nually to deserving students pursuing a career in teaching. Both
Mr. Bos and Mr. Powers are
attending the University of Bri
tish Columbia.
Cary Grant 'Audrey Hepburn
'play a gam* of danger and delight..
Tonight Through Sat.—Shows 7:00-9:05
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NELSON, B.C.
Juvenile Held
In Connection
With Lost Pups
RCMP in Princeton Thursday
night arrested a 16-year-old juv
enile in connection with the theft
of five Great Dane pups and a
panel truck, stolen at Nelson
Tuesday.
Earlier Thursday, four of the
pups were found alive near the
Yahk junction, 40 miles south of
Cranbrook.
The fifth dog was found dead
at the roadside, apparently having been struck by a car.
The truck and the dogs vanished when the driver, W. Haege-
dorn of Kaslo, stepped into a
downtown laundromat in Nelson
Tuesday.
Computers'
Use Told
At Castlegar
"Computers and Programming
Language" was the title of an
address given by John Roberts
to members and guests of the
West Kootenay Chapter of the
Certified General Accountants'
Association of B.C. in Castlegar.
This was the first of a series
of four such sessions scheduled
by the Certified General Accountants, designed to acquaint members of the profession with advances made in the field of electronic computers in the last
10 years.
Mr. Roberts a research engineer with Cominco's research
and computer group, described
the history and development of
analog and digital computers,
and gave several examples of
the speeds with which modern
computers operate.
After sketching in the component parts of a computer installation and describing the function
of each, Mr. Roberts explained
how the "memory" of a computer works, and the methods used
to feed information into a computer and to instruct the machine
to carry out the required calculations.
The meeting was attended by
30 members and students of the
CGA association and guests, including three from Nakusp, six
from Grand Forks, one from
Cranbrook and the remainder
from Trail, Nelson and Castlegar. The next meeting in November will deal with computer applications in management problems.
STARLIGHT
DRIVE-IN
Tonight - Saturday
and Sunday Only
Tune 8 p.m.
"IF A MAN
ANSWERS"
(Color)
Sandra Dee, Bobby Darrla,
John Lind. Mlchellne Presle
INDUCTION CEREMONY was an impresaive
part of the first general meeting this week of the Nelson District Teachers' Association in which new colleagues were formally welcomed to membership in
the British Columbia Teachers' Federation. The in
ductees were, standing left to right, G, Walmsley, J.
H. Morris, S. R. Fulbrook, MiBS P. A. Morey, Miss B. J.
Ward, B. Todd, M. Brooke; seated, Miss S, M. Faber,
Miss S. A. Greening, Miss M. H. MacPherson, Mrs. N.
J. Walmsley, Miss D. M, Tanner and Miss S. B. Edgar.
B.C. Hydro To Aid Castlegar
Area in Development Program
CASTLEGAR — The Castlegar village commission Tuesday night was told of the acceptance by Castlegar and Kin-
nair of a B.C. Hydro and
Power Authority's proposal to
share one-half of the $6,400 cost
of the area's development project.
Due to the lack ot agreement
on the choice of a planning
consultant, a special meeting will
be called to complete a selection.
H. L. Keenleyside, B.C. Hydro
chairman, told the commission
in a letter offering to support a
planning program that "we are
aware of the effects of the Columbia Treaty on the Castlegar
area, and of our responsibility to
help your community's adjustment to these effects.
'We have been examining
ways and means of assisting in
your task without infringing on
your autbnomy, and we have
come to the conclusion that this
can perhaps best be done by helping you to establish a community
planning program designed to
suggest how you can most satisfactorily handle not only the
changes arising from the Columbia works, but also the growth
which you can expect in any
event.
OWN CHOICE
"With this in mind we propose
that you ask a planning consultant of your choice to undertake
a first-stage program of studies
covering the following ground:
General land development proposals   covering
areas, staging and control policies.
General street   and  highway
proposals.
couts See
Firemen
In Action
cess to any working data which
may be of value to us.
"Presumably Celgar will also
wish to be assured that it will
receive an appropriate number
of copies of all studies and reports.
"We, for our part, shall CO-
 , .operate fully with your consul
'We would believe that this tant by SUppiymg him with all
Servicing policies and standards .
General school and park plans.
"These should be carried out
for the wider Castlegar-Kinnaird
area, embracing as much territory around the community as
seems appropriate.
Nelson had a spate of false
fire alarms Thursday. The first
alarm was sounded at 10:45 a.m.
from a call box at High and Pine
Street. Children were blamed.
The second false alarm came
at 7:35 p.m. Thursday evening
while about 100 scouts and cubs
were visiting the fire hall.
Fire Chief E. S. Owens said
the boys behaved well when the
alarm sounded. They moved to
one side of the fire hall on instruction, thus leaving ample
space for the firecrew to don
their protective clothing and proceed to the fire.
The second false alarm was
attributed again to children.
The scouts and cubs were the
second group to visit the fire
hall, 75 having attended demonstrations Wednesday night.
Another fire prevention week
feature was visits of the dkana-
gan Helicopters machine to L. V.
Rogers High School, Hume, Trafalgar and Central Schools, and
St. Joseph's school. The helicopter picked up principals of each
school while Chief Owens lectur-
development ed the pupils briefly.
CASTLE Theatre
Castlegar, B.C.
Tonight and Saturday
"JUNGLE CAT"
(Color)
Shows 7:00 and 9:00
AUTO - VUE
DRIVE-IN - Trail, B.C.
Last Time Tonight
Time 7:30 p.m.
"MAN FROM THE
DINER'S CLCB"
Danny Kaye, Martha Hyer
Plus-
"APACHE TERRITbRY"
RUSSIAN
CONCERT
Grand Forks
High School Auditorium
Saturday
Oct. 10 at 8 p.m.
Stanley  Humphries
High School Auditorium
Castlegar, B.C.
Sunday
Oct. 11 at 8 p.m.
Featuring from Vancouver
MARGUERITA and
NADESDA NEKRASSOFF
Piano Accompaniment
NATASHA DOMBSKY
Accordionist
BOB GURICIC
Admission:   $1.00
Street Corners
By The Informer
Why do the 113 information
Operators take the longest time
to answer?. Over the past two
months I have had numerous
occasions to contact 113 and
have been kept waiting an interminable time. It may be that
113 operators are also doubling
as PBX staff. If this is the case
just think what confusion there
would be If a large number of
113 callers telephoned at the
same time.
* • *
Correction on Wednesday's
column regarding school bicycle
riders. The school mentioned
should have read Central and
00t Trafalgar.
* *  *
Strange as it may seem the
Now Is the
Time to
Check and
Stock Up Your
Medicine Chest
at Home or for
Business
Wide Range at
SAMPLE'S
NELSON     .:
PHARMACY   LTD.
"Your Fortress ot Health'
i39 Baker S» Nelson
Phone 352-2313
lines about the Ward Street sidewalk were taken to heart by the
city. The sidewalks are being
torn up now. Unfortunately, 1
Cannot take credit for prodding
council into doing this work. It
just happened to be a coincidence.
.  * *
For m first time in many
eons i was abroad at 7 a.m.
yesterday. Have you noticed how
different the atmosphere is at
that early hour? Things seemed
to have a sharper focus even
though the mist was pretty
thick. SO much for summer.
• • «
A spot fast becoming dangerous is the 300-block on V6r.
non Street. Cars are parked in
a dangerous manner on the right
of way, apparently without
thought for other motorists.
• * *
I   see   Magistrate   William
Evans is continuing his campaign for hither tines tor minor
offences. At I said before, hit
them where it hurta-in the wai-
let. If fines like this have a deterrent effect on offenders, then
It is a worthwhile approach.
• * ♦
Have you ever tried to turn
right onto Vernon from Ward
Street? It the left hand lane it
blocked by a left turning oar
and the comer parking toot is
occupied you have a difficult
time in turning. Why not delete
the corner parking space' It is
a nuisance.
program would cost around $6400
and we are prepared to assume
half of the Cost, about $3200, We
understand that Celgar would be
willing to assume a further 25
per cent of the oost if they are
specifically asked to do so by
you and the village commission
of Klnnaird.
'We hope that under these
circumstances you and the Klnnaird commission would be willing to share the remaining 25
per cent of the cost, amounting
to $800 each.
"If, as a result of these studies,
you and Kinnalrd see fit to adopt
development policies which Justify further work, we are prepared to consider participation
on the same basis in a second-
stage Study in which detailed
plant, zoning and subdivision bylaws would be prepared by your
consultant.
FURTHER AID
"The cost of such studies would
probably be much the same at
the cost of the first-stage studies
We are further prepared to consider contribution on the same
basis to any reviews and revisions which may become necessary in the bourse Ot the next
few years in order to ensure that
the plans are kept up to date
"It will be understood that
under procedure thut proposed,
the consultant It "your' consultant and will report to you and
to Klnnaird. However, in view
Of Our interest in the suggested
studies, we will wish to have
copies of hit reports and related
progress, and alto to have ac-
Chamber Members
Honor Art Morton
A longtime member of the
Chamber of Commerce, Arthur
C. Morton was accorded a vote
of thanks for his long and meritorious service at an executive
meeting Thursday. He was presented with a travelling case.
President H. Farenholtz, In
conveying the thanks of the
Chamber, said, "Art Morton has
done a great deal of work for the
Chamber of Commerce and for
Nelson."
Mr. Morton began his introduction to the architects' profession
through apprenticeship in 1939,
coming to Nelson from Kaslo.
Representing the firm of J. C.
Williams, he aided in the construction of Mount St. Francis
Infirmary and the Kaslo school.
After a tour of duty with the
Royal Engineers during the Second World War, he spent a few
years in Vancouver with the
Moore Dry Kiln Company and
the Commonwealth Construction
Company.
In 1947, he returned to Nelson,
Joining the firm of the late V.'. F.
Williams.
Active in the Nelson Rod and
Gun Club and especially the Junior Firearms program, Mr.
Morton is Immediate past president of the West Kootenay Rod
and Gun Clubs Association and
a former director of the B.C. Fish
and Game Federation.
A group committee member
of the Boy Scouts of St. Paul's-
Trinity United Church, he is
most at home in any sport connected with the outdoors.
Two years ago, he helped organize the trek into Kokanee
Glacier Park, a planned event to
accommodate skilled mountaineers from various parts of Canada and the United States.
Mr. Morton will join the firm
of R. W. Siddall and Associates
In Victoria.
A. C. MORTON
Richard Hudnut
Fashion QUICK
Home Permanent
On Sale
SALE PRICE
$1.99
Regular $2.50
Mayo Pharmacy
Ltd.
Corner Baker and Ward Sts.
Ph. 352-2813 Nelson, B.C.
available information and data,
In addition we are willing to
help you and facilitate your consultant's work by making Our
printing and blueprinting facilities available to him as far as
our work pressure will permit,"
Hydro said.
TV SERVICE
352-3355
VIDEO
ELECTRONICS
CLIP THIS AD
IT'S WORTH 50c
On Each $5 Purchase at
the SKYLARK
RESTAURANT
and LOUNGE
Spokane
Just Across From the
Rldpath
!• Pan Fried Chicken-1
• Choice Steaks f
• Lunches and Dinners   I
EXPO EXHIBITORS
By mid-September 21 foreign
countries, Canada'! 10 provinces
and the city ot Paris had announced they would participate
in the 1967 Montreal world's
fair.
folders Aid
Visitors Here
Folders which provide information tor conventions held In Nel*
son are being distributed by the
convention promotion committee,
a Chamber of Commerce executive meeting v/as told Thursday.
Mrt. R. H. Dill, chairman of
the committee, said the committee had compiled 85 folders tor
a visiting convention. The folder
Contained pertinent local information regarding facilities and
accommodation in Kelson.
A similar brochure would be
compiled for a Canadian Girls
in Training meet in Nelson next
week.
fabled (or discussion at the
next meeting wat a suggestion
by R. _. Nelson that executive
members and committee chair
men be named in the (all instead
of spring to enable chairmen to
organize in time (ot the new
tourist tetton.
It was explained that chairman
art generally named by Jan. 1,
but that latt year's selection had
been delayed.
Roads and bridges matters and
the Centennial project were discussed.
See Ui For
SILENT, EFFICIENT
and
ECONOMICAL
CONTROLLED HEAT
For Every Room
■ t • i
COLEMAN
ELECTRIC
LTD.
LTD.
NOTICE
No Milk
Delivery
MONDAY,
OCT. 12
Please Order Your Extra
Requirements From Your
Milkman on Sat., Oct. JO
Palm Dairies Ltd.
Kootenay Valley Co-Op Dairy
Men's Arlade-fo-Measure
SUIT SALE
LAST CHANCE
TO SAVE
Reg. Value to
79.50.. . . . NOW
Enjoy the Look of Success in a Suit Cut and Tailored
for You ... at a Sale Price.
BUY NOW and SAVE!
fntamfci^CfompHng
INCORPORATED
 Stock Quotations
The Daily News doea not hold Itself responsible In the event
ol an error in the following lists.
Closing  prices supplied  by  Doherty,  Roadhouse  -
McCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.
TORONTO STOCKS
41.25
44.62
12.37
4.20
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi 14.75
Alberta Dist. 3.90
Algoma Steel 73.87
Alta. Gas Trunk 33.75
Aluminum 33.12
Argus 17-50
Argus C Pfd 13.50
Bank of Mont. 68.25
Bank of N.Scotia 77.00
Bathurst Power 25.25
Bell Telephone 59.87
B.A. Oil 35.12
B.C. Forest 33.87
B.C. Packers A 17.25
B.C. Telephone 62.50
Calgary Power 23.87
Can. & D. Suger 25.75
Can. Cement 46.00
Can. Collieries 12.12
Can. Iron 42.37
Can. Breweries 10.25
Can. Canners 15.00
Can. Industries 22.25
Can. Imp. Bank 67.75
Can. Pacific Ry. 52.87
Chemcell 17.62
Col. Cellulose    11.75
C. Mining - S
Cons. Paper
Cons. Gas
Crest. Timber
Dist. Seagrams 65.25
Dom. Stores      22.75
D. Tar - Chem. 22.62
Dom. Textiles 31.37
Eddy Match Co. 47.50
Eddy Paper 20.37
Falconbridge 78.37
Famous Players 21.50
Fanny Farmer 46.00
Ford Motor Co. 66.25
Ford of Canada 178.12
Greyhound 12.87
Gen. Steel Wares 15.25
Goodyear 155.50
Gt. Lakes Power 25.50
Home Oil A 19.62
Home Oil B 19.75
Hudson Bay Co 17.00
Imperial Oil 52,62
Imp. Tobacco 14.12
Ind. Minerals 8.50
Inland Nat. Gas 9.62
Intl. Utilities 28.00
Int. Nickel 93.00
Interprov. Pipe 93.25
Interprov. Steel. 3.55
Laurentide 17.00
Loblaw B 9.12
Massey Ferg. 29.62
MacM. Powell R. 35.75
Molson Brew. A 34.00
M. Locomotive 12.75
Moore Corp.
Noranda
Ogilvie Flour
Pacific Pete
Price Bros.
Page Hersey
Power Corp.
Que. Nat. Gas
Royal Bank
Rothmans
Salada Foods
Shell Oil
Simpsons
Southam
Steel of Canada 26.50
Traders Fin. A 14.00
Texaco 62.00
Trans Mtn. Pipe 20.25
Trans Can. Pipe 44.25
Union Gas of C. 24.62
Walker-Gooder. 36.62
Westcoast Trans. 17.00
Weston Geo. A 19.25
Woodwards A 26.12
Zenith Elect.      4.10
MINES AND OILS
57.00
50.25
14.37
12.37
47.50
30.00
14.87
12,12
17.25
18.75
12.12
18.87
27.25
30.25
Advocate
Agnico
Aunor
Barnat
Bethlehem Cop.
Bibis
Bralorne
Brunswick
Cal. _ Edmtn
Campbell Chib
Can. Delhi
Campbell R.L.
Cariboo Gold
Cassiar Asb.
Cons. Rambler
Central Del Rio 7.90
Central Patricia 1.37
Charter Oil
Chimo
Coch. Will
Coin Lake
Cons. Halliwell
Cons. Mogul
Conwest
Copper Corp.
Cowichan Cop.
Craigmont
Denison
Dickenson
6.50
.71
3.80
.12
7.90
.29
4.40
13.25
22.87
4.50
9.00
18.30
.80
11.75
1.55
1.80
1.04
3.00
19
351,4
5.31
.47
16,25
16.00
5.15
Discovery Mines 3.30
East Malartic
East Sullivan
Fargo
Frobex
First Maritime
Geco
Giant Mascot
Giant Yel.
Granduc
Gunnar Mines
Highland Bell
Hollinger
Hudson Bay Mg 71.00
Hudson Bay.Oil 15.75
1.1
4.40
2.99
.84
2.89
38.00
1.36
13.50
6.05
6.40
7.45
30.25
Hydra Ex
Iron Bay
Iso
Kerr Addison
Labrador
Lake Dufault
Leitch
Little Long Lac 1.75
Lorado 1.53
Madsen 2.08
Malartic .66
Mattagami Lake 16.25
21%
1.05
1.88
7.25
.37
11,87
5.00
Mclntyre
McKenzie
Midcon
National Pete
New Cont. Oils
New Hosco
Norlex
Normetal
Northgate
Opemiska
Ormsby
Orchan
Petrol O _ G
Pickle Crow
Place Gas
Placer
60.00
.12
4.65
.34%
2.88
.13%
3.75
5.45
8.65
.41%
5.95
.60
.52
.61
44.37
14.87
4.00
74.00
33.87
33.37
17.75
13.87
68.50
77.37
25.87
60.00
35.25
34.00
18.75
62.75
24.00
25.87
47.00
42.75
10.37
15.25
22.37
68.00
53.00
17.75
12.00
41.50
44.87
12.50
4.25
65.75
22.87
22.75
31.75
48.00
20.62
78.75
21.75
46.75
67.00
180.12
13.00
15.87
157.00
26.00
19.75
20.00
17.12
52.87
14.25
9.50
9.75
28.25
93.50
93.50
3.60
17.25
9.25
29.75
36.00
34.50
13.00
57.25
50.50
14.62
12.50
48.00
30.50
15.00
12.25
17.50
18:87
12.25
19.00
27.37
30.37
26.62
14.12
62.50
20.50
44.50
24.87
36.75
17.25
19.50
26.25
4.25
6.60
.73
3.85
.75
7.95
.30
4.45
13.37
23.12
4.55
9.05
19.00
.82
11.87
1.58
8.00
1.40
1.90
1.05
3,10
.20
.37
3:85
5.40
.48
.48
16.50
16.25
5.20
3.35
1.64
4.50
3.00
.90
2.92
38.25
1.40
13.75
6.15
6.45
7.90
30.50
71.25
15.87
.23
1.09
1.90
7.35
.37%
12,00
5.10
1.80
1.55
2.10
.70
16.62
61.00
.12%
.50
4.80
Patino
Preston
Provo
Quebec Lithium
Quemont
Radiore
Rayrock
Reeves Mac
Rio Algom
San. Antionio
Sarimco
Sheep Creek
Sherritt Gordon
Silver Standard
Siscoe
Steep Rock
Sullivan Con.
Teck Corp.
Temagami
Torbrit
Triad Oil
Tribag
Union Oil
United Keno
United Oil
Upper Canada
Violamac
Western Mines
Wrirght Harg.
Wilroy
9.00
9.05
6.60
6.75
"2.16
2.18
3.25
3.35
9.85
9.95
.42 .
. .42%
.92
'    ":.93
2.75
3.50
11.37
. 11,75
.23
»24
.20
.21
1.36
1.45
4.75
4.80
.68
.70
2.25
2.29
6.90
7.00
3.60
3.65
5.40
5.45
1.06
1.08
.62
.65
2.36
2.40
1.71
1.73
15.00
15.12
9.05
9.10
.60
.80
1.30
1.35
2.75
2.77
4.75
4.85
.73
.80
1.70
1.72
Vancouver
Stocks
INDUSTRIALS
Burrard Mort
Growers A
Growers B
Sun Pub. A
Sun Pub. B
Int. Brew. B
4.25
5.00
4.75
20.00
21.00
7.75
MINES AND OILS
Ace Mining
Blue Star
Canam Cop.
Buttle Lake
Copper Ridge
Crown Silver
Copper Soo
Dolly Varden
Endako
Huestis
Jericho
Lytton Mines
Magnum
Mt. Washington
New Ainsworth
Ottawa Silver
Peace River Pete
1.13
.18
.12
.52
.82
.12
.25
.58
12.00
.32
.35
.21
.23%
.81
.15
3.95
.12
.19%
.13
.83
.13
1.72
Pend Oreille
Silver Ridge
Skeena Silver
Trojan
Torwest
Western Expl.
Utica Mines
FUNDS
All. Can. Com,
All. Can. Div.
Amer. Growth
Can. Inv. Fund 4.16
Com. Int. 10:65
First Oil _ Gas 5.46
Investors Growth 8.39
Inv. Mutual. 14.86
Leverage 9.52
Mutual Accum. ' 4.83
Mutual Bond 8.02
Mutual Inc. 6.36
Trans Canada C 8.03
Group Income    4.25
4.50
5.25
4.95
20.50
8.00
1.15
.20
.13
.13
.26
.61
12.12
.34
.36
.23
.24
.83
.09
.16%
.39
4.25 .
.13
.20
.14
.85
1.74
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964 — 3
Duncan Dam Nearly Cleared Await Next Step
i'W&#*^
''.fe;'
^»^__H   :
;*&&.
Wl
m
*"" _"i_3?nf
EAGLE'S-EVE VIEW — 43 acres of timber and bushland will have been cleared when
Spatsum Lumber Company moves out of the
damslte, shown in the picture above.- The cookhouse is seen behind the larger bunkhouse-of-
flce building on the upper side of the proposed
Duncan Dam, whose location was marked in
lime on the cleared land for President Lyndon
Johnson and Prime Minister Lester D. Pearson
to see as they flew over on their way to the
coast to sign the Columbia River Treaty offi-
daily. Of the 263 acres at the damsite there
are still 15 acres to be cleared to the south, 10
acres to the north and 18 acres will be cleared
for the spillway which will be on the far side of
the area shown in the picture. Don Clark is
cook In the small trailer-cookhouse, accommodating 25 men seated almost jowl to jowl. The
problem will be more acute as construction
workers start coming In, until the catering service takes over.
6.26
8.42
10.65
11.64
4.50
11.67
5.97
9.12
16.15
10.43
5.28
8.45
6.95
8.81
4.64
TO THE EAST — the valleys of Duncan (left,
around wooded mound) and Glacier Creek (right),
which leads over into the Windermere country, are
seen from the top of the rock abutment through which
twin diversion tunnels will be driven, with the Duncan
damsite at lower right corner out of picture. This wide
valley will be a reservoir when the dam is constructed and the rivers backed up. Cutting of the trees in
this area will be carried out over a period of years at
low water.
.14
3.85
5.50
8.70
.44
6.00
.63
.53
.64
45.00
COSTS WILL BE SHARED by the Kootenay Lake Board of
School Trustees and B.C. Hydro and Power Authority for work
to be done on the. Jewett School at Meadow Creek, seen being
moved from its former location for a short distance to a site
near the Abey farm. Creighton Construction won the kid for
alterations and addition to the school. The school board's share
of the cost will be $23,231 and the B.C. Hydro will pay $13,469.
The original site of the school will be used by the Authority for
a concrete aggregate zone for the Duncan Dam project. The
Jewett School is shown up on blocks waiting for the move and
the school presently being used, a log building, is shown in the
background.
A MORALE BOOSTER Is
what Duncan Dam developments so far have meant to the
populace of Kaslo, which has
noticed more business increase
from local mining activity than
from increased activity related
to the dam clearing. It is expected that there will be a noticeable change in tempo of
business activity in Kaslo when
the dam construction contract
is confirmed, says Jack Morris, president of the Kaslo
Board of Trade, who keeps a
sharp eye out for changes in
the local scene. Motels are the
main reclnients of Increased
economy In the town so far.
Illlllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllll
Photo-Story
By
Jean Baker
iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiii
FOREMAN Dennis Claggett, right, of Clinton is
directing remainder of the clearing operation at the
damsite for Spatsum Lumber Company, and Wally
Larsen, also of Clinton, is a cat skinner. Both are
standing near the office building which loks like a
dot in the middle of the gigantic cleared area, when
seen from the top of the rock bluff in the background,
looking towards the west. This bluff will be the site
for twin diversion tunnels while the dam is under
construction.
NEGLECTED ANIMAL
SURREY (CP)-Henrl Luclen
Barrett of Vancouver was fined
$50 here Wednesday for neglect
of 10 dogs. SPCA inspector Al
Davidson said He inspected Barrett's dogs and founo. six half-
starved animals that had to be
destroyed. *-- ■ '
ROADS AND ELECTRICITY are Immediate problems concerning the Lnrdeau Board of Trade, which Is in frequent touch
with B.C. Hydro officials concerning the enormous change coming to the Meadow Creek, Lardeau and Duncan valleys with
forthcoming construction of Duncan Dam, scheduled to be completed In 1968. President of the Boar dls hard-working Frank
Abey, who takes time,off from his ranch work to take interested visitors around the damsite area and point out the changes
which have already taken place and the lands to be affected by
the 120-foot high, earth-fill dam. An average work force of 400
men over the next 3% years will have to be accommodated In
the Lardeau Valley and at Kaslo, with a peak-employment force...
of 800 expected at one point. Trailer and cabin facilities at Lardeau and along the road to the damsite are being fully utilized
with even the comparatively small work force which has been
clearing the dam area under the direction of Spatsum Lumber
Company of Clinton.
World Briefs
RECEIVES GRANT
VANCOUVER (CP) - The
department of. pediatrics at the
University of British Columbia
has received a $4,000 grant from
the Children's Research Foundation to establish a research
clinic for diabetic, children. It
will be known as the Juvenile
Diabetic Research Clinic.
BRIGHT FUTURE
KAMLOOPS. (CP) - Alderman Mil Hardaker . of North
Kamloops said Wednesday there
is a bright .future in store, for
the greater kamloops area. Aid.
Hardaker. is, the North Kamloops
representative on the Kamloops
Regional Planning Commission.
OPERATIONS   NEEDED
NEW DELHI (AP)-A government study committee reports 20,000,000 sterilization operations would be needed annually if India's population—now
465,000,000—is to be stabilized
at 600,000.000. About 1,000,000
operations'are performed each
year.     '
WORLD BEEF UP
ROME (AP)-The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization reports that world
beef production in 1963 reached
29,600,000 tons, a four-per-cent
increase over 1962.
PARSLOW'S
ENTERPRISES LTD.
GUNSMITH1NG
LOCKSMITHING
FISHING SUPPLIES
1319 Bay Ave.      Ph. 368-5025
TRAIL, B.C.
-
Currieri Insurance
And
Real Eitate Agencies
I960 LTD.
,'.'•'' All Classes of
General Insurance
Trail, B.C. Ph. 368-3414
 ■_■■
_■_■■
SfrlBOU _3aiiy JJftUH     General Grivas-"Power Behind
Throne" in Strife-Torn Cyprus
Established April 22  1902 Nelson, B C.
Published by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia mornings except
Sundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with
the largest daily circulation in the Interior ot B.C.
Authorized as Second Class Mail  Post Office Department, Ottawa,
and ioi Paymenl ot Pustage in Cash
MEMBER Of   -MS CANADIAN PKESS
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY  NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION
MEMBER OF THE AUDIT  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to Hie use for republication of all news
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this
paper and also the local news nuhlished herein.
Friday, October 9, 1964
Relocation of Zoo for Centennial Project
Relocation of the Robson Zoo to   with the development plans. Another
Nelson as a Centennial project would
be a fine feather in our cap. The potentiality of such a venture could
well prove another major tourist attraction to Nelson.
Preliminary investigation has indicated that the financial aspect is
both within scope and range of the
Centennial Club and our community. Such a project could be a major
financial attraction during summer
months particularly if it can be associated with the Walt Disney name.
Nelson already has a few major attractions. The addition of the Robson
Zoo will mean added impetus for our
growing city.
Allen Woodrow of the Robson Zoo
is interested in relocating for a number of reasons. At present he does not
get a sufficient number of visitors
due to the present position. Any reasonable offer made to Mr. Woodrow
would be received favorably.
The zoo has some star attractions
and with a surfeit of enterprise and
whole hearted support the zoo project would be advantageous to Nelson. Interested citizens willing to-de-
vote some spare time could arrange
to relocate some of the buildings to
fine feature of Mr. Woodrow's zoo is
the private museum. It has taken
many years of hard work and searching on the part of Mr. Woodrow to exhibit local treasures, furniture and
other interesting artifacts.
Surely there are some publicly
minded citizens or firms who would
assist financially with such a worthwhile project? Think what the advantages would be to Nelson, which
could then claim a renowned zoo and
an acclaimed animal trainer in its
midst. The possibilities of a zoo are
endless. Many additional features
could be incorporated in the zoo,
which would assist the financial picture in years to come. If the city is
going to have to subsidize the operation of one centennial project or
another, at least let us have our
money's worth.
As the.Robson Zoo has already
had aii attractive offer from another
area, the Centennial Club, if interested, will have to work rapidly. If
Nelsonites are interested in such a
project why not attend the next Centennial-Club meeting October 27 at
the civil defence room at city hall
and speak your piece. As the zoo
a lakeshore site. A suitable site could..-.idea.wUl appeal to. the younger set
be found  which  would  intertwine    why don't some of you turn out?
.    The Birth Control Debate
Birth control is practically illegal
in Canada. It is a criminal offence,
for instance, to sell, advertise or-pro--
mote information or devices directed
toward contraception.
This law is .utterly archaic. Whatever one's religious approach to the
subject, it is a matter of plain fact
that the law is broken thousands of
times every day. It is broken by doctors, druggists, mail-order houses,
newspapers and magazines, and the
spirit or intent of the law is violated
by the vast majority of the Canadian
people. For the law is based on the.
premise that birth control is evil.
The law ought therefore to be
changed, according to the United.
Church of Canada, the social service
council of the Anglican Church of
Canada, the Presbyterian Church,
the Unitarian Church, Baptist conven-
tions,~fhe~Canddian Medical Association, Children's Aid societies, the
Canadian Council of Women and
many other respected organizations.
A {ew days ago a private member's bill to amend the Criminal Code
to legalize birth-control was brought
up in the House of Commons. If the
government had proposed it, it would
have had certain priority in the legislative process. But being moved by
a private member, it had a few minutes for debate and if it had not been
-voted-on at-the end of that time, it
would be shelved almost indefinitely. So the easy way to kill a private
bill is .to dehateit for the full allotted
time and thus prevent a vote.
That is what happened. Some of
the-arguments used by the small
band of determined opponents: That
Parliament had no power to legalize
.evil, thqt.C.anadian family life would
disintegrate, that an earlier Parliament which wrote the Criminal Code
.was wisex .than the present Parliament, that the people are not ready
for it, that Catholic authorities are
-flgainst.the.bill, that man was commanded to "go forth, multiply, and
fill the earth".
.. The rest of Canada is making important and legitimate concessions to
Quebec these days. It is high time
that Quebec made some to the rest
of Canada, for instance by withdrawing her veto of certain reform legislation such as this.
If the law will not be changed,
then let it be enforced. But it cannot
be enforced. Canada cannot afford
to build all the prisons that would be
needed to hold the guilty.
—Lethbridge Herald.
An Opportunity Missed
It ."is unfortunate that the United
Aut6;Workers Union saw fit to shut
down the General Motors plants by
walking off the production lines.
No end of the strike is in sight,
and-each day brings the United
States economy closer to major dislocation. The full effects will begin
to be felt when layoffs are forced in
the steel, glass, rubber, aluminum
and other industries which normally
supply the strikebound plants.
But-despite this dismal outlook.
General Motors must be applauded
for having the fortitude to resist demands which, with ample justification, may be called outrageous,
The wage increases and other
benefits being sought are bound to
result in inflation of wages and prices
elsewhere in the U.S. economy, as
well as in the automobile industry.
The fact that Ford and Chrysler settled on roughly the same terms as
those sought from General Motors
does not mean that it was right that
the demands should have been met.
Besides the inflationary dangers involved,  it  appears  that  the  Auto
i
Workers, led by Mr. Walter Reuther,
are seeking control of the automobile
manufacturing industry, indirectly at
least. The strike was called when
General Motors refused to give in to
demands which would hand the
union power over grievance procedures, union representation in the
plants, production standards, disciplining of workers, and working conditions. Union control over these prerogatives of management would
leave the companies powerless to
control the industry.
But while the General Motors
stand is praiseworthy, it cannot be
endorsed without some qualification.
The company did not act as wisely
as it might have. Before negotiations
with the unions ever started, it could
have used its record profits to reduce
the prices of its cars. By so doing, it
could have givtn the public a break,
earned itself measureless good will,
and taken the wind out of the union's
sails.
Seizing the opportunity when it
presented itself might have forestalled the strike.—Calgary Herald.
By RUSSELL PEDEN
NICOSIA (CP)—Just mention
the name Grivas in the marketplace, the sidewalk cafe or
the Cyprus government office
if you want to put a damper on
the conversation.
Cypriots are great talkers,
and are more than willing to
enlighten the visitor on their
politics, their grievances and
their place in world affairs.
But no one seems anxious to
chat about the wiry, nut-brown
guerrilla leader who organized
EOKA terrorism in the late
1950s and now is regarded as
"the power behind the throne"
in his native Cyprus.
Gen. George Grivas himself
shuns publicity. Since he returned to Cyprus from Greece
in mid-June to direct the 30,-
000-odd Greek-Cypriot "security
forces," he has seldom been
seen in public and has maintained an iron rule against
granting interviews to reporters, even the local press.
But there is one outsider who
sees the general at least once
a day—a French-speaking native of Edmonton doing a fascinating liaison job for the
United Nations peace force on
Cyprus.
NEEDED INTERPRETER
Maj. J. Louis Lessard, a
Royal Canadian Ordnance
Corps officer, got the job in
mid-August, just after the Turkish, air raids on the west
coast.
At that time, India's Gen. K.
S. Thimayya, the UN peace
force commander, asked to see
Grivas and the two generals
toured the stricken area together. They found out, however, that they had no common
language. Grivas speaks Greek
and French, Thimayya English.
The communication problem
was solved with the appointment of Lessard, who deals
personally with the former
Greek army officer and goes
Today
In History
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Oct. 9, 1964 ...
A i m e e Semple McPher-
son, one of the United
States' most colorful and
controversial religious figures, was born at Ingersoll,
Ont, 74 years ago today—in
1890. The evangelist
preached the fundamentalist doctrine (as opposed to
the Darwinian concepts of
the origins of man) and retained a strong and loyal
following despite ;a third
marriage that ended in divorce. She preached to
mass audiences in the U.S.
southwest for about 20
years, and died in 1944.
1642 — Harvard College
held its first commencement exercises.
1877 — The first railway
locomotive on the Prairies
reached Winnipeg—by boat.
First World War
Fifty years ago today, in
1914, the German armies
forced the surrender of Antwerp after 48 hours of continuous shelling; British airmen raided the German
city of Dusseldorf Where
zeppelin sheds and manufacturing plants were located.
Second World War
Twenty-five years ago today, in 1939, British warships beat off repeated attacks by German bombers
in the North Sea; the
French Command reported
German attacks along a 35-
mile front near the German-
French border; Sweden began building air raid shelters as disquiet spread over
Soviet moves.
along  as interpreter when he
meets Thimayya.
"This has been working extremely well and I am very satisfied," Thimayya says. "We
had a tremendous amount of
trouble getting things done before a liaison man was appointed.
"Maj. Lessard has been very
useful, and has established very
good contact with Gen. Grivas."
Lessard, 46, has a high regard for the former terrorist.
"When I enter his office I always salute and he shakes
hands. It's a custom of his.
"He is crisp, dynamic, very
definitely a forceful character.
I would describe him as likeable."
POSED FOR PHOTO
Grivas' regard for his liaison
man was evident from his willingness to pose for photographs
at Lessard's request.
He advanced, hand outstretched, from behind the
huge desk that dominates his
austerely furnished office.
Radiating authority despite
his 66 years and his casual
dress — a grey cardigan and
slacks — he appeared much
taller than his five feet, three
inches.
His penetrating glance was
undimmed by the horn-rimmed
glasses he uses with reading.
This was the man who, with
some 280 EOKA followers,
eluded 25,000 crack British
troops on a tiny island for more
than four years.
No guard was present, but
visitors are screened carefully
before they reach the office on
the second floor of the heavily
guarded Athalassa police station, Nicosia's largest.
First comes a sandbagged
roadblock near the police station entrance, then the 10-feet-
high gates surrounding the
courtyard. Once inside, the visitor must pass a reception desk
swarming with policemen on
the ground floor and a barred
and guarded corridor upstairs
before reaching the general's
anteroom.
From the inner sanctum, Grivas has brought army discipline
to the thousands of "security
. forces," most of them hastily
conscripted within the last few
months. Under his direction
are some 1,500 police, 5,000
auxiliary police and 15,000 soldiers of the national guard.
The government won't say
how many trained Greek nationals have come to Cyprus to
serve their former commander,
but informed observers put the
figure somewhere between 7,000
and 10,000.
Officially, Grivas is described
as military adviser to the pres-
i d e n t, Archbishop Makarios.
But by all indications his powers are second only to those of
the president himself, and he is
generally regarded as the only
man with enough ot a following to assume leadership of the
country if anything should happen to the archbishop.
During the EOKA campaign,
the Grivas directives were
signed "Dighenis," the name ot
a legendary hero of medieval
Greece. Today, his correspondence goes out over the signature of "George Grivas-Dighe-
nis, General Commander,"
The man nominally in charge
of security forces is Polycarpos
Georgadjis, a former EOKA
lieutenant now minister of the
interior in the Greek-Cypriot
cabinet. It is noteworthy that
he comes to see Grivas, instead of the other way around,
and the general has been known
to keep the minister waiting in
an anteroom while dealing with
other business.
Grivas came to Cyprus at
the invitation of Makarios, and
the two are not regarded as
political rivals. Neither has
even hinted at any other long-
term goal than enosis, the union of Cyprus with Greece.
Grivas has made a number
of ineffectual attempts to enter
Greek politics, but he denied
any further political ambitions
on coming to Cyprus. He would
not see any reporters, he said,
because his sole concern was'
for military matters. Statements on politics were for politicians.
R 	
Victim of
Own Tactics
NEW DELHI (AP)-Some of
Prime Minister Shastri's political enemies are attacking him
with tactics like those he used
against the British colonial
rulers of India 20 years ago.
Shastri's government is being
forced to react the same way
the British were.
The tactics involve little
rough stuff—just plenty of fiery
speeches, peaceful disobedience
of authority and courting arrest. The idea is to force the
police to attack, arouse public
opinion and fill the jails, or go
on hunger strikes.
Ho Hum, Time for
The British Election
By HAROLD  MORRISON
LONDON (CP) - Britain's
election campaign, as seen on
television in the average British livingroom, contains traces
of yawn - producing dullness,
partly because the peri has
shown it is mightier than the
electronic picture.
When the campaign opened,
the national television networks
immediately wheeled in their
cameras to flash to the millions
of viewers a live broadcast of
the give-and-take between reporters and political leaders at
day-by-day press conferences at
party headquarters.
But the networks soon found
that, unlike the situation in
North America, the reporters'
sanctuary was not easily
breached. Newspaper organizations complained that the presence of television ca m e r a s
placed the reporter in an impossible position — his question
and the response would be
made available to the TV
viewer long before he had a
chance to present his report in
print.
TELECAST EXCERPTS
An   agreement  was  worked
HUBERT
=__r
*™?.<M:*-*ra*:-.':*%:W:W.w:w»t.>.-^^
i> King F_tuf«» Syndicate, Int., 1964. World right, rcierved, ftfip; |0-3
"You'll know when Fred's had enough—his socks
will fall down."
out to ban live transmissions of press conferences
and to provide only short excerpts for broadcast later, with
the reporters and their questions blocked out from the television screen.
This is in sharp contrast to
the situation in the United
States where the television networks cover the political press
conferences with such unrestricted freedom that some
newspaper reporters complained they were used and
abused as unpaid actors.
The Guardian of Manchester,
commenting on the victory of
the pen over the camera, said:
"A press conference is neither
a studio performance nor a
public meeting but a private
occasion to which journalists
are invited to obtain information. ... To broadcast it is to
treat the press conference as a
definitive performance.
"The effect must be to destroy the informality and the intimacy of the relations between
journalists and spokesmen
which makes the best press
conference most useful."
TV COMPETITION
But with the victory has come
some barbs. The Watchman,
writing in The Spectator, accused the press of being "a bit
pompous." He expressed Sympathy for reporters being used
by television without being paid
but suggested that behind the
newspaper protests is a general
fear of TV competition.
"Television is bound to usurp
many of the strictly news functions of the press as time goes
on and the sooner papers and
journalists accept this and outflank the movement by their
wits the less painful will be the
process."
The New Statesman, another
weekly magazine, said that
with "some evening papers, the
issue is one ef commerce rather
than principle: their proprietors
do net want the public to see
the questions raised on TV before they read about them in
the newspapers."
"Surely, if the lobby reporters objects to appearing on
TV, it has a simple remedy:.
To stay away from election
press conferences."
CANADA'S INVOLVEMENT — External Affairs Minister Paul Martin has
expressed Canada's reluctance to act as mediator in Indochina "If it is
thought that the operation is not a useful one." Seventy Canadian Army
officers and men are still serving on inspection teams in the Indochinese
states of Ldos, Cambodiq and Viet Nam. About 30 members of the external affairs department work in the civilian control of commissions. Since
1954, this has cost Canada $8,052,715. But their reluctance to continue
as mediator has stemmed from the constant outbreaks of violence in spite
of efforts to maintain peace.—(CP Photo).	
Interpreting the News
MACAPAGAL AND JOHNSON
By ARCH MacKENZIE
Canadian   Press   Staff   Writer
It is not usual for the head of
a foreign state to visit Washington officially in the midst of a
presidential election campaign.
But President Diosdado P.
Macapagal is not a routine
caller—either normally or right
now when the U.S. can use all
the friends it can get in Southeast Asia.
President Johnson bit into his
campaign time to make the
visitor feel at home. In return,
President Macapagal said a
number of things which the U.S.
likes to hear from its allies and
doesn't always get.
Macapagal joined in calling
GIRL CHARGED
POWELL RIVER <CP)-
RCMP here have charged Stella
August of Powell River with car
theft following an accident here
Wednesday. Police said a car
belonging to a rental firm was
found in the bush at nearby
Willingdon Beach. The woman
was found injured and was
taken to hospital for treatment
of minor Injuries. Police said
the car; apparently went Cut ot
control and crashed.
China an "imminent threat" to
the peace of Southeast Asia.
Perhaps more important, he
indicated the Philippines may
step up its aid in South Viet
Nam, something the U.S. has
been striving to encourage from
Europe and Canada.
CONCERN EXPRESSED
Macapagal, .joining Johnson
in the usual communique, ef-
pressed concern that "should
South Viet Nam fall to communism other Southeast Asian
countries on the mainland, in;
eluding Malaysia, will in no
time follow."
He also had some blunt words
about Indonesia's limping but
persistent attack on Malaysia
and suggested failure to resolve the dispute may push Indonesia definitely into Communist ranks.
He also praised U.S. retaliation in the Gulf of Tonkin
against North Viet Nam and it
is reported privately he recommended U.S. attacks on North
Viet Nam supply lines.
Carrying such ideas, it is
doubtful that President Macapagal will get much farther
than he has as a would-be negotiator in the Malaysia-Indonesia dispute. But in terms of
political stability and resources
he is a comforting ally from the
U.S. point of view.
Not all is sweetness and light,
however. Philippine citizens are
reported to be increasingly concerned about the extent of foreign ownership in their economy, Chinese and otherwise.
This applies to American ownership and the matter was
among the subjects discussed.
Word ot Lite
Then saith Jesus unto him, Get
thee hence, Satan; for. it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord
thy God, and him only shalt thou
serve. Mnthew 4:10.
In any emergency there are
always many volunteers ready
to assist. Civil Defence stresses
that it is important to have
leaders trained so that the maximum benefit can be derived
from the volunteer effort.
When it comes to whisky..
*Specialist: Anyone-
after a taste of Walker's Special Old
You're a Specialist in good taste when you
choose Walker's Special Old. Good taste,
good looks, and fine quality have made it
Canada's popular choice in whisky. Next
time—make it a point to buy Walker's
Special Old.
HIRAM WALKER & SONS, LIMITED
•'•''"■»• •-....•..,..„.........."."".        ,N THE SP4RKLma oeoANTEt,
jrhisadverMsement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ot British Columbia
 Sir Alec, Wilson Bolstered
By Wives' Confidence
By TOM OCHILTREE
LONDON (AP) - Two shy
clergymen's daughters — Lady
Douglas-Home and Mrs. Harold
Wilson—strengthen the political
hopes of their husbands with
quiet devotion, commonsense
advice and the knack of making
their men feel like winners.
They both do all they can to
help without diverting the spotlight from their husbands.
Elizabeth Hester Douglas -
Home, 54, and Mary Baldwin
Wilson, 48, come from rival political camps, yet their personal
experiences are remarkably
similar.
They travel endless miles,
smile until their faces, ache and
meet floods of people as Prime
Minister Sir Alec Douglas-
Home, the Conservative party
leader, and Harold Wilson, head
of the Labor party, stump the
country asking for support in
Britain's Oct. 15 national election.
OFFER ENCOURAGEMENT
Each woman travels with her
husband, sits on the - platform
with him, keeps his sense, of
humor functioning and offers
encouragement if the day has
been rough.
"I like my husband to know
I am nearby when he speaks,"
said Lady Douglas-Home. Mrs.
Wilson felt the same.way.
In a series of recent inter
views the two women have
given a clear picture of what
life is like for the wives of British political leaders.
. Campaigning usually starts in
the morning and runs through
a series of meetings in cities
and crossroads until late at
night.
The wives hear variations of
the same speech over and over.
They have learned to laugh on
cue, to appear grave-faced at
the proper passages and above
all never to get sleepy or seem
bored no matter how stuffy the
hall or hot the lights,
Lady Douglas-Home, tall, distinguished looking and self-
assured, wants her husband to
sense her boundless confidence
in him. She explained:
"I have always known he was
capable of holding any political
office in the land. He is tough
both mentally and physically.
He can really lash out quite
well. ..."
Campaigning in Britain can
get rugged with hecklers shouting, people tossing rotten eggs
and officials struggling to keep
order.
Lady Doulas-Home does not
let rowdy incidents bother her.
She resents what she regards
as emotional, unfair criticism
of her husband but she is too
well bred to allow her feelings
to show.
■ They're built to take.it
... with the finest of
I materials and workmanship. Above is only
_ one of many patterns
|    from ...
565 Baker St.
I   Nelson, B.C.
■   Phone 352-2814
Mrs. Wilson also knows how
to mask her emotions. She has
fair hair, cornflower blue eyes
and a peaches-and-cream complexion.
Widely read, a spare • time
writer of poetry and an accomplished singer, Mrs. Wilson up
to now has kept her family's inconspicuous, white ■ washed
home in London's Hampstead
Garden suburb separate from
the bubbling political world of
her husband.
CHANGED   PERSONALITY
People used to say that Wilson projected a personality of
chilly, machine-like efficiency—
that he was  so  stuffed with
facts and figures he lacked appeal for women voters. But he
has a warmer platform personality now, and much of the
credit is' given to Mrs. Wilson.
"I rarely give him advice,"
she protested. "Often I can spot
little things which would never
have occurred to Harold."
Mrs. Wilson would have preferred her husband, to have continued his early career as a
member of the Oxford University faculty.
"I'm not a- bit ambitious,"
she said. "If things were left
to me, I would rather we lived
a quiet life out of the public
eye."
Amalgamated Schools
Name PTA Executives
CRAWFORD BAY - A meeting of the Parent-Teacher Association was held in the staff
room of the Crawford Bay
Elementary School for the executive members of both Riondel
and Crawford Bay.
As the two schools have been
amalgamated, the respective
P.T.A.'s are working in close
alliance to  give  the  greatest
Natal Notes
NATAL — Miss Lois Chala,
accompanied by Miss Leslie
deGrace, Miss Lynn Meredith
and Miss Judy James, all
graduates of St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing, were recent visitors at Natal. Miss
Chala spent a week's visit with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Chala, before returning to Victoria.
Mrs. Stan Grocutt of Michel
is spending an extended visit
with her daughter Doreen at
Barriere, B.C. Miss Grocutt has
been assigned to the teaching
staff at Barriere for the new
term.
Father Martin de Poires, formerly of Regina, recently spent
a few days visiting his uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs..Frank
Schmaltz of Natal. He also spent
a few months in various parishes
in the West and was on his way
to Peru, South America, where
he will be engaged in missionary work for the next six years.
If you're cold in this underwear, better move South
or long sleeves from $2.95. Men's
elastic-waist longs from $2.50 to
$4.95. Boys' shirts will cost you
around $1.50, and longs with full
double seat about $1.95 to $2.50.
You'll be comfortable in Stanfield's.
And they're a lot cheaper than
moving south.
Stanfield's
stanfield's limited, TBUBO, NOVA SCOTIA
Nothing (except,maybe.thetropics);
will keep you warmer than Stanfield's Thermal underwear. This is
because thousands of tiny knit
pockets actually capture body
warmth, and insulate you against
below-zero weather.
This winter-proof underwearkmade
in a choice of weights in ail-cotton,
cotton and wool, and cotton and
terylene. They will keep their shape
washing after washing. You can get
short-sleeve shirts from about $1.95,
benefit to the people of the two
communities.
As Crawford Bay Is now the
site of an entirely elementary
school, this . community will
organize the elementary P.T.A.,
and Riondel will.be responsible
for the secondary grades P.T.A.
At the executive meeting,
plans were laid for the election
of offcers for the. 1964-65 school
year, and a number of people
indicated their willngness to
stand for office if' so elected.
These include:
Secondary P.T.A., president,
Mr. E. M. Davidson; treasurer,
Mrs. I. Walker; secretary, Mrs.
Audrey Green; program, Mr.
Rysen and or Mr. Russell; Elementary P.T.A., president, E.
Ingham; treasurer, Mrs. H. Be-
sanger; secretary, Mrs. T. Davidson; convener Mrs. A. Draper.
A general meeting of the Elementary P.T.A. will be held at
Crawford Bay, October, 22, and
the Secondary P.T.A. will hold
a general meeting in Riondel on
October 15.
Varied Day Ends at Dance
Toast in Gaelic to Oueen
Kinnaird Notes
KINNAIRD — A dinner, party
followed the occasion of the
Baptism of Shirley Rita Richards. The baptism was performed by Rev. Father E. A.
Brophy in St. Rita's Church,
Castlegar on' October 4. Godparents were, Miss Joan Cam-
pana and Mr. Ronda Ronald
Campana of Rossland. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Campana and five children which
include the godparents, Nancy,
Christopher and Laura, were
guests of the Richards family
in Kinnaird following the. ceremony. Also present for the occasion was Mrs. Richards' sister, Miss Albina Makay of Trail.
. #  *. *
KINNAIRD — Wedding guests
from this district travelled to
Creston Saturday for the.marriage of a former Kinnaird girl,
Louise Askew. of Creston, to
Kenneth Yaseniuk of Montrose.
Making the trip were Mr. and
Mrs. R. J. Smales, Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Bale and Miss Charlene
Bale; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bab-
aeff; Mrs. L. B. Jones- and Miss
Carol Jones; Mr .and Mrs. Harry Woods, Miss Dianne Lange-
vin and Mr.' and Mrs. J. D. Askew.
Mrs. P. J. Vaessen has rejoined her family here after spending the past three weeks in Aberdeen, Scotland The European
flight returned Mrs. Vaessen to
her native British Isles after an
absence which followed the war
years.
The guest of her mother, Mrs.
M. Mander, Mrs. Vaessen was
also. reunited with her sister,
Mine. H .Guillaumont, who joined them at Aberdeen from Juan
les-Pines on the French Riviera.
By JAMES NELSON
CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -
Queen Elizabeth and Prince
Philip left at midnight Wednesday after a two-day stay, and so
far as Prince Edward Islanders
are concerned they'd like more
and longer royal visits.
Nearly 1,000 of them waited
on a chilly Charlottetown dock
to see the Queen's departure
for Quebec after attending a
state dinner and ball.
Wearing an emerald green
satin gown, white Canadian
mink stole, and a sun-ray diamond tiara that belonged to
Queen Alexandra, her great
grandmother, the Queen waved
to the crowd and they responded with repeated cheers.
The departure was marred
by a near-accident when the
gangplank of the royal yacht
Britannia shifted position moments before the Queen was to
go up it.
A naval officer said that
while the Queen was attending
the dinner and ball, the tide
lifted the ship and a swell
rolled it just as the Queen arrived at the dockside.
DANGLED FREE
The land end of the gangplank, which had a roller on it
to take the movement of the
ship, tipped an eight-foot-square
platform so that the steps leading to it were dangling in the
air.
Crew members from the Britannia shifted the platform back
into position.
The Queen and her husband
arrive at Quebec Saturday
morning and fly to Ottawa late
Sunday. Most of Thursday will be
spent in the Gulf of St. Lawrence out of sight of land, sailing almost due north towards
Gaspe.
The Britannia is escorted by
four Canadian naval vessels.
Light winds and sunshine were
forecast for Thursday's voyage
A farewell toast to the
Queen's health was proposed in
Gaelic, at the state banquet
Wednesday night. Four pipers
from the Canadian Guards Regiment played Highland airs.
At the ball that followed the
Queen, Prince Philip and 350
other couples—most of them in
full evening dress — danced
waltzes and foxtrots in the new
Fathers of Confederation Memorial Centre, which the Queen
formally dedicated Tuesday.
REMAINED AT EASE
The Queen remained vivacious and at ease throughout
the long day and into the night.
She started the ball, dancing a
a waltz with her husband.
The crowd swarmed around
her when the music stopped and
the royal couple were escorted
by Mounties to a roped-off area
in one corner of the ballroom;
But Philip wasn't content with
that and danced with Mrs. Mac-
Donald, wife of the lieutenant-
governor. The Queen followed
him on the dance floor with Dr.
Frank MacKinnon, president of
the Confederation Centre Foundation.
The Queen's day started Wednesday with a visit to the Confederation chamber in Province House, where the first
meeting of the Fathers of Confederation was held in 1864. She
had visited the chamber twice
before.
Then she drove through rain
wet streets to the city's fair
grounds to appear before 9000
school children, each waving a
Union Jack. She presented Boy
Scout, Girl Guide and school
achievement awards.
RESTED AFTER LUNCH
After lunch at Government
House, the Queen and her husband rested aboard the yacht
and prepared for the evening
dinner and dance.
Driving through city streets,
the public generally had a bet-
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964 — 5
Women's Emergence
Benefits Indian
Political Parties
ter view of the Queen and her
I husband after dark then in daylight. Shadows in the closed
limousine make it difficult to
see the royal couple, but after
dark the interior of. the car is
lighted a»d the public gets a
good view.
RCMP denied a report in a
British newspaper that a Charlottetown taxi driver- passed
casually through security
checks Monday at Summerside
when the Queen arrived by air.
The driver, Conn Murphy, had
been hired by three British photographers to drive them to the
airport. They had asked that he
be permitted through police
lines so he could drive them
back to Charlottetown with pictures of the arrival.
**the money our
termDlan loan
saved us
paid for
this
extra chair **
See Royal Bank first before you shop. Arrange for a low-cost
termpian loan. It puts buying power, bargaining power in your
pocket, leaves you more dollars to spend on that new set of
furniture, or any other "big buy". Save money next time you
borrow,.,       __
Finance in advance at
ROYAL BANK
Kaslo Notes
KASLO - Mr. and Mrs. R.
Kreuger of Mirror Lake have
left for a holiday, during which
they will visit relatives-in Manitoba and Minnesota.
Recent visitors to Kaslo were
Mr. and Mrs. J.. Giegerich .of
Saanich, Vancouver Island and
Guy Atkinson of New Westminster. , Mr. and Mrs. Giegerich returned in early summer
from a three-month cruise
around the world on the P. & O
liner, Oriana. Miss E. Giegerich
entertained a group of friends to
enjoy slides shown by the
travellers. :.: !•"■'■ ■
Mrs. E. Cunningham has returned home from Kootenay
Lake General Hospital, where
she was a patient for two weeks.
J. Osipiwici is visiting - in
London, Ontario, the guest of
Dr. and Mrs. A. Barrera and
family.   ..'..'
Queen's Bay
| QUEEN'S BAY - Mrs. E- D.
Baravalle has returned from
New York and brbught her sister, Mrs. Babcock, with her for
a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. N. R". German's
recent guests were-Mrs. R; T.
Davies and her three children
from Vista, California; Mrs.
Janet Corum of Calgary and
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison of Calgary.
Mrs. Nora Sowerby of :Vlctoria
visited old friends in Queen's
Bay, where she lived for many
years.
Miss Bessie Bashford of Pen-
ticton, formerly of Queen's Bay,
visited old friends in the Bay.
Mrs. Alec Meldriun of Vancouver spent a week with the
Hon. Basil Aylmers.
Mrs. Kenneth Attree is convalescing at the home of Alex
Attree in Victoria.
Mrs. Chamberlain of Vancouver and Mrs. Crozier-Swith
of Nelson were recent guests of
Mrs. Hirst.
Mrs. Lorna Wishaw has returned to her home in Arizona
for the winter.
The Church Guild tea for
September was held at the home
of Mrs. Gladys Hirst.
Procter Notes
PROCTER - The Procter Hall
Society recently held its annual
meeting for the election of officers, with Bert J. Fitchett being elected as president; Gilbert
McMullin, vice-ipresident; Mrs.
Edward Sikula, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. Nick Dosenber-
ger, Jr., and Ernest Spigariol
elected as executive members.
The Procter Teenage Drama
Group, "The Masqueraders"
plans to reconvene under the direction of Mrs. C. Fitchett and
Mrs. Albert Ogden. They have
already sent for play books on
Dickens' Christmas Carol, which
they hope to produce at the
Christmas concert.
RIVER'S DISCHARGE
The average discharge at the
mouth of the Mississippi River
620,000 cubic feet a second.
BOMBAY (CP)—The women
of India • are emerging as a
powerful force in the politics of
the country.
It no longer is true to say of
them that they are disinterested
in politics, totally obedient to
their husbands and coy in the
presence of men.
Indian opposition parties are
attaching more importance to
the participation of women in
anti - government rallies and
processions. Some parties have
organized special women's
branches.
Of the 16,000 Communists arrested recently during a "passive resistance" campaign to
bring down food prices, as
many as 3,000 were women.
The Democratic Socialists
have started a drive to enlist
feminine support. The party has
200 full-time women workers in
Bombay alone.
The right - wing Hindu Jana
Sangh claims it can throw between 3,000 and 10,000 New Delhi women into agitations any
time it wants. To demonstrate
this, the Jana Sangh recently
kept up a seven-day round-the-
clock hunger strike by some
200 housewives outside the re
sidence of Prime Minister La :
Bahadur Shastri.
Armed with broomsticks, Calcutta's women recently surrounded municipal officials, demanding better sanitary services.
Not to be left behind, the Ruling Congress party is making a
major effort to streamline its
women's branch. It has initiated plans for recruiting 20,000
women workers to counter
Communist and Socialist anti-
government propaganda.
COAT
SALE
LADIES' FASHION COATS
Sizes 10 to 18
UP TO HALF OFF
CLOTH COATS:
All wool, chamois lining.
Reg. 39.98 i.	
ALPACAMA COAT:
Reg. 59.98 	
CLOTH COAT:
All wool musk rot trim.
Reg. 59.98; _________
MOHAIR COAT:
Chamois lining.
Reg. 69.98. ____	
ORLON PILE COATS:
White with leopard trim.
Reg. 59.98 —__„	
LEOPARD | COAT:
Reg. 79.98 _______
SIMOTTA i COAT:
Reg. 79.98 . __._
LEOPARD F.L. COAT:
Reg. 89.98 _.,_____
MOHAIR COAT:
Mink collar.
Reg. 179.98 __	
MOHAIR COATS:
Mink collar.
Reg. $135  &
19.99
39.99
39.99
39.99
39.99
39.99
39.99
59.99
89.00
89.00
Jjadai}. WqhL
7 p. m. Specials
Flash Bulbs-HALF PRICE
G.E. M5 power mite flashbulbs with
zirconium foil. Boxes of "?0_i
12. Reg.  1.44. Special _ /_W
Fall Bulbs
Get your fall bulbs now. Daffodils,
narcissus, assorted tulips, crocus,
snowdrop, hyacinths, lily, peony,
shastd  daisy and  phlox.  4 to o
customer.  AO_
Reg. 69c. Special tT7r
Ladies' Blouses	
Large selection of dressy blouses.
Several styles to choose from. Assort-
sd colors. Sizes 10 to 20. Regular
to 6.98  : 1.49 to 3.99
DuBarry Lotions	
-HALF PRICE
Famous Du Barry firming lotion,-
special astringent and skin freshner.
Aegular prices 2.75 and 1.75. Spec.
1,37   and 88*
Boys'
Thermal Underwear
Light, warm, thermal shirts and
drawers. Sizes S, M, and L. Shirts
Reg. 1.79. 1 1Q
Special      LIT
Drawers: Reg. 1.98. >i   *q
Special     I «*f r
Men's
Thermal Underwear
Light, warm thermal shirts and'
drawers. Sizes: S, M, L. Shirts Reg.
1.98. | oft
Special     LOT
Drawers: Reg.
2.29. Special  .	
1.79
Flannelette Pyjamas
Children's cotton flannelette pyjamas in floral and novelty prints. Pastels and white. aq«i
Sizes 3 to 6X TT>
Men's Work Boots
An assortment of work boots with
leather uppers composition soles.
Mostly brown. Sizes 6i "T QQ
to 10_. Special  / .TT
l(hii>siin>*E>„{i (tumpatut
 6 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964
.  . _ ,	
Kromm Names Team
For Tonight's Opener
Bobby Kromm announced his
starting lineup for tonight's Western International Hockey League opener in Rossland Thursday.
He broke the news that Jim
Letcher, Vancouver Canucks'
standby goalie, will definitely
play for the Maple Leafs this
winter and was expected to arrive in town this morning. He
had intended to leave Vancouver
yesterday but was forced to remain in the coast city pending
arrival of Giles Boisvert, who
replaces Marcel Paille in the
Canuck nets. Paille has been recalled by the parent New York
Rangers.
In the event that Letcher is
delayed, Bruno Forlin has agreed
to play.
Holdovers F.ank Carlson,
Dave Stewart and Shorty Mal-
acko will occupy three defence
spots. A pair of M-year-old hopefuls, Bob Willis, of Calgary and
Shelly Atwell will both see action at the other blue line slot.
Larry Motfery of New Westminster will centre Bob Kromm
and Mike Laughton on the Leafs'
first line.
Kelowna junior league scoring
champ, Larry Roberge will take
the pivot spot between Miles
Desharnais and Carl Chwachka
on the second.
Alec Young, a rugged Alberta
winger, who checked in last night
from the Spokane camp will
line up on the right wing of the
third unit. Murray Owens is expected in from Portland to take
TOKYO (CP) - Indonesia today became the second Asian
country to withdraw from the
1964 Olympic Games because of
an argument over the eligibility
of athletes, joining North Korea
on the sidelines.
MIKE LAUGHTON
. . . Switches to wing
over the centre slot and Danny
Calles will be given the left wing
assignment.
Kromm said following last
night's practice that the line-up
will probably be changed noticeably for Saturday's home-opener against Trail, as he wants to
see several more rookies perform under fire before making
a final decision as to the squad's
makeup.
Yankees Bounce Back To Square Series
Rookie Mel Stottlemyre
Dazzles St. Louis Batters
By JACK HAND
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Rookie
Mel Stottlemyre, a name Yogi
Berra still has trouble spelling,
confused St. Louis Cardinals
with seven - hit pitching Thursday and New York Yankees
squared the World Series with
an 8-3 victory in the second
game.
The Yanks rolled out the
heavy artillery and bombed
Bob Gibson and two successors
for 12 hits that Included a
homer by Phil Linz and four
doubles.
Another standing-room crowd
of 30,805 huddled in the chill
breees and 58-degree temperature at Busch Stadium while
the Yanks broke open a tight
game with a four-run blast in
the ninth.
Manager Johnny Keane paraded Barney Schult, Gordon
Richardson and finally Roger
Craig to the hill as the score
mounted.
Boos rattled through the
stands in the sixth when the
Yanks broke a 1-1 tie with the
help of a controversial hit-batsman call by plate umpire Bill
McKinley.
TOKYO (CP-Reuters) - A top WALKED HOWARD
world   sports   body   Thursday!   Mickey  Mantle  had  walked
urged the International Olympic!and Elston Howard had lined
Committee to take "uraent aclout when " haPPened- Joe PePi-
Committee to take   urgent ac- L^ hg]f checking a swing at
tion   to halt the widespread use an inside pitch was nicked on
of pep-pills and pain-killing drugs|tlle ]e{( tnign
among athletes. i   catcher Tim McCarver, Gib-
In a report submitted to the son, Keane and Dick Groat pro-
IOC, the International Congress tested with fire, but to no avail,
of Sports Sciences said the in- Tom Tresh then scored Mantle
creasing use of drugs is caused with the go-ahead run to make
by "the hardness and fanaticism it 2-1 amidst a chorus of boos,
of today's competition." I   Two more Yanke runs in the
RUMS
KAVY RUM,
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the
Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
| seventh and the bundle of four
in the ninth left the home
crowd in a sombre mood as
they filed out.
The teams left for New York
Immediately after the game.
Friday Is an off day for travel.
When they resume action Saturday at Yankee Stadium it
will be Jim Bouton, 18-13, a 25-
year-old righthander, pitching
for the Yanks and 35-year-old
southpaw Curt Simmons, 18-9,
working tor the Cards.
WILL PLAY IN NEW YORK
They will play three games in
New York and then return to
St. Louis for the rest of the
best-of-seven series If more are
needed.
Stottlemyre, recalled by the
Yankees from Richmond Virginians of the International
League Aug. 11, had the Cardinals hitting the ball into the
dirt all through the cloudy afternoon.
The slim 22-year-old righthander from Mabton, Wash.,
banks on a sinker ball and he
had tight control of the situation until he appeared to tire
in the eighth and ninth.
Berra, the Yankee manager,
came out to the mound twice,
once to see if his pitcher had
been hurt by a line smash off
the bat of Lou Brock in the
sixth. Yogi made one more trip
in the ninth after a leadoff
triple by Groat and a single by
McCarver produced a run with
nobody out.
Mike Shannon, the hero of
Wednesday's 9-5 Cardinal victory, slashed into a fast double
play and Stottlemyre struck out
pinch - hitter Charley James to
end it.
MOST VALUABLE PITCHER
It was quite a performance
for a young man who was pitching in the minors most of the
season. In fact, Stottlemyre's
13-3 record in Richmond earned
him the most valuable pitcher
award in that league despite
his month's absence. More than
any other pitcher, the youngster
was responsible for the late
Yankee pennant surge with his
9-3 victory record.
The win halted a five-game
series losing slump of the
Yanks, who hadn't won since
they took the seventh game
from San Francisco Giants in
the 1962 World Series. They lost
four straight battles with Los
Angeles Dodgers last year.
Second game:
New York A 000 101 204-8 12 0
St. Louis N    001 000 011—3  7 0
TOKYO (AP)-The population
of Tokyo, the world's largest
city, reached 10,629,525, as of
Aug. 1.
TAKE ADVANTAGE
NOW!!
Buy Your
GOOD//YEAR
WINTER TIRES
At This
BIG SAVING
BUY 1
GET 1
AT HALF PRICE
On All Sizes
SUBURBANITE
TIRES
ANDY'S TIRE SHOP LTD.
Stottlemyre and Howard; Gibson, Schultz (9), G. Richardson
(9), Craig (9) and McCarver.
W-Stottlemyre. L-Gibson.
HR: NY-Linz.
(2 Athletes
Set for Cross
Country Race
Athletes from seven Kootenay
centres have entered the first
Annual Kootenay Open Cross
Country Championships, to be
held here Saturday. Fernle,
Cranbrook, Creston, Nakusp,
Nelson, Trail and Castlegar will
be represented when 62 high
school students take to the road
over a gruelling two and three-
quarter mile course.
Leading the array is Jim
Henke, of Nakusp, who set a
new record of 4:44 for the senior
mile at the 1964 West Kootenay
High School Track Meet at Trail
last June. His main opposition
will probably be Jim Boyce
grade 11 student at L.V. Rogers
High School, Nelson, who won
the mile and three-quarter, L.V
Rogers Cross Country Championships, two weeks ago.
The race will begin at 1:30
p.m. Saturday at Civic Centre
grounds. Runners will complete
half a lap of the Civic track, proceed onto Vernon Street; up
Douglas Street to Behnsen; down
Behnsen street, behind Safeway
store onto Front street; back
along Highway No. 3 to Civic
Centre, where they will complete one full lap of the track.
Police intend to co-operate
with regard to clearing the
streets while the race is in progress.
JOE PEPITONE
. Was he hit by pitch?
mm
PHIL LINZ
Plays Harmonica
. . Hits Home Runs
Olympic Swim Coach
Expects No Gold Medals
By JACK SULLIVAN
Canadian Press Sports Editor
TOKYO (CP) - Swimming
coach Howard Firby of Vancouver said Thursday Canada
has its strongest swimming
team in Olympic history but a
half-dozen other countries likely
will pick up the gold medals.
Firby rates swimmers from
the United States, Russia, Australia, Germany, the Netherlands and Britain as the ones
who are likely to stand up and
be counted when the gold medals are passed out starting early
next week.
"The Americans should take
all the relays for men and
women," he said in an interview. There are five—the men's
400- and 800-metre freestyle and
400-metre medley and the women's 400 - metre freestyle and
400-metre medley.
Firby, who coached the Canadian British Empire team at
Cardiff, Wales in 1958, said the
Canadians-should reach six individual finals in swimming
here, something Canadians
haven't been able to do in the the men's 800 freestyle.
memory of the present generation.
TIP BEST CHANCES
He gave this rundown of Ca-
ada chances of advancing to
the swim finals:
Women — Mary Stewart of
Vancouver in her specialty, the
100 - metre butterfly; Eileen
(Joey) Weir of Toronto in the
100-metre backstroke; Marion
Lay, a native of Vancouver who
lives in Covina, Calif., in the
100-metre freestyle; and Barbara Hounsell, a native of Weston, Ont, who is a resident of
Whittier, Calif., in the 400-metre
individual medley.
Men — Sandy Gilchrist of
Ocean Falls, B.C., in the 400-
metre freestyle and Ralph Hut-
ton of Ocean Falls In the 200-
metre butterfly.
Firby said Louise Kennedy of
London, Ont., "blows hot and
warm and, if hot, can be a surprise in the freestyle spring."
He also figures there will be
three Canadian finalists in the
relays — in the women's 400
freestyle   and   400  medley  of
IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllMI
Nelson Curling Club Plans
Big Introductory Funspiel
You say you're one of those
people who has always wanted
to take up curling but just never
got around to it?
Then the Nelson Curling Club's
big "Funspiel" Is the thing for
you!
As an approach to attracting
newcomers to the club and
acquainting beginners with the
roaring game, the club announced last night, plans for an
introductory fun-bonsplel, open
to both men and women from
Nelson and the entire surrounding area.
It doesn't matter if you've
never thrown a rock and the
only contact with a broom
you've had is the one your girl
flies on when the moon Is full,
you're welcome.
The club hopes curlers will
register in foursomes, but
stresses that single entries will
be happily accepted.
A club spokesman said an
ideal situation would be one in
which every rink had a member who had never curled
before.
"There will be no fee, except
for two-bits per head which will
go toward prizes," he said.
Every curler will be guaranteed a minmum of two games,
and the clubs best shotmakers
will be on hand to give instruction to beginners and to explain
the rudiments of the game.
"The teams can be made up of
all men, all women or any combination of both," club president,
Lou Maglio invites, "so grab
your mother-n-law, the milkman
and the guy next door, and plan
to attend the big Nelson Funspiel."
Dates will be announced in an
advertisement in the Nelson
Daily News this week.
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Dry Land Training Plan
For National Ski Team
National Hockey League
Looks for Banner Season
By JOE DUPUIS
Canadian Press Staff Writer
"About the only problem we
have," says Clarence Campbell,
"is how to find space for all
the people who want to see the
game."
Faced with such a delightful
prospect, the National Hockey
League embarks on a new season next week confident of
breaking more attendance records, if that's possible.
Boston Bruins play host to
New York Rangers in the league
curtain-raiser Monday.
Campbell, NHL president,
says weekend and holiday
games around the six-city circuit are nearly always automatic sell-outs. "The only margins we have tu work with are
the weekday games," he says.
"These are not always sold out,
but nearly always.
RULES CHANGED
"If fans have the feeling this
year that the spectacle is a little
smoother, with a stepped-up
pace, playing rule changes will
be the reason," says Campbell.
Foremost is the "clean" face-
off rule, with no body contact.
The time-consuming and tedious practice of players arguing
penalty calls with the referee
is out. From now on, penalized
players must proceed directly to
the penalty box—or else.
Other  rules  protect  against
324 Vernon St.
NELSON, B.C.
Ph. 352-3727
EXPORT
PLAIN
or  FILTER  TIP
CIGARETTES
offensive interference—such as
when a defensive team forms a
screen to protect a puck carrier—and restricts the number
of ways' a goaltender can stop
play unnecessarily.
Referees now have the power
to crack down hard on those
who leave the players' bench to
join in an altercation on the ice,
or for any other improper reason.
Chicago Black Hawks, along
with the Canadiens and Detroit
Red Wings, are logical contenders for the Leafs' crown. Offseason trades appear to have
strengthened both the Bruins
and Rangers.
CROZIER ON SPOT
Man-on-the-spot this season is
Roger Crozier, the 22-year-old
rookie goalie on whom coach
Sid Abel has invested the fortunes of his Red Wing team.
Abel still has Gordie Howe to
provide inspiration, but the loss
of reliable veteran Terry Saw-
chuk to Toronto could be a blow.
Crozier played 15 games for
Detroit last season, ending up
with a not-so-good 3.40 average.
Detroit also has newcomers
Murray Hall, Ron Murphy and
Autry Erickson, obtained in a
trade with Chicago. Murphy will
play on the Howe-Alex Delvec-
chio line.
Leafs acquired Sawchuk after
Abel left him unprotected in the
draft. Leaf coach Punch Imlach
plans to alternate Sawchuk in
the nets with Johnny Bower.
Experience is still the trump
card in Maple Leaf aspirations.
Imlach has veteran Red Kelly
back, while waiting in the wings
is. winger Dickie Moore, all-
time Canadiens' scoring ace
trying a comeback with the
Leafs after a year's layoff.
REAY MAKES CHANGES
After stretch - drive collapses
in the last two seasons, the
Black Hawks, under coach Billy
Reay, are minus three veterans
but will have at least four newcomers to try to fill the gap,
Apart from veteran Doug
Mohns, acquired in a summer
trade with Boston, the newcomers are all rookies — John Bren-
neman, 22, Doug Robinson, 24,
and Dennis Hull 19-year - old
brother of Hawk star Bobby
Hull.
Robinson, up from Buffalo of
the American League, will likely
replace Ab McDonald on the
Hawks scooter line of Kenny
Wharram and Stan Mlkita. McDonald was part of the Chicago
trade that also sent Reggie
Fleming and Murray Balfour to
Boston.
Wharram was injured when a
puck smashed into his face dur
ing a pre - season exhibition
game against Toronto, and is a
doubtful season starter.
Brenneman scored 28 goals
and 47 assists with St. Louis
Flyers of the Central Professional League last season.
Two new faces grace the
young, spirited Canadiens team
—Yvan Cournoyer, and defence-
man Ted Harris. Cournoyer is
the exciting right wing replacement for Bernie Geoffrion, who
retired this year to coach Quebec Aces of the American
Hockey League.
Montreal's chief concern is
goalie Charlie Hodge, last year's
Vezina Trophy winner, who has
been playing far below form in
exhibition games.
HAVE ACE IN HOLE
But the Canadiens have an
ace in the hole in veteran
Gump Worsley, Quebec Aces
goalie, who has looked much
better than Hodge in exhibition
play. Winger Henri Richard will
miss some early games for the
Canadiens because of an injury.
New York expects big things
from Bob Nevin and Dick Duff,
acquired in the Bathgate • Mc-
Kenney trade with Toronto.
They also have fresh blood in
Rod Seiling, winger Ted Taylor, up from St. Paul of the
CPHL, defenceman A r n i e
Brown, minor star with Baltimore and Rochester of the AHL,
and Jim Mikol, drafted from
Boston last summer. High scoring winger Camille Henry is
ailing with a back injury. Seiling, who will be 20 in November,
gets his start on defence with
the Rangers, although he can
also play on the forward line.
A member of Canada's Olympic
team last year, he came to New
York in the Toronto trade,
Gilles Villemure, 24, rookie
understudy of Ranger goalie
Jacques Plante, may play a
key role in the team's plans.
Rangers, apparently d 1 s e n-
chanted with Plante, may start
the season with Villemare,
scored upon 18 times in the. five
games he played for New York
last season.
Bruins figure they were bolstered by the Chicago trade
that brought them Balfour, McDonald and Fleming. Boston has
a promising rookie in winger
Ron Shock, last year with Niagara Falls Juniors,
Missing from the Boston lineup for the first time in nine
seasons will be Andy Hebenton,
hockey's iron man who set a
record by playing 630 consecutive games. Bruins optioned
Hebenton to the minors this
year, and he now is on the reserve list of Portland in the
Western League.
Regular dally practice in dry
land skiing is underway for 14
members of the Canadian national ski team who are attending school and training as a
group in Nelson.
Enrolled at the university are:
Andre Crepeau, Sherbrook, Quebec; Eva Kuchar, Montreal;
Heather Quipp, Ottawa; Judy
Young, Fort William; Bob Calla-
dine, Vancouver; Scott Henderson, Banff, Alberta; Dan Irwin,
Fort William; Bob Swan, Ottawa; and Jerry Rlnaldl, Kim-
berley, B.C.
Nancy Green, Rossland, B.C.,
is employed at the university in
a secretarial position, and Barbi
Walker, Montreal, attends the
Kootenay School of Art in Nelson.
Attending L. V. Rogers senior
secondary school are: Gary
Matheson, Montreal; Vicki Rut-
ledge, Ottawa, and Keith Shepherd, Revelstoke, B.C.
Karren Dokka, Vancouver, is
expected to arrive this month to
enrol at U V. Rogers, and three
members of the team who have
been working elsewhere will join
the group for training — Michel
Lehman, Montreal; Peter Duncan,   Mt.  Tremblant,  Quebec
and  Ron  Williams,   Smlthers,
B.C.
Rod Hebron; Vancouver, who
attends Oregon State University,
will arrive at the end of his
school's fall quarter, Dec. 1, and
will train during the winter quarter, returning to Crovallis in the
spring.
Pro-Fi/es
Baseball's
RECORD TH«)Wl
By BOB STJDYK
445 FT. 1 IN. no- Grate's
heave wag accoi.. :is_ed in _
pre-game exhibition la the old
Minneapolis ball park, Aug;. 27,
1906. In hie big league career
ha pitched eight games for the
Phillies In 1945-16, winning; ont
and losing- onel
Minor Hockey
FINAL
REGISTRATIONS
Green Room      —      Civic Centre
Saturday, Oct. 10
10 a.m. lo 12 Neon
MITES—under 8—$2.50
PUPS—under 10—$2-50
PEE WEE—under 12—$4.50
BANTAMS—under 14—$5.00
MIDGETS—under 16—$5.50
JUVENILES—under 18—$7.00
(All Ages as of May 31st, 1964)
Nelson Maple Leafs
1st Home Game
Nelson Civie Centre Arena
Saturday, Oct. 10
GAME TIME 8 P.M.
NELSON MAPLE LEAFS
vs
TRAIL SMOKE EATERS
Season Reserved Tickets $24.00 - Middle 3 Sections
between bluellnes exclusively for season and
reserved ticket holders. - Savings of 112.00
50% Down, Balance by Dec. 1st.
Children 25c       Students 50c       Rush $1.25
Reserve $1.50
Corsages to the First 500 Ladles in Attendance
 HE'S JEST  \-<_)9
LEssBowN'j rr-|T
THAN SO'  -X DO LOOK
IS-SEE? ) (  EWHTINTT
DID HE
UK. IT
f   VES.' M6
SAIO IT WAS
\.  tovEiv
K
§i __JF i
•A       C
_v
[\ tfe
AMP HS 8AIP MAVSEWO I
TO KNIT A PACK FOR
&S/BRVOHB IM THE APMV ,
SO WECOULP ALL. BE Itf
UNIFORM     >-
THIS SAME
IS CALLED,
THlDg-AND-SEEKFIFI-'
THK IDEA IS FOR YOU
JO MICE UNDER THE
COUCH
BIRTHS
ARLIDGE — Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Arlidge, 948 Foul Bay Road.
Oak Bay, Victoria. On October
8th a daughter, Susan.
CLARK — Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Clark, Salmo, B.C.
On October 7th, a daughter.
VLAHOVICK - Born to Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Vlahovick,816
Park Street, Nelson, B.C. On
October 8th, a son.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964 — 7
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
SALES CLERK, STEADY POS-
ition. Salary. Some typing.
Age 21 to 35. Give phone number and particulars. Box 269,
Nelson Daily News. —236-tfn
SITUATIONS WANTED
HELP WANTED
HANDYMAN - JANITOR RE-
quired for the Victorian Hospital of Kaslo. 40-hour week,
general maintenance duties,
coal stoker furnace, care of
hospital grounds and gardens,
car allowance. Apply in writing stating qualifications, experience, and salary expected,
to Administrator, Victorian
Hospital, Box 607, Kaslo, B.C.
-233-238
SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 8 (SLO-
can) Teacher required immediately to teach grades 1-3 inclusive at Perry's Elementary
1-room school. Apply in writing with copies of latest District Superintendent's report
to H. R. Mills, Sec.-Treas., Slo-
can S.D, No. 8, Slocan, B.C.
-234-tfn
EXPANDING AREA EMPLOY-
er requires applicant with
electronics experience or interests. Job in communication
field. Good fringe benefits
Salary open to discussion. Apply National Employment Service, Nelson, B.C.    —238-240
Q U A L IFIED INSTRUMENT-
men with minimum of 5 years
experience required for Duncan Lake Dam Site. Prefer
some drafting and soils testing
experience. Apply in writing to
Montreal Engineering Co. Ltd.
P.O. Box 546, Kaslo. —237-242
MESSENGER BOY OR GIRL.
Apply C. P. Telegraphs, 460
Baker St. -236-241
BEFORE STORING FOR WIN-
ter, treat your implements
right. Call Van's Repairs for
overhaul. Pickup — Delivery,
Phone 352-2408, 57 Ymlr Rd.
-234-23!)
ROOM  AND   BOARD
CLEAN,     PRIVATE     BDRM.
,  for gentleman. Near Legion.
$25. Ph. 352-5030 or 352-3644.
-201-tfn
ROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-
tleman. Ph. 352-2119 after 5
p.m. —238-240
ROOM AND BOARD FOR A
working girl. Ph. 352-2766 after 5 p.m. —228-tfn
WANTED - A POSITION AS
caretaker, motels and summer
camps, anywhere; for a small
fee. Box 264, Nelson Daily
News. —228-239
MALE OFFICE CLERK, WITH
industrial first aid experience
"C" Certificate, requires position. Apply Box 270, Nelson
Daily News. —236-241
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.
G. Stenberg. Ph. 352-6892.
-231-256
BOATS AND ENGINES
FOR SALE - ROOMY SAFE
family cabin cruiser, 19 ft.
Flying Bridge, folding top,
completely equipped, 45 h.p.
Mercury Motor, a bargain at
$1195.00. Call 352-5694 after 5
p.m. -233-238
1*4 YR-OLD BOAT, MO'.JOR,
trailer, water skis, etc. Pi hied
for quick sale. Phone 352-81127
or 352-2450. -234-239
ANTIQUE CARS
AUCTION SALE, VINTAGE
Classic Cars — Car parts,
tires, antique lamps, clocks,
china, books. Three Valley
Motel, 12 miles West of Revel-
stoke, B.C. on Trans-Canada
Highway. Saturday, Oct. 10th,
1 p.m. No reserve bids. Write
Box 860< Telex 048-739. Phone
837-3850. —238-239
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
S:SS—Sign On
6:00-Wake Up Time
6:40—Farm Fare
6:45—Chapel In The Sky
7:00—News
7:05-Wake Up Time
7:25—Sport8 News
7:30—News
7:35—Wake Up Time Continues
8:00—News
8:10—Sports News
8:15—Wake Up Time Continues
8:30—Preview Commentary
8:35—Opening Markets
8:40-Wake Up Time
9:00—News
9:10-Music Fill
9:15—The Archer's
9:30-Alan's A.M. Spot
9:59—D.O.O.T.S.
10:00—News
10:10—What's the Song Contest
10:15-Music Fill
11:00—News
11:05—Morning Melodies
12:00—Canadians On Record
12:15—Sports News
12:25—News
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast'
12:54—News
12:57—Noon Markets
1:00—Sing Along
1:15—The Tommy Hunter Show
1:45—Afternoon Concert
2:00—School Broadcast
2:30-News
2:33—Trans Canada Matinee
3:00—News and Summary
3:05—Sports .Spotlight .. 	
3:10-Music Fill
3:15—Sacred Heart Program
3:30-Tempo - Part I
4:00-News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10—Pops Parade
4:30—Countdown
5:00—News
5:05—The Rolling Home ShOw
5:35—Closing Markets
5:40-Today's Editorial
5:45— Sports Desk
5:50—Spotlight On Sports
5:55— Strikes and Spares
6:00—News
6:05-Grand Old Opry
7:00—News and On
Parliament Hill
7-"0—SpepH"" Personally
7:30-Music For Listen'!!.
8:00—Assignment
8:20-UN Radio
8:30—Reserved For Music
9:00—Easy To Remember
9:30—Chamber Music
10:00-News
10:15-Chapel In The Sky
10:30-Friday Frolic
12:00—News
12:03—Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1964
6:00—The Morning Show
6:10— Olympic Report
6:30—The Morning Program
6:45—Royal Visit
8:15—News
8:30—Programme Resume
9:00—News
9:15—Olympic Report
9:35—Morning Concert
9:45—World Series
12:30-Royal Visit
1:45—Saturday Sports Date
2:30—Olympic Report
8:00—Opera Time
4:30—Pratley at the Movies
5:00—Radio International
5:30—Hockey Night In Canada
7:15—The Outdoorsman
7:30—On The Move
8:00—Max Ferguson Review
8:30—Alfred Deller Consort
9:30—Canadian-American
Relations
10:00—News
10:15-Olympic Report
10:30—The Saturday Set
11:00—From the Panorama Roof
U:30-Continental Cabaret
12:00-News
12:03—Land and Marine
Weather
12:05—After Hours
1:00—News
1:03—Recorded Music
TELEVISION  FOR TODAY
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
KR-M-TV - Channel t
6:30 Friday Night
at the Movies:
"Operation Secret"
8:30 Adams Family *
9:00 Valentine's Day *
9:30 12 o'clock High »
10:30 Farmer's Daughter
11:00 Nightbeat
11:15. Bob Young and News *
11:25 Nightbeat (continued)
11:30 Late Show:
"Captain Horatio
Hornblower"
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
7:00 Gomer Pyle, USMC •
7:30 Rawhide •
8:30 The Entertainers *
9:30 Friday Premiere Theatre
11:00 11 o'clock News
11:30 Chiller Theatre
KHQ-TV — Channel 6
7:00 America
7:30 International Showtime *
8:30 Bob Hope *
9:30 Jack Benny (C) »
10:00 Jack Paar (C) *
11:00 News and Weather
11:30 Tonight with Carson (C) •
CBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel U
4:00 The Secret Storm
4:30 Razzle Dazzle
5:00 Thierry la Fronde
5:30 Music Hop
6:00 Donna Reed
6:30 Home Edition
7:00 The 7 o'clock Show
7:30 Plain Talk
8:00 Country Hoedown
8:30 Mr. Broadway
9:30 Telescope
10:00 Ben Casey
11:00 News
11:14 Viewpoint
CJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbrldge
MOUNTAIN 8TANDARD TIME
9:45 World Series
12:30 Royal Tour
1:30 Breeder Stake
2:00 Sign Off
4:30 Countrytime
5:00 Bugs Bunny
5:30 NHL   (All Star)
SATURDAY
7:15 Juliette
7:45 Sports Unlimited
8:00 CFL-Montreal at Calgary
10:15 Rogues
11:15 CBC News
11:25 Nite Final
11:30 Studio 7
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
WANTED TO RENT
3 BDRM. HOUSE.
352-3008.
PHONE
-238-240
GARAGE NEAR RCMP BAR-
racks. Ph. 352-5443.    —238-240
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC. FOR SALE
ABOUT 9 ACRES CLEARED
plus barn, old pear orchard,
entrance from Queen's Bay
Townsite, plus 46 acres in
timber and poles. Also 650'
frontage on both sides of Nel-
son-Kaslo Highway. Full price
$3500.00. Down $500. Wm.
Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-
2425. -221-tfn
KITCHEN DELIGHT - 2 B.R.
bungalow, lower Fairview.
Spacious and well - planned
kitchen; L.R.; oak floors. Full
basement; gas furnace. Terms
$11,900. Robertson, Hilliard.
Ph. 352-7252. -238-238
25 ACRES, 2 MODERN HOMES,
auto, heat, garage, workshop
and barn on Duncan Flats,
near Trail, Good spot for horses. Apply Box 324, Trail or
phone 364-1683 after 5 p.m. or
anytime weekends.   —236-246
FOR SALE - TWO BEDROOM
house with full basement on
one acre of land with some
mixed fruit trees, or four
acres and the house. Apply to
Steve Danyluk, R.R. No. 4,
Vernon, B.C. -230-255
LAKE FRONTAGE, NORTH
Shore, 3 mile, well-built two
level home, ample cupboards,
all glass lakeside, dble plumbing. App. Ph. 352-3204.
-237-239
FOR SALE, 2 BIG LOTS ON
Ymlr Road, No. 14; 3 B.R.
house on one lot, part basement. Very suitable for store
sight. Inquire at 14 Ymir Rd.
■"" -219-lfh
NORTH SHORE, *i MILE
from bridge. House and two
rental dwellings. Highway and
lake frontage. 2% acres. Ideal
commercial potential. Phone
352-5205. -225-tfn
SMALL 5 ROOM HOUSE FOR
sale or rent, low price at 304
High Street. Ph. 352-5230.
-238-243
FOR SALE OR RENT-2 BDRM
cottage at Longbeach on 1
acre of land. Ph. 229-4263.
I -238-240
FOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE
Box 223, Nelson News.
-176-tfn
14 X 24 MODERN 2 ROOM COT-
tage to be removed from property. Ph. 352-2474.      -236-241
REMEMBER
All Our Listings Are Inspected
and Appraised at
FAIR MARKET VALUE
5-BKDROOM   HOUSE
ON 5 ACRES
2-storey family home on highway 6 miles south of Nelson.
This property is ideal for family wishing country living with
KpCre"ea:.$5500
$3360 down payment, balance
$48.25 per mo. incl. 6% int.
NEW DWELLING -
MULTIPLE LISTING
North Shore, 17-Mile. 14 acre
land in garden. Bungalow
style; 2 bedrooms, living room
with fireplace. Electric heat.
Workshop-guest house also on
property. $6900
Full price  «Ky«""»
Down payment $1500, bal. 6*4%
BUNGALOW OLDER STYLE
NEAR HUME SCHOOL
Corner, level location, 5 rooms,
2-3 bedrooms, glass enclosed
verandah, basement, gas fur-
nace $8700
garage    *     "
Immediate occupancy with
$1500 down.
NEAR LAKE - BALFOUR
120 sq. ft., level property, in
garden, lawns, fruit trees;
only 150 feet from lovely
sandy beach. Five-room bungalow style with large back
porch-laundry, fireplace, car-
port, concrete        $$5QQ
' With $i500down.
LAKE FRONTAGE,
NORTH SHORE
Over 250 feet fairly level with
lovely sandy beach at 11-Mile.
Extends from main highway
to lake; cleared. Also *i acre
with 3-room cot- $1 1,9Q0
tage, all for
Terms.
200 BLOCK SILICA STREET
Older style family home with
all modern improvements in
and out. Two story. 6 rooms,
3 bedrooms, fireplace, gas
hot air furnace, sunporch,
patio, laundry room, large
garage. See this property and
tXin $n'900
Minimum Down $1700
or Trade
NORTH SHORE LOT, 100 X 150,
3 mile East. Ph. 352-3204.
-237-239
3 BEDROOM HOME, MODERN,
on Third St. $15,000. — $4000
down. Ph. 352-6912.      — 115-h
(Continued next column)
FAMILY HOME - 6-MILE
Level land 90'xl6O' just off
main highway. 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms (2 down), double plumbing. Full basement, concrete
foundation and floor, gas furnace, garage in basement,
space for rum- $1 1,900
pus room. . ^ ' " •
Only $2000 Down.
MODERN DWELLING,
' 6-MILE
4 acres of level land with modern 7-room, 4-bedroom dwelling; level land on highway.
Full basement, oil furnace,
rumpus room. Lawns, garden
and land for sub- 41A Qftft
division. Now *''»»«""'
With $2000 down.
I. D. Roslieg
& Son Ltd.
568 Ward St.     Phone 352-3581
Residence, Phone 352-2698
-238-238
'Continued next column)
DAILY  CROSSWORD
47. Island
group: S.
Pacific
18. Prophets
49. A soft
metal
60. Weird:
var.
DOWN
1. Funeral
song
2. Anger
3. Constellation
4. Food from
heaven
5. Uncooked
6. Epoch
7. Exchange
premium
8. Aquatic
rodent
9. Froglike
animal
11. Like
steel
18. Taverfc
19. Curs
20. Goddess
of dawn
21. Jogs
28. Eccentric:
el.
25. Cry of a
cow
26. Stings
27. Rosy
28. An age
31. Short
sleep
35. Web-footed
bird
38. Burning-
|maneIto
3S|
BOWE RHa B
ATE
1  B A D EBB E
PEL
AS KllSTY
|RI
SEES AlWlsB
H_B _□__
-_ 0HHHK _-
___I3   ___
hh_ a___a_H
am _□_ una
_____ _____
Tciterday'i Amw_>
37. Blunders
39. Arrived
41. West wind!
myth.
43. Extinct
bird:N.Z.
44. Unhappy
46. Lawyer's
bill
ACROSS
t Unit of
measure
5. Quantity
ofpaper
9. Coronet
10.100-eyed
monster:
myth.
12. Musical
instrument
13. Blouse
14. Lifetime
15. Nickel:
sym.
17. Turkish
weight
18."	
profundls"
19. French
painter
22. Music
note
23. Greek
letter
24. Natural
26. To fry
lightly
29. Covered
wttli
chimney
dirt
80. Flesh of
sheep
82. Toward
S3. Land
measure
84. Underwater
obstacles
86. Iron: eym.
38. Fabulous
bird
40. Italian
river
41. Breeze
42. English
streetcars
45. Bid
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa-
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
XAZN      JO      MJQWDNBT      MWJOFDW.
XAZN      JO      MWJOFDWT      MJQWDNEi—
HWPDHW      QWDLZDI      OAZX
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ALL ARE APT TO SHRINK
FROM THOSE THAT LEAN UPON THEM.—LORD HALIFAX
(© 1964, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
MAY WE ASSIST YOU
FOR LOCATION AT THE
RIGHT PRICE? ACT NOW . . .
FAMILY GROWING?
3-4 B.R. home near all schools.
L.R. 20'xl4' (fireplace), large,
convenient kitchen and utility
room with dining area. 1 B.R.
down, 3 B.R.s up. 50'xlOO* lot
landscaped with garden ready
for harvest.       % I I CAA
Priced right *l ,'0UU
READY FOR INSPECTION
Just outside city limits. Quality materials and workmanship in newer 3-B.R. stucco
home. Sparkling, convenient
kitchen. Many extras throughout. Beautifully landscaped —
with swimming pool and garden ready for harvest. Drive
to double garage. |, | ^glJO
1963 taxes $4.00
Only $2500 down.
1 BLOCK FROM BAKER ST.
1-B.R. home. Large L.R., 24'
x 14'. S.P. includes gas range,
gas space heater $4000
and refrigerator. ....v
BIG OPPORTUNITY
Make 10% profit 3 units on
Vernon   St.   including   store
\fiB±       $16,650
GOLF COURSE AREA
1-B.R. family home. Garden,
concrete basement. Lot size
383.6 x 333 ft. Hot water heat.
Spacious kitchen and living
room. $1500 down. $8800
Price    *
IMMACULATELY CLEAN
Newly redecorated interior and
exterior. 2 B.R, home. New
copper piping and wiring. Efficient kit. and vanity bathroom. Full basement, gas fur-
onnee,FSpe '._!:, $10,500
TRY YOUR DOWN PAYMENT
3-B.R. home in good condition.
Half blk. from Baker St. Stucco exterior; auto, heat; 2-car
garage. Terms to   $8500
right party «PO«WU
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
Fairview, 7th St. 3-B.R. home
on 1st floor. Featuring planter
divider of L.R., 15'x20\ and
kitchen; many cabinets. Full
basement and oil furnace. Garage attached. Two level, landscaped lots,      tie qflft
Good value at ...*'«>»wU
Only $2000 down!
WALKING DISTANCE
Small 2-B.R. with clever cabinet kit. Full basement, new gas
turaace and H.Wr $5200
Includes gas range, elec. ref„
auto, washer. $50 per mo.
NORTH SHORE - 3-bedroom
- l*i-storey. L.R. fireplace,
excellent kitchen, dining area,
plus utility room. Level 1.99
acres with outside bldg. All
redecorated. Must be seen to
»a*e;      $13,900
$2000 down. .
l-BEDROOM HOME
New gas furnace and hot water
tank. Walking distance to bust-
S£ $3500
Only $1500 down.
Looking for Mirror Lake property? Ask about 2 new listings
at fair price.
ONLY $500 DOWN
Choice location for future commercial property. 2-B.R. home.
Kitchen needs renovation. Lot
36*4' x 91'. Drive-in garage.
« $4500
$500 down.
. NEAR JR, HIGH SCHOOL
Compact 2 B.R. home with
cabinet kit. and snack bar.
Bathroom with sliding glass
shower door. Sun deck with
lake view. Full basement. Wired for W/D. Gas furnace and
S-Price :..   $W00
$1500 down.
CEDAR ST.
Older home — make an offer.
cash   or   finance. Immediate
occupancy.
FAIRVIEW 7TH STREET
Newer 3 B.R. home. Large
L.R., fireplace. Efficient kit.
with eating area and picture
window.    Wired   for   W/D.
$15,900
Available financing.
DISTINCTIVE HOME
Choice Fairview Height location in setting of trees and
shrubs. This 3 B.R. home is a
background of entertaining
with Oriental decor L.R. and
birch panelling D.R. Convent.
Kit. Full basement, nearly finished Rec. Rm. and extra B.R.
A11 a cbed   double   carport.
„ $18,600
Available financing.
SILVER KING ROAD
14.05 acres, fenced. 6-room
family home, 3 B.R.s. Double
garage, barbecue and patio
area; barn, chickenhouses. —
Could subdivide; high poten-
tial. See this     $30,000
Approx $10,000 down,
$118.99 monthly
SALMO CITY
5-room house. Price Includes
many extras. $5000
Total price  -P-WWU
$1000 down.
RENTAL
3-B.R.s,   _ blk. from Baker
St. Auto. heat. A clean home
with 2-car garage.        475*
Per month   Y-«°
700 Blk. Observa- $(200
tory. 50'xl20'lot. v,*vv
CHOICE BUILDING LOT
North Shore, other side of
Blaylocks, 1*4 acres with
orchard. $4000. Ph. 352-6144,
McHardy Agencies Ltd.
PHONE 352-6144
Sylvia Brashear, Res. 352-5633
Gordon Burgess — 352-6887
McHARDY
AGENCIES LTD.
REAL ESTATE . INSURANCE
554 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.
price?
S.P.
for
-238-238
 ■_■_■_■*
8 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9,1964
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND  FARM SUPPLIES
CATTLE FOR LOCKERS. -
Over 100 to choose from.
Young steers 20c; young cows,
17c; calves for veal or to
raise, 25c. Bred whiteface replacement heifers. Ph. 367-9809
-225-tfn
CATTLE AUCTION SALES. -
Mixed, Nov. 25. Calf only, Oct.
14 and 28. Director, Frank
Hill, Box 2139, Cranbrook, B.C.
or phone 4-Y Fort Steele.
-194-tfn
FOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING
dairy and beef cattle, phone
352-6874. Nelson and District
AI. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician,
-tfn
FOR SALE, PURE BRED
Hereford bull, 2*4 yrs. or
would trade for bull or livestock. Box 46, Fruitvale or Ph.
367-9529. —238-240
FOR SALE, GUERNSEY COW.
Good milker. 1 whitehead calf,
George Soukeroff, Shoreacres
Flats, B.C. 229-tfn
1 YEAR OLD CHICKENS 80c
a piece or 32c a lb., dressed.
Glendale Farm. Ph. 357-9734,
Salmo. — 184-tin
COW JUST FRESHENED, 2ND
cilf. Very good milker. Pete
Poohachoff, Slocan Park
234-239
FOR SALE, GOOD QUALITY
first cut alfalfa hay. $25 per
ton. Phone Tex Mowatt 352-
2934.   Nelson, B.C.    —234-239
PETS,   CANARIES,   BEES
BEAUTIFUL BLACK AND
white Purebread Border Collies for sale. B.C. Trial Champion blood lines. Phone 353-
2246 or write Mrs. W. Meers,
Kaslo,  B.C. -234-239
FOR SALE - REGISTERED
Pure Bred English Springer
Spaniel Pups, black and white.
Box 40, Grand Forks, 442-3065
evenings. —233-238
KITTEN WOULD LIKE A
good home. Male. House
broken. Ph. 352-7718. -238-243
FOR  SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE BY TENDER - WE
invite tenders on the following
buildings: 4 only — 48 man
room bunkhouses, 1 only—office building. Buildings are
available for inspection from
Monday to Friday between the
hours of 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Tenders should cover materials received from buildings
after dismantling and removal
The highest or any lender not
necessarily accepted. Tenders
to be clearly marked "Vacant
Buildings" and mailed to Canadian Exploration Limited,
Salmo, B.C. —233-238
Now is the time to plant fall
rye in your garden for green
fertilizer next spring, we have
it!
Nelson Farmers Supply
524 Railway St.    Ph. 352-5375
SUNSTRAND CASH REGISTER
2 total, $107.50. Summira adding machine with subtract
$59.50. Dalton adding machine
with subtract $39.50. New machine guarantees on above. J.
T. Mowatt _ Co. Ltd. 352-2934,
Nelson. -234-239
McCLARY WOOD-COAL STOVE
water tank, 2 coal scuttles, 2
wicker arm chairs, 1938 Singer
sewing machine, small wood
table, wooden chair, box odd
china, metal spring folding
bed. The lot, $39. Ph. 352-7585.
-237-238
SIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,
49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of
pork, 29c; sides of pork, cut
and wrapped, 33c. Newdan
Farm, Creston. Ph. 356-9901 or
356-9769. '    -171-lfn
FOR THE BEST IN USED
automatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,
574 Baker St.. Nelson. B.C.
-27-tfn
CHIHUAHUA   PUPS   -   TAN
colored. Phone 352-5857.
-217-243
BARLEY STRAW FOR SALE.
15c per bale. Newdan Farm,
Creston. Ph. 356-9901.
-230-tfn
1  LARGE  WHITE CRIB,  $20.
Phone 352-2777. -235-240
'Continued next column'
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A bandy alphabetical guide to goods and services
available in Nelson.
Automobile Dealers      Health Food
BILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.
(Studebaker-Lark)
213 Baker St.      Phone 352-3231
-tfn
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.
(Rambler - Volkswageni
323 Nelson Ave.    Phone 352-5355
-tfn
Building Supplies
BEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.
Everything in waterproof
plywood.
301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135
-tfn
BURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.
602 Baker St.      Phone 352-8661
-tfn
COLUMBIA TRADING CO
901 Front St. Ph  352-5571
Lots of free parking.
-tin
Cabinet Makers
...   JOS. C. MERMET
Professional Kitchen  Remodel-
big., Serving Nelson and Dist.
-1020 Davies St. - Nelson
-tfn
Contractors
Lazlo Huszak, General Masonry
Stone - Brick - Cement - Stucco
Plastering
1323 Falls St.        Ph. 352-7092
-213-238
KOKANEE CONSTRUCTION
..- CO. - 582 Ward St.
Residential • Com. • Renovation
Phone 352-3633
Estimates on all jobs.
-214-239
ART RAVESTEIN
Renovations, Cement Work
" and General Carpe_rv
Phone 352-7433
-tfn
Health Thru Nutrition
HEALTH FOOD CENTRE
924 Davies St.
-233-258
Monumental
Stones
Bronze and Granite
K. D. REES
Ph. 352-6727    310-507 Baker St.
-197-tfn
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
i Continued'
SINGER SEWING MACHINE
Co. Sewing machines, vacuum
cleaners, floor polishers, typewriters. 339 Baker St. Phone
352-3631. -234-239
See NELSON FLOWERS LTD.
Phone for private interview.
-230-tfn
Photo Copying
POWELL ENGRAVING
400 Ward St.        Nelson. B C
Phone 352-7521
Contracts  -  Birth Certificates
Legal Documents - Important
Papers.
-tin
Printing
NELSON DAILY NEWS
Printers - Lithographers
Color Printine
Phone 352-3552
-tfn
Radio & TV Service
ONE USED TRACTOR TIRE
and reliners, 10 X 28. Box 46
Fruitvale. Ph. 367-9529.
-238-240
BEST, CHEAPEST USED COAL
and wood furnace. Write to
Cedarco, P.O. Trail, B.C.
-233-238
CHOICE BEEF - SIDE 100-200
lbs. 45c lb. 200-275 lbs. 37c lb,
Ph. 352-6866. —233-258
DRY FIR AND TAMARAC. -
Stove length. Ph. 352-5485.
-219-246
SOLID   OAK   DINING   ROOM
buffet. Good condition. 352-6361
-238-240
GIRL'S SKATES SIZES 11 AND
2. Ph. 352-3087 evenings.
—237-239
BOY SCOUT UNIFORM AND 1
'Cub sweater. Phone after 12
p.m. 352-2821. -237-242
WOOD AND SAWDUST KIT-
chen stove, very reasonable.
Ph. 352-3804. -236-241
COMB USTIONEER STOKER,
$100. Phone 352-3808. -207-tfn
COAL AND WOOD STOVE, OIL
heater. Ph. 352-2861.   -235-tfn
AUTOMOTIVE. BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
CUSTOM-BUILT
Several New Models
IN STOCK NOW
Large Selection of
Used Logging and
Gravel Trucks
SPECIAL
1959 VF-190 C&C, 461 engine,
34,000 bogies  $6000
PHONE 372-3388
INTERIOR
SALES
Serving the Kootenays
2017 East Trans-Canada Hgwy,
KAMLOOPS, B.C.
AUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
(Continued'
FOR SALE - 1958 FORD RE-
tractable hardtop, automatic
trans., power brakes, steering
also power windows. Equipped
with Interceptor special motor.
$1600. Ph. 442-3258.    -238-239
'61 RAMBLER CLASSIC WA-
gon, like new, winterized, 2
extra mounted winter tires.
Trade. $1895. Ph. 352-2036.
-233-238
3 months warranty, $1995; 1958
Volkswagen Deluxe, custom
radio, good condition, $795. Ph.
352-6411. Western Auto Service,
295 Baker St. -237-239
1962 RENAULT GORDINE, A-l
shape, white walls, and many
extras, $1095; 1961 Renault
Caravelie sports car with only
14,000 miles on. Just like new,
NICE 55 CHEV. 2 DOOR HARD-
top Belaire; 52 Ford, needs
some work. Ph. 352-6306.
—238-243
1961 LAND ROVER IN A-l CON-
dition. Model 109, canopy,
warren hubs. Ph. 368-9979.
-233-238
PUBIIC NOTICES
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
AUGUSTA CLAUDIA
LANGFORD MOTION,
DECEASED.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that all persons having claims
against Augusta Claudia Lang-
ford Motion, late of Nelson, B.C.,
who died thereat on the 21st day
of September, 1964, are required
to file particulars thereof with
the undersigned solicitors for
the executor on or before the
4th day of November, 1964, after
which date the executor will proceed to distribute the assets of
the said deceased among the
persons entitled thereto, having
regard only to the claims which
shall then have been filed as
above required.
DATED at Nelson, B.C. this
30th day of September, 1964.
GARLAND _ GANSNER,
P.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.,
Solicitors for the Executor.
-232-h
'59 VOLKSWAGEN BUS, GOOD
condition. Ph. 352-7562.
-238-239
FOR SALE - 1952 G.M.C. _-
ton, $300 cash. North Shore
Motel. Ph. 352-7722.    -233-238
FOR SALE - BSA-250 CC„ 1955
or trade for a larger bike. Box
211, Notre Dame.      -233-238
55 BUICK   CONVERTIBLE,
new top. $745. Ph. 352-3126, 8-5.
-233-238
'55 FORD, '53 PLYMOUTH, '56
Hillman hardtop. North Shore
Service. Ph. 352-2929. -188-tfn
1964  HONDA   90   IN   EXCEL-
lent condition. Phone 365-5177.
—237-242
1951 *4-TON STUDEBAKER, OR
trade for cattle. Box 46, Fruitvale. Ph. 367-9529.     -238-240
1963   RAMBLER   CLASSIC. -
Many extras. Ph. 352-6327.
-237-239
'62 PONTIAC HARDTOP -
Automatic, fully equipped. Ph.
352-2476. -237-238
1950 AUSTIN IN GOOD COND.
Beasley Service, Ph. 359-7411.
-237-242
1948 PONTIAC, 4 DR. - Licenced, $75. Ph. 352-5850 after
5 p.m. —235-240
FOR   SALE,   1
Ph.  352-2398.
RENAULT.
-236-241
-238-h
COTTONWOOD WRECKAGE
wrecking: '55-'56 Chev., '53
Ford Pickup, '55 and '56
Fords, '55-'56-'57 Dodge and
Plymouth, Vt ton Chev. truck;
Good motors, '56 Chev V8, '55
'53 Consul, '56 Dodge. Ph. 352-
5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir Rd.
-221-tfn
Radio - TV • Transistor - Service
COLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE
LTD.
458 Ward St.     Phone 352-5581
-218-tfn
VIDEO ELECTRONICS
405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355
-tfn
HARRY PEDERSEN
Roofing and Siding Contractor
New homes built-old remodeled. Free est. Ph. 352-3584 eves.
-231-256
Family
Financial Advisors
FINANCIAL ADVICE, DEBT
CONTROL
Fred C. Merriman
•0 Baker St.      Ph. 352-6012
hone or write for confidential
day or evening appointment.
-236-261
Flying School
Gov't approved Flying School.
Air Charter Service.
Single or multi-engine aircraft.
WANETA  AIRWAYS
Phone 365-7444 or 365-4871
Castlegar, B.C.
-236-261
Garages
Upper Fairview Motors Ltd.
Cor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525
Transistorized Ignition
—tfn
Refrigeration
Refrigeration Sales and Service
CARLSON EQUIPMENT
Nelson, B.C.     Phone 3S2-545b
-186-tfn
Sporting Goods
Fred Whiteley's Sport Shop
488 Baker Street  Phone 352-7741
  -tfn
Topsoil
Larry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel
Ph. 352-2355 Days • 352-7576 eves
-tin
Welding & Iron
Works
Let KOOTENAY WELDING &
CASTING REPAIRS
specialist take care of voiir welding problem. 30 years experience
from different countries in Europe. Craftsmanship guaranteed
Diesel, cylinder head, cylinder
blocks, etc.
1121 Columbia Ave., Castlegar
Phone 365-5531
—127-282
1963 4-W.D. SCOUT, WITH
full cab and hubs, low mileage, new condition. Full price
$1875. 1951 International Pickup, excellent condition, with
radio, $400. Ph. 352-7238.
-237-239
'Continued next column'
1957 FORD, 4 DOOR, IN GOOD
shape. Ph. 352-5815.    —237-tfn
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
SPOT CASH FOR USED FURN1-
ture, antiques, coins, old gold,
guns and jewels. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531.
413 Hall St.. Nelson. B.C.
-98-tf
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
GEORGE FORTUNE MOTION,
DECEASED
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that all persons having claims
against George Fortune Motion,
late of Nelson, B.C., who died
thereat on the 10th day of February, 1931, are required to file
particulars thereof with the
undersigned solicitors for the
executor on or before the 4th
day of November, 1964, after
which date the executor will proceed to distribute the assets of
the said deceased among the
persons entitled thereto, having
regard only to the claims which
shall then have been filed as
above required.
DATED at Nelson, B.C., this
30th day of September, 1964.
GARLAND & GANSNER,
Solicitors for the Executor.
P.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.,
—232-h
MACHINERY
Farm
Machinery
"No"  Finance  Charges
"No"  Payments
Until April 1, 1965
TIMBER SALE X93101
Sealed tenders will be received
by the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 10:30
a.m. on the 19th day of October,
1964, for the purchase of Licence
X93101, to cut 88,000 cubic feet
of Cedar, Hemlock, Larch, Fir,
Balsam, White Pine, Other Species on an area situated Clearwater Creek, Kootenay District.
Three (3) years will be
allowed for removal of timber.
As this area is within the
Lardeau S.Y.U., which is fully
committed, this sale will be
awarded under the provisions of
section 17 (la) of the Forest
Act, which gives the timber-sale
applicant certain privileges.
Further particulars may be
obtained from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or the Forest
Ranger, Nelson, B.C.
PROPERTY WANTED
WANTED - USED ELECTRIC
motors. Coleman Electric, 502
Front St., Nelson, Ph. 352-3175.
 -227-tfn
WANTED - CLEAN COTTON
rags. Must be at least 12
inches square. Nelson Daily
News -126-tfn
LISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-
ing lots, farm land, city and
country residential. Commercial property, timber lands.
Call or write Wm. Kalyniuk
Agencies, Nelson. Ph. 352-2425.
-231-tfn
COAL AND WOOD RANGE. - 4
hole. White enamel. Phone
352-2405. -238-240
WANTED - LAKEFRONT
acreage, 10 acres up. Prefer
boat access only. All cash for
suitable property. S. Anderson, 100 N. Fletcher St., Chilli-
wack, B.C. -220-tfn
Applies to All New and Used
Agriculture Tractors, Balers,
Combines. Offer Good to
October 30, 1964.
IN   STOCK
NEW M.F. Model 90 Tractor
NEW M.F. 35 Gas - Diesels
NEW M.F. 65 Gas - Diesels
USED   TRACTORS
1-M.F. 35, 3 cyl. diesel
3—M.F. 35, Gas Tractors
3—Ford 8N Tractors
4—Ford 9N Tractors "
1—John Deere Model AR
1—A.C. Row Crop
1—Massey Harris Model 20
1—Massey Harris Pacer and
Hyd.
ON   SPECIAL
1—*"     800 Tractor w/front-
End Loader and Back-Hoe
Now Only $4200 Complete
1—Caterpillar Model D8 with
Dozer and Winch.
Now Only $7,000.00.
Valley Automotive,
Farm Equipment Co.  Ltd.
CRESTON, B.C.
—238-230
Nelson's
Welding Supply
Headquarters
Everything for the
MACHINES
RODS
ACCESSORIES
HANDBOOKS
MAC'S WELDING
& EQUIPMENT CO.
514 Railway St.    Ph. 352-5301
-228-tfn
Rapid Tap Cutting Fluid
Reduces rBeakage.
Makes Drilling, Boring,
Tapping Easier.
Stevenson Machinery Ltd.
Phone 352-3561
-238-238
VALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.
Massey-Ferguson, New Hoi
land New and Used Farm
Equipment, Parts, Sales and
Service, Phone 356-2254, Creston, B.u. —lio-tfn
(Continued next column)
Now On Display in Our Showrooms
BUICK LeSABRE
PONTIAC PARISIENNE
ACADIAN BEAUMONT
G.M.C. HALF-TONS
TWO USED CAR LOTS TO SERVE YOU BETTER
BAKER and FRONT STREET
Largest Car Lot in the Kootenays
1964 Acadian 6-Cyl. Automatic.
1964 Stratochief 6-Cyl. Automatic.
1964 Land Rover
1962 Chevrolet Sedan V-8 Standard
1962 Pontlac Strato-Chiel. V8, Standard.
1962 Pontiac Laurentlan. V8, Automatic, Two-Tone.
1962 Ford Fairlane. V8, Standard Transmission.
1960 Prefect 4-Door Sedan. A good second car.
1960 Consul 4-Door Sedan. Two-Tone.
1860 Chev. 6-Cyl. 4-Door Sedan
1959 I.H.C. 3-Door Panel.
1958 Pontiac 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.
1958 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan. 6, Automatic, Two-Tone.
1958 Austin 4-Door Sedan. Low Mileage.
1958 Meteor 4-Door Station Wagon. 6-Cylinder.    .
1958 Oldsmobile 2-Door Hardtop. V8, Automatic.
1957 Plymouth Sedan
1957 Chev. Station Wagon. 6-Cyllnder.
1957 Austin 4-Door Sedan.
MANY OTHER OLDER MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
1963 Vanguard Station Wagon. 6-Cylinder.
1960 Envoy 4-Door Sedan. 4-Cyllnder, Standard.   <
1960 Sithca 4-Door Sedan. Low Price.
1958 Vauxhall 4-Door Sedan. White
1957 Plymouth 4-Door. Very Clean.
1957 Pontlao 4-Door Sedan, 6-Cylinder, Standard Trans.
1956 Mercury H-Ton. Long Box, 6-Cyl.
1956 Ford Fairlane 2-Door Hardtop. V8.
1956 Ford 2-Door Hardtop. V8, Automatic.
1956 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cyllnder, Standard Trans.
1956 Austin 4-Door Sedan. Light Blue.
1955 Dodge -Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.
1955 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.
1955 Mercury Pickup
1954 Pontlao 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.
1953 Pontiac Sedan. 6-Cyllnder, Standard.
BIG DISCOUNT ON NO-TRADE DEALS
BEACON MOTORS LTD,
PONTIAC — BUICK — VAUXHALL—ACADIAN
GMC DEALERS
701 Baker St.
Phone 352-6641
MACHINERY
(Continued)
1 Only — D-7
Caterpillar
Tractor
Complete with
Dozer and Winch
$6000.00
MAC'S WELDING
& EQUIPMENT CO
514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301
-228-tfn
JOHN   DEERE   440   DIESEL
crawler, blade winch, with or
without timber. Ph. 367-9809.
-229-tfn
TRAILERS
KOOT-NEE
MOBILE   HOMES
LTD.
IN VALUE
IN SERVICE
IN THE KOOTENAYS
Parts -- Towing --
Consignments
and Good Used.
East and West Kootenay
Dealer For —
General Mobile Homes
Scamper Travellers
Canuck Campers
Now At Our New Location
Near the Overpass
Entirely Owned and Operated by
JOE GRAY and RAE MASSE
P.O. Box 2470 Ph. 426-2513
CRANBROOK, B.C.
-238-h
WANTED FOR CASH, 35 OR 40
foot house trailer. Box 368,
Nelson Daily News.   —235-240
MOBILE HOMES
(Continued)
57x10' 3 B.R. $7365
In Modern Decor
Completely furnished and set up.
WHY PAY MORE
The '64 Fleetwood has all the
quality features. 1-pce. galvanized roof, baked enamel.chip-
proof finish on aluminum sides.
Truss engineered channel frame,
60,000 BTU furnace, dble. fibre-
glass insulation, frost free storm
windows for all windows. Nationally known, serviced and guaranteed appliances.
17 floor plans to choose from.
1, 2 or 3 bedrooms.
Best bank financing possible.
Kingsway Trailer Wholesale
5438 Imperial HE 4-0741
Day or Night
-192-tfn
SHOPPING FOR A NEW Mobile home? Don't discover too
late that You did not receive
true value for your dollar. See
Safeway — and compare —
Before you buy! 10 ft, and 12
ft. models on display at Cranbrook Trailer Sales, your
authorized Safeway Mobile
Home Dealer for the East and
West Kootenays. Walt Hill,
mgr. Phone 426-4935, P.O.
Box 2217. -231-tfn
WANTED   HOUSE   TRAILER,
approximately 26 feet long,
suitable for use as bunk house,
Write Box 327, Castlegar, B.C.
-236-241
MACHINERY
FOR   HIRE
FOR RENT - PORTABLE 225
AMP  DC   Welder.   Portable
steam cleaner. Ph. 352-2042.
-218-tfn
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
$5000 TO INVEST IN LOCAL
Business. Forward particulars
to Box 271, Nelson Daily News.
-238-240
PERSONAL
PERSONAL SUNDRIES _ SUP-
plies. 60% savings. Free price
list and sample on request.
Box 8. Station C. Winnipeg.
-27-240
HYGIENIC SUPPLIES. SAVE
up to 100%. "Mail $1 for 18
finest quality assorted. Park
Sales, P.O. Box 561, Hamilton.
Ont. -216-241
ANTIQUES
AUCTION SALE - VINTAGE
classic cars, car parts, tires,
antique lamps, clocks, china,
books. Three Valley Motel, 12
miles west of Revelstoke, B.C.
on Trans-Canada Highway.
Saturday, Oct. 10th, 1 p.m. No
reserve bids. Write Box 860,
Ph. 837-3850. Telex 048-739.
-238-239
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Modern
OFFICE
For
Approximately 700 sq. ft. of
modern, fully wired office
space located on Baker Street
In Nelson.:
REASONABLE  RENT
Long or Short Term
Leases Arranged
Apply to:
Nelson Daily News
Ph. 352-3552
REUBEN BUERGE MOTORS LTD.
THEY'RE ALL NEW F0R '«
New BISCAYNES •- New BEL-AIRS -■ CHEVY VAN - New IMPALAS
New Vi-TONS - New OLDSMOBILES - New CORVAIRS
New CHEVY lis - New CHEVELLES
1965 CHEVROLET HALF-TONS. EQUIPPED WITH TEEPEE CAMPER
CAR LOT No. 1
Vernon Street
Opposite Our Garage
PHONE 352-3121
'59 Pontiac Sedan
'65 Dynamic 88 Sedan
2—'63 Chevrolet Sedam
4—'65 1/2-Toni
'57 Chevrolet HT 4-Dooi
'57 Pontiae 4-Door HT
'62 Ford Sedan
'62 Mercury HT
'61 Zephyr Convertible
'59 Buick HT
'59 Chevrolet Panel
'59 Pontiae 4-Door HT
'64 Chevrolet '/.-Ton
'64 Corvair Van
'64 Chevrolet Van
'58 Chevrolet Sedan
'62 Chevrolet Sedan
'63 Corvair Sedan
Many Others to Choose From
CAR LOT No. 2
Baker Street
Opposite  Peeblei Motor Motel
PHONE 352-3233
'56 Buick HT
'57 Meteor 2-Door
'60 Ford Sedan
'62 Chevy II
'58 Plymouth 4 -Dr. HT
'59 Dodge Sedan
'57 Chevrolet Coach
'59 Chevrolet Sedan
'56 Chevrolet Sedan
'56 Dodge Custom Royal
'64 Mercury Econolina
(Equipped like house trailer)
'65 TeePee Camper
'56 Dodge
'56 Chevrolet 2-Door
'58 Plymouth St. Wagon
'58 Pontiac Sedan
'55 Pontiae Sedan
'58 Standard
'54 Ford Sedan
'55 Chev. Station Wagon
'57 Oldsmobile HT
2—'64 Corvain (New)
2—'64 Chevy II (New)
T—'65 Chevy II
1—'65 Cadillac
NO DOWN PAYMENT
WITH APPROVED
CREDIT
I
<$> SEIBEBUN6
CASH      TERMS      TRADES
The Largest Stock of New and Used Cars In the Interior at—i
REUBEN BUERGE
MOTORS LTD.
24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE — BCAA RECOMMENDED ,-
323 Vernon Street NELSON Phone 352-3121
CHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE - CADILLAC - F-85 STARFIHE
CORVAIR - CHEVY n - CHEVELLE - ENVOY
OPEN TUX < P.M. FOR CAR SALES EVERY DAY
 _■_■__■_■■
mm
__■
m
RENTALS
tlKFICE SPACE FOR RENT.
i suitable for Beauty Parlour.
1 Barber Shop, or office, reno-
I vate to suit tenant, long lease
I available Apply Hume Hotel
t -197-tfn
SIDEWALK   LEVEL,   3   BED-
room unfurnished apartment.
' Close-in, immediate occupancy
' (70 month. William Kalyniuk
Agencies. Ph. 352-2425.
-233-tfn
AT 357 BAKER ST.-TWO BED-
room apt., partly furnished,
heat and hot water supplied.
Apply 414-5th St. Tel. 352-7645.
! - ■ -237-239
HSKPU AND SLEEPING RM
weekly, monthly rates Dishes,
linen supplied, parking. Allen
Rooms. 171 Baker St.
-27-tfn
ONE OR TWO- ROOM FURN-
ished apts. in Annable Block
$21 and up. Call 352-7217. Pou-
lin Agencies Ltd., 582 Ward St.
-231-256
$55   MONTHLY,   HEATED,
neat, self contained, furn. apt.
3 rooms plus bathroom and
storage room. Ph. 352-M36.
-238-243
FOR RENT, A BUSINESS Location in downtown Castlegar
suitable for retail or wholesale. Ph. 365-5001 or 365-7504.
-236-241
2    BDRM    HOME,    PARTLY
turn., automatic oil heated;
2',i miles east of bridge on
North Shore. Ph. 352-3436.
-236-241
2 BDRM. HOUSE, 17 MILE ON
North Shore, modern, fully
furnished. $110 per month. Apply Mrs. J. H. Vandervalk.
Ph.  229-4954. -237-242
HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM,   $45
: month;  heat, light supplied;
over our office. Ph. 352-3944,
Lambert Realty.       -233-tfn
LARGE 2 ROOM FURNISHED
apt., heated, close to Baker
St. Ph. 352-6162 or 352-6411..
-236-241
SPACIOUS PARTLY FURNISH-
ed 2 bdrm upstairs apt. Baker
St. Ph. 352-5401 or Call at 338
Baker St. -236-tfn
CENTRALLY LOCATED 2
bdrm cottage. Ph. 352-3315 or
352-2736. -236-241
» BDRM  HOUSE,   CLOSE-IN.
, Ph. 352-2874 After 6. -236-241
S ROOM  FURN.  APT., PRI-
V«te. Ph. 352-2684.    -236-tfn
RENTALS
2 BDRM. HOUSE. GAS FUR-
nace. Ph. 352-3294 after 4 p.m.
-236-tfn
CLEAN, SELF-CONTAINED
furnished 3 rooms. Ph. 352-5298
-236-240
3 BDRM. HOUSE AT TAGHUM,
oil heat, $60 a mon. Avail. Nov.
1st. Ph, 365-6584.       -235-240
2 BDRM. APT. ELEC. STOVE,
private entrance. Ph. 352-6909.
-233-238
NICELY FURNISHED 2 BDRM.
flat, all private. Just like a
home. Ph. 352-5402.    —233-
SPACIOUS HOME, GAS HEAT.
Near Baker St. Ph. 352-3765.
-233-238
FOR   RENT - HOUSEKEEP-
ing rm., close in. Ph. 352-7462.
-176-tfn
3 BDRM. FAMILY HOME, $65
a month. Ph. 352-2664.
223-tfn
HALDANE   APARTMENTS   -
Furn or unfurn. Ph. 352-6721
-65-tfn
1 AND 2 BDRM. UNITS, WIN
ter rentals, Ken Court Motel
Ph. 352-2821. -237-24!
SELF   CONTAINED   3   ROOM
suite. Ph. 352-7139 after 6 p.m.
-209-tfn
3 ROOM SUITE, 1 BDRM.,
elec. stove, heated, private
entrance. Ph. 352-6263. 216-tfn
FURN. HSKP. RM. APPLY 140
Baker St. or Ph. 352-3384.
-227-tfn
3 BDRM. HOUSE, CLOSE-IN.
Ph. 352-2979 mornings.
-231-tfn
SELF • CONTAINED  SUITE -
Adults. Ph. 352-6732.    -170-tfn
6   ROOM   APT. - CENTRAL.
Adults. Ph. 352-6024.   -198-tfn
SMALL HEATED FURN. APT.
Phone 352-3401 eves.  -235-240
'Continued next column!
JMamt
iatly INeroa
Circulation  Dept.,  Ph.  352-3552
Price per single copy  io cents
By carrier per week. 40 cents
In advance
Subscription rates:
By mail in Canada
Outside Nelson
One month     $ 2.00
Three months 5.00
Six months    .; 10.00
One vear 18 00
MORE THAN YOU
BARGAINED FOR..
NEW TRIUMPH 1200
More Value: Lowest priced 4-passenger convertible
More Horsepower: Top Speed Over 80
More Economy: Up to 35 mileS per gallon.
More Luxury: Walnut dash, bucket seats.
More Convenience: Adjustable Steering column.
More Roadability.
A family sports ear.
NORTH SHORE SERVICE
Phone 352-2929
Just Across the Bridge
Nelson, B.C.
ARRIVING SOON!!
Yours for %73 per Month ■
1963 Studebaker 4-Dr. Sedan
6>Cyl.    Overdrive.    Radio
— Your Choice $29 Per Month <—
1959 Simea 4-Door Sedan
1955 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan
1955 Dodge 2-Door Hardtop
MAC)    On-the-Spot Financing
BILLS'
MOTOR-IN LTD.
213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231
Nelson, B.C.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964—9
PICK iCQ PER MONTH
ONE  J y OR LESS
Check Our Used Cars NOW!      	
'65 PLYMOUTHS, DODGES, CHRYSLERS ON DISPLAY     }
—^___—lla*-——-—-—  ■  ■   _—*MP—_M»_-_—_<   II    _i     I—>MP-»-W»—->
1961 Plymouth Sedan V8. Auto  ONLY $52 per mo.
1961 Chevrolet Sedan V8. Std. Radio. ONLY $52 per mo.
1961 triumph Station Wagon - ONLY $24 per mo.
1961 Corvair Station Wagon ____ ONLY $59 per mo.
1959 Chevrolet Sedan ONLY $47 per mo.
1959 Ford Sedan V8. Std. Radio ONLY $52 per mo.
1959 Plymouth Suburban V8. Auto. ____■_-__• ONLY $53 per mo.
1959 Plymouth Fury V8. Auto. Radio.  ONLY $47 per mo.
1959 Vauxhall Sedan.  ONLY $41 per mo.
1958 Chrysler Windsor V8. Auto. _— ONLY $45 per mo.
195ft Porqwarri.    __.   ONLY !M5 per mo.
1958 Plymouth. Auto  ONLY $40 per mo.
TRUCKS
1961  Ford Pickup. Deluxe _- ONLY $46 per mo.
1958 Fargo Panel ___ —_____ ONLY $35 per mo.
1956 International. 4-Speod Trans. __—_„__. .,—  ONLY $29 per mo.
Many Older Models to Choose From. No Down Payment on Approved Credit.
Watch for the Opening of Our New Car Lot
YOUR   FRIENDLY
CHRYSLER .- DODGE - PLYMOUTH -- VALIANT - LAND/ROVER
DEALER.
CITY AUTO
LTD,
803 Baker St.    NELSON Phone 352-5346
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD,
Phone 352-5355
323 Nelson Ave.
Phone 365-7619
Castlegar, B.C.
Phone 352-2713
722 Baker St.
HUNTERS .. . ATTENTION, PLEASE!!
1964
1959
1956
1956
1955
1955
1955
1960
1959
Volkswagen 1500 Wagon.
Meteor Station Wagon. ....
Thames Station Wagon.
Was 2800
 Was
 Was
695
350
Ford Pickup. New motor, brakes, steering.
Meteor Station Wagon   ..._„._ Was   795
Ford Pickup. Automatic. ... __..Was  695.
Chevrolet Station Wagon. Was  795
Rambler Station Wagon. .. ..._ Was 1895
Was 1095
NOW$2695
NOW 1495
NOW 250
NOW 850
NOW 595
NOW 595
NOW 695 ,
NOW  1695S
I
1963 VOLKSWAGEN 1900 SEDAN. 9600 Miles. White.
1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC 6   	
1961 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE  	
1960 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE 	
1960 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN. P.S., Radio, V8.  .....
1959 OLDSMOBILE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Premium	
19S9 FORD GALAXIE. V8, Auto., Radio, P.S., P.B.
1959 PONTIAC. Like New	
1959 VAUXHALL SEDAN  _
1959 KARMANN GHIA         	
1958 HILLMAN SEDAN. Real good. _______
1959 RENAULT SEDAN __________
1957 HILLMAN SEDAN     .
1957 FORD. Automatic. 8-cyl. _
1956 FORD. New motor  ;	
1955 FORD V8 -_...._.....___	
1955 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP _
1955 DODGE  __________
1955 VOLKSWAGEN : —■
1955 DODGE  ! -—.,-,-..„._—	
1955 PLYMOUTH. ; _j   '   ■
1955  ZEPHYR.  : _______
1954 MONARCH. Automatic. „'' ■ '   ""- [■'■■i,
1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN ! !____
1953 PONTIAC  ;■■   ; ■■-. .-.--. --. .---.
1953 MERCURY V8. Automatic. . ' -"'   ■
1953 FORD 2-DOOR    ','■ „    ,. ,i ,"'	
1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN ._ _______
1950 PONTIAC      _. „„._..._...
...2495.
•• .1395-
.:115V
~"W-
... 1995-
.. .1895
... 1495
895
... 1495
" ,795 '
.   750
j m
1195
795.,
_ 695"
_'■«_.■
_; sso
. 515
m
£495.'-
;-;«0
-,.4S0-
. 195
:0 395
•ffiS"
.rim
295
_. m
A REAL DEAL ON A NEW 1964 RAMBLER.
A Few New 1965 Ramblers In Stock.
_£.  MEL BUERGE
MOTORSLTD.
FORD
A
Ph. 352-7202—608 Vernon St.       Car Lot: Vernon & Hendryx 332-7511
65 FORDS 65
now on display    ;:z
1965 GALAXIE 500 LTD 4-DOOR HARDTOP '^ Ifmi'
1965 GALAXIE COUNTRY SEDAN3 % _„
1965 GALAXIE 500 4-DOOR SEDAN
1965 FORD CUSTOM 500 SEDAN /     '', ™|
1965 FAIRLANE STATION WAGON
1965 FAIRUNE 500 4-DOOR SEDAR V ^
1965 FALCON FUTURA 4-DOOR SEDAN
1965 FALCON 4-DOOR SEDAN =_•-___
1965 FORD W-TON PICKUP :;
Test-Drive Your Choice Today! ~:~r.
USED CAR CLEARANCE
This Week. "
SPECIAL
YOUR CHOICE:  ;
$99
1953 Pontiac Sedan
1953 Ford Sedan
1951 Chevrolet Sedan
1951 _ Dodge Sedan ."...-"
1950 DeSoto __lc1di_/
1964 Ford Galaxie 500
Convertible
1964 Mercury Montclair
2-Dr. H.T.
1962 Galaxie St. Wagon
1962 Rambler 4-Dr.
Sedan
1961  Ford 4-Dr. St. Wgn.
1961  Pontiac 2-Dr. Sedan
1961 Meteor 4-Dr. Sedan
1961  Falcon 2-Door
1959 Ford St. Wagon
1959 Ford Sedan
MEL BUERGE
FORD
NELSON,  B.C.
 10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9,1964
DENTU CREAAE
DENTU POWDER
A Good Combination for Dental Plate Users
Dentu Creme for cleaning plates.
and
Dentil Powder
69.
for holding dental plates in place 57<S
MANN
DRUGS LTD.
Baptist Convention
Ends Association
WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) - Delegates to a Western Association
of Baptist Churches' convention voted Wednesday to terminate their arrangement with the
United Church ot Canada in the
joint publication ot Sunday
school material.
About-350 persons attending
the one-day Essex and Kent
Counties convention also called
for the withdrawal of the material for distribution from the
association's convention offices.
The second resolution expressed disappointment that
"our department of Christian
education be so far removed
from. the. beliefs and convictions
of our people that they should
approve such material."
James Gordon, chairman of
the resolutions committee, said
there has been dissension be-
between Ontario and Quebec
churches by the introduction of
a new curriculum prepared under the auspices of the United
Church of Canada and the Baptist Convention of Ontario and
Quebec.
"It has caused us to go a
separate way from our sister
conventions, the Maritime Baptist Convention and the Baptist
Union of Western Canada," he
said, : ~~r™ ___ ■..■;
Delegates were, told the new
curriculum teaches beliefs that
were contrary to the historic
Baptist convention of the scriptures as the divine and revealed
word of God, and contradicts
and denies portions of the Holy
Scriptures.       .."'".-;
Cabinet Mirnster
Over Hal Batiks
Remember when
Bonded Stock
Lcame in that plain
old bottle?
Well It doesn't
any more.
We've designed a
new bottle for our
whisky.	
And a new label.
We age Bonded
Stock a little longer
now as well. To
make every drop
just that little
more mellow.
We've done
everything we can.
Try a bottle of"	
Bonded Stock soon.
The rest)-up to you.
Cooderham's have been distilling fine whiskies since 1.32
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board
or by the Government of British Columbia. ■
By MICHAEL GILLAN
OTTAWA (CP)-Justice Minister Favreau was told he
should resign his cabinet post
Wednesday during an angry
Commons debate that saw him
and the government flailed for
the handling of Hal C. Banks,
former head of the Seafarers'
International Union of Canada.
Erik Nielsen (PC —Yukon)
moved an amendment to the
justice department estimates to
reduce the minister's salary to
$1. He said "it is both my belief
and the belief of a good many
of us on this side that the minister is no longer fit to hold the
portfolio. . . ."
Mr. Favreau denied the federal government made any
"shady deal" to help Mr. Banks
escape Canadian justice.
He said the government prosecuted Mr. Banks with determination, had opposed his request for bail, and had argued
if bail was granted it should be
set at $50,000.
Although Crown counsel did
not warn Mr. Justice Tremblay
that conspiracy charges are not
covered by Canada's extradition
treaty with the United States,
the judge knew this, and extradition was usually not discussed
during a bail application, Mr.
Favreau added.
FLED CANADA
The former union boss, fired
as SIU president by the government-appointed maritime union
trusteeship, fled Canada while
awaiting an appeal hearing for
his conviction on the conspiracy
charge. He had been released
on $25,000 bail and faced a five-
year jail term,,-.       	
The Banks issue flared again
last week following his discovery by a reporter aboard a
yacht at Brooklyn, N.Y.
Before the special afternoon
debate, Opposition Leader Dief-
enbaker renewed his call for a
special inquiry into Mr. Banks'
flight from Canada.
Debate on the estimates and
Mr. Nielsen's amendment is to
resume next Wednesday.
Mr. Nielsen charged that
Banks was allowed to leave the
country by the government's
"fumbling and bumbling, intentional or otherwise."
He said: there were reports of
tapes and films which might
mean some Liberal backbenchers would want Banks out of the
way.
'VICIOUS RUMORS SPREAD'
David Orlikow (NDP-Winni
peg North) said "vicious rumors" are being spread in labor and newspaper circles that
former members of the Louis
St. Laurent cabinet and present
Liberal backbenchers from
Montreal have "close connections" with Mr. Banks and the
SIU.
He said there were other rumors about SIU contributions to
Liberal election campaign funds
and backed Mr. Diefenbaker's
call for a judicial inquiry.
News of the Day
RATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates
on request. Minimum two lines.
COPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE
Copy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. for insertion
in next day's publication.
Rotary Luncheon Friday 12:15
pjn. Hume Silver Room. —32-h
Duplicate Bridge, Hume Hotel,
Every Monday Night.
-238-238
Salvation Army Clothing Sale.
Sat., Oct. 10, 10 a.m. • 2 p.m.
-238-239
BINGO
ELKS HALL, SAT. 8 P.M.
-236-H
Plan Now to attend the Hoote-
nanny Oct. 15, 7:30 p.m. L. V.
Rogers High School.,     —238-h
Knitting yarns for every purpose
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
-226-tfn
RUMMAGE SALE
Junior Hospital Auxiliary, today, from 10:00 a.m. — ?. 547
Baker St. -236-238
RIDING AT HARROP, SATURDAY, SUNDAY, AND THANKSGIVING. -237-239
Stylish New Dresses for girls,
smartly tappered pants for boys.
You pay no more for styles at
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
-232-tfn
Get yourself a folding clothes-
horse for easy clothes drying in
wet weather.
HIPPERSON HARDWARE
-238-238
A *3L5 VALUE FOR *2°! US
H_a__p*-F___i®
this Christmas   |&^»
give a yearly       !».**■■ 1|M; :
..." subscription of  H^Nil
BEAUTIFUL BRITISH COLUMBIA
A scenic and floral diary and a
beautiful 6" x 8" Christmas
greeting card - FREE!
|VVith  every yearly  gift of  s
F-^jH-eautiful British Columbia
magazine subscription you purchase we
will include a scenic travel diary (worth
$1) and a 6" x 8" Christmas card (worth
25c) announcing your gift subscription-
Beautiful British Columbia is a wonderful
gift for friends and relatives anywhere in
the world.  This spectacular illustrated
magazine deals exclusively with British
Columbia and is published quarterly by
servation. (A regular yearly subscription
is worth $2 alone.)
ORDER YOUR GIFT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FROM THE
NELSON DAILY NEWS
Your Christmas Gift Package and personal
Christmas Card announcing your year - round
gift of "Beautiful British Columbia" wiH be
mailed out by Department of Recreation and
Conservation.
It contains the winter issue of the magazine,
plus a scenic and floral diary featuring 26 of
the best colour pictures from Beautiful British
Columbia Magazine as well as writing space for
the Department of Recreation and Con-       every day of the year.
BINGO
EAGLE HALL TONIGHT
-32-h
TOT • 'N - TEEN
Good stock of Childrens Coats
despite the sidewalk construction we're open for business.
-238-239
TONY FONTAINE STORY
True story in color
SATURDAY, OCT. 10, 8 P.M.
Everybody welcome.
Covenant Church, 802 Baker St.
New Shipment of plastic drapes
• 36". and 54"
STERLING
HOME FURNISHERS
441  Baker  Street,  Nelson.
-238-238
Weekend Specials!
Snowballs,   peanut   clusters,
pectin  jellies.  Reg.  $1.49  lb.
Now 98c lb. Plus other specials.
NELSON FLOWERS LTD.
533 Baker Street
-237-239
ANNUAL
KIWANIS   PEANUT   DRIVE
October 19 and 20
Halloween nuts and candies
Proceeds to our Senior Citizen
Villa
-236-245
BALFOUR BEACH INN
Dinner of the Day and Steaks,
Friday and Saturday, 6 ■ 8 p.m.
Sunday, 5-7 p.m.
Dinner parties catered to by
reservation only. Ph. 229-4235.
-226-h
NELSON DANCE THEATRE
Classes commence Sat. Oct. 10
Notre Dame University
ALL STUDENTS CONTACT
Mrs. J. Gordon, Ballet, 352-2476
Mrs. D. Maryman, Modern Jazz,
352-7435
-238-239
HAVE FUN
While Learning
BALLROOM DANCING
WALTZ FOX TROT SWING
Commencing
MONDAY, OCT. 19th, 8:00 P.M.
Mr. and Mrs. J. G. (Jimmie
and Fran) James
Phone 352-5274
-238-239
Although Mr. Favreau maintained the RCMP had asked the
U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation to search for Mr. Banks,
several opposition members
said it was incredible he had
not: been located when a reporter found him in a matter
of hours.
The justice minister said letters were sent to the FBI Aug.
18 and 21, and that an FBI
liaison officer acknowledged the
second letter Aug. 28.
Mr. Nielsen said Crown counsel always makes certain there
is a provision in a bail bond
to ensure a person remains
within the court's jurisdiction,
but Mr. Favreau countered that
the form Banks signed was the
normal one used in Quebec.
Mr. Nielsen's speech produced angry outbursts from
government members.
When the Conservative member asked whether there was
not justification for concluding
there was a deal between the
government and Mr. Banks,
Trade Minister Sharp shouted:
"Not at ail-that is a lie."
He withdrew the word only
after repeated demands from
Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr. Nielsen.
Both Mr. Nielsen and Mr. Orlikow suggested Mr. Banks'
presence on the yacht, which
they said was provided by the
SIU, indicated he has retained
influence in the'union.
... Let us not believe for
a moment that the SIU would
provide such facilities for Mr.
Banks if he had lost all his usefulness to that union organization," Mr. Nielsen said.
MARKET TRENDS
Two Killed
In Explosion
DETROIT (AP) - Two crew
members were killed and three
injured early Thursday in a fire
on board the 200-foot West German freighter Erato, tied up at
the Detroit Harbor terminal.
Fire department officials said
the dead and injured were
among six men who were
trapped in the crews' quarters
by flames.
More than 65 firemen and 17
pieces of equipment fought the
blaze from the dockside where
the steel-laden ship, based in
Hamburg, was tied up.
Firemen said the fire apparently started in the crews' quarters.
NEW YORK (AP) - Amid
some profit-taking and heavy
buying, the stock market
carved out an irregular advance Thursday, putting some
averages at record highs.
A total of 5,090,000 shares
were traded compared with 5,-
150,000 Wednesday.
Among motors, Ford continued its march to new highs,
gaining 1_ at 62Vs as second
most - active issue while Chrysler recovered IVi of recent
losses and General Motors
closed unchanged as the strike
against GM dragged on.
The Dow Jones industrial average advanced 1.12 to 874.90.
closing below its recently-set all
time high.
The Associated Press average
of 60 stocks made a record peak
of 328.4 with an advance of 1.1.
Of 1,357 issues traded, 612 advanced and 469 declined.
Among the oils, Sinclair rose
1% to 51 as fourth most-active
stock on 83,000 shares. The
company has developed an additive which is said to suppress
engine noise.
STOCK SPi.iT RISES
Honeywell Inc. recommended
a 2-for-l stock split and the issue ran up 5% to 127%.
International Nickel gained
l'/s in the Canadian list while
son Bay Mining % and Granby
Mining _. Canadian Pacific
dropped %.
Prices were irregularly higher
on the American Stock Exchange where 1,840,000 shares
were traded compared with 1,-
790,000 Wednesday.
Among Canadians, Brazilian
Traction gained Vi. Canadian
Marconi was up _ and Scurry
Rainbow Oil advanced _. Canadian Javelin and Jupiter
Corp. lost Vs each.
MONTREAL (CP)-AU major
sections registered gains in
moderate trade Thursday on
the Montreal and Canadian
stock exchanges.
Industrials led the pack up
1.1 on index to a new high of
162.5 on a turnover of 247,000
Mines and oils volume was
986,500 shares.
Composite hit a new high on
index up 0.9 on the day to 156.1
as advances outnumbered declines 104 to 70.
Among   industrials,   Canada
Cement and CIL gained Vi each
to 46_ and 22% and Moore
Corp. Vs to 56%. Du Pont of
Canada dropped    to 59Vi.
Banks were up 0.4 at 131.8.
Royal added % to 77Y4, Montreal % to 68_ and Toronto-Dominion _ to 69. Banque Cana-
dienne Nationale was off Vs at
76.
Papers hit a new high, up 0.2
to 149.1. Consolidated led the
field, gained Hi to 44%. Fra-
ser and Price Bros, were up _
each to 22_ and 48. Great
Lakes dropped Vi to WVi and
Domtar   to 22%.
Utilities were up 0.1 at 148.7.
Trans-Canada Pipe Line picked
up 'A to 44Vi, Trans-Mountain
Pipe Line % to 20%.
Senior base metals were
stronger. Noranda gained VA to
50%, International Nickel 1_ to
93Vi, Hollinger %"'to'30V4 and
Hudson Bay Mining % to 71.
Senior oils were higher.
Texaco highlighted the gain, up
1_ to 62 „. Imperial gained %
to 52%. Shell and Home Oil _
each to 19 and 19% and Husky
« to-10„.     	
Primary metals were also
stronger. Canada Iron led up
1_ to 42_, Aluminium advanced to 33% and Dosco and
Stelco % each to 19 and 26%.
Dofasco fell % to 24%.
TORONTO (CP)-The stock
market broke through to high
ground at the close of only moderately light trading Thursday
to establish two index highs and
provide a handful of issues with
impressive gains.
The 80-stock industrial index
attained a high of 166.86 with
a .97 gain while the 114-stock
TSE index rose .90 to 155.71. All
other major index categories
advanced.
Consolidated Paper gained
1% to 44%, at one point touching 45. Trans Canada Pipe
gained _ to 4414 after hitting
45.
Brailian Traction rose 35
cents to $4.25 after reaching a
high of $4.30 on volume of more
than 55,000 shares. Bell Telephone however, after its spectacular rise—for this bluest of
blue chips—Wednesday to a record 60, declined % to 59%.
OTHER INDUSTRIALS GAIN
Alberta Gas Trunk A, B.C.
Forest Products and Calgary
Power each rose V* to 33, 34
and 24 respectively.
Senior base metals were exceptionally strong. Noranda
paced the group with a 1% rise
to a high of 50%.
Gold trading, though dull, produced higher prices. Hollinger
rose _ to 30_ and Dickenson
23 cents to $5.20. Dome was
down Vi to 33%.
In light but steady western
oils trading, Home A and B
rose % each to 19% and 19%
respectively, while Great Plains
tacked on _ to 11 „ and Canadian Delhi 40 cents to $9.
On index, golds gained 1.38 to
144.36, base metals .34 to 70.97
and western oils .42 to 96.36.
Volume was 3,139,000 shares
compared with 2,749,000 shares
traded Wednesday.        '
Joint Services Bill
To Be Introduced
VICTORIA (CP)-A bill to be
introduced at the next Session
of the B.C. legislature will permit municipalities to enter into
agreements for joint services,
Municipal Affairs Minister Dan
Campbell said Wednesday.
Mr. Campbell said discussions
with the Union of B.C. Municipalities executive will start
immediately in order to have
the legislation ready for submission to the legislature when it
opens in January.
He told a study  group on
formation of a joint services
board in the Victoria area the
proposed legislation may well
meet the needs of Greater
Victoria and B.C.'s Lower Mainland.
Have the Job Dane Right!
VIC GRAVEC
W       LIMITED        •/
Phone 352 3315
MASTER PUJMBKF
WARREN
K.
COOK
FALL SAMPLES
HAVE ARRIVED.
Drop in and see the
world's finest woollens,
tastefully styled for confidence.
See yourself in a Warren K. Cook suit soon.
£_v-ORY'§
LTD.
THE MAN'S STORE
B.C. Highlights
RETURNS HOME
VANCOUVER (CP) - Ten-
year-old Keith Morris wandered
for 48 hours in bush in Vancouver's west end Point Grey area
before he found his way home.
Police say it Is the second time
the boy had been missing recently. Several police dogs and
a police patrol searched the
area for hours.
MANY REJECTED
KAMLOOPS (CP) - The
mobile testing station travelling
throughout the province still is
rejecting more cars than it
passes. A total of 111 vehicles
were tested here Wednesday
and only 35 passed. Of the
rejects, 13 returned later after
minor adjustments and passed.
REXALL
1-CENT SALE
STARTS MON.. OCT. 19
Bone China Cups _ Saucers
Candles — Tree Ornaments
Christmas Lights
Your Rexall Pharmacy
CITY DRUG
Box 460 Phone 352-3611
INQUIRY SLATED
FOR BRITANNIA
LONDON (Reuters)-A Royal
Navy spokesman said Thursday
an inquiry may be held into an
incident at Charlottetown, P.E.I.,
Wednesday night, when a gangplank of the royal yacht Britannia shifted seconds before the
Queen was about to use it.
An inquiry, he said, would be
an internal one aboard the
yacht and the decision to hold
it would be made by the yacht's
flag officer, Rear Admiral Sir
Joseph Henley.
Labor Rebuffed
On Drug Proposal
VICTORIA (CP) - Officials of
two druggists' associations said
Wednesday night the B..C Federation of Labor cannot legally
set up its own drug store.
The annual convention of the
federation voted Wednesday to
do so in the Vancouver area.
"It couldn't be owned by the
union organization," said R. B.
Bates, president of the South
Vancouver Island Pharmacists
Association.
Registrar Douglas Denholm of
the B.C. Pharmaceutical Association said the body's interpretation of existing legislation "is
that they cannot establish a drug
store."
1964
CATTLE SALES
COMMUNITY  AUCTION  SALES
ASSOCIATION   LTD.
CRANBROOK, B.C.
SALE DATES
(NOTE - ALL SALES ARE ON A WEDNESDAY)
October 14 — Calf Sale, 1:00 p.m.
October 28 — Calf Sale, 1:00 p.m.
November 25 — Mixed Sale, 10:00 a.m.
Please list your stock with the Director so that you may
be sure of a position in the sale. It will also assist in
compiling lists for prospective buyers. Calves may be
brought Into the yard the morning of the sale but must
be in before sale time. All other stock must be in the
afternoon prior to the sale and will be sold in the same
order as received in the yard.
Contact FRANK HILL, Director
AT BOX 2139,. CRANBROOK, or PHONE 4-Y FORT
STEELE  FOR  YOUR  LISTINGS  or  INFORMATION
1965 FAIRLANE 500 SPORTS COUPE. A TOTAL PERFORMANCE FORD BUILT IN CANADA
'65 Fairl3__e~Excitement in Style
(A New World of Value)
Fairlane is the car that's built a unique reputation for
ruggedness, reliability, and value. And now, for '65, we've
added new values,
i Outside, this new Fairlane is crisp and clean, with a
trimness that makes it easy to park, easy to handle in
traffic. Inside Fairlane offers the room of many larger
cars, with beautiful new upholstery and a new, smaller
steering wheel that is easier to handle.
But Fairlane's combination of nimble handling with
big car comfort is only part of the story. Low price makes
everything about the Fairlane doubly appealing.
The new standard "Six" haB 120 hp and the smooth-
ness and durability of a 7-main-bearing crankshaft. There
is a bigger standard V-8 of 200 hp, plus an optional 225
and 271 hp—with a choice of three transmissions (3 and
4-speed manual and Ford's 3-speed Cruise-0-Matic).
As you can see, the "Fabulous Fast-selling Fairlane"
is even better for 1965—because it offers all this new
value at Fairlane's low price, plus excellent operating
economy. Ask a Ford Dealer for a Test Drive soon, and
bring the whole family—we build them for family fun.
Certain features Illustrated or mentioned are optional at antra coat.
TcstI)TivcaNcwWorldoiTotal Performance
MUSTANG • FALCON • FAIRLANE • FORD • THUNDERBIRD
608 Vernon St.
MEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.
Phone 352-7202
YOU* FORD DEALER Also INVITES YOU TO SEE THE WCMDERFUl MEW fORDS, FALCONS, MUSTANtSS, AND T-«IRO»"
