 TEMPERATURES
NELSON     45 73
Toronto   51 71
Calgary     36 47
Penticton  48 62
Vancouver   53 62
Whitehorse  _  19 56
Spokane    50 70
.03
.08
0tt!
FORECAST
Kootenay: Cloudy with a few
showers. Isolated thunderstorms
in afternoon. Winds light. Low
and high at Cranbrook, 40' and
58; Crescent Valley, 40 and 62.
Wednesday: Sunny, warmer.
Published at Nelson, government, financial trading and educationaTcentre of the Kootenay-Columbia area
Vol. 63
NELSON, B. C, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 8, 1964
10 Cents
No. 116
ROYAL ROUNDUP - The
formal air of a royal departure means little to this energetic four-year-old boy as he
scuttles In pursuit of his escaping pet dogs. The youngster
with the problem is Britain's
young Prince Andrew, who is
trying to keep his Corgis In tow
at the entrance to London's
Euston Station before leaving
with his mother and other
members of the royal family
for the start of their holiday
at Balmoral, Scotland.
U.S, Economy Showing Strong
Balanced Upsurge/ Says Di
U.S. Considers
Attack on Red
Supply Lines
SAIGON (Reuters)—U.S. air strikes against Communist facilities and supply routes in southern Laos may
soon be ordered, informed sources here said Monday.
The air strikes would centre around Tchepone,
about 25 miles by road from the South Viet Nam border,
in order to hamper the activities of Communist Viet
Cong  guerrillas in South
Kremlin Calling Meet
Regardless of R* China
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Soviet
Premier Khrushchev made
clear Monday the Soviet Union
plans to go ahead with its call
for a world Communist conference in spite of China's refusal
to take part.
He said the holding' of the
conference next year and of
preliminary talks in December
is the only correct course to
follow.
Khrushchev, speaking on
radio and television, said Russia's determination to stage the
conference had the support of
a majority of the world's Communist parties.
The Soviet leader was reporting to the country on his nine-,
day visit to Czechoslovakia,
from which he returned Satur-:
day.
"The Chinese leaders reject
the holding of a conference,
evidently preferring abuse and
bad language to a principled
party discussion at a conference," he declared.
"They have blackmailed fraternal parties with threat of a
split.
"Under such conditions, the
only correct decision is to
gather  the  representatives  of
World News Briefly
GRAND BEND, Ont. (CP) -
Four persons charged with falling to heed a reading of the
Riot Act are to appear In court
as the Judiciary takes over
from police following a riotous
weekend in this Lake Huron
resort community.
Before the situation cooled
off Monday morning, police had
laid 77 charges—59 of them for
Johnson Rips
Goldwater
Nuclear Stand
DETROIT (AP) — President
Johnson took direct issue with
Senator Barry Goldwater on the
nuclear weapons issue Monday
as he unofficially opened his
1964 U.S. presidential election
campaign.
Appearing before a crowd estimated by police at 100,000 in
Cadillac Square, Johnson shouted
that "no president of the United
States can give up responsibility
for deciding when or if to use
nuclear weapons.
Goldwater, Johnson's Republican opponent, has urged that the
supreme NATO commander be
given his own stock of "small,
tactical nuclear battlefield weapons—what may truly be called
conventional nuclear weapons "
Johnson declared:
"Make no mistake. There is
no such thing as a conventional
nuclear weapon."
The president drew his loudest
applause when he discussed nuclear weapons policy and, earlier, when he said he wanted
every American, regardless of
race, creed or color, to enjoy
whole rights under the constitution.
liquor offences such as under,
age drinking and having liquor in a place other than a
residence, 13 on criminal charges and five for traffic violations. '
CARACAS (AP) - President
Raul Leon! has promised to legalize the Venezuelan Communist party if the terrorist armed
force for National Liberation
(FALN) lays down its arms,
The FALN is a pro-Castro organization that has been fighting
from underground and in the
mountains more than three years
in an attempt tp install a Cuban-
style regime.
NEW DELHI (AP) - A Communist-led attack on Indian
Prime Minister Lai Bahadur
Shastri reached unusual fury on
Monday. A no-confidence motion
was lodged against him in Par-
liament.
The motion, the second in the
17 years of India's independence,
attacked Shastri on charges his
government bungled and precipitated a food crisis now sweep,
ing the country.
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Hurrl
cane Dora left her little sister
Ethel behind Monday as
swept relentlessly toward the
U.S. mainland with winds up to
130 miles an hour.
Termed.large and dangerous
by the weather bureau, Dora already was causing heavy swells
along the southeast Atlantic
coast while still far out to sea.
VANCOUVER (CP) -Revenue
Minister Eric Kierans of Quebec
has denied his province is negotiating with British Columbia for
a $100,000,000 loan.
In a telephone interview from
his home in Quebec City, the
rhinister. said Monday he knows
"of no negotiations for a loan,"
all fraternal parties which are
for unity in the ranks of the
international communist move-,
ment and for the principles
of proletarian internationalism,
and collectively to discuss the
pressing, problems. !
"This is the general opinion j
of the Communist party of the;
Soviet Union, of the Communist i
party of Czechoslovakia and of
a majority of other Marxist-
Leninist parties."'
ANNOUNCED PLANS
The Soviet Communist party
exactly a month ago announced
plans for a world Communist
conference in mid-1965, and for
delegates from 26 leading parties to meet in Moscow Dec. 15
to prepare for the larger meeting.
The proposal was promptly
rejected by the Chinese, one of.
the 26 parties invited to the
preliminary talks. North Korea
also rejected the Russian invitation.
Apart from Russia itself, only
nine of the 26 have so far
agreed to attend the December
talks. The Italian Communist
party has said it will attend the
December meeting, but has reserved judgment on next year's
conference.
Viet Nam,
It was believed that this was
one of the subjects U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor
went home to Washington to
discuss with administration officials.
Taylor recently told a press
conference here the United
States would have to take improved steps to bring Viet Cong
infiltration to an end.
Meanwhile, South Vietnamese
Foreign Minister Pham Huy
Quat said he had sent an official to the Cambodian border
to Investigate alleged Cambodian intrusion into South Vietnamese territory.
The U.S. Could mount air
strikes from its three large
bases in South Viet Nam. It has
jet fighters, bombers and re.
cdnhaissancfr'plahes capable of
flying Such missions.
Top American sources ln
gon said the air attacks against
Communist supply routes around
Tchepone could be expected
soon.
Shotgun Fire
Triggers Sirens
OTTAWA CP - A hunter's
shotgun blast was blamed Monday by civil defence authorities
for the setting off of 39 sirens
in the capital area Saturday
afternoon.
A spokesman said pellets accidentally pierced a metal casing carrying a number of cables
between the federal warning
centre at Carp, Ont., and the
capital. The resulting short circuit set off all the sirens in the
Ottawa area.
The spokesman declined to
say exactly where the hunter's
shot caused the break. Carp is
15 miles west of Ottawa.
A minor panic resulted in Ottawa when the sirens began
their uninterrupted 35-minutes
of wailing. Highways were
clogged briefly with traffic and
police offices were deluged with
telephone calls.
Military sources In the border
area have reported for some
time that intensive activity has
been observed near Tchepone,
including air movement and
truck convoys.
In a heavy clash 20 miles
northwest of the capital Sunday,
14 government soldiers were
killed and 40 wounded in an engagement which was believed
to have cost a guerrilla force
between 60 and 70 dead.
Profit Motive
To Be Upgraded
In Russia
MOSCOW* (Renters)-Russian
plans to give the profit motive
a bigger role in the economy
gained powerful support Monday
from one of Russia's most influential economists.
Lev Leontiev, associate member of the academy .of sciences,
was the second top economist to
support the profit idea since the
Communist party newspaper,
Pravda, opened the subject for
discussion a month ago.
Moscow observers said the en.
thusiastic support given publicly
to the profit principle suggested
that major economic changes
were under way, aimed at giving
Soviet factories more independence.
They said the Pravda discussion could take place only if the
idea already had official sanction.
Adoption of the profit motive
as a guiding principle in Soviet
production would transform the
entire basis of Communist-controlled industry in this country.
Leontiev said Monday that'industry's "centre of gravity"
should shift away from administrative controls, to "economic
methods of leadership."
At present, Soviet factories
work to fulfill production targets
laid down by the state.
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Princess Flies
To Lover's Arms
COPENHAGEN (API-King
Constantine II of Greece came
to Copenhagen Monday to fetch
his future queen, Princess
Anne-Marie, 18. She dashed into
his arms and an airport crowd
of 8000 roared its approval.
There was one jarring moment. Two anti-Greek Danes
charged toward the royal couple with signs reading "freedom" and "liberty". Police
pounced on them and hauled
them away.
The 23-year-old king will remain here for three days of
celebrations in honor of the
Sept. 18 wedding in Athens,
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Negro, While
Students To
Class in Peace
TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP)-Four-
teen Negroes and two score white
pupils went peacefully to class
together Monday in a school
closed seven months ago because
white students rebelled against
integration.
The arrival of the Negroes attending the newly reopened Tus-
kegee High School under federal
court order went almost unnoticed in contrast to the tension of
a year ago when the school was
first desegregated,
Tuskegee city police stood by
and'a few 131 agents watched
from ■ distance. But the helmeted state troopers mobilised
by Governor George Wallace In
September, 1963, in an unsuccessful attempt te preserve segregation were Absent Monday.
Wallace is under a federal
court injunction against any
overt action tb interfere with
court-ordered desegregation anywhere in Alabama, i
Unlike the critical days of a
year ago, there were almost no
onlookers.
By JOHN RODERICK
TOKYO (AP)—U.S. Treasury Secretary Douglas
Dillon told world monetary leaders Monday that the
United States economy is expanding in "the longest,
strongest and best-balanced advance of any peacetime period. . . ."
Dillon told fellow governors of the International
Monetary Fund at their annual conference here that
during the last fiscal year the U.S. rate of growth in
industrial production and in the economy as a whole
was better than five per cent in real terms and that
the Gross National ftoduct increased by more than
$40,000,000,000. 	
Speaking on the second day of
the five-day conference of the
IMF governors, the World Bank
and two other affiliate organizations, Dillon threw his weight
behind proposals by 10 of the
leading industrial nations of
IMF to expand'IMF's resources
through general and selecting
increases in the quotas of member nations.
Snoke Bite
Didn't Faze Him
MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-BiU Haast
threw off the effects of Ms latest
poisonous snake-bite and waited
out bf a hospital Monday.
Haast has been nipped by poisonous snakes more than 80 times.
He was taken to hospital Sunday
when struck tn the hand by the
fangs of a 5.4-foot Thailand
cobra from which he was milking venom at the Miami Serpen-
tarium he operates.
Haast quickly injected himself
with a shot of anti-venom kept
nearby for such emergencies, and
then in front of 60 watching tourists, calmly walked to an ambulance.
Treasury Secretary Reports
Gross National Product §|
Increased by $40 Billion
After describing the U.S.
economy, Dillon told the governors that despite the improvement in the U.S. balance of
payments deficit "we are only
half-way back to external balance." He added: "We cannot
relax—nor do we intend to."
In post-war years the amount
of gold and dollars available for
world trade increased because
of the siphoning away of dollars
from the United States. Now
that this drain is being baited,
one of the problems confronting
the ministers is how to establish international liquidity—that
is, new reserves—to continue an
ever-expanding trade.
Wilson
Pledges More
Equitable Pay
BLACKPOOL,. England Renters - Labor Party Leader
Harold Wilson hit (nit at the
Conservative government's incomes policy in a major preelection speech here Monday.
Wilson, who will bead the government if bis party.wins the
general election1 this fall, was
speaking at the annual conference of Britain's 8,000,000-mem-
ber Trades Union Congress here.
He told the 1,000 delegates
from nearly.200 unions that if
elected, the Labor party will
conduct a planned expansion of
incomes related to rising productivity.
"Because we do not regard
wages as the whipping boy of a
bankrupt economic policy we
shall not, as a matter of policy,
hold production down, cripple
productivity and then try to cut
the wages system to fit it," he
lid.
Wilson said this was the time
for "exciting change" and a
breakthrough of the "man-made
barriers of privilege and snobbery."
INCREASES APPROPRIATE
"Such increases seem clearly
appropriate," he said, "in view
of the conclusion . . . that the
next decade is likely to see a
steady rise in the demand for
international liquidity, coupled
with a slower annual rate of
growth in the types of
Newest, Weirdest Seen at Air Show
By JOSEPH MacSWEEN
FARNBOROUGH, England
(CP)-Brltish aviation filled the
air with everything from winged
hot-rods to new jet airliners at
IN Injured
In Beatle Bit
TORONTO CP - The battle
of beatlemania took its toll here
Monday with more than 100
teen-agers treated, casualties of
the Beatle invasion.
The St. John Ambulance reported that "99 per cent of the
cases were suffering from hysteria." Two persons were injured slightly when surging fans
pushed them in front of police
horses.
Most of those treated were
girls for whom the excitement
of seeking their idols — at last —
proved simply to be too much.
A crowd of more than 10,000
greeted the Liverpool lads when
they arrived from Detroit shortly after midnight.
preview of the 24th Farn-
borough Air Show Monday.
About. 10,000 overseas visitors
are expected at the vast show
for the official opening today.
Monday's event was in the nature of a private showing for
the men who design and produce Britain's aircraft, missiles
and equipment.
Stars of the show were the
185-passenger super VC-10, an
early version of which is already in service in Africa, and
the 75-passenger "bus - stop"
one-eleven, heralded as a successor to the famed Viscount.
The VC-10, capable of erasing at 600 miles an hour, has
four jet engines in the tail while
the one-eleven, which enters
service here and in the United
States next year, has two tail,
positioned jet engines.
Farnborough Airport in carnival mood was a sort ot aerial
version of Epsom on Derby
Day — with overtones of Guy
Fawkes fireworks as planes
streaked into the overcast trailing vari-colored smoke to add to
the spectacle. Giant marquees
give a sort of circus or "big
top" effect, sheltering static dis
plays that include a model of
the Concord, the Anglo-French
supersonic airliner. Several Canadian firms have exhibits of
aviation products.
A glimpse into the future was
provided by the needle-nosed
BAC-221, produced by British
Aircraft Corporation of the aerodynamic concept on which the
Concord wing is based.
This futuristic experimental
plane, whose undercarriage re-
POPE NOT GOING
TO INDIA
VATICAN CITY AP - The
Vatican press office Monday denied .reports that Pope Paul
would go to India this winter for
the international eucharistic
congress. It was the first such
denial of the reports.
Citing "authoritative and responsible Vatican sources" as
the basis of its information, the
press office said:
"This expression of orother
desire that the Pope go to India is moving, but unfortunately
it does not find confirmation in
realistic provisions."
sembles stilts, did a fly-past at
slow speed practically standing
on its tail.
Short and Hartland's new military transport, the Belfast, one
of tbe biggest planes seen at the
Farnborough show for years,
unloaded a truck and three
armored cars.
With the diameter of a London underground train and as
long as a cricket field," it can
carry 247 fully-equipped soldiers. A Short spokesman said
British European Airways is
considering a civilian "air bus"
version that would carry 288
passengers between, for instance, Glasgow and London.
The most spectacular event
was a mock attack on the airport, by supersonic planes such
as the Lightning Mark III, followed up by transport planes
and helicopters landing men
and equipment. Soldiers slid 100
feet down wires from the helicopters.
While this is the 24th Farnborough show, it is the first in
two years and British aviation
hopes to win back ground lost
to the U.S. industry in recent
years. Canada's Industry Minis
ter C. M. Drury. is expected to
attend Wednesday as well as
representatives of the defence
department, the RCAF, Air Canada, Canadair and many other
Canadian firms.
MAN HURT IN
FALL OFF
PLANE WING
VANCOUVER (CP) - A 49-
year-old businessman was severely injured during the weekend when he fell off the wing of
an amphibian plane as it taxied
ashore.
Gordon Pallen of Vancouver
was in critical condition in hospital Monday.
Pallen and John Hames were
reported to have climbed onto
the wing to balance the aircraft
which had a punctured pontoon.
Both men fell when the plane
struck an object near the sea-
plane ramp at Vancouver International Airport.
Pallen was taken to hospital
with what appeared to be minor
injuries but he collapsed in hospital and was reported suffering
from a cerebral hemorrhage.
61 TRAFFIC
DEATHS ON
WEEKEND
By TBE CANADIAN PRESI
A grim weekend death tell
seemed assured for. Can§d»
Monday. s'.f  '■"'
Before the evening - dinner
hour 61 traffic fatalities k*4
beeh counted across tbe coun.
try—three more than the aver*
age of 58 for three-day holiday
weekends.
With most of the homeward
traffic yet to come, lt seemed
a prediction by the Canadian
Highway Safety Council that TS
persons would die on the highways might be fulfilled.
CHICAGO AP - riis;Hnm*
mer's last hoUday drew toward
a close Monday night with
United States traffic fatalities
approaching a record-breaking
pace   as   motorists:. .returned
on which chief reliance has home from Labor Day weekend
been placed during recent trips.
years. I   Traffic accVdents had taken
"As Increase to fund quotas [497 lives In the latest count. In
seems te us the right move as addition, IS persona had died bf
member  countries  enter  the boating accidents and SB by
ttext phase in the evolutionary
development ■ of the international .monetary system — a
phase to which the greater
needs are likely, to centre, at
least for a time, on tbe enlargement and elaboration of credit
facilities for transferring reserves among, countries, rather
than upon increases in the overall supply of reserves."
He warned, however, that
further substantial increases to
reserves would only; for the
most part, increase the flow to
a few industrialized countries,
particularly to Western-Europe,
'unless and until those countries
reduce their chronic surpluses
through a relative rise in imports, an .increase in their capital exports, or any other acceptable combination of actions
that would overcome their propensity, to. absorb whatever new
liquidity may be added to the
system in the form of owned reserves."
Dillon told the ministers "we
must be as careful to developing our international financial
arrangements as we are in designing monetary measures for
our domestic needs."
He said countries with large
and continuing surpluses should,
in their own interests an din
the interests of accelerated economic development — carefully
re-examine the possibility of increasing tbe level and quality of
their assistance programs."
drowning.
Dallas
To Erect
Memorial
DALLAS (AP) - Dallas hag
earmarked a full city block and
gathered more than 1225,000 in
its move to erect a memorial
to President John F, Kennedy,
slain by a sniper last Nov. 21
as he rode to a motorcade.     ;'
The block, within earshot et
the assassination site,'will be
cleared of several small, unsightly buildings and converted
to the John F. Kennedy plaza,
an area of greenery around what
Mrs. Kennedy has asked be a
modest and dignified" marker.
Part of the $225,000 win go
for establishing the pia.a and
monument. The remainder, win
he given the Kennedy Library ta
Boston. The library1 is expected
to open in three years.
HAMPTON BEACH, N.H. AP
— Three hundred steel-helmeted
police and national guardsmen,
many with rifles and fixed bayonet, kept an uneasy peace to
this debris-strewn seaside resort Monday to the aftermath
of a night of wild rioting by
10,000 teen-agers.
And in This Corner Vs.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-Shasta, the world's -»ly -ger, will
need all week to recover from a Friday pedicure, the director
of the Hogle Zoo here said Sunday.
It wasn't the toenail (or claw) trimming Itself that floored
the big cat, which b a cross between an African lion and an
Asian tiger.
It was the tranquilizer used to knock Shasta out for the
operation. ."'.'.'•'
Zoo director LaMar Farnsworth said the 16-year-old tiger
may sleep six or seven days as the result of the shot.
"There's no danger to Shasta," Farnsworth said. He said
ber cage was covered to keep zoo visitors from disturbing her.
ROME (AP)—Two separate wedding parties chose the same
restaurant Sunday for tbe nuptial banquet, and up to tbe wedding
cake and the spumante (Italian champagne) everything was
just lovely.
Then the battle began. Police who looked over the shambles
afterward were told 50 or more members of the two festive
parties beset one another in battle.
But by the time police raced to the scene from three different
police stations both parties had dispersed, taking their wounded
away with them — all except one woman nursing a kicked shin,
bone that hurt so badly she couldn't run.
Police said they were told everyone seemed happy, at first
and the two wedding parties even toasted each other and the
happy future of the bridal couples.
Then somebody dropped a coin in the slot and started the
jukebox blaring. A boy from one party began dancing with a
girl from the other party. Somebody complained he was holding
her too closely considering they were strangers.
And that, police were told, started the battle.
■ _-	
 2—NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964
'Welcome' Events Planned
At High School Initiations
\ L. V. Rogers Secondary School
will begip'Mts year tomorrow
rtOi_ing_'v_iU)."_m assembly in the
gymnasium at nine o'clock. The
teaching staff and cabinet for
the coming year will be Introduced and students will be assigned
to their divisions and home room
teachers.     f
Friday, the'annual frosh initiation will take place, with an
indoor track meet in the afternoon. The *_ay -will be completed
with the frosh dance, which will
be held in tbe school in the evening. ■   ■;.;  Hr'. .
This year; the School has adopted a stricter-attitude toward initiation; Because this even is initiation. Because this event is Intended to make new students feel
do away with acts of hazing,
which have often got out of con-
trol in>previous years. Instead,
various' other events are being
substituted which are more in
linejvrilh tbe4idea of welcoming
new students to the school, Students in. the upper classes are
warnMHSit"anyone eausht has-
ipg; will be dealt with by «
Kangaroo Court.
. Frosh. 4r«ss_for initiation will
be: girls, ordinary school dress,
no make up, nose painted green
with water color or poster paint,
hair done in pigtails, or if short,
piled on top of head. Boys:ordin<
ary school dress, nose painted
green, hair slicked down with
"greasy kid stuff" and parted
down the middle.
AMERICAN RED
CHAIRMAN DIES
MOSCOW (Reuters) _ ElUg.
heth Gufley Flynn, national
Chairman o.-.fbe American Com-
munist-party,. died in a Moscow
hospital Saturday at the age of
74.   •    ,.''.,
Miss Flynn died after * "short
but grave illness," She had been
visiting in Moscow for about a
month.
Miss Flynn wss connected
with the labor and Communist
movement in: the U.S. for more
than SO years; first with tha Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW) organization, then, after
1937, as a member of the Communist party, She became
chairman of the party In 1961,
Albertans
Event Draws 146
For Record Entry
Tonight-Wed.—Complete Shows 7:00-9:00
NEVER ON f UNDAY... or any other
day,., will you see a
SELLERS called PETER,
in q film so devilishly
'funny.
9M8 ■OOLTING BROTHER*
Hums wbkm Juki sykis Kiln
BEAVENSABOVE!
m-mmammwm^fm» »*■»■* w *»« —_»t— tmrammm.miw—-» »wv **._»«_ «»»■<■
CIVIC
e
uy.iSell, Trade With Want Ads
Starlight Drive-In
Tonight and Wednesday
Time 8:00 p.m.
"SUMMER
HOLIDAY"
Cliff Richard, Laurie Ptttn
and th* Shadows
LAY MO
dOMlNfi THIS
SATURDAY
The
TYsCONS
heastern B.C's Top
TEEN BAND
9-\
Adm. $1.00
jGilHE
CASTLE Theatw
Castlegar, B.C.
last Times Tonight
7:00 and 9:00 p.m.
"THE NUTTY PROFESSOR"
Jerry Lewis, Stella Stevens
NEWS and CARTOON
AUTO - VUE
DRIVE-IN - Trail, B.C.
Last Time Tonight
"THE MAIN ATTRACTION"
Pat Boone, Nancy Kwan
Plus "RING OF FIRE"
TITLIHOLDIK
Back te School
2 One-Inch 3-Hola
Loose Leaf
Binders
and 73e Refill
$2.73 Value fer
$249
SAMPLE'S
NELSON
PHARMACY   LTD.
"Your Fortress of Health"
Ol Baker St. Nelsea
Phone UUllt
-Fpr every
back-to-school need
firt an W6 Shopptr't Lou
Caver every b*eM*-
;. eolieel mm twin A to z
with an MFC Shopper's   Umo.ni]  M-WMY paymint, sUms
teen. Bet money to      "
|K«vldeboela,clothlng,
tuition, MtppHM-even
•naa«_»ffr»ttetee»liar.
JlsefOWjltwuend-iva
"" ■ You berrew
The wail si Scottish bagpipes
and the swirl oi kilts filled the
air at Nelson Monday as bands
and dancers from neighboring
provinces and states converged
Op the city for the 1964 Highland
Games competition held at th*
Civic centre and bail grounds,
This year Nelson hosted the
largest group of Scots yet recorded as 146 competitors
march through Nelson's streets
and took part in a band parade
at Lakeside Park Sunday.
They came from Lethbrodge,
Calgary, Spokane, Cranbrook,
Fruitvale, Trail, Kelowna, Kimberley, Creston, Vernon, Edmonton, Montrose and Vancouver.
Lion's share oi aggregate
prises ahd trophies was captured by Alberta contestants.
David Hogg of Nelson captured the Jack Stout Shield for
aggregate piping under 16.
Edmonton's Strathcona Legion
Pipe Rand took the Gilker Hose
Bowl Trophy for bands,
WINS TWO
The Hugh McPherson Trophy
for grand aggregate in dancing,
ill classes under 31 yean, want
te Irene Wenger of Calgary, who
alio won the A Treglllus Trophy
in th* under 16 class. Beverly
Patton ot Calgary took the Jake
Campbell Trophy tor contestants
over ta,
Creston'i Gale Kenny danced
away with tha Mary Isdale
Trophy for competitors under 13
and Blrnie Ron of Trail took the
Trail Caledonian Society priie
for Kootenay contestants under
tt.
Another Creston inisi, Shirley
Kemp, won tha Angus McLeod
Memorial Trophy for dancers
under IS and from th* Kootenayi
only,
In drumming, Cordon JenWn-
son ol Spokane captured th* Ted
Allan Trophy, senior amateur;
the James stout Trophy for piping, under 19 yeari, fill tb Clive
MacDonald of Calgary and the
LA to fiie Kootenay Kilties Pise
Band senior amateur grand ag
gregate award was to Malcolm'
McCulloeh of Verpon.
Orand aggregate {old medals
went to three Calgary (lancers,
Melody Wilson, under •; Kandy
Cameron, under 10, and Beverly
Little, under '14.
Results follow:
Saann Trulbhaii (Opm)
Gail Haden: 2. Lee Home
Maureen sknikwa.
Highland Fling (Novice under
8 years) — Barbara Martin: 1.
Cheryl Conroy: i. Heather Sal-
akin.
Sword Dane* (under 14 years)
- Beverly Little: 2. Helm Burn-
dred; 3. Valerie Saynor,
Highland Fling (under 16
years eonfinad to Kootenays) -
Birni* Ross: 3, Sandra Wilton:
3. Loii Graham.
Highland Flint (under 13
years) — Gil* Kenny; 3, Carol
Ashley: 3. Marnle Mackia.
Highland Flint (Novice under
10 years) — Joy Robaris: 3,
Shelley Jonea: 3, Shelagh Hot?
and Holly Bishop (tie).
Seann Truibhals (Under I
years) — Melody Wilson: 3
Bebera Kirkpatrick: 3, Cheryl
Hutsmith.
Hithland Flint 'Novice under
14 years) — Donna Shields: 3.
Patricia Faust: 3. Jean Milne.
Highland Fling (under 8 years)
tt Melody Wilson; 2, Debora
Kirkpatrick; 3. Brenda Owens.
Sword Dance (under 13 yearl
confined to Kootenays) — Shirley Kemp; 2. Susan Preston: 3.
Heather Salekin and Patricia
Langhorn (tie).
, " I ss
750
oor
601
201
se
«_>«___
28.7,
I
-nlta
wu
monl_j|
1
flS £r_3. WM. KMUM M «.-l M mt
.uM >M MpM. Mil M k-W< tn ■«
HFC
-*m AMiVftmer un iwuiwnct at low enow rati*
FjjjAjjCgQ
60S mmf RfMf—*
(a* JeeeotilM stove
352-3575
r Store)
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiHinmitini
REPUTATION
FOLLOWS CROW
Fernie's   Billy,   t|le  crow,
must have a bad reputation.
Following publication of a
news story recently concern-
ing the "taklnt" ways of a
crow at th* Balfour landing of
th* Kootenay Lake ferries, M.
Eberti ot Salmo telephoned
tbe news office and offered the
suggestion that tha feathered
felon might be Billy the Crow.
Billy is a great pet in Fer-
nie. If he is misting, Mr. Cherts
teals the townspeople might be
interested in knowing of a\t
whereabouts.
Billy, if that is his name,
caused soma discomfort to one
motorist at the firry landing
whan he took tha driver's car
keys just as' tha ferry waa.
leaving th* wharf, and deposited them at tha landing for
th* stranded Car Owner to eOlV
lect when the beat reh]rne<j.
Ha also took the leck from th*:
concession cupboard and caused it to be nearly lost overboard.  -  »». _«_.  __.:.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii|iiiiniiiiiin mmy
Highland Flint (under 16
years) — Sandra Moline; 2.
Irene Wengner; 3. Cheryl Wilson.
Sword Dance (under 8 years)
— Melody Wilson i 1. Debora
Kirkpatrick; 3. Brenda Owens,
Seann Truibhals (Under 13
years) — Gale Kenny; 2, Mar
nie Mackia;  3.  Carol Ashley.
Seann Truibais. (under 14
years) -.Beverly Little; .,
Helen Burndred; 5. Carol Mc.
Ghie.    .
Sailor's Hornpipe (Open) -
Gall Haden; I. Us Heme;. 3.
Sherrie Stahl, ■ ,. ..
Highland Flint (Novices, under
12 years) \ts Carol Ross; 3, Linda
joneii s, Joy Roberts. .      .
Highland ■Fling, (under It
years confined to Kootenays' w
Debbie Lauder; 2. Frances
Fisher; 3. Carol Rosa.
Sword Dane* (undw 10 y*ara>
- Susan Smith; 3, Kandy Cameron;  3, Heather Kirkpatrick.
Sailor's Hornpipe (under 16
year*) =- Irene Wmger; 3,
Cheryl Wilson,' 3. Evelyn Cox,
Irish Jit (under 13 yean) -
Gale Kmnyi 2. Carol Aihlay;
3. Brand* Couiina.
Reel of Tulloeh (16 and ever,
amateur, confined te Interior) —
Virginia Stahl; 2. Beverly Pit-
ton; 3. Dtv* Warn*..
Highland Fling (under 10
years)-5us»n Smith; 3, Kandy
Cameron; 3, Heather Kirkpatrick.
Reel ef Tulloch (under 16 years
confined te Koot*n»yi)-8lrnle
Ross; 2. Judy Shaw; 3. Ruth
Haskril.   >    •
Sword Dane* (16 to 11 yeara,
confiiwd to Interior) - Beverly
Patton; ■ s. Dave Warner; 1.
Stephanie Rhodei.
Highland Fling (amateur, 16
to 21 years, confined to Interior)
Virginia Stahl: 3, Beverly Patton; 3. Dave Warner.
Irlih Jig (under 14' yean) -
Beverly Littl*; 2. Helm Burndred; 3. Carol McQbie.
Seann Trulbhaii .(under 16
yearsi-lrene Women 3. Sandra
Moline; 3. Cheryl Wilson.
Seann Truibhals (under If
years) — Kandy Cameron; 3.
Heather Cox; 3. Heather Kirk-,
Patrick.
Seann Trulbhaii (senior amateur, confined to interlori-Bev-
erly Patton: 3, Virginia Stlhl;
3, D»ve Warner,
Sword Dane* (under 18 years)
-Iran* Wenger; t. Sandra Moline; 3. Cheryl Wilson,
Reel of Tulloch (Open) - Gail
Haden; 3. Le* Home; 8. Shlrie
Stahl.
Piping: Marches (junior under
16 years)-David Holt; 3. William Muirhead; 3. Gary Marshall.
Strathspey ind Reel (junior
under 16 yean>-Dsvid Hogg;
Dtv* Mclntyr*; 4. Gary Mar-
•hall.
Marches (junior under lt
y«iri) - (Sliv* MacDOnald; 8.
John Jonea; 3. Dennis COekburn.
Strathspey and Reel I Junior
under 1» years)—Clive MacDonald; 3. John Jones; 3. Richard
Ward.
Marches (bind members not
entered in any 6th*r *v*nt) —
Christine Wickburg.
Marches (proleasionaD-AnguS
MacDonald; 2. David Saul; 3.
Walter Muir.
Strathspey and .R**l (prefet-
sional) - Angus MacDonald; 3.
David Saiil; 8. James Munroe.
Jig   (professional) - David
Saul; 2. Angua MacDonald
Donald Kyi*.
Marches (senior amateur) -
Mary Jenkinson; 2. Keith Langhorn; 3..MalcoIm McCullOCh,
Strathspey and Rett denier
amateur)-Alistair Gilchrist: 2.
Stephen Browp; 3. Malcolm Mc*
CuHoeh.:
Slow Air 'imateur, ill ilei)-
Clive MicDonatd; 3. John JOhil;
s. Stephen Rrown.   •
Strathspey, and Reel (undlr 16,
confined to Kootenay*) - David
HOgg.
Jig (confined to Kooteniys,
amateur, 111 ateS)-Clive MIC-
Donald:.). John Jones; 3. Jiek
Titlwdrth. ■' ■'
I DRUMMING
Marches: Strathspey and fto*{
(under 16 y«iri>~<Sord*n Jem
kinson; 2. Jol-if CHisblt; 8. Qre«
Vount.
Marches, Str*.hi6*y *nd Reel
(senior am*t«ur)i- OordOh Jenkinson; t. John Ellison; 3, drift
Young.  - --:, .   ,.. ._
Marches: Strathtpey end R*«l
(pro'f*Mlon*l)*Jotw *w .«•:
Marches: Strattiapey and RM1
(bands)-StrathconaL*tl«n fit*
pand; .3r K«0ten*y Kiltl* Pip*
Bind. s. Antui ttett, inland cm<
pir* ftp* lind. •
.   BALES TO EA-T   ,
Britain is .now. thi second
highest exporter.. tp . Eastern
Bloc countries, after West Ger-
NET EARNINGS
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Monarch   Tin*   Foods   Ltd.,
year ended June 27: 1964, $637,.
509, 62.3 cents a share; 1963,
$587,880, 58.4 cents.
Canadian Industrial Gas, six
months ended June 30: 1964,
$277,561: 1963, $144,802.
Craigmont Mines Ltd., nine
monthi ended July 31; 1964,
$5,301,432, $1,04 a ehara; 1B63,
$4,420,118, 87 cents.
SKD Manufacturing Ltd,, nine
month! ended June 30; 1064,
$807,733! 1863, $104,009,
Peel-Elder Ltd., six monthi
ended June 30: 1984, $189,091
net loss; 1983, $323,091.
Quebec Natural Gas Corp,,
year ended June 30: 1984, $1,-
017,767; 1863, $195,895, ....
Roralleld Building Corp. Ltd.,
six monthi ended Jun* 80:
1864, $255,828, 16 cents * ihim
no comparable flgurei,
TO STIRRING WAIL of bagpipe*, drum major*
inarched their kilted warrior* down Baker Street
Monday on the way to the Neiion Highland Games,
held at the ball ground* and in tha Clvie Centra
arana.—Dally News photo,
TWO BONNIE LASSIES from tha elan oi Cameron hava gathered a basket lull oi modal* ln th*
lait iew year*. Thirteen-year-old Marie, right, ha*
Won four to data, while her -later Kandy, on the
leit, danced her way lo her 20th medallion Monday by winning the grand aggregate gold medal
ior dancer* under 10. Formerly oi Neiion, tha two
girl* hava .alidad in Calgary for a year.
.   ...-.'   . —Daily Ntws photo.
Only Minor Accidents
On Holiday Weekend
Don't Ntgltet Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Os on* team drop, (Up or woMli
wbin you talk, (at, l»usl> or sneut?
Don't Tit annoyed and (JnSMJWM
by (uoh nandloapi rASTSSTH, an
Slksllne (non.aolcti puwdar to aprln-
1« on your platn, kespa (aim (Mtn
mors Ormly aet aivu oonfld«nt (nl-
Ins of wcurlty ana adHad comfort.
So lummy, sooty, paaty t»«a or (ad-
Ins, oat rAST-BTH today at dm
oountm tverywhua.
A quiet wwliend" wu r*
ported from molt RCMP ditich'
menji icitt»red throughout thi
Kooteniy-Boundary Mondty
1gW,:.'„ ■''."
thi Int long lummer holldly
weekend brought hnvy trifll*
to am roadi but only * ftw
minor aceldenti bid been «■
ported by Mondiy ivmlng.
Most iirioui accident Involved
a Kimberley couple, Mr. and
Mrs. Erickson, whose car Overturned on,the road between Kimberley airport and T* Ta Creek.
Mr. Erickson wai tikin to Kimberley Hospital for medici! treatment.        .
FOREST FIRE
LOSS AT
RECORD LOW
Th* 1964 fir* tenon tapitrt
to. hi beaded for a record low
in thi Nelson Forest Diitrict.
. with only a small portion «l
the official fire season ramlln-
tog, the fire haiard, Ilk*, the
rest of th* province, il rated low,
Last week two new flrts wire
reported in the district, makini
a total of 230 fires to datl at I
combat cost of $27,200. For the
same period in 1963, th*r« wire
417 flrei at an estlmited fir*
fighting cost of $41,000.
: then hav* been no major lire,
reported In the Neiion Foriit
District thii year.
School Starts Wednesday;
Registrations Only Today
Today school officUUy starts
tor sOme students Ind Confusion
starts for most parents.
Today is th* official start of
ichool but in Nelson elementary
students, except tor newcomers,
do not return tp their classrooms
until Wednesday, Ntw Secondary
students will enrol today.
All secondary students will b&
gin regulir Classes Wednesday.
Enrolment of new secondary
students is as follows:
All grades 8, 9 and 10 students
enrol at N«lson Junior High to.
dly from io a.m. to s p.m.
All lenlor secondary students,
grides 11, 12, 13, enrOl at L. V.
Rogers Senior HI|H School-today
from io a.m. to 3 p.m.
Crldi id itudents mending
I. V. ftogers will bl it th* school
it I p.m. Tuesday.
Enrolment bf new secondary
students at Salmo will take place
today.
tor the •lerhintary i-hoele today's enrolment is restricted to
newcomers to th* Nelson School
District, and those pot previously
registered.
Kindergarten classes at South
NelSOn and -Intril Schools will
begin this month at a date yet
to be Set. Hume kindergarten
will tot start until bet, 18, du*
C. A. Dayman
Service* Held
Funeril service for. Charles
Arnold Dayman, who died m Neiion Wednesday,, wit conducted
tt the Thompson runiral Home
Saturday, .'■•".
; Riv. .J.. Rae Allin otflclatid
and cremation followed,. ,
Hymns sung were "6 God Our
Help in Ages Past" and "The
014 Rugged <.reps."
to delay in cllSirOom cOnSttuc
tion, Registration for South Mel'
son Ud central kindergartens ii
scheduled (Or today.
Sllmo kindergarten r*_isti_,
Uon wiU alio take place today.
Classes will . commence. when
construction of accommodation
has been completed.
Silverwood To
Lead Off NDU
Fall Workshop
"Behavior PrOblemi'in Todsy's
society" will be the theme of l
seminar workshop te be held on
the Notre Dame University of
Nelson campus thii fall.
Arranged by th* department
of extension And adult education
for residents Of tb* Neiion irea,
the workshop will open with a
formal lecture by Rev. Canon
W. J. SllverwoOd ObtibCr 7, Hi
will Speak On behavior problems
from 1 sbciolOgicll viewpoint.
Canon SilvirwOOd, former filter ot the Church of thi Redeemer In Neiion, will travel
from victoria for thi lecture ind
Seminar-discussion to follow,
in succeeding lectures, Dr. R.
«.. Barrett will ebtlk from *
medical point Ot view, and B. B.
Crawford, principal Of tb* Junior
high school, from bl* years of
experience with teenager* The
menu! health Mfc-eet of behlvier
problems win tit* te «xplor«d.
-ventuil objective «i th* workshop it u Meruit voiunteeri t*
form * group to werk with the
government ptyebtfoglst servicing, th* Kooten*y districts. Similar seminars will be developed
in the Eaft Kootenay and Okin-
agan areas. K
TV SERVICE
. • Prompt    .   .
« Effieiertt
a Reisonoble
• Loan TV Avollable
352,3355
VIDEO llaetronlei
CHOQUETTE
FUELS
PH. 352-7535
The finest Stoker Coals
ORDER NOW!
Our Specialty -
"I".' STOKER MIXfS
wm—mmmmmmm
WANTED
 IISH*-—*-——      .
USED
OUTBQARDS
>     Trtda UP » 4
1964 JOHNSON
Oi Display u   ,
COLEMAN
ELECTRIC
Mn, Erlckion li reported to
htv* b*tn driving the vehicle,
Which tum*d over on thi roid
liter iwirvlng to mill tb* ditch,
About (MO damage occurred
wh*n tw* vehicle* ildeiwlped on
a curv* it Anniblt, near Trail.
Richard Meier of Spokini wis
travelling up th* hill when hli
vehicle «nd * vihidi driven by
Mrs. Ernest White ot Trail side-
swiped.
Meser was charged with crossing a white line.
With the hunting season a
wlek old hi most parts of the
are*, POliO* reported that the
hunting traffic his been moving
•t a alow p*ce.
TO d*t* then hivi bean no
bunting mi*haps reported in the
•re*.        ■
A jttiewn* man got hli flrit
»nim»l kill four milei lOuth of
-mil Kliti. K* itruek * hon*
with his vehicle.
___!_-_$\l_k
S
EXCEPTIONAL
VITAMIN OFFER
8 Essential Vitamins,
Orange Flavored,
Ideal for Children and Adults
TOO Payi Supply
$]98
Mayo Pharmacy
Ltd.
Corner Baker and Ward Sta.
Ph. IM-llll        Nelsen, B.C.
I saw Royal Bank
^ abouta
termplan loan
then
I shopped around for
a car bargain**
mmmmMs^mmmMmsmmmmWm^gmlmM: .
Nest lima yen want money for * Mr or my big purchase, ««
toWl tank firtt about a low-Cow, life insured tertp_n loan.
It putt the mousy you need In your pocket—gives you extra
bargaining power -cut* flnincing costs to give you more
"sp*8dlni"d0llMS.
finance in advance at
Royal bank
Department of Highways
The Mowing Schedule
Will I* Iffeetivo en the
Kootenqy Lake
Ferries
CornmeiMing Stpt. 9, 1924
Padifld Daylight Saving Time
Uivi Bailey
?:6$ o.in.
9:06 a.ivi.
11:00 a.n..
1:00 f».r¥i.
3:00 p,n\.
5:06 (..fti.
*:S5 P'm'
9:06 P.rti.
1 :00 p.ivi.
1:06 d.ft..
September J, 1164
Nelson, B.C.
U*y* Kootenay _*y
6:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
12:00 Nabr)
2:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
<i:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
1-1:00 MidniflHit
2:00 a.m.
R. 0. WHITI,
Diitrict (nglneir
 mmfssssswwsswssi
SSSSI
! Yomr Individual I
i (
Horoscope
By Frances Drake
Look in the section in which
your birthday comes and find
what your outlook is, according
to the stars,
For Wednesday, Sept. 8, 1864
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries) — Ii you've gone overboard
financially, this is the time to
straighten things out. Seek competent advice in the matter of
retrenching, finding the real
cause of your problems— and
their solution.
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)
—Be realistic in all things now,
and maintain your sense of proportion. Don't go off on tangents
but direct energies only to the
worthwhile. Embroidering poor
material is only wasting effort.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)
—Stimulating Mercury influences
continue. Especially favored: inventiveness and creativity, generally. An excellent period in
which to try out new devices and
methods, to capitalize on unusual
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)
—You may not have as much
leeway in carrying out your activities as you expected, but all
intelligent endeavor will bring
reward, nevertheless. Some good
news or a romantic adventure
could bring you great happiness.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)
—Some weighty matters will still
have to be worked out but keep
trying—with consistency and the
confidence that all will turn out
well.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER
23 (Virgo) —This should be a
day of great activity. In fact, at
some hours, you may wonder
how you will be able to handle
all the extras demanded of you.
But maintain your poise, don't
lose your wits and, if you encounter delays, realize that some
matters are always slow at maturing.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra) Some situations may
confuse you. Don't let them get
you down. Give problems a little
more thought, try a new ap
proach, don't just give up. There
is more than one way to remedy
undesirable conditions.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER
22 (Scorpio) — Though you may
encounter some opposition, you
have a wonderful opportunity for
getting ahead in worthwhile ar-
eas. Just be careful how you
present your ideas and thing!
will fall in line.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) — Jupiter
stimulates your keen mind and
excellent judgment. Emphasis
of these traits can lead you to a
commanding position now. You
may have some dealings with a
person, or persons of distinction.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY
20 (Capricorn) — Mixed planetary influences, but there are
more advantages than disadvantages indicated. Put forth your
best endeavors, team skill with
experience. Be patient in waiting
for benefits to materialize.
sjhs23nVnow,BER
. JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY
19 (Aquarius) — If you will reach
* little further, you will wind up
with a better score. Uranus, still
generous, gives you fine stellar
co-operation.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces) — You may strike some
snags if engaged in creative
work or fn tasks with which you
are unfamiliar, but the Piscean
gifts of ingenuity and dexterity
should help you work things out.
IF you are patient.
YOU BORN TODAY are endowed with talents in many
fields—notably in teaching, acting, lecturing, in both artistic
and technical fields. In the latter, your gifts of thoroughness
and the meticulous handling of
details are invaluable. You always co-operate with those whose
aims are high and like to be
Involved in significant doings.
You make an outstanding host
or hostess, always alert to the
"little things" so much appreciated by others. Highly princip
led, you are often disillusioned
when others fail to live up to
your ideals. Here is where you
must cultivate tolerance and a
more philosophical attitude toward human frailties.
Birthdate of Luigi Galvani, Italian physicist.
Road, Hospital
Facilities
Cause Concern
LARDEAU-With an expected
increase in heavy traffic following official start on dam construction after Oct. 1, Lardeau
residents are concerned about
poor road conditions on the
Kaslo-Lardeau section.
Insufficient facilities at the
hospital in Kaslo to handle traffic accident victims is causing
concern also.
It is expected that there will
be an influx of 40-foot trailers,
low-bed trucks with heavy equipment and many cars bearing
workmen and their families.
Residents of the Kaslo-Lardeau
area are planning for this even,
tuality but are asking for more
help from senior government
levels.
Adding to the concern-have
been six road accidents which
occurred recently as a result of
narrow corners, soft shoulders
and excessive speed.
Local groups such as the board
of trade are planning improvements within their scope but they
feel the need for more help from
senior governments on both road
and hospital problems.
KIMBERLEY - Development
at Kimberley of B.C's first basic
steel production plant is foreseen
in a news story from Kimberley.
The story reports a visit to
Trail of Ralph D. Perry, Cominco vice-president, who stated
that acquisition of Western Canada Steel by Cominco last month
would do much to bring about
such a development.
Mr. Perry was named a director of Western Canada Steel
recently along with a number of
senior Cominco officials involved in the company's venture into
Requiem hr
Weil-Known
Railwayman
CRANBROOK — Requiem was
held for long-time railwayman
in British Columbia, Vernon K,
Eberlein, who died at St: Eugene
Hospital after a short illness.
He was 79 years old and was
born at Blue Earth, Minn. He
came to Seattle as a young man,
then to this province in 1911 to
work at Hell's Gate construction
on the Fraser. In 1912 he began
railway work at North Bend,
then joined the Canadian Army
to service overseas in the First
World War with the engineers
and the medical corps. He resumed railroading -at North
Bend, then Revelstoke, and in
1934 came here as engineer, continuing this work here to retirement in 1950. He was a member
nf Branch 24, Royal Canadian
Legion, and the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Firemen and Engine-
men.
Surviving are his wife at their
home here, two sons, Edward,
Burnaby, and Stanley, Cranbrook; one daughter, Mrs. Vivian Panucco, Kansas City, and
two grandchildren.
Rosary took place Thursday at
McPherson Funeral Chapel, and
requiem Friday at St. Mary's
Church, with burial in the Legion Cemetery, with the branch
taking part In the rites.
Basic Steel at Kimberley To
Follow Western A^c^sitiorx
the ferrous metals market, the
story notes.
"The market at the coast now
is good and it should offer an
opportunity for reasonably early
integration of the two plants,
Western Canada at the coast and
steel production at Kimberley,"
Mr. Perry is reported as stating.
Cominco presently produces
pig iron at Kimberley from byproduct SuUivan iron tailings but
Western Canada cannot make
steel from the iron. The report
quotes Mr. Perry as saying that
an intermediate stage is requir-
Have Reunions With
Friends of Wartime
LARDEAU — Two reunions in
recent months have brought together close friends who have
not met for many years. One of
the incidents requiring a considerable amount of "detective"
work.
Frank Abey, returning a phone
call from a Mrs. Wood in Kelowna, discovered on the other
end of the line an old friend who
he had not seen since 1915.
Mrs. Dorothy Wood and Mr.
Abey had met while he was stationed at Bramshott Camp during the First World War with the
Kootenay Battalion. Mrs. Wood
arrived in B. C. July 2 and began enquiries which led her to
phone Kaslo to ask about members of the Kootenay Battalion
She was referred to Mrs. Verna
Bowker of the Kaslo Post Of
fice, who has known the Abeys
for more than 46 years. Shortly
after, Mr. Abey came into the
post office and received the message to phone a Mrs. Wood in
Kelowna. He found It hard to believe the caller could be his early
day friend until he inquired
about two mutual acquaintances.
Mrs. Wood was unable to visit
Mr. and Mrs. Abey, so the re.
union was conducted entirely by
telephone.
The second uniting of old
friends occurred when a veteran
of the Second World War, Jim
MacNicol of Johnson's Landing,
was host to 76-year-old Mrs. Ber-
gin and her grandson, Colin Budd
of England, who were accepting
a long-standing invitation to visit
Canada. Mrs. Bergin and -her
husband, who was minister of
transport at that time, had entertained Mr. MacNicol and an
army, friend at Christmastime in
1940. Mr. MacNicol and his friend
were facing the prospect of a
lonely Christmas far from home
when Mr. Bergin, a complete
stranger to them, invited them to
his {house for the festive season,
andVon many occasions thereafter. The friendship has continued
by nialT, since,.
Mrs. Bergin and her grandson
spent three weeks with Mr. MacNicol and his mother. They had
been met in-Nelson-after crossing
to Montreal by boat and Canada
by bus. They embarked again at
Vancouver for their return journey to England.   :    ,
INTERMENT FOR
INFANT AT
WESTLAWN
CRANBROOK - Graveside
rites were conducted by Rev.
A. C. Schindel Friday morning
at Westlawn Cemetery for Randy
Samuel Redmond, infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. David Redmond,
who died following a long illness.
He was born in Cranbrook six
months ago, and is also survived
by a brother, Stanley, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Redmond and Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
Campsall, Cranbrook. ...
Tuesday and Wednesday
Back-to-School Special
at Overwaitea
B.C. WHITE
SUGAR
10«»- 99c
Many Other Itemi en Speeial
Throughout the Store.
OVERWAITEA LTD.
Vamon St.
Neiion
Former Ta Ta
Creek Resident
Dies at Edmonton
CRANBROOK — Funeral aer
vice was held Friday for George
Stewart Sims, long-time Ta Ta
Creek resident who died at Ed-
monton.
He was born at Almonte, Ont.,
77 years ago. He moved west to
Strasbourg, Sask,, then Nipawin
where he farmed. In 1937 he
came to this district and firmed
at Ta Ta Creek to retirement in
1954.
His wife, Ellen, died in 1958
and he had lived with various
members of the family since
then.
Surviving him are two sons,
Lawson, Edmonton, and Mervyn,
Dome Creek, B.C.; two daughters, Mrs. W. G. Epp, Cranbrook.
and Mrs. Al Markuson, Yellowknife; 27 grandchildren and one
great-grandchild.
Burial in Westlawn Cemetery
followed the service at McPherson Funeral Chapel.
ed,.the making of steel from iron
fort use at-the coast. The development of basic steel.at Kimberley would be this stage.
.■Mr. Perry.spoke of the early
opening up of developments between . Kimberley and Western
Canada. Steel, which has as its
subsidiary Vancouver Rolling
Mills.  ■■'■ .   ■ ...        '   - .'   '■
Plans Now Available
Hatchery Tenders To
Be Open October
CRANBROOK — Tender call
has been issued, and plans are
now available for the new fisheries and game branch hatchery
in this district which will go into
operation as soon as possible.
Tenders will be opened about
the second week in October toward the initial structural work,
which is estimated at a cost of
about three-quarters of a million
dollars.
The finished hatchery will
start with an annual propagation program of twice Ihe province's present total of sports
fish production for planting the
various lakes.
The location is, east, of the
Kootenay river ,and west of the
Wardner-Fort Steel, road, near
where Bull River joins the Kootenay. Extensive- preliminary
work was necessary in locating
year-round water source with
specific annual temperature
range and the proper mineral
content,
PRELIMINARY WORK
The Little Bull and Norbury
Creeks filled these requirements,
and concrete dam: with underground pipeline, and two supple
mentary wells, which all meet
the requirements, have been
constructed over the summer by
Vancouver Pile Drivers Ltd. at
a cost of about $114,000.
There has been no decision
about actual starting date for the
new construction but efforts are
underway for inclusion of the
project for the winter works program in East Kootenay.
Initial hatchery product will be
Rainbow, Cutthroat and. Eastern
Brook trout,.but it will probably
be extended to other species
of -fish at a future t|me. For
many years, East Kootenay fish
propagation for stocking the
Kootenays has been' a seasonal
activity at a pOnd on JoSeph
Creek just below the city reservoir spillway. It was constructed
by rod and gun clubs nearly 20
years ago and its operation was
later taken over by the B.C.
Game Commission.
The new year-round perma-
neat hatchery plant will include residences for the full-
time year-round staff and
eventual development plans In-
- elude making it a tourist at-
traction, with camping and picnic site in the general vicinity.
Increased Safety Precautions
Tunnel Deaths
TREE-PLANTING
Ontario's spring planting ot
24,000,000 trees in 1964 is an
all-time high, the department of
lands and forests has announced.
VANCOUVER <CP>: - The
Workmen's Compensation Board
said T h u r s day more rescue
equipment has been ordered for
the tunnel workings pt the Peace
River Power project whfere.two
men were killed last week.
An official said 10 units of.
self-contained breathing apparatus have been ordered for the
job,where: Joseph Gillis, electrician, of - Burnaby, .and John
Durack, a miner, were killed.
Gillis -was killed in a gas
explosion in the drainage tunnel.
Durack,died.in a rescue attempt
when another rescuer took; the
single oxygen mask from him to
save.' himself after * finding he
could not drag, the unconscious
Durack odt.
The WCB official said that a
board, inspector who made twice
weekly checks.of the jph. apparently failed to notice that rescue
equipment was inadequate. The
board's regulation said that rescue equipment should,be provided , but - do- not' specify 'how
much.': .;.'      ; v. '
Meanwhile, he said that the
organization of the construction
companies at the Peace project
makes it difficult to determine
who was •Gillis' employer and
who thus.was responsible for
providing'safety equipment and
taking suitable safety measures.
The1 board was assessing
Peace, Power Constructors Ltd.
for sums normally charged to
an employer for compensation.
But a spokesman for the B.C.
Hydro and Power Authority said
Peace Power is only a hiring
agency and does not supervise
workers.  He said contractors
and subcontractors are responsible for safety.
Gillis'?<■ 16-year-oId daughter
Yvette said neither.her father's
union or employer have . contacted the family: The union had
sent the widow $130 collected by
tils workmates.
John.. Whltelaw,. a board'.-Inspector, is investigating the
accident and another one in
which;Neil Moar, 30, was.hit on
the head when a gas coupling
came loose. He suffered concussion.-        ■ ;■><'■ ■'   ,....;■.■'-'
Grand forks Man's
Mans Lead Women W
Vocational School Level
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964—3
Kimberley Woman Fills New
Office at Cranbrook NES
CRANBROOK - New position
in the Cranbrook National Employment Service office, special
service officer, has been established and filled with appointment of Mrs. F. C. Ainley of
Kimberley. Function of the office
is to provide counselling and selective placement of special
categories of applicants.
.. Mrs. Ainley, was born at
Springwater, Sask., graduated
from Arborfield High School in
Saskatchewan and obtained her
certificate in psychiatric nursing
in Saskatchewan in 1954.   .
Funeral Rites
Held at Trail
For Mrs. Jones
TRAIL — Funeral service for
Mrs. Lizzie Jones, 77, was conducted Monday with Rev. A. L.
Allison officiating.
Mrs. Jones was a resident of
Trail for 22 years and died Friday after a lengthy illness.
She was born in Ballandro,
Benholm in Scotland and came
to Canada with her family in
1910. They settled in Moosimin,
Sask., and three years later moved to North Battleford.
In 1923 her first husband passed away and in 1928 she married
Charles Jones in Lloydminster.
Mr. Jones died in 1932.
She was a member of the Presbyterian Church and a past member of the women's auxiliary to
the Royal Canadian Legion and
of the Order of the Eastern Star.
She is survived by a sister.in
Scotland and two sons, Sam and
Andy Lyon, both of Trail. She
left five grandchildren and. 11
great-grandchildren. She. was
predeceased by a son, Robert,
two years ago.
Rites were held.at Carberry's
Funeral Chapel.' Cremation followed.
She was with the public health i They have two children, Joel
service there until coming to and Tamara, and she will corh-
Kimberley with her husband.   I mute to her office here daily.
Lister 4-H Club
Girls Outstanding
In Gaining Awards
CRANBROOK-Laura Millner,
of Lister 4-H Sewing Club, has
been named one of the B.C. delegates to the annual National
Club Week which takes place
each November at the Royal
Winter Fair at Toronto.
She was one of three Lister
members attending the 4-H Dress
Revue at the Pacific National
Exhibition, where fellow club
member Dorothy Kilgren placed
first in Kootenay area. Mrs. A.
Ianoville of Lister accompanied
them to the PNE.
Other 4-H Club members from
East Kootenay attending the
PNE and competing were Terry
Shubert and Bill Koopmans of
Wycliffe Beef Club, Lorna Lancaster of South Country Beef
Club, Ann Lye of East Kootenay
Homecraft and Leslie Phillips
of Lister Community Club.
The various 4-H Clubs in the
area are now preparing to launch
their separate club activities in
beef and dairy cows, and sewing
and cooking toward the grand
climax of Achievement Day next
June. Organization of new 4-H
Clubs in- the district is content-
DAM'S LAKE
Work on the South Saskatchewan Dam will be so advanced
by fall, 1965, that filling the
180-mile-long lake behind it will
begin.
plated,  requiring a  spohsoiug
group and volunteer leaders.
Leadership training course for
those already engaged in this
work and for new adult recruits
is planned for the fall season
here.
Air Cadets
Start Season
Wednesday
TRAIL — First parade of the
cadet year is planned by the
Trail air cadet squadron', which
has seen two of its members
recently awarded pilot licences.
Sgt. Ed Bowes and Cpl. Richard Ward received their licences'
following training at Pitt Meadows on the lower mainland. -
A recruiting program is being
undertaken to raise the squadron's numbers to the quota of 65.
Of the present membership,
Sgt. Dan Gray has been attending a senior leader's course at
Comp Borden this summer, And
Sgt. Bowes and Cpl. Ward attended the flying school on Air
Cadet League scholarships.
F/L Howard Ross has announced the squadron will attend
the Battle of Britain parade in
Castlegar Sept. 20.
FOOD BUYS
,. GRAND'JPRKS, B.C. .CP> -
Four nearly destitute, jobless
women are taking thejhard steps
that will lead'them back to. productivity ' in the community.'
Under a self-help, adult education scheme, devised by John
Walsh,', an elementary, school
principal .in this Kootenay community, the four women took .the
nitial: steps a -year ago — raising their - educational levels to
meet the requirements for vocational school entrance.'
Under the principal's plan, the
women were offered free tuition
and volunteers came'forward to
teach them .more than the .elementary lessons they were receiving. , '"
Mr.. Walsh said the /volunteer
teachers began a program of
instruction two nights a week
arid'by the end of the year two
women .had. a Grade 10 standing
and.; the. Other two completed
Grade Seven.v
This.fall,'the.women, all-in
their thirties, will embark on
the vocational phase — one taking a secretarial coursei another
practical, nursing, a third sewing and the fourth a catering
course. ■ ,       ■_•,
."Now we have.the confidence
tb try It on a larger scale," Mr.
Walsh said.. "If. we .could* only
take - a .few hundred people off
the'-welfare-rolls each yeir.we
could save hundreds of thousands of dollars."
I   Swift'*. Ideal luncheon meat; T2 ez. tin
I
Employment Situation ■■',]
Average in E. Kootenay
PORK & BEANS if)(orQQc.
Chelsea; 15 at. tin __i  I V / /
! MARGARINE
CRANBROOK —, Employment
situation, in the East'Kootenay
area covered by Cranbrook National Employment Service of-
PUC To Hold Public Hearing
On Extension Power Service
A public hearing will be held
in Penticton September 18 to
hear applications for extension
of power services. FoUowing is
a release issued by the Public
Utilities Commission.
"The Public Utilities Commission has had before it for some
time applications for an extension of electric service in rural
areas served by West Kootenay
Power and Light Co. Ltd. All the
areas concerned are uneconomical in the sense that the revenue
to be expected from serving
them would not be sufficient to
cover the cost to the utility.
"Prior to 1960 the commission
would have had no power to order service in such cases. An
amendment in that year empowered it to order service if it determines after enquiry that service is feasible and required to
the public interest and also that
the construction and maintenance of the extension will not
necessitate any substantial increase in rates chargeable by the
company elsewhere or any decrease in services provided by
the company elsewhere.
AREAS
The areas in the Public UtUi
ties Commission's fUes'are:
Tulameen, Christian VaUey
(north of Westbridge), areas
northwest of Westbridge to Beaverdell. and. Carmi, Ymir-Apex,
Joe Riche Valley (near Rutland),
Boundary Falls - Karr Creek
(north of Midway), Boundary
Creek' (north of Greenwood),
Shutty Bench (near Kaslo), Lardeau Valley: (north of Kaslo),
BridesvUle, Rock Mountain, Anarchist .-. Mountain . areas, Deer
Park-Renata oh Lower Arrow
Lake,   .'.' ;-  "■■; ■'• :■
"It has not been the policy of
the commission to order extensions if they appear to be grossly
uneconomical in the sense of involving the utility in substantial
expense ahd providing Utile revenue.
"At the same .hearing the
commission wUl bear the ease
ol any areas which ask that
the, are*- rates applicable • to
them should be reduced.
"After considering these two
questions tbe .commission will
consider to a-general way whether there is a case for a reduction in electric rates throughout
the entire system served by West
Kootenay Power and Light Co.
Ltd. This question is being raised at the present time because
any such reduction would be in
some degree competitive with
both uneconomic extensions and
reductions of rates to' particular
areas',
"No general reduction..could
be ordered by the commission
without a further-hearing, as it
would - be necessary to give
ample notice, to- West Kootenay
Power and Light Co. Ltd., and
to establish clearly that tbe rates
being charged on the system are
excessive,as being more than a
fair and reasonable charge for
the service. A charge is fair and
reasonable if it is necessary to
give the public utiUty a fair and
reasonable return upon the appraised value of the property
used or prudently and reasonably acquired to enable it to
furnish the service..
"As.was. Indicated to the commission's annual report for 19631
there are some extremely' important preliminary questions,
specially applicable to this company, that must be settled before
tbe fairness of the return can
be determined."
fice, Kootenay Lake to Elko .and
north to Parson,' was termed
average at the end of August
by manager A. J. D. Neill. Registration of male applicants for
jobs was 216, and females 1*0,
compared to 271 males at,the
end of July and 139 females: Increase in the latter category was
attributed, to specific advertised
vacancies listed, by. the office
in August.
On the corresponding date.of
1963, Aug. 31, listing wis" 216
males and 137 females.
Aihong the men listed, unskilled labor showed* surplus, while
skilled tradesmen were reported
ih'sbort supply.   , j '..    ,„
Baby Fails To
Respond to
Inhalator
: TRAIL — A'fire department
rescue squad assisted a doctor
early Saturday morning in a desperate attempt to revive a six-
weeks-old boy in Trail, but to no
avaU.
The fire department received
the emergency call at 7:04 a.m.
from the home of D. L. Bourdon,
1666. Second Avenue and responded with inhalator apparatus.
After working for a period of
time the attending doctor, pronounced the baby dead.
TODAY and WED. ONLY
i
i
I
i
FRESH EGGS    ^fal
Grade 'A' imall, In carton* —..-.J mf V #   ;;   J
So-Fresh. Parehmant wrap
Serve with delicious dumpling*,
eviscerated, whole.       -
ib. 29*
t
:T
I
I
I
I
| Prices Effective:
I Today and Wed.
■    Sept. 8 and 9
I   We Reierva tha Right
I to Limit
Quantities.
i
Netted Gems, No. 2      .       |
Grand Forki.
1(K45
UPER
1
I
l
l
l
i
ALU
100% B.C. OWNED
AND OPERATED,
y+
 Established AprU 22. 1902 Nelson, B C.
Published by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
2B6 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except
Sundays and holidays in the centre oi the KoolenayB with
the largest daily circulation in the Interioi oi B.C.
Authorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department. Ottawa,
and for Payment ol Postage in Gash.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PKESS _
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DA1LV NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION
m_,mbi_k U,,M£,M-ER QF THE AUDn BUREAu OF CIRCULATIONS
The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this
paper and also the Incal news published herein	
Tuesday, September 8, 1964	
Eat, Drink and Be Merry,
Our Constitution Is at Stake
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor on any topic ol genuine Interest
are welcome U they ara brlet, accurate and fair. They may
be published over a nom de plume, but the name ol Hie
writer must be given to the Editor aa evidence ol good
faith. Anonymous letters go Into Ihe wastrpaper basket.
Typewritten letters must be double-spared.
Nelson's New Front and Back Doors
highway becomes a justifiable
project, but the government has
The meeting oi Prime Minister
Pearson and the provincial premiers
was intended to be an event oozing
with conviviality and goodwill on
the anniversary of the 1864 pre-
centennial celebrations in Charlottetown. Mr. Pearson, with his usual
aplomb, has turned the party into
a conference dealing with the British
North America Act and its successor,
the proposed constitution for Canada,
When the BNA was discussed at
the 1961 federal-provincial conference, the Saskatchewan government,
headed by Woodrow Lloyd, thwarted
any positive steps that may have
been taken by stubborn insistence
on vetoing particular sections of the
proposed amendment, due to their
inherent dislike of its provisions.
They disliked large proportions
posals deal with powers of opting
in or out of federal .projects.
It seems that our leaders are
putting Ihe cart before the horse.
They are discussing changes of
a major nature but have never
agreed on what changes are necessary. If, in particular, the power of
veto is adhered to under the terms
oi the proposed constitution, and can
be used effectively, Canada will be
left in somewhat the same position
as the United Nations — deadlocked
and hopelessly divided, A perpetual
state of confusion will be evident.
If opting out provisions are included in the proposed constitution
our land will be further divided by
what the Toronto Globe and Mail
refers to as "division on the installment plan."
Certainly there is a great need
of the proposed  new constitution, for constitutional changes and these
which would have superseded the    should have been attempted long
BNA.-. What it actually amounted to
wasthal the Saskatchewan government would not budge, and effectively, used its veto power even
though ihe other provinces were in
virtual accord. On matters affecting
education and languages, complete
agreement was necessary. These
steps were never taken during the
1961 conference as the Saskatchewan government still found the proposals distasteful.
Mr. Pearson has indicated that
he now believes an agreeable
acceptance formula can be found.
This remains to be seen. Even though
Premier Lesage has lent a kind ear,
he is still very much an enigma until
the showdown comes.
Premier Ross Thatcher has, unfortunately, found some of-the stubborn stands of the previous Saskatchewan government palatable, and
is busily toutinq his concepts which
would extend Helegatinq powers of
the provinces. Apparenllv these pro-.
ago, but We wonder if Mr. Pearson
is wise to bring the matter before
the present Charlottetown conference? We remember its original
agenda—to eat, drink and be merry.
Surely this is- no fit place for discussion of the nation's new constitution,
A proper place for discussion-of
the constitution Would be at a full-
scale federal-provincial conference
where the only topic for'discussion
would be the constitution. Nothing
; less than this arrangement will suffice. >   -•
Canadians are rightly concerned
that their country's constitution will,
be put on Ihe line over convivial
dinner sessions in Charlottetown. Let
us not lose sight of the fact that our
heritage is at stake. We owe it to
future generations to lay the proper
foundations for our (.onstitutioh. We
will expect our leaders to tackle this
momentous step with dignity- and
common sense.
To The Editor:
Sir: Our new front door:
We cannot escape the statistical facts the the Kootenay Skyway route from the south-east
to Nelson is now the most practical route to follow, simply because travelling time Horn Creston to .Nelson is almost cut in
half.
We can strongly urge that the
designation "3A" be placed on
the Salmo-Nelson leg of the new
route where it now bears only
the number "6".
Furthermore, a realistic move
may be the change of the Free-
Ferry route number to "3B".
Now, the Free-Ferry route could
also bear an internationally -
agreed-upon number to extend
from Porthill, Idaho, lo Revelstoke via the Lardeau Valley.
In fact, such a number could
apply to the road north to Mica
damsite, and eventually as far
north as the Kamuoops-Jasper
Highway, 75 miles north of Mica.
Our New Back Door:
During the early days of rail
and steamer travel, when the
West Kootenay was openin. up,
Revelstoke was the chief entrance to the district. Now that
the Trans-Canada Highway is
pouring traffic into the north
end of the Okanagan Val'ey, it
follows that traffic could once
again turn south at Revelstoke
into the West Kootenay.
Although east-west traffic is
of prime importance in the West
Kootenay district, it is believed
that there is a great potential
opportunity to be tapped by the
provision of improved north-
south traffic routes. It may be
many years before a Rose Pass
Arms and the Men
in the midst of current alarms-
there is much point in remembering
that, a -disarmament conference is
still at work in Geneva. This one has
been sitting, oif and on, since March,
1962.
It is supposed to be an 18-power
affair but the chair reserved for
France is vacant. President de Gaulle
refused to have anything ta do with
the parley from the start. He took a
crack at it recently. "La vaine et interminable conference," he called it.
! The delegates horn 17 countries
have adopted a tidy routine. Every
Tuesday they discuss "general and
complete disarmament." Thursday is
for "collateral measures." What happens on Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays has not been disclosed; perhaps a jump into the lake.
De Gaulle says it is an illusion
to suppose that fear of nuclear war
will induce the strong powers to give
up their, weapons. The record, to
date,, supports him. There is nothing
to show for all the postwar, talk about
disarmament except the ban on atmospheric nuclear tests; and this did
not reduce any wai machine, by a
single bomb, missile, plane or man.
But the Geneva conferees are
trying. They make little headway
with the "general and complete"
proposition, but they have plenty
oi "collateral measures" on the table.
One is an. American idea that the
U.S. and Russia each make a bonfire of 480 bombers.
That will be quite a sight when
il happens, It will also be a boon to
the arms industry ior the incineration
of 480 bombers would be sure to
produce a demand thatthe shortage
be made up. Still, as Churchill said,
: jaw, jaw, jaw is better than war,
war, war.—Financial Posf.
Ruling Out the News Freeloaders
Conscientious newsmen who
have-long been concerned over the
implications behind the custom oi
wining and dining reporters will applaud the pay-as-you-go policy of
Barry Goldwater.
Mr. Goldwater has ruled that
every newsman aboard his plane
during the presidential campaign
must pay for bis accommodation.
Bach press or TV representative mult
put up $3660 in advance before'occupying one of the 54 seats on the
Goldwater-aircraft.  . '■"■'/-
The same rule will apply to tbe
entourage of the Republican vice-
presidential candidate. We hope
President Johnson will do the same,
and that Ottawa takes note,
_i
already announced new highway
projects from Upper Arrow Lake
to Revelstoke, and from Revelstoke north to Mica damsite
New standard construction has
recently taken place in Galena
Pass north of Trout Lake City,
and now widening and black-
topping is being carried out from
Lardeau lo Marblehead. Progressive widening and black-
topping has been Improving the
Balfour-Kaslo highway.
The roadbed from Lardeau to
Gerrard, using the former railroad grade, requires chiefly widening and paving to bring it up
to a high standard.
The present ferry crossing to
Arrowhead is providing a minimum service, and this service
is actually discouraging the use
of this natural north-south route.
It is not too early to urge for
a large free ferry wilh more frequent trips at the Galena crossing of Upper Arrow Lake.
It is not too early to promote
a great central Kootenay highway from the International
Boundary north to Mica damsite.
"Traveller"
Still Ring True
To The Editor:
Sir—Old words may still ring
true regarding LBJ: "They love
him tr"_t for the enemies he has
made."
S-ejch seconding the nomination of Grover Cleveland for the
presidency, Democratic national
convention, Chicago, July 9,1884.
M.R.B.
l.iHiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
Boys' Firework Fun
Initiates Shooting
NICOSIA (Reuters) - A 14-
year-old shepherd boy's tun
with fireworks shattered the
Cyprus cease - fire Saturday
night, provoking 2'k hours'
shooting and intervention by
United Nations troops.
It happened at Arsos village, 30 miles from here, and
Sunday the Turkish - Cypriot
headman and a United Na-
tions spokesman confirmed
the shooting was all a mistake.
Arsos is one of the rare
mixed villages in Cyprus
where the homes of Greek-
Cypriots, marked by blue
paint crosses on the walls,
still adjoin those of Turkish-
Cypriots, flying the crescent
and star flag.
Shepherd boy Mehmet Hussein, 14, was taking out his
flock when he found some
fireworks in a field, apparently left there by troops on
manoeuvres.
Back home, he tried them
out and, said the headman,
"all hell was let loose."   .
Greek-Cypriots opened" fire
with shotguns, rifles and automatic weapons.
Turkish - Cypriots grabbed
their guns and rushed to defensive positions to return the .
fire.
After 2._ hours a UN patrol
entered the village and called
a cease-fire.
Only casualty was Mehmet
the shepherd boy — slightly
hurt when the headman boxed
his ears.
Illllllllll.lllllllllllllllllllllllllll.lll
Tshombe Backed on African
Peace Force Suggestion
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia
(ReutersI - Congolese Premier
Moise Tshombe Sunday suggested an all-African peacekeeping force in The Congo and
said he would remove his white
mercenaries as soon as it was
in operation.
Tshombe was speaking at the
special ministerial session of the
Organization of African Unity
which has frowned on the use
of white mercenaries by the former Belgian Congo to fight its
growing left-wing rebellion.
"I have in mind that troops
and police from friendly African countries could be stationed
in calm regions and in those already pacified," said Tshombe.
"Such an arrangement would
limit disorder and prevent it
from spreading, and would enable the government of The
Congo to concentrate its efforts
on disturbed regions," he said,
adding:
"This arrangement.. . would
also enable me to dispense with
the services of those whose
presence in The Congo is embarrassing us."
SHARP DISAGREEMENT
But Tshombe's suggestion, according to conference sources,
drew sharp disagreement from
Ghana's foreign minister, Kojo
Botsio, who said the Congolese
crisis could not be solved by
military action.
He said The Congo was in a
state of civil war which could
be solved only through political
action.   The   United  Nations
spent three years and $280,000,-
000 without solving the problem,
be added.
Tshombe said many foreigners seeing confusion in his country had taken advantage of it
by seeking entry into his forces
and, in some cases, succeeding.
"The Congolese army has suffered many reverses," he said.
"To consolidate it and increase
its striking force I have accepted the services of some of
these foreigners."
Tshombe said some of the foreigners came from the Rho-
desias, from South Africa and
from other countries.
"Given our desire to co-operate wholeheartedly with our
brother African countries, we
should like, if it were possible,
to dispense with the services of
these men," he said.
In an apparent reference to
U.S. and Belgian technical military assistance aid and transport, Tshombe said: "This aid
has enabled me to a certain extent to face my responsibilities
to the people Of The Congo."
The Congolese premier said
he could not "tolerate that anarchy should reign in my country . . ."
ALL-AFRICAN FORCE
A proposal for an all-African
force also came from Mali's
foreign minister, Barema Bo-
coum, who insisted there mu/
be an African solution to The
Congo's troubles.
Ministers   of   a   number
of
Japanese-Canadian Delegates
Agree on Chinese Solution
Interpreting the News
By HAROLD MORRISON
Canadian Press Staff Writer
In the view of many Western
diplomats, Nikita Khrushchev's
planned visit to Bonn to talk to
Chancellor Ludwig Erhard
bodes well for world peace.
It may mean that Khrushchev, mellowing in his autumn
years, has decided to shelve for
some time at least any thought
of promoting new tensions in
Berlin. ,.
And it may mean, as widely
rumored, that the wily Soviet
leader P"« r'Hd'd to downgrade the hard anti ■ Western
line advocated oy East German
Leader Walter Ulbricht in favor
of the more flexible, softer policy advocated by the Czecho-
slovakian Communist leadership.
Khrushchev is still driving
hard to get Western recognition
of East Germany and there is
no prospect that his visit to
Bonn, probably after the United
States elections in November,
will change his ambitions. Indeed, the visit may find him repeatedly arguing in favor of
such recognition as the path toward long - term peaceful coexistence.
IN NO POSITION
But Khrushchev is well aware
that Erhard is in no position to
pursue rH.""ss.'')ns on a permanent split of German territory.
It may therefore be the Soviet
intention to attempt to woo
West Germany into a friendlier
relationship with Moscow, perhaps through offers of big trade
deals, to weaken the German-
French axis and to discourage
German exploration of trade
deals with China.
No matter what Khrushchev
may think of German "revan-
chists" and "militarists," it is
a fact that West Germany has
grown into a major European
power, and indications are that
its strength may increase.
Soviet friendship with Bonn
could not only benefit the Soviet
economy but also lead to reduction of U.S. military forces
in Berlin, Washington has often
stated it looks forward to the
day when these forces can be
reduced safely. That day may
come if a Moscow-Bonn friendship ripens.
In other Western capitals
there is every confidence that
Erhard will make no private
deals with Khrushchev. In fact,
it has been stated that Erhard
has consulted his allies on
every move so far in this dramatic shift of old barriers and
old animosities.
By DON HANRIGHT
TOKYO (CPI—Canadian and
Japanese cabinet delegations
called for a "peaceful, realistic
and equitable" solution of the
China problem at the conclusion
of two days of talks here Saturday.
No other details of the possible solution were contained In
the communique which ended
the discussions, third in a series of cabinet-level conferences.
The document said only that
"the ministers of the two countries agreed that the China,
problem was one of the most.
important problems facing not
only Asia but the whole world,
and that a. peaceful, realistic,
and equitable solution must be
worked out through the careful
examination of all the related
factors."
External Affairs Minister
Paul Martin, leading the 18-man
Canadian delegation, had disclosed earlier Canada was consulting other countries to find
out whether a solution was feasible to the problem of recognition of Communist China and its
seating in the UN.
On the seating question, he
told a press conference Canada
has not devised any specific
plan of action, nor was it "satisfied that any kind of action at
this time would be justified."
The Canadian minister was
reported to have told the conference that any solution would
have to be acceptable to the
United. States.   .
VISITS HIROSHIMA
Martin Sunday visited Hiroshima, the world's first atom-
bombed city, along with his
wife. He left for Ottawa Monday along with most of the Canadian group.
Trade Minister Mitchell
Sharp, Finance Minister Walter
Gordon and Fisheries Minister
Hedard Robichaud also took
part in the talks, which revolved largely around trade restrictions.
The. communique said the
ministers had noted with satisfaction the continued growth in
trade between the two countries
and the expectation of further
growth. It added:
"The ministers agreed that
there were a variety of opportunities for Japan further to diversify its sales to Canada."
Japan's Trade Minister Yo-
shio Sakurauchi told the conference that in future Japanese restraints on exports to Canada
must be kept to a bare minimum.
He said that before Japan
will agree to add new commodities to the restraint list, Canada
must produce a clear-cut case
that imports of these commodities would damage Canadian
industries.
Gordon replied that the system of voluntary restraints by
Japan, negotiated each year,
had given Japan better opportunities for sales to Canada than
would any quota or other system.
countries expressed their repug.
nance at foreign intervention in
The Congo and at the use of
white mercenaries by Tshombe's government, a conference
spokesman said.
Ghana submitted a three-point
plan devised by President
Kwame Nkrumah for a Congo
solution which also included a
suggestion for an African peace-
keeoing force.
The plan called for:
1. Proclamation of a ceasefire and neutralization of all
armies in The Congo.
2. A roundtable conference
under OAU auspices in Addis
Ababa of heads of all main political parties and warring factions in The Congo.
3. An OAU peace force in The
Congo to help preserve law and
order during the roundtable
conference and until a general
election established a truly
democratic government.
Nkrumah had previously circulated his plan to heads Of government saying he believed
"the great powers are only
waiting to use the occasion ol
our failure to settle the present
impasse in The Congo as a pretext for an unwarranted and
open-faced intervention in Congolese affairs."
"What happens to The Congo
now could happen to all of us
one by one," he added.
In another development at the
conference, Southern Rhodesia'!
Zimbabwe African Peoples Union appealed to the OAU to use
its good offices with Britain
over the Southern Rhodesia is-
sue,
In a statement handed to the
secretariat of the OAU the union outlined the situation in
Southern Rhodesia and referred
to "an ominous shadow" hanging over the country.
Canadian Uranium
Reserves Reduced
Home Industries Protected
From Low-Cost Jap Imports
Civil
Defenci
The best Insurance aginst
natural disaster is an active
Civil Defence Organization. If
you are not already a member
join now and take advantage of
fall and winter training.
By DON HANRIGHT
TOKYO (CP)-Finance Minister Walter Gordon of Canada
said Monday his government
will not tolerate damage to well-
established Canadian industries
by unrestrained imports of low-
cost Japanese goods.
He said in an interview this
position was made clear to the
Japanese delegation in the ministerial talks that ended here
during the weekend.
The conference ended with a
communique which said among
other things that. both sides
agreed Japanese restraints in
exports of so-called "sensitive
goods" to Canada should be
kept to a bare minimum.
This year these restraints ap-
HUBERT
Some newspapers (including this
-one) insist on paying the fares of
stall members who travel with official parties. If worthwhile news is
in the oiling, will a news medium
worth its salt go after it only if a
iree pass is offered?
However much a reporter might
pride himself on his objectivity, he
must be aware of any free hospitality
he accepts. He may react by being
too., sympathetic or he :may try to
prove his independence, by being
over-critical, -    ;-
' And despite the efforts.of;newe
media to show complete objectivity,
the notion persists among publicity'
conscious agencies that news must
be heavily, buttered before it slips
into "print.*—Vancouvei Province.   .
"My good man,, it's the President who is conducting
the war on ooverty."
ply mostly to textiles, footwear
and tablewear, and make up
only one-quarter of Japan's total exports to Canada of about
$150,000,000.
No agreement was reached on
the issue of Japanese worsteds.
In negotiation of 1964 restraint
levels the Canadian government
claimed that Japanese sales of
this fabric in Canada have increased 60 per cent in each of
the last two years.
The Japanese contended that
Canada had not made a clear-
cut case that Canadian Industry was being hurt by these
sales.
PROTECT CANADA
Gordon commented later that
his job is to see that Japanese
exports do not damage Canadian industry—"It is not my responsibility to satisfy others."
Under the 1954 Canada-Japan
Trade Agreement, Canada has
the right—which she has never
used—to impose arbitrary valuations on Japanese imports for
duty purposes.
Conceivably this could happen
in case of worsteds.
However, Gordon said Monday
that "it won't get to that."
Of Japanese sales In Canada
in general, the minister said:
"We will not allow established
Canadian industries to be obliterated by low-cost imports."
He added that if the Japanese products get part of the Canadian market, the economy
would benefit in the sense that
these low-cost goods would help
to hold down Canadian prices.
Gordon said it would be good
if the Japanese want to displace
some Canadian imports from
other countries. He said that in
some industrial areas they
should have "a--g«dehance."
GENEVA (CP) - A sharp
drop in Canada's reserves of
uranium oxide was reported
Monday to the United Nations international conference on peaceful uses of atomic energy.
. Similar declines in reserves
also were. reported for the
United States, France and
South Africa.
A paper delivered to the conference by J. W. Griffith and
Dr. S. M. Roscoe of the Canadian government's mines department said Canadian reserves of uranium oxide have
been revised downward to 206,-
800 tons from 385,000 in 1958.
Despite the decline, Canada's
reserves continue to be larger
than other uranium producers
in the Western world. Reserves
held by Russia and other Iron
Curtain countries are not
known.
The Canadian paper said
United States reserves have
been reduced to 16,716 tons
from 22,023, French reserves to
33,000 tons from 55,000 and
South African reserves to 150,-
700 tons from 370,700. The Republic of Congo ceased treating
uranium ores in 1961.
LONG-TERM CONCERN
The paper said that despite
the present surplus of uranium
there is growing concern about
long-term supplies for a market that some authorities believe will reach major proportions by 1980.
(This is the time when uranium metal will be required in
large quantities as a fuel for
nuclear power stations.)
"The main reason for this
concern is that the cost of nuclear power in certain areas of
the world is becoming competitive with the cost Of power from
conventionally fuelled thermal
plants," the paper said.
"It is expected that by 1975
or earlier, nuclear power will
show economic advantages in
comparison with conventional
thermal power in many countries."
Best- estimates available are
that uranium requirements
would total some 209,000 tons
between 1970 and 1980.
The paper said this concern
about the long-term supply of
nuclear fuel "has become more
manifest as a result of downward revisions of ore reserves
by the major producers."
(William Gilchrist, president
of Eldorado Mining and Refining Limited, Canadian government uranium agency, urged
recently that Canada should
start exploring soon for new
reserves in view of the danger
of a metal shortage in the 1970s
and 1980s.)
Word of Life
He that rejecteth me, and re-
ceiveth not my words, hath one
that judgeth him: the word that
I have spoken, the same shall
judge him in the last day. John
12:48.
Today
In History
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Sept. 8, 1964 . . .
United States Senator,
Huey P. Long, was fatally
wounded by Dr. Carl Austin Weiss, son of one of the
senator's political enemies,
29 years ago today—la 1935
—in the Louisiana State
House at B a t o n Rouge.
Long, then at the height of
his political powers and 41
years old, died two days
later. Weiss never was
brought to justice for his
assassination attempt. He
was slain immediately after
the attack on Long by the
senator's bodyguards.
1906—Governor Vaudreuil,
the last governor of French
Canada, formally capitulated to the British at Quebec City.
192S—Germany was admitted to the League of Nations.
First World War
Fifty years ago today, in
1914, the British Expeditionary Force, forcing their
way into a gap between two
German armies, reached
the Marne River as the initiative in the Battle of the
Marne shifted towards the
Allies. A Serbian defensive
victory was reported at
Raca, east of Belgrade.
Second. World War
Twenty-five years ago today, in 1939, the position of
French troops inside Germany was given as being at
the northern end of the
western frontier. Distance
within the Reich stated as
being seven or eight miles.
German High Command announced motorized advance
guard had entered Warsaw,
but the Polish government
denied that Warsaw had fallen.
Israel Premier Protests
Use of German Scientists
TEL AVIV (CP) - Israeli
Premier Levi Eshkol says he
expects to confer with West
German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard on "very substantial and
important matters" before the
Israeli national elections next
summer.
In an interview with the Tel
Aviv newspaper Maariv on the
eve of the Jewish new year,
Eshkol indicated renewed concern over Egyptian employment of German scientists to
develop arms.
As for German-Israeli relations generally, Eshkol noted
that the Germans now are Israel's second largest customer
after Britain but added: "That
is not all. There are even
greater and more decisive matters."
Eshkol said it was not up to
Israel to give the Germans absolution from the Nazi past.
"They must struggle to prove
day by day that they deserve
such absolution," he. said.
Although Israel has a trade
mission in Bonn, there are no
regular diplomatic relations between the two countries. Former Premier David Ben-Surioh
tried to open relations with
West Germany but the issue
created a domestic political
furor.
Eshkol also said he is seeking "new paths" for contacts
with the Arab countries.
Peace between Israel and the
Arab countries must eventually
come, he said in the interview.
But he added:
"I hope the Arabs will not
imagine that if we speak in a
different style we are not at the
same time doing everything
possible to ensure that all
(Egyptian President) 'Nasser's
threats will meet an iron wall."
 Sehiavon-Woldie Vows Heard
Bride's Attendants in Pink Shades
Set Color Theme at Cathedral Rites
Hot pink and white provided a lovely color theme
for ihe bridal entourage which accompanied Lynn Arleen
Waldie as she walked down the aisle of the Cathedral
of Mary Immaculate to exchange marriage vows with
Mr. Gerald George Schiavon on Saturday, August IS,
at 4 p.m.
The sweeping hemline of the
bride's softly styled silk chiffon-
over-taffeta bridal gown brushed
the floor, as did the tiers of her
flowing veil, held by a full crown
of pearls with pearl droplets
hanging from the crown's points.
The bouffant skirt was enhanced
by chiffon roses appliqued on
the sides of the fitted bodice and
was highlighted by a scalloped
neckline outlined front and back'
with lace. The sleeves were lily-
point.
The exquisite bride, who was
given in marriage by her father,
carried a cascading bouquet of
hot pink sweetheart roses and
her jewellery was a cross centred with a diamond. Her crown
headdress had been worn.by her
sister, Mrs. Donald Trozzo, at
her wedding.
Rev, Aquinas Thomas read
file marriage service tor the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. B.
STRIKE LOSSES.
Britain lost 1,775,000.working
days due to strikes and industrial disputes in 1963—the lowest total since 1951.
Waldie of Lardeau, B.C., and
Ihe son of Mr. and Mrs. G.
Schiavon of Trail.
Mrs. G. Hamson was organist
and Mrs. Francis Bohemier sang
"Ave Maria" and, during signing oi the register, "The Wedding Prayer".
Pink and white carnations
graced the altar and baskets of
hot pink and white gladioli ornamented the church.
Matron of honor was her sister,
Mrs. Donald Trozzo, with Mrs.
Carol Babcock of Vancouver,
sister : of the bridegroom, as
brides - matron, Miss Audrey
Sandvik as bridesmaid, Miss
Sandra Schiavon,, sister of the
bridegroom, as junior bridesmaid, and Miss Jodie Lynn Wah
as flower girl.
The senior attendants' gowns
in floral print, with hot pink predominating in the various shades
of pink, were of chiffon over taffeta with full skirts, high neckline and sleeveless. Their cha-
peaux.were hot pink, with shoes
en tone, and they wore white
gloves. Mrs. Trozzo's colonial
bouquet was of hot pink carnations and those bf the other at
tendants were of white carnations.
The little flower girl was in
white, the short, full-skirted dress
featuring puffed sleeves. White
shoes and socks completed her
outfit and she carried a basket
of baby flowers in summer variety. Her hat was of the same
real flowers in bandeau shape.
BROTHER BEST MAN
Mr. Lawrence Schiavon supported his brother as best man,
and ushers were Mr. Lome Babcock and Mr, Dave Morris.
The principals' mothers chose
pink and blue for their ensembles, Mrs. Waldie attractively
attired in pale pink sheath-style
dress of chiffon over taffeta with
matching accessories and pink
rose corsage and Mrs. Schiavon
wearing blue sheath-style lace
over taffeta with white accessories and corsage of yellow
roses.
The bride's uncle, Mr. Elvin
M. Waldie of Duncan, B.C., was
master of ceremonies at a reception held in a downtown hotel.
Mr. E. L. Vance of Vancouver
proposed a toast to the bride and
the best man proposed a toast
to the bridesmaids.
The bride's table, covered with
a cloth and ornamented with
chandelier candleholders belonging to Mrs. E. L. Vance, was
centred with a three-tiered wedding cake decorated all in white
and set on tulle, with miniature
bride and groom atop.
Rose bowls of various summer
flowers and baskets of gladioli
provided the floral decor.
The guest book was attended
by Miss Priscilla Schiavon, sister
of the bridegroom.
Telegrams from Mr. Mike
Buckna and his fiancee, of
Houghton, Michigan; Mrs. j. Ko-
siancic of Kimberley, Mr. and
Mrs. DeGuglielmo of Calgary,
and Mr. Allan. Fabro of Prince
George, were read." ■ ..
Before leaving the reception,
the bride presented her bouquet lo her grandmother, Mrs,
D. E. Waldie of Qualicum
Beach, B.C.
For travelling to the Oregon
coast, the bride changed into a
hot pink two-piece suit with
matching hat, white accessories
and white carnation corsage.
Guests at the wedding were
from Trail, Grand Forks, Kinnaird, Kimberley; Kamloops, Golden, Qualicum .Beach,. Honeymoon Bay, Mesachie Lake, Duncan, Victoria, Vancouver, Balfour, Ainsworth, Kaslo, Lardeau,
and other points as well as from
Nelson.
The newlyweds are making
their home at Castlegar.
special message
to all parents
of boys and girls
now in high school
You can guarantee
your youngster's
College Education
Bank of Montreal
UNIVERSITY EDUCATION PRDGRAip
A comprehensive, life-insured plan for financing a college, education for boys and girls now in high school
If_
', you are like most parents with
children in high school, you are
probably.wondering.howyou are
going to meet the costs of financing your youngster's college education. To help parents solve this
problem, the Bank of Montreal has
introduced its University Education Programme—the first life-
insured plan of its land in Canada.
Under this" comprehensive programme, parents, guardiahs and
sponsors of high-school students
can spread the cost of a university
education over periods of up to
nine years, thus keeping monthly
payments to amounts they can afford without hardship. And the
cost to the parentis only a fraction
of the interest paid on a straight
loan programme.
HOW THE PROGRAMME WORKS
Under the basic plan, the parent
agrees to make monthly payments to
the Bank starting, say, two years before the student enters university,
and terminating one year after graduation. In return, the parent receives
an annual sum from the Bank at the
start'of each of the four university
years.
VARIANTS OF THE PLAN
Several optional plana are available
under the programme, and these vary
as to the number of yeara in which
the parent wishes to make monthly
payments, as well aa to the amount
required annually for university expenses. Plans are based on objectives
ranging from $1,000 to $8,000 payable to the parent in four annual
instalments.
Here is an example of how one of
the basic plans can be varied to suit
your needs:
OBJECTIVE: «4,000
To bl paid to thi patan! in four annual amounts of 41,000 iich
OPTIONS
VOU PAY
MONTHLY
PESI00SOF
PAYMENT
Y0UB PAYMENTS
BESIN
Plan A
$49.55
7 years
2 years
balota univetshv
PlanB
42.78
8 years
3 yeara
baton untvare'nv
PlanC
37.86
9 years
4 years
batata university
HOW TO JOIN THE PROGRAMME
See the people at your neighbourhood B of M branch. You will receive a warm welcome from a staff
who will be pleased to
give you further details
and to help you select a
plan suited to your
needs. Ask for your copy
of the Bank of Montreal
University Education
Programme folder.
P.S. If you need help in financing a
student already in University — or
planning to register this year—talk
to your B of M Manager. Chances are
he can arrange a tuition loan with
extended payments adapted to your
circumstances.
LIFE-INSURANCE FEATURE
If the parent concerned
should die after the start
of the programme, the
funds for education specified in the agreement will
be advanced by the Bank
each year without any further payments being made
by the family or the estate.
Bank of Montreal
&MtVtA*'^%«M&
MR. AND MRS. GERALD GEORGE SCHIAVON
—Photo by Renwick Sludio.
Hints From Heloise
By Heloise Cruse
WORKINO     WITH . CA N A Dl A NS     IN     EVERY    WALK     OP     LIP'S     SINCE
T
1117
,    irimi
Dear Heloise:
My refrigerator has a small
freezer. For about a year now
I have been taping a piece oi
paper on the freezer door, with
a list of contents of the freezer.
I add to the list after I have
shopped, and cross off items as
they are used. In this way I
always know what foods I have
without rummaging through the
entire freezer. I also know what
to buy each week alter consulting the list.
When steaks are on sale, and
I don't have any, I stock up
on them. If I see that I have
a sufficient supply, I pass up
that; sale. This applies to all
frozen foods.
After defrosting, I list the
contents on a fresh piece of
paper and attach it to the dcor
with tape.
This hint, can be applied to
any. type- freezer. Just put the
list where it is not seen by
others unless, the refrigerator or
freezer is opened.
Loramae Begun
* •  •
Dear Heloise:
Have you ever had a beautiful head scarf or neck scarf and
dreaded washing it because you
were afraid it might come out
limp as a rag?
I wash and rinse mine carefully (do not squeeze) then roll
the scarf in a terry cloth towel
and pat tb remove as much
moisture as. possible.
Then I press them with the
grain of the material with a
warm iron.
When they are in shape, lift
them from the ironing board and
cover the ironing board with
waxed paper. Lay the scarf on
it and give a final press.
Enough of the wax goes into
the fibres of the scarf to make it
like a new one!
Dorothy Ketchum
. . *  •  •
Try it gals. It's fabulous.
Makes it sorta rainproof, too.
* •  •
Dear. Heloise:
Painting a three-by-five file
index card with your wall paint
is a handy way of carrying a
color sample with you when
shopping for draperies, etc.
Measurements and.other pertinent data can be written on the
back.
A.S.B.
Dear Heloise:
When wrapping gift packages,
I use the pretty plastic flowers
found in any dime store rather
than the conventional bows.
Just a sprig of tiny flowers or
a single large bloom tied with a
simple shoe-lace bow makes an
especially nice package.
If you fold the stems under,
rather than cutting them off,
the recipient has an added memento to display in a vase.
Recently, I wrapped a bridal
shower gift and used a sprig of
tiny white roses as a miniature
bridal bouquet, right down to the
satin' streamers formed by the
tying ribbon. You never heard
so many nice comments.
Mrs. D. H. H.
* »  *
Dear Heloise:
Don't throw away an old rubber, glove until you cut the fingers off. They can be used on
your thumb when cutting fruits
and vegetables so that you won't
cut your thumb into slices!
Cecelia
* •  •
Dear Heloise:
I have discovered a way to
save a package of bologna once
it has been opened.
I remove the slices from the
package and place each slice
between pieces of waxed paper.
Then I put them all in a plastic
bag and freeze them. Whenever
I want to make a sandwich, I
just remove one frozen slice.
The sandwich is prepared as
usual and the meat is defrosted
by lunch time.
Housewife
• *  *
Dear Heloise:
Tell the gals not to throw
away daughter's old bouffant
slips!
They contain scads of scouring
cloths. Just launder the slips,
cut them to desired sizes and
use.
They are generally topped
with a fancy nylon lace panel
... cut it to size and put in a
drawstring. Bingo! A soap chip
bag. Fancy, too!
So don't throw those old piles
of fluff into the rag hag. Use
them!
Mrs. 6. Rockhold
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964—5
Hard To Get Dirty,
But Harder to Wash
CHICAGO (AP)-Some laundering advice for housewives:
That tattle-tale grey is harder
to avoid in washing many
chemically - treated cotton
clothes and fabrics than untreated cotton materials. The
reason is they attract more dirt
in the rinse water.
The same thing may happen
with other natural fibres, two
chemists told the American
Chemical Society Wednesday.
Protective coatings to make
clothes and fabrics resist water, oil and food stains, or to
give them a softer "feel" and
other desirable qualities, are
being used widely.
In actual use, such fabrics
don't attract as much dirt as
untreated cotton, they said, The
coating repels dirt and stains be-
Fruitvale Girl
Honored at
Bridal Shower
FRUITVALE - A shower held
recently in the United Church
basement honored Miss Jean
Calahan, with 40 guests attending to congratulate the bride-
elect.
Corsages were presented to
Miss Calahan and her mother,
Mrs. W. Calahan, by Mrs. Rud-
rum ahd Mrs. N. Sybulka.
Mrs. J: Anderson made a presentation speech and gifts were
presented to the guest of honor
by Misses Barbara Calahan and
Mrs. P. Konkin.
Games were played with'Miss
Audrey Ralph and Mrs. W. Gie-
ger as prize winners.
Head table guests were the
bride-elect, her mother, her fiance's mother, Mrs. W. Weir;
Miss Barbara Calahan, Mrs: P.
Konkin and Miss P. Ralph.
Refreshments were served by
hostesses Mrs. F. Heidt, Mrs.
N. Bancescu, Mrs. A. Rudrum,
Mrs. J. Anderson, Miss Patricia
Ralph, Mrs. E. Ralph and Mrs.
N. Sybulka.
Decor theme was pink and
white with gladioli at the bride's
table, pink tablecloth and a special cake. "    '
cause they have a lower "surface tension."
But once in hot water, even
with detergents, they don't get
as clean as untreated c.llon
fabrics, said Henry Peper, Jr.,
and Julian Berch, of the Harris
Research Laboratories, Washington, D.C. Their surface tension rises, to grab onto dirt particles and oily stains in rinse
water. The dirt that has gotten
in is harder to get out.
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
Wife Works Crane,
Knows All Ropes
TULSA, Okla. (AP)-It's no
trouble for Mary Lynn Totten,
mother of four children, to
lift 10 tons. She's a crane
operator.
"And she's a darn good
operator, too," her husband,
Isco Totten, owner of General Fabricating and Welding
Company, said Thursday.
"It isn't hard to run a
crane," said Mrs. Totten.
"There are only four hand
levers, three foot brakes and
one hand brake. It's no more
trouble to lift 10 tons than 150
pounds."
She has been running a
crane since March, when Totten discovered he had under*
bid a tank assembly job in
Kansas and found he couldn't
afford to pay another salary.
He taught her to run the machine and interpret his hand
signals.
Last spring, when Totten
came down with pneumonia
and poison ivy at the same
time, his wife took over as
boss on the job.
"We didn't miss a day,"
Totten said. "She knows as
much about it as I do."
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
F____f^*___l
1   ?7     •         m
1 *           v m
1    i
.;^_______P-Hy~ -
K
-*___Bv'
MR. AND MRS. DEAN CARMEN
Nelson Couple
Wed al Chapel
The chapel of Coeur d'Amour
at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, was
scene of a recent wedding solemnized by Rev. Dr. Victoria Car-
bury, when Maria Veronica,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
R. Irving of Nelson, became the
bride of Mr. Dean Carmen, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Carmen of
Sunshine Bay.
Attending the ceremony were
the parents of the bride and
groom, also the brother of the
bride, Mr. Gerald Irving, and
Mr. Roger Engelbracht of Invermere.
Following a reception and fam-:
fly dinner, the young couple left
on a wedding trip to the Okanagan and the west coast.
Ainsworth
AINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS -
Mr. and Mrs. E. Peck of Seattle
are guests of Mrs. Peck's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Norquist.
Mrs. Rose Fahrni of Vancouver
spent a.few days with Dr. and
Mrs. Besecker and Mrs. N. Sher-
raden.
Recent visitors with the Heck-
ers have been Jerry Erquart,
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Ramsay
and son, and Arnol Cowan' of
Salmon Arm; also Dick Atkinson
of Vancouver and Mrs. Simmer-
on of Vernon.
Tom Lane and Mrs. M. Lane
were Trail visitors during the
week.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Davidson and
Cindy of Nanaimo are guests of
Mrs. Davidson's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. E. Lane.
Dividends
By THE  CANADIAN PRESS
Argus Corporation Ltd. $2.50
pfd. class A 62V2 cents; $2.60
pfd. class A 65 cents; pfd. class
B 67.4 cents, Nov. 1, record Oct.
15; class C pfd eight cents, common eight cents, Dec. 1, record
Oct. 30.
Beaver Lumber Co. Ltd. pfd.
35 cents, class A 25 cents, common 40 cents, Oct. 1, record
Sept. 10.
St. Lawrence Cor. Lid. 5 per
cent pfd. series A $1.25, Oct. 26,
record Sept. 25; common 25
cents, Nov. 2, record Oct. 1.
Shell Investments Ltd. first
pfd. 21Vs cents. Oct. 1, Sept. 11.
Supertest Petroleum Corporation Ltd. 5 per cent pfd. $1.25,
Oct. 15, record Sept. 16.
Trans • Canada Corporation
Fund, common 1-20 of A series
C pfd. share, 1 per cent non-
cumulative redeemable of $1
par value for each common
share held, Oct. 1, record Sept.
15.
New Denver
NEW DENVER - Mr. and
Mrs. Nick Strebchudt and family bad. as guests Mr. and Mrs.
E. Paddison and sons of North
Vancouver.
J. Ed Kennett celebrated bis
91st birthday quietly at nis
home.
Mrs. H. T. Butler has as her
guests for a few days her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Butler and children of
Victoria, who will also visit Mr.
and Mrs. Allan Gustafson.   .
Dr. and Mrs. P. Postuk of
Duncan, B.C., were visitors at
the home of the latter's uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. T.
Leask.
Mr. end Mrs. R. Spencer bad
as guests Mrs. Spencer's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. H. Halverson and. daughter of New-Westminster and Mr,
and Mrs. G. Reeves and son of
Sechelt, B.C.
Mrs. E. Grest of Winnipeg has
been visiting her brother-in-law
and sister Mr .and Mrs. G. H.
Croy.
Misses Colleen and Kathleen
McCrory are home after vacationing in West Vancouver with
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Childs.
Mr. and Mrs. E; LeClerc and
family of Port Moody, former
residents of New Denver, were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. ■ P. J.
McCrory and family, who have
as guest at present their daughter, Miss Maureen McCrory,
nurse-in-training at Vancouver
General Hospital.
Human Progress
Theme of Lesson
States and stages of human
progress were explored In the
Bible Lesson on "Man" at all
Christian Science churches Sunday.
Bible selections included the
following from Romans (ch 12).
"Be not conformed to this world;
but be ye transformed by the
renewing of your mind, that ye
may prove what is that good,
and acceptable, and perfect, will
of God."
Readings from "Science and
Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy included these lines: "Progress is
born of experience. It is the ripening of mortal man, through
•which the mortal is dropped for
the immortal. Either here or the
hereafter, suffering or Science
must destroy aU illusions regard-
ing life and mind, and regenerate
material sense and self. The old
man with his deeds must be put
off."
CROSS CONTINENT
By 1970, when the Rhine-Danube canal is completed, boats
may travel from the English
Channel to Ihe Black Sea.
SAFEWAY
SavsbL yoiL  WdM.!
Oranges
. Outspan, tweet and juicy.
For back-to-school lunches.
7 h 1.00
Butter
Alpha Brand,
firtt grade
F2ibS$1.09
Soup
Campbell's, tomato or
vegetable; 10 ox. tint
4 f« 49*
Ice Cream
Snowstar. Vanilla, strawberry or neopolitan.
3 pint etn. 491
7 9«l. «*«• $7.29      2 gal. «tn. $2.49
Sausage
Skinless; I Ib. pkg.
3   1.00
Prices Effective: Tues., and Wed., Sept. 8 and 9
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
Ikl SAFEWAY
 6—NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964
ED CLEM TAKES
OPEN TOURNEY
CEC ALEXANDER MEMORIAL TROPHY, presented for the firs, time
this year, was won by well-known Nelson sportsman Gil Gilbert. The trophy,
ln honor of Mr. Alexander, a popular long-time member of the Neiion Golf
ond Country Club who died last year, will be presented annually to the 20-
or-over handicap golfer making the best showing in the Nelson Labor Day
Open golf tournament. Gilbert is shown here accepting the award from Mr.
Alexander's widow, Mrs, Evelyn Alexander. At left is Ray Weit, an official
of the club, and of the firm which donated the trophy.—Daily News photo.
KLAN CONTROLS NINE STATES SAYS CHAIRMAN
ATLANTA,  Ga.   (API—Mem- tain, Ga., about 15 miles east of
bers of the Ku Klux Klan po- Atlanta. A brightly lit 30-foot'James Venable, an Atlanta law.
Utically control nine states, burning  cross  dominated  the|_*ei..?nich.a.rm,.n„0< *___!_'
about 600 people were told at a scene.
Isobel Morris Repeots
As Women's Chomp
Arnold Sherwood of Fernie, who for several yeara
dominated the Neiion golf sfcene, failed over Ihe weekend 16 repeal hli 1963 victory in the Labor Day Open
golf tournament at th* Neiion Golf and Country Club.
BUt at least th* Ken McBride Memorial Trophy
stayed in the family.
Sherwbod Ml victim te the booming tee-lhot* and
rftiPMharp putting 6f hi* 14-year-old llepbrolher-protege,
Ed Clara, and wal iofc-d 16 iettle for the runner-up slot
in tht 20th annual edition 6f tha tourney.
Ci-M, a I*nl6r at L. V. Rogerl High School who
earll.r thii y*ar wort tha EaJt-Weit Kootendy junior golf
ehampionihlp al Trail, cdrd*d a 148, tw6 strokes better
than tha incumbent. H» wa* in *«eand place at the halfway mark, on* itrok» back af Alex Koenlg and Bruce
felmore, wh6 wer* Had far the lead after 16 hole* with
scores al 71.
Tht youthful 101, considered
by miity to be the best prospect
to dome out of thi district in
more than i decade, fired i
blistering 34 over a course that
was ratid as "fast" Monday
morning, and cime home with a
In on the back nine to wrap up
the tournament.
in 1462 he placed second behind BUI Wakihim, now a pro
in Victoria.
REPEATS LADIES' WIN
Defending champion Isobel
Morris of Trail shot a 27-hole
total of lM to repeat her 1963
victory in women's play. Owen
Miller occupied the runner-up
spot.
Mrs. MUler had to overcome a
two-stroke lead held by Dolly
Koehle   after   11  holes.   Mrs.
Koehle carded II after 11 holes
The meeting was caUed by j but experienced difficulty on the
      0ack nine and checked in with a
cross-burning meeting Saturday
night.
The meeting was held in a
rural  field  near  Stone  Moun-
tional Ku Klux Klan Association. He told the crowd:
Several members of the robed I "You'll never be able to con-
audience faced the cross with vict a white man that kUled a
their left arms in stiff salute as nigger what encroaches on the
the cross burned. white race in the south."
52, compared to the winner's 43.
She managed to nose out May
Moros of Castlegar for low net
.onors.
Mrs. M. Ward took the conso-
'..tion prize.
Vern Miller caotured the men's
Now Available
■>
LOANS FOR STUDENTS
Guaranteed by the Government of Canada
Purpose: The purpose of the Canada Student Loans Act is te facilitate bank loins fer
students who need financial help to continue full-time studies beyond secondary
school level it Universities and other educational institutions.
Who can apply: Any Canadian citizen, or anyone resident in Canadi for one year who intends
to live in Canada after completion of studies, may ipply for t loan under the
Act An applicant must be enrolled or intend to enroll at a full-time student
at an educational institution approved by provincial authorities, and mutt
meet the standards of academic qualification and financial need ettablished
by the student loan authority in the Province in which he applies.
Amount of loans: Depending upon individual circumstances and financial need, lotns up ta
$1,000 a year may be made, with a maximum of $5,000 during a student'*
academic career. The Provincial Authority receiving applications and deter*
mining eligibility will issue a certificate to each eligible student stating the
maximum amount tbe student may borrow. Thii Certificate of Eligibility
is required before a student can arrange a Government Guaranteed Student
Loan with the bank of his choice.
Repayment:  Inteieat-Free and Delayed Repayment Period
To assist students, the interest on loans during the period a student continues
full-time studies, and for six months thereafter, will be paid by the Government
of Canada. During this same period no repayment of principal is required, nor
will any service charge or fee be payable by the student
Method of Repayment
Borrowers will begin to pay interest and to repay loans six months after thiy
cease to be full-time students. The current interest rate to student! il iVtV,
per annum. Normally the repayment period will be five to ten yean. Borrowers
have the right to repay loans in part or in full at any time without penalty.
Life Insured
In the event of the death of a borrower responsibility for repayment of the
loans will be assumed by the Government of Canada.
Where to apply: Students resident in British Columbia, regardless of where they intend to
study, should apply for a Certificate of Eligibility to:
British Columbia Student Aid Loan r_.mmittrA
c/o Department of Education,
Victoria, British Columbia.
The shore nates are based upon the Canada Student Loans Act 1964 and are for reference only.
,    All applications and loans are subject to the full terms and conditions of tht Act.
CANADA STUDENT LOANS ACT
CAKADA
*U
A-flight lOw net with Jack Kin-
non in the runner-up Spot — the
lame position he occupied list
year.
Continuing the Nelson domination of play, Herble Klein beat
out Leo Atwell for second-flight
low gross honors. Low net went
to Walter Duckworth. Bill Hamilton was runner-up.
Third-flight play saw Cordon
Smith leading the way with Bob
Rothery second. Low net was
captured by Bill Apostoliuk.
Charlie Symmonds was runner-
up.
Al Larsen won low gross In
fourth-flight play, defeating Gordon French. Irwin Black beat
George Dey of Metaline Falls,
Wash., for low net honors.
Bill Perehudoff of Castlegar
cracked the Nelson monopoly
when he took low gross In men's
fifth-flight play over townsman
J. Landis.
GILBERT WINS TROPHY
Gil Gilbert, a 23-handicap
golfer, checked in with a net 128
to take fifth-flight low net.
The performance was good
enough to allow him to become
the first winner of the Cec Alexander Trophy, sponsored by Kootenay Forest Products and presented by Mrs. Alexander, for
the best performance by a 20-Or-
over handicapper.
The trophy is a memorial to
Tec Alexander, a long-time member of the club who died last
vear. It wiU he presented annually.
Ed Konkin connected for the
only hole-in-one of the tournament. He counted an ace on the
122-yard second hole Monday,
but failed to finish among the
winners.
A record 128 golfers attended
th* 1904 tourney.
Spokane (ops
Nel Honors
TRAIL (CP) - Spokane play-
ers dominated the annual West
Kootenay tennis tournament
here Monday.
Cande Webb, 19, of Spokane
won the women's singles and,
with Kent Brennan of Spokane,
took the mixed doubles, then
teamed with Rae Kirkland of
Trail to win the women's doubles.
Brennan won the Men's open
singles. Bob Quail and Mickey
Ross of Spokane took the men's
doubles.
Runner-up in women's singles
was Vera Lambert of Nelson,
while Bob Hanson of Spokane
and Kay Major of Nelson were
second in mixed doubles and
Kay Major and Kay Thompson
of Nelson were runners-up in
the women's doubles.
Brennan was second with Bob
Hanson in men's doubles.
Rick Ferrell of Spokane took
first in the boy's singles event,
followed by Peter Brockway of
Trail.
In the veterans' doubles (men
over 35) Herb Neils of Libby,
Montana and Gordon of Spokane
took first place, followed by Ed
Haley and Jim Richardson of
Trail.
The event, which was revived
last year after several years'
absence, was plagued by rain
during the last event - mixed
doubles — which was held up
for over one hour before being
played in near darkness.
FAMILY RIVALS ... Ed Clem, right, who
credits stepbrother Arnold Sherwood with teaching
him "all I know about golf," proudly accepts the
Ken McBride Memorial Trophy from Sherwood after
winning the 1964 Nelson Labor Day Open golf tournament Monday. Clem, who Is reigning East-West
Kootenay junior golf champion, carded a 143, two
strokes better than Sherwood's 145, Sherwood won
the event last year and in 1961.
Braves Win One
Kamloops Game
BULLTTIN
KAMLOOPS - Burnaby O'
Keefe'a jumped on Nelson Braves
pitchers Bob Rich and MUes
Desharnais for three home runs
as they downed the CAn Am
baseball league champions 6-0
here, Sunday afternoon! The loss
eliminated Braves from further
competition in the annual Kamloops baseball tournament.
Nelson was held to three hits
during the contest—singles by
Bernie Monteleone, Al Roemer
and Mel Dorey.
Paced by Charlie Burdette's
two-run homer in the fifth Inning
the tribe won its first game of
the tourney defeating Fort St.
John Bulldogs 54.
Impotr Ed Flskland Of Spokane
wont all the way on the mound
for Nelson, scattering five hits
and striking Out 12 batters.
Nelson struck for 12 hits in a
winning effort. Burdette went
two for four; Frank Hufty and
Mel Dorey who played standout
ball for Braves, each hit three-
for-flve.
Burnaby went on to down
Kamloops 9-2 in a night game
to win the tournament.
NELSON — Braves president Frank Hufty announced
Monday he has resigned his
position over a disagreement
between Ihe Braves players
and executives as to whether
the team should have honored
a commitment made by the
Unknown Washington Hurlers
Blast White Sox From First Place
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bennie Daniels and Dave
Stenhouse, a pair of right-handers with unimpressive 1963 records, pitched the lowly Washington Senators to a 3-0, 6-2
doubleheader sweep over Chicago Monday that knocked the
White Sox out of first place in
the American League pennant
race.
Daniels went the distance for
the first time in over two
months, blanking Chicago on
five hits in the opener for his
seventh victory. Stenhouse
hurled eight shutout innings in
the nightcap before tiring and
won his second game of the
season.
Chuck Hinton led the first
game attack with a single,
double and triple. Joe Cunningham collected three hits for the
ninth-place Senators in the second game.
SOX BEHIND ORIOLES
The losses dropped the White
Sox one-half game behind Baltimore Orioles, who divided 6-1
verdicts with Kansas City.
Rookie right • hander Wally
Bunker, 15-4, pitched a six-hitter and Boog Powell hit his 32nd
homer in the Orioles' first-game
victory. Kansas City's Jim Gentile hit two homers in support
of Bob Meyer, 2-5, as the A's
took the nightcap.
Third place New York moved
to within \Vs games of the lead
by nipping Minnesota 5-4 in the
11-inning first game of a scheduled morning - night double-
header. The night game was
rained out.
Roger Maris' fourth hit, a
run-scoring double in the 11th,
won it after the Twins had rallied for four runs in the eighth
to tie.
Sam McDowell scattered five
hits and Woody Held homered
as Cleveland topped Detroit 7-2
in the only single game on the
Labor Day schedule.
Boston was at Los Angeles, cap 3-1 as Pete Richert won his
for a twi-night doubleheader.    first game of the year.
r
IT
Football Standinqs
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Eastern Conference
WLT   F API.
Ottawa 3 2 0104 94 6
Hamilton 3 2 0103 84 6
Montreal 3 2 0 71 83 6
Toronto 1 4 0 66105 2
Western Conference
W L T   F A Pt.
I Calgary 5 2 0 isi 89 io
lJ-C- 4 0 1 97 38 9
silk- 4,3 0171 99 8
Winnipeg 1 6 1147191 3
Edmonton        1 4 0 56185 2
PENNANT RACE
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
National League
W L  Pet. GBL
83 84  .806 -
77 61
77 61
78   62
70 67
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
St. Louis
San Fran.
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Los Angeles
Chicago
Houston
New York
Baltimore •
Chicago
New York
Detroit
xLos Angeles
Minnesota
Cleveland
xBoslon
Washington
Kansas City
.558 6V_
.558 6V_
.557 IVi
.511 13
70 68 .507 !3V_
68 69 .496 15
62 76 .414 26-
58  82  .414 26-
48  91  .345 36
American League
W L  Pet. GBL
83 56 .597 —
84 58 .592 Vs
80 56 .568 IV.
74 67 .525 10
72 70 .507 12-
70 69
69 70
.504 13
.496 14
61 78 .439 22
55 86 .309 29
51 89 .364 32V.
(x-PIayed night doubleheader.)
HIMALAYAN   ROAD
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP)-A
group of 26 Soviet technicians
is due in Nepal in September
to start surveying the first east-
west road across this Himalayan kingdom. The Soviet Un-
ionwill finance part of the pro-
2ND PLACE DEADLOCK
Ninth inning singles by Tim
McCarver, in the first game,
and Curt Flood, in the second,
.ave St. Louis 3-2 victories in
both ends of a doubleheader
with Cincinnati, creating a virtual three-way deadlock between the Cards, Reds and San
Francisco Giants for second
place in the National League.
All three clubs trail front-running Philadelphia by 3Vs games.
Southpaw Dennis Bennett
snapped a seven-game losing
string in the Phillies' 5-1 first
game victory over Los Angeles
but the Dodgers took the night-
first game i
Willie Mays cracked his 40th
homer in the first game and
pinch hit a three-run homer in
the nightcap as the Giants
swept Pittsburgh 6-4 and 9-6.
Milwaukee beat Chicago Cuba
10-9 and 8-7, with Denny Menk*
homering twice in the opener
and Joe Torre belting a homer
and two singles in the eight-inning second game, which waa
called because of darkness.
Relievers Larry Beamarth
and Dennis Ribant snuffed out
eighth inning Houston ralUes
and New York Mets hung on
for a 7-5, 6-4 sweep over the
Colts.
directorate, to attend a tournament In Fernie, with a view toward finishing the Can-Am
baseball league finals with
Cranbrook Canucks, or play In
Kamloops over the weekend.
The team, In a private meeting, voted to go to Kamloops,
Hufty joined vice-president
Olad Petersen and secretary-
treasurer, Art O'Bryan, who
resigned Friday, claiming the
players' vote had undermined
the authority of the executive.
Don Sutherin
Leads Scorers
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Halfback Don Sutherin of
Hamilton Tiger-cats opened an
ll-point lead in the Eastern
Football Conference scoring
race as he booted a field goal,
two converts and a single in
Monday's 24-8 victory over Toronto Argonauts to raise his
total to 35 points.
Sutherln's five-game total included nine converts, eight field
goals and two singles, Ted Watkins of Ottawa Rough Riders
remained in second place with
four touchdowns in five games
for 24 points.
Halfbacks Ron Stewart and
Dave Thelen of Ottawa were
tied for third spot with three
touchdowns each for 18 points.
Jackie Parker of Toronto Argonauts and Hal Patterson and
Bernie Faloney, both of Hamilton, each added one touchdown
in Hamilton's 24-8 victory over
Toronto Monday to raise their
totals to 12 points each.
Tom Grant of Hamilton got
hli first touchdown of the year
Monday for six points while
Karl Sweetan of Toronto converted one touchdown to bring
his total to four points.
COAL BUY
YOUR BIST
li New At
QUEEN CITY
FUEL
Dial 112-5018 - Nelson
GODFREYS' m
5th Annual
SUIT SALE
Continues
$4999
EACH
120 SUITS
* Sizes 35-46 * Pure Wood Tailored by Fit-Reform Ltd.
•*■ Shorts, Tails, Regulars -£ Uie Your Charge Account
* Valuei $69.50-$85.00        * We Finish the Trousers
At
Phone
352-3953
GODFREYS ltd.378 ?#kw s*
Neiion
For the warmest feeling
Qo first class on a budget with STANDARD HEATINQ OIL. You earn
spread the cost over 12 monthly payments with no interest or carry-
Ing charges. Whafe more, you enjoy the premium quality of Standard
Heating Oil . . . highly refined for clean, safe, all-enveloping warmth
(■or any Standard Oil product, ean
CLAUDE  W.  HOOKER
95 GOVERNMENT ROAD NELSON PHONE 332 2157
: t	
 Stamps Grab Conference Lead
Bomb Winnipeg 25-8
To Edge Past Lions
By ED TREF1AK
CALGARY (CP) — Calgary Stampeders maintained steady pressure through a Western Football
Conference tangle Monday to defeat Winnipeg Blue
Bombers 25-8 before a crowd
of 18,075.
The victory moved Calgary
into first place, one point ahead
of British Columbia Lions. Saskatchewan is in third spot and
the Blue Bombers are fourth
with one win and one tie in
eight games,
was picked up Sunday by
Bombers after being cut by
Boston Patriots of the American
Football League. He is the
brother of former Stampeder
Bill McKenna.
Calgary moved the yardsticks
21 times for a total yardage of
yards on 14 first downs.
Calgary's defensive unit held
I Bombers to only 43 yards along
Bomber, played much of the ^ »!*•*»'
game without first-string quarterback Kenny Ploen, who suffered a broken rib in a second-
quarter  pile-up   Hal  Ledyard ,sla, „, .,     „.
quarterbacked the rest of the .lge » mey ^_h.d fo_ m /..„.
8ame' I   Ledyard and Ploen com.1.',d
Ted   Woods,   Bobby   Taylor 15 0f 25 passes for 216 yards,
and Bruce Claridge scored Cal- while Day and Stampeder quar-
gary's touchdowns, with Robinson adding three  converts, a
single and a field goal.
Art Perkins scored Winnipeg's
terback   Jerry   Keeling   threw
the ball 19 times and 11 of them
were successful for 164 yards.
Ledyard had the most sue
touchdown and Bob Reed got a cess, completing 14 of 22.
convert and a single. The single
came in the fourth quarter
when Reed fumbled into the
Calgary end zone and Calgary
safety Jesse Branch
the ball.
The Bombers fumbled three
times, and lost all of them.
Stamps had little success experimenting with a flat kickoff.
grounded Veteran halfback Leo Lewis of
Winnipeg returned two for 93
Woods  broke  past  Winnipeg j yards,
halfback Barry Hansen and ran    Lovell  Coleman,  the  WFC's!
42  yards  for  Calgary's  first leading ground-gainer in 1963,'
touchdown at 10:59 of the sec-
end quarter. The other touchdowns were aerial, with day
hitting Taylor in the Winnipeg
end rone at 2:37 of the third
quarter and tossing to Claridge
from the five at 12:02 of the
third frame.
Winnipeg's only touchdown
came at 14:11 of the third quarter when Bombers moved to
gained 137 yards for Calgary in
20 carries. Newcomer Ted
Woods averaged 10 yards in
seven carries, including his 42-'
yard touchdown.
Reed, the best ground-gainer
for Bombers with only 25 yards,
also led pass receivers with
seven completions in eight
throws.
The field was slick following
SINGLING OUT A SUCCESS STORY—A no-hitter on the way,
Milt Pappas, the Baltimore righthander, served this pitch a
bit too good for Zorro Versalles of the Twins and he belted
it for a clean single to ruin the production. That was the
only hit as Pappas beat the Twins, 2 to 0, in Minneapolis.
score in four plays from the ] pre-game rains, but the weather
Stampeder 50. Ledyard, on the-broke just long enough for the
19, passed to Perkins who ran game.
the ball over from the six.       1	
Winnipeg moved into Calgary HAMILTON (CP) - W. J.
territory frequently but failed to .(Billy) Shering, a member of
Bet through the staunch Calgary | Canada's sports Hall of Fame
defence. and Olympic gold medal win-
Day was shaken up by Bomb- ner, died here Sunday following
cr's  rookie  import   Dick  Mc- a brief illness. He was 87.
Kenna shortly after Ploen left    Mr. Sherring won the mara-
the game, but returned late inithon for Canada, seven minutes
the quarter. | ahead of his nearest competitor,
McKenna, a defensive half j in the 1906 Olympic Games in
who played junior football here, Athens.
Ti-Cats on the Move;
Hand Argos 4th Loss
Roughriders Trample
Montreal Al's 32-0
By RON MacDONALD
REGINA (CP)—Saskatchewan Roughriders handed
Montreal Alouettes a convincing 32-0 defeat Monday
afternoon in an interlocking Canadian Football League
game before an all-time record Taylor Field crowd of
18,187 fans. '          "
The defeat left Montreal in
a tie for first place with Ottawa
Rough Riders and Hamilton
Tiger-Cats in Eastern Football
Conference standings.
Saskatchewan led 8-0 after the
first quarter, 17-0 at halftime
and 24-0 after three quarters.
Quarterbacks Ron Lancaster
and Bob Ptacek, halfback Ed
Buchanan and fullback George
Reed scored one touchdown
apiece. End Martin Fabi got
two singles.
Roughriders dominated the
entire game with power-running
by Reed and Buchanan and
crisp defensive play. Drizzling
rain fell
game,
James missed another field
goal attempt and then Riders
moved from the Montreal 49
with passes to flanker Hugh
Campbell and end Dick Cohee,
Lancaster was shaken up on the
pass to Cohee at the Montreal
one yard line and Ptacek came
into the game. He went over
himself for the touchdown.
PTACEK INTERCEPTION
Ptacek, at his usual defensive
halfback position, intercepted
Cole's pass on the next Montreal offensive play and ran the
ball from the Montreal 40 to the
15. A rough play penalty took
the ball back to the 30, from
during most of the | where James' field goal attempt
went wide for a single.
Montreal managed only six | Lancaster came back at quar-
first downs, 82 yards rushing terback in the third quarter,
and 56 yards passing. Roughriders scored their next
Buchanan rolled up 122 yards | touchdown when Campbell took
on the ground in 13 carries and j a 10-yard pass at the Montreal
105 yards In the air with six 52 and flipped the ball to Buch-
catches. Red got 112 yards in anan as he was tackled. Buch-
13 carries.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964—7
Dianne Gerace Wins
Jerome Flashes to Victory
In Toronto Track Meet
MCKEAN REPLACES COLE
For Montreal, fullback Dave
By JERRY GLADMAN
TORONTO (CP)-The Canadian National Exhibition Labor
Day invitational track meet
produced a sneak preview of
most of the members of the
cast who will perform for Canada and the United States at the
1964 Olympic Games at Tokyo
in October.
Heading the list was Harry
Jerome of Vancouver, who is on
a comeback campaign after
missing most of the 1963 season
because of an operation for a
thigh injury.
The 24-year-old, five-foot-10
athlete hooked up with Edwin
Roberts of Trinidad in the 100-
yard and 220-yard dashes, each
taking an event.
Jerome, who ran 10 seconds
flat in the 100 in Saskatchewan
in 1960 at the trials for the
Rome Olympics, equalling the
world record set in 1959 by Ar-
min Hary of Germany, edged
out Roberts in 9.3 seconds. His
time was one-tenth of a second
off the world outdoor record he
shares with several other athletes.
Roberts—who was beaten in a
photo finish by Jerome in the
100-metres at Eugene, Ore., in
June when Harry missed his
tingent to Tokyo on hand as
well as representatives from the
U.S., Trinidad and Jamaica.
Competition in the women's same time.
anan burst up the sidelines for record 10.0 by one-fifth of a sec-
a touchdown. ond — captured  the  220-yard
On Montreal's first offensive j event in 20.4. His time was one-
Hopppiann  was  the best ball play'of the fourth quarter, Cole tenth off the world mark but
By TOM WILLIAMS
HAMILTON (CP) - Hamilton
Tiger-Cats grabbed a share of
first place in the Eastern Football Conference Monday by over-
nowering Toronto Argonauts 24-8
jefore 27,156 fans jamming Civic
Stadium here for the annual
Labor Day battle between the
two clubs.
The victory, Hamilton s third
of the season against two losses,
moved the Tiger-Cats into a
three - way tie with Ottawa
Rough Riders and Montreal Alouettes. Argos remained in the
EFC cellar with four straight
losses after winning their season opener.
carrier with 24 yards on two passed to fullback George Dixon
carries. Starting Montreal quar-1 at the Saskatchewan 54. Dixon
terback Vernon Cole was re-,was hit by Saskatchewan line-
placed in the fourth quarter by! backer Larry Fumelie and furn-
Jim McKean, a 19-year-old Ca- j bled into the hands of Rider
nadian. {linebacker Wayne Shaw. Shaw
On their first offensive series. went  to  the  Montreal 20,  a
Roughriders   went   from  their rough play penalty moved the
own  37  to  the   Montreal  29,
on a 36-yard pass-and-run play
MR. MOTORIST - Don't Wait
For This Kind of Emergency Service!
Equip Your Car NOW With
New Wheels and
SNOW TIRES
Read on I
SPECIAL
Vx PRICE
Buy a Pair of
Town and Country
Tires
Get Your Wheel at
HALF PRICE
1. You "Mr. Motorist" can easily perform a do-it-yourself wheel and tire
change at the first sign of snow. No
waiting in line ot the service station
for a tire change.
2. Safety—Protect your tire bead seal—
Constant changing of tires can easily
create enough damage to cause a
"leaker".
3. Convenience—Be ready to go or stop
on a snowflake's notice.
4. Eeonomy—Tire
eliminated.
mounting  costs are
DON'T DELAY ANOTHER DAY
See
ALGAR'S
TIRE SERVICE
AND RETREADING
LTD.
520 Lake St.
NELSON, B.C,
Phone 352-3656
Veteran quarterback Bernie but had to settle for a single by
Faloney guided a well-balanced Fabi when penalties stalled
Ticat attack, passing for touch- them,
downs by Tommy Grant and Reed with a breakaway run
Hal Patterson and scoring an- •_ 55 yards sparked Riders on
other himself on a three-yard their first offensive series in the
keeper play in the third quar- second quarter but a clipping
ter. Don Sutherin added six penalty spiked the drive and
points with a field goal, two'Jams' field goal attempt from
converts and a single on a field the 36 went wide for a single,
goal attempt that went wide.
Jackie Parker, who saw
limited action as a flanker for
Toronto, scored Argos' only
touchdown on a three - yard
screen pass from quarterback
Don Fuell with less than four
minutes remaining in the game.
Karl Sweetan converted the
touchdown. Dave Mann counted
Toronto's only other point on a
second • quarter kick that resulted in Ticats' Jackie Simpson being rouged.
The Ti-cats led 3-0 after the
first quarter on Sutherin's 45-
yard field goal. They stretched
it to 10-1 at half time and 18-1
after three quarters.
Tiger-Cats rolled up a total
offence of 391 yards, 187 on the
ground and 204 by passing.
Argos made a total of 261 yards,
all but 20 of them on passes as
the ferocious Hamilton line
squelched Toronto's running
game.
FUELL HITS FOR 13
Fuell completed 13 of 35
passes, but was dumped for
losses half a dozen times and
had four of his throws picked
off by Hamilton defenders.
Mann completed one 30-yard
pass for Argos on a third-down
gamble that worked from
Argos' 14-yard line in the second quarter.
Faloney completed nine of 13
pass attempts, including a spectacular 36 - yard pass • and - run
play with Patterson. The veteran end took Faloney's well-
time 50-yard throw at the Argo
30-yard line, then beat off Toronto defenders Len Chandler
and John Wydareny around the
20 and went over standing up.
ball to the 10, Buchanan went
to the two and Reed scored a
touchdown.
Fabi wrapped up the scoring
with a single when he missed a
field goal attempt.
Roughriders made 20 first
downs on 293 yards rushing and
155 yards passing. Lan_.._to-
completed 14 of 20 passes and
Cole and McKean completed six
of 18 attempts.
the high wind velocity disqualified it as official.
AVERAGES EARLIER LOSS
Bill Crothers of Toronto, top
Canadian middle distance runner, avenged an earlier defeat
administered by Jan Underwood of California in the 880 by
winning in 1:52.0. Underwood
was second in 1:53.2.
Bruce Kidd of Toronto, who
was beaten at last year's meet
in the two-mile run by Chris
Williamson of Fredericton, N.B., turned the tables with
an impressive time of 8:47.8.
Oscar Moore of New York was
second and Williamson third.
There were 11 members of
Canada's 15-member track con-
Driver Escapes
Death at
Calamida Track
TRAIL (CP)-A driver emerged without a scratch Sunday after a stock car in which he had
been racing was demolished.
Art McCann, of Rossland, was
in second place in a heat
race at Calamida Stadium,
15 miles north of here, when
his car began to roll over and
another car, driven by Dale
Sanft of Trail, drove over top
of McCann's entry and remained
in the race unscratched.
Three Canuck Marks Fall
At West Kootenay Meet
TRAIL (CP) — Three Canadian
age-group records and one British Columbia native record were
broken Saturday as more than
160 athletes competed in the West
Kootenay Track and Field championships.
Sandra Neufeld of Trail threw
the discus 124 feet 6 inches, 3'k
feet farther than the midget girls
Canadian record set last year by
Carol Martin of Don Mills, Ont.
Stu Hunnings, 15, of the Vancouver Optimist StrMers put the
shot 59 feet Wt inches to better
the midget boys' Canadian record of 58 feet, 4 inches, set by L.
Peterson in 1959.
The Norwesters Track Club of
Vancouver set what is believed
to be a Canadian record for juvenile boys 4x440. relay. Their
time was 3:33.
Stu Hunnings set a B.C. native
record in midget boys' discus
with a throw of 147 feet, better,
ing the old mark of 113 feet, 6_
Inches.
Bob Keppel of Spokane, who
has reached a height of 5 feet
10% inches in the high jump,
spiked himself in the left calf
and knocked down the bar three
times at 6 feet Vk inches.
Gerry Moro of Trail, a member
of the Canadian Olympic track
team, was suffering from laryngitis and did not enter any running events. He won the men's
shotput and discus with marks
of 43 ieet Wk inches, and 146
feet 8 inches.
Bob Yard of Trail, second to
Moro in the Olympic pole vaulting trials, beat Moro's winning
mark of 16 feet, Vt inch, with
height of 15 feet 2 inches.
Gordon Deng of the Vancouver
Optimist Striders, who won the
men's 120-yard high hurdles, in
16.1 seconds, and the broad jump
in 22 feet IVt, inches and came
third in hop, step and jump, won
the senior men's aggregate and
individual aggregate.
The Canadian record holder in
javelin, John Fromm, of Seattle, won the event with a throw
Of 222 feet •>. inches. His record
is 252 feet.
Virginia 'lusted of Seattle, a
member of the U.S. Olympic
team, won the women's javelin
with a throw of 155 feet, 1 inch.
Carol Hadford of Lethbridge
won the senior women's aggregate with a first in the women's
shotput and a second in women's
discus and javelin,
The 20-year-old employee of
the Lethbridge Herald swept the
She was second in the javelin
behind Miss Husted, and was
second behind Trail's Gabby
Moro in the discus.
Ed Blott of Edmonton came
second in the 120-yard high hur-
s, third in discus and shot
put. In the discus and shotput
.  BRAIN DRAIN
CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (CP)
So many brilliant New Zealand
students finish their education
abroad and then take posts
away from their own country
that there are enough of them
to staff an entire university,
worried educationists say.
New  Zealand  claims to  lose
more academicians   proportion-1 field in the shotput with a throw I
ally than otherJcountrles. ' of 37 feet 3'k hches. |
he placed behind Gerry Moro
and Pat Monaghan of Lethbridge
each time.
Trail Track and Field Club
won the team aggregate with 390
points, Vancouver Optimist Striders were second with 163 and
Lethbridge Track and Field Club
third with 137.
HARRY JEROME
,.. Olympic hope.
high jump had been expected
to be stiff, featuring Dianne
Gerace of Trail, B.C., and
Eleanor Montgomery of Cleveland. However, Miss Montgomery missed her third try at five
feet, six inches and Miss Gerace, Canadian women's pentathlon champion, dropped out
after 5-7 because of an aggravated foot injury.
Nancy McCredie of Brampton, Ont., Canadian shot put
and discus star, took the shot
put competition with a toss of
50 feet six inches, well off her
world record of 51 feet 11 3-5
feet six inches set here in January.
Times for the mile were slow
with John Valiant of Victoria,
B.C., the Canadian 3,000-metre
steeplechase champion, winning
in 4:11.3. Ergas Leps of Toronto, the Canadian native record holder, was second with the
COMPLETE RESULTS
TORONTO (CP) — Results of
the Canadian National Exhibition invitational track meet
Monday:
Women's 80 metres: 1. Debbit
Thompson, Frederick, Md.; 2.
Irene Pietrowski, Vancouver; 3.
Jenny Wingerson, Toronto. No
time available.
Men's 100 yards: 1. Harry
Jerome, Vancouver; 2. Edwin
Roberts, Trinidad; 3. Don
Smallwood, Philadelphia. Time
J.
Men's 880 yards: 1. Bill Crothers, Toronto; 2. Jan Underwood, Oregon State University;
3. Dave Ellis, Toronto. Time
1:52.
Men's two miles: 1. Bruce
Kidd, Toronto; 2. Oscar Moore,
New York; 3. Chris Williamson,
Fredericton, N.B. Time 8:47.8.
Women's shot put: 1. Nancy
McCredie, Brampton, Ont.; 2.
Cindy Wyatt, Hawaii; 3. Carol
Martin, Toronto. Distance 50 ft.
6 in.
Women's 80-metre hurdles: 1,
Jenny Wingerson, Toronto; 2.
Marion Snider, Toronto; 3. May
Rollins, Chicago. Time 10.8
(breaks Canadian record of 11.2
set by Sally McCallum of Vernon, B.C., in 1960 at Vancouver).   .
Women's 880 yards: 1. Sandra
Knott, Cleveland; 2. Cecelia
Carter, Hamilton; 3. Serena
Doucette, Oakville, Ont. Time
3:14.5.
Men's one mile: 1. John Valiant, Victoria, B.C.; 2. Ergas
Leps, Toronto; 3. Paul Jones, Detroit. Time 4:11.3.
Women's 220 yards: 1. Derby
Thompson, Frederick, Md.; 2.
Irene Pietrowski, Vancouver; 3.
Jenny Wlngerson, Toronto. Time
23.9.
Men's 220 yards: 1, Edwin
Roberts, Trinidad; 2. Harry
Jerome, Vancouver; 3. Don
Smallwood, Philadelphia, lime
20.4.
Wo men'a high Jump: 1,
Dianne Gerace, Trail, B.C.; 2.
Eleanor Montgomery, Cleveland. Height 5 ft. 7 in.
Men's one mile relay: 1. Toronto East York Track Club; 2.
Toronto Track Club; 3. Toronto
Olympic Club. Time 3:18.1..
Women's 440-yard relay: 1.
Toronto Don Mills Track Club;
Mayor Daly Youth Centre of
Toronto. Time 48.2.
SORE ACHING FEET
Zam-Buk relieves tnd cools sore
aching feet fast. Its soothing, antiseptic ingredients penetrate deep
to ease skin irritation. Zam-Buk
prevents chafing and makes corns
easy to remove. Invaluable also
for cuts, bruises and minor burns.
Get Zam-Buk NOW and keep
It handy.
.vmllM. h faree titssmytln
KamBuk
HERBAL
OINTMENT
What is a Volkswagen 1500
All this
And more.
sill
The Volkswagen 1500 is the other car in our life. It's got all the nice things that made the
beetle famous. Engine in the rear for bttter traction. No radiator to freeze or boil.
Low gas consumption. And a design that never changes. And the VW 1500 gives you a
lot more. It's a Volkswagen with more power, more room and more looks. It goes from a
standing start to 50 mph in 12 seconds. Our station wagon is big enough to carry a
bathtub or 14,600 bars of soap. The sedan is so roomy it's got two trunks. With the VW 1500
you get sports car power and family car room. Sort of a family sports car.
That's the Volkswagen 1500. It's more Volkswagen than any other Volkswagen.
PARKVIEW   MOTORS    LTD.       323 Nelso. Avenue Ph. 352-5355
T
1r
 '
8—NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964
GROWS'EM'MIGHTVTALL ^   (areA
IN TH'CIIY, DON'T THEV?- *V VOU    1
d:bouta-pound JGOING /
COOK IT?)
THETALL DEPENDS ON WHAT ^^
MOOD WE GIRLS IS IN, LATER.1?! HAS
VO'GOTA RAILROAD SPIKE, A A
SLEDGEHAMMER, A LENGTH O'%
GARDEN HOSE, AN'A WET TOWEL?
Crash to Freedom
By Czech Youths
FURTH IM WAU), West Ger.
many (API—Two youths in a
stolen truck crashed through
Communist border barriers
from Czechoslovakia Sunday
and escaped into West Germany. Czechoslovak guards
seriously wounded one of them.
The boys, aged 18 and 14, told
West German police they fled
Czechoslovakia because "we
didn't like ti there any more."
Their identifications were withheld.
etaivia. WhsudstiL
SIZE 32 TO 46
Easy pick-up work, - elegant
completed. Use string alone or
woven with metallic thread.   ■
Fashion news!' Crochet 1 a e y
jacket of 4'/_" squares, 1 at a
time; join into 3 flat pieces. Pattern 951: sizes 32-34; 36-38; 4042;
4446 included.
THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coins
(no stamps please) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, care of
Daily News, Needlecraft Dept.,
Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and
ADDRESS.
NEW FOR 1965! 200 designs
—more fashions to knit, crochet
than ever! Plus 3 FREE patterns, embroidery, dolls' clothes.
Send 25c for new Needlecraft
Catalog.
VALUE! 16 COMPLETE
QUILT PATTERNS in deluxe
Colonial Quilt Book. For beginners, experts. Send 60c.
0ASAL ItfL (tilth.
WIcuuwl Tfovdut
Printed Pattern
SIZES  t-VM-!*
93$1
EASY-SEE DIAGRAM
Look leaner, taUer in a swift-
to-sew sheath with no waist
seams to. interrupt the smoothly
gliding line. Choose shantung,
Dacron, faille.
Printed Pattern 9331: Half
Sizes 12%, 14%, 16%, 18-, 20%,
22%. Size 16% requires 2% yards
39-inch fabric.
FIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins
(no stamps please) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,
ADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.
Send order to MARIAN MARTIN, care of Daily News, Pattern Dept., Nelson.
FREE PATTERN DIRECT TO
YOUR DOOR - choose it from
300 design ideas in new Fan-Winter Pattern Catalog! School, casual, career, dressy styles — all
sizes! Send 50c.
.ir
 ■■
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1954—9
HELP WANTED
INTELLIGENCE, GOOD CHAR-
acter and energy qualify you
(or a permanent position with
a well known sales organisation specializing in Mutual investment Fund Shares. Mutual
Funds represent a simple plan
(or participating in the earning and growth of successful
Canadian industry through
Planned Investment Programmes. Public acceptance of Mutual Funds is growing rapidly.
This should enable you, by rendering a valuable service to
others, to earn a regular above
average Income, and to enter
a professional lifetime career.
Ages 30 to 70 desirable. Previous investment or sales experience helpful but not required,
thorough training and co-operation supplied. Saleswomen
are also invted to apply, All
replies strictly confidential.
Apply Box 246, Nelson Dally
News,
-208.213
WANTED - EXPERIENCED,
(ull-tlme service station attendant. Apply Reuben Buerge
Motors Ltd,, 323 Vernon Street.
-210-211
SITUATIONS WANTED
EXP, SEC'TY.-STENO, ABOVE
average speeds, seeks perm-
employment ln Nelson. Mrs.
Hofllns, 817 Victoria St,
-209-214
PIANO TUNING AND HEP AIR.
G. Stenberg, Ph. 952-6892.
-200-225
PERSONAL
PlksONAL SUNDRIES fc 0W-
plies. «o% savings Fret pries
Ust and sample on request
Box 8, Station C, Winnipeg.
-27-249
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
IMPERIAL QARAGE AND
confectionary with a three
bedroom house attached, Oil
furnace, 1. i acres, Located on
Highway 3A between Fruitvale
and Salmo, Any reasonable
down payment considered. Ph.
397-9890 or Box 485 Fruitvale.
-.211-213
GENERAL STORE FOB SALE,
two bedroom living quarters,
gas pump, extra lot. Very good
business. Low down payment,
balance low interest and payments, Further particulars,
Apply East Robson Store, Box
40, Robson. -206-211
FOR SALE, GRANDVIEW AUTO
Court, Has Imperial Gas Service Station, 8 modern living
quarters, 6 modern cabins,
double stall garage, Will consider a house and property as
payment, Phone 352-3677.
-210-213
GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY TO
purchase a going business in
Nelson. Central location on Baker St. Well established news
and gift shop. Apply Box 1653.
Nelson Daily NewS     -122-tfn
BOATS AND ENGINES
20' SPORTS CABIN CRUISER.
Plywood planing hull, Mahogany deck and cabin, galley, and
head facilities, (lying bridge,
2 bunks, will sleep 6. New 180
H.P. V8 Interceptor Inboard-
outboard engine, auxiliary Vk
HP. outboard: lull convertible
top with boat trailer. Phone
352.577. -204-215
MCCULLOCH-SCOTT OUT-
board engines, boats and parts,
Sales & Service. Mac's Welding k Equipment Co. Ltd., 814
Railway St., Nelson, B.C.
PhOne 382-8301. -130-230
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A handy alphabetical guide to goods and services
available in Nelson.
Automobile Deolers
BILLS'MOTOR-IN LTD.
iStudebaker-Larki
218 Baker St.      Pbone 382-3231
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.
<R«mbl« - voikiwageni
321 Nelson Ave.   Phont 3S2-8SM
—tin
Building Supplies
BiB BUILDING SUPPLY LTD-
Evtrythlng in waterproof
plywood.
Wi: Biker St    Pbont 352-313*
 —tin
BURNS LUMBER-O, LTD,
60. Btkef St.   ' Phone 852-8681
—un
COLUMBIA TRADING CO
•Hti Front St. Pb- 352-5871
Lots of trie parking.
■»ltn
Cabinet Makers
JOS.C.MEBMET      .
Prc.tsi.6n_l Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nelson and Dist.
1010 Davits St. - Nelson
—un
ste
Contractors
ART RAVESTEIN
RinovMloiit, Mmenl Wert
and General Carpf-try
12-743$
Phont 882-';
-td.
Lathi Ruszak, General Masonry
lions. firick • Cernent - Stucco
Plltttring
132$ ttils St.       Ph, 36--76.J
-137-212
ate
ec
_3=
Flying School
G6v't approved Flying School;
Alf Charter Service.
Single or multl-inglne al|«r.lt,
' ' WANETA AIRWAY*
Phone 365-7444 or 388-4871
Castlegar, B.C.
- -210-..5
Garages
Upper Fairview Motors LW.
(Ha. 7th at Davies  Ph. 352-2528
Transistorised Ignition
—™
Insurance  Agents
. V
ttvtrtlge Lift Inturanet
Jim Crosiw Rspfeseritative
•   418 Gore St. - Nelson
SS
=-__=
-187-21?
tfi ■'_  Vj'ij-
Monumental
Stones
irfrawoN ritmi Lt*:
Phon* for P'lvtt* Inttrvltw. ,
•     ... .»*»•
Bronie and Granite   ■■
K   D  REGS
ph. js? .'1*1 Sl°-M P»J<« St-
Photo Copying
POWELL ENGRAVING
460 Ward St. Nelson, B.C
■. Phone 353-7821.
Contracts - Birth Certificates
Legal Documents - Important
Papers.
-tin
s
Printing
NEUON DAILY NEWS
Printers - Lithographer!
Color Printing
Phont 852-3859
-tfn
Radio & TV Service
VIDEO ELECTRONICS
405 Hall St - Pbone 152-3385
-tfn
Reducing • Exercises
Ladles, Mon., Wed.. Fri,
io a.m. - io p.m.
Gents, Tues., Thurs., Sat.
2 p.m, • 10 p.m.
SLIM GYM
109 Baktr St.     Phone 362-5214
-20B.tfn
Refrigeration
GENE'S REFRIGERATION
LTD.
Sales snd Repairs To All
: Refrigerated Equipment.
Phone Trail 368-8590.
.     -180-tfn
Refrigeration Sales Wd Service
CARLSON EQUIPMENT
Nelson, B.C.    Phont 352-545.
-186-tfn
Sporting Goods
Fred Whiteley's Sport Shop
488 Baker Street Phone 352-7741
-tfn
Topsoil
Larry's Topsoil, Sand and 6ravel
Oth abd Davies St. Ph. 382-2355
Diys Or 352-7576 Evans.
-tin
Upholstery
CASTLEGAR CUSTOM
UPHOLSTERY
Recovering - R.modelllog
carpet. pies
Craftsmanship Guaranteed
CAll for free OStimateS.
No Obligation.
Phont 3.6-5836
-,18--417
LAND REGISTRY ACT
(Section 182)
IN THE MATTER OF an undivided V. Interest in and to;
Lot 304 bi Lot 304, Kootenay District, Plan 928.
Proof having been filed in
my office of the loss of Certificate of Title No. 6531-1 to the
above mentioned lands in the
name of Louis Santor and bearing date the Wth December,
1910, I HEREBY GIVE NOTICE
of my intention at the expiration
of one calendar month from the
first publication hereof to issue
Provisional Certificate of Title
ln lieu of such lost Certificate.
Any person having any information with reference to such lost
Certificate of Title Is requested
to communicate with the un-
Welding &
Works
ron
Mite****-
specialist take ctrt ot vour wtid-
tag problem so years experience
from different countries in Eur-
6*0. Crafumanshlp guaranteed.
Dltstl. cylinder httd. cylinder
blocks, tte. •
1131 Columbia Ave., Castlegar.
Pbone 365-5531
-.127-282
PUBMC NOTICES
LAND REGISTRY ACT
(Section  162)
IN THE MATTER OF Block 10,
save and except Parcel "A"
(D.D. 22453-JI  of Lot 6809,
Kootenay District, Plan 876
- and - Block 8 of Lot 6809,
Kootenay District, Plan 876
save  and  except  thereout
that part shown outlined in
red on Reference Plan 45005-
I,
Proof having been filed in my
office of the loss of Certificates
of Title Nos. 57146-1 and 94088-1
to the above mentioned lands In
the name of GEORGE ST. JOHN
RAPER and bearing dates the
30th of March, 1944 and 15th of
April,    1953    respectively,    I
HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my
Intention  at the expiration of
one calendar month from the
first publication hereof to Issue
Provisional Certificates of Title
in lieu of such lost Certificates.
Any person having any Information with reference to such
lost Certificates of Title is requested to communicate with the
undersigned,
Dated at Nelson, B.C, This
4th day of September, 1964,
L. A. McPhall
Deputy Registrar
Nelson Land Registration
District.
-2U-H
DATED at Nelson, B.C.
this 27th day of
August, 1964.
L. A, McPHAIL,
Deputy Registrar
Nelson Land Registration District.
Date of First
Publication, August 31, 1904.
-205-H
MACHINERY
BETTER
J' IB-It. Deluxe Aluminum $623
1 Tilt Trailer $195
I 28-h.p. McCulloeh engine with
starter ahd generator  8495
EASY PAYMENT PLAN
MAC'S WELDING
& EQUIPMENT CO-
514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301
-216-215
ELECTRODE HOLDERS
Shortstub, chipping hammers,
ground clamps, cable Splicers,
connectors, arcalr carbons.
Stevenson Machinery Ltd.
Phone 352-3561
RENTALS
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY -
fully modern furnished, propane heated, housekeeping cottages to rent by the monlh or
year, Lakeview Auto Court.
Phone 2-D, Gray Creek,
-208-213
LOVELY 2-BDRM. HOUSE IN-
eluding living room, kitchen,
and utility room i part basement, $85 per month. In Fair-
view. Call Poulin Agencies
Ltd., 352-7217. -210-tfn
MMEDIATE OCCUPANCY -
Comfortable, fully furnished,
2-bedroom home on the North
Shore at 6-Mile. (88 per month,
Call Poulin Agencies, Lid.,
352-7217. -210-tfn
OVER OUR OFFICE. LARGE
hskpg. room, Sink, gas range,
fridge, bed and some other
furn. Gas and Elec. supplied.
$50 mon. .Lambert Realty.
-2 06-tfn
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT,
suitable for Beauty Parlour,
Barber Shop, or office, renovate to suit tenant, long lease
available. Apply Hume Hotel.
-197-tfn
HSKPG AND SLEEPING RM
weekly, monthly rates. Dishes,
linen supplied, parking. Alien
Rooms, 171 Baker St.
-J7-tfn
ONE OR TWO- ROOM FURN-
Ished apts in Annable Block
121 and up. Call 352-7217. Poulin Agencies Ltd., 083 Ward St.
.    -206.230
2 BDRM. APARTMENT, PART-
ly furnished, heated and air
conditioned. Apply 414 Fifth St.
Ph. 352-7648. -206-211
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
room, private entrance, close
ta, room for car. Ph. 352-2977.
-196-tfn
1 BDRM. FURN. APT., HEAT-
ed, private entrance, downtown area, $65. Ph, 352-5252.
-209-tfn
HECKER'S ROOM CLOSE TO
pool. Rates reas. Ainsworth
Hot Springs, B.C. Ph. Balfour
"  -181-tfn
MODERN APt. LIV. RM.
bdrm., kitchen Ind bath. $70
per mo. Heated. Ph. 332-3815.
Fleming Apts, -207-tin
3 ROOM SUITE, FULLY FURN.
suit business' couple, Avail.
Sept. 7th. Adults only. Ph. 352-
0877. -208-211
SPACIOUS QUARTERS, 2 B.R.,
gas furn,, neavy wiring. Very
close ln. Avail, anytime. Box
251, Nelson News,    -210-215
FURN. 3 RM. APT. HEAT k
water supplied Vi. blk. off
Baker. 414 Falls Street. Ph.
382-6912 or 352-3208.    -211-tfn
2-BED DELUXE APT. HEATED,
automatic washing facilities.
Furn. $100, and unfurn. $80.
Phone 352-3808. -210-tfn
RENf:  LARGE  OLDER
14 BR..home J60.00. Rob-
FOR RE1
style , ;
ertson, Hilliard Ph. 332-7252.
211-211
OLDER 3 BDRM. BUNGALOW.
Close to schools k town. Avail.
SCpt. 21. $50. Ph. 352-6133.
-211-tfn
COSY PARt_V FURN. l-BR
suite. Uphill. Avail. Sftpt. 3.
Adults. Ph. 952-6484. -205-tfn
2   BDRM.   HOME, FURN. OR
unfurn., near Baker St. Pb.
352-5402.       -$09-214
»■_»«■ gkea+f+e^m
-211-211
FOR SALE: I960 CASE CRAWL-
er loader — 2 cu. yd. bucket,
land cl pa ring blade, log
grapple. 2250 Watt Onan lighting plant, K-30 Letoutneau ripper. Campbell k Sons Contracting Co. Ltd., P.O. BOX
2378, Cranbrook, B.C. -206-211
VALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.
Massey-Ferguson. New Hoi
land New and Used Farm
Equipment. Parts, Sales and
Service. Phone 358-2254, CreS-
ton, B.u -UO-tfn
TD 14 INTERNATIONAL BULL-
dozer, reasonable. Ph. S52-
6216. -203-tfn
MACHINERY
FOR   HIRE
D7 CATS FOR HIRE. WITH
cable and hydraulic blades.
Lind clearing, road building,
exCavtting. Ph. 352-6372.
-us-ttn
HAVE  SMALL- GRAWLEft
tractor capable of doing smsil
buiidoiing jobs by the day or
hr. Ph. 352-204$ Or 352-6053.
-203-tfn
f6r rent: portable 825
amp.  DC  Woldtr.  Portable
steam .leaner. Ph. 353-2.42.  ,
.   —J04-.li
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii
Buy, tle|l, |rade With Wait Ads
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
SELF  CONTAINED  3  ROOM
suite. Ph. 352-7139 after 0 p.m.
-809-tjn
BRIDGE-END N,S. COTTAGE,
adults. Ph. 352-0024 Or 3880.
-_07-tIn
LARGE 2-RoOM FURNISHED
apt. near Baker St. Ph. 352.162
-210-215
3 BDRM. HOUSE, GAS FUR-
nace, gas range provided, $05.
Ph. 352-3216. -210-215
FURNISHED 2 RM. APT. AND
bath, $28.50. Pb. 253-2064.
-207-tfn
FURN   HSKPG.  RM.   APPLY
140 Baker St. or oh. 382-3384.
-51-tl
I   ii>M.   COtTA.E   ton
rent. Gat 10. Ph. 332-2024.
-$07-212
HALDANE   APARTMENTS  -
Furn. or upturn. Ph. 3S2-872J.
05-tfn
FOR RENT - h6uSEKEE>-
ing rm., close in. Ph. 332-7462.
-i76-t|a
basement Storage space
available. Ph. 351-6024.
i»4t(n
i 6DRM. HOUSE, 226 WIRING
hot and cold watir, gat heat-
in,. Ph. 352-6083.       -208-ttn
SELF-CONTAINED  SUITE-
Adults. Ph. m-tnt. -170-tfn
( ROOM^APT.-.CENTRAL.
Adults. Ph. $81-0624.  ■
8-Room" sEmi-Furn. Suite
Phont 852-8168. -201-212
PROPERTY WANTIP
LISTINGS WANTED. BU1LD-
ing lots, farm lend, city and
' country residential. Commercial property, timber lands
Ca|I or write Wm. Kalyniuk
Agencies, NKton. Ph. 352-2425.
* -186-tftl
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC. FOR SALE
FOR SALE - SPECULATION,
or small farm home, outside
of city limits, low taxes, one
block Vocational School, 2
blocks Elementary, 6 acres,
half hay and garden; half pasture, 5 room modern house,
220 wired, barn, garage, hen
coop. Private water system,
$4 per year. Septic tank.
Ready to occupy about Oct.
1st. Value $18,000 to $18,000,
but will sell lowest cash,
$10,000. V.'C. Marshall, Box
542, Nelson, B.C. Ph. Nelson
352-5065. -200-214
NORTHSHORE - ABOUT V,
mile from bridge on highway.
1 acre plus with 235 ft, beach
frontage. Cottage, boathouse,
and 3 car garage: with modern
apt. Will also consider sale of
balance of property, Vk acres
with house, now under V,L,A,
Total 2V, acres with unlimited
commercial potential. Phone
852-5205. -196-tfn
8 BDRM. HOUSE, KITCHEN,
dining rm., sitting rm„ hot
and cold water, coal and wood
furnace, all in good cond.
Terms $6500 cash. Apply 14
Ymir Road before Saturday.
After Saturdsy, apply Mr.
Alex Papou, 4719 Albert St„
N. Burnaby, B.C.     -197-tfn
ROBSON-HQUSE ON 1 ACRE
with lake frontage. Good beach.
2 miles below High Arrow dam.
ilOO sq. ft. living area. Excellent (or family with children.
Reasonably priced. Ph. 365-5579
or writ* P.O. Box 52, Robson.
-204-212
BEAUTIFUL 3 BDRM. HOME.
Must be sold. Owner transferred. 1.14 acres land. On highway, North Shore, 6 miles
from Nelson, Good terms. Ph.
owner 352-3442 after 7.
-206-211
FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR A
home In Nelson: 51-acre farm,
10 acres cleared, good 3-bdrm.
house, barn, new Irrigation,
young fruit trees, etc. Phone
352-5038 after 6 p.m. or 352-
5284. -204-215
HALF HOME. BE HANDY TO
tht job. Live in it while you
finish It, Has bdrm,. living
rm., ktchn,, bthrm,,- cool rm.
Insulated, gas htd., plumbing.
Ph. 352-3236, -209-214
HALF HOME, BE HANDY TO
the job. Live in it while you
finish it. Has BR., LR., ktchn.,
bthrm,, cool rm. Insulated gas
htd.. plumbing. Ph. 352-3236.
-209-214
58 ACRES (8 CULTIVATED) 4
bdrm house. Tractor and
equipment, located at Sunshine Bay, Procter, B,C, Ph.
228-4635 anytime.       -200-213
CASH AVAILABLE FOR FIRST
and Second mortgages and
Agreements of Sale. Write full
particulars, Box 245, Nelson
Daily News. -208-tln
LAND POR SALE - LARGE .4
acre lots subdivided for building. Located V4 mile past ferry. Apply P.O. Box 39, Robson.
Ph. 863-8324. -206-217
COMPACT DESIGN, 3 BED-
rooms On a Jewel like lot.
Upper Fairview, $4560 down.
Wm. Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph-
852-2425. -166-tfn
7 AC. tARM, 8 B.R. HOUSE,
full basement, oil heat, young
orchard. BOx 37, Robson
-207-232
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY, 2
bedroom design. F.P. $7500
Wm. Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph.
352-2425. -186-tfn
FOR SALE: |10 FT. X 1050 FT.
Cheap for cash. Ph. 359-7435.
-209-214
FOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE
Box 223, Nelson News.
-176-tfn
LOT IN KINNAIRD 100 X 150
ft. Good location. Ph. 352-5688.
-209-214
FOR SALE: 3 BDRM. HOME
10 Yrtir Rd.. Nelson. -203-228
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED- GOOD USED CLAS-
Slcal records 83 1/3 rpm. Will
pay $1 each if in good cond.
Albums welcomed. Reply Box
280, NeltOn Dally News.
-109-414
SPOT CASH POR USED FURNI-
ture, antiques, coins, eld gold,
guns and jewels Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 351-0531.
413 HaU St.. Nelton. B.C.
-98-tf
Canadian & u.s.a.
coins. Silver dollars te cents,
gold. State prict wanted. Write
te P. Polovnikoff, Box 2, Nelson, B.C. -166-224
WANTED - CLEAN COTTON
rags Must bt at least 12
inches squirt Nelton Daily
Newt -126-tfn
   ITER RIFLE 1895 MO-
del in 30 - 80 or 30 • OS cal. Ph.
$52-a6>6 evenings.       -208-213
WANTED TO RENT, A PIANO.
Ph. 352-7451. -209-214
SMALL ACCORDilbN', 40 OR 80
Sa'SS. Ph. 352-765$.     -209-516
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
Be ready for the dry weather
ahead!! GET YOUR NEW
PLASTIC HOSE. NEW LOW
PRICES! Both clear and nylon
reinforced. Also first line rub-
NELSON FARMERS SUPPLY
524 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5375
-171-171
COMPLETE LINE OF TOP
quality Wall-to-Wall Carpeting,
Draperies, Upholstery, Boat
Tops, Carpet Installation, Call
Toll Free Zenith 6910 for appointment In your area, or
contact Gordon Wall Upholstery Ltd., 1X95 Cedar Ave,,
Trail, B.C., Phone 368.6545,
-203-228
SIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,
49c, cut and wrapped: Sides ol
pork, 29c: sides of pork, cut
and wrapped, 33c. Newdan
Farm, Creston. Ph. 356-9901 or
356-9768. -171-tfn
PLASTIC PIPE. ALL SIZES
and pressures. Lowest prices.
Mac's Welding & Equipment
Co. Ltd., 514 Railway St„ Nelson, B.C. Phone 352-5301.
-130-230
35 WINCHESTER RIFLE, $100:
22 Cooley rifle, $10; 12 ft. ply-
wood boat with 3 h.p. Evin-
rude motor, like new, $200:
Ph. 332-2388 or 618 W. Gore St.
-208-213
FOR THE BEST IN USED
automatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc, contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd..
874 Baker St.. Nelson, B.C.
-27-tfn
TWO PROPANE TANKS, ONE
250 gal.; one 300 gal: with controls, 4 meters, Pete Chevel-
dave, S.S. No. 1, Castlegar,
-207-212
HYGIENIC  SUPPLIES.  SAVE
up to 100%. "Mail $1 for finest
quality assorted. Park Sales,
P.O. Box 361, Hamilton, Ont,
-109-224
SINGER SEWING MACHINE
Co. Sewing machines, vacuum
cleaners, floor polishers, typewriters. 339 Baker St. phone
352-3631. -211-216
BOY'S GEAR BIKE, CHILD'S
rocking horse, tricycle, small
fridge, lawn mower. Ph, 352-
7604. -209-211
80;"000 B.T.U. GAS FURNACE,
Beatty  24"  mangle   ironer,
venetion blinds. Ph. 352-5857.
-208-284
T.V., WASHING MACHINE,
Dinette and misc. furniture,
etc. Call 352-3335 after 6 p.m.
—209-220
HAND OPERATED CONCRETE
block machine. Galn-A-Day
Ironer, drum type duplicator.
Ph.359-7561. -208-211
2 WINTER COATS. 1 FRENCH
seal k 1 cloth coat, Both size
14. Ph. 352-7181. -211-212
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
i Continued i
COLEMAN HOT AIR OIL FUR-
nace, automatic controls and
all fittings. Ph. 332-3976.
-208-213
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE,
owner moving, Mr. Griff, Silverton, B.C. -203-211
SEWING MACHINE WITH CAB.
inet, perfect condition. Ph.. 352-
2646, -206-211
DRY FIR AND TAMARAC, -
Stove length. Pb. 352-5405.
-106-211
LARGE FERN ON MAHOGANY
pedestal. Ph. 352-5072,-208-213
TRAILERS
MOBILE HOMES
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
-203-228
WANTED
Clean to Wides in
Good Condition
REWARD
Top Trade-in Allowance for
Mobile Homes that have had
"That Extra Care and Attention." TRADE-UP to a New
10 or 12 wide
SAFEWAY
Call, see, or write to
Walt Hill To-day - at
CRANBROOK TRAILER SALES
Your Authorized SAFEWAY
Mobile Home Dealer.
Open 7 days a week and every
evening - for your shopping
convenience.
Box 2217 Phone 420-4938
Cranbrook
-192-tfn
WANTED TO RENT - SMALL
camping or house trailer to
sleep 2, for 2 wks. Ph. 352-7008.
-210-212
WANTED TO RENT
GOV'T. EMPLOYEE DESIRES
2-3 br, home Oct, 1st. Not coal
k wood. Within 10 ml. of Nel-
son--524 Oxford Ave,, Kelowna.
-211-216
3-B.R.   HOUSE   WITH   BASE-
ment, between 4 miles and 6
miles, North Shore. Ph. 332-7704
-204-tfn
COMBUSTIONEER STOKER,  GARAGE IN FAIRVIEW. PH.
$100, Phone 352-3808. -207-tfn     352-3320. ' -209-211
DAILY  CROSSWORD
4$. Fasten
together
DOWN
I. Run at top
speed
J. Toward
the let
8. Girl's
nickname
' 4. Instrument
intcir
5. Exclamation
6. Blunder
7. Thin tin
plate
8. Floss
II. Birds _s
a class
13. A wild cat
W.A
cereal
grain
10. Fishermen's
net
10. Savory
23, Flowed
28. Writing
implement
$7. A
eellarw-y
28. Good
friends
30. One who
edits
BMtlu   Bl.l'J-1
jaunts SiL.au.
-1_--1II_1   [_|-1___H-I
,-llt   l_)__i:l   fcVIUU
=tl_i__   _1W'.'J     Mia
lil-l-NK   lilia.n__.-_>:
•1
II
a
■ll_
-.1
_S','_   l_l__l'
•IMKI   M'.
i_'__l_l  1.
1191=1
l(___l
'„
1
•
. ai=
Li
l!li .
•1
-1
1
=
1
tl
-
IS. 1   H
...
II!
'tall.
II .1*1
il
L_d   M
fell
II.
Iitartey'i taiww
35. Tapestry
88.Erase:
print,
40.Mid-Ea_t
30. Greek letter       land
31. Alter 42. Old timet
32. Sea eagles    44. Put
r
ACROSS
I. Without!
poetic
5. Obtains
O.Mtp
10. Spoken
11. Gladiators'
"theater"
12. Bay   ...
window
14. Contend
for
15. A measure
of length
17. Negative
vote
18, Half in em
10. Remaint
21. Verb:
neuten. .
abbr.
22, Road
24. Top
26. Breeze
27. Anthropoid
28. Famous
Quaker
30. Heir to a
throne
88. Publie
notice
34. Relieved
88. Hour:
abbr.
87. Cover
89. Narrow
inlet
40. Men's
name
41. Guide
43. Cautlont
40, Bulging
jar
to. A king ot
Israel
07. communists
DAILY CRYPTOQtTOTB — Here's how to work lti
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
Ont letter simply stands for mother. In thtt sample A Is uied
for the threa L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single lettert, apostrophise, the length and formation ot the words art til hints.
Bitch day tht code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
OWZGW    CQVXQW    AEZDWOWP     BXC
HWJFDZDW        DX       VX.-BXJB FVZ
tWQ'tX
Saturday's Cryptoquote: SUBMIT TO FATE OF YOUR OWN
FREE   VILL.—MARCUS AURELIUS.
(0 1364. Kin. Features Syylcate, Inc.)
AUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
COTTONWOOD WRECKAGE
wrecking '51 Olds, '55 Chev.,
-. 55 GMG^piclrim, '5J Ford, '57
- Plymouth hardtop. '54 Consul,
Plymouths, Fords, Cfievs.,
Pontli.cs, Vt ton Chev, truck,
'53 Meteor. Good motors. '56
Chev V-8, '52 Pontiac, '53 Con.
sul. Ph. 352-5818, Box 382, 24
Ymir Road,     _      -lio-ttn
KENWORTH LOGGING TRUCK
220 Diesel motor & 18 ton
Fruehaul trailer. All in very
good condition, good rubber,
with steady job. Ph. 442-3239
or 442-3789, Box 609, Grand
Forks, B.C. -211-216
SLIGHTLY USED EASY TO Operate — accurate Bear alignment with scuff plate and on
car balancer. Ideal for small
garage or Service Station;
Easy financing. Ph, 332-9807..
-209-211
1957 PONTIAC, 4 DOOR,
whitewalls, radio, one owner.
Excellent condition. Ph. 365-
8108, Box 67, Kinnaird. Mr. Edward isakson. -207-212
'52 PONTIAC. 1939 THAMES
Station Wagon, '88 Plymouth,
'39 Rambler Sedan, '.53 Zephyr.
North Shore Service. Ph. 332-
2929. -188-tfn
FOR SALE; 1956 DODGE
Royal Suburban Sedan. Downtown Texaco, ph. 352-2724.
-207-212
BOY'S GEARED BIKE, PER-
fect cond.; girl's balloon-tire
bike, fair cond. Ph. 352-2439.
-207-212
1  OLDER MODEL INTERNA-
tional 1-Ton. Flat deck; in good
running cond. $150. Ph. 352-2042
-210-215
1963 CHEV. FLEETSIDE.
Reas, priced, John Evin,
Castlegar, Ph, 305-7420,
-202-213
1963 MACK LOGGING TRUCK
for sale complete tnd on the
job. Ph. 356-2070, Creston, B.C.
-203-214
FOR SALE; 1948 PONTIAC,
licensed. Ph. 852-5850 alter
5 p.m.  -207-212
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND  FARM  SUPPLIES
CATTLE AUCTION SALES. -
Mixed, Sept. 23 and Nov. 25.
Calf only, Octrltahd 28. Director,-Frank Hill,. Box 2139,
Cranbrook, B.C. or phone
4-Y Fort Steele, ^    -194-tfn
l-'OR .ARTIFICIAL'BREEDING
dairy and beal-cuttle, phone
352.6874 Nelson and District
A.1, Centre, 709'iTblrd St., Nelsen. J. De Jong, Technician.
■    . . ' ■;■■.':■'      - -t>s
NICE . YOUNQ- HEREFORD
cattle for sale*, "21 .sad; weight
between 600-to' 800 lb|. 12
steer, 9 heifers. R,: Dguphin-
ais. Ph. 357-9583 Salmo.
:  -*207-212
SADDLE HORSE FOR SALE OR
trade for smaller riding horse
or livestock. Ph. 352.2560, or
S, Troyan, Box 322, Nelson.
-210-215
WEANER PIGS.FOR SALE, 8
weeks old..Also bred sows, J.
p; McCartney, Yahk, fcC,
. ......      -208-213
HERD FOR SiHfl§ 30 DAIRY
Cows, good stock, Pluj}8 can
quota. Apply. 1 Valley .Dairy,
Rossland, B.Oi'.s.      -209-214
YOUNG  GUflSNSEY'-'COW,
, just freshened.'-Also excellent
beef heifer. PK*H6-753B. "
alt. %
-206-211
1 YEAR OLD CHICKENS 80c
a piece or S2c.aJb., dressed.
Glendalt Far«ir-Ph, 337-0734,
Salmo        .- - ■"   -184-lln
FOR SALE: APPROX. 20 TONS
of baled hay;' Apply Box 283,
Salmo, B.C..;1    -   -200-214
LEGHORN LAYERS. $1/80, PH.
352-3808.        '„ *_07-tfn
ROOM  AND  BOARD
CLEAN,     PRIVATE    BDRM.
.  for gentleman, Near Legion.
$25. Pb. 352-90$) 01 352-3044.
-JOl-tfn
ROOM AND BOAfil. WANTED
by business genttiman. Apply
Box 248, Nelson Daily News.
-   -v;-.y 3    -208-213
RM. & BOARD FOK'GIRU STU-
dent preferred, 'Ph. 3524478,
M_   -208-213
1952 STUDEBAKER tt-TON -
Cheap for cash. Ph. 352-2621.
-210-215
'53  DODGE   4-DOOR   SEDAN,
$175. Ph. 352-6279, Nelson.
-210-215
SWAP '55 METEOR FOR PICK-
up truck around same year.
Ph. 352-5909. -209-214
1959 INTERNATIONAL PANEL,
4 wheel drive, good cond, Ph.
352-0433, -209-214
1963 VOLKSWAOON SEDAN
Ph. 332-8826 days. Ask for Mr.
Jacobson. -211-216
'63 GALAXIE, 6 CYLINDER,
Ph. 352-3920 after 5, -211-210
'64, 123 HONDA, $478, PH. 332-
7619 after 8. -207-212
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Modern     , j
OFFICE:
SPACE
For    '
RENT--"
Approximately 700 sq. ft. ol
modern,   fully   wired  office
space located on Baker Street
in Nelson.
REASONABLE   RENT
Long or Short Term
Leases Arranged
Apply to:
Nelson Daily. News
-    Ph. 352.3552
AT LAST
WRIOLEY'S
SPEARMINT
IS IN THI
MODERN
ROOM   AND   BOARD AVAIL-
able. Ph. 352-5843, Nelson.
...  ■  ... i-'■'■',    -208.213
FOR   1   GIRL ' WILLING;  TO
share. Phone 3M-W63, -210-215
LOST AND POUND
FOUND-ONE,Mi*fAL BRACE
with   leather-., fastenings   for
child's  crippled, .jegs.   Apply
office, Hudson's Bey Company.
-   =!■-"   -110-212
JMBfltt
Circulation Dept,, Ph. 8B-355-
Prict ptr tinglt copy 10 cents
By carrier per/ weak, 40 cents
In advance;
1       Subscription rtteti   ;
By mall in Canada
Outtldt Nelson .
Ont month '"$ 2.00
Three monthi ....._..-;...-...,, S.M ,
Six monthi  -', ."• woo
One year              s: 18.00
By mail to United Kingdom
or the Commonwtalth
One month               $ 2 00
Three months ""__£.    6.00
Six months ._.*'... .aa-  ll*
Ont year      ..sSXh ..^O.OO
,1     By Mail tpU,$A. or
Foreign Countries   •
One month    .■__■'._*! ,,* 2-50
Threa monthi -...Js..—i  7.00
Six monthi  J„i~Z> 13 00
One year  '   .,.«*,,.* * 24 00
Where extra postljfiti required.
above rates pg-postege.
For delivery by-cirfttr in Cranbrook,   phon«_,iJ|>s   -tan'ev
WilllSon:       •™'"
Government Rejects
Tax Reduction flea
OTTAWA ICP.-The federal
government has rejected a recommendation by provincial ministers of mines that mining
taxes and royalties.paid to the
provinces be deductible 'in full
from federal taxes...
Federal Mines Minister Beni-
dickson in a letter to the ministers made publicMopday said his
government had' reviewer) its
policy and "no. action ■ on this
matter is contemplated at the
present time."--v, •,    """
The provincial' ministers made
the_ recommendation in a brief
presented to the cabinet in February.
 ■
10—NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 8,1964
Quebec Premier Borrows From B.C.
STE.- GERMAINE, Que. (CP)
Opposition Leader Daniel Johnson said Saturday night that
within- the next few days the
Lesage administration wUl borrow. JUKU)QP_QP0 from the government of British Columbia.
Speaking at the opening of the
byelection campaign of Marcel
Blais, Union Nationale candidate for Dorchester County, Mr.
Johnson .said Mr. Lesage now is
tlegotiafing-wlth Premier Bennett's government for a short-
term loan. Provincial byelec
tions in Dorchester ahd three
other constituencies are to be
herd Oct. 5.
"British Columbia has just re
ceived $300,000,000, its part of
the Columbia River project, and
already Lesage wants to bor
row. I ask myself how will he
[now be free to go and show off
at federal • provincial conferences?
Read the Classified Daily
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAI
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
;   ^TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1964
5:58-Sign On
6:00—The Morning Show
»:4m_Farm Fare
6:45-Chapel In tbe Sky
7:00—News
7:05-Wake Up Time
7:38—News
7;3iPW_kS"tfp Time Continues
8:00—News
8:05-B.C. News and Weather
8:15-W_ke Up Time
8:80—Opening Markets
8:35—Wake Up Time Continues
8:00—News
9:10—Preview Commentary
9:15-The Archers
»:90-Alan's A.M Spot
9.-59-DOOTS
10:00—News
10:10-Esso Travel Time
10:15—Morning Melodies
U:00-News.
llHM^-Book Mark
11:10—Morning Melodies
^^-Continue
12:00—Tennesse Ernie Ford
12:15-Sports News
12:25—News
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55—Noon Markets
1.00-Sing Along
1:15—What's On Tapp
1:45—Afternon Concert
2:30—News
2:33—Trans Canada Matinee
3:00—News
3:05—Sports News
3:10—Esso Travel Time
3:15—Sacred Heart Program
3:30—A Summer Place
4:00—News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10—Tempo
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—National News
6:05—Grand Old Opry
7:0O—News and Reports
7:20—Speaking Personally
7:30—Music For Listening
8:30—Winnipeg Pops Concert
9:00—The Film in Society
9:30—1116 Chapel Royal
10:00—News
10:15-Chapel in the Sky
10:30—Assignment
ll:00-Sign Off
CBC  PROGRAMS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1964
6:00—Morning Show
9:00—News and Report
■ 9:10—Interlude
9:15—The Archers
9:30—Pacific Express
9:59-D.O;0:T:S.
i 10:00—Morning. Visit
10:10—For Consumers
10:15—University of the Air
10:45—Playroom
11:00—Off the Record
11:45—Music on the Heather
12:00-Canadians on Record
12:15-News
12:25—Bill Good Sports
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55-Five To One
1:00—Readings from the
:    ...Classics
l:15-The-Tommy Hunter Show
. l:4^Mairily Dixieland
2:00-^Afternoon Concert
'■ 2:30s-News
( 2:33-Side by Side
3:30—Matinee Theatre
4:00—News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10—Tempo
4:30—Countdown
5:00—Tempo for Teens
5:30—News
5:40-Today's Editorial
5:45—Sports Desk
5:50—Spotlight on Sports
5:55—Recorded Music
6:30—The Question Tonight
7:00—News and ParUament HiU
7:20—In the Provinces
7:30—Christian Frontiers
8:00—Assignment
8:30—Dixieland Downbeat
9:00—Music Diary
9:30—CBC Strings
10:00—News
10:15—Talks
10:30—Serenata
11:00—New Records
12:00—News
12:05—Recorded Music
TELEVISION  FOR TODAY
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
KREM-TV - Channel t
■ 6:36 Woody Woodpecker
■ 7:00 Guestward Ho
7:30 Combat*
8:30 McHale's Navy *
9:00 Greatest Show On Earth *
10:00 The Fugitive *
11:00 Nightbeat With BUI Denton
11:15 News- Bob Young •
11:30 Late Show
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
7:00 Adventure Theatre
;7:30 7 Wonderful Nights
8:80 Billy Graham
9:00 Petticoat Junction (L)
9:30 Jack Benny (L)
10:00 "The Great Stars" (L.
11:00 11 O'Clock News
11:30 Big 4 Movie
KHQ-TV — C-annel I
7:00 Bold Journey
.7:30: Mr, Novak *
8:31) TBA'    "
9:00 Richard Boone '
110:00-BeU Telephone Hour* (C)
11:00 News k Weather
11:30 Tonight w/Carson * (C)
CBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11
4:»iBCMP-_
A:» Vacation -Time
5:30 The Lone Ranger
6:00 Magic Lantern to the Stars
6:30 Home Edition
7:00 7 O'Clock Show
7:80 The Open Road	
8:00 Patty Duke
8:30 Ben Casey
9:30-The Planemakers
10:30 Cine Club
11:00 News
11:14 Viewpoint
CJLH-TV — Channel 7, Lethbridge
MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME
WEDNESDAY
«:00 Teat Pattern
12:10 Wiplash -
3 "Divide * Conquer"
1:00 Breaking Point-"A Child
of the Centre Ring"
2:00 Movie-"The 49th Man"
J.SHWF^
4:00 RCMP.
4:30 Vacation Time
5:3» Forest Rangers
6:00 Sports, Weather, News
6:30 Rawhide No. 61
VS %*■ Ed-"°h. those Hats"
«:00 Camera West
8:30 Perry Mason
»:30 Suspense Theatre
10:30 News Magazine
11:00 CBC News
11:15 Night Final
11:20 Breaking Point "A Child
of tbe Centre Ring"
The Record Rack
by The Sour Notes
(Programs subject ts dung* by station without notice.)
TO BROADWAY WITH LOVE
(Original Cast)
This is a nostalgic revue of the
best of a century of the Great
White Way, currently enthralling
visitors to New York's World
Fair.'
Selections for the most part are
appropriately stamped with the
style and sentiment of its peculiar era, most of them being lesser lights from the pens of Broadway's great contributors. The
music stretches from minstrels
to Ziegfield then the last two
decades, concluding with three
new compositions predicting future Broadway vehicles. AU attesting to imperishability of musical comedy.
The personnel has had limited
exposure but their talent is not
to be denied as orchestrations
are plush, vivacious, generating
an aura of opening night excite
ment. Songstress MUlies Siavin
serves notice with her clear cut
phrasing on "Rose of Washington
Square, Speak Low."
On the whole, a bright, breezy
tribute to Broadway giants,
Broadway revisited.
AMOR (Eydie Gorme and The
Trio Los Panchos.
Vocalist Eydie Gorme has been
a seeker oi off-beaten material
in ber latest albums and so far
her ventures have been rewarding for the listener. Her latest
straying outside the realm of
pop music is into the languorous
beat and lush lyricism south of
the border. Her gallants are the
soft strumming and singing Trio
Los Panchos.
For the trio this is home territory, Spanish love songs presented in their native tongue. Displaying another facet of her versatility, the vivacious Bronx
beauty adapts smoothly to the.
nuances of Spanish song and
light bolero rhythms enhancing
the total production, instead of
tarnishing it which happens too
often in such coUaborations.
Trio plus one.
BE MY LOVE (Jerry Vale).
This could have a sub-title,
'A tribute to the taste of the
1950's", for all of the romantic
ballads enjoyed immense popularity during that decade.
In the modern market the singers are few who can properly interpret the warmth and lyricism
of the likes of "Secret Love, Be-1
cause, AU the Way, Too Young,
Mona Lisa". They encourage the
full note and demand an ear for,
music. Vocalist Jerry Vale ful-,
fills both facets more than ade-,
quately.  Vale  is  in  excellent
voice to handle the warmth, intensity, passionate outpouring of
romantic notes, and is smartly
complimented by the arrange
ments of Glenn Osser.
Big ballad.
THREE WINDOW COUPE (The
Rip Chords).
The grease pit crowd hits the
waves, is the motif of this album which combines the two
latest musical rages in a high
power if somewhat clamorous
presentation.
To adult ears it seems odd to
hear the beauties of a mechanical marvel revered in song. What
happened to moon, June tune
adults will wonder but the. teens
will identify with the souped up
jalopies, smoking pistons, shrieking rubber and meshing gears.
The other half of the album is
dedicated to that sport, restricted primarily to the Souh Pacific,
which has infected landlocked
mortals, surfing.
Hot roddin' breakers.
SOMETHING TO SING ABOUT
(Tbe Travellers)
This folk quartet is Canada's!
answer to the Weavers and like
them their unaffected style, developed over the years, is to al-
Uow the music to speak for itself
be it a soft sung but hard hitting
social message or a lighthearted
romp.
This is folk singing before the
taint of commercialism; simple[
accompaniment and powerful
voices ringing with conviction
proclaiming the message.
Travellers' material is heavUy
orientated toward Canadiana and
several selections in this dozen
are of Canadian flavor. We particularly Uke the haunting loneliness of the north country in
Wild Goose."
Something to listen to.
OUTER WEST! (The Honey
Dreamers)
Johnny Mercer's lyrics of "I'm
An Old Cowhand" have been updated two decades for jet age
arrangements of this smooth
and rich harmony.
The tunes bespeak the old west
vocal group with the solid beat
but the sound is new, a jazz
rhythmis caU spiked by latin
[pos. Old steeds Uke "Red
River VaUey, Red Wing, Wagon1
Wheels, Tumbling Tumble-,
weed" are saddled with a big]
band beat and hip vocalizing. It
is an incongruous couple but an
entertaining one for the transistorized Texans of today.
Western jazz.
THE VERY THOUGHT OF
YOU (Robert Horton)
Cowboy hero Robert Horton
.rode off the television screen in
to a musical vehicle on Broadway and he hasn't looked back.
This lights low music soft performance only reaffirms his
choice in careers.
He of the affable grin, Horton's
pleasant voice reveals knowledge
of tempo and phrasing in sounding familiar lyrics enmeshed in
the sauve arrangements of Marty Manning. 	
Though old chestnuts populate
the grooves, Horton does offer
one or two new tunes. Reliable
tunesmiths Cahn and Van Heu-
sen have given him a showpiece
in "Summer Green and Winter
White."
Rugged heart-throb.
SLIPPIN' AROUND (George
Morgan and Marion Worth)
Coupling of singers to state the
pitfalls of love is a common and
profitable practice in the country
music field. The latest combination is George Morgan and
Marion Worth, who have both
made their individual groove in
the recording whirl.
Their material is sturdy fare,
country music's pre-occupation
with the hopelessness of misplaced love. It has aU been stated before but the new country
duet adds a few more teardrops
to the flood of woe eroding the
countryside in a performance
above par in this field.
Two timing beat.
Weekend Toll
Less Than Expected
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
At least 58 persons met accidental deaths across Canada
during the first two days of the
three-day Labor Day wekend,
-48 of them on the highways.
A survey by The Canadian
Press from 6 p.m, local times
Friday to 11 p.m. EDT Sunday
showed that the rest of the total included seven drownings
and three miscellaneous accidents.
The Canadian Highway Safety
CouncU has predicted the death
toll could exceed 75 over the
three-day holiday weekend. An
average of 58 persons have
been killed on the final long
weekend of the summer over
the last seven years, with a
high of 77 in 1963.
Quebec's total of 23 fatalities
included 19 traffic deaths, three
drownings and one in which a
boy was crushed by a tractor.
Ontario reported 19 accidental
deaths with 15 on the roads,
three drownings and one in
which an infant was suffocated
under a pillow. Manitoba had
three persons killed on the road
and. one when a woman was hit
by a train.
Saskatchewan and British Columbia each reported three traf-
fice deaths while New Brunswick had two on the highways.
Nova Scotia had one traffic fatality and one drowning.
Newfoundland and Alberta
each reported one road death
while Prince Edward Island
was the only fatality-free province.
Priest's Marriage May Preclude
Doctrinal Change on Celibacy
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii
MONSTER PIE DEVOURED
DENBY DALE, England
(AP)-The great pie of Denby
Dale, largest ever seen in this
home of monster pies,
emerged in triumph from its
oven Saturday and was
promptly devoured by waiting
throngs.
For 36 hours its six tons of
beef, potatoes, spices and
crust, had baked and bubbled
in Hector Buckley's barn,
overlooked by a herd of cows,
including the mothers of some
of its ingredients.
As eating time drew near,
the pie, on its 16-wheeled
trailer, started a ceremonial
journey to the field in which
Denby Dale has eaten pie for
at least two centuries. Pipe,
brass and jazz bands heralded
its progress.
After blessing from the village parson, and a hymn in
memory of four Denby pie organizers kiUed in a car crash,
the crust was cut.
Its culinary success was indisputable.
Commercial success, bow-
ever, was in some doubt.
The crowd of 40,000 to 50,000
feU below the vast assemblage
for which the vUIage pie committee had prepared. Enough
people were there, however,
to demolish the pie, which
was divided into 30,000 portions and sold at 10s ($1.50) a
piece, including the price of a
commemorative plate.
Denby Dale, a Yorkshire
viUage otherwise known for
its fine worsted , cloth, has
been making great pies since
the 18th century.
The first, in 1788, celebrated
a temporary bout of sanity on
the part of King George III.
The second, 27 -years later,
greeted Britain's victory over
Napoleon.
This year's pie was the
eighth, and was larger than
any seen before. It celebrates
the four royal births of 1964,
among them Queen Elizabeth's third son. Prince Edward.
The steel dish holding the
latest pie measured 18 feet
long and six feet wide and 18
inches deep. Now that the pie
is eaten, the' pie committee
hopes to sail the dish across
the English Channel.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
News of the Day
RATES! 30c Une, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates
on request. Minimum two Unes.
COPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE
Copy for this column accepted untU 3 p.m. for insertion
in next day's publication.
Special Summer Clearances at
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
-203-tfn
As usual best back-to-school
Values are at
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
-195-tfn
Rayon Satin Back 46" Drapery
on Sale for $1.79 yd.
STERLING FURNISHERS
-211-212
For that extra special touch
in flowers k design, phone 352-
5035. NELSON FLOWERS LTD.
-211-211
Diamonds, Watches, Gifts,
Repairs, Engraving.
TED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY
-29-h
KINDERGARTEN
Children for. Mrs. Lambert's
Kindergarten register at 2:30
Tues;, Sept. 8. -209-211
No-Stik oven spray keeps your
oven clean for months. Food and
grease will not stick. .1.45 each.
HIPPERSON HARDWARE
-211-211
CLASSES IN HIGHLAND
DANCING COMMENCING SEPTEMBER 12. FOR REGISTRATION AND INFORMATION,
PHONE MRS. J. GENTLES
352-6575 EVENINGS.      -211-H
EVERYBODY WELCOME
COLUMBIA COLLEGE 60 HIGH
STREET WEDNESDAY SEPT.
9. OPEN HOUSE 4:00 P.M. -
9:00 P.M.
-211-211
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of my dear
husband and father, Alex Swet-
likoe, who was killed suddenly
Sept. 8th, 1960.
Sad and sudden was the call
His memory is as sweet today
As in the hour he passed away.
Sadly missed by his loving
wife, Anne; son, Allen; Betty,
John and grandcbUdren Voykin.
-2U-211
BINGO
LEGION HALL TONIGHT
-29-h
Haigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon
576 Baker St,      Ph. 352-3313
-29-h
FUNERAL NOTICE
LAWSON — passed away September 6 1964 in hospital, Catherine Anne Lawson, age 89 years,
widow of the late Thomas A.
Lawson, formerly of 2408 Antrim
Avenue South Burnaby, and Nelson, B.C. Survived by one son
John of Castlegar, B.C.; two
daughters, Mrs. J. R. (Agnes
Jean) Stead Vancouver and Mrs.
O. D. (May) Berry, Alberni,
B.C.; four grandchildren, ten
greatgrandchildren and two
great great grandchildren. Funeral service Wednesday Sept. 9
at one p.m. in Nunn and Thomsons Chapel, Tenth Ave. and
Cambie St., Vancouver, Major
Peter L. Gorie ahd Captain Ivan
McNeilly officiating. Interment
Forest Lawn Memorial  Park.
MERCENARIES
QUIT CONGO
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters)
About 20 mercenaries recruited
in South Africa returned here
by air Saturday night from Ka-
mina Camp in The Congo complaining of "utter chaos" there.
They spoke of bad food, inadequate weapons, no. contracts,
little money, few medical supplies and only one doctor.
Also with them came three
men needing medical treatment,
according to Patrick O'Malley,
tbe recruiting agent here.
White mercenaries have been
aiding the government of Congolese Premier Moise Tshombe
in fighting a widespread rebellion in the country.
'O'Malley said the mercenaries had "a perfect right" to
return.
"We promised the volunteers
they would be free to come
back if they wished," he said.
PARIS (Reuters) - The
Bishop of VersaUles has criticized a Roman Catholic priest
for breaking an oath of sUence
by informing the press he had
been given Vatican permission
to marry.
The diocese of VersaUles issued a communique Saturday
deploring publicity "which can
be wrongly interpreted as a
modification of the church's law
on the celibacy of priests."
The mass circulation paper
France-Soir said the priest,
identified only as Abbe W, was
reduced in status by the church
in May after he expressed the
wish to marry. However, it
added, he retained his ecclesiastical title.
The priest, since wed, was
quoted.as telling France-Soir he
had not been unfrocked but
could no longer practise his
priestly duties except in extreme cases such as administering the last sacraments to a dy-
Premier Sees Way To
Bridge Rich-Poor Gap
TOKYO (Reuters)—Japanese
Premier Hayato Ikeda told the
opening session of the joint annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank Monday that nations
should promote stable economic
growth and reduce the disparity between rich and poor.
Ikeda also said he would like
to see the fund and bank further expand their functions and
resources and invite more countries to become members.
More than 11,900 delegates
from 102 countries, including
Canada, have assembled here
for the five-day conference, the
biggest ever held in Japan.
"Today, when rapid expansion
is taking place in economic and
cultural relations between nations, not one nation can prosper unless others also prosper,"
Ikeda told the conference.
"Prosperity is indivisible," he
said. "It is incumbent upon all |
of us to make efforts to remove
obstacles to free economic intercourse, to strengthen international co-operation and to go
beyond our own national borders to contribute to the growth
of the world economy as a
whole and to the enhancement
of the welfare of mankind."
REGULATE WITH TAXES
The managing director of the.
International   Monetary   Fund,'
Pierre - Paul Schweitzer of
France, told the fund's board
of governors Monday that major
countries should give more
weight to taxation policies in
regulating domestic demand
and rely less on monetary policies.
He said greater emphasis on
fiscal policies would leave
"greater freedom for monetary
policies to be adapted to the
changing international situations" in the interests of the
co-ordination of monetary policies among the major countries.
As well as recommending fiscal policies, Schweitzer urged
countries in strong payments
positions to make every effort
to lower impediments to imports and capital exports.
He strongly recommended an
early increase in the quotas of
all countries which belong to
the fund. This, he said, would
increase "conditional liquidity"
-liquidity which is available to
countries on the understanding
that they will follow constructive policies to eliminate their
payments deficit.
Reviewing world economic
conditions, Schweitzer said general prosperity in the industrial
countries in the last year provided the major part of the explanation of the recent strong
export position of the primary
producing countries.
ing man if no other priest was
avaUable.
He also was reported to have
said: "In Rome I learned I
could keep my title of priest
while giving up my celibacy. . . , I have decided to
make this secret known to let
my colleagues, kept in ignorance, profit by it."
Abbe W was married in a religious ceremony by an official of
the VersaiUes diocese, with his
marriage blessed by the bishop,
the newspaper said. He now
works as a decorator in a Paris
suburb.
French newspapers speculated that his case might be the
prelude to a doctrinal shut in
the church on the celibacy question, already raised at the Vatican ecumenical councU.
COTTON
CASUALS
and
HIPSTERS
For
BACK
to
SCHOOL
*5.95-*7.95
EMORY'S
LTD.
THE MAN'S STORE
Riot Act Read
In Resort Town
Cultural Group Requests
Canadian Ethnic Group
OTTAWA (CP)-The Canadian Institute of Cultural Research has called for a cultural
centre supported by the federal
government which would promote c o n t a c t s between Canada's various ethnic groups.
The institute, a Toronto-based
group incorporated two years
ago,, made tbe proposal in a
brief to the royal commission
on bUingualism and biculturalism, copies of which were released to the press.
The brief said such a federal
agency could conduct and coordinate sociological and historical studies of cultural minorities, especially those with
an ethnic origin other than British or French.
"The lag that presently exists
in integration of the two rival
main cultures may be more
readily overcome when a triangular, rather than a dual cultural basis exists."
The brief said the proposed
cultural centre could sponsor
art exhibits, drama and concerts to show the contributions
of various ethnic groups. Student exchanges and contacts between so-called ethnic newspa-
BRITAIN BROKE
SPY AGREEMENT
SAY RUSSIANS
MOSCOW (AP)-Annoyed by
what it considers Britain's
breach of a gentlemen's agreement, the Soviet Union wiU begin publication this week of its
version of the Wynne-Penkov-
sky spy case.
GreviUe Wynne, a British businessman once imprisoned by
tbe Russians as a spy, began
publication of his memoirs in
the London Sunday Telegraph.
The Russians freed Wynne, 45,
last AprU in a trade for Soviet
master spy Gordon Lonsdale,
[who was serving 25 years in a
British prison.
Reliable Soviet Informants
said in Moscow publication of
Wynne's memoirs broke an unwritten agreement to keep si-
.lent on the case and that the
I Kremlin's version will appear
'in the government newspaper
Izvestia. The Telegraph denied
that there had been any understanding.
Wynne, arrested in Budapest
in November, 1962, while in
charge of a trade mission, was
subsequently tried and convicted with Oleg Penkovsky,
former deputy chief of the foreign section of the Soviet state
Committee for scientific co-ordination. Wypne was sentenced
to eight years. Penkovsky was
I executed.
pers would be other possible activities.
REGRET WORDING
The institute regretted the
wording of the royal commission's terms of reference. The
terms call for an equal partnership between the "two founding
races" taking into account the
contributions of other ethnic
groups.
"The meaning is innocent,"
the brief said, "but the interpretation is rather harmful
since it designates mediocrity
to the 'other.
"However, it is now evident
that the appointment of the
royal commission is stimulating
our Canadian awareness."
It would be a difficult task to
effect a partnership of the English and French cultures without at the same time destroying the equality of all Canadians, whatever their origin.
John Grudeff of Toronto, a retired juvenile court judge, is
president of the institute, which
plans to . sponsor cultural and
sociological research on the integration of Canadians with different ethnic origins.
Dr. Watson Kirkconnell, president of Acadia University,
Wolfville, N.S., and Hon. J. T.
Thorson, retired president of
the Exchequer Court of Canada,
are honorary patrons.
The royal commission is
scheduled to hold public hearings later this year and next
year to receive briefs and question the authors.
Russian-Canadian
Land Methods
Similar
NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)
Soviet Agriculture Minister I.
P. Volovchenko said Sunday a
common interest in land use
and scientific research could
improve East-West relations.
This trip to Canada is useful
and interesting and it is contributing greatly to closer connections with the agricultural
circles of the U.S.S.R. and Canada and to the improvement of
relations between my country
and North America," he said in
an interview.
The minister, accompanied by
other Soviet agricultural experts, spent several hours in
Niagara Falls before leaving
for Chatham to continue his
three-week tour of Canada.
He said there are many common features in tbe method of
land cultivation in Russia and
Canada and for this reason an
exchange of agricultural knowledge was useful to both countries.
GRAND BEND, Ont. (CP)-
The reeve of this Lake Huron
resort town read the Riot Act
over a loud haller early Sunday as an unruly mob of 500
fun-seekers whistled and jeered.
One of them was arrested for
assaulting an Ontario Provincial Police officer and four others for failing to disperse within
the 30 minutes required under
the emergency law.
As police ordered the crowd
to clear and as booths and concessions were closed OPP reinforcements were speeding to the
Scene from several detachments
to the south and east.
The trouble began about 11:35
p.m. Saturday when members
of the Grand Bend OPP detachment tried to arrest two men
who were fighting on the main
street. A crowd gathered
around their cruiser and a car
pulled in behind it, blocking its
exit. Several youths began rocking the cruiser as the crowd
chanted "Roll it. RoU it."
Cpl. Robert Fulton, in charge
of the 10-man Grand Bend OPP
detachment, radioed for help
and another 10 men answered
from nearby patrol areas.
Meanwhile the crowd of 500
went shouting, singing and
laughing toward the police station. By 1 a.m. the crowd, by
then reduced by half, stUI refused to disperse and Cpl. Fulton called his 20 men to the
station.
SITUATION OUT OF HAND
Cpl. Fulton summoned Village
Reeve Stewart Webb to the municipal office at 1:15 a.m.
"Things started to look bad,"
the reeve said. "The situation
was out of hand for a while."
An emergency councU meeting was called. Councilors decided the only way to clear the
streets was to empower the police under terms of the Riot
Act.
Murray des Jardines, combined viUage clerk and justice
of the peace, then stepped out
on the steps of the police station, clicked on a loud hailer
and said "I want absolute silence."
Several persons booed and
snickered.
"I am going to read the Riot
Act," Mr. des Jardines continued.
Then he slowly read the
emergency powers adopted by
the council minutes earlier.
I The Riot Act, section 69B of
'the Criminal Code, may be.read
j in cases of emergency and, under its provisions, persons found
i on streets 30 minutes after it is
read may be charged..
Four persons were charged
under the act. Police said another 49 persons were arrested
on liquor and creating disturbance charges, while Rodney
Coulter, 18, of Grand Bend was
charged with assaulting a policeman.
CARS TURNED AWAY
The Riot Act was read about
1:45 a.m. By then 43 policemen
and 14 cruisers were on hand
and police blocked all entrances
to the village. Cars coming into
Grand Bend from Highway 21
were stopped and ordered to go
elsewhere. Those owning cottages in the downtown . area
were refused permission to
drive their cars into the viUage.
Booths and concessions were
closed down.
By daybreak the streets were
deserted. As the sun warmed,
tightlipped booth owners unlatched their shutters and
fumed about the previous
night's police action.
Bruce Thompson, owner of
the Little Beaver, claimed the
police used "gestapo" methods.
He said he plans to take legal
action against either the police
or vUIage council to recover his
potential business losses.
Other booth operators felt the
police did what they had to do
under the circumstances. Gerald Vecsi said he thought police
activity in the resort during the
summer was of a high caliber.
Grand Bend's normal population of 600 swells to 15,000 or
more on a normal summer
weekend.
Canada Supports Increase
In Monetary Fund Quotas
TOKYO (CP)-A general increase of 25 per cent in International Monetary Fund quotas
is likely to be approved at the
IMF annual meeting here this
week. Canada will support the
move.
Finance Minister Gordon said
in an interview Monday that
Canada would have backed an
even larger increase. He regarded the 25 per cent as a compromise between a somewhat restrictive approach by the Europeans and the expansionary
policy of Canada, the United
States, Britain and Japan.
Canada's IMF quota now is
$550,000,000, Of Which $137,500,-
000 is in the form of gold. The
figures are in U.S. dollars.
Attending the meeting with
Gordon are Louis Rasminsky,
governor of the Bank of Canada, and A. F. W. Plumtre,
deputy finance minister. Gordon is scheduled to return to
Ottawa Friday.
Besides the over • aU IMF
quota increase, this week's
meeting may call for special
increases for certain countries.
Canada is one of these; Japan
is another. There has been no
indication so far of what this
added increase might be.
CONTINUE STUDY
The IMF also is expected to
continue its study of the adequacy of international liquidity,
that is, the world's total supply
of credit and currencies to finance international trade.
One group within the IMF,
the so-called- group of, 10 or
"Paris  Club"  which  includes
Canada, has said that while
(liquidity is adequate at the
moment, it would be wise to
make detailed studies with the
future in mind.
One form these studies are
taking is the possibility of creating some new form of reserve
asset, besides gold and the U.S.
dollar.
However, Gordon said there
is a wide range of views both
in the group of 10 and in the
IMF itself.
He said there are those who
think the IMF is operating well
as it stands, and those who believe it should become "a sort
pf central bankers' central
bank."
"Nothing startling is going to
happen in a hurry," Gordon
I said.
Have the Job Dene Right!
V'C GRAVEC
■       LIMITED        •_*
Phone 382-331S
. MASTER PLUMBER
BACK TO SCHOOL
Brief Coses  $4.98
Zipper Bogs  $4.50
Binder, Dividers,
8 Subject Covers
Your Rexall Pharmacy
CITY DRUG
Box 460
Phone 352-3611
.!
&
