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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" a^s1\nNelson's  Record\n1851 Days\nTraffic Fatality Free\nV0F55   :      :\nWEATHER FORECAST ,\nKootenay: Cloudy. A few scattered showers, cooler. Winds light.\nLow-high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 45 and 68.   .\nNELSON, B.C, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1957\nNot more Then .60 Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 135\nHP^^'-\nWM~'\n\u2022    '\u25a0\n\u25a01L            J^\n.   -    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u00bb-.\n'     I\n:;\u25a0}\u25a0'. '. \u25a0:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0; :.-.'\n\u25a0  \u00bb*    \u2022\n,'    ' '-A\ni . %>. \u25a0\nti\u00a3,'l*J\nPk,\n\u25a0 '   -    !*?>\nJr.--\n'^jj|(B\n0 ' (\n;  ^Bv|\n:\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0';\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0;'.\nmW>\nr\n\\              \u25a0\n\\\n\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.;.\u25a0:-,-.\u25a0   ..'.;\" \u25a0'.' '\n:::,;.;::::3':-C:V^^ :-:'::.   i   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   '-'\n.       ..,\u25a0>;.\n.;;:..;:-.\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0 .:,'::;.;..;V'.''' '\u25a0\u25a0.\nlti|-\ny   .-    \\yy\n. jSImiWt'-' \u25a0_-\u00ab\n.,    ''   \"\u2022    v:    \"     \u25a0'\nJ\nNEW PRESIDENT of the Union of B.C. Municipalities, Reeve C. A. P. Murison\nof North Cowichan, right, who was elected to the position Thursday is pictured\nabove with 1956-57\" UBCM president Mayor J. E. Fitzwater ol Karnloops, lefti and\nMayor E. Simenson, of Wenatchee, president of the Association of Washington\nCities. Mr. Murison will be installed today.\u2014Daily News photo..,\nMurison of North Cowichan\nElected President of UBCM\nReeve C. A. P. Murison of North Cowichan will be\nInstalled this afternoon as president oi the Union of British\nCJoIumbia Municipalities at the closing session of the UBCM\nconvention in the Civic Theatre. Formerly first vice-president,\nhe was unanimously elected to the presidency Thursday.\nOthers elected were\nfirst vice-\npresident, Mayor J. J. Ladd of Kelowna, formerly honorary secre-.\ntary-treasurer; second vice-president, Aid. Mrs. C. J. Gray of\nPrince George (re-election)'; honorary secretary-treasurer, Reeve\nC. W. MacSorley of Burnaby; village representative; commissioner\nG. L. Williams of Smithers.  '\nExecutive members are: Mayor\nP. B. Scurrah of Victoria, Mayor\nClifford Swan of Kimberley, Mayor\nv Joseph Kary of Nelson! Mayor L.\nK. .Jordan of Port Alberni, Aid.\nHalford Wilson of Vanr{puvr;r, Cbm-\nTiiisijidneV A.. V; I-.aseiTof Quesnel,\nReeVe Nesbitt of Surrey and Mayor\nC. W. Cates of North Vancouver.\nAid. Mrs. Gray had been pro-'\nposed by the nominating committee for first vice-president. The\ncommittee nominate}! Reeve P. Je-\nnewein of Maple Ridge for second\nvice-president,  and  Reeve  Mac\nSorley and Mayor Cates were nom\ninated from the floor. Mayor Ladd\nhad been nominated to continue\nas honorary secretary-treasurer,\nand Reeve MacSorley, Mayor\nCates and Reeve JeneWein were\nnominated from the floor. J. E,\nKraft of Castlegar was nominated\nfrom the floor as village represent\ntative.\nOthers, suggested for the executive were Reeve Richards of West\nVancouver, Reeve Weaver of Powell River, Commissioner ' James\n7orbes%f' Wiiielet^fleeve'Jene-\nwein, Reeve James Christmas of\nCoquitlam\", aiid Reeve Atkinson oi\nSummerland.       ,    .'\nMayor G. E. Hills of Prince Rupert, chairman Thursday afternoon,\nwas chairman pf the nominating\ncommittee. Various municipal\nclerks conducted voting. '\nBennett Says Fitzwater\nHas 18th Century Views\nVICTORIA (CP) - Mayor J. E.\n. Fitzwater of Karnloops has adopted\n\"18th Century thinking\" in his attitude toward provincial cabinet\nministers, Premier Bennett said at\na press conference .Thursday.\nThe mayor told a Union of B.C.\nMunicipalities convention in Nelson\nWednesday that only' eight of 12\nministers were present when he\nrecently led a delegation before\nthe cabinet to present a brief con-\nDAMAGE CHARGE\nAGAINST TENANT\nPENTICTON (CP) - Harvey.\nJohn Webb, charged with, causing\nwilful damage in a Penticton motel\nhe vacated after a court order foreclosed his mortgage, elected jury\ntrial in Penticton police court\nThursday.\nIn a written; statement given to\nRCMP, he denied he is responsible\nfor the damage. .    '\nConst. T. L. Anderson testified\nhe went to the Roses Motel Aug. 7\nand found' corrosive material on\npillows, bed spreads and chesterfields, water on the floor, a lard-\nlike substance on walls and ceiling\nand broken glass in the main building and eight cabins.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nMosse Didn't\nKnow His'Place\nLINDSAY, Ont. (CP)-Bruce\nthe. moose has cooked his\ngoose. The moose, which invaded the cow pasture of Clifford\nPadgett about seven miles\neast of here,. was destroyed\nThursday by S. C. Simons, a\ndepartment of lands and forests district agent.,\nBruce had firmly resisted efforts of Mr. Padgett and other\nfarmers to put bulls in with the\ncows. Mr. Padgett finally ap->\npealed to the department for\nhelp in getting rid of the amorous moose. .    '    \u2022 1\n\"He was in very poor shape,\nblind in one eye, and looked as\nif he had been wounded by a\nhunt* during the winter,\"\nMr. Simons said.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt\ncrning the UBCM. He said the absent ministers, among them Premier Bennett, were \"discourteous,\"\nin not being there.\n\"If the whole cabinet stjyed in\nVictoria behind their desks there\nwould be no development in B.C.,\"\nPremier Bennett said Wednesday.\n','Why, the Premier and the cabinet are never discourteous,\" Mr.\nBennett said. \"The brief was studied carefully.\"\nMayor Fitzwater's attitude is\n\"18th century thinking \u2014 but he\nhas every right to think that way.\"\n\"Britain never would have become the great leader of our empire if all the'ministers had stayed\nat home,\" he said.\nPrice of Wines Up\nFrom October 1\nVICTORIA (CP) - Price increases ranging from five to 90\ncents a bottle on some brands- of\nCanadian and imported wines will\ngo into effect Oct. 1, provincial\ncabinet authorized Wednesday.\nIn addition the price of two\nbrands of imported English ale\nwill go lip 25 cents a case.\nCabinet also approved a reduction in the price of one brand each\nof gin and scotch.\nLiquor \u2022 Control Board commissioner Donald McGugan said the\nincreases were due to \"increased\ncosts to the board\" and added the\nreduction of 10 cents a bottle on\nthe scotch and gin was due to the\nabsorption of part of the freight\ncosts by the distillers.\nTrainmen Join\nNEW YORK (AP) - The AFL-\nCIO executive council has approved a request for affiliation from\nthe Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen: slhe. brotherhood, now independent, has. 160,000 active members in the U.' S., 20,000 in Canada and 30,000 on the retired list.\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar, was M6 lower at a\npremium of 8 25-32 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds; a week ago\n4 1-32 per cent premium, The\npound sterling was 7-32 higher at\n$2.79 31.\nTo Sue City ior\nWrongful Arrest\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A three-act\ndrama had its sequel in Vancouver\nWednesday when three city men\nsaid they, will sue Vancouver city\npolice'for wrongful arrest as suspects in Tuesday's bank holdup^\nThe three men: Je^se W. Rogers,\nrnlning executive; Dr. W.'H. Pat-\ntnore, geologist; and Joseph C,\nBoyes Jr., soil? inspector,'\"Were\nthe innocent,victims of eager; po;\nlice atteniptfhg''te<sotve!' a;''$220ij\nrobbery of a downtown branch of\nthe Royal Bank of Canada.\nMr. Boyes was picked up as he\ndrank a beef- in a hotel; the two\nother men were hustled off a Canadian Pacific Airlines flight minutes\nbefore it took off for Prince George.\nApologetic police provided an escort to the airport Wednesday to\nmake sure Mr. Rogers and Dr.\nPatmore caught another plane to'\nPrince George.\nMr. Rogers said after he landed:\n\"We are going to throw the book\nat them; Dr. Patmore and I are\ndefinitely going to fake legal ac-\"\ntion. RCMP, acting as agents for\nthe city police, took me from the\nplane without telling me why.\n\"I was searched in full view of\neverybody. They wouldn't let me\ntelephone the city police station\nand they would hardly M me .talk\nto my wife, who was there to see\nme off.\n11111111111111111111111111111111111111isi.mil\nSome Didn't Know\nThey Were Lost?\nVICTORIA (OP) - There's\nnothing like the zeal of a crack\npolice department.\n.Police Chief John Black-\nstock's monthly report to the\npolice commission Thursday\nshowed:\n\"Persons reported missing,\n25; Persons, located\u201428.\nThe department also reported 19 bicycles found or brought.\n' in, one more than .reported lost\nor stolen.\nHowever, the department\nbatted an 1.000 in recoveries\nof stolen cars: 14 for 14.\nillllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n11 DEAD'\nIN TYPHOON\n11.1 Missing, 17\nInjured as Winds\nLash Okinawa\nNAHA,' Okinawa <AP) \u2014Typhoon\nFaye veered into sleeping Okinawa\nWednesday with 146-mile winds.\nThe Ryukyus government reported\n11 Okinawans: dead, 17 severely injured and 111 missing. Damage\nwas expected to exceed $10,000,000.\nThe winds smashed, planes and\nhouses, overturned trucks,> sank\nfishing vessels and sent unwarned\nU. S. servicemen racing for cover.\nThe government said 417 houses\nwere destroyed and 855 damaged\nbut other sources said up to 2200\nOkinawans lost their homes.\n_ Eleven Americans Were admitted to hospitals with cuts and\nbruises. Another 24 servicemen\nwere treated and released. \u2022\nFaye, only a tropical storm' with\n50-mile winds most of Wednesday\nhad been expected to pass well off\nthe Okinawa coast; But about midnight it, suddenly ballooned into a\nmajor 'typhoon, hooked sharply\nand raged up the 65-mile length\nof this U. S. base, 400 miles off the\nChina Coast.\nNew Disarmament Proposal\nFaubus Urges\nsBe\nSome Treattneni\nSays Bennett\nVICTORIA (CP) -\u25a0 Premier\nBennett said Thursday he will not,\ninterfere in any way with the decision of the B. C. Motor Vehicle\nBranch bn whether Highway Minister Gaglardi's licence should (je\nsuspended.\n\"Everybody should be treated\nthe same,\" said the Premier, commenting at his press conference\nOn the minister's speeding fine in\nKarnloops. Mr. Gaglardi was fined\n$10 for speeding on the new Kam-\nloops-Savonna road.\nRCMP officers said the minister\nwas travelling 85 to 100 miles an\nhour. In March this year, he was\nfined $25 in Vancouver on a speeding charge. .\nIb ' Karnloops, Magistrate Charles Anderson, said in an interview\nhe was not aware that it was the\nminister's second such .offence,\nwhen he imposed the fine.\nLIT\/TIE ROGK,( Ark. (AP)\u2014Governor Orval Faubus of\nArkansas Thursday night asked segregation-minded persons\nin Little Rock for a law-abiding calmness in the face of U.S.\ngovernment troop occupancy\nof Central High School.\nFaubus said in a radio speech:\n\"The federal authorities \u2014 including federal troops \u2014 are in\ncontrol. They are handling the situation and there is nothing we can\ndo about it.\n\"I know that when the American\npeople have had time-to think, and\nto learn more of the facts of this\nsituation they\u2014in their good judgment\u2014will rebuke, the national administration for the ill-advised and\nunwarranted use of federal troops.\"\nTENSION EASING\nNine' Negro students moved\nsmoothly through a second day of\nintegrated classes at Central High\nSchool Thursday. They were protected every step' of the way -by\nU.S. Army paratroopers but tension seemed to be easing.'       ,\nThere was no- bloodletting and\nno skirmishes .outsidejj-the school.\nStudents \/coming out oftclasses re\nported no disturbances Inside.\nThe governor's office said' many\nArkansas legislators have suggested an emergency session to legislate against state financial aid to\nintegrated schools. '> . .i\nNEWPORT, R.I. (APi\u2014 President Eisenhower told a committee\nof five southern governors Thursday he will confer with them Tuesday in, Washington but oh a\nbroader.scale of school integration\nproblems than they intended: \u25a0\nThe,' governor^ \u201ehadj,L psigd,;.. the\nmeeting 'solely to'seek the earliest\npossible withdrawal'of tho federal\ntroops sent to Little Rock, Ark.,\nunder Eisenhower's orders to quell\nschool integration disorders,\nEisenhower's reply made it plain\nMSA TO OPPOSE\nDOCTORS' FEE HIKE\nVANCOUVER (CP)-G. W. Wilson,'of Trail, director of Medical\nServices Association, a health insurance plan, said Thursday he\nwill oppose acceptance by MSA of\nthe Jiewly-approved 15 per cent fee\nincrease of B.C. doctors.\nHe said he will oppose a resolution urging MSA to reject the new-\nschedule at its board meeting Oct.\n8 and expects support from others\non the eight-man board.   .\n\"If we accepted this new scale\nit might mean curtains for MSA.\nWe'd be pricing MSA out of the\nreach of the average man,'' Mr.\nWilson said. ,\nhe does -not intend to .'limit discussion to that point1 but to expand\nit to other phases of the' problem,\nEisenhower's 'reply also made\nclear that Governor Orval Faubus\nof Arkansas will not attend.\n\u25a0The president specified that his\nmeeting be with the governors'\ncpmmittee--a_d -Faubus is not a\ncommittee member.\nGo-Slow Celgar\nPulp Mill Policy\nCASTLEGAR (CP; - Celgar Development Ltd. is following a go-\nslow policy on its $30,000,000 pulp\nmill near Castlegar, a company\nspokesman said Thursday.'\nThe spokesman said that only\ninitial phases of the project are\nbeing carried out at present.\n, A j reported softening. in pulp\nmarkets is reported causing concern among, top officials of Canadian Chemical and Cellulose,\nparent company of Celgar. ,\nT. Nv Beaupre, executive vice-\npresident. of Celgar, said: \"We're\nreasonably.' confident. that this\npoor market situation will not be\nof long duration,,but in the meantime, wi're not plunging ahead with\nfull-sc;a:ie'.\u2022construction at Castlegar \" - -;_,\nBONNER GOING\nAFTER EUROPE\nINVESTMENTS\nVICTORIA (CP) - Attorney-.\nGeneral Robert Bonner Wednesday named a three-man- group\nwhich will accompany him on his\ntrip to 'Europe to drum up more\nEuropean investment in B.C.\nHis companions will be Tom\nSturgess, .deputy minister of industrial development, trade and\ncommerce; Dr. Gordon Shrum, director of the -B.C.1 research council, and W. C. Mainwaring, vice-\npresident of theB.C. Electric Company.\n\"British Columbia must increase\nits pace of secondary industrial development,\" he said. \"This is a\nphase in which European management and capital should be widely\ninterested. We intend to arouse\nthat interest.\"\nCommittee To Study Municipal Finance,\nRecommend New Revenue Sharing Policy\nSetting up of a municipal finance policy committee\nto examine all aspects of municipal financing was approved\nby the -JJniOn of B.C. Municipalities at its Thursday sessions\nat the Civic Centre.\n. The committee will oIbo study financial relationships\nbetween municipal, and provincial governments \"with a\nview to \u2022recommending a policy which will ensure to municipalities a more eguitable share of the sum total of provincial-municipal\nchan who later in the day was\nelected president, said;\n\"At present, our ideas are pieces\nof a jigsaw puzzle and we have\nno idea1 of the final picture we want\nto produce out'of them. Our idea\nis tp do the best with your help to\nfit these pieces' into the final picture.\"'\nThe \"pieces\" of municipal aid\nwere education financing, social\nwelfare, hospitals, borrowing and\ngrants-in-aid.\n' Mayor C. W. Cates of North Vancouver, executive member, said\nregardless of what happened on\nthe floor, the resolutions would still\nbe funnelled through a UBCM committee and presented to the provincial cabinet.\nIn its preamble, the resolution\nsaid financing of municipal expansion was beyond the revenue of\nlocal government .when .such resources are based mainly on the\ntaxation of real property. Municipal aid actually furnished by the\nprovincial government and requests for financial assistance\nmade by municipalities through\nUBCM had been \"governed more\nby expediency than by a completed\nrevenue.\nThe resolution was introduced by\nthe Resolutions Committee and received a rough ride before it was\nfinally endorsed.' The committee\nhad been supported when it suggested withdrawal of two resolutions from Surrey t and Langley\nTownship urging a provincial-municipal conference on municipal financing and approval of a third\nfrom Richmond asking setup of a\nmunicipal-provincial committee to\nbring down recommendations with\nrespect to future financial relations\nbetween both levels of government.\nBut when the committee's resolution was put forward, delegates\nquestioned the sequence, suggested\nthere was duplication and said that\nthe'resolutions from the three municipalities should be considered\non their merits.\nVITAL ISSUE\nThe new resolution was tabled on\na, standing vote,, 118, to 103, and\nlater taken from the table and,\nendorsed.\n\"This,, municipal aid is one of\ntheSnost vital\" issues today,\" C. A.\nP. Murispn, reeve of North Cowi-\nand well integrated policy based\nupon clearly defined principles.\"\nA resolution from the floor by\na Kitimat delegate moving that\nall other resolutions dealing with\nthe subject by referred to the\ncommittee to work out \"individually and collectively and correlate all other problems of finance\" won approval.\nSurrey's resolution requesting the\nprovincial  government,   to  enact\nlegislation to set up.a crown corporation with adequate borrowing\npowers, or alternatively enable the\nmunicipalities to set up their own\ncorporation with authority to issue\nand sell securities on the open\nmarket to raise funds to purchase\nmunicipal securities' was endorsed,\nit would \"enable the -municipalities\nto act cooperatively in obtaining\nthe best rate possible for financing\ncapital requirements.  ,\nSEEK LOAN FUND .\nThe meeting also passed Richmond's resolution asking the provincial government to take immediate steps to establish a fund to\nbe used for making loans directly\nto .municipalities at a .low rate\nof interest to finance construction\nof essential public works in the\nm u n i c i p a 1 i t i e s; and Prince\nGeorge's requesting immediate\nprovincial legislation to prompt the\nguaranteeing of municipal debentures for water, sewer, local Improvement and hospital purposes.\nThe word \"hospital\" had been added by the resolutions committee.\nNorth Vancouver's resolution\nasking that the provincial government guarantee municipal\ndebentures for hospital construction was carried. It noted present\nmarket conditions made it \"impossible\" to sell municipal deben-\n' toes except at a very high discount. It asked the same guarantee for hospital bonds as the government now gives to debentures\nfor school construction. Federal\nand provincial health schemes\nwould not work satisfactorily unless adequate hospitals are built,\nit pointed out.\nOther resolutions endorsed were:\nFrom Vancouver, asking the government to re-examine its policy\non crown property within municipal boundaries with a view to accepting \"its moral obligation\" to\nmeet the cost of providing municipal, services to that property by\nway of grant in lieu of taxes or by\nsome similar method.\nSquamish, that fhe government\nbe asked to repeal portions of the\nPacific Great (Eastern Railway\nCompany ' Tax I Exemption Act\nwhich deals with exemption from\ntaxation in municipal areas.\nRichmond, that the government\nexempt municipal governments\nfrom payment pf the provincial\ngasoline tax.\n'Langley City, that'the government be asked to amend tho Social\nService Tax Act to make exempt\nfrom taxation all gravel purchased\nby municipalities for road work.\nSeeks Support of Sf and\nOn Halting Nuclear Jests\nBy LLOYD McDONALD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITEDWATIONS, N.Y.(CP)-\nThe United, States was reported\nconducting a private - campaign\namong Western delegations\nThursday with ,a view to presenting a new disarmament resolution\nto the',United Nations ^General Assembly. '\"\u2022,.'-\".\u25a0\nI Tied in;with this campaign, llj\nwas understood, - was a move for\nsupport of the American position\nagainst ending nuclear tests without waiting for agreement on other\ndisarmement matters. \u2022 \u25a0\nIndia', Russia and Japan already\nhave made proposals ending tests\nof atomic weapons subject to various conditions, but the U.S. is\nunderstood to be holding firm to\ncontinuing the direct link between\nsuspension and the Western disarmament proposals laid down in\nLondon during the summer.\nSTUDYING DRAFT\n< Canadian delegation members\nmost concerned with disarmament\nwere reported studying the American draft resolution but apparently were reluctant to comment\nimmediately.\nOn the question of test suspension, Prime Minister Diefenbakdr\non Monday told the UN assembly\nthat Canada would stand with the\nbig Western powers; that'many\nelements were regarding, suspension as, a: \"panacea\", but, that it\nwould be considered.in the light\nof the .other proposals on, disarmament which Russia had rejected\nin the London talks.\nThe U.S. resolution, in its first\nform, was understood to contain\ntwo parts; 1. That the General Assembly endorse the joint Western\nproposals,\" and, 2. That the UN's\nfive-power subcommittee be, called\nupon to take up the direct negotiations broken off in London.\nThe idea of endorsing the joint\nWestern proposals appeared to be\na direct challenge by the U.S. to\nthe, strong neutarlist- voting group\nin the assembly to state its position\neither for'_ast or West on the dis-\narmamtht. question.\nDAG RE-ELECTED\nOne vote which went unanimously Thursday was on the reelection of Dag Hammarskjold to\nanother term: as UN secretary-\ngeneral. The 82-member assembly\nwent 80 to 0 for the Security Council's privately reached recommendation that the Swedish diplomat remain in office for another\nfive years. Israel.was absent because of the Jewish New Year's\nholiday, and one ballot apparently\nwas inadvertently invalidated.\nPaper Says Bennett Asks\nCivil Service Cut Staffs\nVANCOUVER (CP) -'The-Sun\nsays premier Bennett has told clvd)\nservice'departm'ent bosses to cut\nstaffs wherever, possible.,1,\n\u2022 Ina Budgetary memo\" to department-heads, the finance departi\nment, headed by Premier Bennett\nas finance minister, .told officiate\nto keep staffs fo a minimum ..\nand cut staff wherever possible,\"\nthe paper, says.,  ,   , , ;\n\"No written order saying how\nmuch to cut staffs has been delivered but. department heads .have\nbeen unofficially informed that\nthey should aim for five per cent\nif possible,\" the story says.: .\nIt was reported the departments\nhave until Oct. 15 to get their'staff\narrangements into line..\nARAB SUMMIT\nMEET SHAPING'\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nDAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - A\nnew Arab summit conference was\nreported in the making Thursday\nas King Saud of Arabia took up\nthe role of middle man in an effort\nto prevent\" a blow-up over leftist\nSyria.  '     '\nA sample of Saud's intervention\nas peacemaker was the arrival\nhere Thursday by Premier A1 i\nJawdat of Iraq, a member of the\nanti-Communist Baghdad pact.\nid-January\nVICTORIA' (CP)-Premier Bennett ; indicated Thursday, - the next\nsession of the provinciaMegislature\nWill probably start about mid-January.       ) '\nThe premier told a press conference Thursday the session would\nbegin \"sometime in January.\"\n\"Normally the session would\nstart in January or. February, and\nI hope it begins in January this\nyear.\"..\nLast year's session started early\nin February and lasted until the\nend of March. %\nHe still has given no consideration to the appointment of a new\nspeaker, he said.\nFewer Polio Cases.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Health\nauthorities report nine polio cases\nso far this year in Metropolitan\nVancouver, eight fewer than in the\nsame period last year.\nFour children and five adults\nhave been stricken this year. One\nof the children had received polio\nvaccine. \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 .\nPRESIDENT John McMahon of Inland Natural Gas\nCompany, is shown addressing Thursday's noon luncheon of the Ufiion of B.C. Municipalities. At left is Nelson\nAlderman W. S. Ramsay who chaired the function.\n\u2014Daily IVews photo.\n T~\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1957\nYOUR MOST WONDERFUL ENTERTAINMENT PATH\nSOle Century-Fox\nPAT\nBOONE\nTERRY MOORE\nJANETGAYNOR\nDEANJAGGER\nil\u00abl> PM <l-l \"L\u00b0\u2122 LMm\nBERiMARDlNE\nCOLOR by OC LUXE\nClNBMsvScOP-\n7:00-9:05\n#wt?\n\u2022 MMODS\nPUttlS\nUEITII\n[\"starlight\"!\nI! DRIVE-IN I\nI   TONIGHT and SATURDAY    1\n.    Time 8:00 and 9:30 p.m.      |\nI\nI\nn \"fORI      TUIWA |\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\nOne Showing 7:30 p.m.\n\"HOT ROD GIRL\"\nLorl Nelson, John Smith\nPlus \"Girls In Prison\"\nRichard Denning, Joan Taylor\nDRIVE-IN\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\nTime 8:00 and 9:30 p.m,\n\"STORM  FEAR\"\nAdult Entertainment\nCornel Wilde, Jean Wallace\n- PLUS -\n'FORT YUMA\"\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\nFirst Show 6:45\n\"TAZA, SON OF COCHISE\"\nRock Hudson, Barium. lUuili\n\u2014 Also \u2014\n\"Satelite In The Sky\"\nCASTLE  THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B;C.\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\n2  Shown  Nightly 6:45  p.m.\n\"FUNNY  FACE\"  (Vistavlsion)\nAudrey Hepburn, Fred Asfalre\nSHORT and  NEW8\nThe Weather\nWinnipeg \u25a0\u25a0\nHegina \t\nSaskatoon\nCalgary ....\nPenticton\nVictoria ...\nMin Max Pre\n. 24 53 \u2014\n.   33   ,84     -\n  41 76 -\n  45 70 -\n  62 61 Tr\nWhitehorse  49 60 \u2014\nBpokano  57 81\nPremiere Theatre\n'FRUITVALE, B.C.\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\n\"Kettles On MacDonald's\nFarm\"\nParker Fenley, Marjorie Main\nSuggest Taking\nCemetery Control\nPowers From PUC\nRequest from Vernon for immediate removal of the powers of\nthe Public Utilities Commission to\nregulate and control municipally\nowned and operated: cemeteries\nwas supported Thursday by the\nUnion of British Columbia Municipalities convention.\n.The resolution said PUC control\nover municipal cemeteries \"is\nviolation of municipal .autonomy\nand is inconsistent with the principles of local self government.\nIt further'said \"it is apparent from\nlegislation passed at the 1957 session of the provincial legislature\nthat municipalities have not been\nexempted from jurisdiction of the\nPublic Utilities Commission, despite assurances given.\"\nIn 1955, the PUC was given permission -\"to make regulations relative to the operation of cemeteries,\nincluding municipal cemeteries,\nbut assurance was given, according to the resolution, \"that such\nregulations were not Intended to\napply to municipally owned and\noperated cemeteries.\"\nA North Vancouver resolution expressing the same desire'was withdrawn in favor of the Vernon resolution.\nNfWlMODCRN\nWAMl>OLE\nfHOSPHOrPLEX\nMSM\nIWStlWf DAY\" WAY TO\nREST\nTIRED\nNERVES\nWCTtC PACI OkTTINO YOU\nDOWN I\nIN JO MSY TO MLAX\nJUST TAKE PHOSPHO-HIX\nMtlEVI THAT JUMPY, \"TIRED All\nTHI TIMI\" FEtLWO.    \" ,    '.\nENJOY LIFE\nWKWHO-ttfX 15 THE EVERYDAY\nWAY TO RELIEVE NERVOUS\nTENSION.\nWompole PHOSPHO-PLEX lj a\n^modern nerve food and tonic,\n'rich In B compound Vitamins,\nond other important restorative\nIngredients. Ask your Druggist\nfor PHOSPHO-PLEX In either\n\u2022asy-lo-lake tablets or convenient liquid form,\nA FULL THREE WEEK TREATMENT\n50 TABLETS     16 OUNCES\n2-50        _).50\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine at.\n\u00bb ' Phone 1S03\nAnglican Diocese\nExecutive Meets\n\"KELOWNA \/CP) - Routine business was discussed at an executive meeting of the Anglican diocese of the Kootenay. The meeting\nwas presided over by Rt. Rev. P.\nR. Beattie, Anglican Bishop of the\nDiocese.\nRt. Rev. R. H. Waterman of Halifax, chairman of the Anglican\nGeneral Synod budget committee,\nwas in attendance.\nE. C. Weddell, Kelowna delegate, said a great deal of time was\nspent discussing next year's budget. He intimated this would be\nincreased next year.\nThe executive meets alternatively at Nelson and Kelowna in the\nspring and fall of each year.\nDR. FERRIS DIES\nNSW YORK (AP) - Dr. Eugene\nB. Ferris Jr., 52, medical director\nof ths American Heart Association\ndied at his desk Thursday at.the\nnational headquarters of the association. Death apparently was due\nto a heart attack.\nTED'S  &  ED'S\nB.A\nAFTER HOUR\nSERVICE\nOpen Dally From\n& p.m. to 10 p.m.\n701  BAKER ST.\nOil \u2022 Wash :.\nGas\n\u2022 Ace.\nUBCM Endorses New\nSuperannuation Plan\nProvincial Government' Urged Adopt\nNew Scheme for Municipal Employees\nDelegates to the Union.of. B.C\nMunicipalities convention Thursday afternoon passed a motion\nurging the provincial government\nto adopt new UBCtVJ drafted superannuation scheme for municipal\nemployees.\nIn moving acceptance of the\nscheme, Mayor C, W. Cates of\nNorth Vancouver said the committee which drew up the scheme and\nIthe Department of Municipal Affairs, deserved credit. Reeve Nes-\nbitt of Surrey seconded the'motion;\n\u201eThe report covers work over\nabout three or four years, according to committee chairman Aid.\n6. C. Miller pf Vancouver.\nThis- was one of the most important matters to come, before, the\nUBCM for a long time, Aid. Miller\nsaid, adding that the scheme, if\nadopted By the provincial government, will give municipal employees, \"something to look forward to\"- when they retire.\nT.' R. B. Adams of New. Westminster, UBCM executive director,\nread the committee report. The\ngovernment would pay $100,000 per\nyear, reducing by $5000 per year\nto 1978, approximately equal to\nthe interest now paid by the government on certificates of loan.\nEmployers would pay a flat\namount, independent of payroll, to\nliquidate the net past service liabilities for present employees and\ndebts remaining, consisting of certificates of loan'and cash advances\nINCREASE EMPLOYERS SHARE\nThey would pay a current service\ncontribution as a percentage of\nsalary, and\" this percentage will\ndouble 15 years before retirement,\nLessening of payment ,by. employers during early years of service would result in savings when\nemployees leave the service before\nretirement age, particularly in the\ncase of female employees, whose\nservice is generally short. Average current service contribution\nwill be about 5.2 per cent of payroll, \u2022 compared with' the present\nfour per cent average. \u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0'  ;\nNo change has been made In\nemployee contributions, five per\ncent of earnings'plus voluntary\ncontributions. The committee' recommends consideration to Increased workers' contributions,\nparticularly during the last 15\nyears of service. .  ;\nOn retirement, employees would\nreceive one per cent of the 1957-\n58 salary multiplied by years of\nservice to April 1, 1958, together\nwith . the paid-up. annuity as at\nApril 1, 1958, plus one and three-\nquarters per cent of average salary after April 1, 1958, multiplied\nby service after that date. The\ncommittee thought $500 should be\nthe maximum for service prior to\nApril 1, 1958.\nMinimum pension is based on\n$2400 salary for 1957-58, and the\nreport said no employee could\nreceive less than at present. Dis-\nability compensation after 10\nyears' service would be .the same\nas for normal retirement, less any\nWorkman's Compensation Board\npension, In case of death.after 10\nyears' employment, the pension\nwould be the joint life and last\nsurvivor equivalent of disability\npension.\nInterest at three per cent will\nbe paid on refunded employee contributions. If an employee leaves\nmunicipal service after 20 years in\nCommunity Chest\nCanvassers to Meet\nCommunity Chest canvassers\nand team captains are to meet\ntonight at the Legion Hall for a\nbriefing session. \"Blitz\" canvass\nof Nelson's' residential section\nMonday will open the $20,000\nChest Drive.\nSPECIAL\nTHIS WEEK\nWe Will Allow You\n150\nOO\nTrade - In On\nYour Old Washing Machine\nOn The Purchase of a New\nQslwcsL NORGE\nAutomatic\nWasher and Dryfer\nColeman Electric\n327 Baker St.\nPhone 205.\nthe municipality's employ, he may\nleave his contributions in \"the fund\nand receive a pension at the normal retirement age, if he wishes.\nAll present employees, Including\nthose now under over-age agreements, would be covered. Maximum entry age has been raised\n10 years and older entrants may\nenter the new plan under special\ncouncil resolution. Retirement ages\nare unchanged, but employers mai\npostpone retirement of any employee.\nFEDERATED PLAN \"MUST\"\nThe new formula does not apply\nto retired employees, but an employer may provide for increased\npensions.- 1\nThe proposed scheme was outlined by' W.. H. Forrest, deputy\ncommissioner of municipal superannuation, from Victoria. A Toronto lawyer assisted with the drafting scheme.\n, Continuation of the present federated type of plan Is \"practically\na must\" according to Mr. Forrest. He thought payment of three\nper cent interest on refunded employee contributions \"better, than\nhaving money iri the ibank,\nHon. W. D. Black municipalities minister, hoped employers\nwould \"share our enthusiasm for\nit,\" saying the plan was comparable to any in Canada.\nMr! Forrest .told a Langley delegate contributions refunded to an\nemployee would be deductable on\nhis income tax,\nWhy should new municipalities\nbe saddled with the extra expense\nof the new -plan? asked a Coquit-\nlam, delegate, whose municipal\nhelp are covered by a private plan.\nMr. Forrest said this additional\ncost woulii' be calculated individually. Aid. Miller said the plan\nwouW cos'lV all municipal councils\nsome money, but most councils,\nhe thought, wanted to encourage\nwprkers to remain in municipal\nservice.\nE,ntry of municipalities into private plans has been illegal, Mr.\nBlack said, adding his department\nwill listen to valid complaints, such\n\u2022as those'raised by Ccquitlam and\nPrince George, who have private\nplans. He said the plan must be actually sound 20 years from now.\nWith Aid. Miller on the committee, were Mayor F. H. Jackson,\nof-| New ' Westminster and Reeva\nC. W. MacSorley of Burnaby. They\nwill function as a liaison committee with the provincial government. '\nSevere*\/ Former\nNelsonites at\nUBCM Contention\nIt was like old home week for\nsome- of the delegates to the 54th\nannual convention of the Union of\nB.C.- Municipalities at Nelson.\nSeveral were former Nelson\nboys, eager to see \"the old home\ntown\" again.\nThey are:\nGordon M. Berry, clerk, Duncan;\nH. Dennis Thain, clerk, Port Alberni; E. E. (Ted)- Chace, clerk,\nDistrict of Mission; Sidney R.\nBishop, commissioner, Squamish,\nwhose father, the late Thomas\nBishop, was parki caretaker for\nmany years; Mayor Frank Becker\nof Vernon, a frequent visitor here;\nVerdon Scott; councillor, Chapman\nCamp; Ted Youngberg, Richmond;\nJack Morris, alderman, Kaslo;\nGeorge Cady, commissioner, War-\nfield; S. C. Muirhead; commissioner, Kinnaird, former Procter\nboy who attended school in Nelson,\nand Joseph Logelin, commissioner,\n-Kinnaird, who was in business here\nfor a year just after the war.\nMr. Bishop left Nelson in 1917\nand is in business at Squamish,\nSalvation Army\nYouth Council to\nMeet in Nelson\nYoung people from four Interior\nB.C. Salvation Army corps will\ngather in Nelson this weekend for\na young people's council. The delegates including youth workers\ncorps officers and young people\nwill represent Rossland, Trail,\nCranbrook and Nelson.\nLeaders of the council to be held\nat the Salvation Army citadel in\nNelson will be Sr. Major L. Pind-\nred from S. A. Territorial headquarters at Toronto and Sr. Major\nH. Roberts from Vancouver.\n, The first item of the convention\nwill be a musical program presented by youth' delegates Saturday\nevening. Major Pindred is to give\nthe main address at each of the\nthree delegate meetings on Sunday,\nJohnson Rites\nHeld at Slocan\nFuneral services for Peter Johnson, 89, of New Denver, who died\nthere Monday, were conducted\nThursday by Rev. D. MacKellar in\nthe Slocan City Presbyterian\nChurch. Interment ,will be in Claresholm, Alberta.\nOrganist was Mrs. Ethel Parker,\nand the congregation sang \"Rock\nOf Ages\" and \"Abide With Me.\"\nTribute, Paid to 35 Years\nIn Municipal Government\nDelegates to the 54th annual.-con-\nvention of the Union of B.C. Municipalities Thursday evening paid\ntribute to a man who has worked\nin municipal government ranks for\n35 years. '\nNew Westminster's Norman E.\nLidster was presented with a\nUBCM Life Membership, before a\nbanquet gathering of close to 700\npeople.,     ,'.;\\\u25a0'\u2022.\u25a0;\nIt was a tribute to one'who has\nserved his city in the capacity of\nsolicitor, of alderman and as a\nmember of the library board, for\n35 consecutive years. The membership, first to be .awarded anyone other than a past president of\nUBCM,- was presented by Mayor\nF. H. Jackson of New Westminster.\nThe banquet'atmosphere was a\nlighthearted one as delegates, their\nwives and guests enjoyed dinner,\na program free of ''speeches\" and\nconvention .business, and musical\nfare.\nMerits of his home city of Karnloops were described by feature\nspeaker Mayor J.- E. Fitzwater,\nretiring president of.UBCM.\n\"In Karnloops we have the interior's first escalator . . . the\nHon. Phil Gaglardi (B.C. highways\nminister) . . . and beautiful women,\" he told his delighted audience.\nAfter two days of hearing speakers laud the wonders of Nelson\nand the' Kootenays \"I began to\nwonder if there was any place else\nin B.C. But these things we do\nhave in Karnloops.\"\nMayor Fitzwater congratulated\nNelson and the Association of Kootenay Municipalities on a fine job\ndone in sponsoring the 54th convention. ' ..\nHe carried a soft spot in his\nheart for Nelson, for it Was here\n15 years ago'that he attended his\nfirst municipal convention, it was,\nhere in 1950 he was first elected to\nthe executive, \"and tonight I'm\nhere as retiring president.\"'-\n\"... WATCH OUR DUST\"\nReeve Lloyd Williams of Tadanac, president of AKM and\nchairman of the banquet, warned\nthe gathering to' \"look out .\nwatch our dust\", as he forecast\na big step ahead for the Kootenays.\n\"When we get that long needed\nroad from Salmo to Creston, the\neffect will be startling.\n. .. \"Just watch our dust.\"\nThe Kootenays, land of unlimited\npower sources and natural resources, had too long been a backwater and too long isolated.\n\"Our citizens have a flourishing\ncivic pride, our coun'rty, with its\nsummer homes and winter sport,\nis an attraction for tourists, and\nour land is crying -out for further\ndevelopment of food growing industries.\"\nHe mentioned the mining industries, the water power, the sprawl-,\ning Cominco plants, the wondrous\nSullivan mine at Riondel and the\ngold that brought settlers to the\nKootenays one hundred years ago.\nGrace was said by Rev. H. R.\nWhitmore, and guests at the two\nhead tables were introduced by\nReeve Williams. Songs' of Norman\nGibson, and the lively music of\nthe Cominco Calypso Quartet, Ted\nNorth, John Chesser, Dick Ross\nand Ian MacDonald, all of Rion-,\ndel, provided the musical fare.\nOrganist Merlin Bunt played\nduring the dinner.\nCominco was host at a reception\nheld prior to the banquet, and the\ndinner, held in the Civic Recreation Hall, was catered to by the\nwomen's auxiliaries of Nelson\nUnited Churches.\nBridge Toll Won't Be Known Till\nOpening Possibly in November\nOpening of the West Arm bridge at Nelson is now\nbeing tentatively planned for between November 7 and 10,\narid not until then will the toll\nbe made known.\nThis information was conveyed\nto Nelson Chamber of Commerce\nThursday by president M. B. Ryalls\nas the result of a conversation with\nHon. W. D. Black, Nelson-Creston\nMLA.    '\nThe big question mark in the\nmotoring public's mind \u2014 the toll\ncharge\u2014will be answered on opening day, Mr, Black indicated.\nThe president's remarks to the\nluncheon meeting were addressed\nGov't Formula\nOn Education\nCosts \"Failure\"\nThe Union of B.C. Municipalities adopted Thursday a report\nof its Educational Finance Committee that the provincial government's education finance formula has \"failed to produce the\nresults claimed for it.\"\nThe special committee report expressed \"deep concern.\" It was\npresented by Reeve C. A. P.\nMurison of North Cowichan, who\n- was elected president later in the\nday. ,\nThis failure was \"demonstrated\nbeyond doubt\" by the increased\ndemands on taxpayers made in the\n1957 school'budgets of most municipalities, the report notes.\nThe report charged the government formula was \"unrealistic regarding teachers' salaries, which\nmake up 60 to 70 per cent of ordinary expenditures,' and said it\ncalled for \"large hidden contributions from municipalities.\"\nWhen the formula was introduced, it called for the municipalities\nto pay the first 10 mills, the government the rest. But as assessments rose, the government's\nshare dropped annually.\nSALARIES UNCREASED\nIn addition, Victoria set an arbitrary figure for teachers salaries\nand refuse to pay its share on any\namount exceeding this scale, regardless of the fact most teachers\nnow get far more than they did4n\n1955.\" :\nTherefore, 'the report charged,\nthe formula \"works entirety to the\nadvantage of the government.\"\nEducation minister L. R. Peterson has promised to meet with the\nspecial committee and a similar\ncommittee of the B.C. School Trustees Association before his department drafts proposed changes to\nthe Public Schools Act, the report\nnoted.\nIts resolution asked that any new\nformula take.into account actual,\nand not hypothetical, teachers salaries.\nIt also noted that the formula\nwhen first introduced was' fairN\nsatisfactory, and would still be if\nthe relative position in cost sharing\nwere brought up to date annually.\nto a small gathering, attendance\nhaving been cut by Uie Union \"of\nB.C. Municipalities convention.\nJohn Learmonth, reporting on\nthe1 Rose Pass trek, said Kimberley\nwas apparently willing to join in\naction toward asking for a preliminary survey of the pass for regionally-proposed highway route.\nIf it was found to pose too many\nobstacles to good highway building, then the more southerly paK\nabove Gray Creek, also traversea\nby tlle trekkers, could be suggested\nfar a survey.\nC. W. Ramsden, the chamber's\ndelegate to the executive council\nmeeting of the Associated Boards\nof Trade and Chambers of Commerce of Southeastern B.C. in\nCranbrook September 7, said the\nmeeting had been the \"best yet\".\nDelegates had spoken frankly on\nissues.\n. A booth sponsored at the West\nkootenay Exhibition brought a net\nprofit of $91, Mrs. R. H. Bradley\nreported for her committee in\ncharge. Disposition of the money\nwill be discussed by the tourist\nand publicity committee.\nA letter from the New Westmin-\nSQMMERS AT\nBROADWATER?\nA report originated by a Victoria\nnewspaper Thursday that former\nlands and .forests minister R. E.\nSommers Was recuperating at a\nfishing resort at Broadwater on\nLower Arrow Lake sent two Coast\nnewsmen, here to cover the UBCM\nconvention, to the scene. But they\nfound no Mr. Sommers.   -\nGossip concerning Mr. Sommers'\nwhereabouts has increased greatly\nsince criticicm was voiced by political leaders in Trail .regarding his\nabsence and his failure to appear\nin court last Monday for examination for discovery in his slander\nsuit against David Sturdy of Vancouver.\nA Supreme Court judge in Vancouver Tuesday rejected a medical\ncertificate stating Mr. Sommers\ncould not appear because of a nervous disorder and issued an order\nfor his appearance on Oct. 7.,\nster Chamber of Commerce expressed its appreciation of \u2022 \"the\nextraordinary kindness\" to its touring members while- in Nelson, and\nstated \"the Chamber would be delighted io reciprocate the hospitality at any time.\"\n' Bud O'Sullivan of Vancouver,\npast vice-president of the Canadian\nJunior Chamber of Commerce, and\nNoel Watson of Nelson were luncheon guests.\n$. E. Malloff of\nBrilliant Dies\nA resident of Brilliant- for 44\nvears, Sam Eli Malloff. 74, diel\nThursday in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nMr. Malloff came to Brilliant i\"\n1913, and farmed there until 1942,\nwhen he retired. Ho. entered hospital several months, ago.\nBorn in 1882 at Tiflis, Russia,\nMr. Malloff came with his parents to Canada 16 years later.'They\nfarmed in 'this country. His wife,\nwhom he married in Saskatchewan; died in 1954. Surviving is one\nson, William Zoobkoff at BleweU.\nBRAMBLE\nTWIST\nThe \"out of this\\ world\"\nClothing for men.\u2014.\n' Long, wearing, resilient\ncrease resistant and durable\nOver fifty shades and\npatterns in the new Fall\nRange.\nSUITS IN STOCK\n$72.50\nSUITS TO MEASURE\n$75.00\nGodfrey's\n378 Baker St.\nDo The Job In Half The Time!\n'Compare These Features:\n\u2022 Dries   in   30   Minutes   '\n\u2022 Brush, Spray or Roll\n\u2022 Washable\n\u2022 Ready To Use\n\u2022 High Hldirfg\nLOWEST  PRICES  EVER\nGallon $6.50\nFRED CARMICHAEL\n407 Hall St.\nSIGN  and   PAINT  STORE\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 379\n.-*\u00ab\u25a0 l*,.~'~*-^:_--\u25a0'.\u2014\u2014!H\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT ...\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDRVMHBLLEk DttP SEAM\nQytJL\nPhone 889\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\nA Day To Remember...\nMONDAY\nSEPT. 30th\nN ELSON DISTRICT\nCOMMUNITY CHEST\nAnnual\nRESIDENTIAL\nCANVASS\nSupport This Canvass and You. Are Assisting 19\nCharity, Welfare and Youth Organizations.\nCampaign Objective Is\n$20,000\n,   \u25a0 \u25a0     \u25a0 \u25a0';   v '.'\n\"ONE APPEAL FOR ALL MEANS MORE FOR ALL\"\n.    BE READY - BE GENEROUS\nWHEN THE CANVASSER CALLS\n ,$145,000 'Phone Job\nAdvances at Creston\nCRESTON \u2014 Preparations for\nCreston's new automatic telephone\nsystem are now well under way,\nrpports V. C. Owen, B.C. Telephone\nCompany's district commercial and\ntraffic manager at Nelson.\nMr. Owen said that good pro\ngress is being made on the construction of the new telephone\nbuilding work has now started on\nan extensive .outside plant project\nwhich will eventually cover the\nentire exchange area.\nCosting  approximately $145,000,\nJudgment\nIn Fruit Case\nDueOcU\nCRANBROOK \u2014 About noon\nOctober 4 has been set by His\nHonor Judge H. W. Colgan for\nhis reserved judgment in the\nCounty Court hearing of John\nSherstibotoff of Lister on a charge\not violating the Canadian Produce\nMarketing Act.\nThe hour was set to permit counsel D. C. Fillmore of Kelowna for\nprosecution and C. I. Merritt, V.C.,\nof Vancouver for defence to attend\nthe session between commercial\nairline flights.\n; A further appeal to a higher\ncourt on this charge which concerned transport in mid-July of\nearly cherries and apples by a\ngrower for direct marketing in\nAlberta is expected from the\nCounty Court judgment.\nI could talk for houn\nabout the good service\nat GLOBE AGENCIES\n\"SEE THE VIPONDS\"\nAgencies\nLIMITED\nFor\nAll Travel Requirement!\nby Land, Sea, or Air,\nand\nGeneral Insurance\n1146 CEDAR AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nPhone 2345 Anytime\nthe project involves placing cable\nand open wire throughout the main\nportion of the town and the suburban areas of Canyon, Lister, Erick\nson and Wynndel.\nPrimarily aimed at providing all\nthe necessary facilities for the coming dial service next summer, the\nnew installation will permit a reduction in the number of subscribers on many multy-party lines, and\nalso provide for future growth in\nthe district.\nForeman Ralph Moffatt is super\nvising the construction crew carrying out this work, which is expected to last until the end of the\nyear. Some idea of the extensive\ncoverage being provided is shown\nby the. fact that cable additions\nBlone contain well over 1000 miles\nof wire.\nFloods Spread\nIn S. Texas\nSAN ANTONIO, Tex. (API-\nDrenching rains swept soggy\nSouth Texas again Wednesday\nand rising rivers and streams\nchased an estimated 300 from\ntheir homes in San Antonio.\nMore rains were forecast Thursday.\nDownpours of up to nine inches\nboosted the totals to as much as\n15 inches since Sunday in some\nspots.\nCivil defence workers and firemen rescued 120 persons, some\nstranded on roof tops, at the\nheight of the flood. Many were\nremoved by motorboats.\nSPEEDWAY\nSERVICE & GARAGE LTD.\nSales and Service\nMercury - Lincoln - Meteor\nCedar and Farwell Sts.        Trail\nPHONE 834\nFIBERGLAS\nREINFORCED PLASTICS\nFor Boats, etc.\nWrite for full information to:\nM. E. OBAL\n8ASH   &   DOOR   CO.   LTD.\nPhone 2066   Trail. B.C.   Box 122\nPARSLOWS\nGUNSMITH1NG\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave. Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.; \u25a0\u25a0\n' .'        ,^\u2014\u2014\nLOWEST PRICED SEWING\n-MACHINES,...\nIn the Kootenays\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1510 Bay Ave., Trail - Phone 2080\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationery  Toiletries, Books\nTrail, B.C.\n943 Spokane St.,      Phone 11\n\u25a0s_MM--\u00abn-_\u00ab\u00bb\nNewNORGE\nAutomatic .Dryer and Washer\nMODERN ELECTRIC\nPHONE  133\n1632 Bay Ave. Trail, B.C.\nR. E. WALTON\nTRAIL \u2014 The appointment of R.\nE. Walton to the position of assistant manager, purchasing division,\nwas announced by R. D. Perry,\nvice-president and general manager of the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company.\nMr. Walton was born in Cumberland, England. He attended the\nUniversity of Alberta, graduating\nin mining engineering in 1928. He\nhad joined Cominco during the previous year at Kimberley and his.\nearly service was in mine survey\nwork. Mr. Walton was later a pilot-\nengineer on pioneering exploration\nwork in the North. Between 1931\nand 1938 he held supervisory posts\nin the chemical fertilizer plants at\nTrail, and in 1938 was transferred\nto purchasing as technical buyer.\nHe became assistant purchasing\nagent in 1946.\nMr. Walton has been active in\ncommunity work at Trail. He is a\npast president of the Trail Chamber of Commerce and the Trail\nDistrict Welfare Society. He has\nbeen a school trustee in the Trail-\nRossland district for many years,\nserving currently as chairman of\nthe board.\nAWARD GOES TO\nFERNIE MAN IN\nCATTLE DEATHS\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Damages to a\ntotal of $820 and costs were awarded Thursday in county court by\nHis Honor Judge H.' W. Colgan to\nLeslie Kenneth Bryant of Fernie,\nrepresented by Michelangelo Provenzano, for the highway death\nnearly a year ago of six cattle.\nDamages were against Henry\nPeters of Edmonton, driver of a\ncar which plowed into the herd,\nand are on the basis of beef prices\nat that time. The defendent failed\nto appear and Ihe judgment was in\ndefault. '\u25a0\nBecause of Illness of defence\ncounsel R. E. Read, hearing of the\nsuit of F. J. Reilly for damages of\n$1000 against Dr. G. A. Gibson allegedly arising from an intersection car collision, was postponed\nfor later hearing. Mr. Provenzano\nis representing the plaintiff.\nCranbrook Old-Timer Says\nHe'll Be 100 Next Year Too\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook's\nPeter Webster Bull will.be observing his. centenary along\nwith British Columbia next year.\n\u2022 He has notified the Cranbrook\nCentennial Committee chairman\nW.' A.. Burton, and has given\nofficial; proof that he was the\nson of John and Ruth Bull and\nwas born January 18,  1858, at\nHigh Schools\nAt Trail May\nReopen Monday\nTRAIL (CP) - The West Kootenay' medical health officer, Dr. C.\nJ. G. Mackenzie said Thursday an\ninfluenza epidemic which forced\nTrail's two high schools to close\nMonday may soon be on the decline. '\nDr. Mackenzie said the two\nschools, whose-students population\ntotals 1323, may reopen next'Monday.\nHe said there was a slight increase Thursday in the number- of\nnew cases among students and\nadults but that he thought the decline would start by the weekend.\n15-YEAR-OLD\nWEEPS ON WAY\nTO PENITENTIARY\nNANAIMO (CP) - A tough 15-\nyear-old wept Wednesday when he\nwas led away from police court to\nbegin a two-year term in B.C. Penitentiary.\nThe boy, John Cyr, was sentenced by magistrate Lionel Beevor-\nPotts for burglary, theft and car\ntheft. The crimes were committed\nwhile the boy was an excapee from\nBrannan Lake school.\nCourt was told John started getting into trouble near his Montreal\nhome at age 12. He appeared 14\ntimes before Montreal juvenile\ncourts. His parents voluntarily\ncommitted him to an institution\nProbation officer Ed McGougan\nsaid the youth eventually left his\nhome \"because his parents were\ntoo demanding and too restricting.\"\nHe made his way across Canada\nand got into trouble at Creston\nwhich resulted in his being committed to Brannan Lake.\n. Magistrate Beevor-Potts said he\nhoped the penitentiary' would afford the boy training facilities for\n\"some sort of a trade and an education.\"\nEuphemia   Township,   in   what\nwas then Upper Canada.\nHe is a resident of a rest home\noperated by Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Shaw and is the-most active\nof an elderly quintet who share\na dormitor,, there.\nHe goes to town every day\nwith his cane which has\nshovel handle and prospecting is\nstill his main interest and preoccupation. He came to this\nprovince and district in 1897 and\nhas lived between Golden and\nCranbrook during the intervening 60 years, engaging mostly\nin prospecting and a smattering\nof bush work,\nHis only physical disability is\ndeafness. \u25a0'. \u25a0 .   .\nCelgar Pulp\nMill Well\nUnder Way\nVANCOUVER. (CP) - Work on\nthe $30,000,000 pulp mill being erected at.Castlegar by Celgar Development Ltd. is well under way, an\nofficial of the firm says.\nPresident M. W. MacKenzie of\nCanadian Chemical and Cellulose\nLtd., parent company of both Celgar and Columbia Cellulose Ltd.,\nsaid here Wednesday clearing of\nthe site is almost completed and\nconstruction is expected to start\nshortly.\nThe Castlegar mill, wi.h a 300-\nton daily capacity, was started\nthis Summer after two years of\nsurveys.\nEdgewood Stages\n\"One ol Better\nSmall Fairs\"\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 A general report\nof the fourth annual fair given at\na meeting of the Inonoaklin\nFarmers' Institute Agricultural\nFair held at the home of H. O.\nCooper, stated there had been 85\nexhibitors and a total of 510\nexhibits, compared with 81 ex\nhibitors and 465 entries last year.\nThe amount of $188.50 was paid\nout in prize money.\nOfficial government judges report forms turned in by various\njudges for the day were read and\nnote made of their suggestions. W.\nT. Baverstock, district horticulturist of Vernon, who judged the\ngarden produce\",' fruit and floriculture sections, made the following comments on his report:\n\"Fruit was very good quality\nand arrangement and general setup was very well carried out;\nvegetables,- very \u25a0 good; flowers,\nnumber of entries increased approximately 30 per cent over previous year, arrangements and\nquality very. good. This fair has\nmade considerable progress.every\nyear since it re-opened in 1954\nand very little fault could be\nfound with the setup and general\narrangement of the fair. On the\nwhole this fair appears to be well\nmanaged and is one of the better\nsmall fairs.\" Mr. Baverstock also\ncongratulated the members of the\ncommunity who strived to complete the building in time for the\nfair. Started on August 3, it was\nready by September 2 and was\ndone entirely by volunteer labor.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\/FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1957 \u2014 _\nREMOVE TEMPTATION\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Directors\nof the Pacific National Exhibition\nbanned the tossing of candies and\nother delicacies from parade\nfloats this year, bscause of hazard\nto children running amidst traffic.\nSouth Slocan School\nAddition Being Built\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Construction\nof a 73 by 53 foot activity room\nhas begun at. Mount Sentinel\nJunior-Senior High School, with\ncompletition expected by the new\nyear. Architects for the addition\nare P. D. Smith and partner of\nTrail,    and    the    contract    was\nWALLS and CEILINGS\nON k^\nGYPR0C\nALWAYS\nBUY\nQUALITY\nFIREPROOF\nWALLBOARD\n\"INSIST ON THE BEST\"\n4'x6' Sheets . \/ 1.80\n4'x9' Sheets . . 2.70\n4'x7' Sheets . .  2.10\n4'xlO' Sheets.. 3.00\n4'x8' Sheets . . 2.40\n16\"x8' Panels .   .83\n2'x8'x_\" Sheeting 1.28\nPHONE\n1180\nBURNS\nLumber Company\n602 Baker St.    Nelson, ..\nPHONE\n1180\nPHONE\n1181\nawarded to Castlegar Building\nSupplies.\nPlans include a storage basement 58 by 24 by eight feet high,\nas well as washroom facilities.\nStudents and teachers are looking forward to the use of the new\nfacilities, which will augment the\nfour-room school. At present,\nwinter sports and physical education are limited to classrooms\ncleared of desks.\nConstruction of the activity\nroom has been made possible,\nthrough new regulations laid_down\nby the Department of fiducftion,\nafter the defeat of two money bylaws in the Slocan School District.\nMake Payment on\nHeating Unit\nPayment of $5400 has been received from Famous Players The-\njtes towards the new Civic Centre\nheating unit, it was reported at a\nmeeting of the Civic Centre Commission. The theatre company's\nshare in the cost was set out in\nterms of a new lease on the\nCivic Theatre issued this year.\nFamous Players are withholding 10\nper cent of their share until the\nsystem is operating and has been\napproved by Heat and Power Engineering of Vancouver, designers.\nJ. B. Morgan, Civic Centre manager, said a temporary line has\nbeen installed from the propane\ngas tank to supply hot water to\nthe heater and boiler. Payment of\n$168 to Heat and Power Engineering for their trip inspection of the\nsystem was authorized.\nTentative winter schedule and\nopening program for the arena and\namusement hall was discussed and\napproved in general. Mr. Morgan\nsaid Tuesday details for the opening program were not complete\nyet.\nFollowing rental contracts were\napproved: Nelson Junior High\nSchool, recreation grounds October\n3 soccer tournament; Spokane Fly-\n1 ers hockey club, arena Oct. 10,\n; exhibition hockey game, Oct. 3 to\nj 12, senior hockey training camp;\nNelson Kootenaires orchestra, New\nYear's Eve dance, RCMP, recreation, hall, Nov. 1, cabaret and\ndance.\n\\\\\nNew Fall\nBaycrest\" Suits\nDress up for Fall in a new Baycrest Suit. Many new\nshades and patterns in the ^^ -_^: _, ^\npopular  2-button,   single-       j i.. '   f^   50\nbreasted style. Wool worsteds in sizes 36 to 44\t\n59\n\"Canada's Most Famous Coat\"\n\"ALPACAMA\"\nStep out ih one of these new Alpacama Coats. Wool\nand Cashmere combine to give you Warmth without weight. Smartly styled, sin-     '\u25a0\u25a0.|\ngle breasted models with notch     C\nlapel\", slash or patch pockets.\nSizes 36 to 44 '\n55\nShop Friday\n'g(M  Till 9:00 p.m.\nmtm\nCanada's\nYour fashion dollar is well invested in luxurious long\nwearing ALPACAMA COATS, the soft cloud-light\nblend of wool and mohair has been fashioned by\nKAPLAN into many flattering and sophisticated\nstyles. See them today and choose your new Fall\nCoat from an exciting range of colors. Sizes 10 to 20\n7 p.m. SPECIALS\nLIMITED QUANTITIES ONLY\nON SALE SHARP AT 7 P.M.\nPERSONAL SHOPPING ONLY.\nBoys' Blue Jeans\n14 Only\u2014Sanforized blue denim jeans. Sizes 8, <f|\n12, 14 and 16. Reg. 1.99.  ', _  $ '\nMen's Flannel Shirts\nIf Only\u2014Pre-shrunk checked flannelette sport QQ\n'Shirts. Size small only. Reg. 1.89.    ..ref\nChild's Cotton Pullovers\n23 Only\u2014Child's long sleeve Gorton pullovers in        <l\u00bb|\nassorted colors and styles. Sizes 3-6x. Reg. 1.89  \u00ab|> I\nMen's Cotton Drawers\n25 Only\u2014Ankle-length cotton drawers with elastic     ^Q\nwaist Size small only. Reg. 1.49  . ref\nFall Handbags\nFall' styles in plastics. Mostly large sizes in black patent,\nblack calf and navy finishes. \u2022!   fln\nRegular $5.  _>oOO\nReg. 2.98 Crepe Slips\nStyled by well-known manufacturer. Lace trim     |   QQ\nat bodice and hem. White. Sizes 32 to 38 ,.   I \u20223'3'\nReg. 1.19 pr. Imported Pillow Cases\nPicot hemstitched. \u2022% 1   IA\n42\" Jt 86\" _  Aprs.   I . I 7\nLamp Shades\n. Drum Type in Fibreglass or' Silk Finish.\n9 only\u2014Reg. 3.50        18 only\u2014Reg. 4.93\n6 only\u2014Reg. 6.9S        19 only\u2014Reg. 3.95\nVt OFF\nFibre Suit Cases \u2014 Vi Price\nReg.       SALE\n16\"xl0\"x5\" deep i 2.95      1.4T\n14\"x9\"x4Vz\" deep .. 1.50       .78\nIdeal for school or small spare oase for weekends.\n Nelson laily Nntta\nEstablished April 22.   11102\nInterior Brilish Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper   ,\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMP\/VNY\nLIMITED. 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER 01   l'HE AUDI'l  BUREAU Off CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Ot   l'HE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use toi republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to 1'he Associated Press or Reuters In this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nFriday, September 27, 1957\nCanada Can Do It\nSome self-designated experts on\nCanada's trade problems have used\n\"up quite a lot of printer's ink to Bhow\nthat Prime Minister Diefenbaker will\nhave great difficulty in switching 15\nper cent of Canada's purchases from\nthe United States to Great Britain,\npoints out the Toronto Globe and Mail.\nTheir prognostications are jolted by\nword that Mr. Peter Thorneycroft,\nBritain's Chancellor of the Exchequer,\nand Sir David Eccles, Chairman of\nthe Board of Trade, are planning to\nremain in-Canada, after the coming\nconference of Commonwealth-finance\nministers, for a series of private conferences with Canadian ministers In\nOttawa. The purpose is to \"dovetail\nplans by Britain and Canada\" toward\nthe Diefenbaker program into a common effort.\nIn the meantime, dispatches from\nLondon state that Canadian and British\ntrade officials, already working on the\nproblem in London, have succeeded\nin drawing up special shopping lists\nwhich would realize the 15 per cent\nobjective. Additional comments In\nBritish newspapers indicate that both\nIndustrial and government officials are\naccepting Canadian trade proposals\n\"with the utmost seriousness\".\nOur own Trade Minister, Mr. Gordon Churchill, went overseas on a\nquick tour to find additional wheat\nbuyers, while a British official in Canada says that country will buy more\nof our wheat if both protein content\nand prices are satisfactory. The International Monetary Fund and World\nBank annual meetings in Washington\nwill study currency stabilization with\na view to supporting more active and\nmore broadly spread multilateral\ntrade between dollar and non-dollar\nareas of the Free World. And, a delegation of senior officials from the\nBritish West Indies is in Ottawa seeking closer economic ties with Canada.\nThese are some of the present activities designed to Influence Canadian\ntrade into wider multilateral channels;\nwith special stress on sterling trade,\nbut without prejudice to any feature\nof our economic connections\u2014save our\nmounting trade deficit\u2014with, the United\nStates, the Toronto newspaper continues. It is possible that the U.S. will\ncontinue, as in the past, to restrict\nImports from Canada whenever it suits\nher purposes. But we have lived with\nthat problem through many decades.\nIt Is in fact one of the reasons adding\nurgency to the. Diefenbaker program,\nThere may be some pockets of\ninternal opposition to that program.\nGovernment policy and Canadian\npublic opinion will have to overcome\nthem, if we hope to remain high on\nthe list of the world's trading nations.\nIt is possible for Canadian producers\nto meet United Kingdom and other\nCommonwealth requirements in respect of Imports from us. It Is possible\nto expand our imports from those areas\nwithout prejudicing the normal growth\nof our trade with the United States,\nas our economic base continues to\nexpand.\nWe can learn to specialize In our\nimport program, as well as in our\noverseas exports. And we can learn\nto adjust our fiscal, monetary and\ntrade policies to fit more closely our\nobjective of a more secure place\namong trading nations. If we cannot,\nit must be concluded that the spirit\nof enterprise is waning in a land content to survive in the shadow of another's economic Influence.\n'Civilization' by Supermarkets\nIf future historians ever come to write\nthat America conquered the world, it almost\ncertainly will not be by the atom bomb but\nParking, Lot Bargain\nCongratulations are in order to Owen\nSound aldermen who thought it sound business to purchase another lot lor'off street\nparking. The price, $17,350, may seem high\nsome but they can be assured lhat similar\n\u2022lots would sell for mi}ch more in the business\nsections of comparable Ontario cities. Even\ngranted there Is sufficient parking space\nnow (which we do not for a moment believe)\nevidence is lhat the population is growing\nand the district is becoming more and more\nmotorized year by year, lf this matter had.\nbeen left any longer, the parking situation\nwould no doubt become worse and some future concil might find a $50,000 price tag\non similar properties.\nAs consolation [or taxpayers who mourn\nthe temporary loss of $17,350, it is pointed\nout that parking meter revenue will make\nthe project self-liquidating.\n\u2014Owen Sound Sun-Times.\nWatch Your Language\nSUPERNAL (su-PUR-nali: Adjective -\nEeing, or coming from, above,, from the sky\nor heaven; high in position or reach; towering, as supernal light; of heavenly or spiritual character; ethereal. Origin: Old French\nfrom Latin\u2014Supernus, from Super, above.\nby soft drinks, jazz orchestras, mail order\ncatalogues, and supermarkets.\nTo some persons the one propsect may\nseem not .very much less appalling than the\nother; but at least the Yugoslavs at the Zagreb International Trade Fair seem to have\nbeen more impressed by crisp vegetables\nflown from Philadelphia and cuts of meat\nwrapped in cellophane than by the sight of\nSoviet-built helicopters.\nTo devotees of.the picturesque probably\nno worse fate could befall a quaint European\nvillage than to have the shops of the baker,\nths butcher, the vegetable gardener, the fruit\nvepder, tlle florist, the dairy merchant, the\napothecary, tho stationer\u2014and the grocer-\nall merged Into one cubistic, glass-sided,\nenameled, shelved, and price-marked emporium in which masses of men In sport\nshirts. ladlSs In shorls, and children in jeans\nmill around pushing baskets on wheels, often\nwith a baby. In the basket-within-a-basket,\nwishing they could remember what was on\nths grocery list they left at home, debating\nwhether electric light bulbs will be at the\nend of Ihe aisle with the canned goods or the\nsiap powders, buying anchovies, pie cherries,\nchocolate-dip cnokies, fruit salad, and a\ncanned ham on Impulse Instead of by design,\ncmeiielng'up at. Ihe cash register, and emerging Into the parking lot wondering \"how we\ncame to get all this stuff.\"\nEuropeans may adapt the supermarket to\ntheir landscape, traditions, and esthetics\u2014but\nthey'll never thereafter be quite the same.\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nGov't SKould State\nCivil Defence Stand\nThe retirement of an able and conscientious public servant is always a matter for\nregret. But it has one advantage. His release\nenables him to speak his mind. Thus Major-\nGeneral F. F. Worthington, who has retired\nfrom the post of federal civil defence coordinator, flatly 'calls on the government\neither to back civil defence or to scrap it\nand cease wasting public money.\nGeneral Worthington has not been happy\nabout civil defence organization ever since\nl'iis appointment in October, 1948. In 1951 he\nsaid very much the same thing that he says\nnow, only without direct reference to the\ngovernment. At that time he called on all\nCanada to get solidly behind civil defence\nor abandon lt. Now, free of public office\nrestraints, he declares that the previous government was apathetic and states that If\nthe Diefenbaker government feels the same\nway about civil defence lt should \"tall the\npublic and quit wasting the people's money.\"\nThis is as it should be. Since 1948, the\npublic has been told practically nothing about\ncivil defence. Provincial governments and\nmunicipalities have repeatedly complained\nof lack of leadership from Ottawa, lack of\na policy, lack of adequate financial support\nfrom Ottawa. Civil defence has never been\ntaken seriously by the public for the simple\nreason that Ottawa itself never appeared to\nregard it as Important. It was placed under\nthe department of health and welfare, where\nit still remains, and the obscure position\ngiven it, coupled with governmental apathy,\nwas reflected in the lack of public Interest.\nGeneral Worthington, speaking with\nknowledge and experience, declares that civil\ndefence Is vital to national survival. Nuclear\nweapons, not withstanding the lack of sure\nmilitary protection against them, have not\nmade civil defence useless. On the contrary,\nthe possibility of widespread devastation necessitates organization for national survival.\nMoreover, apart from the emergency of war,\nthere are the emergencies that arise in peacetime\u2014flood, hurricane, fire\u2014when the services of an efficient civil defence organization\ncan be Invaluable.\nIf the Diefenbaker government believes\nIn the value of civil defence, its first step, as\nGeneral Worthington suggests, should be the\ndeclaration of a clearly defined positive national policy. The apathy that has heretofore prevailed must be replaced by leadership.\u2014Toronto Telegram.\nFew Little Red\nSckoolhouses Left\nJust as the Model T inevitably gave way\nto the flashy modern automobile, so the little\nred school house ultimately became obsolete.\nThe new school Is more sanitary, in a machine-like way lt Is more efficient, and\nIt probably saves money.\nBut some people contend that the Model\nT was the best car for its times that ever\nwas made. And so with schools.\nForty years ago, even 25 years ago,\nrural Alberta had a little red school house\n(lt was nearly alwayB white or cream) every\nfour miles each way. Now they are almost\nall gone.\u2014Calgary Albertan.\nPiercing, Aurora\nWhere the Aurora Borealis is part of the\ncelestial lighting effects, and less than a phenomenon, Its properties often are in dispute.\nThere aro old-timers who insist they have\nheard it \"whoosh,\" and others who as quickly\nbrand this as imaginative nonsense. A\n\"whooshing\" Aurora, indeed!\n- Yet it Is a fact that despite familiarity\nof so many people with \"northern lights\"\nover so many centuries, relatively little is\nknown about them and their causes. Perhaps this curtain is about to be penetrated.\nA bolloon-borne rocket recently sent up by\nthe University of Iowa, off the Labrador\ncoast, penetrated the lights and made recordings from the Inside. What can be done about\nthem when their secrets are exposed is another and perhaps still more frustrating matter. As ot now they merely indicate one of\nnaure's show-off moods,\u2014Windsor Star.\nNot Always Smiling,\nThere Is no denying it, that the prime\nminister is a handsome person, but it is not\ndoing him justice to picture him always as\na Hollywood type. Sooner or later the public\nis likely lo discover Mr, Diefenbaker stating\nbluntly that certain distasteful things are\ngoing to be done and the smile Is not going\nto make the edicts any more palatable for\nthose who hold high ho.pes.\nEveryone who knows the new prime\nminister knows that he can bite off \"no's\"\nwithout the sign of a smile and with eyes\nflashing very differently than for press cameras.\u2014Moose Jaw Times-Herald.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n7$ I_KMOW WS WERE CXIT^^^FL^TTERER- H-H-HEH-\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nI DON'T MIND WrtSH HE'S\nWITH YOU \u2022\u2022\u2022 I'M NOT\n\/W6R\/-\u00bb-U. PUT HIM\nT0 8EDNOIV-COME,\n\u201eDE4RIE\"\nCHEOD4R IS\nTHE SMOOTHER\nOF TROUBLED\nW\/lTERS WHEN\nIT COMES TO\nC4LMINO A\nSW-OUT\nPAL'S F!?4U-\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBlcrir.cd nrft they that hunger and\nthirst after righteousness, for they\nshall be filled. Matt. 5:6.\nThey that hunger for wealth and\nfame sometimes reach their goal,\nbut it does not satisfy. They are\nnot blessed.\nfiiml disL\nBut when\nrr comes to\nHis own smug\nH4RBOR-..\nTH4rs A SEAHORSE OF A\nDIFFERENT'\nHUE.--\nOmi MO A rltno '\nM4T TIP TO\n4MM STEPT.\nHOLLYWOOD\n_4Ur>.\n__.\nAble Seaman\nSentenced\nHALIFAX (CP)-Able Seaman\nFred Hind, 19, of Windsor, Ont.,\nThursday was 'sentenced to two\nyears in jail for manslaughter\nIn connection with the death of\na shipmate aboard the frigate\n\u25a0Lauzon.\nA supreme court petit jury convicted Hind Tuesday, about six\nweeks after AB Ross McCallum\not Toronto and Midland, Ont.,\ndied from a stab wound aboard\n;the frigate which Was tied up\n:here.\n' Hind was originally charged\nwith murder, but the charge was\nreduced at the end of the preliminary hearing. '\nMcCallum's death followed a\nscuffle aboard the ship. Witnesses\nsaid Hind and McCallum wer.e\nalways on \"friendly terms.\"\nBask in 1600 boyi weren't allowed to loaf at livery (tables\nThey might have heard tha kind\nof stories now heard at cocktail\nparties.\nUP-TO-DATE\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP) -\n\"They can have the good old days;\nwe like modern living,\" say a\nyoung-at-heart couple, Mr. and\nMrs. M. B. Shantz. They have just\ncelebrated their golden wedding,\nand like cooking pies from their\nhome freezer in an electric frying pan,\nClassified Ads\" Bring Rcturnat\nB.C. Reverts Sunday\nTo Standard Time\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nClocks and watches advanced\none hour to daylight time last\nspring will be returned to standard time this weekend In British\nColumbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Newfoundland and in some\ncentres In New Brunswick \u25a0 and\nNova Scotia,\nMost of the. rest of Canada\nwhich switched clocks ahead\nApril 28 will keep them there-until Oct. 27 this year, giving an\nextra month of what to many\nhas' come to be known as an extra hour of daylight. For many\nthe additional month is an innovation this. year.\nOf the 10 provinces, Alberta\nand Prince Edward Island, stick\nto standard time all year round,\nThe western province has remained on a standard time for\nmany years. The P.E.I, legislature ruled only last year to leave\nits clocks alone in the summertime, beginning this year,   .\nA Canadian Press survey shows\nthat some provinces will take a\nwhole month to complete the\nchange. In New Brunswick, for\nexample, Frederlcton and Woodstock change their time pieces\nback this. weekend  while  Saint\nJohn, St. George and Sussex keep\ndaylight time until Oct. 27.\nSYSTEMATIC CHANGE\nBritish Columbia and Newfoundland handle the clock-\nchanging business systematically, changing all time pieces\nboth in towns and in the countryside. They revert this Sunday\nto .standard time.\nIn Saskatchewan and Manitoba\nmany towns and, of course, the\nfarmers who like to live by the\nsun, remain on standard time all\nyear round, In Manitoba, only\nWinnipeg changed its clocks this\nspring and they revert, with the\ncity man's clocks in Saskatchewan, this Sunday. Livestock and\ngrain markets in both provinces\nwill change their clocks along\nwith the cities.\nMost of Ontario and Quebec\nwill retain daylight time until\nOct. 27 which happens also to coincide with the Bwitch in the\nUnited States from daylight to\nstandard time. ;\nMost communities making the\nswitchover decided that 2 a. m.\nwas the best hour to turn their\nclock back 60 minutes, Not so\nLondon, Ont., however. That city\nwill keep In step with most of On-\nThreaten To\nSue Police\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A mining\ncompany president and a soil engineer, picked up by police Tuesday in error for a bank robber\nwho escaped on a bicycle with\n$2400, said they will take action-for\ndamages.\nJesse W. Rogers, president of\nJesse Mining Company, picked\nup as he boarded an airliner for\nPrince George, B.C., and Joseph\nBoyes, B.C. Electric Company\nemployee, taken In custody as he\nsipped beer at a downtown hotel,\nsaid they will sue police for\nwrongful arrest.\nOfficers brought them in for\nquestioning after receiving tips\nthey might be the cream \u2022 suited\ngunman who earUer held up a\ndowntown branch of the Royal\nBank of Canada and was seen \"\ncycling from the scene.\nMayor Fred Hume said he was\n\"very sorry it happened\" and Attorney \u2022 General Robert Bonner\nsaid it was \"regrettable.\"\ntarlo by making the change Oct.\n27 but at 12:01 a.m. and not .!\na. m. Owen Sound also picked\nthe 12:01 hour for change on\nOct. 27. \t\n' J\nMc&Mc\nValue in Complete\n3-Room Ensemble\nHere Is What You Get:\n* 3 Pee. Bedroom\nSuite\n* 1 Slumber-Rite\nMattress\n\u25a0k 1 Slot Spring\n\u2022k 5 Pee. Kitchen\nSet\n1\n*k 2 Pee. Living\nRoom Suite\n3 Pee.\nBedroom Suite\nGenuine mahogany veneer suites In\nbeautiful finishes with plate gldBs\nmirrors. Sots include - chest of\ndrawers, dresser, ' double; radio\nheadboard and rails.\n5 Pee.\nKitchen Sets,\nBeautifully styled, sturdily built in\nchrome, chrome and copper; in\nblack and copper. Matching chairs\nand table tops In a choice of 3 colors.\n2 Pee.\nLiving Room\nSuite.\"\nHigh grade frelze, 100% top nylon\nand boucle in_a choice of 3 colors.\n*_2JBoudoir Lamps\n* 2 Pillows\n* 2 Cushions\n* 1  Lamp\nll 1 Coffee\nTable\nMattress and Slat Spring\nSlumber-Rite 252 coil unit in striped Belgium cotton cover;\nfancy taped edge, nylon tufted. Sizes 4'6\".\nFURNITURE DEPARTMENT\nDOWNSTAIRS\nCOMPLETE PRICE\n$49995\nONLY $49.99 DOWN\nPHONE\n1300\nNELSON\nB.C.\n rr\n'&<&\u2022\nTwo Members Take Office in\nFruitvale Legion Auxiliary\nthe\nnilllli   By Dorothy Mcintosh\nPHONE   1007-L OR. 1844   -\nMrs. A. J. Burnside of Penticton\nis visiting her sister-in-law, Mrs,\nH. M. Whimster, 407 Third Street.\n* *   *\nR. E. Horton and his daughter,\nMiss Carmen Horton, have taken\nup residence in the. former Thorn\nhome at Pine and Chatham Streets.\n* #  *\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Thorn left\nfor Vancouver Saturday. They\nplan to make their home at the\ncoast, where Mr. Thorn has been\ntransferred.\n* *  *\nMrs. R. Winckler of Vancouver\nis visiting a> the Glen H. Ellwyn\nhome, 402 Innes Street. Mrs.\nWinjkler is the mother of Mrs.\nEllwyn.\n* *   *\nVisiting Mr. and Mrs. Alfred\nCawley of the North Shore for two\nweeks are Mr. Cawley's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Cawley of\nNorth Vancouver.\n* *   #\nIota Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi\nmet at the home of Mrs. D. S,\nMaglio, 1206 Josephine Street\"\nTuesday evening. Miss Joy McEwen and Mrs. J. S. Todd were\nhostesses at the social hour, which\nfollowed the business and cultural\nmeeting.\n* *  *\nSeattle visitors who returned\nhome early in the week were Mr.\nand Mrs. A. H. Ronmark, Mr. and\nMrs. H. (Fritz) Farenholtz, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. C. VanSacker and Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Stern. While at the\nCoast the men participated in a;\ncurling bonspiel.\n\u2666\u25a0'.*\"\u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Chace of Mission, former Nelson residents, are\nFRUITVALE - Members of .the\nLadles' Auxiliary 'to Fruitvale\nbranch, Canadian Legion, elected\nMrs. F. M. Smith to fill a vacancy\non the executive at their recent\nmeeting. Mrs. Gordon Stoutenburg\nwas chosen as the second vice-\npresident. Later in the evening the\ntwo were installed into their respective offices by Hugh McCut-\nclieon, president of the branch. He\nwas assisted in this. by Mrs.\nCharles Lilydale as sergeant-at-\narms.\nReports were heard from various\nconveners. Mrs. Frank Kalusik,\nsewing, reported she still, had a\nquantity of material on hand to be\nmade up. Mrs. H. McCutcheon reported she had made several visits to the hospital and that flowers\nand cards had been sent.\nMrs. Smith, in-her report, stated\nthat she was unable to enter the\ndisplay in the fall fair as she\nhadn't; enough response from the\nmembers to make it worth while.\nPlans were conmpleted for the\ncatering on October 18 and preliminary plans made for another\ncatering job.\nAs the next meeting falls on\nThanksgiving Monday it was decided to cancel that meeting.\nPlans for Remembrance Day\nwere left in abeyance until the\nbranch wishes are known.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTRH - Ted Carpenter\nwho was working here .during the\nsummer holidays has left for Vancouver where he is going to\nUniversity of B.C.\nMrs. J. Howe entertained tables\nof canasta, for 'Mrs. Plecash who\nis leaving' for JJranium City.\nWard Davidson and his mother,\nformer residents of Ainsworth have\nleft to live at Balfour.\n. Mrs. J. McCallum has' left to\nreside in' Nelson where she is\nemployed.\nvisiting here while Mr. Chace attends the UBCM meet.\n'   *  . ..\ne\nMiss Charlotte Birch is spending\nher holidays with relatives in Edmonton.\nThe Rt. Rev. R. H. Waterman, D.D.\nLORD BISHOP OF NOVA SCOTIA\nWill Visit:;..\u00ab. ,\nSt. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral\nFRIDAY, SEPT. 27th.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014EVENSONG.\n0:30 p.m.\u2014ADDRESS in PARISH HALL\nSocial Hour Following.\n.fei . ' \u25a0 i     \u25a0 I\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n:     ^        . \u2014by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, Sept. 27th \u2014 Right now, while\nsummer holiday memories are still fresh, is a\ngood time to start to plan for your next year's\nvacation. And one of the best ways I know to\ndo this is to open a \"Sunshine Account\" at the\nBANK OF MONTREAL! You'll be so glad of\nthis special B of M Savings Account when\nholiday-time comes 'round again. Without\nmoney worries you are assured a care-free vacation 1 So why not\ndecide now how much holiday money you're going to need? Then\ndeposit one-twelfth of this sum each month into your Sunshine\nAccount at \"My Bank\". Resolve now to begin the good work\nwithout delay 1\nREAD ALL ABOUT ITI  EXTRYI  EXTRYI Read all about the\nFabulous $20,000 Prize List \u2014 and the easy,\nrules - for the Second Great DOMESTIC\nBAKEFEST Contest as explained on the\ninside  .of   every   package   of   Domestic\nShortening! You may win a Cash Prize of\n$2,500 and 3 Fabulous Moffat Appliances\nJust for your favourite recipe, using'\n)omestic Shortening. The ten top winners are all awarded large\ncash prizes \u2014 plus thrilling Moffat Appliances \u2014 plus an all-\nexpenses-paid trip to Toronto for the Grand Bake-Off! Also 200\nvaluable Consolation Prizesl So get your Domestic Shortening today\nand read the easy ruless Determine now to win one of these\n210 Prizes!\n$20,000\nIN PRIZES\nPROMINENT PLACE in social functions during the Union of B. C. Municipalities\nconvention has been occupied by Mrs. W. D. Black, left, wife of the provincial minister of municipalities, whose home riding is Nelson-Creston. Pictured with Mrs. Black\nare Mrs. Percy B. Scurrah of Victoria and Mrs. F. H, Jackson of New Westminster.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER-Mr. ana Mrs.\nC, L. Wemp of Ferndale, Wash.,\nwere visiting Mrs. Wemp's three\nsisters, Mrs. M. O'Reilly, Miss L.\nC. Meinardus and Miss Erna Meinardus, and were accompanied back\nby'her. sisters, who will visit them,\nMiss Mary DeMeulenaere left for\nTrail where she is taking a beauty\ncourse.\nMr. and Mrs. John McLean had\nas their guests their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hansen of Victoria. -\nMrs. T. W. Clarke returned from\nVancouver where she accompanied\nher son Denis Clerke, who is taking law at University of B.C.\nMr .and Mrs. J. Chute of Blaine,\nWash., were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn McLean.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter G. Thring\nreturned from a .week's holiday in\nKarnloops with relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Taylor, on their\nhoneymoon from White Rock, B.C.,\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. John\nMcLean. ,\nMiss Norma Thomlinson has returned to Vancouver after a week's\nholiday with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. S. E. Thomlinson., '\nMiss Lucia Hoshino left for Vancouver where she will be a nurse-\nin-training at St. Paul's Hospital.\nLister Notes\nLISTER \u2014 Douglas Ricketts and\nJdhn Arstall of Calgary, recently\nvisited A. Marzke and T. Mahon.\nEdward Meyer of Golden was\nvisiting his brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meyer.\nThe brothers had not seen each\nother since 1948.\nMr. and Mrs. Bjarson of Burns\nLake were visiting . the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Millner.\nMr. and Mrs. P. J. Sherstobetoff have left to visit their son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. R.\nJ. Rines at Prince George,\nMr. and Mrs. W. I. Young and\nfriend of Spokane visited H. Demchuk and J. A. Hobde'n.\nIRENE'S\nMILLINERY AND DRESS\nSHOP\n\"HE'S THE CUTEST THINGI\" ... I find myself\nsaying that a dozen times a week as I watch the\nbustling, cocky, lovable antics of our beautiful budgie,\nSir Isaac. He's -got.a gymnasium of toys to play\nwith \u2014 and is busy every minute of the day. Happy\ntoo, and in perfect health, because he's thriving on\nBROCK'S .BUDGIE TREAT, one of Brock's 5 Basic\nBudgie Products. He's had nothing but Brock's \"Basic\nFive\" \u2014 and there never was a lovelier birdl I\nchallenge you!\nIT LQOKS SO GOODI Part of the satisfaction in enjoying the famed\nRED RIVER CEREAL, lies in the delicate\nblending of its three grains . . . cracked\nwheat, rye and flax. You- can see how good it\nlooks \u2014 none of that mushiness most of us '<?!??&\u00bb\ndislike in a hot cereal \u2014 but a delicately QS\u00bb^-\nflavored taste delight that we all enjoy. This n\nFall, make sure that your family gets the\nright energy and protective food they need to\ncarry them through their busy-busy days.\nBless them \u2014they need the best breakfast cereal you can give\nthem. That's Red River Cereal, seems to me. Cooks quickly of\ncourse. Costs only two cents a serving,,tool\nIT'S A LUCKY 7 FOR YOUI ... the day you discover and start\nusing the 7 delightfully fresh-flavored ROYAL\nINSTANT PUDDINGS. Lucky because they save\nyou so much time and effort in preparing tempting desserts. There's no cooking needed. Just\nadd to milk and mix for one minute. And for all\ntheir ease of preparation, Royal Instant Puddings\nwill thrill your family with their delicious, ricn-\ntasting flavor. And lucky too, because they'combine so beautifully with fresh fruits, raisins, dates,\nchopped nuts to make dozens of oxciting dessert\nideas. You always have pleasing desserts to serve\nyour family when you have ROYAL INSTANT PUDDINGS on hand.\nJust look for the sparkling new \"picture-packages\". Each flavor\nis beautifully pictured right on the package for easy selection.\nTry Royal Instant Puddings soon, won't you?\n569 Ward St.\nPHONE 50\nWOMEN'S\nHalf-Sized\nFall Suits\nand Dresses\nFresh, New Colors, Fabrics\nand Styles.\nIN SIZES\nRi\/2   to   26V-\nSee Our Lovely\nFALL FASHIONS\nat the\nKIWANIS\nFALL FASHION SHOW\nc'tqser st'i\nAt Ihe Catholic Hall\nExecutive\nIntroduced to\nEmerald PTA\nEMERALD MINE-Introduction\nof new officers acquainted members with the executive at the opening meeting of the season of the\nHarold Lakes School Parent-\nTeacher Association here.\nThey are president Mrs. L. Hill,\nfirst vice-president Mrs. E. Kipp,\nsecond vice-president Mrs. K.\nSteele, secretary' Mrs. B. Duthie,\nand treasurer Mrs. E. Smith. Conveners are Mrs. M. \u2022 McLeod, recreation; Mrs. A. M. 'McGowan,\npamphlets; Mrs. G. McLean, hospitality; Mrs. B. Rennie, program;\nMrs. P. Boyes, social, and Mrs. D.\nKnight, membership.\nPrincipal M. Phillips is to be allotted the required amount of\nmoney for repairing and replacing\nequipment on the school playground.\nTeachers Miss P. Owen and Miss\nAllen gave talks on the schedules\nof an average school day. and the\nMoyie Notes\nMOYIE - Mr. and Mrs. Tom\nClark have left for Calgary for a.\nfew months' vacation.\nMrs. H. Strand and ' daughter\nAlice spent a few days in Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Clark of\nSeattle, who have been guests of\nMrs. Clark's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. R. Saunders, left by car for\nCalgary accompanied by the Saunders, '\nBalfour WI Plans\nThanksgiving Event\nBALFOUR - A subject discussed with interest at the monthly\nmeeting of the Women's Institute\nwas a Thanksgiving dinner and\ndance to be held October 4, proceeds from which will be shared\nby the Women's Institute and the\nentertainment committee for the\nnew community hall.\nThe committee is now raising\nfunds for the roof. Since June they\nhave, realized $350.83 toward their\ngoal, and within a reasonable time\nhope to see it completed.\nknowledge to be gained in a term\nfor grades 1 to 4.\nMrs. H. Steane consented to be\nin charge of the sale of Christmas\ncards.\nProcter Woman's\nHandicrafts\nImpressive\nPROCTER \u2014 An array of handicrafts created by Mrs. Albert Ogden, talented representative from\nthe Procter and District Recreation\nCommission, was a highlight of the\nrecent Procter Fair.\nMrs.- Ogden attended the -provincial Recreation- Leadership School\nat Victoria this summer where she\ntook courses in recreation administration, iolk dancing, playground\noperation and programming, and\nclasses in community crafts. Simple but effective projects in the\nplayground course included raffia\ndolls, crepe paper puppets, belts\nmade of thin rectangles of, wood or\ncork laced together with plastic,\nand woodfibre flowers. Mrs. Ogden\nbrought back leaflets on the construction of animals from materials procurable in the home such as\nfood cartons, dixie cups and\nstraws. Although Procter as yet\nhas no \"playground the representa\ntive intends to use this knowledge\nin the Sunday school of which she\nis superintendent.\nCommunity crafts taugh't more\ncomplicated projects including basketry, flower corsages from colored foam rubber, chenille flowers,\nand animals from starfoam. This\nlast material was used to make a\ncute poodle dog and a bird in a\ncage of chenille. Dainty earrings\nfashioned of fine copper wire and\nbeads completed this display of\nhobbycraft..\nIn an advanced class in copper\ntooling, Mrs. Ogden (earned how\nto frame work she had already finished in Procter under the tuition\nof Mrs. N. C. MacLeod. She 1\nmade a lamp in copper tooling that\ndrew much admiration from viewers at the fair. '\nThe representative said she thoroughly enjoyed \"going to school''\nagain though studies were intensive and even evenings 'were planned out. A get-acquainted party\n'was held the second night-and the\ncourses ended with a bapquet. The\ndrama classes presented a program of plays and free tickets, for\nwrestling matches, the gymkhana\nand'various sporting events were\nmade available to _ the delegates.\nThe leadership sch'ool was again\nheld at the Oak Bay Junior- High\nand is the fourth, one of its kind tp\nbe held In B. C. Pamphlets, brochures and books are procurable\nfrom the programmes branch covering every phase of recreation,\nNews pf the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rate* on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nWhist Tonight, Sacred Heart Hill,\nHall Mines Road, at 8 p.m.\nBINGO-EAGLE HALL TONIGHT\nThe Cutest Souvenirs. Novelties at\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nFor Fuller Sales and Service\nCall Don Sergent - Phone 350\nFisherman's  Headquarters\nTII.LICUM INN-BALFOUB, B.C.\nNew ladies dresses and skirts\nA good fall selection in all sizes\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nA peak selection of Fall Millinery\nand Accessories.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nH. W. Herridge, MP, will be at\nthe Hume Hotel, Nelson, September 28 to October 1.\nKINETTE RUMMAGE SALE\nCapitol Theatre, Sat., Sept. 28, at\n9 a.m.\nGas or oil heating installed and\nserviced. Licenced, bonded gas fitter. Norm Bowcock, phone 385.\nTHE GREEN DOOR ,\nIce Cream bricks,  quarts,  half-\ngallons, all flavors.-\nSleepers, Dr. Denton Moodies and\nother brands.\nTOT.'N' TEEN SHOP\nEAGLE HALL FOR RENT FOR\nDANCES, PARTIES, ETC; PH. 288\n.OR 1088-L.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\n. Boy's Pants, Shirts, Sweaters\nA good selection to choose from,\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nWanted \u2014 Ground \/floor 'apartment, one bedroom, heated, central. Box 6182, Daily -News.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nSi permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 211. Phone ,1922.\nDAN\nATTREE DANCE STUDIO\nREGISTRATION DAY,   SAT,,\nSEPT, 28TH, LEGION HALL,\nHOURS 10 TO 12, 2 TO 4:30\nPlywood of all kinds.\nFull sheets or half sizes.\nT. H. WATERS & CO.'LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. \u2022 Nelson\nSquare Dance Club\nHolds First Practice\nFRUITVALE - The Valley\nTwirlers Square Dance Club have\nheld their first dance session 'of\nthe season. Mrs. Kate Shaw and\nJames Forbes were on hand to\nguide them.\nThe Valley Twirlers Club have\ninvited all who would like to come\nto their next dance session October 4. There is no limit on membership. I\nBOY SCOUT GROUP\nCommittees -representatives please\nattend briefing meeting ,for Community Chest tonight, 8 p.m.,.Legion Hall.     '\u2022'\nNew Chest of Drawers\n$16.00 and up.   ,\nWE PAY CASH\nFOR USED FURNITURE\nBTRCH'S FURNITURE - PH. 47\nCOMMUNITY CHEST CANVASSERS' MEETING FRIDAY, TONIGHT, CAN. LEGION HALL, 8\nP.M. ALL CANVASSERS PLEASE\nATTEND FOR BRIEFING.\nPARISH OF KOKANEE\nHARVEST FESTIVAL SERVICE\nSept. 29\nQueen's Bay   11:00 a.m.\nWillow Point '   3:00 p.m.\nBalfour     7:30 p.m.\nCARD OF THANKS   \u00bb\nWe wish to thank everyone for\ntheir acts of kindness during our\nrecent bereavement in the loss of\nour dear husband and father.\nMrs. Dorothy Avery and family,\nSalmo.\nClassified Ads Bring Returns!\n\"Down-to-Earth\" Comfort\nMOC. TOE, SIDE. GORE CASUALS\n\u2022 'Conce.aled Side Gore for easy\non-off action. '   ,\n\u2022 Smart for Casual or Business\n.wear.\n&    Smooth Black or Brown Calf\nMEN'S SIZES 6 -11\n$13,95 PR.\n411\nBaker  St.\nPhone\nHERE'S  THE   SECRET  OF\nNIAGARA'S   HEALTH-\nPROMOTING POWERS\nNiagara cyclo-massage is new,\ndifferent and exclusive,. . . unlike anything else known to\nman. -It is a product of Nia-\n\u25a0gara's extensive research program in laboratories, hospitals\nand colleges. ,\nTests conducted by one of the\nnation's leading physicists have\nproved that the action in no\nway resembles that of a vibrator.- Rather, it is a smooth\nand pleasant cycloid(r) action\nwhich is widely conducted\nthrough the body. This cyclo-\nmassage produces profound\nbeneficial physiologic- effects on\nthe body far beyond those attained by ordinary massage or\nthe common types of vibratory\nmechanisms.,\nObjective studies by competent\nresearch investigators indicate\nthat the_proper application of\nNiagara Cyclo-Massage will aid\nin:\n\u2022 Increasing blood circulation.,\n\u2022 Decreasing many types of\npain such as that commonly\nassociated with medically-\ndiagnosed chronic arthritis,\nbursitis, rheumatism, lumbago, and muscle spasm as\nin sprains and other injuries.\n\u2022 Relieving many types of high\n. or low back pains.\n+ Relaxing nervous tension,\nenhancing sleep, and decreasing fatigue.\nTHE THERMO-CYCLOPAD(r)\nHeat and massage have proved\ninvaluable in the relief of pam\ncommonly associated with arthritis, bursitis or rheumatism.\nSimilarly, heat and massage\nhave been used throughout the\ncenturies to induce relaxation.\nNow, the Thermo-Cyclopad offers both heat and massage in\nan easy-to-use form. The flat,\ncomfortable pad contains a\ncvclo-massage motor and a special heating element.\nThe combination of heat and\nmassage drives deep DEEP\ndown through tissue and bone\nto help relieve pain, incrr-\u00bbse\ncirculation, ease tension. The\nThermo - CyclOnad is offered\nalone or, as part of the Portable\nSet.\nTHE HAND UNIT A small massage unit lor localized use all\nover the body. Its action Is very\ndirect, verv effective, very Stimulating. This\" is th\u00b0 Niagara unit\n!.h?t is used by many athletic\ntrainers as a replacement for\nhand manipulation in giving\n\"ibdowns. ,\nNiagara Deep Massage products of Nelson at Andrew's,\n'..rD'Seter Street.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 19S7\nIT'S SMART TO SHOP WHERE VALUES ARE BEST!\nSpecial Things You Might Not Know\u2014\n\u2022 Our Brooks Lamps have ot least\ntwo feet more cord length than usual.\n\u2022 Beach Ranges have been manufactured for 63 years by an all-Canadian company.\n\u2022 Low Cost Furniture Is Not Cheap'\nIt's the'Hidden Construction That Counts.\n\u2022 We have Modern, Period, Contemporary and Colonial Styles,\n\u2022 Our Carpet Value at $9.95 per\nsquare yard is the best we have had in years.\n\u2022 .REMEMBER\u2014FOR FURNITURE\nIT's .....\nNow Agents for the Duraclean Service\nPhone    115\nLEADERS BADLY NEEDED,\nBROWNIE MOTHERS TOLD\nIn a spirit of effervescent\ngaiety, the 86. members of the\nFirst Nelson Brownie pack began\ntheir new season Wednesday with\na social evening which included\ntheir mothers.\n' Mothers and little sisters joined\nin the traditional Brownie games.\nSix girls who will soon be'going\ninto Girl Guides served tea and\ncookies to the guests.\nMiss Florence Moss, B\/own Owl\nTrophies Given\nAf Team Banquet\nFRUITVALE - Nineteen girls\nin the Fruitvale - Beaver Falls -\nMontrose Softball Club sat down,\nto a turkey dinner with their\ncoaches, Glen Cooper,' Mrs. William Callaghan, Mrs. Bert Poole\nand Mrs. John Channon, and several special guests. -'Flu prevented more from attending.\nSpecial guests inducted Mr. and\nMrs. John Newton, president of\nthe Recreation Commission, and\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Bryan. Owing\nto the latter couple the girls had\ntwo handsome trophies to compete for_-one for champion team\nin the league and one for the gest\nall-round player.\nThere were four teams In play\nthis year\u2014Montrose, Beaver Falls,\nFruitvale A's and Fruitvale. B'j.\nThe Fruitvale A's came out to the\nfroht when they defeated Montrose. Merle Gordon, as the captain, received the trophy for the\nteam from Glen Cooper who was\nmaster of ceremonies. Merle and\nEmmaline Johnson share jointly\nthe trophy for the best all-round\nplayer, each girl to hold it six\nmonths.\nThe girls then presented their\ncoaches with a gift.\nDancing wound up the evening.\nof the grbup, welcomed the\nmothers and explained the purpose of the Brownie organization.\nShe told of the shortage of\nleaders which has weakened the\nmovement in Nelson. There are\nnow two Girl Guide troops instead\nof three, she said, because no\nleaders are available for the\nFairview group, Of the four\nBrownie packs, only one has not\nbeen hit by the leader shortage.\nMrs. A. D. Kemp, mother of a\nnew Brownie, offered to: ;asslst.\nMiss Moss. Other assistants are\nMrs. J. R. Taylor and' Mrs. John\nShort.\nMiss Moss also spoke of the\nNelson Girl Guide Association\nwhich is made up of mothers of\nthe Brownies and Guides,: .She\nsaid it too is in groat nocd' of\nmembers.\nHow  Christian - Sclonco   Heali\n\"THE OPEN DOOR\nTO HEALING\"\nCKLN, 1240 ke, Friday, 6:20\nMr., Mrs. Thorn\nHonored At Party\nA surprise farewell party wa\u00ab\ngiven at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Garrett, 76 Victoria Street, for\nMr. and Mrs, P. Thom, who have\nleft to make their home In Vancouver where Mr. Thom has been\ntransferred by the Canadian Pacific, Railway.\nCo-sponsors of the party were\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Hendrickson, B.\nThom and L. Calblck. Mrs. Garrett, on behalf of the guests, pree-\nented the couple with a parting\ngift.\nR. ANDREW - CO.\nWhen you shop at Andrew's, yon\ndo io with Confidence, We specialize in fitting style and quality shoes for the whole' family.\nHave the children's shoes checked regularly. Alno linrd-to-flt feet.\nWe have Murray-Selby, Naturalizer er Enna Jettlck, In a large\nrange of sizes. If we haven't yoar\nsize, we can soon get it lor yon.\nWe have a full line of Savage\nShoe's for children and teenagers.\nRunning shoes for school wear.\nIn fact anything in the line ot\nfootwear, the place to shop ii\nR. ANDREW _ CO. \u25a0 Est. 1902\nSiMiqhL\n9      I\nJL\n%CUUWJU)\n.Is the fashion\nyou need in your\nnew\nFall\nCoat\nlor the\nlook ot ELEGANCE.\nPriced From\n$49.95 to $99.80\nCHAH5E ACCOUNTS <^\n\u25a0    INVITED\n\u2022AUNG\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SJEPT. 27, 1957\nQueen lo Grant\nAmnesty to\nAll Prisoners\nOTTAWA (CP) - A grant of\namnesty will be made when the\nQueen arrives in Canada Oct. 14,\nJustice Minister Davie Fulton announced Thursday.   v\nAll prisoners will be entitled to\nremission of a portion \u2014 about\none-twelfth\u2014of the period of their\nsentences.\nThirty days for each year of\nsentence will be remitted. If the\nsentence is less than a year, a\nproportional number of days will\nbe remitted. -For instance, ii the\nsentence is six months, 15 days\n\u2022will be remitted.\nCalculatioh of the portion of\ntime to be remitted will be made\nas of Oct. 14. Time remitted will\nbe In addition to any remission\nearned by a prisoner under the\nPenitentiary Act or Prisons and\nReformatories Act.\nHolyoake Gears\nUp Cabinet\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. (Reuters)\nPrime  Minister  Holyoake,   who\nsucceeded Sir Sidney \"Holland six\ndays ago, reshuffled his cabinet\nThursday in what he termed a\n\"gearing up\" of the government\nmachine for elections due Nov. 30,.\nIb the reshuffle, Holyoake re-\n..Bnquishes  the  agriculture  portfolio.tn. Sidney Smith, who also\nretains the internal affairs post.\n\u25a0The ^minister for external af-\n!#iibd defence, Thomas Macdonald, relinquishes the defence\nportfolio to Dean Eyre.\nThf minister for Maori affairs,\nErnest Corbett, has resigned, and\n. Holyoake takes  over  that  post,\n1 while' a  new  member  brought\ninto the cabinet is John Rae, who\ntake*  charges  of housing  and\nstate advances.\nU.S. Reports\nFlu Increase\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The public health service said \u25a0 Thursday\nnumber of Asian flu cases apparently is going up rapidly in the\nUnited States.\nA spokesman said there are increasing reports of outbreaks in\nschools and colleges. I\nThe service's weekly summary\nof reports from individual states\nwill be made public Friday and\nin the meantime there is no\nnumeralical estimate of how\n.many case? there have been. Last\nweek's estimated cumulative total was about 100,000.   ,\nKing Saud Opens\nTalks in Syria\nDAMASCUS, Syria (AP)-King\nSaud of Saudi Arabia arrived here\nWednesday, .for talks with Syrian\nleaders believed, aimed, at easing\ntension 'in the Middle East.\nThe monarch scheduled meetings today with President Jihukri\nKuwatly and other Syrian leadr\ners. '\nSyria has attached great importance to the three-day visit to\nthe king.      '.\u00bb\nSaud is on friendly terms with\nall members of the Arab bloc and\nalso has co-operated with U.S.\npolicy in the Middle East.\nIt was believed that position\ngave his visit the two-fold aim of\ntrying to patch up Arab quarrels\nand lessen the friction' between\nSyria.and.the West.\n... Tie. Syrians .were .hopeful that\nSaud's trip would inject new life'\ninto the Syrian-Saudi Arabian-\nEgyptian front. That grouping\nheld together firmly until the recent threat of Red infiltration in\nthe Arab world cooled Saud.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTh* Daily Newi doe* not hold itself responsible in tha event\not an error In the following lists.   '\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium ......_ .'.     .08\nAlgom Uranium   17.25\nAmal Larder .\nAtlin Ruff.\nAubelle \t\nAumacho .\nAunor .\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium .\nBibis Yukon\t\nBoymar\t\nBrilund\t\nBroulan\t\nBrunhurst _\nBuff Can\t\nCallinan \t\nCan Met\t\nBIG FAMILY\nWOODSTOCK, Ont. (CP) - Five\ngenerations were present when,\nMrs. Sarah Nunn celebrated her\n92nd birthday. She has 17 grandchildren, 35 great grandchildren\nand 15 great great grandchildren.\nRussians Build Drama\nRound U.S. Negro Girl\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The Russians\nbuilt a somewhat fictional radio\ndrama around a real-life Negro\nschoolgirl of Little Rock, Ark.,\nand broadcast it. Wednesday to\nschoolrooms in the \"Soviet Union.\nThis was the sort of exploitation President Eisenhower has\nsaid can be expected from enemies of the United States'.\nMoscow radio told Russian lis-'\nteners that lawless mobs have\ntaken over in Little Rock'.\n.Soviet school children were\ngiven a special program on the\nevents which, the radio said,\n\"have sent a shudder through all\nhonest people the world over.\"'\nThe program was a dramatized\naccount of racial violence terror-\n'izing a Negro school girl named\nElizabeth Eckford trying to get\ninto a desegrated school at Little\nRock.\n\"STOPPED IN FRIGHT\"\nA Russian actor took the lead\ning part in the drama. He said\nElizabeth got her first shock\nwhile walking to school.\n\"She stopped in fright, dropped\nher satchel with her books and\nfelt her hair stand on end,\" the\nradio said. \"A corpse hanging\nfrom a lamp post swung to and\nfro in the wind..\n\"On its chest was a board: with\nthe inscription: 'This will happen\nto all who dare to sit on a school-\nbench next to a white person.' .\n\"No, it's a dummy and not a\ncorpse . .. and the girl heaved a\nsigh of relief.\n'\"They might do the same to\nme', reflected Elizabeth. '\"No,\ncome what may, I'll carry\non ... '.'-\u2022'\nIn. another program for adult\nlisteners, Moscow said:\n\"It is hard to believe that all\nthis is taking place in the 20th\ncentury, in a country proclaiming\nits democratic liberties for all to\nhear.\"\n.15\n.32 ,-\n.07\n.14\n1.95\n.42\n.20\n.05V4\n.14 .\n.22\n.70\n.07\n.11\n.2214\n3.15\nCassiar      6.60\nCentral Patricia ,...\u201e     1.05\nChimo  ,  '    .73 .\nCons Denison   17.25 .\nCons' Discovery _,.,..    2.70\nCons Halliwell 43\nCons Howe       2.01\nConsM&S :. i  21.00\nCon Sanorm  \u2022  ;07 :'\u25a0\nCon Sub ....: -    .88 .\nConwest  ..; 3.35\nCopper Corp       ,22%\nCopper Man      .0TO\nEast Amphi 08 -\nEast Malartic !     1.65\nEast Sullivan      2.25\nFalconbridge   25.00\nFaraday  \u201e     1.93\nFrobisher  '.     1.70\nGeco      9.00\nGeo. Scientific Pros 40\nGiant Yel     4.30\nGlen Uranium' _ 17\nGoldcrest 0B\nGolden Manitou      .56 '\nGrahdines ....:      .08\nGunnar Gold  ..  16.62%\nNew Gas Expl\nOkalta\nHarminerais\nHasaga\t\nHollinger \t\nHudson Bay.\nInspiration.,\n,14\n'.16\n24.00\n51.50\n,40\nInt. Nickel _'.... 75.75\nIron Bay  2.31\nJoliet Que  .27\nJonsmith   .10\nR J Jowsey   .50\nKerr Addison \u25a0.  16.00\nLabrador    15.25\nLake Lingman _ 09\nLakeshore    5.15\nLexindin  \u201e 07\nLittle Long Lac  1.67\nLorado      1.02\nLouvic't  .10\nMacassa  2125.\nMadsen R. L  ... 1.60\nMalartic G. F   1.40\nManeast   f.   .12%\nMaritime Mining\nMcLeod ...\"\t\nMcMarmac .........\nMilliken\t\nMining Corp.'....:.\nMogul\t\nNew Delhi\n1.20\n.12\n2.80\n11.50\n.90\n.65\n.14\n.17\n.07\n.19\n1.45\n,07\nNew Fortune  _\t\nNew Harricana\t\nNew Jason \t\nNew Lund\t\nNipissing\t\nNisto _\t\nNoranda New  40.00\nNorgold : 10%\nNormetals   2.95\nNorpax ..., _ .:. .63\nNorth Rankin  ...... 1.01\nOpemiska      8.55 .\nPickle Crow  ;....'.  1.10\nPlacer \"Devel  9.00\nPreston E. D   7.05\nQuebec Copper  ..._..\u201e.. .48\nQuebec Lab   .08%\nQuebec Lithium  , 6.25\nQuebec Metallurgical  \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 1.27\nQuemont .'.  10.12%\nHOW MUCH MONEY\nDO YOU NEED?\nWould $400, $600, $1000 or more help you\nover a financial hurdle? Then call Niagara,\nwhere friendly loans are made. Many thousands of people from coast to coast are using\nNiagara Loan facilities to get extra cash when\nthey need it\u2014Loans are made .up to $1000.00\n\u2014sometimes more. And Niagara Loans can be\nlife insured as an added peace-of-mind feature.\nRemember you're always welcome at Niagara.\nJust a jew of Niagara's many loan plaits\n^r-\u2014J     YOU\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n^GW\\    GET\n_?_-_\u25a0\u25a0\n12\n15\n20\n24\nifL-Sjffll *400.00\nVvlSfM 600.00\nktr-SrV  794.45*\n\u25a0Jl^ \"71,000.00\n37.63\n55.75\n91.56\n30.94\n45.71\n74.82\n24.27\n35.69\n58.11\n30.69\n40.00*\n49.77\n*One of Niagara's many even-dollar payment plans.\nNIAGARA\n560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1636\nLOANS\nLargest All-Canadian  Loan  Company\nRadiore\t\n..-_..\u25a0    .68\nRayrock \t\n     1.30\nSan Antonio  _..\n 60\nSherritt. Gordon\t\n    .5.25\nSilver Miller\t\n.46\nStadacona \t\n_       .22\nSteep Rock \t\n    13.50\nSlocan Van Roi _\n,05%\nSullivan Con\t\n.     2.15\nTeck Hughes    1.74\nTemagami ,',  2.00\nThomp - Lund 71\nTombill  _ .60\nTrans Cont Res _ .18\nUpper Canada 75\nVentures ...-.  28.25\nVicour   08\nViolamac  .'.  1.35\nWaite Amulet .:   6.60\nWiltsey Goglin rr\u201e.... * .24%\nWright Hargreaves  1.59\nYale     ::.: ; 17%\nYellowknife Bear  1.10\nYukeno : ....:.. .05\nOILS       >\nAmerican Leduc   \u25a0 .21,\nBanff Oils  2.30\nBailey Selburn .'.... 11.87%\nCalgary and Edmonton .... 26.00\nCan Admiral   .40\nCdn Atlantic  6.05\nCanadian Devonian \u201e.i  5.45\nCentral Explorers  2.55\nDuvex  !._... .16\nHome A ...:  18.37%\nLiberal Pete ,  1.51\nMidcon  '.  '   .63\nNat. Pete  3.05\n\u201e  1.85\n..... 1.83\nPacific Pete  .I. :. 24.00\nPetrol  .\u201e  .60\nPonder ........... .60\nProv Gas  2.93\nRoyalite   16.50\nSpooner  :.. .28\nStanwell Oil...: \u2022..:. l.oo\nTriad , 5.40\nUnited Oils   3.30\nWes Pac  2\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   2\nAlgoma Steel  28%\nAluminium    341\nArgus 2nd pfd  40\nAtlas St.  ....-  18%\nB.A. Oil.: ;  40%\nBell Telephone   39%\nBrazilian  .  \u25a0 _ i%\nB.C. Electric 4%s _ 88%\nB.C. Forest ..:...:....;., _ 10%\nB.C. Power A  40\nCanadian Breweries  23%\nCanadian Canners  13%\nCanadian Celanese  16\nCan. Cement  25%\nCan Chem Co  5%\nCanadian Dredge  16%\nCan Oil  29%\nCanadian Pacific Rly  28%\nCan. Packers B  34%\nCockshutt  8\nCons Gas   '    29%\nDist. Seagram _...... 25%\nDom.- Foundries'  26%-\nDom. Magnesium  13%\nDom. Steel Ord  24%\nDom. Stores  44%\nDom. Tar & Chemical  ' 9%\nDom. Textiles   7%\nFamous Players ;.\u201e 16\nFord A  79%\nGatineau .'._... 27\nGatineau 5% pfd _\u25a0_ 103\nGoodyear  161\nGypsum Lime v. ._....\u201e 26\nHoward Smith  ;.  26%\nImperial Oil    42%\nImp. Tobacco   11%\nInt. Pete  43%\nLaura Secord \u201e  19\nLoblaw A  22\nLoblaw B   20%\nMassey Harris _.\u201e  6\nMcColl Frontenac ................ \\61\nMoore Corp  59%\nNat. Steel Car  22 '\nPage Hershey  (  112 ,\nArchbishop Says\nSunday Laws\nOut of Dale\nLONDON (Reuters)-The archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, has criticized the\nlaws which govern Sunday \u2022 in\n\u2022England.\nWriting to the Sunday Freedom\nAssociation, Dr. Fishei\" recommended that a-government committee be appointed to advise on\nrevising the laws.\n\"There is general agreement\nthat the present legislation is not\nonly completely out of date but. in\nmany respects ridiculous,\" he\nsaid.\nUnder present law, if a theatre\ngives performances on^Sunda'y, no\nmake-up or stage clothes can be\nused. In , no circumstances can\nany entertainment involving dancing or variety turns be held.\nA comedian can sing a straight\nsong\u2014but if he puts on a funny\nhat and sings for a laugh, prosecution can follow. Sports events\ninvolving paid admission are illegal.\nBut movies and taverns are allowed to open Sundays.\nPowell-River\nPower Corp .'.\t\nRuss. Industries \t\nShawinigan \t\nSteel of Canada\t\nTaylor Pearson :.\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nWestern Grocers A .\n34\n51%\n9%\n73%\n53%\n\u25a09%\n64%\n22\nSylvanite      1.52\nNIMBLE HANDS\nORILLIA, Ont. (CP) - Friends\nhere enjoy demonstrations of Mrs.\nGrace Dunning's special accomplishment. She writes easily with\neither hand-backwards.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge ......;.\u201e....._.....\nBralorne __,_.\nCanusa .._._\u201e\nCariboo Gold ., ___\u00bb\nFarwest Tungsten.:.\t\nGiant. Mascot \t\nGranduc  \t\nHighland Bell \u201e ___.\nNational Ex ..., i\t\nPioneer Gold  \t\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino  \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilback Premier ....:\t\nSilver Ridge  \t\nSilver Standard\t\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor \t\nTrojan  .....\nUtica\n.16\n4.85\n.03%\n.63\n.09\n.09%\n1.65\n1.26\n,27 '\n1.30\n.06\n.47\n.47\n.06\n.04\n.20\n.12\n.10\n.27\n.02\n.30\n.2*\n.47\nCalgary & Edmonton   25.50\nCharter      2.25\nHome     17.75\nNew Gas Ex      1.80\nOkalta Com      1.75\nPacific Pete   23.75\nRoyalite  _.   16.00\nRoyal Can _ 55\nSparmac _. 17\nUnited  ;     3.25\nVanalta    20\nVantor \u201e     1.40\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers      1.40\nAlberta Distillers Vt     1.30\nB C Forests   10.00\nB C Power   39.25\nB C Telephone   38.00\nInt Brew B .v   4.30\nInland Nat Gai     4.00\nLucky Lager.  .....   3.80\nMacM & Bloedel B   23.00\nPowell River    82.50\nWestminster.Paper    23.00\nWestern Exploration .\nOILS\nAltex   ,.\t\nA P Consolidated .\nUNLISTED\nAuwon \t\nTranscana Com ..\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can\nRciv Bank of Can\nBid\n.05\n24.25\n40.00\n42.00\n42.00\netsM\nAsk\n25.00\n41.50\n43.00\n45,00\n01.01)\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund...\nCommonw'lth Int.\nGrouped Income..\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage     4.50\nTrans Can \"C\" ..    5.15\n8.00\n6.64\n3.28\n9.21\n8.78\n7.30\n3.58\n9.95\n4.90\n5.65\"\nBritish Schools\nTeach by TV\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Lessons by\ntelevision became an official part\nof the curriculum for boys and\ngirls in 300 British schools this\nweek, and the kids agreed it was\njust great.\nTV sets were Installed in classrooms and Britain's two television networks\u2014one state-controlled\nand the other commercial\u2014began\ntransmitting daily series of 25-\nminute programs.\nThe plan is still experimental.\nSchool authorities and the networks say they want to find out\njust what television can do for\neducation.\nThe ,BBC started its series off\nwith a film about life in British\nColumbia, introduced by Canadian actor - comedian Bernard\nBraden. This was the first of a\nseries called Living in the Commonwealth.\nCBC NOT FOR SALE\n\u2014 DIEFENBAKER\nOTTAWA (CP) - Prime Min-\nister Diefenbaker said Thursday\nthe government - owned CBC is not\nfor sale.\nHe made the comment when\nquestioned by reporters after a\nmorning .cabinet meeting about a\nreport that a group of eastern\nradio-television interests was preparing an offer to buy the cor-,\nporation for a price of some $50,-\n000,000.\nMr. Diefenbaker said \"no offer\nhas been made, received or will\nbe considered.\"\nAsked whether this meant the\nCBC is not for sale, Mr. Diefenbaker said he could not make\nhimself clearer.\nLabor Paper\nCriticizes\nTV Sponsors\nLONDON. (AP). -' The Daily\nHerald Thursday takes a sa<i-eyerj\nview of the announcement that a\ncosmetic firm will sponsor a telecast of Queen Elizabeth and\nPrince Philip at the royal Commonwealth ball on their visit to\nthe United States.\nThe Herald's story goes like\nthis:\n\".Ambassadors, senators, congressmen bow deeply. America's\ntop socialites curtsey. The Queen\nturns to them and smiles.\n\"Cut: Darken your eyebrows\nand deepen your mystery. X's\neyebrow pencils make you an eyeful.\n\"The Duke of Edinburgh raises\na glass to return a' toast. He\nopens his mouth to speak.\nCut: Girls, get your man by\nfluttering . your \u25a0 eyelashes. He\nlingers longer when you use X's\nmascara.\nThat's the kind of thing that\nwill happen during the coast-to-\ncoast TV scaeening of the royal\ntour of America next month,\" the\nHerald declared. 'Every few\nminutes the Queen will be blotted out by advertisement jingles\npersuading women to buy X's\nmakeup.\"\nThe newspaper notes' there have\nbeen no complaints from Buckingham palace and quoted an unnamed court official as saying:\n\"In foreign countries people can\nBlames Pegged Price\nFor Idle Gold Mines\nBy FORBES ItHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\n' TIMMINS, Ont. (CP) - The\nprice of gold, $35 an ounce in\nAmerican funds, was described as\nunrealistic by Ontario. Mines Min-,\nister J. W. Spooner in an address\nWednesday night to the Commonwealth Mining and Metallurgical\nCongress.\nThe mortality rate.among gold\nmines has been high, Mr. Spooner\nsaid, and. those interested in the\nwelfare of the mining community\nfeel it was brought about to a\nlarge extent by the price to which\ngold has been pegged.\nThere now are 11 gold producers\nin this area. In 1941 there were 20,\nAnd in all Ontario there now are\n30 producers where in 1941 there\nwe're 72.\nARBITRARILY FIXED\nFew. other businesses in this\ncountry . or elsewhere, said Mr..\nSpooner, could ^arry on in 1957\nwith its higher operating costs if\nthe market price of its product\nremained arbitrarily fixed at the\n1934 level.\n\"Yet that is exactly what our\ngold mines are obliged tb do in\noperating under the provisions of\nthe International Monetary\nFund.\"\nMr. Spooner described the dis\ntrict as the centre of one of the\nworld's greatest gold mining\nareas, and added:\n\"Almost literally within a\nstone's throw of this room there\nare 13 gold mines which, togeth\ner, last year produced some $37,\n000,000 in new wealth.\n\"Among them are some individual giants,, including Hollingei\nwith an annual production of $9,-\n250,000; Mclntyre with $7,500,00C\narid Dome with nearly $6,000,000\n\"Altogether, since gold' ^wai\nfirst mined in the Porcupine district, these mines and other!\nwhich are no longer active have\nproduced $1,250,000,000.\"\ndo what they like in matters like\nthis.\"\n. An announcement in New York\nWednesday night said the May-\nbelline company will sponsor the\ntelecast at the ball in New York\nOct. 21. The firm, which sponsored television coverage of the\nwedding of Prince Rainier and\nGrace Kelly, has arranged with\nCBS-TV for a 45 minute program.\nAirborne Camera\nTo Record Sun\nNEW BRIGHTON, Minn. (AP)\nA giant plastic balloon bearing a-\nspecially built telescope;camera\nsoared into the sky over Minnesota Wednesday on a flight designed to reveal secrets of the\nsun.\nThe balloon was launched early\nWednesday from the University\nof Minnesota airport near New\nBrighton, about five miles north\nof Minneapolis and St. Paul.\nProect officials said it towed\nits 1,375 pound gondola load of intricate instruments to 81,000 feet\nin 90 minutes.\nThere, above 95 per cent of the\nhazy atmospheric cloak surrounding the earth, it is hoped\nthe camera will record pictures\nof the sun with a crystal clarity\nnever before obtained.\nSurvivors Tell of Rescue\nShip Framed by Rainbow\nBy RANALD B.  MACLURKIN\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Five survivors of the German windjammer Pamir said Thursday that just\nas they -felt doomed, an American freighter \"framed by a rainbow\" in the sunset rescued them.\nThe dramatic account of the\nfour-masted ship's last hours in\nan Atlantic hurricane and the\npraying survivors' 54-hour sea ordeal was received at U.S. naval\nheadquarters here. It came from\nthe American transport Geiger\ndue in Casabalanca, Morocco,\nSaturday with five survivors. A\nsixth is aboard the Coast Guard\ncutter Absecon.\nU. S. Navy ships .have called\noff their hunt for further survivors of the 52-year-old Pamir\nwhich sank in a hurricane 600\nmiles off the Azores Saturday en\nroute from Buenos Aires to Hamburg with a grain cargo.. There\nwere 86 men aboard including 52\nyoung sea cadets.\nSWAM TO BOATS\nGiving the first-full account of\nthe tragedy, the five survivors\ntold how the majestic sailing ship\nrolled over slowly and sank with\nmen still trapped in the twisted\nrigging. They said lifeboats were\ntorn away by 35-foot waves. Men\nspilled into the sea and swam to\nthe buoyant but almost swamped\nboats.  . \u25a0\u25a0       \t\nOn the first two nights, their\nreport said, several ships approached but failed to hear the\nsurvivors' screams for help.\nA 24-year-pld ship's- baker, oldest of the group in the lifeboat,\ntook charge. He said he \"openly\nprayed to God before the other\nmen to do the right thing.\"\nToward dusk Monday, a squall\nsprang up and the five survivors\"\nbelieved their number was up.\nOUT OF SQUALL\n\"Men turned around in boat to\nease numbed bodies suddenly discovered as if by magic the SS.\nSaxon almost oh them emerging\nfrom a squall framed by a rain-1\nbow from the last rays of the setting sun,\" the report said.\nThe Saxon picked up the men\nand before midnight they were\ntransferred to the Geiger where\nbetter medical facilities were\navailable.\nU. S. planes planned Thursday to\nsweep the search area until all\nthe surface ships have dispersed.\nWest German ships in. the\nsearch area were told, however,\nto continue an organized search\n\u2014espe6ially. for grey rubber\ndinghies.   .\nJUNIOR   AND   SENIOR\nHIGH SCHOOL\nSTUDENTS\nIN  BRITISH COLUMBIA\nYou can win one of these\nVALUABLE PRIZES\n$1750 worth of major awards plus\n600 additional prizes!\nENTER THE 1957\nPULP & PAPER INDUSTRY\nESSAY CONTEST\ni-AM\/I THIS COUPON TODAY FOR INFORMATION!-i\n\u25a0   Canadian Pulp & Paper Association (B.C. Division),       *'\n1402\u2014550 Burrard St., Vancouver 1, British Columbia. I\nPlease sour! full information about,the contest and prizes.   \u25a0\nNarne\nAddress.\nI\nContest-Closes Midnight, November 15th, 1957\n4\n\"flu* Canadian\nFast, streamlined daily\nservice between Montreal-\nVancouver and Toronto-\nVancouvcr.\nTheVOMIWH\nConvenient daily schedule\nbetween Montreal-Vancouver and Toronto-Vancouver.\nPlan tb see Canada this year via-the scenic Banff-Lake\nLouise route\u20142,881 miles of ever-changing scenery\u2014\naboard The Canadian or The Dominion, Wide choice of\naccommodations \u2014 tourist or first class \u2014 coach seats\nreserved at no extra fare. There's the Mural Lounge for\nrefreshments... the Skyline Coffee Shop for budget meals\n... the DeLuxe Dining Room Cars for famous Canadian\nPacific cuisine. You'll enjoy, too, new riding comfort.; s\nthe ultimate in modern spring suspension to make daytime sightseeing, night-time sleeping a pleasure;\nInformoffon and reservalfoftf from any Canadian Pacific ottice on\nBakar - Ward Sis., Ncslson\nToll Nolson 203\n Borrow $400,000 From U.S. Firm *. . . ^\nAconic Bankruotcv\nPetition Withdrawn\nTORONTO (CP) - A loan of\n$400,000 for Aconic Mining Corporation has been arranged and\na petition of bankruptcy against\nthe corporation in Montreal has\nbeen withdrawn, Guy Falla of\nLondon, England,, president of\nAconic, announced Thursday.\nThe announcement, released\nhere, said the company has borrowed $400,000 from Thomas H.\nJones of Cleveland, Ohio, and Albert A. List. Of New York, on a\nfive-per-cent promissory note due\nOct. 1, 1962. It said the investors\nFlow of Capital\nTo Canada Up\nOTTAWA (CP) - The flow of\nforeign capital to Canada, resulting from trade in outstanding\nStocks and bonds, increased\nsharply in July after lagging in\nJune.\nNet imports of this form of\ncapital climbed to $29,600,000\nfrom the June low of $1,300,000\nand from $27,400,000 in July last\nyear, the bureau of statistics reported Thursday.\nThe main source was Britain.\nThe net flow from Britain totalled\n$10,300,000 in July, compared with\n$7,100,000 from the United States\nand $12,200,000 from all other countries.\nThis trend of an increasing\nflow from Britain showed up also\nin the January-July seven-month\nperiod when Canada had net imports of $116,800000.\nIn that period Canada showed\na net export of $14,700,000 in capital to the United States This contrasted with net imports of $82,-\n600,000 from Britain and net imports of $48,800,000 from other\ncountries.\nLONDO_N (CP) - Horace Smith,\nthe man who taught the Queen\nand Princess Margaret to ride\nhorses, has died in a London hospital at age 79.\nhave a right to use the money\nfor the purchase' of 1,178.995\nshares of Aconic', until Oct. 1,\n1962.\nMr. Jones has been elected a\ndirector, board chairman and\ntreasurer. Gen. Royal B. Lord of\nNew York also has been elected\nto the board.\nThe announcement said Mr.\nJones and Mr. List intend that\nthe working capital they have\nprovided will finance further studies to determine the economic\nfeasibility of putting the Aconic\nproperties in production. Aconic\nwas organized in 1952 to mine\nirnn ore sands in the Natash-\nquan, Que., area.\nMr. Jones is chairman of\nScurry - Rainbow Oil Ltd., and\npr\u00bbsident. of Ungava developments Ltd., the second largest\nshareholder in International Iron\nOre Co. and Atlantic Iron Ore\nCo., both controlled by Cyrus\nEaton of Cleveland.   '\nMr. List is chairman of the\nboard of RKQ Theatres Inc. and\nList Industries Corporation.\nU.S. To Supply\nArms \u2014 Bourqutba\nTUNIS, Tunisia (Reuters) -\nPresident Habib Bourguiba said\nThursday the United States has\nconfirmed it will supply arms to\nTunisia.\nHe said the United States gov:\nernment had told him this in\na\\ communication delivered two\ndays ago.\n\"What matters is that the\narms which I promised the Tunisian people will arrive in Tunisia\nduring October. Whether they\ncome from Italy or elsewhere,\nthey will be western arms.\n\"I hope France will not waste\ntime or efforts in trying to hinder the deliveries to the Tunisian\narmy.\"\nBourguiba said Egypt's, offer of\narms to 'Tunisia was symbolic\nand related to a small quantity\nof arms but had \"greatly helped\nthe solution of the problem.\"\nSays Cancer\nCosts Money\nKITCHENER (CP)-The president of the Canadian Cancer Society says cancer is the, most ex-\npehsive disease known.\nCarl B, French of Toronto told\nthe Ontario women's cancer service conference here Wednesday\nnight that the greatest part of the\ncost occurs after the patient is\ndischarged from hospital.      .    '\n\"It is our hope that the proposed federal hospital insurance\nplan will include home treatment,\" he said, \"we are going*\nto see what .we. can do about it.\"\nBureau of Satisfies' Half-Year\nFigures Show Farm Incomes Lower\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Cash income\nof Canadian farmers totalled.an\nestimated $1,207,000,000 in the\nfirst half of this year, only, slightly\nbelow the $1,213,000,000 receipts in\nJanuary-June, 1956, the bureau of\nstatistics reported Thursday.\nThe figures were based on\nsales of farm products and distributions by the Canadian wheat\nboard of payments for previous\nyears' grain crops.\nEstimated farm cash income\nwas down in the Maritime prov-\nOpponents of A.V. Roe Dosco\nDeal Form Protective Group\nMONTREAL (CP)-Opponents\nof A. V. Roe Canada Limited's\noffer to purchase control of the\nDominion Steel and Coal Corporation said Thursday legal counsel\n'will ascertain whe'ther Dosco\nshareholders who have already\naccepted,the offer may be able\nto get their' shares back through\nthe. courts or whether such transactions can be restrained temporarily.\nThe opponents have decided to\nform a shareholders protective\ncommittee and that committee\nwill seek a meeting with the\nDosco board of I directors, which\nhas given majority approval to\nthe Roe offer.\nOpponents headed by R. A. Jodrey of Hantsport, N.S., Dosco ,di\nrector who has led criticism of\nthe Roe offer, outlined their program after a meeting. -\nThe group said it is concerned\nbecause:\n1. Full acceptance by Dosco\nshareholders would \"completely\ndeplete\" Roe consolidated net\ncurrent assets as outlined in the\noffer.' \/-\u25a0\",;'\n2. Dosco has not shown in prospectus or interim earnings statement what the committee \u00bbbe-\nlieves would b\u00bb an after-tax net\nprofit gain of about 25 per cent\nup to the tfme of .offer.\n3. Newspaper rumors. of possible government contract cancellations affecting Roe aircraft\nproduction.\nOttawa Plans Unusual Meeting\nTo Tackle Education Crisis\nBy BILL BOSS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer ..\nOTTAWA (CP) - A mammoth\nconference to dramatize an impending Crisis in Canada's education program is to be held here\nFeb. 16-20.\n-\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0 More than 700 persons\u2014repre\nsenting ,19 sponsoring organizations embracing 2,000,000 members throughout the country, and\nincluding , 120 r delegates from\nother 'interested groups\u2014are to\nattend the Canadian Conference\non Education.\nThey will spend one day being\nWHAT TO DO...\n.:. WHERE TO GO\nLIBERTY MOTEL\nNorth 6801 Division St.\n(HU-7-4112)\n* ULTRA-MODERN\n2 to 6 Person Units\n* 15 MINUTES TO DOWNTOWN SHOPPING\n* Hi MILES TO NORTHTOWN\nSHOPPING\nAAA Approved\nTHE SKYLARK\nRESTAURANT\n4      arid\nfocktcuL  t&wupL\nPAN-FRIED   CHICKEN\nA SPECIALTY\nCHOICE STEAKS\nAcross From Ridpath Hotel\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nFine\n'itfsmm\nJhs. Jum&t in. J oath. & foddaitL.\nENJOY OUR ITALIAN CUISINE\nOFTEN IMITATED NEVER EQUALED\nRIPPLE ROOM\nFOR COCKTAILS ...\nN. 110 Howard - Spokane, Wash.\nYou'll Enjoy Dining in the\nSilver Grill\nWorld-Fa mous\nfor   Fine   Food\nStay at Spokane's\nFriendly Hotel . . .\n1ST No charge for children\n.1. ufi 11 under 14 on opr\not  WALL i family plan.\nRUTHERFORDS\nTRIPLE   XXX    DRIVE-IN\n2125 E. SPRAGUE 2819 N. DIVISION\n\u2022    Dine in Your Car\n%    Fine Food\n#    Open 7 a.m. to 2 a.m.\nWELCOME CANADIANS\nbriefed on the crisis, two days in\nworkshop study of it and a fourth\nin reporting their findings and\nrecommended solutions- to a plenary conference session. Business,\nlabor, education and social work\nwill be represented in the talks.\nPENFIELD HEADS TALKS\nThe conference, with Dr. Wilder Penfield, world famous Montreal neurologist, as chairman,\nwill revolve around preliminary\nreports by eight preparatory\ncommissions studying buildings\nand equipment, education for leisure, financing education, higher\neducation, the role of the home in\neducation, special needs, the\nquality and quantity of teachers,\nand organization and curricula.\nK., R. Swinton, Toronto businessman representing the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, is,\nchairman of the organizing committee. \"\n\"The crisis before us points out\nwith abysmal clarity that we are\nconfronted with a series of problems that we have to tackle\u2014and\nhave to solve,\" he told a press\nconference. \"The plain fact is\nthat as a nation we cannot afford to wait any longer to co-ordinate our attack on the unsolved\nproblems of education.\"\nHUGE EXPANSION\nFacts he laid before the press\nconference:\nOne-third' of Canada's present\npopulation is under 15 years of\nage, posing a need to expand facilities for a secondary school population likely to be tripled within\n20 years, and a university enrolment expected to be quadrupled.\nTeachers, too, must be provided.\nWithin 10'years Canada would\nneed 28,000 more schoolrooms\nand teachers for-them; Canada\nalready was short 9,000 qualified\nteachers.\nTwo-thirds of the pupils entering Grade VII now. drop out\nbefore completing secondary\nschool. More, than one-half of\nCanada's young people between\n15 and 19 are not attending school\nof any kind. Only one in every\nthree students with high intelligence ratings finishes high\nschool:\nMERrCANS  GO  FURTHER\nOnly seven or eight children in\nevery 100 enter university, and\nof them only five or six graduate.\nOn a per capita basis, three\nAmericans, enter college to,one\nCanadian.\nIn its study of \"higher education,\" said Mr. Croskery, the\nconference definition bf that field\nwould be \"post-high school education, not just university training.\"     .\nIt would take in the good ubb\nof leisure time, for adolescents\nas well as adults. Canada' was\nheading into an era of increased\nleisure, with a four-day work\nweek possible within the next 10\nyears.\n4. The \"apparent unwillingness\" of Dosco directors to call\na shareholders meeting to discuss\nUie offer.\n5. Dosco is apparently unwilling\nto increase the dividend although\nearnings seem to justify one.\nIn a statement, the committee\nadded it will seek legal advice on\nits technical makeup.\nWhether or not clarification\nwas forthcoming, legal prospects\nwould be ascertained of shareholders regaining Dosco shares\nalready submitted to Roe. Counsel would examine whether trans\nfer of such shares might be\nrestrained pending investigation\nand a meeting with Dosco directors.\nA. V. Roe offered Dosco shareholders $10.25 cash and VA Roe\nshares for each Dosco share.\nWith Roe now selling at $13, this\namounts to $26.50. A. V. Roe has\nsaid it already has effective control of Dosco.\ninces, Quebec and Saskatchewan.\nGains .in other provinces ranged\nfrom, about one per cent in Ontario to more than five per cent\nin Alberta;\nThe bureau said returns from\nfield crops were down slightly,\ndue to smaller marketings and\nlower grain prices, and income\nfrom the sale of livestock and\nlivestock products also was less\nmainly because of -lower returns\nfrom eggs and poultry.\nPROVINCIAL FIGURES\nThese are the estimated half-\nyear figures by provinces, with\nlast year's cash income for January-June in brackets:\nPrince Edward Island $11,945,-\n000 ($12,993,000); Nova Scotia\n$18,902,000 ($19,683,000); New\nBrunswick $23,242 000 ($24,024,-\n000); Quebec .$195,855,000 ($203,-\n230,000); Ontario- $352,967,000\n($350,183,000).; Manitoba $85,179,-\n090 ($83,843,000); Saskatchewan\n$259,309,000 ($271,962,000); Alberta $213,943,000 ($202,888,000)\nBritish Columbia $45,633,000 ($44,-\n059,000).\nHere are similar comparison\nfor estimated cash income from\nsome of the major sources:\nWheat $182,460,000 ($217,194,-\n000); Canadian wheat board payments $79,307,000 ($61,977,000);\noats $15,526,000 ($21,101,000); Barley $33,581,000 ($34,980,000); Flaxseed $22,561,000 ($8,903,000); tobacco $60,243,000 ($46,109,000);\ncattle and calves $183,105,000\n($184,702,000); hogs $153,144,000\n\u2022$144,622,000); poultry $65,034,000\n($67,977,000); dairy products\n^13.808,000 ($210.43\" 000); - eggs\n$62,572,000   ($72,110,000)..\n'Phons Company\nPlans $97 Million\nB.C. Expansion\nB.C! Telephone Company will\nspend 97 million dollars on expansion in B.C. by the end of 1959,\nvice-president and comptroller G.\nA. Kennedy from Vancouver told\nthe UBCM 54f,i annual convention\nin Nelson Wednesday.\nOf this total, 51 million will be\nspenl in the Interior of B.C., six\nmillion in the Fraser Valley, eight\nmillion on Vancouver Island, and\n32 million in the greater Vancouver\narea.\nGuest speaker at the Union of\nB.C. Municipalities noon luncheon,\nMr. Kennedy assured the crowd of\nover 650 delegates and guests that\nthe Trans-Canada micro-wave system would be completed next year.\nHe noted that the aer,ial tramway on Dog Mountain near Hope\nis one of'the longest spans in the\nworld.\nMr. Kennedy explained that the\nraising of municipal taxes on B.C.\nTelephone communications projects had not seriously .injured\ntheir profits.\n\"However,\" he emphasized, \"the\nincreased rate of taxation as the\noutcome of recent revisions of the\nMunicipal Act will cut down company profits and will also affect\npayrolls.\" .**\nThe luncheon was chaired by\nNelson Aid. C. F. Blakeman. Grace\nwas said by Rev. J. N. Allan of\nNelson. The B.C. Telephone Company was host.\nHonored guests were Mayor\nJoseph Kary and Mrs. Kary of\nNelson, Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Owen\nof Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. G.\nAngus, Mr. and Mrs. T. Brett of\nTrail arid Mrs. C. F. Blakeman.\nNET.SON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1957 _ 7\nSuspended Sentences\nFor Ottawa Teenagers\nOTTAWA (CP) - Four Ottawa\nteen-agers were given two-year\nsuspended sentences Thursday on\ncommon assault charges and ordered to be at home by 10 p.m.\nevery night during'that period.\nThe four were convicted Wednesday on the direction of Mr.\nJustice J. W. Spence in Ontario\nsupreme court where they were\ntried before a jury on charges of\nmanslaughter. The charges were\nbrought following the death of\nRene Jodoin, 17, in a street fight.\nOne juvenile was among those\nsentenced.   .  ,\nA second juvenile also was\ncharged with manslaughter and\nwas scheduled for trial in Juvenile court. \/\nThe parents of Rene Delorme,\n16; Vincent Tamarit, 17; James\nMcDermott, 16; and the convicted\njuvenile were . ordered to post\nbonds for\" the two-year period to\nensure the court's sentence is followed.\nThe jury returned its verdict in\nthree minutes after hearing testimony about the May 3 fight outside Our Lady of Perpetual Help\nRoman Catholic church where the\naccused and- Jodoin had attended\na dance.\nLONDON  TO  HEAR\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Radio\nlisteners in Britain will hear a live\nbroadcast of the Queen's opening\nof the Canadian Parliament in Ottawa Oct. 14, the BBC said Wednesday.\nBorrow where money service\nhas improved with age\nWhen you borrow money, you want service\nthsi's backed by years of experience. That's\nwhy most people turn to HFC, providing a\nmoney service backed by 13 yean' experience.\nAtH^Cyou receive promptattention, friendly\nbut businexslike efficiency, your money in one\nday, lind your, choice of repayment plans.\nPhone or visit HFC today.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nS. G. Barnard, Manager \u25a0   .\n608 Bakor Street, second floor, phone 1890\nNELSON, BX.\naneiAi'sfar\never sold\nB-A's exclusive new Velvet co, >|   \u25a0in I gives-yon all tho\npower potential possible from l oil ,    I ugh compression engines.\nIt effectively slops engine \"rumlili\"' uid knock caused by pre-ignition.\nEnjoy full power\u2014velvet-smoo | |      ig from your car.\nFill up today with new B-A V<>!> < '      . . the best gasoline ever sold.\nVelvet-smooth power-improved performance\nat the sign of the big\nG-6235C\nTHE BRITISH AMERICAN  OIL COMPANY. LIMITED\nHI\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1957\nYankee Infield Rated\nInferior to Milwaukee\nBy BEN OLAN\nNEW YORK (AP) - Joe Adcock, Red Schoendienst; Johnny\nLogan and Eddie Mathews represent the hardest-hitting infield in\nbaseball's major leagues.\nOnly first baseman Adcock,\namong these four, Is rated less\nthan a superior fielder. And he\nlikely will be replaced by Frank\nTorre, a defensive standout,\nwhen the occasion demands.\nFor, these reasons, the Milwaukee Braves' infield rates a\ndecided edge over the New York\nYankees in the world series which\nopens next Wednesday.\nSKOWRON IN DOUBT\nThe Yankees' infield picture is\nfar from clear. The big question\nis whether first baseman Bill\nSkowron, a .304 right-handed batter with good power, will be able\nto play. He has been sidelined\nsince Sept. 13 with a sacroiliac\ncondition.\nShould Skowron be unavailable,\nmanager Casey Stengel's infield\nfor the opener probably will\nshape up this way: First base-\nHarry Simpson; secorid -base-\nBobby Richardson or Gerry Coleman; shortstop\u2014Gil McDougald;\nthird  base\u2014Andy  Carey.  Carey\nMaurice Released\nBy Rough Riders\nOTTAWA (CP) - Ottawa Rough\nRiders Thursday released Maurice Bassett, 220 - pound fullback\npicked up from Cleveland Browns\na few weeks ago. Club officials\nsaid Bassett wasn't strong enough\ndefensively to play for the Ottawa\nclub. He had not seen action with\nthe Big Four team.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nlikely will be replaced by Jerry\nLumpe against Milwaukee .right-\nhanded pitchers.\nThe home run figures of the in-\nfielders are most revealing. The\nMilwaukee regulars have accounted for 69 \u2014 Mathews 32,\nSchoendienst 15, Adcock 12 and\nLogan 10. And Adcock's production is misleading since he was\nout for two months with a fractured leg.\nFor the Yanks, Skowron has 17\ncircuit blows, McDougald 13,\nColeman J. and Carey 6 for a total\nof 37. Simpson has 12, Lumpe\nand Richardson none.\nMcDOUGALD SUPERIOR\nOnly at shortstop, where McDougald gets the nod over Logan,\nfavorably with Milwaukee's. Mc-\ndo the Yankee infielders compare\nDougald is batting .290 to Logan's\n.277 and the New York star is a\nbit better defensively.\nAt the Other infield positions:\nSecond base: Schoendienst over\nRichardson or Coleman. He has\ndone an outstanding job since his\nacquisition from New York Giants\nin mid-June.. With a batting average of .311, he'probably will be\nthe only major leaguer to reach\nUie 200-hit mark this season.\nFirst base: Adcock over Skowron or Simpson. The Milwaukee\nslugger hits a longer ball than\neither of the Yanks. He's in better shape than Skowron and superior all-around to Simpson, who\ncame in from the outfield after\nSkowron's Injury. Torre, and\nYankee Joe Collins likely will see\naction, as-late - inning defensive\nreplacements.\nThird base: Mathews over\n\u2022Carey or Lumpe. Eddie, in addition to his hefty hitting, is an\nunderrated fielder. Lumpe, bat-\n\u2022ting .341 for ,37 games, is only\naverage defensively.\n\"My Life Insurance man\ndid a grand job for me, Ed\"\nAH talk over the back fence isn't about sport, or\npolitics, or television programs. Very often it's\nabout such vital things as looking after the\nfamily and having enough money to retire on.\nYour life insurance man is well equipped to solve\nthese problems. He is trained to analyse all the\nfacte about a family's future requirements. He\nserves Canadian families by offering practical\nplans to meet individual needs.\nLife Insurance representatives have exceptional\ntraining opportunities today. Their own companies provide them with basic courses covering\na wide variety of subjects.\nThrough the Life Underwriters Association of\n, Canada they have access to the experfenqe of\nmany able men who have helped to make\nCanadians the world's best-insured people.' This\nAssociation has a 2-year training program for\nits members. And, in addition, for those who\ndesire to pursue more advanced studies, there is\na 3-year university extension course leading' to\nthe Association's designation of Chartered Life\nUnderwriter (C.L.U.) ,,\nThis thorough training plus practical experience\nin helping people explains why millions of\nCanadians have welcomed the services of the\nmodern Life Underwriter.\nTHE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA\nSPOKANE GROUP\nSUGGESTS GRID\nINTERSECTIONAL\nSPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - Mem-I\nbers of the Athletic Round Table,\nfamous for sponsoring unusual\nevents, Wednesday came up with\nthe idea of bringing the entire student body of troubled central high\nschool in Little Rock, Ark., here\nIor an intersectional football game\nto relieve tension.\nThe plan, which will be formally\nsubmitted to the group's board of\ndirectors, would be to underwrite\nthe trip of the student body here\nfor a Thanksgiving Day game with\nGonzaga Prep, a local Catholic\nhigh school. Members said the aim\nwould be to broaden, understanding, biiild friendships and give Arkansas students a vacation from\nthe integration scene,\nCost of the project was roughly\nestimated at $100,000,\n\"It would give those kids from\nLittle Rock who have had nothing\nbut trouble since school started, a\nrespite from all the, uproar,\" said\na board member. ''And it would\ngive them a taste of Spokane's hospitality which might help to calm\ntheir nerves after what they've\nbeen through.\"\nFRICK UNDECIDED\nABOUT ALLOWING\nSfcRIES SUBS\nNEW YORK (AP) - Baseball\nCommissioner Ford Frick said on\nThursday it was unlikely that any\ndecision about substituting men on\nthe eligible player list for .the world\nseries would be made before Tuesday.- \u2022\n. Frick said he had not been informed officially that Milwaukee\nwould ask permission to use outfielder Ray Shearer in place of the\ninjured Billy Bruton.\nWhen the Braves said Wednesday they would make that request, manager Casey Stengel of\nNew York Yankees said he would\ncounter by asking that Sal Maglie, former Brooklyn pitcher, be\nmade eligible.\nMammoth Payoff\nFor Followers\nOf Vet Jockey\nSALEM, N. H. (AP) - Veteran\nChilean jockey Jorge Contreras\nreally got the pesos for his followers at ,the Rockingham Park on\nThursday as he rode both ends of\na $1905 daily double.\nThirty persons in a crowd of\n9000 held tickets on the second\nlargest daily double of the New\nEngland season which was produced .by Standee, $60.20 in the\nfirst, and Xalpa Streak $98.80 in\nthe second.\nIt is believed to be the first time\nin modern racing history that one\nrider has brought home a payoff\nof this size.\nBoth horses were quoted at 20-1\non the \"overnight'.' line\/A two-\ndollar parley would have netted\n$2971.88.\nGOOD SUBSTITUTE\nWORCESTER, England (CP) -\nPrivates in Worcestershire Regiment who saluted a general outside King's School found out later\nit was a schoolboy, Peter Jones,\ndressed for the school play.   -\nFourth Revision\nOf Shift Proposal\nSent to Dodgers\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - A proposed agreement covering transfer\nof the Brooklyn Dodgers to Bos Angeles has been revised a fourth\ntime and sent to the president oil\nthe National League Baseball club.\nDetails of the proposal were expected to be presented today to\nthe Los Angeles city council, which\nmust adopt the agreement in the\nform of an ordnance before the\ndeal can become final.\nApproval also must come, of\ncourse, from Dodger president\nWalter O'Malley in New York.\nHarold C. McClellan, the industrialist, who negotiated with the\nDodgers for the city and county of\nLos Angeles, Said Wednesday night\nthe Brooklyn team will be here\nnext year, barrirrg obstruction by\nthe city council. McClellan, now in\nth eeast, told a local newspaper by\ntelephone after, being appraised of\nthe revised offer:\n\"It's legal, logical, fair and practical. When it goes before the city\ncouncil it will be readily recognized as such by anyone with reason.\"\nREAL RADISH\nGRENFELL, Sask. (CP) - Mrs.\nPat Ferch took out of her.\ngarden near here a radish which\nweighed H4 pounds.\nSki Slants\nYou've all heard the good news\nthat our ski lift has been named\nNelson's Centennial Project. Now\nwe must get to work and see that\nthe project is carried through.\nLast Tuesday the parts we need\nto increase the length of our lift\nwere ordered,' but until we get\nsome information from the manufacturers, we cannot place and\nerect the towers.\nHowever, while we are waiting\nfor that information, there are'\nsome things we can do. As .a start\n\u2014this Sunday\u2014we are going to\nbegin the extensions of the ski\ncabin.\nWe cannot go all out and build\na lodge, sq for this year an extension on last year's cabin will have\nto do, ..\nSunday meeting place will be the\ncorner of Baker and Stanley\nStreets at 10 a.m. So if you can b'e\nthere, bring a hammer, saw\u2014or\nanything you , can use\u2014to help\nbuild the cabin,\nSee you then.\nPOPULAR ELSEWHERE\nWINNIPEG (CP) -Former\nWinnipeg ballet star Carlu Carter\nsaid in an Interview here that\nCanadian ballet dancers are\n\"just grabbed up in England and\nthe U.S. as soon -as they say they\nare Canadians.\"\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nArchie Willing for SIOIM\nTo Defend Crown Against Yvon\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Charlie Johnston, manager of\nlight heavyweight champion Archie Moore, said the\nveteran would be glad to meet Yvon Durelle of Baie\nSt. Anne, N.B., for the title \"if the money is right.\"\nJohnston said he has been called, after' Durelle's\nvictory .over Willi Besmanoff at Detroit Wednesday-\nnight, by promoters from Montreal, Louisville and Miami.\nHe also said he expects to sit down in a few days with\nofficials of the International Boxing Club.\nMoore was guaranteed $90,000 for his defence\nagainst Tony Anthony last week at Los Angeles. Johnston is asking $100,000-for the Durelle fight.\nIlllllll|i||||lllini!lll!llllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|llllll\nNelson at Trail in Inaugural;\nLeafs' Home Opener October 19\nAction begins Thursday, Oct. 17,\nin the Western International\nHockey League season, when Trail\nSmoke Eaters oppose Nelson\nMaple Leafs at. Trail's 'Cominco\nArena. The first encounter of the\n1957-58 season pits the two clubs\nthat' tangled iri a best-of-seven\nsemi-final series last spring.\nBoth clubs have undergone considerable changes 'from last year\nas they prepare for the season's\nopener. Trail is without the Warwick brothers, and Nelson's team\nis likely to have as many as eight\nnew \u25a0 faces.\nAs last year, each club will play\n48 games, half of them \u2014 quite\nnaturally \u2014 at home. Nelson's\nhome games will be played on\nSaturdays, primarily, with Wednesday- being the alternate. night.\nThe annual New Year's Day game,\nwith Trail as visitors, has again\nbeen scheduled.\nLeafs play 15 Saturdays at home,\nwith five Saturdays being set aside\nfor Leaf visits to Spokane's, mammoth Coliseum. Leafs also play\none Sunday game at Spokane.\n- For the first year in recent memory, Friday games have been discarded ,due no doubt -to the alteration in business hours in Nelson,\nWail arid Rossland. Rossland\nplayed most of its. games at home\non Fridays last year, but this\nyear Tuesday games predominate.\nLeafs' home schedule begins\nOct. 19 when Rossland visits CWc\nArena. The annual boxing day\nclassic at Trail, with Nelson supplying opposition, has also been\ncontinued.\nThe exhibition season gets under way Oct. 12 in Spokane when\nVernon Canadians pay a visit. The\ngame will, coincide with' an officials' school being conducted by\nthe WIHL.\n.The schedule:\nOct. 17\u2014Nelson at Trail\nOct. 19\u2014Rossland at Nelson\nTrail at Spokane       <\nOct. 22\u2014Trail at Rossland\nOct. 23-Spokarie at Nelson\nOct. 24\u2014Spokane at Trail\nOct. 26\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nRossland at Trail\nOct. 29\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nOct, 30\u2014Rossland at Spokane\nOct. 31\u2014Nelson at Trail\nNov.  2\u2014Trail at Nelson\nSpokane at Rossland\nNov.  5\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nNov.  6\u2014Spokane at Nelson\nEdmonton First In Offense\nAfter Eight WIFU Contests\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 The front-running Edmonton Eskimos are the\ntop team in total yards netted from\nscrimmage in the Western Interprovincial Football Union.\nStatistics released Thursday by\nleague statistician Bill Hawrylak\nof Regina show Esks with a- net\nrushing and passing gain of 3369\nyards. ,,'-.- '-.'\u25a0:\u25a0 , \"\nThe second-place Winnipeg Blue\nBombers are next in line with a net\n\"\u25a0w\ntm^Jm\nGREYHOUNDS\nFALL BARGAIN FARES\n. SPECIAL FALL FARES FROM NELSON\nTO:\n\/\u25a0    '\nOne Way\nRound Trip\nLETHBRIDGE\n$9.50\n$17.10\nCALGARY\n11.65\n21.00\nEDMONTON   ,-.-'\u25a0,\"\n17.00\n30.60\nREGINA\n20.90\n37.65\nWINNIPEG\n29.10\n52.40\nVANCOUVER\n12.50\n22.50\nSAN FRANCISCO\n26.10'\n47.00\nLOS ANGELES\n30.90\n83.68\n\u25a0;, \u25a0:\nFor full- Information contact the Greyhound Bus Depot,\n686 Baker Street, Nelson, or Telephone 800, or see your\nlocal Greyhound Agent.\nGREYHOUND\n\"lt'$ such \u25a0 comfort to\ntake the but ... and\nleave the driving to us!\"\ngain of 2761 yards, two yards more\"\nthan the total for Saskatchewan\nRoughriders. The. British Columbia\nLions' have netted 2362 yards while\nCalgary Stampeders have a net\ngain of 2014 yards.\nStatistics cover all games except\nWednesday's night's game in Calgary between the Stampeders and\nthe Lions, with each club having\nplayed eight times.\nEskimos' lead the way along the\nground with a net gain of 2158,\nyards. Bombers have netted 1847\nyards' rushing, the Riders 1318,\nLions 1141 and the Stamps 954.\nEks are averaging six yards a\ncarry on 357 ground plays while\nBombers are averaging 5.3 yards\non 344 carries.' Riders are averaging 4.5 yards on 292 ground plays,\nIhe Lions four, on 287 and the\nStamps 3.9 on 246.\nRiders are tops in yardage\nthrough the air with a net total\nof 1441 yards. Lions have netted\n1221 yards passing, the Esks 1211,\nStamps 1061 and Bombers 914.\nBombers have completed 54.9 per\ncent of-102 passes, Esks 53.2 per\ncent of 139, Riders 52.8 of 178, Lions\n50.3 of 163 and Stamps 49 per cent\nof 157.\nEsks also show the way in total\nfirst downs with 193 while Riders\nhave moved the yardsticks 155\ntimes and Bombers 152 times. Lions\nhave 139 first downs and Stamps\n115. Esks have the most first downs\nrushing with 129 while Riders have\nthe most passing with 69..\nBombers are the most penalized\nteam,' having 480 yards marched\noff against them on 55 penalties.\nLions have been penalized 51 times\nfor 401 yards, Esks ,34 for '\nRiders 36 for 278 and Stamps 32\nfor 222.\nEsks have the most fumbles 21\nand have lost the most, 15. Stamps\nhave lost 14 of 17 Jumbles,. Bombers eight of 10, Riders eight of eight\narid Lions seven of 13. Stamps have\nrecovered the most opposition fumbles, 15,\nEsks' also own the best punting\naverage, with an average hoist of\n43.1 yards on 54 kicks', Stamps are\naveraging 41.7 yards _n 71 punts,\nLions 41.5 on 63, Bombers 40.6 on\n71 and Riders 40.5 on 67.'\nNov.  7\u2014Spokane at Trail\nNov.  9\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nRossland at Trail\nNov. 12\u2014Trail at Rossland    .\nNov. 13\u2014Rossland at Nelson\nNov. 14\u2014Nelson at Trail .\nNov. 16\u2014Trail at Nelson l\nSpokane at Rossland\nNov. 17\u2014Rossland at Spokane\nNov. 19\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nNov. 20\u2014Spokane at Nelson\nNov. 21\u2014Spokane at Trail\nNov.' 23\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nRossland at Trail\nNov. 26\u2014Trail at Rossland\nNov. 27\u2014Rossland at Spokane\nNov. 28\u2014Nelson at Trail\nNov. 30\u2014Rossland at Nelson\n. . Trail at Spokane\nDec.   3\u2014Spokane at Rossland\nDec.   5\u2014Trail at Spokane\nDec.   7\u2014Trail at Nelson\nRossland at Spokane\nDec. 10\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nDec. 12\u2014Rossland at Trail\nDec. 14\u2014Spokane at Nelson\nTrail at Rossland\nDec. 15--Trail at Spokane\nDec. 17\u2014Spokane at Rossland,\nDec. 19\u2014Spokane at Trail\nDec. 21\u2014Trail at Nelson\nRossland at Spokane\nDec. 23\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nDec. 26\u2014Nelson at Trail\nDec. 28\u2014Spokane at Nelson\nTrail at Rossland\nJan.   1\u2014Trail at Nelson\nSpokane at Rossland\nJan.   2\u2014Rossland at Trail '\nJan.  4\u2014Rossland at Nelson\nTrail at Spokane\nJan.  7\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nJan.  8\u2014Spokane at Nelson   '\nJan.  9--Spokane at Trail\nJan. 11\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nRossland at Trail\nJan. 14\u2014Spokane at Rossland\nJan. 15\u2014Rossland at Nelson\nJan. 16\u2014Nelson at Trail\nJan. 18\u2014Trail at Nelson\n' Rossland at Spokane\nJan. 21\u2014Trail at Rossland        ,\nJan. 25\u2014Rossland at Nelson\nSpokane at Trail\nJan. 26\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nJan. 28\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nJan. 30\u2014Nelson at Trail\nFeb.   1\u2014Trail at Nelson\nRossland at Spokane\nFeb.  4\u2014trail at'Rossland\nFeb.  5\u2014Spokane at Nelson\nFeb.  8\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nRossland at Trail\nFeb. 11\u2014Nelson at Rossland\nFeb. 12-,Rossland at Nelson\n' Trail at Spokane   .\nFeb. 13\u2014Nelson at Trail \\\nFeb. 15\u2014Trail at Nelson '\nRossland at Spokane\nFeb. 18\u2014Nelson at-Rossland\nFeb. 20\u2014Spokane at Trail\nFeb. 22\u2014Spokane at Nelson '\nTrail at Rossland\nFeb. 25\u2014Spokane at Rossland\nFeb. 27\u2014Nelson at Spokane\nRossland at Trail\nMar.   1\u2014Rossland at Nelson\nTrail at Spokane\nSMITH TO PILOT\nPHILLIES IN '58\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Philadelphia Phillies Thursday signed\nmanager Mayo Smith to a new\none-year contract,    i?-;\nSmith, who will be handling the\nNational League club' for his\nfourth straight season, brought\nthe Phils home fifth this year.\nAnnouncement of Smith's re-appointment was made by the club's\ngeneral manager. Roy H a m e y,\nThe salary terms of the new contract Were not disclosed. Smith\nreportedly received $18,000 in'1957,\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results of\nsoccer games played Thursday\nnight in the United Kingdom :\u25a0\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision III, Southern\nNorthampton 4 Colchester 1\nNewport vs. Port Vale, ppd\nYOUTH INTERNATIONAL\nEngland 4 Spain '4 .\nRacer Allowed\nTo Seek Record\nALBANY, N.Y. 'AP)-The state\npublic works department saic\nThursday it will let Donald Campbell, British speedboat racer, try\nfor a new water, speed record or-\nOnondaga Lake with his jet-powered Bluebird II.\nCampbell failed in repeated attempts to post a new speed mark\non Canandaigua Lake this summer.\nA department spokesman said\nCampbell has sent a request for\npermission .to try Onondaga bul\nit has not yet arrived.\nDates of the proposed runs were\nnot available.\nThe Briton holds the water\nspeed record of 225.63 miles an\nhour.\nNearly Nine Years\nSince New York\nLost Series Game\nNEW YORK (AP) - If Milwaukee Braves defeat New York Yan\nkees in any world series gams\nthis year it will mark the first\ntime since 1948 a non-New York\nteam has won a world series contest.\nOn Oct. 11, 1948, Bob Lemor\nand Gene Bearden of Cleveland\nIndians combined to defeat Boston Braves, 4-3, at old Braves\nField in Boston in the sixth and\nfinal game of the 1948. series.\nSince then 46 world series games\nhave been played and all have\nbeen won by the three major\nleague, teams representing the\nNew York area.\nThe Yankees captured 27 series\ngames during this span, Brooklyn\nDodgers 13 and New York Giants\nsix.\nOnly two non-New York clubs\nqualified for series competition\nduring this eight-year period and\nboth of them were eliminated in\nfour consecutive games. The Yankees swept Philadelphia Phillies\nin 1950 and the Giants crushed the\nIndians in 1954.\nPIRATES RECALL\nSLUGGER STUART\nPITTSBURGH (AP) - Dick\nStuart, fabulous home \u25a0 run hitting\nsensation of the minors who\n[ailed this year to stick with the\nPittsburgh Pirates, will get another chance.\nThe Pirates announced Thursday\nan exchange of players with their\nHollywood_, farm club in the Pacific Coast League. Stuart was included among the players acquired.\nOthers from Hollywood are\npitcher John Lamabe and outfielder Emil Panko.       *\nIn exchange, <Pirates gave r\nthese players to Hollywood:\npitchers Clarence Churn, Donald\nKildoo, Gonzalo Naranjo and Joe\nTrimble, and shortstop Ken Hamlin. .-.-\nChisox Sign Lopez\nAs 1958 Manager\n. CHICAGO (AP) - The American\nLeague's second place Chicago\nWhite Sox Thursday signed manager Al Lopez for the 1958 season.\nThe move was announced at a\nnews conference by Lopez and the\ntwo Sox vice-presidents, Chuck\nComiskey and John Rigney.\nLopez, who came to the Sox this,\nyear after directing Cleveland Indians for six years, led the Chi-\ncagos to their highest finish since\n1920.\nComiskey declined to reveal\nLopez' salary for the coming year.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nNational League\nAB R H Pet. j\nMusial, St. Louis 50282 176 .351\nMays, New York 577 112 192 .333'\nRobinson, Cinci 599 \u25a0$& 195 .326\nAaron, M'w'kee 607 118 197 .325.\nGroat, P'Burgh     495   58 157 .317\nRuns\u2014Aaron, 118.       >\nRuns batted In\u2014Aaron, 132.\nHits \u2014 Schoendienst, Milwaukee, 199.\nDoubles\u2014Hoak,  Cincinnati  39.\nTriples\u2014Mays, 20.'.\nHome runs\u2014Aaron, 44.\nStolen bases\u2014Mays, 38.\nPitching\u2014Buhl, Milwaukee 18-7\n.720.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Sanford, Philadelphia, 179.\nAmerican League\nABR H Pet.\nWIlllamB, Boston 414 96 160 .386\nMantle, N.Y. 474 120 173 .365\nWoodling, Cleve 422 74 136 .322\nFok, Chicago 604 108 192 .318\nBoyd,. Baltimore   479  71150.313\nRuns\u2014Mantle, 120.\nRuns batted in\u2014Sievers, Washington,  112.\nHits\u2014FOX,   192.\nDoubles\u2014Minoso, Chicago, 36.\n.Triples\u2014Bauer and McDougald\nNew York, 9.\nHome  runs\u2014Sievers,   41.\nStolen liases \u2014 Aparicio, Chicago, 28.\nPitching \u2014 Donovan, Chicago,\n16-6,  .727,\nStrikeouts - Wynn, Cleveland,\n184.\nr\u00a3&^mm\n\\paH&<\/4a\/i\n\u00ab-22\u00bb&& $s.\n_Jchenlei| OIC.\n'the dNLiy ;\u25a0\u2022\u2022\"'\"\",\",\nCERTIFIED 8-YEA'R-QL.D\nCANADIAN WHISKY \u25a0..'\u2022'-\nON THE MARKET .;;\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\ni*_QF.C\nI ..\u2122%1AN WHJSK\"\n1%ft,'\u00bb0S\u00bb;sS.I>S!S\u00abl\"i\nS\u00bb5J2 '\"MUDiHSOMlU\"'1\"!!!!\n-~\u00b0\"HtcimniM0Ovi\u00ab\u00ab\"\"'\n SPORTS\nJtlSL\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN  SHORT\nNelson Maple Leafs early last season were an interesting hockey club, but they possessed talent in limited quantities, and after the journeymen on the team fell back to\nthe level of ordinary skaters and checkers, the club dropped\nfrom contention.\nToward the middle of the season, after it became\nebvious they were resigned to third place in the four-team\nWestern Interprovincial Hockey League, they began to gripe.\nThey were unhappy with this... they were displeased\nwith that... they floundered in a morass of mediocrity which\nno amount of eagerness1 could pierce,\nIn one season. Nelson Maple Leafs antagonized more\nhockey fans than had been irritated in years by other groups,\nThe executive made several gestures that infuriated the\npaying public; the. players proclaimed for all to hear that\nthey were generally indiffer-\nlished that new faces will be\nsought to replace last year's dissatisfied \u2014 and dissatisfying \u2014\nveterans.\nThere is, naturally, no ordain-\nment that this year will be different. Finances are still scarce:\nhockey players willing to roar into corners and to hand out stiff,\nbody checks for relatively small\npay-cheques are even more rare.\nThis will not be an easy season\nfor those in command of the inner\nworkings of Nelson Maple Leafs.\nent.\nVery few local fans were sorry\nto see the season end.\nj  \u2022' *\nBut that, gentle reader, was last\nyear. It1 is gone, and forgotten to\nal! intents and purposes. The effect\nof last year's early spurt dissolved\nunder the weight of lack-lustre late\nseason displays.\nThis season, things may be different. Optimistic statements from\nthe executive have tended to indicate they have profited from\ntheir mistakes. It has been estab-\nSox, Tigers\nDiscuss Deal\nCHICAGO (AP) - Officials of\nthe Chicago White Sox -and Detroit Tigers huddled Thursday\nover a possible trade of \"name\nplayers.\"\nThe Tigers are believed to be\ninterested in outfielder Larry\nDoby and catcher Les Moss of\nthe White Sox, while the Sox are\nsaid to be eyeing Harvey Kuenn.\nVice - presidents Chuck Comiskey and John Rigney and field\nmanager Al Lopez; rehired\nThursday for 19J8, conferred almost two hours with John Mc-\nHale, Tiger personnel chief. All\ndeclined to name any names under discussion.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDetroit   120 000 000\u20148  9  1\nChicago    000 000 200\u20142  7  0\nFoytack, Sleater (7), Maas (8)\nand Wilson: Fischer, Rudolph (8)\nand Battey. W: Foytack; L: Fischer.\nCleveland    010 000 100\u20142  4  0\nKansas City .. 000 010 000\u20141  5   1\nValehtinetti and Brown; Terry,\nPortocarrero (9) and Thompson.\nL: Terry. HR: Kan. City, Thompson.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN\nLEAGUE\nW  L   Pet. GBL\nNew York .\n    96   55   .638\n    89   62   .589    7\nBoston \t\n    81   70   .537   15\nDetroit\t\n.....   77   74   .510   19\nCleveland ...\n    74   76   .493   21%\nBaltimore   .\n    73  76   .490  22\nPat Egan has been returned as\ncoach. He is expected to arrive\non or about Oct. 1; practices begin Oct. 3, at 6 p.m. Until that\ntime, conjecture v must suffice in\nplace of knowledge.\nUntil Egan has rallied his forces\ninto an effective unit, fans must\nhope for the best, but, human nature being the fickle force that it\nisj they will all the while fear for\nthe Worst.\nThis year the executive realizes\nthey can't impose upon the public\nwith sickly sentimental phrases\nsuch as \"This is your club, help\nus support it.\"\nThey must pay off on the ice if\nthey are to benefit on the ice.\nShort's Briefs: Earl Anshelm,\nwho wasn't good enough to depose\nGerry Koehle at training camp last\nyear, has been invited to the camp\nof Victoria Cougars of the Western\nHockey League ... but the job\nthere has already been handed \u2014\non a platter\u2014to Don Hamilton,\nwho guarded the nets for Victoria\nShamrock Juniors, who were eliminated in the finals of the Minto\nCup lacrosse finals in Brampton,\nOnt., last week . . . Reno Zanier\nof Rossland Warriors has been\ninvited to the camp of New Westminster Royals, another Western\nHockey League club, but beating\nout Emil (The Cat) Francis is not\na simple chore, even for the talented Reno ...:.LongBranch, home\nof fhe lacrosse-playing Pontiacs,\nis barely half the size of Rossland\nin population, which makes all the\nmore impressive the effort of the\neastern representatives in the\nMann Cup final, especially when\none realizes that all the players,\nwith the exception of Bert Russell,\nwere developed in Long Branch,\nand moved up en masse to senior\nranks after copping the Minto Cup\nlin 1955.\nLeo tucchini,\nNorm Lenardon\nRejoin Redmen\nROSSLAND\u2014Rossland Warriors,\nlast-place finishers in the Western\nInternational Hockey League during their maiden season last year,\nmade two moves Thursday that\nwere geared to an improvement in\ntheir lowly lot.\nManager Fini Rossi announced\nthat veterans Leo Lucchini and\nNorm Lenardon had agreed to\nterms for the 1957-58 season, which\nbegins for Rossland with a game\nat Nelson Civic Centre Oct. 19.\nLuCchini's contract is in the form\nof assurance that he will play for\nRossland, while Lenardon has\nwarned Warrior officials that he\nmade arrangements to attend the\ntraining camp of Seattle Americans of the Western Hockey\nLeague. Lenardon's prolific scoring during the latter part of last\nseason earned him a call back to\nthe camp. '\nNorm started .last season with\nTrail Smoke Eaters but had trouble\nhitting his stride and was chopped\nfrom the roster in time to spark\nRossland with almost a goal a\ngame.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT.\n27, 1957 \u2014 9'\nNELSON CENTENNIAL PROJECT ..is a 2565-foot T-bar lift on Silver King Ski Club\nhill. The above photo shows future location of the lift on the extreme left of 25-acre\nclearing. Area \"A\" shows ski terrain as available last year with old cabin (arrow)\nand access road. Next step in the extensive development program planned by the\nski club is extension of the ski. area to top of hill as indicated.'Eventually second\nlift will take skiers to remarkable viewpoint on top. Ski season and free ski lessons sponsored by The Daily News last year attracted over 250 new skiers to this\nfast growing Winter sport. Promoters believe that the hill, only 1.5 miles from the\ncity, when completed will be one of Canada's finest skiing spots.\u2014SJri CJub photo.\nArgos Still Juggling Men;\nRouqhtes at Ottawa\nBy The Canadian Press\nStadium scenery and the lineup\nof Toronto Argonauts will'be*the\nonly thing changed from last\nweekend in' the Big Four football\nunion's scheduled battles this Saturday.\nMontreal Alouettes and Hamilton Tiger-Cats renew their feud in\nHamilton's Civic Stadium with\nonly one thing sure about the\nevent: there'll be a sellout crowd,\nOttawa Rough Riders, tied with\nMontreal and Hamilton atop the\nleague, are expected to   keep  a\npartial grip on first place following their return game with the\nwinless Argos in Ottawa.\nMeanwhile in the senior Ontario Rugby Football Union, another winless Toronto team\nBalmy Beach, heads for Sarnia\nand a game with the Golden\nBears Saturday. The same day,\nKitchener plays at London.\nSarnia and London are tied for\nfirst place in the four - team\nleague, with Kitchener one point\nback in second spot.\nArgos are expected to continue'\nMantle, Skowron Rest\nDuring Season Windup\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Mickey several weeks ago and tried to\nWinter Tire\nLAY-AWAY PLAN\n.00\nDOWN\nwill hold any set ef\nWinter Tires\n\u2022  New Dunlop Silent Traction\n(Ai illustrated)\n\u2022 Sawdust Retreads\n(12 month guarantee)\nAVOID    _    -hat Hectic First Snow Rush\nDROP   IN   NOW    _    .\u201ed Select Your Tire.\n5% CASH DISCOUNT\ni'f TIRE\nALGAR'S service\nPhone 252 Nelson, B. C.\nDUNLOP\n\"Qualify Is Our Most Important Product\"\nMantle and Bill Skowron remained behind when the New York\nYankees left Thursday for their\nlast road trip of the season \u2014 a\nthree-day visit to Boston.\nManager Casey Stengel said he\nwanted to give both men a chance\nto rest at home for the world series\nthat opens Wednesday against the\nMilwaukee Braves.\nMantle still is badly handicapped\nwhen he has to hit lefthanded\nagainst a righthanded pitcher. The\nswitcher isn't bothered when he\nbats righthanded, so presumably\nhe would be ready to swing freely\nWednesday if Warren Spahn, a\nsouthpaw, starts for Milwaukee,\nas expected. Mickey's left leg shin\nsplints that sent him to the hospital for a period still bother him.\nStengel still remembers how the\nYankees suffered when Mantle was\nunable to play against Brooklyn in\n1955.\nThere is still uncertainty about\nSkowron.' He injured his back\nplay too soon. As a result of the\nre-injury, he has been unable to\nbend freely.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nmaking life miserable for program printers by dressing another\nrevised team. Coach Hamp Pool\nsays he'll have southpaw quarterback Fred Wyant from Washington\nRedskins of the National. League\ndirecting his attack.\nHelping Wyant in a series of\nplays expected to emphasize running will be Dick Shatto at left\nhalf, Charlie Sticka at fullback,\nand Corky Tharp at right half.\nLatest addition to the Argo'defensive platoon is halfback Ray\nShiver.\nCoach Frank Clair doesn't expect to make any changes from\nthe combination that earned a 55-\n14 win for Ottawa over the Argos\nlast week.\nMontreal Alouette coach Doug\nWalker says he'll dress import\nhalfback Gene Wilson in Hamilton. Wilson was acquired this week\nfrom the Argos.\nHe'll likely stand in for kicker\nAvatus Stone, who brought' a sore\nknee out of last week's gate -with\nthe Ticats.\nProbable Pitchers\nNtfW YORK (AP) - Probable\npitchers for today's major league\ngames:\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York at Boston \u2014 Turley\n(12-6) vs Nixon (12-12).\nBaltimore at Washington (N) \u2014\nBrown (6-8) vs Wiesler (1-0).\nCleveland at Chicago (N)\u2014Mossi\n(11-9) vs Harshman (7-8).\nKansas City-at Detroit. (N) \u2014\nUrban (6-4) vs Bunning (19-8).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn at Philadelphia (N) \u2014\nHarris (0-0) vs Sanford (18-8).\nCincinnati at Milwaukee (N) \u2014\nRabe (00) vs Burdette (16-9).    -\n\u25a0 Chicago at St. Louis (N> \u2014 Rush\n(6-16) vs Lovenguth (0-0). i\nOnly games scheduled. |\nBalding, Stan\nNamed by CPGA\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Stan Leonard\nand Al Balding have been selected\nto represent Canada in the Canada\nCup golf matches in Tokyo Oct. 24-\n27, Bill Kerr, president of the Canadian Professional Golfers' Associa;\ntion, announced Thursday night.\nLeonard, a Vancouver native\nnow playing out of Lachute, Que.,\nwon the Greater Greensboro Open\nin North Carolina this year, the\nfirst victory for the veteran pro\nin a circuit tournament,\nBalding was a regular on the pro\ntour, playing in almost every tournament. Leonard picked his spots\nrarely playing more than three\ntournaments without a week's layoff.\nRon Hurst Dropped\nTo AHL Americans\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - Ron\nHurst, rugged right winger, was\nsent to the Rochester Americans\nThursday as Toronto Maple Leafs\ncontinued paring their training\nroster for the coming National\nHockey League season.\nGerry McNamara, second-string\ngoalie who suffered a dislocated\nelbow in. a baseball game prior to\nthe training season, takes the ice\nfor the first time Monday. Last\nyear with Hershey Bears of the\nAHL and Winnipeg Warriors of\nthe Western League, McNamara is\ndue for a trial with Rochester.\nVs AWAIT TWO PLAYERS\nPENTICTON (CP) - Coach\nHal Taralla of Penticton Vs announced Thursday that Rhio Tow-\nzin, spare defenceman with Winnipeg Warriors last season, is coming to the Penticton camp along\nwith returnee Walter Peacosh:\nIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIir\nRollins Big Man\nIn Stamps'(amp\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014The Calgary -Stampeder hockey\ncamp took on a look of confidence and gaiety Thursday.\nThe Stamps landed the \"big one\" Thursday morning when Al Rollins picked up his equipment at the\nCowboy dressing quarters. It was a move that had been\nanticipated for weeks but did not become reality till\nlate Wednesday night when the veteran netminder\nerrrived in the city.\nRollins will be counted on to fill a big gap in the\nStampeder brigade for the Western Hockey League\nseason. He Is the man coach Frank Currie is counting\non heavily to lead the club out of the doldrums.\nlllllilMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGALLANT MAN RUNS IN SEARCH\nOF SIXTH STRAIGHT RACE WIN\nNEW YORK (AP)\nGallant\nMan will be aiming for his sixth\nstraight victory Saturday in the\n$100,000 - added Woodward Stakes\nat Belmont Park \u2014 a four - horse\nduel which is probably the r i c e\nof the year.\nNo race in recent years at the\nswanky, Belmont layout-even the\ncelebrated battle two years ago\nwhen High Gun beat Jet Action\nand Nashua in the Sysonby \u2014 has\ngenerated such steam and conflict of opinion.\nGallant Man, owned by Ralph\nLowe of Texas, is a leading contender for the three-year-old title\nand horse of the year honors, and\na victory in the Woodward is a\nvirtual must.\nHe has\/to whip three of the\nfastest horses seen around in\nmany a moon \u2014 the Wheatley\nStable's Bold Ruler, also a 3-year-\nold, and two older speed demons.\nMr. Jan Burke's 5-year-old Dedicate, and the Woodley Lane\nfarm's 4-year-old Reneged. Under\nthe weight-for-age conditions the\n8-year-olds will carry 120 pounds,\nthe older horses 126.\nGallant Man defeated Dedicate\nSept. 18 by a neck in the Nassau\nHandicap, with - Reneged third.\nLowe's colt broke the track record\nfor the mile an an eighth event\nthat day.\nWillie Shoemaker will ride Gallant Man Saturday with Eddie Arcaro on Bold Ruler. Bill Hartack\nwill pilot Dedicate and Pete Anderson Reneged.\nCards Excuse\nialr Mates\n' ST. LOUIS (AP)-Stan Musial,\nhis seventh,National League batting title in the bag, and seven\nother St. Louis Cardinal regulars\nwere excused by the club Thursday from the remaining three\ngames of the season.\nNewcomers will take their places\nin the lineup in the three-game\nseries against Chicago starting tonight.\nThus the 36-year-old Musial's\nbatting average will stand at .351.\nThis is 11 points above his lifetime\n.340 average, second only to Ted\nWilliams of Boston Red Sox among\nactive major league players.\nWillie Mays of New York Giants,\nhis closest competitor at .333, has\nonly two games left and would have\nto get 16 consecutive hits to pull\neven with Stan.\nGift  Cigarettes  for  CANADA'S\nMIDDLE-EAST MILITARY PERSONNEL...\nAND, OTHER IMPERIAL TOBACCO BRANDS\nCAN BE SENT TO CANADA'S\nUNITED NATIONS EMERGENCY FORCE\n$1,60 sends 400\nffafsXS\nSweet Caporal, Matln.e, Viceroy\nor Wlnch.sier.\nPrice InttutlcB pDifaga.\nMall order and rom\/f\/anco tot\nIMPERIAL TOBACCO CO.\n'.O. Box 6500, Montreal\nBOXES of Shells\nAbsolutely FREE!\nwith the purchase of a high-power Rifle or a\nPump, Automatic or Double Barrel Shotgun.\n2\nWater Revea\nWater (plain or sparkling) is your most reliable\nguide to the whole truth about any whisky. Water\nadds nothing, detracts nothing, but reveals a\nwhisky's true natural flavour and bouquet\n\"83\"\nQfis&ifou 9__\u00ab m\/\nLowest Possible Gun Prices\nFOR EXAMPLE \u2014 .308 WINCHESTER <t 1 \/I 1\nModel  88   ^> I f\/L\nSTEVENS MODEL Double Barrel 12 gauge <\u00a3TT\nSHOTGUN     -    $ ' '\nREMINGTON MODEL 68 12 gauge frm \u00abQ\nSeml-Automatlo SHOTGUN '.'. .'. '...  $ I T'j'\n* .300 REMINGTON RIFLE, PUMP ACTION\n+ .270 WINCHESTER MODEL 70, BOLT ACTION\n* .300 H AND H  MAGNUM  REMINGTON  BOLT ACTION\n+ .30-06 REMINGTON SEMI-AUTOMATIC\n* .30-30 MODEL 94 WINCHESTER, LEVER ACTION\n* ITHICA PUMP 20 GAUGE SHOTGUN\nPlus Many Others,\nWe carry a full line of hunting equipment, accessories and supplies, Including\nduck and goose calls and decoys.\nGOOD  HUNTING TO ALL! ! !\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nIhe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nPHONE\n1300\nC MC\nMM\nNELSON,\nB. C.\nS&^&^wisM\n \u25a0!\/\u00ab _*>\u00bb \/W MOUNT?J\n\u25a0 WBKIP-, i.\niJlP^\nn^^^g   \\ii^l\n^^ff_Bfl4s_^___!?T<i__te_-*       r*_\/yS^tar^\nB^\"i\nwUIKJiMM\n^HiH\nB^h*.   ^V3 * -_VTC^__BHfc_fcMP*_!\nh)**!-\n\\^I^59H\n\u25a0Bpji\ncA&e* kin\n10 \u2014 NEL50N DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. J7, 1957\nc\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nL.\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ,\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\n' _ PONT KNOW IF   \\\n\u25a0 ;\u00bb\nI CAN DO IT-\n:justi\nPUT AWAy ONE rV&    J\n\u201e    PIECE    _^| >\/\n\\\\*'\nWf*\n$a\ni&\nIii\n7\/r~^cn\n\\y^f\n^ \u20225y\ni\n\u25a0>; y\nDeadline toi Classified Ads \u2014 S p.m.\nH-tP WANTED\t\nAPPLICATIONS FOR THE Position ot caretaker, janitor, ahd\nice-maker for the Bluebell Recreation Hall, Riondel,- B.C., will\nba received by the undersigned\nup until Oct. 7, 1957. Ice-making\nexperience preferable but not\nessential.\n'   Mrs.B. Harrison, See.-Treas,\nBluebell Recreation Club,\nRiondel, B.C.\n\u2122-   ^\nFreshens\nYourMbuth\nSweetensYour Breath\nEnjoy chewing delicious\nWrigley'i Spearmint\noften every day,\nHELP WANTED\n(Continued)\nLEARN BLUEPRINT READING\nby home study. Your ability 'o\nread blueprints will bring promotion to n better paid Job. Diploma awarded. Free folder. Blueprint Reading Dept. 03, Primary\nSchool of Drafting, Box 123, Station \"Q\", Toronto,\t\nDRAFTSMEN ARE IN GREAT\ndemand. Train by hbme-study in\nyour spare time for a well-paid\nsecure job. Diploma awarded.\nFree folder. Primary School oi\nDrafting, Dept. G, BOX 123, Sta\nHon \"Q\", Toronto,\nIMMEDIATE OPENING FOR\nqualified laboratory technician,\npart or full time at K.L.G. Hospital, Phone Nelson 868 collect\nor write the Administrator.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWOMAN DESIRES HOUSEWORK\nby hour or by the day. Ph.\n1788-X.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n8:15\u2014Good Morning\nB:30-Search for Tomorrow\nB:45\u2014Guiding Light *\n9:00-TBA \u00bb\n9:25\u2014Walter Cronktte News\n9;30-As the World Turns \u2022\n10:00\u2014Beat the Clock \u2022\n10:30\u2014Houseparty *\nll:00-Big Payoff \u2666\nll:30-The Verdict Is-Yours \u2022\n12:00-Brlghter Day *\n12:1B\u2014Edge of Night \u2022\n1:00\u2014Garry Moore *\n2:00\u2014Hotel Cosmopolitan\n2:15\u2014Love of Life\n2:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n3:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n3:30\u2014The Matinee\n4:00\u2014Western Roundup\n5:00\u2014The News\n5:15\u2014Doug Edwards News *\n5:30\u2014Big Picture *\n6:00\u2014Sgt. Preston\n6:30\u2014Song Shop\n7:00\u2014Mr. Adam and Eve *\n7:30-West Point\n8:00\u2014Destiny\n9:00\u2014Herald Playhouse\n9:30\u2014Waterfront\n10:00\u2014Country Style\n10:30\u2014Chicago Wrestling\nU:30-\u00a3hannel Four Playhouse\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n:40-Color Test Pattern\n:43-Test Pattern\n:55-NARTB\n:56-Blble Reading\n; 00\u2014Tic Tac Dough \u2022\n30-It Could Be You *\n00\u2014Arlene Francis Show \u2022\n30\u2014Treasure Hunt *\n00-Price is Right \u2666\n80\u2014Bride and Groom *\nOO\u2014Matinee Theatre *\n00\u2014Queen for a Day *\n45\u2014Modern Romances \u2022\n00\u2014Comedy Time *\n30\u2014Truth or Consequences *\n00\u2014Women\n30\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n00\u2014Matinee on Six\n00\u2014Mr. Enigneer\n30-Four:Thirtv Movie\n' Drums Along the Mohawk\n45\u2014Decorating Ideas\n00\u2014Cavalcade of Sports \u2022\n45\u2014Red Barber's Corner \u2022\n00\u2014Blondie *\n30\u2014Life of Riley \u2666\n00-H-Squad *\n30\u2014Thin Man \u2666\n00-Whirlyblrds\n30r-Code Three\n00\u2014Late Movie\nOutpost In Malaya\nSITUATIONS WANTED\ni Continued)\nDON'T WAIT FOR WINT_R\nPlan now! The rush is oh. Stops,\nsidewalks, driveways, basement\nfloors. All carpenter work and\nstucco work, roofing, etc. Phone\nL, H, Zylstra and Sons,\nHANDYMAN WANTS ODD JOBS.\nPhone 256-R.\nWANTED - PART-TIME HOUSE\nwork. Schermann, 711 Silica.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEM\/LE\nEXTRA INCOME\nLadies, Fall and Xmas buying\nseason provides big cash profits\ndaily. Show fast selling children's, ladies' wear to friends,\nneighbors. Beautiful styles, top\nquality. Write today. British\nKnit; Slmcoe, Ontario.\nFREE BOARD AND ROOM FOR\nmiddle age working woman or\nretired woman in 2-adult home,\n' In' exchange for light housekeeping duties. Apply Box 7933,\nDally News,   \t\nWAITRESSES WANTED - TOP\nwages paid. Phone 391 or 1877,\nMACHINERY\nKREM rv - Crtanilel 2\n00\u2014Kit Carson\n: 30\u2014Newsroom\n: 40\u2014Weather Sketch\n:4S\u2014Phillips World News\n55-Sports Spotlight\n00\u2014World Around Uj\n30-Rin Tin Tin \u2022\n8:00\u2014Jim Bowie \u00bb - :',\n8:30\u2014Crossroads *\n9:00\u2014Dr. Christian\n9:30~Date With The Angels \u2022\n10:00\u2014Playhouse Two\n10:30_-Command Performance\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Algerian\nseaport\na. Keep\n4. Pronoun\nJ. Hunting\nexpedition\nt. Single unit\n7. Caught\nup with\nt. University-\nassisted\nstudent\n(Dublin)\nB. Daggers (Ir.\n11. River\n(Run.)\n16. Trick\n(slang)\n18. Tellurium\n(sym.)\n1L Unjust\n22. Male\nadults\n23. Let-\ntuca\n26. Movei\ncrook,\nedly\n27. Comes\nIn\n29. pressed\n30. Exclamation\n)3L Negative\nreply\n23, Not\nwindward\na*. Unites, ,\nas metal\nMmidil l-jnidhl\"\nHH_lflB: f:l!W=IH\n__@_[=l   ___ilBI\nmmu __cai__\nBaa raara    rs_\nHHSB\nhioe- _rai_iia_\n_i_     --_  -0-\nuiiiaami. _a__\na\u201eBHH aanaa\n_B_I3E1   HiaiJBB\nCli-IUH   r-IHUH\nTertwttar's AMin*\n28. Wild on\nas. Slight\ndepression\n41 Diamond\n(slang)\n42. Lofty\nmountain .\nACROSS\n1. Foreman\n(colloq.)\n6. Female bets\nI dial.)\nI. Miss\nBernhsrrt\n10 Smithy's\nblock\n12, Rascal\n1J. Fretful\nalarm\n(colloq.)\n14.Serf\n15. Music note\n16. Flowed\n17. Exclamation\nlt High.\ncraggy hlW\nIB. A Un coin\n(Malay.)\n20. Sen  Chaves\nstate\n24. Withered\n(var.)\n29.Percolate\n28. Kind of\npaper\n82. Beard of rye\n84.Greek letter\n35. Great\n(abbr.)\n88. Chair\nsupport\nIT. Hawaiian\nbird\n88. Cutting tool\n40. PlxyllUe\n42.Close to\n(poet.)\n43. Bring out\n44. Yearns for\n45. Snow\nvehicle\n46. Caresses\nDOWN\nl.Forew&rner\nof death .' \\ '\nDAILY (3RYPXOQC,OTE \u2014 Here's how to work Itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\n_ _ 0 N 0 F E L L O W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hlnU.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nPTADU    EL    _ Y Y D I    PLOD    UAO\nE P Y ,    PU    GOMM    UD    OEYUA,    P    HLOl\nLDU    IAOYO \u2014MDLXOOMMDI.\nYesterday's Cryptoquotei THAT IS AS WELL SAID AS IF\n1 HAD SAID IT MYSELF \u2014 SWIFT.\nPlotrlbutcd by Kino Features Byndlcstt)\n%\n1\n3\n4\ni\ns\nfc\n7\n0\n^\n9\nI\n16\n11\nir\n^\n13\nM\n%\n15\n1\n16\n17\nn\n^4\nIB\ni\n|\u00bb\n_>\"\nai\nll\n,\nll\n%\n%\nu\nVs\n2S\nV.\nil\n\u00a7\n|\nw\n39\n30\n31\n3J\n33\nI\nH\n|\nI\nis\n3l>\n^\n3l\ni\n3?\na\nA\\\n%\n41\nit\n1\na4\n%\nW\n%\nAb\n'^\nsir\nhydraulic angle-    SI8^0\nGOOD USED\nTRACTORS\nand LOADERS\n1\u2014Caterpillar D2 \u2014 with angle-\ndbjer and Hyster winch and\nguard. Just overhauled. \u2014\nPriced for quick    $2950\n1\u2014John Deer Crawler \u2014 with\nhydraulic angledozer and winch.\n1\u2014Oliver OC3 \u2014 Front End\nOnly*31\":. Very.g00d' $ \" S00\n1\u2014EZ Homellte\nChain Saw .\n1\u2014McCulloch Model 235   J7S\n1_Ho\u00b0r.skas,t $'2oo\nSea\nH \"FRITZ\" FARENHOLTZ,\nC. ROSS or ALEX McDONALP\n$135\nFOR SALE MISCEUANEC\nFOR SALE CHE\/>\nUsed.\nHot Air\nFurnaces.\nAll Fittings, Piping, ere.\nPrices Range From\n$10 to $50\nMACHINE SHOP\n824 Vernon St     Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 593\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\nAC'S\nWELDING &\nEQUIPMENT CO., LTD.\n814 Railway St       Nelson, B.C,\nPHONE 1402\nFOR HIRE-1957 D-7 CAT, ROAD\nconstruction, land clearing 6r\nlogging. Box 7926, Dally News.\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nCAFE IN HOTEL-NEWLY DE-\ncorated\u2014fully equipped. Terms\ncan be arranged. Apply Fruitvale Hotel Ltd., or phone 3392.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\n,   REPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON _ CO.\nAsaayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail.-Ph. 2752. Office Mgr., Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-8th St., NelBon, Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.   Nelson  Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop  Acetylene and\nelectrlct welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593.     324 Vernon St.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes,\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357.\nFOR SALE - 2-UNIT NATIONAL\nportable milker, new rubber and\nIns, etc., with or without motor.\nCheap. Box 46, Fruitvale.\nHERE'S SOMETHING! 60 ISSUES\nSaturday Evening Post $4.-79. Indicate new or renewal. Nelson\nAdvertiser, 611 Ward St., Nelson.\nFOR SALE - GE 4 \u25a0 BURNER\nelectric range, 5-pce. chrome set,\nSpanish electric guitar. Phone\n1329-Y.\nITALIAN PRUNES-PICK YOUR\nown at 3c per lb, at Mr. John\nFlegel, Longbeach, Bring your\nown containers.\nLUX MOFFAT ELECTRIC\nrange, cottage model. Phont\nI761-R-3. I.\nFREEZER BEEF, 30c LB,\nwhole carcass, delivered. E. H,\nHird, Slocan City.\nGUNS, NEW AND USED. CUS-\ntom loads and supplies. Norm's\nGun Shop, 171 Baker, ph. 385.\nHOUSE TO BE DEMOLISHED.\nJ. A. Houston, R.R. 1 (on Balfour).\nBLUE GENDRON BABY BUGGY.\n$25.00. Phone 1837.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies SI,\nBELTONE   HEARING\nPhone 272-L.\nAID.\nFOR SALE-ELECTRIC RANGE.\nPhone 727-L.\n\"FRIG\"   COLD   WATER   SOAP.\nBest for woollens. Local stores.\nFURNACE-CHEAP.  2650 HIGH-\nway Drive, Trail, B.C.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nFridays. Box 493. Phone 366-R or\n483-R.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THS DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1957\n8:55\u2014Farm Fare\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n7:00\u2014Chapel In the Sky\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n7:15-Wake-Up Time\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reporta\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n7:30\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n2:15\u2014Today's Guest\n8:00\u2014News\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n4:30\u2014Ride With the Sun\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n4:45\u2014Round About\n9:00\u2014News\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home Show\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n6:00\u2014News\n9:15-Story Parade\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n9:25-Shoppers' Guide\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n10:00\u2014News\n6:20\u2014Christian See. Program\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n10:45\u2014Music\n7:30-NowIAskYou\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:00\u2014Don Quixote\n11:15\u2014Woman's World\n8:30\u2014Canadian Yarns\nll:2(f\u2014Entertainment World\n8:45-Plain Talk\n11:25\u2014Women Today\n9:00-Songs ot My People\n11:30\u2014Morning Melodies\n9:30\u2014Music from Montreal\n12:00-The Dinner Bell\n10:00\u2014News\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n10:15-We Write Novels\n12:25-:News\n10:S0\u20143ign Off\nCBC PRC\nJGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYI.IG\nBT SAVING TIME)\nSATURDAY, SEP!\n'EMBER 28, 1957\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Don Messer'i Islanders\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n3:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014News, Weather\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n3:15\u2014The Story of Colonization\n7:40--Morning Devotions\n3:30\u2014Opera and Ballet\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n4:00\u2014Rhythm with Ruther\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n4:30-This Week\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:45\u2014Sports College\n8:15\u2014Stu Davis\n5:00\u2014Drive In\n8:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n5:30\u2014Footloose\n9:00\u2014News\n6:30\u2014Moods in Modern\n9:15\u2014Saturday Serenade\n7:00\u2014News\n9:30-CBC Stamp Club\n7:05\u2014Scored by Hyslop\n9:45-Kerry Wood\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n10:0O-Postmark UK\n8:00\u2014Halifax Theatre\n10:30-World Church News\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner            .\n10:45_-News and Weather\n9:00\u2014Musical Program           j\n11:00\u2014Traditional Echoes\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert  1\nU:30-Rhythm Pals\n10:00\u2014News                           1\n12:00\u2014Party Line.\n10:15\u2014At Your Fingertips        \\\n2:00\u2014Summer Date\n10:30\u2014Harlem Magic\n %w\\.\nSMALL INVESTMENT  -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  \u2014  PHONE   1844\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nSPORTSMAN'S PARADISE\n1\u2014Located at scenic Deer Park,\n5 min. walk to store and P.O.\nNewly built 2-B.R. home with\ncement basement and drive-\nin garage. \u2014 Open creek\nthrough 2.2 acres. $3000\nSacrifice Price v\nTerms. \u2014 Cash, $2500.\nHOME WITH A FUTURE\n2\u2014Newly painted. New roof and\nnew wiring, new plumbing.\nClean, compact 2-B.R. home.\nEconomical furnace heat, \u2014\n*     Choice Fairview location;  2\ned's\"'\"   $l\u00b0'000\nConvenient Terms.\nJUST OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS\n3\u2014Creek St Cozy 3-B.R. home,\nApp. 1 acre, fruit trees and\ngarden. $7000\nS.P.\nTerms, $6500 Cash.\nCARPENTERS,   ATTENTION\n4\u2014Fairview; unfinished duplex,\n<     124 Chatham St. 62% x 118.\nLots shrubs and     %iOOO\nfruit-trees. S.P.-    \u00abP',V\u00abV\nOnly $1000 Down.\nVIEW LOCATION\nIMMfflSjiilUOCCUPANCY\n5\u2014Compact 4-B.R. family home.\n. Large L.R. with raantli fireplace, also fireplace in rec.\nroom.  H.W. floors throughout. Quality lino, well plan-\n-   ned  kitchen  and  B.  nook.\nDouble plumbing; full basement; oil furnace. 50' x 120'\ncorner lot;        $ j 7 500\nchoice shrubs.   ^      '\nConvenient Terms.\nWALKING DISTANCE\n8\u20145-B.R. home. L.R., fireplace,\nalso fireplace in den. Light\nand airy D.R.; family kitchen\nand nook. Full basement;\nnew oil furnace. 2 lots, land-\n,    g\u00bb*        $12,500\nAvailable Financing.\n7\u20143-B.R. Fairview home, built\n1948. Features 26' x 14' L.R.\nwith picture window and\nlake view; U-shaped kitchen\nand dining area. Cement\nbasement and new oil furnace with air conditioning;\nfireproof drive'-in garage. \u2014\nOnly $3500 down to respons-\ng\u00a3 buyer;    $14,750\nC. D.\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS\nPhone 99 - Eves. 1821-L\n10TH AND GORDON ROAD\n1\u2014Modem- bungalow, built six\nyears. 3 bedrooms, large living room has wall-to-wall\ncarpet, fireplace and large\npicture window. Gas hot\nwater heating. Playroom in\nbasement, tiled floor and\nfireplace. 1 or 2 car garage.\nLot 80'x 130'.    $22,000\nPrice   T      '\nAdditional improved ground\non either side obtainable.\nNORTH SHORE\n2\u2014Near bridgehead..\u2014 Modern\nbungalow, built 1955. 3 bedrooms, oak floors and fire-\np\u00bbaM $13,000\nPrice  ~      '\n$4000  Cash, Assume NHA\nMortgage  $65  Per  Month.\nATTRACTIVE HOME '\nJ-tTwo bedrooms upstairs. \u2014\nGround floor: nice kitchen,\nwired for range, also piped\nfor gas; lots of cupboards;\ngood bathroom, living room\nand den or sewing room. Cut-\nstone foundation. Full basement with cement floor (furnace). A really lovely garden, several fruit trees (ap-\nfile, apricot, cherry, etc.),\nawns and flowers. $7500\nGood terms. ' *^\nWe figure this is one of our\nbest listings.\n4\u2014CREEK STREET. Large lot\nand 2-bedroom $4500\nhouse. Price \u00abe-\u00bby\u00ab\n$1500 Will Handle.\nPossession 2 Weeks.\n6\u20143-bedroom home In immaculate condition. Bedrooms are\nlarge with good cupboards.\nDining room and living room,\nlarge kitchen, gas installed.\nGood garage. New roof and\nnew siding 1956. Two beautiful corner lots. $g900\nPrice 7\n$2000  and  Balance  W  and\nInt Monthly Might Handle.\nCar Insurance and Package\nPolicies a Specialty\nC. W   Aoolevard\n& Co. Ltd.\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.      Nelson. B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nLooking for a Home\nIn.the Country?\nMODERN HOME AT MODERATE PRICE! \u2014 One-half\nacre requiring some work to\nmake into beauty spot. Nearly\nnew two bedroom bungalow.\nLarge '.living room, modern\nKitchen, lots of clipboards and\ndinette space. Full basement,\npiped hot air furnace with\nblower. Moderate $7900\nterms \u00abpi*\u00bbvv\nWillow ^.oint\nNine acres with two acres\ncleared, balance in good timber. Two bedroom bungalow.\nExcellent view from large living room with fireplace; modern bathroom and kitchen. \u2014\nFour outbuildings. SQ^OO\nPrice yejovv\nWith $5000 Down.\nT. D. Rosling\n. & Son Ltd.\nM.   (Trader)  Parker, Salesman\n568 WARD ST. PHONE 717\nFOR SALE - MODERN 2-BED-\nroom bungalow, full basement,\noil furnace, hardwood floors,\nwired for electric range. On 2\nlots, corner Silica and Cedar.\nCash required $5000. Sacrifice\nprice $6950. A real opportunity\nfor a good, well made home.\nPhone 1327-R.\nFOR SALE - 10 MILES WEST\nof Nelson, 20 acres, large buildings, plumbing, electricity, house\nand 5 acres can be bought separately. Box 361, Nelson.\n$2565 BUYS $2850 EXCELLENT\nfirst agreement for sale. Pays\n$50 principle plus 6% interest\nmonthly. Ph. 1777, William Kalyniuk Agencies.\nFOR SALE - OLDER STYLE 3-4\nbedroom home, heavy wiring,\nmodern kitchen, furnace, 4 corner lots. Phone 1577-Y.\nLOT 50 BY 250. GRANITE\nRoad, VA miles from town.\nTaxes $1.75 a year. Very reasonable price. Ph. 1757-R,\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR SALE.\nPhop 771-L.\nFOR SALE - MODERN 3-BED-\nroom house.-1923 Falls St.\n5 LOTS   FOR   SALE - APPLY\n1416 Vancouver Street.\t\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFAIRVIEW - COMFORTABLE\nhome, 2 corner lots, 3 bedrooms,\nS-year old furnace, full basement, wired for range and TV,\ngas installed, garage. One block\nfrom .school and shopping centre.\nExcellent condition, Full price\n$7940.00. Phone 715-R.\nTHE ONLY BEACH PROPERTY\nIn Nelson. Modern 3-room and\nbath home. Wired for electric\nrange and oil heat. Housekeeping\nroom in basement with plumbing. Room revenue bearing at\n$30.00 per month. F. A. Baker,\n1106 Beatty Ave. Ph. 743-L-3.\nAll Models of\nNe#w CHEVROLETS\nand\nOLDSMOBILES\nTo Choose From\n1956 Monarch Sedan\n1956 Meteor Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\n1956 Plymouth Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Ford Coach\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Consul Sedan\n1952 Hudson Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Coach\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1951   Ford Sedan\nTrucks\n1956 Willys Jeep\n1956 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1955 International Pickup\n1955 GMC Pickup\n1955 Dodge Pickup\n1954 Fargo Panel\n1954 Chevrolet Pickup\n1954 Fargo Pickup\n1953 GMC Pickup\n1953 Mercury 3 Ton\nPickup\n1953 Chevrolet Pickup\n1953 Ford. Pickup\n1950 Ford Panel\n1950 Chevrolet 1  Ton\nPickup\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St    Nelson, BC.\nPhones 35-36\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nNew International\nRp-210 Tandem\nLogging Truck\n211r' Wheel Base\nNew International\nA-180 Truck -\n190\" Wheel Base\nNew International\nA-l 00 Pickup\n'56 International\nS-180 Truck\n190\", Wheel Base,\nWith Steel Lumber Roller\nDeck\n'52 International\nL-180 Truck\n172\" Wheel Base\nWhite WB-22 Truck\nWith Logging Trailer, Reach\nBunks, Ready for Work\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St\nPhone 1810 - 100\nFor The\nBest Bey\nWhy Not Try\n1957 Plymouth   Plaza\n1956 Volkswagen Deluxe\nSupercharger\n1956 Volkswagen Deluxe,\nRadio.\n1956 Studebaker  Pres.   \/\n1955 Chev Deluxe\n1954 Meteor   Niagara\n1953 Pontiac  Deluxe .\n1953 Consul\n1953 Henry J.\n1952 Chev Deluxe\n1952 Pontiac 2,Dr.\n1951 Vanguard\n1951  Austin\n1947 Universal  Jeep\n\u00a9tors\nLTD,\nVolkswagen - Rambler\n\u2022Vanguard\nSales and Service\n323   Nelson   Ave.\nPhone  1454\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice \u2014 Used parts for '47 Olds,\n'52 Somerset, '52 Ford, '46 Meteor, Mercury, '37 Ford, '46 Plymouth, '47, '49, '50, '51, Austin,\nHillman, Prefect, Vanguard,\nMorris Minor cars. For sale,\n'49 Austin, 2-wheel trailer. Phone\n1363-L-2 or write Box 382 Ymir\nRoad, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - L-190 INTERNA-\ntional tandem truck in good condition. Also 10 yard gravel box\npresently installed on above\ntruck; also 13-ton tandem Freu-\nhauf logging trailer with bunks\nand sub-frame Jor above truck.\nVery reasonable prices. Trades\nand terms. Located at East Kootenay  Equipment,  Cranbrook,\nFOR SALE - 3-TON SPECIAL\nMercury truck, 178\" wheel base,\ngood tires, hoist and steel deck.\nVery reasonable. Phone 1757-R.\nRENTALS\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, ' weekly oi\nmonthly rates. Alien Hotel, 171\nBaker Street.'\n3 LARGE-ROOM SUITE. CLOSE\nin. Heated. Also hot water.\nPartly furnished. Phone 2013.\nSMALL FURN. HOUSE AT WIL-\nlow Point. Available for winter.\nPhone 482-L-2.\nFURNISHED APARTMENT FOR\ntwo adults, lease. Box 1996, Nel-\nson Daily News. _\nSINGLE LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Call at 140 Baker or Phone\n491-L. \u2022\nHOUSE FOR RENT - ADULTS\nonly. References. Apply Benny's\nGrocery.\t\nEXCLUSIVE HEATED 4-ROOM\napt., fridge, stove, bath, private\nentranfce, $75. Phone 542-R.\n3 - ROOM APARTMENT, HOT,\ncold \\vater. Private entrance.\n618 Latimer. ..\nFOR RENT - 3-ROOM SUITE\nNorth Shore, private entrance,\nheat and hot water. Ph. 678-L-2.\nFOR RENT - REVENUE HOUSE\nclose in. Box 6295, ph, 1703.\n2 ROOMS  FOR  RENT.\n547-L.\nPHONE\nl-ROOM    HOUSE.\nPhone 126-L.\nCLOSE    IN.\nFOR RENT \u2022\n519-L.\n- GARAGE. PHONE\n3-ROOM   HEATED   FURNISHED\nsuite. Phone 697-X.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.\nS. P. Pond, 1013 Falls Street.\n3-BEDROOM HOME. AVAILABLE\nimm. Box 7895, Daily News..\nFURNISHED    APARTMENT   -\nclose in. Phone 511-R.\n2-ROOM  SUITE,  PARTLY FUR-\nnished. Phone '672-R.\n1   FURNISHED   LARGE   ROOM.\nPhone 964-R.\nPARTLY   FURNISHED   SUITE.\nAdults. Phone 316.\nRENTALS\nICssuUiiiied.\nHE _ TED BASEMENT FOR\nstorage on Baker St. N. A. Houston, R.R. 1,\nTRAILERS\nHomes\nLTD.\nir New and Used\ntAt Sales and Service\nCRANBROOK\nJUNIPER 6-2270\nCASTLEGAR\nCastle 2701\n- Our Policy:\nTo Give Quality Service\nThroughout the Kootenays\n1958 MODELS\nNOW' ON   DISPLAY   ;\nFLAMINGO MOBILE HOMES ON\ndisplay, 1958 models. Northern\ninsulated. Colored bath and kit-\nchert, exquisite woodwork, beautiful fabrics. See why Flamingo\nis the largest selling mobile\nhome   In   the   West.   Barrett\n. Trailer Sales, 745 Kipling St.,\nTrail and Fruitvale cutoff road.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nfor single, man, preferrably near\nSenior High School, Box 7923,\nDaily News,\nCOMFORTABLE ROOM AND\nboard. European meals. Bath\nand laundry. 711 Silica.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nFOR SALE - POM PUPS, MALE\nPhone 241-Y-2.\nEDSEL\nNow on Display at\n-\nBuerge Motors\nWe Still Have Some\n57\nrs\nFOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT BIG,\nYEAR-END DISCOUNTS\nSPECIAL\nOntario tourist will sacrifice\u2014\n1955 SPECIAL BUICK HARDTOP.\nDyna flow, radio, low mileage,\nimmaculate, Bikini coral, $2250.\n709 Josephine. Phone 1446-R.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE - 1952\nFord ci,stomline tudor. Will take\nolder pickup in trade. Ph. 1221-Y.\nFOR SALE-TANDEM BICYCLE.\nA' bicycle built for two $59. Apply Box 7893, Daily News.\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. OF\nnewly built brick 2 BR home.\nAuto, oil furnace, drive-in gar-\n' age. 2 miles North Shore. Contact S. Brashear of C. D. Black-\nwood, phone 99.\nSMALL OF F I C E AND WARE\"\nhouse with shelving 'conveniently located in Truck Terminus Bldg. on ground floor.\nPhone 77 for particulars.\nDOWNTOWN: FURNISHED\nsmall light housekeeping room\nwith fridge, rangette. $25\nmonthly. Enquire Bishop's News\nStand.\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED GOOD\n2-bedroom bungalow, close in.\nAdults. Apply Box 10214, Nelson\nNews.\nFOR .RENT - 4 ROOMS AND\nbath. $40.00 month. Apply 1020-A\nGore Street.\n2-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT. AP-\nply 614 Victoria Street.. .\nNOW\nOPEN\nel Buerge\notors\nUsed Car.\nLot\nOpposite Medical Clinic\nPHONE   1135'\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - 8 MONTH OLD\nlaying Light Sussex pullets. M.\nAben, Bonnington.        \t\nFOR SALE - DAIRY COWS, ONE\n' freshened and one to freshen end\njof Oct. Box 46, Fruitvale, B.C.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWILL YOU BE OUR GUEST\nwhen In Spokane, Washington?\nCity centre, parking one block.\nComfortable rooms w'wo bath at\nlow, low rates. Colonial Hotel.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 5 H.P. JOHNSON\noutboard motor. Used 20 hours.\n3 h.p. electric motor. Phone\n1363-X-3.      \t\nWANTED TO RENT\nROOM WANTED, PREFERABLY\nwith younger folks. Box 10268,\nNelson Daily News.       \t\nNelson lailu, N- U10\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday.  10c on Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per week I\nin advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month           $ 1.25\nThree months    $3.50\nSix months    $ 6.50\nOne year $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States -\nOne month    $ 1.75\nThree months _..    $ 5 00\nSix months    $ 9.50\nOne year     $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.    ,\nPEEBLES\n>\nSAVE HUNDREDS\nOF  $ $ $\nRight Now \u2014 Right Here \u2022\n>\nFORWARD   LOOK\nYears Ahead of Competition\nPLYMOUTH  AND\nCHRYSLER   CARS\nFARGO TRUCKS\n>\nWe're Screaming \u2022\nFor  Good\nUSED CARS\nDrop in and you'll be delighted with the'big trade\nallowances here.\n>_an__n\nODDS AND ENDS\nFord V8 Motor Assembly.\n'51 Austin Motor and\nTransmission Complete.\n4 Cylinder Plymouth,\nreconditioned motor,     (\nrigged up with saw pulley.\nBig Stock\nUsed  Generators,   Starters,\nCarburetors, Air Cleaners, 011-\nFilters, Car Radios.\nPEEBLEi\nMOTORS\nCHRYSLER.-PLYMOUTH\n. FARGO'c-WwxTIP.Ei' !\n7U.\/..090'He\/son.'f>.C '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1957 \u2014 11\nYOUNGSTERS HELP\nDERBY, England  (CP)  - To\nmeet a severe staff shortage 16\nteen-agers who left schools in\nnortheast Derbyshire in July are\ngoing back as student teachers.\nUSED JEEPS  \u25a0\nUSED CHAIN SAWS\n,\\    $40.00 and Up\nNew5H-.P. I.E.L Chain Saws $199.50\n.    Complete With 16\" bar. and Chain\nUsed Crawler Tractors\nSINNERUB\n191   Baker St.\nPhone 1030\nDealers in Allis-Chalmers Tractors, White and Autocar Trucks,\nWillys14-Wheel Drive Units and IEL Chain Saws.\nWEEKEND BUYS AT\n\u2022\n\u2022\nNew AUSTINS and MORRIS' IN STOCK\n10g- BUICK 4-DOOR SEDAN\n_._\/'_)\/   Automatic   Trans.,   Radio,   Power   Brakes,\nPower   Steering,   2-Tone   Paint,   Whltewall\nTires, Chrome Discs.\n:,      $750 off List Price.\n10C7 PLYM0UTH 2-DOOR SEDAN\nX\\j>0 \/  2-Tone Paint, Whitewalls, Chrome Discs.\n$650 off List Price\nB--7 DODGE 4-DOOR SEDAN\nS \/  Push-Button Trans., V-8 Motor, Radio, 2-Tone\nPaint.\n$650 off List Price\n-ir\\\\B\u00a3i P0NTIAC --DOOR HARDTOP\nJLj\/ftO V-8 Motor, Radio With Rear Speaker, 2-Tone\nPaint,, Whltewall Tires, Deluxe Trim. New\nCar Condition. Reg. list price $2995.\nPrice to Clear $2650\nDODGE 4-DOOR REGENT SEDAN\n2-Tone Paint, Low Mileage. A Very Clean Car.\nReg. price $1975.\nPrice to Clear $1675\nMETEOR 4-DOOR SEDAN\nAutomatic Trans., Radio, Immaculate Condition. -Reg. price $1850.\nPrice to Clear $1525\nCHEVROLET 2-DOOR SEDAN\nStandard Trans.,  Seat  Covers. -Immaculate\nInside and Out. Reg. price $1595.\nPrice to Clear $1375\n1955\n191\nI\n^ 195^\nSPECIAL\n1955 METEOR RANCH WAGON\nBeautifully 2-Toried in Turquoise and White; Whltewall Tires,\nCustom Radio. New Car Condition Inside and Out.\nPLEASE NOTE\u2014Trades Accepted on All Above Units.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nWE PAY CASH FOR YOUR GOOD USED CAR\n, AUSTIN - MORRIS SALES AND SERVICE\n-Baker and Hendryx St; .,    Phone 2000\nleiung\n1956 PLYMOUTH TUDOR\nV-8 Motor, Radio.      ;.,!,! ,'.,'., ,* * *P\n,,     1957 FORD CUSTOM 300\n2-Tone, Red and White. -     $Z5d5\n1955 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP   $1095\nHaldane Motors\n\u2022New & Used Cars\n301 Vernon Street ' Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 2135 \u2014 Phone 2136\n* 1957'DODGE SEDAN\n* 1957 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n* 1955 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n* 1955 BUICK SEDAN\n* 1953 PONTIAC SEDAN\n\/      * 1954 AUSTIN SEDAN\n,. * 1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n\\v, '- '* 1952 CHEVROLET COACH\n* 1951 CHEVROLET COUPE\n* 1950 HILLMAN -\n* 1955 INTERNATIONAL Vi TON\n* 1953 G.M.C. Vi TON\nze'.in Brake Jobs\nand Minor Tune-Ups\nDrop In and Get Your Marfak Lubrication Now !\nOpsn Till 9:00 Tonight-Saturday for Gas'and Car Sales\nI\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1957\nAsiatic 'Flu???\nSouth Pole 'Flu???\nLower Slobovia 'Flu???\nResist it much better by building up YOUR resistance with daily additions of vitamins and minerals\nin your diet.\nA Complete Stock of\nDietary Supplements Is Kept\nat All Times\nat\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nRCAF Cornel Jets Return fo Base\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The RCAF's are scheduled io return to their\ntwo   Comet   jet   transports,   in\nmothballs for the last-. ZVi years,\nPLAYMOR\nKootenay's Favorite\nDance Rendezvous\non IKE\n\u25a0 1  SATURDAY\nMEN OF  NOTE\nOn The Bandstand\nhome base here Thursday, the air\nforce announced.\nThe planes have been in England for the last year for modifi-\ncations. They are being flown\nback by Fit. Lt. Paul' Lemieux of\nManiwaki, Que., an'd Fit. Lt. W.\nB. Carrs of FUn Flon, Man.\nThe Comets were grounded in\nJanuary, 1954,- after two fatal\ncrashes by commercial airline\nComets.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nSafety Concern\nOf Everyone,\nUBMC Told\nB.C. has the worst accident record of any Canadian province,\nH. H. Hamper, executive director\nof the British Columbia Safety\nCouncil, told delegates to the annual' Union of British Columbia\nMunicipalities convention Wednesday afternoon.\nAverage number of accidents'\nper year from 1951 to 1955 in B.C.\nwas 1108. In spite of the fact B.C.\nhas many hazardous industries,\nMr. Hamper's statistics showed\n255 accidents per year were industrial, 231 were traffic, and 622\noccurred in homes, on the water,\nduring recreational periods and at\nother times.\nAccidents cost $100,000,000 per\nyear, or $5 per person per month\nin B.C., Mr. Hamper quoted. He\nsaid the answer to this problem\nis for everyone to become concerted about safety. Public concern about polio found an answer\nto the (head scourge, Mr. Hamper\nsaid.\nEveryone interested in safety\ncan participate in a community\nsafely council, according to Mr.\nHamper, and information is avail-,\nable. He pointed out that, iriunisi-\npalities. consist of.people, not properties, and noted wonderful sup-\nport given by the UBCM executive.\n, Mr. Hamper said the B.C. Safety\nCouncil will not prevent accidents\nin any community, but exists to\nhelp, communities plan safety\nprograms.\nUBCM Credit\nBalance $21,464    ,\nCredit balance of the Union of\nBritish Columbia Municipalities\nwas $21,464 on August 31, according to honorary treasurer Mayor\nJ. J.,Ladd of Kelowna. The Union\nalso has- municipal bonds with a\n$15,000 per value, and $13,916.25\nmarket value, he said.\nAttraction of New People Big\nInterior Challenge Says McMahon\nNatural gas will be a major factor in the growth of forest, mining\nand smelting and manufacturing\nindustries, the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention was told at\nthe Civic Centre Thursday.\nJohn McMahon, president of Inland Natural Gas Company, predicted that in the next few? years\nnearly every British Columbia\ncommunity would be reached by\nthis fuel. He was addressing convention ^delegates and their wives\nat a luncheon sponsored by Inland\nWith introduction of natural gas\nto B.C. resources, the Interior\n\"now has the basis to offset a trend\nthat has been alarming British\nColumbia businessmen since the\nend of the war.\" This trend, Mr.\nMahon continued, was in the form\nof congestion- of a large portion of\nthe population in the Lower Mainland.    ' .\nAttracting, new people to portions of the province lying outside\nthe Vancouver trading area \"will\nbe the greatest challenge to municipal management of the future,\nand one Of the best known methods\nof attracting new people and new\nindustry falls in the profession of\ntown planning. Planning for the\nfuture will pay better dividends today than any other form of municipal progress.\"\nHe   asked   the   delegates   If,\n\"with   ample . basic   materials,\npower and now natural gas, will\nyou be ready to   attract   new\npeople to your town or village or\ndistrict?\"\nAttractive, well designed communities soon caught the eye of\nnew business. New business meant\nnew people and new people meant\nprogress in every form.\nMUST SPREAD\n. British Columbians enjoyed a\nvast natural' wealth which was\n\"only just now being developed to\nprovide us with a better way of\nlife. Unfortunately, nearly half of\nus live within 20 miles of the Vancouver post office. Your job ...\nwill-be to spread the population\nmore widely over the map, through\nmaking your areas competitive\nwith the Lower Mainland.\"\nHe said Inland this year would\nserve 27 towns and villages and\nby next year the distribution system would be 40. Since construction\nbegan in February, 360 miles of\n500 miles of distribution system\ntransmission pipeline and almost\nlines had heen laid.\nThe vast network of pipe and con.\ntrol stations.to regulate the flow\nof gas had cost about $25,000,000!\nOf a nine-million dollar contract\nfor construction, 60 per cent had\ngone to wages and the majority of\nworkers were local men. Payroll\ndollars \\were still circulating in\nmany, communities and would be\nfor \"a long time to come.\"\nDealing   with   Inland's   rate\nstructure, he said gas users In\nNelson, more than 300 miles from\nthe point at which the company\ntook delivery of gas, would pay\nexactly.the same rate as a person close io the Junction with the\nWestcoast Transmission Com.\nPany-\nEnd of construction would mean\nthe beginning of municipal income\nfrom the Inland system. By the\nend of the fifth.year of operation it\nwas estimated that Inland will\nhave paid $2,000,000 m municipal\nand school taxes.\nIn introducing. Mr. McMahon,\nMayor J o s e p h. K a r y told the\ndelegates he was a native son,\nborn near Moyie, in East Kootenay and had received his education\nin B.C. He was well known to many\nof the delegates as a former partner of McMahon and Burns Ltd.,\ninvestment dealers.\nCPR Exhibit Here Today\nFeatures \"Electronic Brain\"\nA giant portrait in words and\npictures of the Canadian Pacific's\ncoast to coast system, for handling\nthe mass of paperwork required to\noperate the railway and featuring\nthe new I.B.M. 705. \"electronic\nbrain\" has begun a two-month tour\nacross the nation in a specially fitted railway car, and is in Nelson\ntoday.\nThe exhibit, which will be on\nview at'49 centers, across Canada,\ntraces the history of recording\ntransactions and processing -business information from the earliest\ntimes \u2014 from the clay tables of\nthe Sumerians and the abacus of\nthe' Chinese, centuries before\nChrist, through the early typewrit-\nYOUR DOLLAR  BUYS MORE AT YOUR MARSHALL-WELLS STORES\nSALE STARTS TODAY\n.\"V.:;';.    Oval Blue Roaster\nSmooth enamelled finish with rounded corners\nfor easy cleaning. Holds a 5-lb. roast | JJQ\nor 4V4 lb. fowl. 1.69 value'for    I .3 7\nDeluxe Dish Pan\nUnbreakable   polyethylene.   Lightweight, durable, easy to\nclean. 1.79 value for \t\n,69\n.49\nCAKE PAN8\n3 different square sizes.\n..98 value for,       \t\nCORN-CAKE PANS\n.75 Value for \t\nFuel Oil Can\nwith  Flexible Spout\nSturdy corrugated body' with large filler\n\u25a0 cap. Large strainer spout* with 10-inch,\nflexible extension. \u25a0 >i qq\n3.49 value for  Zs\/7\nAutomobile Floor Mats\nAll rubber; black. Centre non-slip design\nwith plain border. 16tt\" x 20\". ^jq\n.89 value for    sO\/\nFloor Broom\n12\" width, heavily, filled. \u2022 Clear lacquer\nfinish on hardwood block. | M.Q\n'2.39 value for       I .T1\"\nSPECIA.L\nALARM CLOCK\nThis  Sale   Only.\nDependable, accurate, easy to read\nnumerals. Modern design. | qq\n2.65 value for   .  I t7\/\nPoly\nUtility  Pail\nWill not leak, dent,\ncrack or rust. Heavy\nbail handle. \u2014 1.98\nvalue for\n'\u2022'9      Somian Banded Teapot\n.The practical, everyday teapot that keeps\ntea.hot-longer. \"TC\n-1.19-yalue for......     .IJ\nCOME IN AND SEE THE\nMANY NON - ADVERTISED\nSPECIALS. TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON DOZENS OF ITEMS.\nGeneral Purpose Shovels\nGet ready now for \"Winter show. Choose\nfrom our complete stock to suit your requirements. ,1 v\nD-handle, general purpose.\n2.25 value for\t\nD-handle shovel of light-weight\naluminum. 3.95 value for \t\n1.75\n2.99\nP. LO. Putty\nHigh grade pure linseed oil. putty.    | m\n1-lb. pkg, ,22 value for . ...:   oil.\nPutty Knife\nMEASURING CUP AND\nSPOON 8ET\nRegular .55 JQ\nfor '  \u201e3<r\nCOHERED BOWL SET\nSet of 3. jp\n.49 value for       \u00ab3 3\nNYLON   FUNNEL.\n\u202219 value i >\u2022\nfor   j;r5\nFelt  Weatherstrip\ninch.\n.19\nLength 20 ft, width % inch.\n.25 value\nfor\nTempered  blade  with   enamelled   wood\nhandle. Makes glazing easy. | ry\n.15 value for   . I V\nHeating   Pad\ny\\>r more comfort fn\nevery home. Available\nin rose, green or .blue.\n5.95'value A AC\\\nfor  '.. T'.T'^\n(\nStorm Window Kit\n72\" x 36\" transparent plastic sheet, 18 feet\nof fibreboard moulding and. nails.\n.45 value for\t\n.29\nMARSHALL-WELLS STORES\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n395  Baker St.\n(OWNERS)\nNelson,  B.C.\nPhone 497\nUBCM Turns Down\nUse of Building\nOfficials' Code\nDelegates, to the Union of British\nColumbia Municipalities defeated\na resolution from Nanaimo seeking\npermission for municipalities to\nuse the Uniform Building Code,\npublished by the Pacific Building\nOfficials' Conference, in place of\nthe National Building Code, if they\nso wished.\nUBCM executive.director T. R.\nB. Adams of New Westminster\nread a letter from the B.C. Building Inspectors' Association regist-,\nering disapproval of the measure.\nThey thought the National Building\nCode technically sufficient for B.C.\nconstruction requirements.\nNainaimo contended the Pacific\nCoast Building Officials' code, now\nused by some municipalities, could\nbe more useful in B.C. A delegate\nfrom there also pointed out that\ncomplete . reprints were issued\nevery three years, free plan checking service was available, and reports were made on' new building\nmaterials.\nVictoria now uses the Pacific\nCoast Building Officials' code, according to Mayor, P. B. Scurrah.\ners, comptometers and ., adding\nmachines.\nThe display shows that as late as\n1881 when .the C.P.R.-was incorporated business correspondence was\nconducted in longhand and all\nstatements and business documents\nwere calculated with pencil and\npaper and written out in ink.\nIt shows the advanced machines,\nincluding small electronic computers, which were in use on the CPR\nbefore ihe new program was inaugurated in 1956 apd demonstrates how new tools have made possible a revolutionary new approach\nto handling CPR paperwork.\nProminent among the new tools\nis the \"common language machine\", which enables the operator\nto produce a record on punched\npaper, tape or punched cards simultaneously with typing the original\ndocument. -From here on, all processing is accomplished entirely\nby mechanical means.\nEqually prominent is the role of\nCanadian Pacific Communications\nwhich provides 24-hour wire ser-\nvice over a coast to coast network\non \"carrier\" circuits which enable\nmany messages to be sent simultaneously over the same pair of\nwires.\nGraphically portrayed in the ex.\nhibit is the flow of Canadian Pacific information from its source at\nhundreds of points across 'the\ncountry by wire, mail or messenger to the regional collection points\ncalled \"Data Centres\" at Vancouver, Calgary, Moose Jaw, Winnipeg, North-Bay, Toronto, Montreal'\nand Saint John, where it is further\nprocessed and relayed to the Computer Centre in Montreal for processing on the giant electronic\ncomputer, and eventual flow back\nto those requiring it.\nThe giant electronic computer\nitself is represented in a 10 foot\nmodel with which the complexities\nof its operation can be explained in\nlayman's language.\nThe spechjl car will leave Nelson\non today's westbound passenger\ntrain.\nResolutions Affecting Voters'\nLists Passed by UBCM Meeting\nA resolution submitted by Victoria to the effect that, the provincial government.be requested to\namend the new Municipal Act so\nthat the municipal clerk would not\nbe required to annually mail\nnotices to electors to be signed and\nreturned in order to keep the\nelector's name on the voters' list\nwas passed by the UBCM annual\nconvention.\nAnother resolution from Victoria\nregarding voters' lists was discussed and carried. It requested\nthe government to reinstate the\nprovisions of the Municipal Elections Act under which\" any person\nwhose name had been improperly\nomitted from the voters' list would\nbe allowed to vote upon presenting\nto, the returning officer a certificate\nsigned, by the municipal clerk or\nassessor.  . ;\nA further resolution from Victoria was passed requesting' the\nprovincial government to amend\nthe new Municipal-Act to eliminate\nthe requirement for the keeping of\na poll book td be signed by each\nand every elector at municipal\nelection time.\nBecause of the high cost of\nborrowing and for other reasons a\nresolution was submitted by North\nCowichan, and carried by the con-\ncention, to the effect, that the\ngovernment be asked to introduce\nlegislation permitting Councils, if\napproved by ratepayers, to create\na reserve to meet future specific\ncapital commitments by annually\nsetting aside specified amounts out\nof current revenue. This had been\nendorsed by the Association of\nVancouver Municipalities.   -\nResolutions from Summerland\nand Mission District regarding the\nsize of a council were withdrawn\nin favor of an amended resolution\nrecommended by the resolutions\ncommittee to the effect that the\nsize of a council remain fixed\nunless   petitioned   otherwise   by\ncouncil and approved. This was\nvoted on and. carried.\nAn amended form of a resolution submitted by Langley Township was passed to the effect that\nthe provincial government be asked\nto make necessary amendments to\npermit council members who belong to co-operative organizations\nor Farmers Institutes freedom to\nvote on questions affecting such\norganizations on permission from\nthe council.\nA resolution submitted by Burnaby was passed to the effect\nthat Section 193 of the Municipal\nAct be amended deleting the last\npart of the section so that it would\nread as follows: \"When a Municipality employs a solicitor or\ncounsel whose remuneration is\nwholly or partly by salary, annual\nor otherwise, the municipality,\nnotwithstanding, has the right to\nrecover and collect lawful costs\nin, all actions'and proceedings in\nthe same manner as if the solicitor or counsel was not receiving-\na salary.\" -\nWOULD RAISE EXEMPTION\nA resolution submitted by Pitt\nMeadows was passed, asking the\nprovincial government to. raise tax\nexemption on farm buildings from\n$5000 to $7500. ,\nMayor of North Vancouver, C.\nW. Cates reported for the Resolutions Committee.\nChairman at the session was\nReeve C. A. P. Murison of North\nCowichan who holds position as\nfirst 'vice-president of the Union\nof B.C. Municipalities.\nA report of the Educational Finance Committee was read to the\ndelegation Wednesday morning.\nThe appointments of leaders for\nthe convention committees were\nannounced as follows: Mayor E.\nHills of Prince Rupert as chairman of the credentials committee,\nMayor R. E.'Sang of Cranbrook\nchairman of the nominations committee, and Mayor Jackson of\nNew Westminster as chairman of\nthe special committees.\nPOTATOES GROW\nABOVE GROUND\nAT PROCTER\nA potato plant grown at her summer home at Procter by Mrs. Pauline Backman of Nelson, produced\nits spuds above instead of in the\nground.\n\"I've never seen anything like\nit,\" said, Mrs. Backman, who\nbrought the vine into'the Daily\nNews. Large size potatoes clung\nto the stalk as high as three feet\nfrom the stem,\n.The rest of the .patch grew nor\nmally and produced a good crop,\nshe reported.\nBuildinq Near\nAirports\nStudy Urged\nThe-time has come for a study\nof building restrictions near airports or alrpdft sites, S. L. Bryce,\nexecutive- secretary of the B.C.\nAviation Council, told the annual\nconvention of the Union of British\nColumbia Municipalities on Wednesday in the Civic Theatre. A\nsuggestion was made after Mr.\nBryce's address that the UBCM\nset up a committee to investigate\nthe matter. This may be'dealt\nwith before the convention ends\nFriday.\nAir transportation Jias become a\nmajor factor in our province's\neconomy, Mr. Bryce said, quoting\nthat, in July, 720 planes were registered in B.C. Of these, 270 belonged to private individuals or\ncompanies, and the remainder to\nairlines.\nIllustrating the benefits which\nmight come from municipal airplane landing facilities, Mr. Bryce\nsaid 22 planes landed recently on\na strip opened last year at Quali-\ncum Beach on Vancouver Island.\nOther municipalities have built or\nare planning airport facilities, he\nsaid.\nThe Department of Transport,\nhe added, administers flying regulations but has no control over\nForsyth\nNo-Iron\nShirts\nNOW IN COLORS\nMade in the Star-Dust\ncldth, in Blue, Green,\/\nGrey and White.\nJust wash and drip dry,\nno more ironing.\n$5.95\nE-ylORY'Q\nLTD.     ^\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPICKERSGILL\nTAKES UP LAW\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-J.W.\nPickersill, federal member for\nBonavista-Twillingate, has registered in Newfoundland as a law\nstudent articled to the firm of\nCook and Bartlett, St. John's.\nSince Mr. Pickersgill holds -a\nbachelor of arts degree he can\narticle for a period 'of three\nyears, during which he must\nwrite five sets.of examinations\nset by the Newfoundland Law\nSociety.\nThe'Liberal member was reelected In the last federal election but lost his post as immigration minister in the Progressive\nConservative changeover. He has\nhad no previous law experience.\nbuildings put near airports, Mr,\nBryce said. Improved-roads and\ntrains, he claimed, would not\nsatisfy the growing desire foi\nspeed, and Mr. Bryce said man;\nnew airplane developments are be\ning planned.\nSome. B.C. Schools Get\nLong Christmas Holiday\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSome  Canadian  students   and\nteachers   will   have   a   slightly\nOdds..'.\nand Ends\n. ...byM.D.B.\nI have a sore middle finger on\nmy left hand so if you don't mind\ntoo much, I'll strike-the ''K\" and\n.\"I\" on my typewriter instead of\nthe \"De\" and \"E\" so as to save\nthe distressed digit. I (lope this\nwon't confusi you too much. I know\nyou won't mind suffiring with mi.\n* *  *\nA friind of mini who was flying\nup from the coast kinaly brought\nmi a piici of amarylis\u2014a biiutiful\nplant that I hak akmirjk whin I\nwas down thiri. Biing hi thi habit\nof talking to mysilf I akkrissik jt\nthus as I plantik it in.my noni\ntoo filtili soil: \"Now, you diarlittle\nplant, I know this ground is not\n.niarly as good as that you ari usik\nto,' but pliasi ko your best for mi\nand I will lovi you for it.\" This was\nabout a wiik ago ank it is looking\nquiti happy, so I'havi hopis. I tolk\nall this ,to a, friink ank shi laughik\nhiartly so I thought I would pass it\non to you.-\n* *  *\nLooking back over this I can see\nit is going to be almost too much\nto expect you to translate so I will\ntry to train my fourth finger   to\ntake the load ort the ee's and d's.\n* *  *\nReading about all the band\nmusic planned during Queen Elizabeth's visit (there'll be some band\nor ' another playing almost the\nwhole time she is here). I.couldn't\nhelp sending up a fervent prayer\nthat she likes band music, otherwise I fear for her sanity.\n* *  *\nYou know of the system PTAs\nhave of awarding something or another to the class best represented\nby parents and teachers at meetings. Well, I have discovered that\none group allows five marks for\nfathers that turn out, three marks\nfor teachers and two for moms.\nSurely this must give the poor,\nlong-suffering moms an inferiority\ncomplex to realize they rate three\nmarks below Pops. Rank discrimination I call it. Someone ought to\ninvoke the law of equal pay for\nequal work or something.\n* #  *\nI have been much interested in\nWinnipeg's battle of the elm. When\nthe citizens can get so wrought up\nover their 95-year-old tree you can\nimagine the concern of the canine\npopulation. Why, a Scotch terrier\nand an Irish setter were highly\nincensed. 'Said Scottie, \"I hear-r-r\nthey'rrr talkin' aboot cuttin doon\noor elm. Ah, it's a dog's life an'\nthere's nae a tiee for blocks.'\nPaddy agreed and observed that\neither they couldn't have read any\nof Ernest Seton Thompson's books\nor they'd as leave tear down the\npostoffice.\nlonger Christmas holiday this\nyear.\nThe longer-than-usual holiday\narises from the mid-week occurrences of Christmas and New\nYear's day. School officials say\nthis situation occurs about once\nevery five years and creates a\nproblem which may only be\nsolved by allowing a longer holiday.\nHowever, education department\nofficials agree that the final decision to grant an extended holiday is up to the local school\nboards.\nA Canadian Press survey shows\nproposed holidays vary from 14-\n17 days across the country except in Winnipeg where schools\nwill be closed for only 10 days.\nEXTENDED   HOLIDAY\nSome public and high schools in\nNew Brunswick, Quebec, Alberta\nand British Columbia will enioy\na 10-day holiday.\nProtestant schools in Montve3)\nhave decided to extend the holiday from Dec. 20 to Jan. G as\nhave schools in Lethbridge, tii'.'i.\nand those in B.C.\nSeparate' school children in Alberta will get 17 days' holiday,\nthe longest year - end layoff reported. Their schools close on\nFriday, Dec. 20, remain closed\nMonday, Jan. 6, because it is a\nholy day, and reopen Tuesday,\nJan. 7.\nIn Ontario, Saskatchewan, and\nin some schools in Alberta, teachers and students will enjoy a 16-\nday holiday from Dec. 20 to Jan.\n6. But schools in Winnipeg will\nonly be closed from Dec. 24 to\nJan. 2.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n' \u2122    , LIMITED        **\nPHONE 813\nMASTER PLUMBER\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n8.  CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\nS7r> Baker SI.' Phone 235\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nCity Drug\nTour Rexall Pharmacy\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_09_27","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0430107","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1957-09-27 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1957-09-27 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}