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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":" with COMICS \u2014 10c\nmim:\"J$m*\n'snm\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy with a\nfew snowflurries. Little change in\ntemperature. Low-high at Cranbrook 27-35, Crescent Valley 32-40.\nSunday outlook: Little change.\nVol. 55\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 5, 1957\nNot more Than 6o Dally,  10c Saturday\nNo. 142\nRUSSIA  LAUNCHES  MAN-MADE  MOON\nLiving Index Takes\nSixth Straight Jump\nSome Food Prices Push Index\nUp Seven-Tenths of Point\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The consumer price index increased\nsharply by seven-tenths of a point during August to a new\nhigh of 123.3, up from 122.9 in July, the bureau of statistics\nreported Friday.\nThe increase was the sixth consecutive monthly rise in a series\nthat started last March. With each\nsuccessive boost, a record high has\nbeen established. The index is\nbased on 1949 prices equalling 100.\nThe bureau said the increase was\nseasonal and almost entirely due\nto a rise from 120.2 to 121.9\u2014also a\nrecord\u2014in a food component of the\nindex.\nPrice increases were reported\nHorseplay May\nCost Boy's Eye\nPENTICTON (CP) - Alec Gal-\nbraith, 13, may lose his left eye as\na result of an accident at Penticton high school.\nHis doctor said Friday it is too\nearly to say what the outcome will\nbe, but that the boy suffered a\nsevere injury.\nAlec was hit in his left eye by\na splinter from a ruler. The grade\n8 student was engaged in a friendly\n\"horseplay\" between classes Wednesday afternoon.\nAlee and one of his classmates,\narmed with ruler and pencil respectively, made thrusts at each\nother. The ruler caught on a desk\nin the process and splintered, one\npiece, shooting off into the Gal-\nbraith youth's eye.\nHe wa_ taken to Penticton General Hospital where an operation\nwas performed. The eye was still\nbandaged Friday.\nfor eggs, pork, butter, oranges,\nbananas and lettuce, although\nother fruits and vegetables were\nlower.\nThe shelter sub-index increased\nfrom 135.3 to 135.6 as the home-\nownership component advanced\nmore than rent costs.\nThe clothing sub-index edged upwards one-tenth of s point to 108.3\nas price increases for a number\nof men's items in the fall line were\npartially offset by further declines\nin women's wear.\nFractionally higher prices in\nmany items of the household goods\nincluding furniture, floor covering\nand household services moved this\ncomponent of the cost-of-living index to 119.8 from 119.7.\nThe sub-index for miscellaneous\ncommodities and services advanced slightly to 127.1 from 126.9, reflecting higher prices for car repairs and servicing, car insurance\nand public transportation fares.\nHighways\nComptroller\nMoore Dies\nVICTORIA (CP) - Joseph Edward Moore, Highways Department comptroller here, died Friday.\nMr. Moore, 46, worked his way\nup from departmental messenger\nboy. He collapsed at his desk in the\nDouglas Building, opposite the\nLegislative Building, and died a\nfew hours later in hospital.\n3-to-l Vote Sweeps\nHoffa to Presidency\nMIAMI BEACH, FJa. (AP) -\nStubby, square - jawed Jimmy\nHoffa Friday took over full control as president of the giant International Brotherhood of Teamsters and pledged to turn the organization into a \"model of trade\nunionism.\"\nThe 44-year-old target of labor\nscandal charges was elected chief\nofficer of the, 1,500,000 - member\nby a margin of nearly 3 to 1\nover the combined votes of his\ntwo opponents.\nIn the final count, 1208 delegates voted for Hoffa, 313 for William A. Lee and 140 for Thomas\nJ. Haggerty.\nLee and Haggerty,  both  from\nfor  a\ncondi-\nChicago, had campaigned\ncleanup of the corruption\ntions charged to the union.\nCanadian delegates favored\nHoffa with 20 votes compared\nwith 11 for Lee and none for Haggerty. Votes were cast by locals\nfrom Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton, Windsor, Saskatoon,\nPembroke, Ont., and Port Arthur.\n. There are a total of 36 locals\nin Canada.\nThe convention voting was by\nvoice in a noisy auditorium with'\nout use of amplifiers. It is possible a few votes may have been\nmissed.\nALL QUIET AT\nLITTLE ROCK\nNine Negroes\nUnmolested;\nFaubus Silent\nLITTLE ROCK, Ark (AP) -\nThe white student body of Central High School Friday quietly\nadmitted nine Negroes into their\nmidst for a 10th day of integrated\neducation.\nGone were the outward signs of\nteen-aged restlessness that built\nup all week and reached a climax\nin Thursday's walltout of 75 white\nstudents.\nThe demonstrators were suspended for three days. Nevertheless, . attendance was reported at\n1725 out of the maximum, 2000,\nonly 58 below Wednesday's peak\nfigure.\nThere was silence, too, on the\npolitical front.\nGovernor Orval Faubus had\nnothing to say to reporters.\nIn Washington, President Eisenhower apparently stood on his\nultimatum to Faubus issued earlier\nin the week. The White House demanded that Faubus unequivocally\nguarantee law and order in Little\nRock and pledge no further obstruction to integration.\nIn return, Eisenhower said, he\nwill withdraw regular army\ntroops from Little Rock and turn\nback to Faubus control of the Arkansas National Guard.\nBennett Mum on\nCivil Servants\nNegotiations\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier Bennett and other government officials\ndeclined comment Friday on reports that negotiations between the\ncivil service and the government\nfor bargaining rights for employees\nhave stalled.\nThe disclosure was contained in\nspeech by Edward O'Connor,\ngeneral secretary for the B.C. Government Employees' Association,\nthat he believed the government\nwas not negotiating in good faith.\nIt is believed the Association will\nask Chief Justice Gordon Sloan to\nmediate in the dispute.\nDOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 1-16 lower at a pre\nmium of 3 3-32 per cent in terms\nof U.S. funds. The pound sterling\nwas Vs higher at $2.79%.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U.S.\ndollar was at a discount of 2 31-32\nper cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, the Bank of Canada reported. Thursday's noon rate was\n96 15-16 cents. Pound sterling\n$2.71%, up %\nGOV. ORVAL FAUBUS reads a prepared statement to his\npress conference In Little Rock, Ark., and tells the newsmen\nthat he is \"standing pat\" on his original statement to President\nElsenhower.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nMark Creek Defeated\nKimberley Hospital\nBylaw Landslides\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 City ratepayers\nFriday gave 1009-70 approval to a\nbylaw auhtorizing expenditure of\n$282,370 as their share of the proposed $1,165,000 new 57-bed Kimberley Hospital.\nSecond bylaw asking approval\nof borrowing $75,000 toward completion of the Mark Creek project\nwas defeated 510-561.\nSixty per cent \"yes\" votes were\nrequired to pass each bylaw. To\npass, the Mark Creek bylaw would\nhave needed 642 \"yes\" votes.\nNearly 1100 of the 1.28 elegible\nvoters turned out.\nThe hospital bylaw also received\nendorsation by rural voters but\nfigures were not available.    ,\n5-YEAR PC GOV'T\nSEEN BY LAING\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The proposed introduction of free trade\nbetween Britain and Canada would\n\"compromise us enormously\" in\ntrade agreements with other countries, B.C. Liberal Leader Arthur\nLaing said Thursday night.\nHe told the Vancouver Point\nGrey Young Liberal Association\nsuch a pact would be of \"tremendous advantage\" to British Columbia but would be \"disastrous\" to\nindustrial Ontario.\nThe Liberal leader predicted that\nthe new Progressive Conservative\ngovernment will stay in office no\nmore than five years. He said\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker faces\nan \"impossible position\" of increasing services while decreasing\ntaxes.\n185-Pound Satellite Circling\nEarth at 560-Mile Height\nLONDON (CP)-Russia Friday set a 185-pound sphere spinning around the earth-the first man-made earth satellite in history,\nMoscow radio reported.\nSeveral more will be'launched during the next year and thede-\nvelopments will \"pave the way to interplanetary travel,\" it said.\nThe broadcast said the satellite now is revolving\naround the earth along an elliptic trajectory at an estimated\nheight of 900 kilometers (560 miles).  .\nThe broadcast quoted the official Tass news agency\nTito's Friend\nTried in Secret\nSREMSKA MITROVICA, Yugoslavia (Reuters) \u2014 Former Communist leader'Milovan Djilas was\ntried in secret here Friday. The\ncourt announced the verdict,will\nbe delivered today.\nThe news agency Tanjug said\nDjilas, formerly President Tito's\nclose friend, answered questions\nin the closed court. Some sources\nsaid he remained silent in protest against the secret hearing.\nThe 46-year-old former vice-\npresident of Yugoslavia is accused of allowing publication outside Yugoslavia of his book The\nNew Class, in which he denounced\nthe Communists for setting up a\nnew despotic ruling class.   ...\nDjilas now is serving a three-\nyear sentence following conviction last December on other\ncharges of criticizing the state.\nPolish\nStudents\nRiot\nWARSAW, Poland (AP) - Combined forces of Polish police, security troops and militia men\nfrom worker ranks fought down\na new student uprising here Friday night.\nThe students, beaten down by\npolice after a similar uprising\nThursday, taunted the anti - riot\nforces with shouts of: \"Gestapo,\ngestapo.\"\nThe forces used clubs and tear-\ngas and noise bombs as the violence spread beyond the students\nto Poles of other ranks.\nThey broke up groups of students at the Warsaw Polytechni-\ncal School and smashed a demonstration outside . the Communist\nparty headquarters where the\nparty central committee was reported in emergency session.\nPeople from other walks of life\njoined the milling crowds after\nthe police assault on students.\nDespite threats of punishment,\nthe students had massed again\nFriday night to protest suppression\nof the student newspaper Po Pro-\nstu and the rough treatment police gave them at their first rally\nThursday night.\nas saying:\n\"For several years research and experimental designing work has been under way in the Soviet Union to create\nsatellites      '     '\nJudgment Reserved in Freedomite Appeal\nCLC May Expell\n4000 Electricians\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Nearly\n4000 electricians may be expelled\nfrom the Vancouver Building\nTrades Council (CLC).\nThey are accused of raiding six\nother city building trade unions.\nCharging the electricians, Local\n213 are the laborers, plumbers, machinists, teamsters, operating engineers and iron workers unions.\nThey say Local 213 has signed\nworkers outside its jurisdiction at\nseveral lower mainland construction projects. The local has been\nunder international union trusteeship since an anti-leftist purge of\nlocal officers nearly three years\nago.\nEd Kennedy, BTC secretary, said\nthe move to oust the local was still\nin the hands of the committee.\nOttawa Asked\nCut Coal Imports\nOTTAWA (CP) - The United\nMine Workers of America (Ind.)\nFriday called on the federal government to cut down on imports\nof coal from the United States to\nopen a market in central Canada\nfor about 2,000,000 tons for the\ndwindling western Canadian industry.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Five judges of the B.C. Court of\nAppeal Friday reserved judgment on conclusions in an\nappeal by Freedomite couple against committal of their\nson to the T>lew Denver school in 1956 because he did not\nattend a regular school. \u00ab\nVancouver lawyer Pat Hogan appeared on behalf of\nthe appelants, Anna and Bill Perepolkin of Nelson.\nLast year this same case was rejected by the B.C.\nSupreme Court and the Court of Appeal and has been reopened on a point of consti\ntutional law.\nThe court was told by Mr. Hogan\nthat under the British North America Act everyone in Canada has a\nfundamental .right to freedom of\nreligion, and coupled wilh it the\nright to decide how his children\nshall be educated.\nHe argued that any provincial\nlegislation which placed this decision in the hands of a judge or\nmagistrate was a denial of rights\nof citizenship.\nThus, he said, a section of the\nProtection of Children Act, which\nsays every child to be found habitually truant from school or liable\nto grow up without a proper education, is in need of protection and\ncan be taken away from the parents,' can be questioned as to its\nconstitutionality.\nCERTAIN EXEMPTIONS\nMr. Hogan then referred to Section 157 of the B. C. Public Schools\nAct. He said t_is act provided that,\nsubject to certain exemptions, each\nchild between the ages of seven\nand 15 must attend school every\nday.\n- \"One of those exemptions,\" he\ncontinued, \"is that where the parents can show that a child is being educated by some other means\nsatisfactory to judge or magistrate\nthey cannot be convicted.\"\nHe added that the Freedomites\nhad established a school conforming to their religious and\nconscientious convictions in the\nnearby district of Glade.\nThis enterprise, he said, proved\nunsuccessful because children at\ntending the school were apprehended by police and it had since\nbeen closed. .\nJohn Steeves, Vancouver, is appearing in support of Mr, Hogan,\nThe constitutional appeal is opposed by G. L. Murray, Vancouver, appearing on behalf of the superintendent of child welfare and\nthe B. C. attorney-general, who\nhas intervened in the case.\nMr. Hogan also produced an af\nfidavit from a Doukhobor elder\nwhich stated that Freedomite parents refused to send their children\nto B. C. state schools because of\ntheir religious belief that it is\nwrong to kill either humans or animals.\nThe Freedomites are thus opposed to any school teaching which\n\"glorifies, justifies or tolerates\"\nthe taking of life.\nG. L. Murray of Vancouver, appearing on behalf of the superintendent of child welfare and the\nB. C. attorney-general, argued that\nracial groups could only be exempted from provincial laws if\nthey had a preferred status at the\ntime B. C. came into confederation\nin 1871.'\nThe Freedomites, he said, held no\nsuch status.\nARROW UNVEILED\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Avro Aircraft\nLimited Friday put on view the\nangry-nosed, gleaming white supersonic Arrow.\nThe 1200 - mile - an - hour plane,\nwhich has not yet been flown, was\nunveiled at the company's suburban Malton plant by Defence Minister Pearkes.\nThe Arrow has a long needle\nnose, bat wings and a high tail.\nIgnored Warning,\nFined $200\n\u25a0 VANCOUVER (CP) - A company executive who had an employee feed coins into a parking\nmeter as time ran out on his car\nwas ordered to pay a total of $200\nFriday on 17 traffic charges.\nPolice said director Harold Gibson of Gibson Industries and\nHandling Limited was personally\nwarned by a constable, a sergeant\nand an inspector that it was illegal to have the meter replenished\nas the regulation one-hour parking\nperiod expired.\nHe was fined $25 and ordered to\npay $1 costs on each of six counts\nand given the opportunity to pay\nthe remaining 11 tickets out of\ncourt for a total of $44. Police said\nsome dated back to May.\nShift of Canada\nDefence Spending\nTo Be Studied\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian\ngovernment Friday agreed to\nmake a comprehensive review of\nits defence and other spending in\nthe United States to see whether\nsome of this -purchasing could be\nswitched to Britain.\nIt also agreed to dispatch a big\ntrade mission of industrial, farm\nand labor leaders to Britain ' as\nquickly as possible and to consider reducing duties on imports\nof overseas tourist goods to entourage more overseas visits by\nCanadians, particularly to the\nUnited Kingdom.\nIn return, Britain undertook to\ngradually eliminate import curbs\nagainst Canadian goods as U.K.\nearnings increased through heavier\nsales to Canada.\nartificial   satellites   oj -the\nearth.\n\"It has already been reported\nin the press that the launching of\nthe earth satellites in the U.S.S.R.\nwas planned in \"accordance with\nthe program of the International\nGeophysical Year research.\n\"As a result of the intensive\nwork by research institutes and\ndesigning bureaus the first artificial earth satellite in the world\nhas now been created.\n\"This first satellite was successfully launched in the U.S.S.R.\non October 4.\"\nUnited States scientists were\nreported in July as planning to\nlaunch some tiny satellites early\nin November as a test prelude to\nthe later projected launching\n\"next spring of a larger sized\n\"baby moon.\"\nIt was said at the time that one\nor more of these smaller objects\nmight get into an orbit around\nthe earth, though for a very short\ntime.\nThe little ones would be only\n6.4 inches in diameter and weigh\nonly four pounds, compared with\nthe 22 pounds the larger satellite\nis expected to weigh.\nTass said the Russian satellite\nlaunched Friday is a sphere and\ncarries ft radio transmitter.\nIt is 58 centimeters (about 23\ninches) in diameter and weighs\n3.6 kilograms (about 185 pounds)\nIts flight could be observed In\nthe rays of the rising and setting\nsun with the aid of simple optical\nInstruments such as binoculars\nand spy glasses, Tass said.\nThe satellite was launched from\na carrier rocket.\nThe carrier rocket gave the satellite the necessary spin speed of\nabout 8000 meters (26,000 feet) a\nsecond, Tass said.\nA complete ' revolution of the\nearth would take one hour, 35\nminutes.\nDr. John P. Hagen, director of\nthe American \"project Vanguard\" satellite project early this\nweek told a conference of satellite scientists in Washington:\n\"Following the launching of\nfour test spheres, the navy will\nthen attempt to launch and place\nin orbit the first 20-inch satellite.\n\"If our present test program\ncontinues on schedule, the first\nsatellite launching attempt will\nbe made early next spring.\"\nSENDING SIGNALS\nThe orbit of the satellite is inclined at an angle of 65 degrees\nto the equatorial plane, Tass\nsaid.\nIt should pass twice over the\nMoscow area today\u2014at 1:46 a.m.\nand at 6:42 a.m. Moscow time.\nThe satellite is fitted with\nradio transmitters continuously\n-emitting signals which could be\nreceived by \"a broad range of\namateurs,\" the agency said.\nFruit Men Qrieved\nBy Snowsell Death\nBCPC Opens\n$3 Million Plant\nQUESNEL (CP) - The $3,000,-\n000 B.C. Power Commission thermal generating plant here was officially opened Wednesday by\nMLA-elect W. C. Speare.\nInitial capacity of the plant is\n12,360 horsepower. The capacity\nwill be increased to 16,480 horsepower later this year. The plant\nwill supply power for communities\nas far south as 100-Mile House.\nKELOWNA (CP) - Leaders of\nthe Okanagan fruit industry paid\ntribute to James Snowsell, president of B.C. Tree Fruits Ltd., .who\ndied in hospital here early Friday.\nA. R. Garrish, president of the\nB.C. Fruit Growers Association,\nsaid:\n\"Mr. Snowsell's death is a great\nloss to the fruit industry. He has\nbeen for many years one of our\nmost active members and has\nserved the industry with great sincerity and devotion in many capacities.\"\nSaid R. P. Walrod, general manager of B.C. Fruits: \"Mr. Snow-\nsell's sincere interest in the affairs\nof B.C. Tree Fruits and his unselfish devotion to duty earned him\nthe deep respect of the management and staff'of this organization.\" s\nThe Glenmore district orchard-\nist, aged 40, had been admitted to\nhospital 24 hours earlier. Death\nwas believed due to a heart attack.\nAn autopsy will be performed..\nMr. Snowsell had operated an orchard at Glenmore for 18 years.\nHe was active in community affairs and was chairman of various\nfruit committees in addition to being president of the growers' selling agency. He had been a member of the B.C. Tree Fruits executive since returning from overseas service in the Second World\nWar.\nAlberta Crops Buried\nBy 8-Inch Snowfall\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 An early-\nOctober storm of mid-winter proportions cracked Alberta a severe\nblow Friday, burying crops beneath as much as eight inches of\nsnow, clogging side roads with\ndeep drifts and bringing traffic in\ncities and on main highways to a\ncrawl.\nThe weather office  described\nthe storm as one of the worst in\nhistory for the time of year and\npromised little relief for several\ndays.\nThe storm was confined to Alberta Friday, resulting in three\nseasons being apparent across the\nPrairies.\nIt was summer in Manitoba,\nwhere Winnipeg's daytime high\nreached the mid-70s; autumn in\nSaskatchewan where Regina, Saskatoon and Prince Albert had readings between 45 and .60; and winter\nin Alberta, where with few exceptions the temperature stayed below 25 degrees.\nAll of Alberta felt the bite of\nthe storm, but the western half\nwas worst off with six inches of\nsnow lying on the ground from Edmonton south. Some of this was\nwhipped into drifts five and six\nfeet deep by north winds that\nreached 35 miles an hour.\nUp to 12 inches of snow has fallen in the last two days in southwestern regions.\nMany farmers were hard hit as\nthe snowfall covered swathed\ngrain and a lot that was still\nstanding in the fields.\nThe Alberta Wheat Pool said a\nquarter of the wheat and barley\ncrops, a third of the oats and half\npf the flax still were in the fields\nwhen the storm began Wednesday.\nLivestock also suffered. They\nwere not perishing \"but they are\nnot doing well,\" said Mr. Bell.\nThe snowfall, already far above\nthe average for the entire month,\nplayed hob with traffic, both on\nthe highways and in the air.\nANDREW. TURCHIN, 41, Cuyahoga, Ohio, Is show.n here\nduring an excruciating hour and a half pinned in beer truck\ncab after It hit a bridge on U.S. Highway 30 west of Warsaw,\nind. A doctor gave him morphine to ease the pain until he was\nfreed. Later he was reported in fair condition suffering from\nshock and a possible left leg fracture.\u2014AP Wirephoto,\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 5, 1957\nKIDDIES  \u2014   AT   THE   MATINEE   TODAY\n\"ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET CAPTAIN KIDD\"\nPlus  SERIAL  \u2022   CARTOONS   \u2022   COMEDIES\nLast Times Tonight\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-9:00\nCary Grant km Pebofeh Kerr in m\nli the Mediterranean, aerate an ocean   A\nandslloverNewYorkin (l.\u00a5\nAnAtfajrW\nRemember\nCMC\nr#\n\u00ab FAIDDS\nPLItttS\nIUE1II1\nStarts Monday\u2014\"TENSION AT TABLE ROCK\"\nPlus\u2014\"THE BRAVE ONE\"\nrn a_m  _____\u25a0 _am n _n_n\nstarlight!'\nARLIG\nDRIVE-IN\nTimes 8:00 and 8:30 p.m.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"DOCTOR\nAT LARGE\"\nEaslmancolor, Vistavision\nLDirk Bogarde, Muriel Poulow  |\n_\u25a0 son m __\u25a0_> \u25a0__\u25a0 \u25a0__\u25a0\nELK DRIVE-IN*\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"The Gambler From Natchez\"\n(Color)\nPlus: \"My Pal Gus\"\nOne Showing 7:30 Standard Time\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTime Approx. 6:45 p.m.\n\"WINGS OF THE HAWK\"\nPlus\n\"Abbott and Costello\"\nCASTLE   THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n2 Shows Nightly at 6:45 p.m.\n\"RIVER OF NO RETURN\"\n(Cinemascope)\nRobert Mltchum, M. Monroe\nCar Leaves Road, Hits\nParking Meter, Tree\nLooking from their office windows at Nelson City Hall Friday\nat 9:15 p.m., city police were eye\nwitnesses ot an automobile accident in the 300 block Ward Street.\nThe car which was occupied by\nthree 18-year-old boys was driving\nsouth uphill on Ward when it reportedly smashed a parking meter\non the right curb, swerved out\ninto the street and then back onto\nthe curb,, careened off a tree in\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"LAST   FRONTIER\"\n(Technicolor)\nAnn  Bancroft\nChildren Were Attending\nSchool, Says Freedomite\nLibrarian Retires\nOn Eve o.\nDream Come True\nA Nelson-born woman who has\npatiently waited 31 years for a\nnew library building in Vancouver,\nhas retired there on the eve of\nthe structure's inauguration.\nShe is Miss Gwynneth Lewis,\nwho resigns as head of the circulation department of Vancouver's\nmain branch library at Main and\nHastings.\nHer dream of a new library\nbuilding will become a reality\nwith the opening of the $2,000,000\nplant at Robson and Bu.rard\nNovember 1.\nMiss Lewis began her library\ncareer in Vancouver in 1926, \"expecting then a new library would\nbe erected within a year or two.\"\n\"It's been a long wait, but at\nlast, the new building is here.\"\nMiss Lewis took her librarian's\ndegree from the University of\nWashington, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from University\nOf B.C.\nfront i of Court House, removing\nbark, and came to a halt.\nThe police arrived at the scene\nwithin 30 seconds after the crash\nbut the driver had disappeared.\nHe had not yet been apprehended\nat press time.\nOne passenger was taken to hospital with head injuries and was\nreleased after treatment. The other\npassenger was unhurt. The car received extensive damage, the grill\nsmashed in, front fender and headlight torn off and glass and metal\nstrewn around.\nNames of the youths are being\nwithheld temporarily while police\nare investigating the incident.\nCharges will be laid, police said.\nPolice were unable to disclose further particulars Friday night as\nthis would involve evidence.\nReport that three Sons of Freedom  children   were   apprehended\nby RCMP for not attending school,\n' drew protest from William Moojel-\nsky of Shoreacres, secretary of the\n' Reformed Doukhobors, Friday.\nThe children were committed to\nYOUR\nPrescriptions\nCOMPOUNDED\nPromptly - Carefully\nAt Moderate Prices\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203     Nights: 394-L\nthe temporary care of the. superintendent of child welfare and\ntaken to the dormitory school at\nNew Denver pending future hearing in family court.\nMr. Moojelsky said the children\nwere attending a school at Shore-\nacres sponsored by the Christian\nCommunity and Brotherhood ol\nReformed Doukhobors. Here they\nwere taught in both Russian and\nEnglish by their mothers. They\ntook such subjects as singing, reading of,Bible literature, arithmetic\nand grammar, in English and Russian.\nBecause they were \"attending\nschool\", authorities erred, he said,\nin taking the three children to\nNew Denver. He claimed that their\naction was a misinterpretation of\nthe Protection of Children Act under which the children were com\nmitted.\n\"SECOND TIME\"\n\"This is the second school they\nhave wrecked,\" Mr. Moojelsky\nstated. \"It happened in Glade a\nyear ago,\" when, he said, a school,\nsince replaced by a new one at\nTarrys, was condemned as unfit\nfor such a purpose. He said authorities would not permit teaching\noi children in the building because\nit contained no electric lighting, no\nwindows on one side and no school\nequipment such as blackboards,\nscribblers and so on.\n\"WS would not use these things;\nwe believe in memory work,\" _e\nsaid.\nAppeal being heard in B. C. Appeal Court, if successful, would be\n\"be a great step ahead\" if won,\nbecause it would prove \"the courts\ncan make decisions without order\nfrom the government.\" His sect\nhad avoided going to court in past\nyears because it felt the courts\nwere \"dominated by the govern\nment.\"\n\u25a0nilcnvnwnt.\n\u2022 f..o.8 your family protection\nif fluey need it!\n* (Hm you all your money back\nal 65\\f they don't!\nPlus a profitable' return \u00bbn\nyour investment!\nDon't buy any lift insurant**\nttr.iil you investigatt thit via\nolanl\nFamily Income Plans, Juvenile\nEducation and' Mortgage Consul\ntation Politics\u2014Group, Life* Ac\ncldent and Sickness, Group\nAnnuities.\nAND   NO.WII\nL'fe  Income  Bonds .\n100%   Deductible for\"\nInectttfe  Tax  ftC'r'tfcsei-\nALSS..T MMM\nEXTRA YELP\nLEICESTER, England (AP) -\nThe post office magazine reports\nthe case of an old lady who heard\na yelp every time she got a phone\ncall. Engineers found the wires\nwere short-circuited on a drainpipe, to which her dog was chained. Every lime Ihe phone rang; the\ndog got a shock,\nBARAVALLE CITY\nBAND LEADER\nE. D. Baravalle has taken over\nas bandmaster of Nelson City\nBand. He succeeds Norman Fish-\nwick of Castlegar, leader since the\nband was reorganized a few years\nago. Pressure of other duties has\nnecessitated Mr. Fishwick giving\nup the post.\nMr. Baravalle is musical director at L. V. Rogers High School\nand leader of the school band.\nFined $25 Following\nCafe Disturbance\nIsaac Kasper of Nelson, charged\nwith wilful damage, was fined $25\nand costs and paid $25 damages\nwhen he pleaded guilty before Magistrate R. S. Nelson in city police\ncourt Friday. Evidence was that\nKasper had thrown a chair and\nsmashed two windows at the Chop\nSuey House at 624 Front Street\nearly Friday morning.\nH. Roy Crabtree, Montreal,\nwho has been elected chairman\nof the executive council of the\nCanadian Chamber of Commerce. He was formerly vice-\nchairman. In business life, Mr.\nCrablree is chairman of Howard\nSmith Paper Mills Limited, and\nchairman and president of Woods\nManufacturing Company Limited.\nHi\nCastlegar\nThe Castlegar A.O.T.S. clubmem-\nbers are conducting a house to house\ncanvass in the Castlegar area for the\nK.R.C. WELFARE AND\nRECREATION SOCIETY\nNEW JAYCEES\nCONSTITUTION\nBEING DRAFTED\nR. A. Aubry reported to Nelson\nJunior Chamber of Commerce on\nthe regional executive meeting he\nattended at Cloverdale, August 17\nand 18. Mr. Aubry was representative of the West Kootenay Junior\nChambers including Trail, Rossland and Nelson.\nThe business at Cloverdale had\nconsisted mainly of drafting the\nnew constitution for Junior Chamber Region I which takes in British Columbia and the Yukon, he\nsaid.\nNext month the Jaycee regional\nexecutive will further iron out\nparts of the new constitution at\ntheir meeting in Penticton. The\nconstitution is to be submitted at\nVancouver next year.\nLocal Junior Chamber meetings\nwill be held at t he Chamber of\nCommerce room the first and third\nThursday of each monlh, instead\nof every second Thursday as before.\nGuest speaker at Thursday\nnight's meeting Was D. M. Disney of the National Employment\nService who spoke and presented\na film on rehabilitation of disabled\nworkers. Jaycees Clifford Sherlock expressed the view that assistance with such a program was\n\"definitely Jaycee work.\"\nOther guests were J. R. Lee and\nR. M. Philip.\nJuvenile Fined\nA 16-year-old Nelson boy appeared before Judge William\nEvans in juvenile court Thursday morning on the charge of\nstealing two hub caps about the\nmiddle of last month.\nThe boy was found to be a\njounvenile delinquent and was\nfined $20 and placed on 12 months\nprobation.\nNEW CONSTRUCTION in Nelson includes cinder-block building, above, which\nis to replace present Mac's Welding & Equipment Co. Ltd. headquarters on Railway Street. A new feature will be a showroom at one end of the office, along with\nparts and storage room. Directly behind, will be a repair shop, which will include\na section for saw repairs. Cost is estimated at about $12,000. Partners in company\nare H. (Fritz) Farenholtz, Charles Ross and Alex McDonald.\u2014DaiJy News photo.\nimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTemperature\nDips to 38\nThe temperature in Nelson\ndropped to 38 degrees, the low\nso far this' Fall, Thursday\nnight and Friday morning.\nThe mercury managed to\nrise only six degrees Friday\nto a \"high\" of 44.\nDuring the 24 hours up to 5\np.m. Friday a half an inch of\nrain fell in the city. Precipitation in the upper regions was\nIn tire form of snow which\ncould be seen on many mountains around Nelson.\niiiiriiiiiiimiiiimimiiiiiiimmimti.\nThe Weather\nCROWDING BABY\nLONDON (CP) - Don't put parcels in the bottom of the pram\nwhen you're out shopping, or the\nbaby may grow up with deformed feet', says Alan Underwood, a shoe-fitting expert.\nNELSON   \t\n    38   44\nToronto \t\n    36   59\nWinnipeg\t\n    53   72\nRegina   \t\n    40   59\nSaskatoon \t\n    40   59\nCalgary \t\n    20   25\nEdmonton  \t\n    21   24\nKimberley \t\n    27   39\nKaslo     \t\n    37   45\nGrand Forks \t\n    41   50\nKamloops   \t\n    39   46\nPenticton   \t\n    44   53\nVancouver \t\n    41   56\nVictoria    \t\n    42   57\nWhitehorse   \t\n    10   38\nSan Francisco\t\n    55   67\n36   48\nTi\nen\nConcert Series Oct. 25\nNewsboys Being\nHonored Today\nThousands of young businessmen\nare being honored today by national add civic personnel and\nleaders of the' newspaper industry.\nTribute is being paid to the newspaper boy on this National Newspaper Boy Day.\nThe1 Nelson Daily News carrier-\nsalesmen represent one of the\nlargest groups of such young businessmen in the interior of British\nColumbia. In Nelsoh alone this\nenterprising group's weekly profits\namount to $218 or $11,336 per year,\nwhile district carriers show a profit\nof $271.58 per week, amounting to\n$14,121 per year.\nNor are these profits spent unwisely. Jor these young earners,\nrealizing\" the effort needed to earn\ndollar, do not let it slip easily\nIhrough their fingers. Some save\nfor university ^or normal school\ntraining, some help out tile family\nexchequer by buying a few of their\nown clothes, or the bicycle the've\nadmired in the store window.\nSuccessful operation of their\npaper routes teaches them the rudiments of bookkeeping, thrift,\nhonesty and dependability.\nA salute to all newspaper boys\non this your day!\nAt a meeting of Nelson Overture\nConcert Association executive on\nThursday night it was decided to\nstart Ihe 1957-58 concert series Friday, October 24 or 25.\nArtist for tile first concert will\n'Flu Past Peak\nAt High School\nIt appears the incidence of influenza at L. V. Rogers High\nSchool is past its peak, school\nofficials stated Friday.\nFriday there were 12 per cent\nabsent compared to 14 per cent\nThursday and 18 per cent Wednesday, principal G. H. Lee said.\nThe 'flu generally lasts three to\nfive days.\nThree or four teachers had been\nfeeling ill previously but only ono\nteacher has missed any time, one\ni day two weeks ago.\nPostal Business Up\nTotal transactions at Nelson Post\nOffice in September were $248,-\n314.47 compared to $241,726.87 a\nyear ago and $276,816.36 in August\nthis year.\nOther statistics with 1956 figures\nin brackets follow: sale of postage\nstamps and suplies $9855.23 ($10.-\n005.781; other revenue $497.36\n($435.98); money orders issued\n3855 (3046); and money orders paid\n5114 (5747).\nSki Project Community\nCommittee Feels\nNelson Centennial Committee met\nFriday evening to finalize plans for\nsubmitting the Silver King ski hill\ncentennial project to the Central\nCommittee afVictoria, and lo complete their application for centennial project and celebration grants\nfrom the provincial government.\nSki hill project was previously\nvoted on and accepted by the local\ncommittee and later unanimously\nendorsed by City Council.\n\"I would be very disappointed,\"\nMayor Joseph Kary told the committee, \"if this project which has\nbeen chosen by the popular vote of\nour citizens is not supported wholeheartedly. Our ski hill and facilities should be developed equal to,\ni.\" not better than any similar project in Canada.\"\nThe Centennial Committee felt\ngenerally that the Silver King ski\nproject is to be a community effort, the responsibility of everyone.\n\"SHOULD RAISE\nSIGHTS\"\nMayor Kary pointed out that the\nski hill project as a community\neffort was not just the responsibility of the Centennial Committee or\nthe city council or ski club or any\none organization. \"Although the\ngovernment grant we are applying\nfor is expected to total $5832,1 hope\nthat our aim will go far above simply raising $6000 to match that\namount,\" he said. \"We should\nraise our sights far above that figure.\"\nFiltered\nDry Cleaning\nDyeing \u2022 Alterations \u2022 Repairs\nUso Agents for House of Stone\nMade-to-Measure Suits\nEmpire\nDry Cleaners\n!7 Baker St. Phone 288\nWE CALL AND DELIVER\nA motion was passed to the effect\nthat after the chosen ski project\nhad been accepted at Victoria a\nmember of the Silver King Ski club\nwould be invited to attend every\nfuture centennial committee meeting in order that the local committee and the ski club could work\nin close liaison.\nPlans were discussed in preparation for the coming of the historical\nvan to Nelson as part of next\nyear's centennial program. Also\nfurther plans were laid in prepara\ntion for the staging of the centen\nnial pageant \"From Wilderness to\nWonderland,\" a copy of which has\nbeen received from Victoria.\nThe meeting was conducted by\ncommittee chairman V. C. Owen\nof Nelson. -.\nRalph C. Pybus, Vancouver,\nwho lias been elected president\nof Ihe Canadian Chamber of\nCommerce, at the national business organizations' 28th annual\nmeeting in Victoria. In business\nlife, Mr. Pybus is president and\ngeneral manager of Commonwealth Construction \"Company\nLimited.\nBuy and SeT With Classified!\nA joint emergent communication of Ymir Lodge No. 31\n.nd Nelson Lodge No. 23,\nAF and AM, will be held In\n.elson Masonic Temple at\n1:15 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 7.\nfor th. purpose of conducting\nhe funeral of our late\n.rothfr. Robert John McCandlish, past mast.r of\nYmir Lodge, who died Thurs-\nlay..\nVisiting  brethren  invited  to\n.ttend.\nBy order of the secretary,\nD. E. SWEET.\nAn Appeal to All Citizens of Nelson\nand Soldiers' Friends\nThe B.C. Supreme Court, in dismissing the Injunction\nto prevent the City Council from moving the Soldiers' Cenotaph, the Houston Memorial and the Memorial Trees from\nthe 400 Slock on Vernon St., has assessed the court costs\nagainst B. Affleck and R. McCandlish, amounting to $567.95.\nThis Injunction was prompted by the Nelson and District Old-\nTimers Assn. on behalf of the taxpayers of Nelson and the\nrelatives and friends of the soldiers of the two Great Wars.\"\nThese oostB were compiled under the direction of tho City\nCouncil, Defendant, and would approximate the maximum\nchargeable.\nThe complete Bill of Costs is here enumerated:\nInstruction for Brief     25.00 Hearings May 30-31  .   65.00\nMotion for Preparation\nInjunction   ...      35.00 Argument        35.00\nJjeience and r-\nAmendments        50.00 Continuance Trial       100.00\nAdmission' of Facts ..     15.00 Signing Judgment ....     10.00\nConsultations Taxation of Costs ....     15.00\nBefore Trial       50.00      Disbursements          7.95\nInstructions for Brief 100.00 Total Bill of ,\nTrial May 28 ....'.       50.00 Costs  $557.95\nIn addition, the Plaintiffs have expended $200.00 In\nlawyer fees and approximately $100.00 on publicity, When\npetitions supporting the injunction were circulated, many\nsigners signified their willingness to assist financially. Now\nthat these \"two valiant Pioneers\" are personally liable for\nthe above costs and subject to suit, an earnest Invitation Is\nextended to everyone willing to share this burdert by send,\ning their contributions to Wait's News Depot or Emory's\nLimited.\nNELSON AND DISTRICT OLDTIMERS' ASSOC.\n \u00bb '.\nbe mezzo soprano Betty Allen.\nChairman Roy Pollard said Friday the membership campaign had\nbeen \"gratifying in some respects,\nbut has not received the response\nfrom last season's members that\nthe executive would like.\"\nPersons interested in becoming\nmembers are urged to sign up\nsoon to enable the executive to\nmake complete plans for the con\ncert series.\nJail Term for\nImpaired Driving\nJ. J. Fononoff Jr. of Shoreacres\nwas sentenced to 14 days imprisonment by Magistrate William Evans\nin Friday's provincial court when\nhe pleaded guilty to impaired driv\ning on the Ymir Road. Magistrate\nEvans pointed out that a prison\nterm was compulsory since this\nwas Fononoff's second offence on\nthe same charge within six\nmonths.\nCustoms Revenue\nDown in Sept.\nExcise and customs receipts for\nthe month of September at Nelson\ntotalled $30,012.99 making the total\nto this year $329,444.18.\nCustoms revenue for September\n1956 was higher, $36,893.04. Total\nrevenue for the same nine-month\nperiod last year was considerably\nhigher than this' year, $406,782.48.\nNelson customs and excise revenue is on bonded freight* and express received here, also parcel\npost. Goods brought across the\n\u25a0 line by travellers and tourists do\nnot come under Nelson office.\nINCONSPICUOUS CAR\nBEACONSFIELD, Eng. (CP) -\nA police car left among 500 vehicles at a fete in this Buckinghamshire town won first prize as\nthe best-kept car. The chief constable refused the prize, saying\npolice cars are professionally\nmaintained and it would be unfair\ncompetition.\n470 Attending\nRogers High\nEnrolment this term at L. V.\nRogers High School is 470 to 480\ncompared to 375 last year, meaning the school is \"almost filled to\ncapacity  (500).\"\nThe school has taken on two\nmore teachers since the term began.\nLunchroom facilities are taxed\nby the large enrolment with some\nclassrooms used for eating. The\nlunchroom is used as a study hall\non some occasions.\nens-\nli   Fall Clothing\nby Jit JfafloJwi\n......  \u2022 PICKWICK WORSTEDS\nP7   \u2022 CHARCOAL GREYS\n\u2022  BRAMBLE TWISTS\n$72.50\ni .,\nJust very  good clothing ,\nGODFREYS1\n378 Baker St.\nPHONE   889\nTOWLER\nFuel and Transfer\n Fruit Case Conviction\nReversed; Refund Fine\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A magistrate's\ncourt conviction August 21 of John\nSherstibotoff of Lister, secretary-\nmanager for East Kootenay Berry\nAssociation, on a charge of illegally transferring cherries and,\napples July'17 eastbound for direct\nsale outside' B.C. was reversed in\ncounty court ruling by Judge H. W.\nColgan Friday afternoon and the\nfine was ordered refunded. He had\nbeen found guilty in the lower\ncourt.\nThe decision upheld generally the\npowers of the B.C. Fruit Board to\nappoint a single agency for marketing of B.C. tree fruits in inter-\nElectrocution\nVictim Walked\nSeveral Miles\nPARSONS, B.C. (CP) - An unidentified woman electrocuted on\nMonday at a nearby power station is believed to have walked\nseveral miles before killing herself,\nRCMP have reached this conclusion because of the worn condition\nof the woman's shoes and the\nblisters on her heels. Her body was\ndiscovered by B.C. Power Commission employees.\nThe  woman,  believed  to be  a\nHungarian immigrant, climbed an\neight-foot fence topped with.-barb\nwire and piled boxes on top of each\n, '    other to touch high tension lines.\nShe was described as between\n25 and 35 years old, five feet eight\nInches tall, weighing about 150\npounds.\nPolice say she carried a shopping bag containing butter of a\nbrand sold only in large chain\nstores. The nearest of these are at\nNelson and Calgary.\nAn inquiry will be held by Dr.\nJ. E. Taylor, coroner.\nprovincial trade but His Honor held\nthat for a short period ending July\n31, 1957, the board had no power\nto make new regulations.\nOn that date a new order-in-\ncouncil under the Dominion Agricultural Products Marketing Act\nwas passed and it reinstated the\nboard's powers to control inter-\nprovincial trade in tree fruits\ngrown in the interior of B.C. Subsequent to July 31, 1957, the-board\npassed new inter-provincial and export regulations which are now in\neffect. '\nPrevious board regulations had\nalso prohibited direct grower marketing inter-provincially. Replacement regulations under the amended act were passed provincially\nJuly 16 but the order-in-council\ndeputizing the B.C. Fruit Board\nto enforce these did not come into\nforce until July 31.\nThe charge was laid on the highway just west of Cranbrook the\nafternoon of July 17 and Judge\nColegan ruled this preceded the\nboards legal powers to make new\nregulations under the amendment\nof the Act for enforcement of orderly inter-provincial marketing.\nThe case is arousing province-\nwide interest and a further appeal\nby the Crown is under consideration by B. C. Fillmore, who represented the B.C. Fruit Board at the\nhearings.\nLieut.-Col. C. I. Merritt was defence counsel at the two hearings\nand was represented in court Friday by R. E. Read of Cranbrook.\nThe Agricultural Products Marketing Act powers as administered\nin the province by the B.C. Fruit\nBoard require all tree fruits be\nmarketed through B.C. Tree Fruits\nLimited as sole selling agency in\ninter-provincial and export trade.\nOver the past 30 years two previous acts to secure orderly marketing of produce have both come\nto bad ends when they were declared ultra vires after prolonged\nhearings and appeals which reached the Privy Council.\nIF THE AMOUNT of planning going into Kimberley's 1958 Snow Fiesta is to be\nregarded as indicative, the big February event is already assured of success. Meetings take place every Monday afternoon. Discussing arrangements are J. B. Ostrom\nof Cranbrook, regional consultant for the Community Programmes Branch of the Department of Education; Mrs. Sam Calles of the Ladies' Curling Club; Alderman Mark\nBeduz, chairman of B. C. Centennial celebrations in Kimberley, and William Campbell, Snow Fiesta director. \u2014Charles Wormington photo.\nTO TRAIN AS PILOTS\nTRAIL \u2014 Neville Fryling of\nTrail, who has just completed two\nweeks of intensive examinations at\nLondon, Ont., has been accepted\nfor pilot training by the RCAF. He\nwas active in Air Cadets, was a\nmember of the Trail Maple Leaf\nband and recently of the Symphon-\nette orchestra.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nMrs. Stanton Named Sup't\nOf Nurses At Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY-Mrs. Herb Stan\nton has been appointed new\nsuperintendent of nurses at Kimberley District Hospital. She is\na graduate of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Nelson, during\nits training school days, and has\n1\nLet's talk about Royal Triton ...\nThe Amazing Purple Motor Oil\nSpecifically compounded\nto meet the demands of modern motoring,\nROYAL TRITON gives you outstanding\nperformance In high compression,\nclose tolerance engines. ROYAL TRITON\nte famous for improving hydraulic valve lifter\nperformance and cutting acid action.\nYou v. HI notice the Improvement In gas mileage\nand cold engine starting almost Immediately.\nSee your nearest ROYALITE dealer about.\nROYAL TRITON for your car.\nROYALITE\nGOLDEN PREMIER &\nREGULAR Motor Fuels\nROYALITE &\nROYAL TRITON Motor Oils\nThe Hallmark of Motoring  Satisfaction\nlived here since her marriage 29\nyears ago. She and her husband\nwere long-time Kootenay badminton champions.\nShe has been with the Kimberley Hospital nursing staff, for\nthe past 14 years, resuming her\nprofession when their four children grew up. One son is a\nlawyer at Whalley, and one a\ndoctor at present studying at\nHenry Ford Hospital, Detroit,\nand both daughters are married.\nAlan John\nHeads Club\nFRU1TVALE - At their annual\nmeeting the Fruitvale Community\nPlayers re-elected Alan John as\npresident fo. his second term.\nKenneth Gibbard was elected for\na two-year term as vice-president.\nAlso elected 'for a two-year term\nwere Wilfred Martin and John\nBarne' as directors, The remaining\nexecutive members who have still\nanother year to serve are Mrs, L-\nWood as secretary-treasurer and\nCharles Lilydale and Mrs. L. Wade\nas directors.\nThe annual reports of officers\nand standing committees revealed\nthat the Club had enjoyed an\nactive and, successful year. Four\none-act plays and one three-act\nplay were produced. Two of the\none-act ones were written by a\nmember of the club, who also\ndirected the entry in the 1957\nfestival of progress was noted on\nthe- stage facilities in the Memorial hall.\nThe standing committee chairmen were appointed and are: librarian and historian, Mr. Martin;\nmembership, Mrs. 3. Barne; social,\nMrs. L. Bell; selections, Mrs. Karl\nMonk; publicity, Mr. Lilydale.\nTo bring the bylaws up to date\nMrs. Walter Veitch was appointed\nas chairman of a special committee for this purpose. She is to\nselect her committee,   i\nOwing to preparations for the\nSpring festival and the Centennial\npageant, it was decided to dispense with a spring production.\nMrs. Wilfred Martin was unanimous choice as auditor of the\nclub's finances for the year.\nFILES   DIVORCE   PAPERS\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Mrs.\nMichael Parker, wife of Prince\nPhilip's former private secretary,\nhas filed a divorce petition, her\nlawyers said Friday.\nA \"Mrs. Thompson\" is named\nin the suit.\nParker, 36, resigned as Prince\nPhilip's private secretary last\nFebruary following press reports\nabout being estranged from his\n34-year-old Scottish - born wife,\nEileen.\nMinister Going\nFrom Cranbrook\nTo Rossland\nCRANBROOK - Rev. F. D. Wy-\natt, rector of the Christ Church\nAnglican parish, Cranbrook, for\nmore than five years, is leaving\nfor a new appointment as rector\nof St. George's parish at Rossland,\neffective in mid-November. St.\nGeorge's church at Rossland is a\nmemorial to Rev. Heory Irwin,\nthe widely-known early Kootenay\nmissionary better known as Father\nPat.\nMr. and Mrs. Wyatt'have been\nactive in many\" phases of Cranbrook affairs since they came here.\nHe is chaplain of both the Canadian Legion and the 107th Battery,\nAnti-Aircraft reserve unit, past\npresident of the Rotary Club,\nchaplain of the Senior Citizens'\nAssociation, director of the Film\nCouncil, and member of the Ministerial Association. Mrs. Wyatt\nhas been prominent in musical\naffairs. They have two daughters\nand two sons.\nHe came here from Okanagan\nMission parish, and at Rossland\nsucceeds Rev. L. D. Ritchie who\nleft last spring for Montreal.\nTwo Businesses\nChange Hands\nAt Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK -Change in\nownership of two well known\nCranbrook businesses was announced this week. Frank Spring,\noperator of Cranbrook Taxi and\nthe Cranbrook-Kimberley bus service, bought the Premier Service\nStation on Cranbrook Street. This\nis one of the oldest service stations\nin the city, operated since 1940 by\nHerb Letcher, who has joined in\nthe business in 1947.by Roy Joyce.\nDuring this pSriod a new cinder\nblock garage was erected on the\n150-foot site on the main eastern\napproach to the city. Mr. Spring\nwill continue garage service there\nand also will start an agency for a\nsmall European car at the site.\nMcPherson Funeral Service Ltd.\nwas transferred this week to\nGordon Willis, Cranbrook najive\nson, who has been employed there\nsince his RCAF discharge in 1946.\nThis business was founded in the\nearly 1920s by F. M. McPherson\nwho was joined later by Angus\nMcPherson. The latter bought the\nbusiness and continued its operation until his death last January\nwhen Mr. Willis became manager.\nRichard Bothamley, staff member\nof the firm for the past two years,\nwill continue this work.\nWIDE CHOICE OF\nSUBJECTS IN\nNIGHT CLASSES\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 A \"variety 'of\nskills will be taught here this winter in night .school classes sponsored by the Castlegar district\n.chool board. N. Turik is director.\nClasses ranging from 20 to 10\ntwo-hour sessions are being offered\nin sewing and dressmaking, woodworking, St. John Ambulance first\naid, leatherwork and glove making, beginners and intermediate\nsquare dancing, drawing and painting, English fo'r new Canadians,\ngolf for beginners, keep fit ..class\nfor women, typing, photography,\nboat-building and lumber grading,\nHighly qualified instructors have\nbeen engaged to conduct the ses-\nFruitvale Players\nOn Stage Nov. 16\nFRUITVALE \u2014 November 16\nhas been set as the date when the\nFruitvale Community Players will\nstage their latest production,\n\"Night of January 16th.\"\nThis is a three-act comedy-\ndrama by Ayn Rand and is directed by Alan John. Charles Lilydale\nis in charge of stage and properties\nand Wilfred Martin, advertising.\nThe play is something different in\nthat the audience participates to\nsome extent in its production, unrehearsed and unprompted. It is\nvastly different from the Club's\nformer productions.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nWONttER.UL  TIME   FOR   A\nNEW   COLOR   CAMERA\nYour Headquarters  For\nCameras,  Equipment, and  Supplies\nCAMERA  STORE\n(flttmAOJ^L\n497   BAKER   ST.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 5, 1957 \u2014 3\nBalfour Church Marks\nFounding 65 Years Ago\nBALFOUR \u2014 One of the oldest\nchurches in the Kootenays, St.\nMichael's and All Angels', Balfour,\nbuilt in 1892, has just celebrated\nits 65th anniversary.\nIt stands as a tribute to the Busk\nfamily, by whom it was endowed.\nRev. William Edington officiated\nat the anniversary service, for\nwhich the church had been decorated by the Guild with generous\nquantities of fruit, flowers and\nvegetables given by Balfour\npeople. These in turn are to be donated to Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\n\"We, as inheritors of this church\nbuilt by early pioneers, should\nshow our appreciation by continuing to work and keep the same\nspirit of faith,\" Mr. Edington\nstated.\nThe organist was Commander\nBurrard Smith of Longbeach.\nCmdr. and Mrs. Smith were one\nof the first couples to be married\nIn St. Michael's and All Angels.\nThe first church service held in\nthe vicinity was Conducted in the\nsummer of 1891. The following year\nBishop Sillitoe placed Rev. A. J.\nReid in charge of the parish of\nYmir, and the first service under\nhim was held in C. W. Busk's storeroom May 15, 1892. On July 17,\n1892, the first service was held in\nNelson. The same year the parish\nchurch at Balfour was erected\nthrough the munificence of Miss\nBusk, an aunt of Mr. Busk, who\ngave the church furniture. First\nservice in the new building took\nplace on St. Stephen's Day, December 26, 1892. The church wa\"s\ndedicated to St. Michael and All\nAngels and consecrated by Bishop\nDart of the Diocese of New Westminster in October, 1895.\nIt was served from Nelson until\n1909. In 1908, and 1909 Rev. C. H.\nReynolds, a retired Indian chaplain, held occasional services.\nBECAME PARISH\nPeople near Kokanee took the\ninitiative in 1909 and made certain of support for the the forma-\nFIRE ENGINE\nPROPOSED FOR\nFRUITVALE\nFRUITVALE'- The Fruitvale\nWater District Board gave first\nreading to a money bylaw for\n$18,000 for the purchase of a fully-\nequipped fire engine. The proposed bylaw will receive its second and third readings at a special\nmeeting next week. It will then\nbe sent to Victoria for ratification\nand approval.\nThe Board was instructed at the\nannual meeting to take the necessary steps towards the purchase\nof such an engine. The need for it\nwas pointed out in the fire brigade's annual report. For an area\nof this size and the number of\npeople it would serve, a bigger fire\nengine is needed. At present the\nvolunteer brigade has a fairly well\nequipped truck for use as a pumper\nand for carrying equipment.\ntion of the parish of Kokanee as\nseparate from the parish of Nelson. It included all the portion of\nthe West Arm east of Nine Mile\nNarrows and Kootenay Lake south\nof Queen's Bay. Rev. Christopher\nReed, former vicar of Dawson\nCity, came from England to take\ncharge in October, 1909. Points\nserved from the beginning were\nBalfour, Procter, Queen's Bay,\nCrawford Bay, Gray Creek, Hal-\nlett's, now Sweetgrass, Harrop\nand Kokanee.\nIn the spring of 1910 a canvass\nof the parish was made and a\nsmall but comfortable vicarage\nwas built at a cost of $620.\nMr. Edington is now vicar of the\nparish of Kokanee, which recently\nembraced Willow Point. A new\nvicarage was bought this fall at\nWillow Point. Points now served\ninclude Riondel, Crawford Bay,\nGray Creek, Procter, Queen's Bay,\nBalfour, Longbeach and Willow\nPoint.\nColor Posters\nGive Notice\nTo Hunters\nCRANBROOK - Aimed at solving sometimes troubled relations\nbetween hunters and farmers,\nlarge colored cards have been\nmade available here through the\nDepartment of Agriculture office\nregarding hunting on private land.\nRed posters on the fence 200 feet\napart forbid the hunter to shoot on\nthat'property. Green posters similarly nailed up allow hunting it\npermission is given by the owner,\nand yellow posters permit general\nshooting without permission of the\nowner. The posters must be signed\nby the owner. This action has been\ntaken on a joint basis by the B.C.\nInterior Fish, Game and Forest\nConservation Association, B. C.\nBeef Growers and Farmers Associations to rlrevent conflicts between the two interests which\narise each year.\nCranbrook Farmers Institute has\napproved this plan and members\nwill use the service.\nPurchase of a trophy by the Institute has been approved by the\nmembership to encourage youth\nparticipation in 4-H Beef Clubs in\nits district. Initial award is planned for October 12 with the cup to\nbe presented holder of the highest\nscore in the club on the basis of\nplacing of the steer in the final\nshowing, his or her project records,\njudging ability and participation in\nclub meetings.\nTV FOR TINA\nPOOLE, England (CP) - Organizers of a competition in this\nDorset town went to deliver a television set won by \"Tina Watts,\"\nand found the winner was a dog.\nTina's owner had used her pet's\nname on the ticket.\n%&Qt^MQvm\nThe book-lined shelves form a natural background to enhance this\npicture story of two small try playing boss and secretary roles.\nChoose Background With Care\nOne of the most important questions you picture-takers can ask\nyourselves is: \"What's behind it\nall?\" No, we're not suggesting you\nturn into a Sherlock Holmes or a\npsychoanalyst \u2014 we're just recommending that you get into the habit\nof looking behind your subject as\nwell as at it before you shoot a\npicture.\nIn many instances \u2014 where exposure, distance, viewpoint and\nthe subject are all the same \u2014 it's\nthe choice of background that determines the success of the finished print. What are the best\nbackgrounds? Well, first of all,\nsimple ones \u2014 tjiose that complement rather than clutter your picture story, while at the same time\noffering some contrast itf color or\nbrightness.\nNext, according to .the total\neffect you want to create, decide\nwhether a neutral background or\na natural one is the more appropriate.  A sweep of blue sky or\ngreen lawn, a painted wall or an\nunpatterned drapery would be considered a neutral background\u2014one\nthat adds nothing to the actual\nstory value of your picture, but\nserves merely as a plain backdrop.\nA natural background, on the\nother hand, provides something\nmore, It's a setting tor the action\nbeing performed by the person\nyou're snapping \u2014 and as such\nadds its own story-telling elements\nto the picture. A shot of a little girl\nplaying with a toy baking set will\nbe twice as effective taken right\nin the kitchen \u2014 the natural setting\nfor such \"homemaking\" tasks \u2014\nthan if she were pictured holding\nher rolling pin and cake pans on\nthe front porch.\nChoosing your backgrounds with\ncare \u2014 and an eye on the simple\nand uncluttered \u2014 will give you a\nbetter picture every time. So be\nsure to look \"behind your subject\nbefore you click your shutter I\n660 \u2014John Van Guilder\n '\nBe^coPI\nNflaOH 0aiiit NplUB Press Comment\n_to^ + ****>     -\u00ab>-va\u00bb*\u00bbj     _>.\u00bb..*..\u2022 ExpSrts disagre. a. td whether the worl\nEstablished  April  Bit,   11)112\ninferior  British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   th*   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Bake: Street; Nelson, British Columbia    . ,\nAuthorized _s Second Class Man! Post utfico Department. Ottawa\nMEMBER Ot   .HE  AUDI.   BUREAU   OB' CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Ot   THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use foi republication ot all newt\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuteri in this paper,\nand also the local newt published therein. \u2022\nSaturday, October S, 1957\nThe Tranquille Sanatorium\nThat the Tranquille sanatorium will\nshortly run out of patients is a tribute\n;\"to the success of British Columbia's\n.war against tuberculosis. The steady\nand relentless campaign carried on\nover the years has been so effective\nthat at least one wing of the institution is vacant.\nWith the possibility of the sanatorium having too few patients to make\nit economical to run, other use must be\nfound for it. As the building, was de-\nsigned and operated largely as a hospital, its suitability for other purposes\nwill be largely limited by that fact.\nIts situation and the excellent ell-'\nmate   which   the  sanatorium   enjoys\nmake it an admirable building for a.\nconvalescent hospital for those who\nwould otherwise be occupying sorely\nneeded beds in hospitals. It would\nserve, too, as a hospital for those\npatients whose complaintB are of a\nchronic nature, many of whom receive\nindifferent care at home or in private\ninstitutions.\nSo far, the government has not embarked on any venture of this nature,\nbut the time will come in the inevitable\nnature of things when it must assume\ntoo care of the convalescent and the\nchronic patient. There could be no\nbetter start on this than for the BCHIS\nto take over the sanatorium for this\npurpose.\nA Black Mark for the Profession\nThe case of the twenty-two Vancouver doctors charged with receiving\n\"kickbacks\" from optical companies\n\u25a0is surely one of greed overcoming the\nscruples and ethics of otherwise highly\n-.trained and educated men. As such\n\u25a0 it is distressing to the general public\nwhich has always held the medical\nprofession in high esteem as being\nfree from the sordid quest for money.\nThe British Columbia College of\nPhysicians and Surgeons is, however,\nacting promptly to investigate the ruling of the appeal board of the taxation\ndepartment that the doctors were illegally receiving \"kickbacks\" from pre\nscriptions. In a period of ten years one\ndoctor received $54,754.\nUndoubtedly, as the assistant chairman of the appeal board says, this\nconstitutes a fraud on the public, but\nfar more serious than that is the hurt\nto the reputation of a profession which\nhas always been held in high repute.\nIt is to be hoped that the College of\nPhysicians-will mete out\\due punishment to the offenders as some measure\nof restoring public confidence.\nAt the same time, there should be\nsome properly constituted inquiry into\nthe activities of the optical company\nwhich seems to have played a large\npart in this case.\nStatistics and the Asian Flu\nSeveral purely statistical points ought to\n. be borne in mind by those who are agitated\nby the newspaper headlines about Asian flu.\nThe figures quoted about this disease sound\n; alarming, especially when uttered in a sepulchral voice by an announcer, or printed in\nlarge black type by a newspaper. But are\nthey really as alarming as all that?\nTo begin with, the large number of reported cases of Asian flu certainly reflects a\ngreat improvement in the worldwide business\nof medical reporting. This improvement is\nnot astonishing, since it has been one of the\nI major objectives of the World Health Organization and of the League of Nations before it.\nSilliest Spending,\nAlbertans are now lining up in the chartered banks of that province to receive their\n$20 \"gift\" from the Manning government. In\nfact, some of them are reportedly lining up\ntwice.\nIn all the long history of \"bread and circus games\" handouts by governments, this\nshould qualify as the* doughiest and the\ngamiest.\nThe Alberta politicians describe the handouts as a dividend to citizens from the province's wealth. Actually, the Manning- government could hardly have found a sillier\nway to blow a wad of money so that it would\ndo most people the least good.\n\u2014Winnipeg Tribune.\nPreordained\nMan  Loses Out\n-. .. The British Board of Trade spent six\nyears measuring women and came up with\nthe astounding conclusion that the average\nfemale Britisher has almost the same measurements as the Venus de Milo. Of course, if\nthey had arriyed at any other conclusion,\nthey wouldn't have dared to go home to their\nwives.\u2014Sherbrooke Record.\nSome of those excessively dull international conferences at which medical statisticians endeavor to agree on definitions of\ndiseases, and tp work out methods of exchanging information, have begun to bear\nfruit.\nA similar improvement in medical statistics in western Europe and North America\nin the -early part of the century focused attention on tuberculosis and led to greater\npublic awareness of the disease. This is all\nto the good; but it dbesn't mean that TB was\nnon-existent before the statistics were available. Similarly with Asian flu: the number\nof reported cases of this .disease is high\u2014but\nwho knows how many such events took place,\nunreported, before the advent of World\nHealth? *\nAnother factor in the statistics may be\nthe fact that medical treatment is more\nreadily available than it once was. From all\naccounts, Asian flu is- one of those pesky\nconditions which 'unless complications develop I are principally a matter of going to\nbed until you are better. In the past, families\ntended to deal with such cases without the\nhelp of a doctor or a hospital; hence the case\nwept unreported. With a National Health\nService, as in Britain,\" or even with private\nhealth insurance schemes as in North Airier-\nica, there's far more tendency to call the\ndoctor. This is all to the good, in view of the\nfact that complications may thus be detected\nor prevented; but it adds to the statistics\nwithout necessarily adding to the true incidence of the disease and the misery of the\nhuman race.\nIn short, sensible Canadians will guard\nagainst the danger of regarding an advance\nin medical Statistical procedures as an indication of failure on the part of medical science. The statistics are doing their job when\nthey alert medical personnel to be ready for\nthe approach of an infection. They should not\nbe the occasion for, panic among those they\nare intended to safeguard.\u2014Financial Post.\nExperts dlsagrite as td whether the world\nIS getting warmer, flbiitts but the Chaflbtte-\ntown Guardian, which Suggests that it would\nbe best \"tb keep an open rtilnd on the cbnfiict-\nfng theories and prepare for another hard\nwinter, just to be on the safe side.\"\nPerhaps no person should be permitted\nto drive in this couptry unless he understands\nour language, says, the Ottawa Journal. \"But\nprobably 99.9 per cent of our traffic accidents are caused by people who can read the\nsigns but either Ignore them or regard them\nas a challenge.\"\nThe heavily taxed home owner cannot\nhave it both ways, observes the Victoria\nTimes. \"He cannot expect the national and\nprovincial governments to spend more and\nmore and at the same time hope to esoape\nhigher real estate taxes, since the municipalities have nowhere else to go for money.\nSo long as economy in government is only an\nempty, ritualistic word for election campaigns; Canadians must pay dearly for the\nright to own a home.\"\nAre they really going to be Conservative,\nasks the Peterborough Examiner of the new\nmembers of the government. \"The Conservatives have forgotten their traditional political\nphilosophy. They have declared themselves\nin favor of large social reforms, but primarily\nas a means of outbidding the Liberals for\nvotes. But now they are In a position where\nthey will have to do something better than\nshout, 'Me too!' and 'I'll raise you five!'\nwhenever something is offered to the electorate.\"\nEnd of the Hoe\nNext to milking cows, and they don't do\nmuch of that by hand any more, hoeing row\ncrops like corn probably decided more country boys to leave the farm than any other\nsingle chore, They won't have that excuse\nmuch longer.\nThere is a field of corn on the Ontario\nAgricultural College farm at Guelph this year\nthat has never seen a cultivator since it\nwas planted. Yet the crop.is excellent and\none has to hunt to find a weed-\nNormally corn requires a lot of cultivation to keep the weeds down. It was because\nof this that many farmers stopped growing it.\nLabor costs were too high.\nNow this OAC experiment indicates a\nway to grow corn without any expensive cultivation. In this case a selective chemical\nweed killer was used\u2014something that wouldn't hurt corn but is deadly to most other\ngrowth.\nThere are a few problems yet to be ironed\nout, of course. The chemical is expensive, but\ngreater production will undoubtedly bring the\nprice down.\nThere is the more serious matter of damage to succeeding crops and other crops riiust,\nbe grown, as it is not good practice to grow\ncorn or anything else year. after year on\nthe same soil.\nFinally, while most weeds are killed by\nthe chemical, a few are not, and scientists\nfear that these resistant ones, without the\nusual competition, may thrive and eventually become troublesome.\nBut similar early difficulties with new\n, products and processes have always arisen\nand been overcome. Eventually we can expect that for \u2022every commercial crop grown\nthere will be a chemical treatment that will\nkeep down all competing growth. With some\nlines we hive that protection already. The\nman with the hoe is on his way out.\n\u2014Financial Post.\nA&e Has Its Uses\nPension schemes can make it permissive\nthat a worker can retire at, say age 65, but\nto speak Of this as being universally desirable is to ignore the different human natures\nwe possess and to throw into the dust heap\nthe skills acquired after years of experience.\nAge is not always destructive; it develops patience and concentration on (he\nwork at hand. Age is not subject to the\ndistractions of youth,\nAs we have said, pension schemes require a basic age limit, but a grave error\nis committed when this is converted into a\ncompulsory retirement.-rPort Arthur News-\nChronicle.\nH\norse Dense\nWe still believe that good ordinary horse-\nsense in handling children in their formative\nyears will meet all requirements. If parents\ntrain their children to report WhSfe thev are\ngoing and whom th\u00b0y will be with during\ntheir absence from home, they will not fall\ninto an\" serious difficulties. \u2014 Moose Jaw\nTimes-Herald.\nRecently Me of my friends asked\nme if his child in a split class was\nlikely to do as Well in his studies\nas if he were in a one grade class.\nHe seemed to think that the child\nwould not get so much attention\nand would most likely be distracted by the teaching of the other\nclass.\nI'think that like many other\npeople he is inclined to place too\nmuch importance on the teacher\nIt is very nice for the child to\nhave a teacher he can be fond of\nand one who will make him work\nbut the essential thing in teaching\nIs the attitude of the pupil. If heis\ndetermined to learn he will learn,\neven from a' poor teacher.\nOf course his child most certain1\nly will listen to the teacher giving\nlessons to the other class and as he\nis in grade five it does him no\nharm to listen to \"what the grade\nsix children are- learning. Those\nteachers who were fortunate\nenough In the bad old days to have\nto teach eight grades in one room\nknow how much the younger child\nrcn learned by being in the same\nroom as the older pupils. Incidentally the word \"fortunate\" is not a\npiece of irony. There was a stimul-\nous in the one room school which\nis often absent in. classes of -one\ngrade.\nA REWARD\nOf course it is perfectly natural\nfor children to listen to everything\nand everybody \u2014' except father\nand mother. That is one of their\nways of learning and often what\nseems a distraction is for the child\na very engrossing matter. Providing of course that the pupil completes his assignment what spare\ntime he can squeeze out of a period should be regarded as his to do\nwhat he likes with. It is decidedly\nunfair to throw more work at him.\nTo listen to the other class or to\nread are both forms of learning\nand such, things should be a reward for doing a job quickly.\nAll too frequently teachers complain of large classes and declare\nthat they cannot give the pupils\nthe individual attention they require. Having in my day taught\nclasses of two grades of sixty pupils I am not so sure that children\ndo need so much individual attention. It may be that it is something\nthat we have come to expect of the\nteacher and which the pupils expect too. It is so easy to put the\nblame for their failures .on the\nteacher.\nOf course the most important\nperson in the classroom is the\npupil. He is the one who is to get\nall the benefit of the learning. If\nhe is willing to learn he will succeed, but this requires that he is\nembued with the desire to do his\nbest in his studies. If all pupils\nhad that in mind there is no question that even overloaded classes\nwould do good work.\nATTITUDE IMPORTANT\nWhen my over - conscientious\nteacher used to mourn that they\ncould not give forty-five pupils the\nindividual attention they needed!?)\nI used to point out that provided\nthey did the best they could under\nthe circumstances there could be\nno blame attached to them. Ac\ntually I never found that the large\nclasses suffered the disasters they\npredicted, which was possibly a\ntribute to their skill.\nWhat is wanted today is not so\nmuch the emphasis on teachers as\nan emphasis on the importance of\nthe attitude lo learning of the individual pupil. It is not the least\ngood in having the best teachers\nin the world if the pupils do not\ndo their best to learn. We have in\nthe last few years placed a great\ndeal of importance on the child\nbeing happy at school, being emotionally adjusted and socially accept able but all this docs not or\nshould not obscure the fact that\nchildren go to school to learn.\nEXECUTIVE of Nelson Kinsmen Club for 1957-58, pictured above, were in-\n, stalled recently by deputy district governor R. N. Crowe of Trail, seated. Left to\nright, executive members are secretary Vern Swerdfeger, president M. A. Martyn,\ndirector Helmuth Mayrhofer, vice-president Gordon French, treasurer I. F. Brown,\ndirector L. M. McBride and past-president R. A. Jack. Not in picture is director G. A.\nClark.\u2014Vogue phofo.\nCoast Paper Hands RCMP List\nOf Alleged Dope Distributors\nVANCOUVER fCP)-The Vancouver Province says it has\nturned over to the RCMP names\nof four persons and their associates described by an un'derworld\nfigure as mainstays of this city's\n$10,000,000-a-year illicit narcotics\ntrade.\nThe informant produced an initial list of 28 persons he said are\nactively engaged in drug distribution, the story written by city\neditor Bruce Larsen adds.\nOne \"thug\" and three business\nmen were named as \"directors\"\nof the trade.\n\"The kingpins named (with the\nexception of the thug) have legitimate business fronts in Vancouver but the drug enterprises they\ndirect are far more lucrative.\n\"Only two of the top four have\nserved prison terms \u2014 the other\ntwo have no arrests against them\nknown to 'Mr. X.' \"\nThe directors never \u25a0 see the\nheroin they control \"and have\nonly contempt for the addicts at\nthe other end of the scale.\"\nThe only persons above the\nVancouver top four, the informant said, \"would be the men controlling drug syndicates in eastern Canada\u2014'they have to play\nalong witii them or no supply.'\"\nThe Province quotes, \"Mr. X\"\nas saying he was naming the top\nrung of drug addiction because\nhe was \"tired of seeing these\ncrime bosses and their helpers\ngo untouched in police roundups\nof drug traffickers.\"\nVaccine Shortage Everywhere . , .\nFlu Bugs Active\nAcross Canada\nBy  THE  CANADIAN fRESS\nTens of thousands of Canadians\nFriday wrestled with the influenza\nbug\u2014Asian and otherwise\u2014across\nthe country.\nVirus infection scrambled\nclassroom schedules. Scores of\nschools were closed. Hospitals in\nwidely separated communities suspended visiting hours indefinitely.\nNowhere was there enough Asian 'flu vaccine to begin full-scale\nimmunization of the general public. Essential workers were given\npriority for the first shots. Places\nwere viruses had been identified\npositively were relatively few.\nNO WORSE\nThere was no indication that\nthe disease was getting more serious. Doctors still recommended\nrest at home as the best treatment. Asian flu and the other varieties that usually crop up in-Canada about this time every year\ncarried the same old symptoms\n\u2014aching muscles, prolonged\ncoughing, watery eyes and colds, j\nAt  Winnipeg,  Dr.  Roper  Cad-\nham,   city  medical  officer,  said j\nflu   cases   were   numerous   but j\nthere was no epidemic. But the\nDauphin, Man., collegiate reported 220 of 600 .students ill and |\na nurse who flew to Sheridon, 30\nmiles northeast of Flin Flon, said\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\u25a0___\u25a0       Tt rv.)J'-r .\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nSummer-\nKEISTER, THE\nTR4VELING\nS4LESM4I.C4M7\nSET A <\\HD\nWORD OUT OF\nTHE MOTEL\nM06UL,LE7\n4LONE A PLACE\nTO SLEEP-\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nAnd wh'n the children of Israel\nheard It, thev were afraid of the\nPhilistines. Samuel 7:7.\nBut when the children of Israel\nabandoned their heathen ways and\nregained their faith, they won a\nvictory. Faith is a form of courage.\nWe need it in our daily lives.\nAuthor Returns To U.K.\nTo Buy Warm Underwear\n_>ut comes rr\nR.LL 4ND THE\nSL4CK Z5.AS.Oti-\nHE'S WELCOMED\nLIKE A PENM4MT,\nIN D0D6ERT0WN\/\nJIliWX Ana A TIP t>P\nT .\u00a3 . \u00abLO H4T TO     \"Y\\\nAB086E a\"\n\"Sun   spots    have    mysterious\npower.\" Especially the ones called\n' freckles on a cute girl's nose.\nLONDON 'AP) - Author W.\nSomerset Maugham has returned\nto London to buy some underwear.\n\"The British make the best\nmens' underwear in the world,\"\nsaid th. 83-year-old novelist and\nplaywright. \"They have to. The\nweather, you know. It's rather\ndamp here at times.\"\nMaugham lives most of the\nyear at his villa on Cap Ferrat,\na sunny spot on the French Riviera hard by Prince Ranier's\nMonaco..\nThursday night Maugham\nheard an opera version of his\nSouth Sea island novel on the life\nof painter Gauguin, The Moon\n,3iid Sixpence, performed by the\nSadler's Wells Opera Company.\nNO MUSICIAN\n\"1 enjoyed it very much,\" ne\nDEATHS\nVancouver \u2014 Charles Dickens,\n69, general insurance man and\nformer financial editor of The\nProvince.\nOrlando, Fla.\u2014Walter Duranty,\n72, a- Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspondent and an expert of Russia. .\nsaid. \"I haven't read my book\nfor at least 35 years. Nor am I\na musician. But this splendid\ncompany brought it vividly back\nto me,\"\nIn the same hotel where he always lives in London, the author\nwhose books have sold more than\n35,000,000 copies talked about his\nwork.\n\"My earlier works are rubbish,\" he said slabbing the air\nwith a long cigaret holder. \"I\nwon't allow them to be reprinted.\"\nHe added that he had forgotten\nthe rifcmes of many of them.\nLIZA A SUCCESS\n\"It's all so long ago.\" he said,\n\"and I'm a very old party. But\nof those early ones, only Liza of\nLambeth was a success. And it\nearned me about \u00a320.\"\nHis lined, hawk - like face relaxed.\n\"I cannot expect to live much\nloqger. I've had a full life. I face\nwhat'Will come calmly.\"\nAsked if he had any immediate\nplans for the future, the crusty\nauthor replied:\n\"Yes.  Definitely.  To  live on.\"\nabout half the 1,400 inhabitants\nwere sick.\nSaskatchewan officials said\nthere probably are Asian flu\ncases in the province although\nnone has been identified.\nAn estimated 6,000 cases were\nreported in Calgary's 200,000 citizens. Eight hundred students\nwere away from one high school\nwith an enrolment of 1,400.\nEDMONTON DEATHS\nLethbridge restricted hospital\nvisiting. Two deaths from pneumonia following flu were registered in Edmonton. The first vaccine\u20143,000 doses \u2014 was expected\nin the Alber'a canital Friday and\nessential workers were to receive priority.\nWhite Horse, in the Yukon, had\nabout 450 mild cases but the outbreak was reported on the wane.\nBritish Columbia's^ deputy\nhealth minister, Dr. G. F. Amyot,\nsaid few cases of Asian flu have\nbeen reported in Vancouver, Victoria or Vancouver Island. Worst\naffected area was in the southeastern corner of the province at\nTrail, where five district schools\nhave been closed.\nPrince Edward Island and New\nBrunswick appeared to be the\nonly provinces which so far have\nescaped major infection. At Fred-\ncricton, Dr. J. A. Melanson, chief\nNew Brunswick medical officer,\nsaid no cases have been reported\nto his department but this did not\nmean there hadn't been any.\nAuthorities at Sydney, N.S., reported the steel manufacturing\ncity had \"several hundred\" cases\nbut schools stayed open.\nAt Montreal, only two private\nschools have been elbsed but\nthere have been three deaths\nfrom respiratory complications in\nthe wake of flu.\nSCHOOLS REOPEN\nThirty - five Roman Catholic\nschools at Sherbrooke, Que., reopened Wednesday after a week-\nlong shutdown prompted by the\nspread of an unidentified flu-type\nvirus to 1.000 of Ihe 11.000 students. Nearly 1,000 of the 6,600\nschool pupOls at Jonquiere, Que.,\nwere down with flu and five of\nthe 13 schools at Shawinigan\nFalls, Que., were closed.\nIn Ontario, an estimated eight\ndeaths from complications have\nbeen reported. The latest was a\n12-year-old boy from the Toronto\nsuburb of Etobicoke who died\nThursday. Five of the 12 schodls\nin Kirkland Lake were closed.\nHamilton and Ottawa hospitals\nrefused to accept any but emergency cases and banned visitors\nas did hospitals at Guelph.\nMore. than one-quarter of the\nhigh school students at Windsor\nwere ill. Oshawa, London and\nOwen Sound reported classes depleted by the bug.\nVermonl-Que.\nRoad Issue\nn Legal Hands\nQUEBEC (CP) - Quebec Solicitor-General Rivard said Friday\nhe has been asked by Vermont\nto investigate the border dispute\nover a state road that skirts\nbriefly into Canada.\nThe road\u2014about 300 yards of\ngravel highway \u2014 swings from\nNorth Troy, Vt., through the\nQuebec farm of Paul Di Paolo,\nthen dips back into Vermont. Mr.\nDi Paolo, a Montrealer who owns\nthe border farm, twice barricaded the road but has lifted his\nblockade pending settlement of\nthe dispute.\nMr. Rivard, acting attorney-\ngeneral during the absence of\nPremier Duplessis, said Vermont's Attorney - General Frederick Reed telephoned him to request the investigation.\n\"It has been tentatively found\nthat the stretch of road is private\nand owned by Di Paolo,\" the Quebec official said.\nBut he pointed out that the road\nmay have become public by\nusage over many years and_ may\nbe recognized as such in some\ndocument.\nIf there is no document and the\nroad is private, then the matter\nwill be for discussion or court\nargument between Vermont and\nMr. Di Paolo, he said.\nMr. Reed has already indicated\nVermont plans to seek an injunction in Canadian courts for free\nuse of the road.\nThe state highway department\nhas estimated that $30,000 would\nbe needed to build a new stretch\nof highway on the U.S. side of the\nborder.\nGang Leaders\nScare Refugees\nTORONTO (CP)-The Star say.\nToronto police have consulted\nimmigration authorities to find\nout what can be done about a\ngroup of Hungarian \"terrorists\"\nthey blame for several serious\nassaults in the Hungarian community here.\nPolice were alarmed because\nthe victims are too frightened tc\nprosecute their assailants.\nThe Star says members of 0,\ngroup, who pass themselves c\nas \"freedom fighters\" are stf\nto have threatened death to arl\none who goes to court.\nIt says police know the nam?\nof the gang leader and havi\nturned over information about his\nactivities to immigration officials.\nThe story adds that a Hungarian doctor, whose eye was sev\nerely injured in a restaurant\nwhen he was attacked by one ol\nIhe group, is receiving protection\nof police and is expected to go\nthrough with his evidence in an\nassault case despite threats\nagainst him.\nSwiss Cancel\n0?000 Callups\nBERN (Reuters) \u2014 The Swiss\ngovernment Friday cancelled\nmore than 50,000 military call-up\nnotices for the annual fall manoeuvres because of epidemics of\nAsian  and  other influenza.\n oH3i\ntOSM. U .Chyrt'i\nWelcome To\nWorld Communion II a.m.\nSunday School for Grade 2 thru\nHigh School at 9:45 a.m.\nSunday School for Grade 1 and\nYounger at 11:00 a.m.\nH.Imiig-Sntutij Unfab\nCorner Josephlno and Silica Streets\n\"A (Btwctif With a fflljallimg.\"\nMinister\nREV.   DONOVAN   JONES\nB.A.,   B.D.,   Th.M.\nMusic\nMERLIN R. BUNT\nDirector,   278-L\nSAINT PAUL'S\nEVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH\nStanley and  Silica  Streets \u2014  Nelson,  B.C.\n(The Friendly Church With a Friendly Welcome)\nThe Rev. Ernst H, Nygaard, B.A., B.D., MST.   ,\nPastor \u2014 Phone 1855-R\n\u2022    SUNDAY, SEPT.22\nMORNING WORSHIP at 11:00\nSermon: \"The Possibility of Resurrection\" (Luke VII 11-17)\nLUTHER LEAGUE at 7:00 p.m.\n(Yearning for Christ)\n\"Sunday is' the core of our civilization, dedicated to thought\nand reverence. \u2014 It invites to the noblest solitude and to the\nnoblest society.\" \u2014 Emerson.\nWE INVITE YOU TO WORSHIP\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nRector: REV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG. B.A., L.Th.\nSUNDAY, OCT. 6th, 1957 \u2014 TRINITY XVI\nHARVEST THANKSGIVING FESTIVAL*\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Faith Forum for Teeners\n(In the Chapel downstairs.)\n11:00 a.m \u2014 All Departments of the Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Eucharist.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Festal Evensong.\nWEDNESDAY, Oct, 9th \u2014 Holy Communion 10 a.m.\nMattins Dally 9:00 a.m.\nCorner of Fifth and Elwvn Streets\nREV. H, R. WH1TMORE, Minister\nOrganist: Mr. Angus Fraser\nSERVICE IN THE NEW CHURCH\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Service. 'World-Wide Communion\nThis service is being held in the Fellowship Hall\nof the new church. Elwyn St. entrance. Hall is\nnow heated. '\nNo Evening Service Until Further Notice.\nP\nE\nT\nN\nE\nC\nO\ns\nT\nA\nL\nlb%l Hater ttarl*\n708 Baker Street\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Service\n8:00 p.m. Tues\u2014Bible Study and Prayer\n8:00 p.m. Fri., Oct. 11\u2014Rev. Ipp\n5:45 p.m. Sunday\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\nRev.  R. Swanson  extends an Invitation to all\nSALMO\nH1LLCREST\nPLNTECOSTAL   CHURCH\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Service\nPastor: Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\nSt. John's\nLutheran   Church\nThe Church of\nThe Lutheran Hour\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev, Carl J. Hennlg, Pastor\nRes, 317 Silica St.   Phone 7.9-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014No Divine Service\nThanksgiving Service Oct. .13.\nYou Are Cordially Invited\nCHURCH   OF JESUS  CHRIST\nOF   LATTER   DAY   SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a,m.\u2014Sunday   School\nEagles Hall, 641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President, Phone 762-R\nTRINITY UNITED CHURCH in Creston was setting\nfor the marriage of Ronald James Rines and the former\nMarjorie Diane Sherstobetoff, who will live at Prince\nGeorge. The bride is a graduate of the Royal Inland\nHospital school of nursing in Kamloops.\n\u2014H- M. Bucina photo.\n(\u00a3ninmattt Gtljttrr Ij\n803 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nTUESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Sewing  Circle,\nMrs. Smith.\nThursday:\n7:15 p.m.\u2014Choir Practice\n8:15 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting\nFriday:\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Junior League\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples.\nAngl\nicon Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nFA1RVIEW\nCanon W. J. Silverwood\nA.K.C., B.Sc,\nRector\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday  School\n11:00 a.m\n7:30 p.m.-\n-Morning Prayer\nRev.  W.   Edington\n-Evening Prayer\nRev.  W.   Edington\n1:30 p.m.\u2014South Slocan\nOur\nFathe\nBusiness\nr's\nI the\n'\u25a0\u25a0mill By Dorothy Mcintosh\nPHONE   1007-L   OR   1844\nMrs. C. A. R. Pitt of the North\nShore was honored at a farewell\nparty this week when members of\nthe North Shore Bridge Club met\nat the home of Mrs. Leo Atwell.\nMrs. Pitt received a cup and saucer from the eight members present.\n.     *    *\nMrs. Evlyn Lefeaux of Denver,\nColorado, is the guest of her son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nLaurie Lefeaux, 621 Sixth Street.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. R. Pitt and\nson, Gordon, of the North Shore\nhave left to make their home in\nCranbrook where Mr. Pitt has\nbeen transferred.\n* *   #\nMr. and Mrs. F. A. Johnson\nof Hedley have been visiting Mrs.\nJohnson's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. Kendrick, 924 Latimer Street.\n* *   .\nAn enjoyable afternoon was\nspent recently when Mrs. A. Dolphin, Annable Apartments, entertained a few old friends to hear\nof Mrs. Edmondson's trip to\nEngland.\nfirst lap its!\n(Elturrlj\nCottonwood and Fourth Sts.\nMinister: REV. K. IMAYOSHI\nPhone 1420-L\nSaturday   and   Sunday\nLeadership Training,\nMiss  Barrltt\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Welcome to\nSunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"The   Mightiest\nSecret\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"The   Last Supper\"\n(Communion\nService Follows)\nWEDNESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study and\nPrayer\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Finance Committee Meeting.\n\"We would see Jesus.\" John\n12:21.\nThis is an age old wish. From\nthe days of Job, man's cry has\nbeen \"Oh, -that I knew where I\nmight find Him.\"\nThrough long generations of\nJewish history there was this\ntense longing for the coming\nMessiah whom the. Prophets had\nspoken about. In the fullness of\ntime He came and the fame of His\nwords and deeds soon filled the\nland.\nA great feast was had in Jerusalem .and along with the thousands who attended it, there came\nsome Greeks, whose cry was, \"We\nwould see Jesus.\" This showed\nthat Christ was to be Saviour not\nonly to the Jews but Gentiles also.\nEver since the fall of man there\nhas been this desire for a Saviour\nand so the cry has gone up from\nthe lips of millions, \"We would\nsee Jesus.\" Now why would we\nsee Jesus? We would see Him not\nonly because He is the Divine Son\nof God but also because of what\nHe does for us. He i\u00a7 man's Saviour from sin. \"Thou shalt call His\nname Jesus because He shall save\nHis people from their sins.\"\nIf Jesus were merely a perfect\nexample for man then He could\nnot meet man's deepest needs. If\na man comes and says \"I would\nsee Jesus\" and then looks at Him\nmerely with intellectual eyes he\nwill find no help.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT, S, 1957\nCooker\/ Column\nChicken Tetrazzini\nKeeps Good Company\nBy MARY MOORE\nThe first Fall Sunday when christenings were being\nsolemnized rolled round when Herbie was here on his way\nto Germany. So last Sunday afternoon Marianne dressed\n17-month-old Gary in a suit suitable for christening a little\nboy with a bass voice and his dad and mum and grandma\nand many others drove off to take part in or watch the\nsolemn proceedings.\n\"You Wanted\nTo Know...\"\nDepartment\nConducted by MARY MOORE\nQUESTION:    I    enjoy   your\ncolumn  very  much.   Especially\nlike your Chocolate Party Roll.\nWould  you  have  a  recipe  for\npickles done  in  a  barrel  with\nlots of salt, also method of doing\nhot peppers In a salt and vinegar\nsolution?   Could   you   give   me\nsome ideas as to what would be\nsuitable for a birthday party for\na four-year-old. We live in the\ncountry   and   I  will   serve   the\nparents too . . . Mary A.\nANSWER:  I have a recipe for\ncrock   pickles   that   calls   for   9\npounds of cucumbers.  I think if\nyou doubled the amounts it would\nbe sufficient to warrant the use\nof a small barrel.\nCROCK PICKLES\nNine pounds medium-sized cucumbers, 1 tablespoon alum, 2\ncups each vinegar and' water, 3\nlbs. white sugar, 6 cups vinegar, 1\noz. stick cinnamon, 'A oz. whole\nallspice. Make a salt brine of 1\ncup salt to 14 cups of water and\nlet this stand over the cucumbers\nfor 3 days in a crock (or barrel).\nDrain. Pour clear cold water over\nthe cucumbers each day for 3 days.\nDrain then cut cucumbers in 2 or 3\npieces. Mix 2 cups water with 2\ncups vinegar, add the alum and\nallow pickles to simmer in this\nsolution for 2 hours. (Some pick-\nlers only give this simmering process .20 minutes.) For a bright\ngreen appearance a little green\ncoloring may be added 'to this\nsolution. Drain and pack in earthen crock, large glass jar or small\nbarrel. Combine the sugar, 6 cups\nvinegar and spices and let boil 5\nminutes. Pour this hot syrup over\nthe pickles. Cover and keep cool.\nThese are crisp and delicious\nThe trouble potential with ten\ninfants is so huge the air seemed\nelectrified, but not one of them\ncried and not one pulled the\nminister's hair.\nSo we celebrated with a buffet\nsupper afterwards and one of the\nhot dishes that I made for the\noccasion was Chicken Tetrazzini.\nIt was popular with our crowd and\nI am sure will be welcomed by\nseveral of you that I know. It is a\ngood company dish that may be\nmade in advance and chilled until\nbaking time, and one' of those\npriceless one-hot-dish items that\ngives character to a luncheon or\nbuffet table.\nCHICKEN TETRAZZINI\nBoil a 3V_ or 4-lb. fowl in water\nto cover until tender. As,soon as\nyou can handle it turn it out on a\nlarge tray and lift the meat from\nthe bones. Cut the large breast\npieces in halves crosswise. In a\nlarge casserole arrange Vi lb.\nnoodles which have been boiled in\nsalted water until tender. Make a\nsauce by heating Vi cup chicken\nfat skimmed from broth, and in it\nsauteing 1 medium onion chopped,\nand 2 stalks celery chopped, until\ntransparent. Stir in 3 tablespoons\nflour, then 2 cups chicken broth\nand 1 12-oz. can of mushrooms,\nuntil thick. Add salt and pepper\nto taste. Arrange the chicken meat\nover the noodles in casserole, pour\nsauce over, lifting the noodles to\nbe sure some of the sauce runs\nthrough them. Cover top with 2-3\ncupf fine cracker crumbs, then a\ngenerous sprinkling of Parmesan\ncheese. Bake at 350 degrees\nFahrenheit about 40 minutes.\nNOTE: If desired this may be\nmade the night before it. is needed\nand kept in the refrigerator until\nabout 1 hour before serving time,\nIf it goes into the oven chilled\ndirectly from the refrigerator it\nwill require 50 minutes baking at\n350 degrees.\nFRENCH SAUSAGE AND\nCORN CASSEROLE\nTo serve five you will need VA\nlbs. smoked or fresh sausage, 2'_\ncups raw corn cut from the cobs\nor 1 20-oz. can of kernel corn,\nabout 1V4 cups fine cracker\ncrumbs, 'A each sweet green and\nred pepper, 2 cups medium white\n,. , , ,  .     .  i    The only recipes I have for pick-\nOur highest and eternal joy in  ling peppcrs are for pickled sweet\nLoop Cotton Scatter Rugs\nin a host of beautiful\ncolors, all different\nsizes to 4' x 6'.\nWhy not treat your' room\nnow by treating yourself?\nsauce. Cut the sausages in short\nlengths and mix them with the\ncorn and chopped peppers and\nsprinkle them to taste with salt\nand pepper. Make medium sauce\nby melting Vi cup butter or margarine, adding V. cup flour and\nwhen blended, stir in 2 cups milk\nuntil thick, fn a buttered baking\ndish sprinkle crumbs to coat sides\nand bottom, the bottom being\ncovered more liberally. Spread\nover a layer of the corn mixture,\nthen some sauce. Repeat, finishing with crumbs. Bake at 375\ndegrees Fahrenheit about 20 to 25\nminutes.\nCASSEROLE OF MACARONI\nAND CHIPPED BEEF\nMake a white sauce as in recipe\nabove for French Sausage and\nCorn Casserole but reduce flour to\n3 tablespoons. Have ready 4 cups\nelbow or bow or shell macaroni\nwhich has been cooked, 1 cup\nchipped beef and Vi cup each\nbreadcrumbs and grated old or\nParmesan cheese. Arrange in layers starting with macaroni then\nchipped beef, then sauce. Repeat,\nfinishing with crumbs and cheese.\nBake at 400 degrees Fahrenheit\nabout 20 minfites.\nCUPS PRESENTED\nAS GOLFERS END\nTOURNAMENTS\nNEW DENVER - New Denver\ngolfers wound up their tournament\nseason with a pot-luck supper at\nthe Club House.\nThe Neil Tattrie Cup for women\nwas won by Mrs. Molly Harris,\nwith Mrs. Iris Black runnerup and\nMrs. Anita Kirson third. \u2022\nThe Eddy Graham Cup for men\nwas taken by J. W. Butlin, with\nNeil Tattrie runnerup, and Art\nHam third.\nAfter the supper, the day's cups\nand prizes were presented by T,\nW. Clarke, president of the club.\nDiane Kashluba\nCGIT President\nA short business meeting of the\nSt. Paul's-Trinity United Church\nCGIT was held this week for election of officers. President is Diane\nKashluba, treasurer Carol Swan-\nson, secretary Shannon Norris,\nvice-president Sheila Ramsay, and\nnews reporter Dianne Skapple.\nThe meeting closed with the singing of \"Taps.\"\nfirst\nPrpabtftniatt\nGtlturrl?\nMinister\nREV.  J.   N.  ALLAN,  B.A.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning   Worship\n4The Minister Will Preach\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Salmo.\nSacraments of\nHoly Communion.\nseeing Jesus is to see Him as our\nSaviour from sin. It was said of\nMozart that he brought angels\ndown, and of Beethoven that he\nlifted mortals up. Jesus does both\nand more. He is God's way to man\nand man's way to God.\nThe grand truth is that His\ngospel may. be put into the crucible of human experience and we\nmay personally know Him \"whom\nlo know is life eternal.\"\nHow can we see Him? We can\nsee Him through his Book the\nBible. We can see Him through\nPrayer and Christian fellowship.\nWe can see Him by faith. If we\nwould see Jesus we must give Him\nour lifes without reserve lo be\nused to His .glory. The reason why\nso many folk get so little out of\nReligion is because they put so\nlittle into it.\nIf we trust our lifes to Him we\nshall not. only see him but \"we\nshall be like him, for we shall see\nHim as He is.\"\nREV. E. HANSON.\nit)*\n\u00a7alttatum Army\n513 Victoria St.\nLieut, and Mrs. G. Gi'ice\nSUNDAY\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014 Holiness  Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening  Service\nfirst (Hijarrij ai\n\u00a9ljrist Hnrirtttiat\nA Branch ot the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ\nScientist in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"UNREALITY\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m.\nReading Room 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily from\n- 2:30  to  4-30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nBrouse Notes\nBROUSE \u2014 Alfred Gensick, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. Gensick of\nRevelstoke, is guest of his uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gensick.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Henke had\nas their guests Mr. and Mrs. Del\nbert Olson and three children of\nWallace, Idaho.\nMr. and Msr. Verne Bone and\nMabel have moved to Box Lake\nand Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bargery and\nthree children have taken up residence in the Kershaw house.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Henke motored to Haney on business. Mr. and\nMrs. Verne Boni were in charge of\nthe dairy.\nMr. ^nd Mrs. W. Schoppert have\nmoved back to Yorkton, Sask.\nClassified Ads Bring Returns!\nred peppers, cabbage-stuffed pep\npers (mangoes) and pepper relish,\nI am going to give you the recipe\nfor pickled sweet red peppers and\nyou may be able to adapt it for\nyour hot peppers.\nPICKLED SWEET\nRED PEPPERS\nWash 7 large red peppers and\nremove tops and seeds and ribs\nand cut them into strips. Cover\nwith boiling water and allow to\nstand 2 minutes. Drain well. Pack\ninto hot sterile jars. Boil together\n% cup sugar and Hi cups vinegar\nfor 5 minutes. Pour this syrup over\nthe peppers to fill jars. Seal,\nSince your guests may be coming from _ome distance to your\nson's birthday party I think you\nshould have a fairly substantial\nmeal ready.\nIt could be hot or cold. If hot it\ncould be chicken a la king or hol-\nlandaise on fluffy hot tea biscuits\nor puff patties: casserole of summer succotash (fresh corn and\ngreen beans); peach ice cream\nand birthday cake; tea and cocoa\nor milk. If cold it could be jellied\nchicken or veal or tuna loaf or\nindividual moulds; fresh tomatoes\nstuffed with cottage cheese and\nchives; h o 1 homemade whole\nwheat rolls; raspberry and mint\nherbet (one scoop of each); angel\nfood birthday cake; tea and cocoa\nor milk.\nTaghum Club Plans\nHallowe'en Party\nArrangements for a children's\nHallowe'en party October 31 were\nmade when the Taghum Ladies'\nNeighborly Club held its monthly\nmeeting.\nThe women will also be holding\ntheir annual sale of fancywork for\nthe benefit of the proposed home\nof the Kootenay Society for Handi\ncapped Children.\nFLU TREATMENT\nPARIS (CP) \u2014 The French min\nistry of health, after diagnoses of\nthe first cases of Asian flu in Paris\ngave advice to be heeded in case\not epidemic: avoid chills and con\ntact with known victims and\ncrowds irt general, resHn bed, and\nremember the ailment \\should cure\neasily.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Leonard,Boden\nthe Scottish painter, has flown to\nItaly to complete a portrait of the\nPope for London's Italian church,\nSt. Peter's in Clerkenwell.\nFruitvale Notes\nFRUITVALE - Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Mawer of Comox are renewing acquaintances in the valley. They are former residents\nwho moved to the Coast three\nyears ago.\nAlso renewing acquaintances in\nthe district were Mrs. M. Pesut\nand her son, Leo Adolph of Vancouver. They were accompanied\nby Miss Joan Roberts of Vancouver and were the guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. Karl Grupp. It is 16\nyears since Mrs. Pesut left the\nvalley to make her home at the\nCoast.\nGuide Leaders\nAttend Course\nGirl Guide leaders from all\nparts of the district met at the\nGuide hall this week to take part\nin a Guides training session conducted by Mrs. R. Hyson of Castlegar, divisional commissioner.\nAfternoon sessions were followed\nby dinner at the Shamrock Grill.\nLater in the evening the 17 Guiders\nmet with Nelson Girl Guides to\nview slides taken at the World\nCamp at Doe Lake, Ont., last summer. Mrs. Ruby Kirkman of Edge-\nwood, district commissioner of the\nArrow Lakes district, took tjie pictures while attending the camp to\nwhich Girl Guides from all over\nthe world had come.\nBishop To Induct\nKokanee Vicar\nWILLOW POINT - The October\nmeeting of the St. .Andrew's Woman's Auxiliary, Afternoon\nBranch, was held in the Church\nHall Friday.\nA thank you letter from Mrs.\nC. Haycroft, recovering satisfactorily in Vancouver Hospital from\nan accident, was received. Flowers\nand cards were sent ffom the Auxiliary.\nThe annual Kootenay Deanery\nmeeting is to be held in Fruitvale\nOct. 18.\nMrs. N. Denny was named convener for the Christmas calendars,\nMrs. H.\" Hankin for the \"Living\nMessage.\"\nSt. Andrew's-by-the-Lake is now\nin the Kokanee parish and consftsts\nof seven churches along the lake.\nA vicerage has been purchased at\nSeven-Mile. Mrs. T. G. Ludgate\nwas named parish convener.\nA tea will be held in the Church\nHall Oct. 17 following the induction of the vicar, Rev. W. Edington, by Rt. Rev. P. R. Beattie,\nBishop of Kootenay.\nAt the meeting guests were Rev.\nand Mrs. Edington and Mrs. P.\nGrimes of California. Mrs. B.\nTownsend served tea. '  \u25a0\nAIDS BOYS TOWN\nNEW DENVER - The Women's\nAuxiliary to the New Denver\nLegion branch with hostesses Mrs.'\nT. R. Turnbull, Mrs. W. G. Thring\nand Mrs. John Taylor held a\nsuccessful court whist drive with\neight tables in play. L. R. Campbell was master of Ceremonies.\nThis whist drive was in aid of the\nBoys Town project.\nI In 6ERTIFICA\"\ni^^HARD OF HEARING\nOn Saturday and Monday\nOctober 12 and 14, 1957\nFrom 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nAt Hume Hotel, Nelson\nYou are cordially Invited to come In\nand discuss your hearing problems\nwith Mr. D. E. Weber,-acknowledged\nhearing aid authority. He will demonstrate the many different models of BELTONES and seien-\n' tiftealty test your hearing without charge or obligation.\nEvery person who gets a Beltone is individually fitted\nwith the correction that helps him hear best\nAbsolutely Nothing in the Ear\nEverything hidden inside\u2014newest\nBeltone Hearing Glasses, especially  wonderful  for  conduction\n\u2022 \u2022 I losses.\nAid\nE.   WEBER\nConsultant\nInvisible\nHearing\nWITH A curvaceous figure,\nbright blue eyes and honey\nblonde tresses, Canada's entrani\nin the \"Miss World\" beauty contest In London, Judy Welch is\nwell equipped to be a Canadian\ngoodwill ambassador overseas.\nWinner of nine' beauty crowns\nsince 1955, \"including the Miss\nToronto crown of 1956, Judy, 21,\nleft for England Oct. 1 in her\nhunt for the world title which\nstarts on Oct. 6. Later she will\nvisit Paris for four days.\nnew $emme\n420% SUMMER\nHEARING GLASSES\nHearVith Both Ears\nand other new\nexciting\nBeltones,\nIncluding    Super\nPower for Severe\nLosses\nPhono Hotel for Free\nHome  Demonstration\nIf Hearing Is Your Problem\u2014Beltone\nIs Your Answer\nBe sure to cut this ad. out for the\ncorrect date.\nE. C. GORING ANDXOMPANY LTD.\n524 W. Pender Street, Vancouver, B.C.\n$.0\nCLIP THIS\nAD\nIT'S\nWORTH-\nOh the purchase of\nany Beltone Hearing\nAid during this\nClinic. Terms gladly\narranged and Trade-\nin Allowance for\nyour present aid.\n ' \u25a0\u25a0\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 5, 1957\nPhiladelphia Negroes, Whites,\nOpen Campaign To End Violence\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Side-\nby-side' campaigns to help the\nvictims of teen-age violence and\nto rid the city of r.aclal bitterness gathered force Friday.\nPublic agencies and aroused individuals, white and Negro alike,\njoined in an expressed determination to end \"these senseless\nfights before mere young people\nare hutt.\"\nThe quoted words 4re Uiose ef\nMrs. Clara Baldwin, a Negro In\nher late 40s with a family ef her\nown and a strong sense of social\n. responsibility.\nMrs. Baldwin, cheered fin by\ncity .officials end welfare groups,\n*arh>rt_la week started canvas\nsing her North Philadelphia\nneighborhood to raise money for\nthe family of Billy Fluck, 15-year-\nold white boy stabbed in an attack by several Negro youths-\nthe boy's spinal column was all\nbut severed by a knife, causing\nparalysis of both legs. Doctors\ntear he may never walk again.\nIn less than three days- the\nBaldwins have rallied to their efforts more than 100 volunteer\nsolicitors, most of them Negroes.\nAbout 35 canvasser* gathered\nin the Baldwin heme Thursday\nnight and reckoned up about $ioo\nin contributions. Approximately\nthe same amount was raised the\nnight before.\nMISSING BOY\nFOUND DEAD\nLOS ANGELES (AP)-A nine-\nyear-old boy, missing since Wednesday, was found shot to tlleath\nin an abandoned house Thursday\nnight. Lying dead next to him\nwas his crippled grandmother,\nwho wanted him as her own.\nRonald Barrett White was\nfound In an upstairs bedroom\nwith a bullet in his back. The\ngrandmother, Mrs. Allene Durs-\ninn, 58, had a bullet in her head.\nPolice said a pistol was clutched\nin her hand.\nThe boy's father, Thomas M.\nWhite, said Mrs. Durston had\ntaken care of Ronald in his early\nyears and was \"all wrapped up\nin the boy.\"\nRonald's mother, Mrs. Evelyn\nD. White, reported the boy missing when she learned he hadn't\narrived at school. She said she\nfeared her mother might have\ntaken the boy away.\nbounties Find\nFaked Money\nTORONTO (CP)-Royal Canadian Mounted Police said today\nthey recovered eight counterfeit\nUnited States $20 bills passed\nmainly at service stations and\ndrug stores scattered throughout\nthe metropolitan Toronto area.\nAn RCMP spokesman said two\nmen and a woman were passing\nthe fake bills, sometimes as a\ngroup and' sometimes Individ-\nilly.\nHe said RCMP believe the recovered bills are part of a batch\nprinted in Montreal several\nmonths ago and flooded into up^\nstate New York in August.\nHALSTEAD, England (CP) -\nMrs. E. Root, 84, was the runner-\nup in a competition in this Essex\ntown for the best house garden\namong munlcipally-owned homes.,\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nr\u00bb\u2022 Dally Ntwi Don pot hold molt niponilbie in the ovont\nof an orror In \u00bbh\u00ab following Mate.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium     .07V4\nAlgom Uranium -  19.00 '\nAtlin Ruff 29\nAumaehe  18\nAumaque  07V4\nAuner   - -...   1-99\nBase Metals - 85\nBaskn Uranium      .17\nBoymar 13Vi\nBrllund  - 21\nBroulan - -.     .79\nBrunhurst 06\nBuff Can      .12\nCampbell C    6.40\nCan Met    2.10\nCasslar     6.60\nCentral Patricia    l.oo\nChime --..-    ,71\nCoin Lake  13\nCons Denisen  17.12V4\nCons Discovery    2.74\nCons Halllwell *i\nYOUR\nNEWS\nAPER\nThe story behind the headline, and the copy in a\nnewspaper is spelled S-E-R-V-l-C-E! This newspaper,\nand every other piper in the country is a \"public\nservice\" \u2014 it is infOrmOtive, educational, humanitarian and civic-minded. Dad turns first to the news\nand editorials; Mom likes foshi.n stories and recipes; the kids like the comics.\nThere's something for everybody in every phase of\neveryday life! Fundamentally, yOur newspaper\nServes you with information \u2014 whefher in the news\ncolumns, or in the ads! Truly your paper is a \"Service center\" ... the meeting place dnd the marketplace of the Community.\nPHONE 1844\nThe Nelson Daily News\nCons Howe    2.00\nCons M & S  21.50\nCon Sub 89\nConwest     3.35\nCopper Corp 28\nD'Aragon  17\nDonalda  12\nEast Amphl 08\nEast Malartic    1,73\nEast Sullivan    2.25\nFalconbrldge   25.00\nFaraday     2.00\nFrobisher      1.61\nGeco     9.00\nGeo Sclentlfio Pros 40\nGiant Yel.    4.50\nGlen Uranium 18\nGoldcrest   17.50\nHeadway 42\nHollinger    24.00\nHudson Bay   51.75\nInspiration 40\nInt Nickel   74.25\nIron Bay    2.29\nJollet Que 26\nKenville  , 08\nKerr Addison i  16.25\nLabrador    15.50\nLake LIngman      ,09\nLakeshore     4.95\nLexlndln  06V4\nLittle Long Lac     1.55\nLorado   _...    1.02\nLouvlc't _\u201e 08\nMacassa      2.21\nMacDonald  33\nMadsen R L     1.64\nMalartic G F     1.40\nManeast  13\nMaritime Mining 90\nMart McNeely 13\nMcLeod      1.15\nMilliken  \u201e     2.70\nMining Corp   12.00\nMogul    83\nNew Alger 08\nNew Bidlamaque 07\nNew Delhi 60\nNew Fortune   12V4\nNew Highridge 12\nNew Jason 07V.\nNipissing     1.55\nNisto - 07V4\nNoranda New   40.50\nNorgold  10\nNormetals      3.00\nNorpax   53\nNorth Can      1.50\nNorth Rankin _..     .86\nOpemiska      8.50\nPickle Crow     1.16\nPlacer Develop     -8.75\nPreston E D     7.15\nQuebec Copper 44\nQuebec Lab 09\nQuebec Lithium     6.25\nQuebec Metallurgical     1.25\nQuemont     9.50\nRayrock     1.33\nSherritt Gordon      5.20\nStadaeona _- 22\nSteep Rock .    13.12V.\n     1.42\n     1.76\n     2.10\n       .70\nSylvanite\nTeck Hughes .\nTemagaml \t\nThomp-Lund .\nTombill \t\nTorbrit .\n.34\n.18\nTrans Cont Res\nVentures     30.25\nVicour 06\nViolamac      1.31\nWiltsey Goglin fi3V_\nWright Hargreaves     1.62\nYellowknife Bear      1.20\nYukeno 04V4\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc\nBanff. Oils\t\nData Petroleum ..\n.al & Ed\t\nCan Admiral .\n 23\n     2.35\n 07V.\n    27.75\n 46\nCdn Atlantic    .5.85\nCan Devonian     5.40\nCommonwealth Pete'     3.25\nsJons Peak 06V4\nJuvex 16\n.iDme A   18.25\nLiberal Pete      1.50\nLong Island Pete 12'_\nMarigold 17\nMidcon .\nNew Continental .\n.63\n\u202243.\nNew Gas Expl     1.75\nOkalta      1.83'\nPac Pete   23.50\nPetrol 58\nPonder   59\nProv Gas     3.00\nRoyalite    17.25\nSpooner  27\nStanwell Oil 99\nTriad    5.20\nUnited Oils     3.20\nWes Pac       .18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\n  28V4\n  28\nAluminum   35V4\nArgus 2nd pfd  16\nAlias St  18\nB A Oil   43Ve\nBathurst Power  45\nBell Telephone  39%\nBrazilian   77\/s\nB C Elec 4s  :  88\nB C Forest  9%\nB C Packers A  13\nB C Packers B   12\nB C Power A   39%\nBurns A  \u00bb10\nBurrard A   7V.\nCan, Breweries  25\nCan Canners  14\nCan Celanese  14V.\nCan Chem Co   5SA\nCan Dredge  18\nCan Malting   47'4\nCan Oil     30\nCan Pac Rly   28Vi\nCan Packers A  35\nCons Gas  ,  29(4\nDist Seagram   26V.\nDom Foundries   27Vi\nDom Magnesium  12%\nDom Steel Ord   25\nDom Stores  46\nDom Tar & Chem \u201e 9%\nDom Textiles   7V_\nFamous Players  15%\nFanny Farmer   17V4\nFord A   82%\nGen Steel Wares  6\nGoodyear  160\nGoodyear pfd   44\nGypsum Lime   29\nImperial Oil    43%\nImp Tobacco   HVi\nInt Pete  43'4\nLaura Secord  18%\nLoblaw A  22 ;\u25a0;,\nLoblaw B  _  20%\n.Vlassey Harris  _.... 5%\nAlcColl Frontenac  _  .. 58\nMont Loco  16\nCan Ogopggq\nBe Relation?\nMONTREAL (CP)-One of the\nmost widely read authorities on\nQuebec's outdoor life Is inclined\nto go along with a theory that\nthe monster of Lake Pohenega-\nmook is a sturgeon.\nG. H. Carpenter, executive editor of the Montreal Gazette\nwhose wildlife column appears\nunder the pseudonym I z a a k\nHunter, relates in Friday's paper\nan, incident that may solve the\nidentity of \"the thing\" reported\nfrom Kamouraska County.\nFrom what friends have told\nhim\u2014and he is known to . hundreds in the province's most rugged areas \u2014 the angling world\nneedn't have the shudders.\nSome years ago a priest In the\nvicinity of the lake \"had a sort\nof farm fish pond,\" writes Izaak\nHunter.\n\"Into this water he introduced\nsome sturgeon, perhaps with a\nview of producing caviar or other\nforms of food yielded by the sturgeon which abounds in waters of\nthe province.\n\"Sturgeon, as we all know,\ngrow to an enormous size under\nActor's Equity\nBars Color Bar\nLONDON (Reuters) - British\nactors were told Friday to turn\ndown parts in a proposed South\nAfrican company of Pajama Game\nbecause of color bar problems.\nThe order was Issued by British Actors' Equity after it had\nfailed to gain assurances from the\nSouth African producers that a\ndefinite proportion of the performances would be set aside for\nNegroes and colored mixed blood\naudiences.\nEquity reserves the right to determine the exact number of performances to be set aside.\nfavorable conditions, running up\ninto the hundreds of pounds.\n\"The opinion of some of my\nfriends is that one or more of the\npriest's sturgeon escaped, as I'm\ntold they well might have, and\ntook up residence in Lake Phene-\ngamook to wax fat and fearsome.\n\"The sturgeon has a saw-\ntoothed row of horny plates along\nhis back, which would seem to\nsupport this theory.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 15\nBralorne    4.80\nCanusa 03\nCariboo Gold     63\nFarwest Tungsten  09\nGiant Mascot      .10\nGranduc      1.60\nHamll S1I 02V4\nHighland Bell     1.25\nNational Ex   ...: 30\nPioneer Gold      1.30\nPremier Border 05\nQuatsino  39\nSheep Creek    45\nSherritt Gordon     5.10\nSilver Ridge     OS\nSilback Premier  06\nMoore Corp   60%\nNat Steel Car  22%\nPage Hershey  113V.\nPowell River   \u2022 34V4\nPower Corp   56VS\nRuss Industries  10\nShawinigan  23Vi\nSimpsons A  15%\nSoutham   44V4\nStandard Paving   34V4\nSteel of Can   54V.\nTaylor Pearson  9\nUnion Gas of Can -  69\nUnited Steel  13V4\nSilver Standard \t\nSunshine Lardeau.\nTaylor \t\nTrojan \t\nWestern Ex\t\nOILS\nAltex     ...\u201e\nA P Cons\n.20\n.13\n.10\n.32\n.34\n.18\nCal & Ed  27.25\nCharter   2.45\nHome    17.25\nNew Gas Ex  1.70\nOkalta Com  1.65\nPac Pete    23.00\nRoyalite    17.37'.\nRoyal Can 50\nSparmac 17\nUnited   3.10\nVanalta  20\nVantor  20\nVantor   1.45\nINDUSTRIALS     -\nAlberta Dist  1.35\nAlberta Dist Vt  1-25\nB C Forest  9.50\nB C Power    39.25\nB C Telephone  38.30\nInt Brew B      4.30\nInland Nat Gas  7.25\nLucky Lager  3.90\nMacM fc.Bloedel B  23.00\nMid Western   2.50\nTrans Mtn  76.00\nWestminster Paper  23.00\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\n1:00\n1:30\n2:30\n3:00\n5:30\n6^00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:30\n8:00\n8:30\n9:00\n9:30\n10:30\nKXLY TV \u2014 Channel 4\nSATURDAY\nGood Afternoon\nWestern Rbundup\nThe Lone Ranger\nWestern Roundup\nWild Bill Hickock\nLeave It To Beaver\nPlayhouse\nStarlit Stairway\nDick and The Duchess '\nGale Storm Show *\nHave Gun Will Travel *\nGunsmoke *\nPerry Mason\nThe Late Show\nSUNDAY\n8:30 Good Morning\n9:00 Mormon Church Conference\n11:00 Sunday Matinee\n12:30 Bowling Time\n1:30 This Is The Life\n2:00 TBA\n2:15 Professional Preview *\n2:30 Professional Football *\n5:30 Annie Oakley\n6:00 News and Commentary\n6:30 You Are There *\n7:00 Lassie *\n7:30 Jack Benny *  .\n8:00 Ed Sullivan Show *\n9:00 General Electric Theater *\n9:30 Alfred Hitchcock *\n10:00 $64,000 Challenge *\n10:30 What's My Line *\n11:00 Errol Flynn Theater\nKHQ TV - Channel 6    '\nSATURDAY\n10 Color Test Pattern\n13 Test Pattern\n25 NARTB\n26 Bible Reading\n29 Program Previews\n30 Gumby *\n:00 Fury *\n30 Howdy Doody \u2022\n00 Cartoons\n45 World Series \u2022\n45 PCC Hi Lites .   '\n15 NCAA Football \u00bb\n(California vs. Michigan) *\n45 Football Scoreboard *\n00,Hopalong Cassidy\n30 Western Marshal\n00 Western Theatre\n00 I Led Three Lives\n'6:30 Trouble With Father\n7:00 Death Valley Days\n7:30 \"Franceses\"\n8:00 Perry Como (C) \u2022\n9:00 Polly Bergen Show \u2022\n9:30 Giselle Mackenzie *\n10:00 Dean Martin Show *\n11:00 Late Movie \"Remember\"\nSUNDAY\n10:45 World Series *\n1:00 Western Theatre\n2:00 Christopher Program\n2:30 This Is The Answer\n3:00 Travel Series\n3:30 Short Subjects '\n4:00 TBA\n5:30 Price Is Right\n6:00 Kraft TV Theatre\n7:00 Ted Mack Amateur Hour *\n7:30 Sally *\n8:00 Steve Allen (C) \u2022\n9:00 Bob Hope Show  *\nU):00 The Web *\n10:30 O. Henry Playhouse\n11:00 All Star Theatre\nSATURDAY\n2:00 Adventures of Gene Atttry\n3:00 Saturday Showcase\n4:30 KREM Cartoons\n5:00 Kit Carson\n5:30 Lone Ranger\n6:00 Championship Bowling\n7:00 Majer Fights\n8:00 Pride of the Family\n8:30 Hollywood Offbeat\n9:00 Lawrence Welk *\n10:00 Mike Wallace Interview *\n10:30 Million $ Theatre\nSUNDAY\n1:00 Gene Autry\n2:00 Telecourse\n2:30 Faith For Today\n3:00 Sunday Matinee\n4:30 Paul Winchell \u2022\n5:00 Tales of the Texas Rangers(\n5:30 Kit Carson\n6:00 Roy Rogers Roundup\n7:00 You Asked For It \u2022\n7:30 Maverick \u2022\n8:30 Bowling Stars *\n9:00 Sunday Spectacular\nIPrograma subiect  to change t>y stations  without notice.)\nPARKER SECURITIES-Troil, B. C. and ANARCHIST\nCHROME CO., LTD.-Kelowna, B. C. wish to announce that an initial release-of 200,000 shares of\nTreasury Stock, from Anarchist Chrome Co. Ltd., is\nnow being offered to the public for 75(t per share\nin Canadian Funds. A complete prospectus and brochure will be made available to all interested parties\nalong with coloured slides showing development and\noperations at \"Anarchist Mt. Chromite and Mineral-\ndyke Nickel\" properties.\nSigned\u2014M. M. Butorac, Pres. Parker Securities.\nR. Cacchioni, Pres. Anarchist Chrome\nCo., Ltd.      '\nFor  Further, Information  In  Nelson  Area,  Contact\nMR. P. E. POULIN, 582 Ward St., Nelson, B. C.\n SPORTS\n^M\nSpokane Club Arrives;\nMaglio, Gare in Gear\nPaying due homage to the attraction of the world series, Spokane Flyers were attempting Friday to arrange their practice\nschedule to allow the players to\nwatch the third game of the classic.\nWith the majority of the club in\ntown and others expected within\nthe next few days, the Allan Cup\nRangers Trip\nBlack Hawks\nST. THOMAS, Ont. (CP) - Chicago Black Hawks didn't look\nmuch like Stanley Cup contenders\nFriday night as they lost 6-2 in\nan NHL exhibition game with New\n.ork Rangers.\nParker   MacDonald   paqed   theibc expected considering the time\nRangers with two goals while Guy of year-\nfinalists began arriving Friday\nnight to begin their practices at\nCivic Arena. Practices will continue for one week, when the club\nreturns to Spokane to oppose Vernon Canadians in an exhibition\ngame.\nBefore they leave, however, the\nMen of McBride, who may lose the\nservices this season of starry Art\n(The Dart) Jones to New Wesmin-\nster Royals of the Western Hockey\nLeague, will tangle with Calgary\nStampeders or Seattle Americans\nof the WHL in an exhibition affair.\nNelson Maple Leafs held their\nsecond practice of the season Friday, at which veterans Ernie Gare\nand Mickey Maglio turned out.\nThe session was devoted, as expected, to a scrub game that saw\ncentres Don Appleton and Lee\nHyssop, Maglio, Gare and Dave\nStewart skating faster than might\nGendron, Andy Hebenton, Hank\nCiesla and George Sullivan were\nthe other. New York goal-getters,\nFor the Hawks, Ron Murphy netted the puck in the second period\nand Bob Bailey scored in the\nthird.\nEach team was minus some of\nIts top stars who are in Montreal\nfor the all - star game tonight.\nHarry Lumley tended goal for the\nBlack Hawks replacing Glen Hall.\nWIN A\nHOMELITE\nCHAIN SAW\nIN OUR OWN\nLOCAL CONTEST\nAlto Many Other Prizes\nSAT. OCT. 12th\nNelson\nCivic Grounds\nHOMELITE\nSALES & SERVICE\n536 Stanley St., Nelson, B.C.\nKeith Harrison and Arnold Sherwood, who labored in local intermediate ranks last year, also\nwere in action.\nAround the rink: George Wood,\nnetminder for last season's Memorial Cup champion Flin F 1 o n\nBombers, was made available a\nfew days ago. He didn't stay avail\nable long. Penticton Vs of the\nOkanagan Senior Hockey League\nsnapped him up to solve their\ngoalie problem . . . Norm Ussel-\nman, last year with Kelowna, will\nline up this season with Kamloops\nChiefs, home \u2014 temporary variety\n\u2014of Grant and Dick Warwick .\nJack Lancien will handle the workouts until Flyer coach - manager\nRoy McBride arrives from the\nPrairies . . . note to local fans\nSeason tickets go on sale Oct. 7\nfor those who held season or con\ntract tickets last year.\nAuld Lang Syne\nEnds Golf Year\nNelson Golf and Country Club\nSunday concludes one of its most\nsuccessful seasons with the annual Auld Lang Syne tournament.\nAlmost every member of the increasingly-sizeable club has made\narranegments to participate in the\nevent, at which gaudy costumes\nand soaring golf scores are the\nrule.\nStarting-times for the golfing\ngroups are not available, as, in\nline with the general atmosphere\nof the affair, tee-off times were\nleft.'to the discretion of the competitors.\nGilchrist's Service\nAlnsworth,  B.C.\nIMPERIAL  GAS  AN  OIL8\nATLAS   TIRES\nOpen Sunday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn   Nelson-Kaslo   Highway\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII\nONE WAY\nOR ANOTHER\nIT'LL HAPPEN\nMILWAUKEE (AP) \u2014 The\nNew York Yankees and their\nwives\u2014can have their laundry\n(Done free while they're in Milwaukee, a cleaning firm announced Friday in a quarter-\npage ad in the Milwaukee Journal.\n\"After all,'; the ad read, \"If\nyou're going to be taken to the\ncleaners anyway, you may as\nwell be token to the very best\nIn Milwaukee.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWALDEN STOPPED\nIN NINTH ROUND\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Ernie\n(Sonny Boy) Williams of Washington, fighting his first main event,\nstopped Dave Walden of Youngs-\ntown, Ohio, Friday night on a technical knockout after 30 seconds of\nthe ninth in a scheduled 10-round\nlightweight scrap.\nWilliams weighed 13, Walden 134.\nReferee Marty Gallagher halted\nthe struggle after Williams stunned Walden with a right and then\npounded him on to the ropes.\nWalden, 22-year-old \u2022 last minute\nsubstitute for stable-mate Johnny\nBusso in the nationally-televised\nfight, was stopped for the first time\nin his 26 pro engagements.\nTurley, Buhl Do Battle Today\nAs Series Enters Third Game\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - Bob Tur\nley and Bob Buhl, a pair of bullet-\nthrowing right-handers, will do the\nhonors today when the world series switches to this baseball-daffy\ncity after a one-day travel-break.\nAll even at one game each after\nholding the proud New York Yan-\nkeos to a split in their own stadium,\nthe confident Milwaukee Braves,\nreturn to their friendly \"home of\nthe Braves\" for three big games,\nIn sharp contrast to blase New\nYork where a world series is just\nsomething that happens every October at Yankee Stadium, there is\ncontagious excitement in the brisk\nair of Wisconsin. The beer and\ncheese land never has been host to\na series before and there is intense\ncivic pride in \"our Braves.\"\nHuge crowds cheered the Braves\nThursday night when they flew\nhome on a pink cloud. Lew Bur-\ndette's pitching and Wes Covington's hitting and fielding blended\ninto a heady tonic. The 4-2 victory\nthat squared the series came al\nthe most opportune moment.\nYANKEES ARRIVE\nThe Yankees, who seldom fly,\nrode inlo Milwaukee at noon on a\nMentor Anxious\nFor All-Star Win\nMONTREAL (CP) - Hockey's\nbrass converged on Montreal Friday for a look-see at the team\nsupposed to be something of a\nshoo-in for 1957-58 titles.\nThe occasion is tonight's National Hockey Leage all \u2022 star\ngame when Montreal Canadiens,\nintact last season,, will meet\nthe glitter talent voted to the No.\n1 and No. 2 all-star combinations.\nCanadiens, as Stanley Cup winners, are hosts for the second\nstraight year. They're still looking for their first win, They tied\n1-1 last year and took a 3-1 licking at the hands of the all-stars\nin 1953.\nCOACH ANXIOUS\nUnder present arrangements\nfor the so-called dream game, all-\nstar teams have won four times,\ntied twice and lost twice. Both\nlosses were to the Detroit Red\nWings.\nThe assembled brass wants to\nhave a good look at the Montreal\nmachine in action and try to find\nways and means of halting it in\nthe long season's stretch ahead.\nCoach Milt Schmidt of Boston\nBruins, whose club was polished\noff by Canadiens 4-1 in the best-\nof-seven cup final last spring, is\nparticularly anxious to knock off\nthe proud Montrealers. He is the\nall-star team's coach and, with\nthe top players from five other\nclubs, feels he can do it.\nOn Schmidt's forward lines the\nfamous Detroit one - two scoring\npunch of Gordie Howe and Ted\nLindsay will be reunited.    Since\nNelson Civic Arena\nSUNDAY'S SPECIAL\nFamily Skating\n2 to 4 p.m.\nEntertainment for\nGrandma\nGrandpa\nMother\nBrother Tad\nBring the Baby\nPlease, No Dogs\nlast season Lindsay has been\ntraded to the Chicago Black\nHawks. Schmidt will also have\nsuch high - powered scorers as\nAlex Delvecchio of Detroit, Real\nChevrefils of Boston, Eddie Litz-\nenberger of Chicago, Andy Bathgate of New York Rangers and\nDick Duff of Toronto Maple\nLeafs.\nIn goal will be Glen Hall, who\nwent with Lindsay from Detroit\nto Chicago.\nPRESTIGE AT STAKE\nCoach Toe Blake of Canadiens\nfeels his club has a lot of prestige at stake in the game and a\nwalloping at the hand, of the all-\nstars might be a psychological\nblow for the start of the regular\nseason.\nBlake plans to use five defence-\nmen, four complete forward lilies\nand an extra forward. In addition to his regulars from last season he has Marcel Bonin and\nStan Smrke, both forwards. Bonin\nwas acquired via the draft from\nBoston Bruins. He played with\nQuebec Aces in the Quebec Hockey\nLeague last season. Stan Smrke\nwas acquired from Chicoutimi of\nthe QHL in last mid-season but\nsaw little action because of injuries.\nspecial train and hustled to County Stadium for a workout. Only a\nfew of the Yanks\u2014Whitey Ford,\nMickey Mantle and Yogi Berra \u2014\nhad played in tne park in the 1955\nall-star game.\nMilwaukee's second game victory sliced the series odds in half.\nThe Yankees, who were 13-5 favorites after the opener, now were\nonly 7-5 to cop the best-of-seven\nset. For today's game, the price\nwas 11-10, New York favored.\nAbout 45,000 including standees\nwill jam into County Stadium but\ntheir decibel cdunt probably will\ndouble or triple the noise generated by 69,000 in New York.\nThe fast-ball hitters on both\nclubs\u2014who have been jnoaning\nabout the curves and changing\nspeeds of Warren Spahn, Whitey\nFord and Burdette\u2014will get a\nchance to swing from their heels.\nBoth Turley, who follows Don Lar-\nsen's no-wlndup delivery, and Buhl\ncome from the old \"rear back and\nfire\" school.\nLACKS CONTROL\nBuhl, 29, tied his personal season\nhigh with an 18-7 record although\nhe lost a month\u2014 from August 18\nto September 12\u2014due to a shoulder\ninjury. Control is his trouble\", but\nhe has a blazing strikeout pitch.\nHe is a scowling, mean-looking\ncompetitor on the mound.\n\"They say the Yankees like'to\nhit the fast ball,\" Buhl said Friday\nafternoon. \"We'll see tomorrow.\"\nTurley, during the 1957 season,\nconquered his old control trouble\nand wound up with a 13-6 record.\nEven before the Yanks hit town,\nthey got a taste of the hysteria that\nhas gripped this rich dairy country. As the train sped past a farmhouse, a girl in a blue dress and\nwhite apron hoisted a huge handmade sign.\n\"Win Braves,\" it read in letters\ntwo feet high.\nCrowds lined the railroad right\nof way, peering for a glimpse of\nMantle, Berra or maybe manage)'\nCasey Stengel. Gathering when the\ntrain stopped al Sturtevaut, Wis.,\nwhere baggage was transferred, a\nsmall brass band tooted away in a\ngreeting that caught even Stengel\nspeechless.\nUNSUNG HERO\nCovington, whose running catch\non Bobby Shantz' fly helped save\nThursday's game, was the big batting hero of the first two games\nwith his .500 average. This unsung\nleft fielder has overshadowed such\nsluggers as Eddie Mathews, Hank\nAaron and Joe Adcock.\nBraves manager Fred Haney\nsaid he would move Covington up\nto the No. 5 spot in the batting\norder and would play Bob (Hurricane) Hazle, a late season phenomenon from Wichita, in place of\nBritish Golfers Win Only One\n01 Four Ryder Cup Encounters\nLINDR1CK, England (API-United States professional golfers won\nthree of the four scotch foursomes\nmatches in the Ryder Cup Friday,\nleaving only a flicker of hope to\nthe British team.\nThe Americans need only four\nof today's eight 36-hole singles\nmatches to keep the international\ntrophy they have held without a\nbreak since 1935.\nOnly Dai Rees, little 44-year-old\nscrapper from Wales, and unwor-\nried Ken Bousfield held out against\nthe tide. One down after 27 holes,\nFavorable Weather\nFor Third Contest\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - The wea-\nIherman gladdened the hearts of\nworld series baseball fans with a\nforecast to delight anyone with\ntickets for today's contest.\nPredictions call for sunny and\npleasant weather with cloudless\nskies and temperatures in the middle 60's. A northeast wind of 15-20\nm.p.h. was forecast, which would\nblow across left field toward the\nfar end of the right field grandstand at county stadium.\nthey climbed back to a 3-and-2\nvictory over lanky Art Wall, Jr.,\nand Fred Hawkins.\nDoug Ford, 1955 American PGA\nchampion, and leading money winner Dpw Finsterwald defeated the\nyouthful British pair of Peter Al-\nliss and Bernard Hunt, 2 and 1.\nCAPTAIN WINS\nJack Burke, U.S. team captain,\nand tough Ed Kroll whipped Britain's big hitters, Max Faulkner\nand Harry Weetman, 4 and 3.\nU.S. Open champion Dick Mayer\nand Tommy Bolt crushed Ireland's\nChristy O'Connor and Scotland's\nEric'Brown, 7 and 5.\nBritain has won the Ryder Cup\nonly twice, to nine American victories, since the contest was inaugurated in 1927. But only once\nhas Britain failed to score a point\nin foursomes, in which partners\nplay alternate strokes with one\nball.' That was in the first postwar match in 1947.\nIn Friday's play on the exacting\n6525-yard, par 34-36\u201470 Lindrick\ncourse, Britain was saved from a\nshutout only by the comeback Rees\nand Bousfield staged on the final\nnine holes.\nAndy Pafko in right field. Hazle\nwould bat 7th.\nFrank Torre, a lefthanded hitting\nNew Yorker, may take over first\nbase from Adcock although Haney\nwasn't positive.\nDel Rice, who is Buhl's  \"personal\" catcher, also will be in the\nlineup, replacing Del Crandall.\nTENTATIVE LINEUP\nStengel's lineup always remains\ntentative. It is expected' that he\nwill stay with the same men who\nplayed Thursday, with another\nrighthander pitching. However, 41-\nyear-old Enos Slaughter might give\nway to Kubek, the 20-year-old\nrookie, in left. That would bring\nback Andy Carey or Jerry Lumpe\nto third base where Kubek played\nthe second game.\nJerry Coleman leads the Yankee\nhitters with a .600 average on three\nhits. The veteran seems certain\nto remain on the job.\nThe umpires shift around to put\nBill McKinley of the American\nLeague behind the plate in his\nfirst game in the National League\npark.\nProbable starting lineups:\nNew York: Hank Bauer, rf, Tony\nKubek, If, Mickey Mantle, cf, Yogi\nBerra, c, Gil McDougall ss, Harry\nSimpson lb, Jerry Lumpe, 3b,\nJerry Coleman 2b, Bob Turley, p.\nMilwaukee: Red'Schoendienst 2b,\nJohnny Logan ss, Eddie Mathews\n3b, Hank Aarbn cf, Wes Covington\nIf, Joe Adcock lb, Bob Hazle rf,\nDel Rice c, Bob Buhl p.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 5, 1957 \u2014 7\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIUUIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIUIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n2. RD YEAR STARTS TODAY\nFOR NELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nWhen Nelson Civic Centre opens its doors tonight\nto greet members of the Nelson Figure Skating Club at\na skating party, the  _ommunity*-owned building will\n, mark the beginning of its 23rd year as a pillar of the\nsports-loving residents of the community.\nDuring the eight days ending Oct. 12, a figure skating party, family skating, adult skating, tiny tots' start-\n- ing, a minor hockey jamboree, an exhibition hockey\ngame, guys' and dolls' skating, the annual Firemen's\nBall and a student dance will combine to keep active\neveryone who is interested in leaving the house.    -\nArena manager Jack Morgan and his staff have\nbeen working long and hard during the past few weeks\nto add lustre to the occasion. Actually, the arena opened\nto the call of the season Thursday night when Nelson\nMaple Leafs held their first practice of the year in preparation for the 1957-58 Western International Hockey\nLeague season.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'\nFLU BUG BOTHERS GRIDDERS\nAS COLLEGE SEASON STARTS\nBy The Canadian Press\nAlthough the flu bug may slow\nsenior intercollegiate league teams in their season openers\ntoday the virus isn't expected to\naffect bumper crowds of eastern\nCanada fans facing their first full\ncard of weekend football action\nthis season.\nIn the college league, defend-\ning-champion Queen's   University\nWoolies Order of Evening\nFor Shivering Grid Fans\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEverything else may be in doubt,\nbut it's a sure bet the fans are*\ndigging out their warmest red\nwoolies for tonight's two games in\none of the biggest weekends of the\nseason in the Western Interprovin-\ncial Football Union.\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers and Saskatchewan Roughrides, basking at\nhome in balmy breezes of Indian\nsummer, travel to Edmonton and\nCalgary, where some of the worst\nearly-October weather conditions\nin memory prevail.\nThe forecaster promises a temperature of about 20 degrees when\nBombers tackle the first-place Eskimos at Edmonton in a game that\ncould determine the bye into the\nleague final.\nAt Calgary, similar conditions\nare predicted for the Stampeder-\nRoughrider encounter, a victory in\nwhich would almost assure the\nCowboys of their first playoff berth\nsince 1952,\nSHOULD IMPROVE\nWeather conditions should be improved for the other half of the\nweekend schedule when Stampeders are at Vancouver against British Columbia Lions and Bombers\nat Regina against the Riders. Re-\ngina and Vancouver so far have\nescaped the wintry blast that has\nwhipped Alberta.\nHopes of a record Edmonton\ncrowd.of more than 22,000 dwindled\nFriday with the onslaught of snow\nand cold, but club officials still\npredicted a blanket-and-bottle turnout of 18,000.\nThe Edmonton - Winnipeg game\nis the last meeting between the\ntwo during the regular schedule\nand is perhaps the most important\nof the regular season for both.\nBombers are two points behind the\nEsks, but have a game in hand,\nand with a victory tonight, only an\nupset defeat by one of the last\nthree clubs would take that first-\nplace bye away.\nEskimos can move four points\nahead\u2014and to an almost certain\nfirst-place finish \u2014 if they can outdo the Bombers.\nBARRY CULLEN'S\nSECOND MARKER\nTIES JR. HABS\nOTTAWA (CP) - Barry Cullen's\nsecond goal in the last three minutes of the game enabled Toronto\nMaple Leafs to tie Ottawa - Hull\nJunior Canadiens 5-5 in an exhibition hockey game Friday night.\nCullen scored for the National\nHockey League team at 17:31 with\ndefenceman John Longarini of the\nbolstered home club sitting out a\npenalty. Dick Duff, Tod Sloan and\nGeorge Armstrong scored the other\nToronto goals. Bob Boucher scored\ntwice for the junior Habs while\nsingles went to Gary Aldcorn, Rudy\nMigay and Billy Carter.\nThe juniors were bolstered by\nToronto players Migay, Aldcorn,\nSid Smith and Ron Stewart.\nKeep Yonr Eye on Classified!\nGolden Gaels are at home to\ncoach Dalt White's flu-ridden University of Toronto Blues. The\nother, game, in Montreal, has Mc-\nGill University Redmen against\nUniversity of Western Ontario\nMustangs.\nFlu shouldn't affect the outcome of Montreal Alouettes Big\nFour game with winless Toronto\nArgonauts in Toronto, but it could\nhave some say in the action in\nOttawa.\nGOOD SHAPE\nCoach Frank Clair's Ottawa\nRough Riders, tied with Als for\nfirst place, are host to second-\nplace  Hamilton  Tiger-Cats.\nThe Senior Ontario Rugby Football Union schedule has another\nwinless Toronto club, Balmy\nBeach, playing London Lords.\nSarnia, tied with London for first\nplace, will match plays with\nKitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen in\nKitchener. Dutchies are in second\nplace, one point back of the top\nrung.\nOttawa Coach Frank Clair must\nsmile despite the misery of his\nown personal attack of the flu\u2014\nhis team is in the best possible\nphysical shape for the Ticat tussle.\nBAKER-FLINK\nSNOW  PLOWS\nFor Trucks\nBe Prepared \u2014 Order Now\n\u2022'.- Vancouver 9,\nB.C.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nAdult\nStraight Skating Club\nCommencing October 10th and every Wednesday\nthereafter, the Adult Straight Skating Club will hold\nregular sessions from 8:00-10:00 p.m.\nAdmission will be by membership cards' only. Persons wishing to join may do so by registering\nWednesday. The membership fee is $5.00 which\ncan be paid as follows: 50\u00a3 each Wednesday until\n$5.00 has been paid, or you may purchase the\nmembership card outright for $5.00.\nHOCKEY\n1957-58 Senior Hockey\nSeason Ticket and\nContract Ticket Sales\nLAST SEASON  TICKET  HOLDERS\nTickets on \u00abal\u00bb Civic Centre Office,\n10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Oct. 7-15.\nNEW TICKET HOLDER8\nTickets  on  sale  starting   Oct.  16,  Clvle\nCentre Office daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nPRICES OF ADMISSION\nSeason Tickets $30.00\nContract Deposits $3.75\nNOTICE\nSeason Tickets purchased before\nOct. 19, 1957, will be $27.50\nHOCKEY\nAre You Ready tor the\nSkating\nAND\nHockey Season\nDrop in and see our selection of\nPleasure and Hockey Skates\nPriced to suit your budget, from\n$9.95 to $25.\nNELSON'S BEST SKATE SELECTION\nJack Boy@\u20aci Mens'\n\"Located in McKay & Stretton Building'\nPhone 160\nNelson, B. C.\nssssi\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 5, 1957\ni V V11.11. f.  \/. IIV ^OH-n-PlRSONWANTAfi-\nillAJf iLll.lllliV  FORQU\/CKRtSUlti.'\nPhone 1844\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.'\nPhone 1844\nBIRTHS\nBALL\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Denis\nBall of South Slocdn, at .Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, October 3,\na son.\nTAGAMI \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nYoshiro Tagami, 722 Eighth Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, October 4, a daughter.\nCAZAKOFF - To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Cazakoff of Blewett, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital October 4, a daughter.\nSTEELE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Steele of Salmo, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Ootober 4,\na daughter.\t\nHELP WANTED\nGOVERNMENT  OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nAPPRENTICESHIP AND\nTRADESMEN'S\nQUALIFICATION BRANCH\nPRE-APPRENTICESHIP\nTRADE TRAINING CLASSES\nApplications are invited from\nyoung men for enrolment in pre-\napprenticeship trade classes\nwhich are intended to lead to\napprenticeship in the following\ntrades:-\nElectrical\nElectronics\nSteel Erection\nWooden Boat Building\nApplicants   should   preferably\nbe from seventeen to nineteen\nyears old, have a good basic education and be physically able to\nengage in the trade.\nNo charge will be made for\ntuition but students will be responsible for their room and\nboard. A subsistence allowance\nwill be given to help the student\npay for his room and board. The\namount of this allowance will\nbe forty dollars a month for. a\nstudents whose home is in the\ntraining city and fifty-six dollars\na month for a student whose\nhome is outside of that area.'\nWhere living accommodation\nis not available at the school, arrangements will be \u2022 made with\nprivate homes to accommodate\nstudents.\nCourses wjll start soon after\nOctober 21st, 1957 and will be\nheld in Vancouver. Each course\nwill last about five months.\nApplication forms ,can be obtained by writing to the following address:-\nDirector of Apprenticeship\nDepartment of Labour\n411 Dunsmuir Street\nVANCOUVER 3, B.C.\nPlease indicate the trade in\nwhich you are interested.\nEXTRA COMMISSIONS\nWe offer a line of incandescent\nlamps (2000 hour) on a commission basis to full or part'\ntime salesmen. Commissioned\nweekly, repeats credited. Here\nis a year-round staple that can\nbuild into a large and remuner\native operation. Write today for\ndetails, in confidence to Box\n.10261, Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED MAN FOR\ndairy farm able to handle milking machines and light chores.\nApply Duncan Dairy, Box 324,\nTrail, B.C.\nHELP WANTED\n(Continued)\nAPPLICATIONS FOR THE Position of caretaker, janitor, and\nice-maker for the Bluebell Recreation Hall, Riondel, B.C., will\nbe received by the undersigned\nup until Oct. 7, 1957. Ice-making\nexperience preferable but not\nessential.\nMrs. B. Harrison, Sec.-Treas.\nBluebell Recreation Club,\nRiondel, B.C.\nFINANCIALLY RESPONSIBLE\npersons required as territory\nmanagers to cover Trail and the\nKootenys. Must have late model\ncar, preferably experienced in\ncrew management. The best deal\nat the moment. Dollar down, dol\nlar a week, backed by radio\nand TV programs. Write Suite\nC, 168 E. 2nd Ave., Vancouver.\nYOUNG MAN WITH EXECUTIVE\nability to train as assistant manager. Preferably with Bank, Insurance, Credit or Accounting\nexperience. Attractive salary\nand fringe benefits. Apply in\nwriting, Trail Credit Union, 1440\nBay Avenue, Trail, B.C.\nRELIABLE YOUNG MAN TO\nwork in department store, rapid\nadvancement possible to right\nman. Must have Junior matnc;\ngood writing, good appearance\nand fast with figures. Must be\nable to be bonded. Apply in Writing to Box 10299, Daily News.\nLEARN BLUEPRINT READING\nby home study. Your ability 'o\nread blueprints will bring pro\nmotion to a better paid job. Dip\nloma awarded. Free folder. Blueprint Reading Dept. G3, Primary\nSchool of Drafting, Box 123, Sta'\ntion \"Q\", Toronto.\nDRAFTSMEN ARE IN GREAT\ndemand. Train by home-study in\nyour spare time for a well-paid\nsecure jolj. Diploma awarded.\nFree folder. Primary School of\nDrafting, Dept. G, Box 123, Sta\ntion   \"Q\",  Toronto.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nGIRL TYPIST TO TRAIN IN\nPublic Accounting. Must be neat,\nreasonably attractive, accurate\nin spelling, have a fair insight\ninto mathematical problems\nAge preferred, 18-25. Submit\nqualifications in writing, Box 530,\nNelson, B.C.\nWANTED - GIRL TO HELP\nwith house work and young children. Must be capable and willing to live in. New home with\nall conveniences. Good wages,\nWrite Mrs. A. K. Gregson, Box\n609, Revelstoke.\nLARGE FIRM WITH BRANCH\noffice in Nelson requires qualified stenographer. Salary $200\nper month. 40 hour week. Box\n8000, Daily News.\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED FOR\nmotherless home. 1 child no ob-\njection. Box 11207, Daily News.\nLOST AND  FOUND\nLOST - MAN'S MED. BROWN\nframed glasses, vicinity main\nlake ferry and Nelson. Reward.\nPhone 1116-R or write 1001 Da-\nvies St.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nKaolin\nBranch\nRock\nMolding .\nedge\nStrings\nDog's lead\nIncite\nAfrican\nworm\nPalm (Asia)\nGame\nanimal\nOf a mountain range\nFemale pig\nRice beer\n(Jap.)\nConsumed\nSecondary\nThrice\n(mus.)\nPart of\na church\nUnit of work\nNoise\nKing of\nIsrael\nGreeting\nPublic\nvehicle\nChest sound\nPrecious\nstones\nFred Allen's\nforte\nResin\n(Scot.)\nForay\nScotclr caps\nSoon\nDOWN\nJob\nImmense\n3. Trees\n4. Aye\n5. Drawing\nroom\n6. Tramples\n7. Epoch\n8. Error\n9. Run\nbefore\na\ngale\n11. Black eye\n(slang)\n15. Barristers\n19. Corrode\n21. Siberian\ngulf\nHI_I_[_   O-tl-D\ninaasiH ehhbei\nhhbh _it.an_n\nas     EBB  ______\n23. Ship's\nbrake\n24. Fan\npalm\n(Ceylon)\n25. Girl's\nname\n27. Erbium\n(sym.)\n30. Publisher's Yesterday's Answer\ncolophon       37. Foreign\n32. Eve's first    38. Miss\n1.1111 _i_]_l Sill\n[___1E_I___ UIGISB\nmiSilli- GIHHHI-\nigHEHBI EHHHtl\nHE-IB   BLOT\nhome\n34. Ejects\n36. Greeting\nDaniels\n43. Man's name\n44. Wine vessel\n%\n1\n_\nV\nX\"\nf^\nY\n6\n7\n8\n.\u25a0\n^<\n\\o\n_.\nII\n11\n^\n13\npr\n1\nIS\n^A\n16\n17\n%\n10\n1.\ni\nV\/A\n^\n20\n21\n^\n12.\n13\n21\nIS\n4\nu\n11\n^\nIB\nV)\n30\n\u00a7\nSI\n32.\n%\n^\nt\nsr\n31\nfy\n36\n3b\n37\n30\n3.\n%\n40\n^\n41\n41\n43\n1\n44\n45-\n1\n46\n%\n47\n%\n43\n%\n41.\n42.\n44.\n45.\n46.\n47.\n48.\n1.\n2.\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014Heie's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW \"'\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 hints\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n'FQES    WBF    FBB    SJFP    FB    EPPG   J\nWPTPV    TBVSM \u2014FPWWKEBW.\nYesterday's  Cryptoquote:  PUT NOT  YOUR  TRUST  IN\nMONEY, BUT PUT YOUR MONEY IN TRUST- HOLMES.\nJ)\u00abrilnit\u00bb4 by King Fe^ww 8yo.iwt_\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE OF AUCTION SALE\nOF CROWN TIMBER\nThere will be offered for sale\nby Public Auction at the Office\nof the Forest Ranger, at Nelson,\nB.C., at 10:30 a.m. (Local time),\nMonday, October 21st, 1957, approximately 500 pieces 6' 6\"\ncedar fence posts, as is and\nwhere is, situated on Lot 9912,\nStarlight M\/C.\nAll bids must be accompanied\nby a certified cheque or money\norder covering the full amount\nbid.\nSixty (60) days will be allowed\nfor the removal of the above\nmentioned posts.\nThe highest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nFurther particulars and tender\nforms may be obtained from\nthe District Forester at Nelson,\nB.C., or from the Forest Ranger at Nelson, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nDon't\nBuy   a   shallow  well  pump,\nthen discover later you need\na deep well pump.\nSEE\nThe New\nMonarch\nSELF-PRIMING\nCONVERTIBLE\n\u2022fa Can be converted from\nshallow to deep with one\nsimple step\u2014and\nAT-NO\nEXTRA\nCOST\nPHONE 18 OR 1139\nCompany Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nairs!\nFor over 40 years we have\nbeen headquarters for\nmachinery repairs of all\nkinds.\nOur completely equipped Welding and Machine Shop is constantly engaged in keeping\nlocal industries operating.\nWe can also supply your needs\nin Welding Supplies, Industrial\nTransmission Equipment.\nStevenson\nMACHINERY  LIMITED\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97  '\nMore  Good\nUSED SAWS\n1\u2014McCulloch 430A\nLike New.\nOnly $100\n1\u2014McCulloch 325\nOnly $75\n1\u2014Homelite EZ\nVery Good $ 125\n1\u2014McCulloch 73\nNew Guarantee $250\nH  \"FHITZ\" FARENHOLTZ,\nC. ROSS or ALEX McDONALD\nMAC'S\nWELDING &\nEQUIPMENT CO., LTD.\n614 Railway-St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nFOR SALE - LF-192 INTERNA-\ntional tandem truck in good condition $3500. Also 13-ton tandem\nFreuhauf logging trailer $1200.\nEast Kootenay Equipment, Cranbrook.\nWANTED - D-4 CAT ON RUB-\nber tire backhoe for trade on a\nrebuilt D-8 Cat with 'dozer. Box\n11141, Daily News.\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nNew International\nRF-210 Tandem\nLogging Truck\n211 \"Wheel Base\nNew International\nA-180 Truck\n190\" Wheel  Base\nNew International\nA-100 Pickup\n'56 International\nS-180 Truck\n190\" Wheel  Base\nWith Steel Lumber Roller\nDeck\n'52 International'\nL-180 Truck\n'     172\" Wheel Base\nWhite WB-22 Truck\nWith Logging Trailer, Reach\nBunks, Ready for Work\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1810 - 100\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\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.,\nPAcilic   6357.\n288 FOLDING AUDITORIUM\nchairs in units of three. Plywood\nseats and backs, $2.95 each. In\nlots of 100 or more $2.50 each.\nColumbia Trading Co., 902 Front\nSt., Nelson.\nGURNEY HOT AIR FURNACE,\nsteel weld, 17 inch, complete\nwith pipes $60.00. Apply A. Vaas,\n295 Dockerill St., Trail, B.C. or\nphone 1232-X.\nNYLON LACES 36 YDS. $1.00,\nRibbon, 1500 yds. $1.00. Beautiful taffetized, %\u25a0%\", Postpaid.\nSchaefer, 264, Drummondville,\nQue.  '\nBLUE SUNSHINE BUGGY, GOOD\ncondition $15.00; green davenport $10.00;. green settie $10.00;\nWinnipeg couch $8.00, .suitable\nfor summer camp. Ph. 1316-L.\nPROPANE UNIT, 2 TANKS, HOT\nwater tank. $65.00. Thor oil\nheater $40.00. Apply Miller's\nStore, opposite bridge. \u25a0\nFOR SALE-DOUBLE.BED AND\ndouble' spring-filled mattress,\nlike new, reasonable price. Ph.\n1813-L.\nJUST ARRIVED - CARLOAD OF\ndrain tile, vitrified pipe and tees\nand flue lining. Columbia Trading Co., 902 Front St. Nelson.\nPEARS FOR SALE, $1.50 PER\nbox, approx. 42 lbs. Will pick\nby order. Howards Ranch, phone\n1727-R.\nDINNER SET, DOMINION MEAT\nchopper, trilights, 2 pair skis,\ncurtain stretchers, other house-\nhold\"goods. Phone 473-X.\n2 PAIRS BOYS' SKATES, SIZE 6\nand 8 and one pair girl's white\nfigure skates, size 3. Used one\nyear only. Phone 1279.\nSN.G FIT WEATHER STRIP-\nping complete door set with\nnails $1.75. Columbia Trading\nCo., 902 Front St., Nelson, B.C.\nWALL BOARD SPECIAL - y8\"\nhardboard 4x8 sheet $2.69. Columbia Trading Co., 902 Front\nSt., Nelson, B.C.\nGUNS, NEW AND USED. CUS-\ntorn loads and supplies. Norm's\nGun Shop, 171 Baker, ph. 385.\nPORK, VEAL AND LAMB FOR\n\u25a0 sale at Crawford Bay. Phone\nevenings, Harrop 1271.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BALED TIMOTHY\nhay. Apply A. E. Freed, Box 128,\nWynndel, B.C.\nFURNACE FUEL, CHEAPER.\nAvailable immediately. P h o rt e\n714-R-3.\nFURNACE FUEL, CHEAP.\nAvailable immediately. Phone\n714-R-3.\nHOOVER UPRIGHT VACUUM\ncleaner, good condition, $30. Ph.\n1468-L.\nCOLEMAN OIL HEATER, 50,000\nbtu., with fan. South Slocan 361.\nHE\/fl\/TH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies St.\n'.'FRIG\" COLD WATER SOAP.\nBest for woollens. Local stores.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\n 5135\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -   LARGE  RETURNS\n-.\u25a0.\u25a0.\u25a0.That's the Want Ad Story  -PHONE   1844\nL<V_STCCK,  POULTRY\n\\ND FARM S'J?PLI_S. ETC.\nM'LSCr. DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, O.T. S, 1.37 \u2014 .\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nAll Models ot\nNew CHEVRGLETS\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 Hud__n Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Coach\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1951   Ford Sedan\n-   Trucks\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,\nPhones 35-36\nB.C.\nYou   Have\nA Wide  Choice\nOf Late Model\nUSED\nCARS\nFully Winterized\nat.\nPARKVIEW\nMOTORS\n1957 Plymouth Plaza\n1956 Volkswagen\n19-55 Chev Deluxe\n1954 Meteor   Niagara\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Henry J.\n1952 Chev Deluxe\n1952 Austin Stn. Wagon\n1951  Consul\n1951  Vanguard '\nLTD.\nVolkswagen - Rambler - Vanguard\nSales and Ser.vice\n323  Nelson Ave.\nPhone   1454\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\n1952 DODGE SUBURBAN A-l\ncondition. Radio, heater, signal\nlight, trailer hitch. Phone 3501,\nKinnaird.\nFOR SALE - 3-TON SPECIAL\nMercury truck, 178\" wheel base,\ngood tires, hoist and steel deck\nVery reasonable. Phone 1757-R.\nFOR SALE - '54 HILLMAN\nsedan, radio, new tires, turn\nsignals; also 28' inboard cabin\ncruiser,   Phone  1446-R.\nFOR SALE - '55 METEOR HY-\ndromatic. No reasonable offer\nrefused. Phone Austin Jackson,\nCivic Hotel, evenings.\t\nFOR SALE - 1S49 OLDSMOBILE.\nPhone 1841.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDON'T WAIT FOR WINTER.\nPlan now! The rush is on Steps,\nsidewalks, driveways, basement\nfloors. All carpenter work and\nstucco work, roofing, etc. Phone\n62.-L. H. Zylstra and Sons.\nFOR HIRE - TANDEM 10-YD.\nLF-190 International dump truck\nby hour or contract. S. Kudra,\nphone 1757-R.\nWATED - JANITOR WORK IN\noffice or'apt, or caretaker for\nfurnace. 711 Silica.\nHANDYMAN WANTS ODD JOBS.\nPhone 256-R.\n. RUI'cRl Y, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\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 for above truck.\nVery reasonable prices. Trades\nand terms. Located at East Koo-\ntenay  Equipment, Cranbrook.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice \u2014 Used parts for '47 Olds,\n,'52 Somerset, '52 Ford, '46 Meteor, Mercury, '37 Ford, '46 Plymouth, '47. '50, '51, Austin.\nHillman, Prefect, Vanguard,\nMorris Minor cars. For sale,\n2-wheel trailer. Phone 1363-L-2\nor write Rox 382 Ymir Road.\nNels.,..\nNORTH SHORE\nNEAR BRIDGE\n1\u2014New.   modern,   3-bedroom\nhome. Fireplace, oak floors,\nfull basement,    C I O flOA\npicture window, v \u00ab\u00bb\u00bb.\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\n$2500 Down, Balance N.H.A.\n5% Mortgage, $65.00 Per Mon.\nand Second Mortgage.\nOccupancy 2 Weeks.\n2\u20142-storey, 4-bedroom house.\u2014\nCut stone foundation, full\nbasement, furnace, wired for\nrange. Garage; 2 garden lots.\n\u00a3\u00a3 $7900\n$3000 Cash Might Handle.\n3\u2014ATTRACTIVE HOME. Two\nbedrooms upstairs. Ground\nfloor: nice kitchen, wired for\nrange, also piped for gas;\nlots of cupboards; good bathroom, living room and den\nor sewing room. Cut-stone\nfoundation. Full basement\nwith cement floor (furnace).\nA really lovely garden, several fruit trees (apple, apricot, cherry, etc.), lawns and\nflowers. Good        S7500\nterms *^\nWe figure this is one of our\nbest listings.\n4\u2014THREE -BEDROOM HOME\nin immaculate condition. \u2014\nBedrooms are large with good\ncupboards. Dining room and\nliving room, large kitchen.\nGas installed. Good garage.\nNew roof and new siding,\n1956.   Two   beautiful   corner\n& $6300\n$2000   and  Balance   $50   and\nInterest Monthly Might\nHandle\n5\u2014CREEK  STREET,\nand  2-bedroom\nhouse.\n$1500 Will Handle.\nPossession 2 Weeks.\nIDEAL FAIRVIEW LOCATION\nVery Smart 2-Bedroom Bungalow\nBright Kitchen\nLots of Cupboards\nAttractive Living Room\nWith Fircolace\nOak Floors in Mam Rooms\nPolished Coast Fir Bedrooms\nGlassed-in Front Porch\nExcellent Full Basement\nAutomatic Oil Furnace\nBasement Garage\nAttractive Corner  Property\nGood Garden\n$12,500\n$3500   Cash   Might   Handle.\nCar Insurance and Package\nPolicies a Specialty\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.       Nelson. B.C.\nLarge  lot\n$4500\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about- our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777 and save.\n1956 RF 210, FIRST CLASS ME-\nchanical condition, very low mileage. $9,750. Write or call Spar-\nwood Esso Service. P.O. Natal,\nSparwood, B.C. Phone 56-W.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\n1\u2014A good solid investment, 3\nsuite apartment block. Always rented. Well located\nand in good condition. Revenue amounts to $260\nmonthly, taxes are only $238,\nand water rates $84 yearly.\nCould have 1 suite for owner\nand rent 3, or rent all 4. Oil\nheated, and metered individ-\n\"eanyatPriced t0 $21,000\n:\u2014A very well located and built\nhome ~ close in. Has L.R.,\ngood K., modernistic bathroom and 2 B.R.s or 1 plus\nD.R. on main floor; 2 other\nB.R.s upstairs. Full basement,\nwashtubs and furnace; also\ndrive-in garage. 2 well-devel-\nr:.ice    $9500\nWith only $3500 cash\npayment!\n\u2014A lovely building location in\nFairview. Lot is 60' x 90' \u2014\nbordered by Davies St., and\nalso has lane ac- C I CAfj\ncess. Full price is  ***l UVV\n4\u2014An older type home but in\nfairly good condition. Main\nfloor has L.R., D.R., K., modern bathroom and 3 B.R.s. \u2014\nAlso has rented suite in basement. Double garage on property. Hot water heated with\n4 to 5 tons of coal yearly. \u2014\nProperty is 100* x 120'. Full\n^c;is $8950\nCash, about $2700. Balance\nagreement for sale at $50 per\nmonth plus 6% Interest.\n-4 very lovely scenic locations\nfor good homes. Each location\nis 90' x 120'. Price of each\nlocation is $2000\nAsk about these!\n\u2014A very well built 4-B.R.\nhome on Houston St. \u2014 right\nat bus stop. Property very\nwell developed. House has\nL.R. and D.R., H.W. floors;\nlarge K\u201e 2 large B.R.s with\nample closet space. First-class\nbathroom\u2014all on main floor.\n2 large B.R.s upstairs. Full\nbasement and coal furnace\u2014\nalso dHve-in garage, Full\nprice of this <\u00a3 I A \u00a3 Aft\nproperty is only $ ' U^UU\n\u00a3 reasonable cash amount\ndown!\n\u2014We have anxious buyers\nwaiting for homes. List your\nproperty with us today.\nonly\nReal   Estate  and   Insurance\nAgency\nPHONE 68       532 WARD ST.\nMULTIPLE   LISTING\nSilica St.\nA' five-year-old 3-B.R. home\nsituated cm 2 lots with an additional  2  lots  at  the   back.\n\u00a3\u2122s $10,000\n. P. E. Poulin\nREAL ESTATE AGENT\n582 Ward St. Phone 70\nMULTIPLE\nBungalow; 3' bedrooms, L.R.,\nD.R., large kitchen; hot water\nheating. Located 304 Observatory St. 3 level, well developed\nlota. Garage. J^QQ\nb'.P. Only $2500 or Offers,\nMULTIPLE\nGracious 3-B.R., large L.R.,\nD.R. Hardwood floors. Located\nat 816 Baker St.   <t I\n'' D.P. $3800. Balance $72\nMonthly  Including  5'.%  Int.\nWILLIAM\nKALYNIUK\nAGENCIES\nLow Cost Auto Financing,\nReal  Estate  and Insurance\n534 Josephine St. Nelson\nPHONE 1777\n1,000\n\\ If Listed at a\nFAIR   PRICE\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY\nC. W. Applevard\n& Co. Ltd.\nBox 26\n421 Baker St.\nPhone 269\nNelson. B C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Cnntlnue.l\nFAIRVIEW - COMFORTABLE\nhome, 2 corner lots, 3 bedrooms,\n3-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.\nLARGE COMPANY WOULD LIKE\nto establish warehouses in suburbs of Nelson. We requite land\nand access for buildings and preferably with resident as caretaker. Apply Box 11036, Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE-REVENUE HOUSE\ncentral located. New gas furnace, completely rewired, income $230.00 per month. $.3,000.\nSome terms. Box 8007, Daily\nNews. '\nLOT 50 BY 250. GRANITE\nRoad, lfe miles from town\nTaxes $1.75 a year. Very rea-\nsonable price, Ph. 1757-R,\nPRICED FOR QUICK SALE!\nTwo-bedroom North Shore home,\ndirectly above bridge approach\non Johnson Road. Fully insulated and in nice condition*. Cash\n$5500, terms $6000. Ph. 1413-L,\nRENTALS\nOFFICES FOR RENT - ONE\nroom Johnstone Block, $45, or\nwill convert for suitable tenant.\nAlso 3 rooms Aberdeen block,\n600 sq. ft., $65. Immediate occupancy. T. D. Rosling and Son\nLtd., Property Managers, 568\nWard St., Phone 717.\nFOR RENT-IMMEDIATE Possession, 3-bedroom house. Oil\nfurnace. Ideal family home. Garage. Good beach. North Shore.\nTen minutes from bridge, 6 mosk\nor year lease. Box 11135 Nelson News.\nSMALL OF F 1 C E AND WARE-\nhouse Nwith shelving conveniently located in Truck Terminus Bldg. on ground floor.\nPhone 77  for  particulars.\nHOUSE FOR RENT AT WILLOW\nPoint: 2 bedrooms, five rooms,\ngarage and fuel shed, ,$65. T, D.\nRosling and Son Ltd., 568 Ward\nSt., Phone 717.\nDOWNTOWN - SMALL FURN.\nbed-sitting room $17.50, With\nfridge, rangette $20. One person\nonly. Enquire Bishop's News\nStand.\nWANTED TO  RENT-TWO-BED-\n' room house in Fairview. Furnished or unfurnished. Apply Box\n11162, Daily News.\nNEW MODERN SELF-CONTAIN-\ned apartment. Suitable for one\nor two people. Wired for TV.\nPhone 933-X.\nMODERN 2-BEDROOM INSULAT-\ned cottage on lake front at Willow Point, turn, or unfurn. T. G.\nLudgate, 482-X-4.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly oi\nmonthly rates. Allen Hotel, 171\nBaker Street.\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED 2-BED-\nroom bungalow. Close in. Adults.\nApply Box 11137, Nelson News.\n3 LARGE-ROOM SUITE. CLOSE\nin. Heated. Also hot water\nPartly furnished.- Phone 2013.\nFURNISHED 3-ROOM APART\nwith bath, heated, near Baker,\nNov. 1. Phone 1184-Y.\nTRAILERS\nLTD.\n\u25a0it- New and Used\njc Sales and Service\nCRANBROOK\n\u2022JUNIPER 6-2270\nCASTLEGAR   \t\n\" Castle 2701\nOur Policy:\nTo  Give  Quality  Service\nThroughout the Kootenays\n1958  MODELS\nNOW   ON   DISPLAY\nRMSED PULLETS - BUY NOW\nraised pullets ol good breeding\nfrom our farm. Lejhorns, HarilB-\nshires, Hamn-Leg crosses. We\nhave'over 30 years experience\nwith poultry. Apply our agent\nNelson Farmers' Supply, Nelson or write, direct to New Siberia Farms, R.R. 3.. Chilli-\nwock. B.C.\n30 HEAD HOLSTEIN HEIFERS.\n6 months to 2 years. Priced to\nsell. Phone H. Harrop, 1271.\nFOR SA'LE-2 GENTLE HORSES.\nGood for farm or logging. Apply\nA. Maloff, 'Blewett, B.C.\nWANTED-YOUNG GOAT BUCK.\nApply Box 11126, Daily News.\nBUILDING  SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD.\nfor all Building Supplies. Specializing in Plywood. Contractors enquiries solicited. Phone or\nwire orders collect. 3600 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C., GLen-\nburn 1500.\nCanary Livestock\nCALGAR. (CPI - The very-\nlight offerings'* on the livestock\nmarket, 250 cattle and 10 calves,\nwere partially due to the very\npoor road conditions. Insufficient\ncattle were on offer to give reliable\nquotations, trading was moderately active,\nGood, butcher steers met a fair\ndemand at generally steady prices.\nThere were no choice steers on offer; common and medium were\nabout steady. Good and choice butcher steers met a reasonably good\ndemand, prices being steady at the\nweek's lower levels; common and\nmedium grades generally steady.\nThere was a slightly improved demand for medium and good cows at\nWANTED TO RENT\nFURN. 3-ROOM SUITE FOR OC-\ncupancy end of Oct. Close in. Ph.\nBernie, 235 days, evening 2102-L.\nYOUNG WORKING COUPLER!-\nquire  turn.   apt.   or  house  by\nNov. 1. Phone 1999-X.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS,\nFridays. Ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nDENTAL PLATE SORES, WHITE\nCanker Spots quickly relieved\nwith Fletcher's Sore-Mouth Medicine ! A trial will convince you.\n$1.00 at all druggists.\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EF-\nfective. 3 weeks supply $2.50, 9\nweeks $6'.00 at Fleury's Pharmacy\nand all druggists.\nUSE LLOYD'S CORN AND CAL-\nlous Salve and Pads for painful\ncorns and callouses\" \u2014 prompt\nrelief. Salve 50c, Pads 25c at\nFleury's Pharmacy, Nelson;\nSalmo Drugs, Salmo, and all\ndruggists.\nSIX PER CENT\nAttention Investors\u2014First agreement 'for sale on new dwelling,\ndiscount 10% repayable\nmonthly $50, principal plus interest. Cash required $2565. Ph.\n1777, William Kalyniuk Agencies.\nUNWANTED HAIR\nVanished away with Saca-Pelo.\nSaca-Pelo is different. It does\nnot dissolve or remove hair from\nthe surface, but penetrates and\nretards growth of unwanted hair.\nLor-Beer Lab. Ltd., Ste. 5, 679\nGranville St., Vancouver 2, B.C.\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\nCAFE  IN  HOTEL\u2014NEW.LY  DE\ncorated\u2014fully equipped.  Terms-\ncan be arranged. Apply Fruit-\nvale Hotel Ltd., or phone 3392.\nClassified Ads Bring Returns!\nWILL   YOU    BE   OUR   GUEST\nwhen in Spokane,  Washington\nCity centre,   parking one block.\nComfortable rooms w'wo bath al\nlow,  low rates   Colonial Hotel\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD    AND    ROOM    FOR\nyoung gentlemen, Ph. 1179-X.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nTUBULAR   BARREL   HEATER.\nPhone 629-L.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA5SAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND,  BC\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., Nelson, Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P. Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nG..W. BAERG, B.C.\n' Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.   Nelson   Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric! welding, motor rewind\ning   Phone 593      324 Vernon St\n2.J. lam. latin Sfouia\nPrice 'per single copy 6c Monday\nto  Friday.  10c  on Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per week\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    _    $ 950\nOne year     $1800\nCLASSIFIED   DISPLAY\nWEEKEND BUYS AT\nMcELROY'S\nNew-AUSTINS and MORRIS'-IN STOCK\nNEW HOUSE FOR SALE IN\nCastlegar close to high school\n2 bedrooms, living room, modern kitchen, bathroom, full basement, coal and wood furnace.\nWired for electric range. Land\ncould be sub-divided into four\nlots. Ph. 6511, Castlegar.\nLOTS   FOR   SALE   -  APPLY\n1416 Vancouver Street.  '\n(Continued  in  Next   Column)\nBEDROOM WITH OR WITHOUT\nbath. Winter rates, week or\nmonth. Stirling Hotel.\nFURN. LAKESIDE\nClose in. Adults.\nDaily News.\nCOTTAGE.\nBox    11117,\nFOR RENT-LARGE HOUSE, 2\nbedrooms. Good location. Phone\n1236.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\non Crossley Ave. Ph. 681-R after\n5.\nONE 3-ROOM FURNISHED COT-\ntage, $30.00 monthly. Phone\n743-L-3, 1022 Beatty Ave.\nFOR RENT - GARAGE. PHONE\n519-L.\n2-BEDROOM   APART.   ON  NEL-\nson Ave. Apply Cutler's News.\nFURNISHED   HEATED   APART.\nAdults. Box 11118, Daily News.\n2-ROOM  COTTAGE. LIGHT WA-\nter and stove. Phone 1789-Y.\nFURNISHED  APARTMENT.\nClose in. Phone 839-R.\n2-ROOM  SUITE,  PARTLY\nnished. Phoije 1341-X.\nFUR-\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom.  Phone  1564-X.\nFOR RENT-TWO-ROOM APART-\nment. Phone 672-R.\n3-ROOM   APART. 5 FURNISHED.\nApply Cutler's News.\nBEDROOM   FOR   ONE   ADULT.\nPhone 839-R.\nNORTH   SHORE   MOTEL   NOW\nnoen for winter rentals. Ph  1684\nLARGE BRIGHT FRONT ROOM.\nPhone 247-Y. v -\n*\n*\n*\n*\n1957\n1957\nPLYMOUTH 2-DOOR SEDAN\n2-Tone Paint, WhitewaltB, Chrome Discs.\nDODGE.4-DOOR SEDAN\nPush-Button Trans., V-B Motor, Radio, 2-Tone\nPaint.\nPONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDT,OP\nV-8 Motor, Radio With Rear Speaker, 2-Tone\nPaint,  Whitewall  Tires,  Deluxe Trim.  New\nCar Condition. -\nPLYMOUTH SEDAN\n2-Tone Paint, Chrome Discs,\nAUSTIN SEDAN\n7000 Miles.\nWhitewall Tires.\nFORD SEDAN\nRadio,\nLow Mileage.\n1954\n1954\nMETEOR 4-DOOR SEDAN\nAutomatic Trans., Radio, Immaculate Condition.\nCHEVROLET 2-DOOR SEDAN\nStandard   Trans.,   Seat   Covers.   Immaculate\nInside and Out.\nSPECIAL\n1954 Chev. 4-Door Station Wagon\n2-Tone Paint,' Radio, Windshield Washers.\nLow Mileage. Immaculate Inside.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nWE PAY CASH FOR YOUR GOOD USED CAR\nVKELROY MOTORS\nAUSTIN - MORRIS SALES AND SERVICE\nBaker and Hendryx St.  . \u25a0\u25a0-.>'\u2022    Phonij 2000\n.~-\u2014\u201e\u201eJJ._... .,,,,^-..\u201e..JJJ^JJJ\u2014it.\u2122-\nsteady to slror.g prices. Bulls were\nsteady.\nVery light receipts of replacement cattle were cleaned up at\nsteady rates. All classes of calves\nremained fully steady.\nChoice steers 17-17.75; good 15.75\nto 16.75; medium 13.50 to 15.50;\ncommon 10 to 13; choice heifers\n15.25 to 15.75; good 14 to 15.25; medium 12.50 to 13.50; common 10 to\n12; good cows 10.25 to 11: medium\n10 to 10.25; common 9.50 to 10;\ncanners and cutters 6.50 to 9.50;\ngood bulls 12.50 to 13.25; common\nto medium 9 to 12.\nGood feeder steers 16-17; good\nstock steers 15-16.50; common to\nmedium 9 lo 14.50; good stock steer\ncalves 15-17.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nttW\u00bb\u00bbK'\u00bb0R\u00bb\nL0\nmm **\u00bb*\u25a0\nEfficient Units for Every Need in\nBOY, HI-BOY and COUNTER-FLO MODELS\nEASY TO INSTALL\u2014furnace\nproper completely assembled.\nCOMPACT \u2014 occupies minimum floor space,\nECONOMICAL \u2014100%\nprimary radiating surface extracts maximum efficiency from\nfuel; spun glass and aluminum\nfoil Insulation ensure extra\nsavings.\nEFFICIENT \u2014 Power-pHe PTtof\non burner maintains constant\nflame to Ignite main burner when\nheat Is called for.\nATTRACTIVE \u2014 finished In\nattractive brown and tan colour\ncombination, Infra-red baked\nto a durable, easy-to-clean\nfinish.\nLei ut gjve yew 6ft th* foc+i \u2014\u25a0 oowl\nBennetts Ltd.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St: Nelson, B: C. Phone 593\nPEEBLES  I  PEEBLES\n1\nPEEBLES MOTORS LIMITED\nGOOD TILL OCTOBER 15,  1957\n21-POINT ENGINE TUNE-UP\nComplete Motor Tune-Up\n1. Test and record engine compression.\n2. Clean and adjust or replace sparkplugs.\n3. Test battery and clean-terminals.\n4. Clean and adjust.or replace distributor points.\n5. Inspect distributor rotor, cap, high and low\ntension .wiring.\n6. Check mechanical and vacuum advance.\n7. Test coil and condensor.\n8. Inspect and free up manifold heat control valve.\n,9. Service air cleaner and fill with new oil.\n10. Test fuel pump pressure and .clean sediment\nbowls.\n11. Adjust fan belt tension.\n12. Test starter draw.\n13. Normalize engine to operating temperature.\n14. Torque cylinder head and manifold bolts.\n15. Replace valve cover gaskets.'\n16. Adjust engine timing.\n17. Inspect all hoses and tighten connections.\n18. Adjust carburetor with combustion analyzer.\n19. Clean and adjust voltage regulator.\n20. Anti-freeze tested.\n21. Complete tire safety check.\nPlymouth, Dodge: 6-Cylinder     $ 9.95\nPlymouth, Dodge: V8 engine       13.65\nChrysler, Desoto:        13,65\nParts and overhauling, of components are extra\ntrt\nto\nvr\nSPECIAL CLEAN-OUT\nPRICES ON PEEBLES\nQUALITY USED CARS\nBenefit   Now   On   Big   Reductions\nOn All 1957 Models.\nPEEBLEfMOTORW\nCHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-. ARGOJMfcTffill\nc%w: 1,090. \u25a0 ;mesm.M-m^m\n 10- NELSON DAILY NEWSrSATURDAY, OCT. 5, 1957 Month's Total $68\/900 .. .\nAnd\nWhen Your Doctor\nWrites Your\nPRESCRIPTION\nLet Your First Thought\nBe\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nHow Canadians Voted\nIn Teamster Election\nMIAMI BEACH, Fla. (OP) -\nThis is how Canadian locals voted\nin Thursday's election for the\nteamsters union presidency:\nLocal 31, Vancouver, J votes.\nLee 2.\nLocal 108, Montreal, 8 votes.\nHoffa 3.\nLocal 119, Winnipeg, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nXbcal 129, Vancouver, 1 vote.\nLee 1.\nLocal 139, Saskatoon, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 151, Vancouver, 1 vote.\nLee 1.\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n\u00bb'       LIMITED        \u2022*\u25a0\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\n578 Baker St\nPhono 827\nSawdust Burner Tops\nSeptember Building\nLocal 189, Vancouver, 1 vote.\nLee 1.\nLocal 213, Vancouver, 2 votes.\nLee 2.\nLocal 351, Vancouver, 1 vote.\nLee 1.\nLocal 352, Toronto, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 419, Toronto, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 484, Vancouver, 2 votes.\nLee 2.\nLocal S14, Edmonton, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 647, Toronto, 3 votes.\nHoffa 3.\nLocal 842, Vancouver, 1 vote.\nLee 1.\nLocal 810, Windsor, 3 votes.\nHoffa 3.\nLocal 973, Montreal, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 979, Winnipeg, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 987, Calgary, 1 vote.\nHoffa 1.\nLocal 989, Pembroke, Ont., 1\nvote. Hoffa 1.\nLocal 990, Port Arthur, Ont.,\nHoffa 1.\nA $20,000 refuse burner for\nPowell Lumber Company, being\nconstructed by Electric Power\nEquipment of Vancouver, was the\nlargest project for which a building\npermit was issued at City Hall in\nSeptember.\nPermits were Issued during the\nmonth for projects valued at $68,-\n505.71 compared with $50,855 a\nyear ago. Total. for the year to\ndate is $2,400,835.71, three times\n1956's total, with about two million dollars of the total for the new\nhospital.\nNext largest was an application by Miss E. Prucello for an\naddition to the Shamrock Grill,\nestimated value $10,000. Contractor is Louis Maglio.\nMrs. Nellie Palac applied for\npermission to build a $9000 home\nat 506 Gore Street.\nOthers were: Dr. N. E. Morrison,\nalterations to house at 422 Maple\nStreet, $6600; Mac's Welding and\nEquipment, 514 Railway Street,\nconstruction of new premises' by\nLawrence Simpson and A. Walper,\n$6000; James Madden, 317 Hall\nMines Road, convert house to duplex, $4000; Finning Tractor and\nEquipment Company, build retaining wall west side Cottonwood\nCreek, pour concrete slab for wash\napron, with catch basin, grease and\nsand trap, $3000.\nHOTEL SIGN\nChurch of the Redeemer, re-\nshingle part of the roof, $1095.71;\nOscar Ahderson, 921 Fifth Street,\nbuild bedroom over patio, $1000;\nA. J. Hease, 230 Baker Street, remodel house, convert into two\napartments, reshingle roof, rewire\nand other jobs, $100.;\nHume Hotel, raise' illuminating\nsign, $500; Mrs. S. T. Heddle, 1303\nHall Mines Road, re-roof with\n.aluminum shingles, $500; Joseph\nStrachan, 523 Robson Street, build\ngarage, $500; G. G. Hood, 823 Josephine Street, build patio and\n_teps at rear of house; Standard\nOil Company, Canadian Pacific\nRailway flats, insulate ceiling, lay\nnew floor, and other work; A.\nJohnson, 204 Chatham Street, build\nrumpus room in basement; G. J.\nTalbot, 1817. Falls Street, build\ngarage and partition off.\nBernard Diplock, 622 Fifth Street,\nadd two bedrooms; F. G. Smith, 218\nDelbruck Street, build garage;\nHenry DeHim, 624 Latimer Street,\nextend kitchen and re-roof; Mrs.\nA. D. Oliver, 1023 Front Street,\nbuild- new chimney; J. S. Tinlin,\n907 Fifth gtreet, rebuild garage;\nJ. H. McGinn, 723 Sixth Street,\nconstruct garage adjoining cement\nwall of house foundation; A. J.\nHarrison,: 420 Delbruck Street,\nbuild - cement foundation under\nback porch.\nJ. McKihley, 711 Vernon Street,\nnew roof on veranda, paint house;\nL. S. and M. Ott, 212 Silica Street,\nrepair roof with aluminum sheeting; L. Popoff, 502 Richards Street,\nraise roof over kitchen, bathroom\nand bedroom to make ceiling level;\nWilliam Proctor, 410 First Street,\nenlarge four windows; J. B. Vec-\nchio, 415 Innes Street, build new\nporch; J. A. Peters, 307 Delbruck\nStreet, reshingle house and remodel living room; Kichard Palmer, 609 Third Street, insert window; N. V. Warner, 519 H o o v e r\nStreet, build garage; F. J. Williams, 405 Elwyn Street, reside\nhouse with rolled asphalt siding;\nL.' M. McBride, 820 Stanley Street,\nreshingle garage roof.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nUSED CARS and\nTRUCKS\n1953 Dodge\nClub Coupe\nOverdrive, New Wheel\nDiscE, Black Paint,\nWinterized.\n-   1950 Ford Sedan\nRadio, Heater, Winterized.\n1953 Pontiac\nTudor Sedan\nGood Rubber, Two-Tone,\nWinterized.\n1946 Pontiac\nBusiness Coupe\nHeater, Winterized,\n1953 Fargo 1 Ton\nDual Rear Tires, Extra Tire and Wheel,\nFour-Speed Transmission, Winterized.\n1953 Dodge . Ton\nNew Rubber All Around, Heater, .Winterized.\nSee These UnlU Before You  Buy. \u2014 We Will  Not Be\n-Undersold,   Regardless.\nWigiriton Motors Ltd.\nCorner Josephine and Victoria 8ts.\nPhone 2039\nPlan Flights\nTo Honor Byrd\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Plans\nfor a round-the-world air flight\ncrossing both South and North\nPoles, and named in honor of the\nlate Admiral Richard E. Byrd,\nwere announced Friday.\nIt would be the first such crossing of the bottom and top of the\nworld in a continuous series of\nhops, said Cmdr. Frederick G,\nDustin, an Antarctic veteran and\nclose friend of Byrd's. Byrd had\nflown over both poles in separate expeditions.\nDUstin said the flight, financed\nby a group of businessmen, is\nscheduled 'to leave Boston about\nNOV. 10.\nHe announced this planned\nItinerary:\n' Boston to Trinidad, to Buenos\nAires, to Punta Arenas, Chile,\nand McMurdo Sound. Then to\nChristchurch, N. Z.,' Melbourne\nand Darwin, Australia; Manila,\nTokyo, Anchorage, Alaska and\nthen over the North Pole to\nThule, Greenland. From there to\nLondon, Frankfurt, Paris and\nback to Boston. The flight is expected to take at least two weeks.\nOdds...\nmd Ends\n...by M.D.B.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n.,'.1    '       (PACIFIC\nSATURDAY,\n55\u2014Farm Fare\n(HMVake Up Time\n25-Sports .tews\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News,\n15\u2014Market. Review\n20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n00\u2014News .\n05\u2014Musicale\n: 15\u2014Story Parade\n30-Stamp Club\n45\u2014Outdoors\n00-Post   Mark   U.K.\n30\u2014Juke Box\n: 45\u2014World Series\n30\u2014Rhythm Pals\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Weekend Listening\n: 15\u2014Musical Program\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nSTANDARD TIME)\nOCTpBER 5, 1957\n2:45\u2014Don Messer\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30-This Week\n3:45-Sports Colli\"- jsg_\n4:00\u2014Musical Pi-     'V\n4:25-CKLN Nev,.\n4:30-Hockey\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:45\u2014Armdale Chorus\n7:00\u2014Now I Ask You\n7:30\u2014Hotel Down Beat\n8:00\u2014Music from Montreal\n8:25\u2014Musical. Interlude\n9:00\u2014Scored 6y Hyslop\n9:25\u2014Musical\n9:30\u2014Winipeg Pops Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:3O-Sign Off\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1957\n8:45\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Overseas News .\n9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:15\u2014Musicale\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n10:45-Wofrd Series\n1:30\u2014Msuicale\n2:30\u2014News\n2:35\u2014Weatherman\n2:45\u2014In Retort\n3:00\u2014Canadian  Scene\n3:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014Horizon's  '57\n4:30\u2014Little Symphones\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle'\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Weekend Review\n6:20\u2014Special Speaker\n6:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n7:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n7:30\u2014Music Diary\n8:00\u2014CBC Stage\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:l_-Talk\n10:3O-Sign Off\nCBC   PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1957\nWell, that was the last straw\u2014\nto wake up and find that the mountains had turned white overnight,\nKokanee has gathered her skirts\nand veils around her and gone into\nseclusion and I guess we won't see\nher until the sun comes out again\nand then she will be dressed like\nthe bride of wintef\u2014 all pink, white\nand serene.\n#  #  *\nMy young friend told me Friday\nof the flight of geese that went over\naround nine in the morning. He\nsaid they were flying in perfect\nformation. His teacher who hails\nfrom \"down under\" had not seen\nthem before, so I can imagine the\nthrill it must have been to her.\nSigns of the times leave little\ndoubt as to the season. Besides the\nhuge pumpkins I noticed in one\nFairview garden and the.Fali\nflowers, shop windows also tell a\ntale. Flannelette pyjamas, overshoes and rubbers, nose drops and\nother stuff for fighting colds held\nprominent places behind the glass,\nThen of course there are duck de.\ncoys, rifles and shells which call\nforth pictures of the hunter sitting\nin a . soggy duck blind, getting\ncolder by the minute. I believe\nsome do go home with one or two\n(imp balls of feathers with heads\ndangling, only to be met by the\nmissus with the announcement that\n\"you can pluck them and clean\nthem.\"\nIn another window hockey equipment tells of the\" start of the Winter season in sport along with badminton birds and racquets. And believe it or not, Christmas cards\nare also on display. There are also\ncandy kisses in orange and black\nwrappers that could only mean one\nthing, and in grocery store windows boxes of apples tempt the\nshopper.\nIt has been interesting to. watch\nthe Clum home across the lake\nshaping up, I see it has its nice\ngreen roof on. Speaking of roofs\nreminds me: Mr. Holt was looking\nmost downhearted the other day.\nApparently they had put new\nshingles on the bandstand roof at\nGyro Park and some kids had\ncome along and torn them off. \"It's\nmost discouraging,\" he observed.\nK certainly is hard to figure out\nwhat causes such cussedness ii\npeople.\nHi-Fi Addicts Interest\nQuebec Psychiatrist\n)\nModern heating unito.whfeh mikeformor*\nefficient use of fuel, do not allow enough\nheat to enter the chimney to keep waste\ngases hot until they reach the outside air.\nAs a result harmful condensation, tar and\nsoot forms, cracking and clogging conventional chimneys.\nC.M.H.C. iV.L.A,\nAPPROVED\nAVAILABLE\nWITH OR\nWITHOUT\nSQUARE BRICK\nHOUSING\nAN EXCLUSIVE\nSELKIRK\nFEATURE\nThe Selkirk Chimney is superior to a conventional chimney Because its insulated\nconstruction aflows it to be heated quickly\nfrom furnace to the outside air.\nIn addition the Selkirk Chimney is mora\ndurable, more compact, weighs less and Is\nfar easier to install.\nThe Selkirk I* a modern chimney designed lor Modern Healing.\nSELKIRK METAL <B PRODUCTS LTD.\n635 Wall Street. Winnipeg\n972 Victoria Street. Kamloops\n\u25a0    \"        ___ Sroz.\nMONTEBELLO, Que. (CP)-\nHi-fi addicts may. need sympathetic psychiatric attention, in\nthe opinion of a Quebec psychiatrist.\nDr. Angus Bowes, clinical director in psychiatry at St. Anne's\nMilitary Hospital, Quebec, said\nthe hi-fi addict \"is very frequently of compulsive personality and tends to go through rituals in the playing of his high-\nfidelity records.\"\nDr. Bowes spoke to delegates\nat the annual conference of the\nIndustrial Medical Association of\nQuebec and the section on industrial medicine of the Ontario Medical Association.\nHe related his findings in connection\" with psychiatric treatment of eight hi-fi addicts in\nEngland and a similar number in\nCanada. .\nHe said the addicts were\nof \"compulsive personality and\nwere acting out their aggression\nand hostility by these-means.'\nAt the same time he emphasized that \"the enjoyment ofre\u00bb\ncorded music is, in itself, no indication of abnormality or psycho-pathological disturbance.\"\nOff\u2014News\n15\u2014CBC News\n18\u2014Random Hour\n30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n00\u2014B.C. Garden & Weather\n15\u2014Musical Program\n30\u2014In His Service\n45\u2014World Series\n30\u2014Musicale\n30\u2014CBC News\n35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n:42\u2014In Reply\n: Off\u2014Canadian Scene\n:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n: Off\u2014UN on the Record\n:15-TBA\nQuebec Income\nTax Judgment\nSaid Important\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014An income tax\nappeal board judgment of far-\nreaching consequences Friday\nruled that a husband falling\nwithin Quebec's law of community property is required to pay\nincome 'tax only on half of his\nincome.\nThe judgment by fioard member W. S. Fisher said the other\nhalf of the husband's income is\nthe property of the wife and she\nalone is liable to income tax on\nthe amount.\nJ. Gear McEntyre, deputy revenue minister for taxation, described the judgment as \"very\nimportant.\" He indicated the ruling will be appealed to the Exchequer Court of^Canada.\nIf the ruling is' upheld by the\ncourts, it could mean major savings to most Quebec married residents paying federal income tax.\nWithout taking exemptions into\naccount the federal tax on a $20,-\n000 income is $6070. However, if\nthe husband and wife each pay\ntax on $10,000 the tax is cut to\n$4,240 a saving of $1,830.\nHERE'S IHE [NEWS] IN\nMEN'HMS\nII44SEJ>'_7 form 227\nAutumn shades in new\nScottish Twistj and Worsteds. Shoulders are neater,\ntrimmer. Lapels are narrower. Woollens have richness, texture.\nYou'll-feel better and look\nbetter in one of these quality tailored Suits.\n$59.50\nExtra Pants $18\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nMarket If rends\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Music Program\n6:00-CBC Nat. News\n6:10\u2014Weekend Review\n6:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n6:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n7:00\u2014Pacific. Playhouse\n7:30\u2014Music Diary\n8:00\u2014CBC  Stage\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Chamber Music\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Talk\n10:30\u2014Prayers and Meditation\n11:00\u201420th Century Masterpiece\n12:00-CBC News & Marine Weath.\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1957\n(HK-B.C. Fishpian's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n40\u2014Morning Devotions\n55\u2014Musical March Past\n00\u2014News \/\n10\u2014Sport News\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014CBC   News\n35\u2014Anything Goes\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014Morning Concert\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n45\u2014Pages From Life\n00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n15\u2014Theme and Variation\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Showcase\n: 30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n: 55\u2014Five to One      -\n:00\u2014Afternoon Cone\n1:30\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Nursey Rhymes\n4:45\u2014Story Man\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Special Feature\n6:30\u2014Musical. Interlude\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter.....\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Parker '57\n8:00\u2014Marine Investigator\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00\u2014Elgar Centenary Concert\n10:00\u2014News\nlOilS\u2014Oriental1 Interlude\n10:30\u2014Dream Street\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n11:57\u2014CBC News\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rateo en\nrequest. Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment\nFor Fuller Sales and Service\nCall Don Sergent \u2014 Phone 350\nFisherman's Headquarters,\nTELLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C.\nBabies - Weddings - Portraits\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nSEE OLDTIMERS' ADVERTISEMENT TqpAY ON PAGE TWO.\nDON'T FORGET DON COSSACKS\nHIGH SCHOpL, OCT. 22.\nReserve November 30 for\nRebekah Sale and Tea\nThe latest in art and craft supplies\nfor everyone's hobby at\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nNew ladies dresses and skirts\nA good fall selection in all sizes\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nPhone 505 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging.  R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nBook your orders now for shrubs\nand rose bushes. Spring delivery.\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER SHOP\nUsed Chesterfield\nGood condition, priced to clear.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nGas or oil heating installed and\nserviced. Licenced, bonded gas fitter. Norm Bowcock, phone 385.\nFor Sale \u2014 3 Pianos\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 Hall St.\nStill a few oil heaters left\n$15.00 and up.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE \u2014 PH. 47\nDarwin Tulips \u2014 assorted colors.\n$6.50 per 100. Plant now.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFOR YOUB NEW HAIR STYLING\n& permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 21L Phone 1922.\nBoy's Pants, Shirts, Sweaters\nA good selection to choose from,\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nMine wedges and loading sticks\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156\nATTENTION CANADIAN\nLEGION MEMBERS\nBus leaving for Nakusp Saturday\nat 3 p.m. for travelling-gavel ceremony. Members wishing to go on\nthis trip please contact Legion\nSecretary\u2014phone 546\u2014today.\nRE POLIO INOCULATIONS\nThe Selkirk Health Unit, 303\nBaker Street, is holding a special\npolio Cinic on Friday, October 11,\nfrom 2 to 3:30 p.m. Parents with\nchildren under school age who require the second polio inoculation\nare. asked to bring their children\nto this clinic. Please note that\nthis clinic is being held only for\nchildren requiring second doses.\nThe supply of vaccine is not large\nenough to give first or third doses\nuntil a latpr date.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMtCANDLISH - Funeral services for the late Robert John McCandlish will be held at Thompson\nFuneral. Home Monday at 2 p.m.\nReverend H. R. Whitmore will officiate, and interment will take\nplace in Nelson Memorial Park.\nFINE FOLLOWS ACCIDENT\nRobert William Pinfold of Balfour was fined $20 and $21.50 costs\nwhen he pleaded guilty before\nMagistrate William Evans in\nThursday's provincial court, to\na charge of driving without due\ncare and attention. This was the\nresult of an accident September\n27 when Pinfold's car left the\nroad near Balfour and smashed\na powerline pole. The accident\ncaused about $1000 damage to his\ncar and $125 to replace the power\npole.\nNels Edward Sjoberg of Nelson\npleaded guilty and was fined $10\nand costs in provincial court\nThursday, for speeding on' the\nNorth Shore.\nNEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices declined quietly after\nthree days on the -pside. Key issues wei;e down from fractions to\n2 points or more.\nTurnover was as low as it has\nbeen all week and there was no\nworld series ba.eball to provide\nan excuse. Sales totalled 1,520,000\nshares compared with 1,590,000 on\nThursday.\nAircrafts were lower as gloom\nspread in the industry over the\ngovernment's announced policy of\nlimiting monthly payments to contractors as -part of the economy\ndrive.\nBEARISH ITEM\nAnother bearish item was freeing by the U. S. government of\n135,000,000 additional pounds of ni'c\nkel for non-defence jndustry.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks declined 80 cents to $167\nwith industrials down $1.60, rails\ndown 80 cents and utilities un\nchanged.\nAluminium Ltd., up V. on 6900\nshares, was one of the few Canadian gainers on the New York exchange. Losers included Int. Nickel\ndown 2% on 5100 shares; Mclntyre Porcupine off %, Distillers -\nSeagrams Vi and Hudson Bay mining Vi.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices on\nthe Montreal and Canadian stock\nexchanges wobbled between plus\nand minus levels.\nUtilities were up. Union Gas rose\n2V_ to 69Vi, and Calgary Power\nclimbed a point to 61. Steels were\ndown. Dosco fell V. to 24'A. In a\nmixed miscellaneous section, A. V.\nRoe firmed Vi at 12%.\nImperial Bank slumped 9V. to a\nnew low of 45. Constructions lost\nsmall fractions.\nIn a mixed base metals group,\nInternational moved the most, falling 2V_ to 74, a new low. Noranda\ngained V. at 49.\nPov\/ell River, in new prints, lost\nIV. at 34 while Abitibi at 28V4 and\nHoward Smith at 27 each gained a\npoint. Interprovincial Pipe Line\nfirmed Vi at 44V.. B.A. rose Hi to\n43Vi but McColl slipped a point to\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket edged lower in moderate\nmid-afternoon trading.\nIndustrial losses outnumbered\ngains mor.e than two-to-one with\npapers, utilities, steels refining oils\nand manufacturers having the\ngreater number of losses compared\nwith advances.\nMost price changes were fractional but there were few exceptions. Hayes Steel gained two points\nat 26.  Canadian  General  Invest\nments, Page-Hershey Tubes and\nCanada Packers A each lost a\npoint.\nEight of the 15 senior base metals were lower and only two had\nsmall gains. International Nickel\nfeatured with a 2V4-point loss at\n74. Lower-priced mines gave up\ntwice as many losses as gains.\nMost price changes, however, were\nconfined to 15 cents or less.\nWestern Oils were the heaviest\nlosers on the board with declines\nholding a three-to-one edge over\ngains. Senior issues moved down\nin a fraction range and losses\namong lower-priced stocks 'ranged\nto 25 cents.\nSmelter Workers\nWant Access To\nEmployees Home\nTORONTO (CP) - The International Union of Mine, Mill and\nSmelter Workers (Ind.) Thursday\nurged amendment of the Ontario\nLabor Relations Act to guarantee\nunion representatives free access\nto employees at their place of\ndomicile. , ,\nPresenting a brief to the On- i\ntario legislature's select committee on labor, R. L. Stevenson, executive board member of mine-\nmill's District No. 2, said employee living quarters were often\ncompany bunkhouses within\nfences.\nHe said these were posted\nareas and all but company employees deemed trespassers.\nMr. Stevenson said in some\ncases companies permitted representatives of the union of their\nchoice to enter and talk to the\nmen, but representatives of other\nunions were banned.\nDEVELOPING\nfjelpfulSnapshotAdvi'co\nREXALL  PHARMACY\nCity Drug\nBox 460\nPhono 34\n'\nAttention Rebekahs\u2014Any P.N.G.\nwishing to take the assembly degree Oct. 15, when Rebekah Assembly President Jessie Woods\nvisits Nelson,, contact Mrs. J. C.\nTaylor.\nSTOWMARKET, England (CP)-\nThe Rose Inn, which opened in 1461\nin this Suffolk town, is to be closed\ndown. It is-too old to be modernized.\n5 ***** Special\nTODAY ONLY!\n1953 Laurentian 4-Door Sedan\nCustom A.C. unit,\" one owner, low mileage, immaculate condition, chrome wheel discs, beautiful\n2-tone.\nPRICED AWAY BELOW MARKET\nat\n\"THE  HOME  OF  MOTORING  SATISFACTION\"\n\"Every Deal a Seal of Friendship\"\n.\u25a0I\nNelson Motor Products\nLTD.\nPKone 121 -2 end 658-9 Nelson, B.C.\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_10_05","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\/1.0430127","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":"1957-10-05 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":"1957-10-05 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":""}]}