{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2023-04-03","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1956-09-17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430179\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" iiiiiHiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiimi........\nKitchen, Kitchen, Where\nTo Put the Kitchen?\nHOPE, B. C. (CP) \u2014 Uncertainty about the location of a hospital kitchen has delayed construction of the proposed Hope hospital for more than a year, Health Minister' Eric Martin said here\nSaturday night.\nHe blamed an inexperienced hospital board and architects for\nthe delay\nMr. Martin, speaking at a Social Credit rally in support of\nYale candidate Irvine Corbett, was replying to heated questioning\nfrom several Hope citizens.\n\"We've been battling for a hospital for years,\" said one.\n\"H I break my back, I have to go 35 miles to a hospital. What\ndo I care where the kitchen is?'' said a second man.\nMr. Martin said the 12th set of hospital blueprints to be exchanged between the hospital board and the Department of\nHealth were acceptable to the department.\nConstruction of the hospital should start \"very soon,\" he said.\nIIIIMIIIIMMIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nCYPRUS...\n13 Killed Since\nTruce Called Off\nBritish Soldier, Greek Cypriot\nLatest Fatalities; Frenchmen safe\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) \u2014 Terrorists killed a British soldier and a Greek Cypriot Saturday to bring the\ndeath toll to 13 since the underground KOKA organization\ncalled off its truce offer 15 days ago. Thirty-two others\nhave been hurt.\nSince the terrorism began, in\nApril a year ago, 189 persons\u201452\nof them British\u2014have been killed\nand another 756 \u2014 including 325\nBritons\u2014injured. The figures for\nthe last two weeks were also\nhigher, with one exception, than\nfor any other two - week period\nsince the outbreak of hostilities\nbegan.\nThree youths killed the soldier j\nat a grocery store  in  suburban j\nNicosia. He was the 43rd British\nlerviceman killed.\nTwo EOKA gunmen wearing\nmasks killed the Greek Cypriot\nand wounded his wife while they\nwere riding in their car near the\nvillage of Pano Panya on central-\nCyprus.\nEOKA circulated its first leaflets in the French language Sunday, promising newly arrived\nFrench soldiers they will not be\nattacked in the Greek underground's fight against the Britons. About 5000 French troops\nare,'or will be, stationed here as\n* result of the Suez crisis.\nThe leaflet, signed Dighenis the\nLeader, said \"no Frenchman will\nbe touched and I have given my\norders on that subject.\"\nA British spokesman said authorities are not certain yet that\nthe leaflets are genuine.\n> --If-they* tfe   _irft-Mfci,ijtriey\ncontain the first evidence supplied   by   EOKA   that   former\nGreek Army Col, George Grivas Is Dighenis the Leader, head\nel the underground fighting organization of Greek Cypriots.\nThe leaflets said Dighenis attended the French Military Academy. Grivas is known to have\nstudied at l'Ecole Superieure de\nGuerre in France,\nThe Britons long ago said Grivas is the EOKA leader and put\na price on his head, but EOKA\nnever has confirmed the identification.\neteon Dailn\n<9L(<3\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nSunny and warm Monday.\nWinds light. Low and high at Cranbrook 45 and 80, Crescent Valley\n40 and 80.\nMETEOR REPORTED\nHON. C. D. RICHARDS\nFREDERICTON (CP)\u2014A heart\nattack Saturday night ended the\nlong and distinguished career of\nHon. C. D. Richards, 77, a former\nchief justice of New Brunswick\nand previously Conservative pre-\nTnier of the province.\nMr. Richards was premier from\n1931 until his 1933 appointment to\nthe King's bench division of the\nNew Brunswick Supreme Court.\nHe served as chief justice from\n1948 until his retirement last year.\nHe became an attorney in 1911.\nHe practiced at Woodstock and\nFredericton before his first election to the legislature in 1920.\nMrs. Zucco\nSlill Fighting\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 \"Silicosis\nsitdowner\" Mrs. Bea Zucco will\nhave a sizeable sign beside her\nSunday in her sixth day as a sit-\ndown striker on the steps of the\nlegislative buildings. \u2022\nIt's being made by a sign painter, and-will read in effect:\n\"Onp s*ck husband . . . one mo-\n, . four chil-\nHEGINA (CP) \u2014 The Regina\nAstronomical Society's observa- j ther, B.C. product\ntory reports a meteor flashed: dren, also B.C. products . . . seven\nacross the sky close to earth at\u25a0. years of struggle ... a B.C. dis-\nlunset  Sunday,  about  100 miles | grace\".\nnorth of Regina. . |    Mrs.    Zucco,    34,    Vancouver,\nJohn Hodges, director of the ob-' claims her husband is eligible for\nservatory, said the meteor, which! a Workmen's Compensation Board\nleft a spiral-type double smoke \\ pension on grounds he contacted\ntrail in the sky, was spotted at! silicosis as a miner, but says he\n6:40 p.m. j has been refused the pension be\nlt was described as \"a brilliant'cause he later got tuberculosis,\nwhite flame, like a fluorescent i and TB scars hide x-ray evidence.\nstreak, tearing to earth in a north- J She's been starting her daily\neasterly direction at about 45 de-1 stint at about 8:30 a.m., and pack\ngrees.\" I ing it up around 6 p.m. \"Outdoing\nSaskatchewan amateur radio the civil servants,\" as she says,\noperators, meanwhile, reported! Her unique approach to the go\nhearing an airplane crash and ex-! vernment has been completely ig-\nplode about 150 miles northeast of! nored to date. She intends to ,con-\nRegina. The RCAF station at j tinue her strike, at least until date\nMoose Jaw, however, said no air- j of the provincial election, Sep\ncraft is missing. j tember 19.\nElection Highlights\nVICTORIA (CP) - Total of\n778,625 residents of British Columbia have registered as voters in\nthe Sept. 19 provincial election,\nchief electoral officer F. H. Hurley has announced.\nThis is 38,619 more than were\nregistered in  1953.\nLargest constituency in the province is Vancouver - Point Grey\nwith 85,349. Smallest is Atlin, in\nthe northern section of B. C-, with\n1820 voters.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Premier\nBennett is doing a \"cruel thing\"\nin withholding the RCMP report\non the Sommers-Sturdy case, fisheries minister James Sinclair told\nan election rally,\nIf information contained in the\nreport can exonerate former lands\nand forests minister Sommers it\nshould be made public, Sinclair\nsaid. \"The people should be the\njudge.\"\nVICTORIA     (CP)\nVictoria\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 17, 1956\nNot  More  Than 6e  Dally,  tOo Saturday\nNo. 124\nMay Lose Customers\nCountries Using Canal\nTo Meet in Britain\nEgypt W>* Defend\nSovereignty\u2014Nasser\nBy GILBERT SEDBON\nCAIRO (Reuters) \u2014Egypt Saturday condemned the\nWestern-backed Suez Canal users' association as an \"association for waging war\" and promised to defend Egyptian\nsovereignty at any cost.\nPresident Gamal Abdel Nasser told air force cadets at\ngraduation' ceremony that \"any foreigner who enters\nEgypt against our will, will\nnever leave alive.\nWe   shall   fight  an   organized\nwar as well as a guerrilla war.\nthe two nations constitute an \"act\nof aggression\", It termed the new\nBig Three plan \"a dangerous provocation\" and warned that an at-\nWoman Killed\nNear Cranbrook\nWo shall defend our rights to the! tack in Egypt would lead to im\nlast drop of our blood.\"\nIn a fiery speech at Bilbeis Aiir\nForce College, Nasser accused\nBritain and France of trying to\nwreck the operation of the canal.\nHe declared triumphantly that\ntheir efforts had failed on the first\nday of Egypt's handling of canal\ntraffic without the aid of foreign\ntechnicians.\nDANGEROUS PROVOCATION\nThe Soviet Union, in a new\nstatement on its position in the\nSuez crisis, charged Britain and\nFrance intend to seize the canal\nand said military' preparations by\nmense destruction in Suez and \"in\nthe oil-fields in the countries of\nthe Arab East as well as in the oil\npipelines.\"\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles,\nwho is going to London for the\nWednesday conference had asked\nNasser to reconsider his opposition to the Big Three plan to set\nup an organization which would\nuse its own pilots to guide ships\nthrough the canal, collect fees and\nshare the take with Egypt. But\nin   his   speech   Saturday   Nasser\nCRANBROOK - Mrs. Marina\nBerkenshire, about 22, was killed\nearly Sunday when the panel\ntruck she was driving left the road\nand overturned in the vicinity of\nWycliffe between Cranbrook and\nKimberley. She had been employed as driver of the truck for \u25a0 a\nlaundry firm for the past few\nmonths. She is survived by her\nhusband with the American Army\noverseas, an infant daughter, her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert\nWilson of Cranbrook, and one\nbrother. RCMP investigation is\nunder way,\nBennett Attacks\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Premier\nBennett at a press conference on\nSaturday called Publisher Donald\nspurned the plants amounting\"to!Clomie of the Vancouver Sun a\nnot peace but war and aggression against the small countries.\nSlocan Park Woman\nTops Fair\nBefore another capacity crowd\nin Civic Centre arena at the final\nnight of the Eight Annual West\nKootenay Exhibition, Mrs. P. S.\nPopoff of Slocan Park, mother of\nfive, children, received the coveted Shaughnessy Cup from W. H.\nBurns, Exhibition president.\nThe cup is presented annually to\nthe competitor receiving the highest, aggregate marks in agricultural products.\nThe agricultural exhibits had\nbeen outstanding, _M\/..Burns and\nMrs.'J. C. Eckmier,' secretary-\nmanager, said. Fruits and vegetables displayed were said to be of\nthe highest quality ever shown in\nthe fair. Industrial and group organizations showed a drop in entries.\nMrS. Helen Armstrong of Nelson\nreceived the Jaen Hunter Cup for\nhigh aggregate in arts and crafts;\nNelson Ski Club took the Burns\nPlaque for best industrial booth\nand Mrs. G. A. Stewart of Nelson\nwon the Purity Flour Cup for\ncooking.\nF. H. W. Chanter of North Shore\nwon the Wood Vallance Hardware\nTrophy and Kootenay Breweries\nTrophy; Mrs. V. E. Howard, North\nShore, Walkdens Florist Trophy\nand the Daily News Trophy; Aid\nG. Eckmier, Mac's Greenhouse\nTrophy and the Edith Rutherford\nTrophy, and Mrs. C. E. Bradshaw,\nNelson Hotelmen's Association\nTrophy.\nMrs. Armstrong also won the\nHudson's Bay Special prize for\nhigh aggregate in sewing; Mrs. J.\nDoerkson the Mary Maxim Special;\nand Ellison Milling special prizes\nwent to Mrs. h. Bobier for her\nwhite bread; Mrs. R. Mills, brown\nbread and Mrs. Ted Swendson,\nwhite cake.\nThe-Exhibltion grand prize, this\nyear an automatic washer or dryer,\nwent to the Air Cadettes, and the\nthree nightly prizes to Mr. and\nMrs. W. Townsend and Mr. Her-\nbrlck, all of Nelson. Joe Ringrose\nwon the Kinnette prize and L.\nCatley the Lady Lions prize.\nAdding to enjoyment of the final\nstage show, was a half-hour's performance of the new City Band\n\"newspaper baron .... trying to\nset up a super-government over\nthe public representatives.\"\nStriking back at a Sun editorial\nof Sept. 13, Mr. Bennett said Mr.\nCromie is making \"deliberate attempts to mislead the people of\nBritish Columbia.\"\nThe editorial criticized the record  of  the  Social  Credit  party\nfive children'A received the covet-1 since it came to power in 1952.\nits\nCjfucen City Twirlers, popular Nelson majorette troupe. Mayor\nJoseph Kary expressed his pride in\nthe fine concert staged by the new\nband. Civil Defence corps from\nKinnaird also staged a thrilling!\nrescue performance on the recrea.\ntion grounds.\nBy The Canadian Press\nConcerted forest fire prevention\ncampaigns held throughout Canada during the year have paid\noff, forestry officials says.\nHurnan carelessness has been\nreplaced as a top fire hazard by\nlightning, at present an uncontrollable factor. A Canadian Press\ncurvey showed almost 5000 forest\nfires were reported in Canada this\nyear, almost one-half in British\nColumbia.\nOfficials have been able to cope\nwith the human angle by publicity, but they are at a loss with\nthe lightning problem.\nWater - bombing from helicopters and planes was used this\nBritish Columbia will vote Wednesday in a provincial election.\nPremier Bennett said in a statement at the press conference that\nhis executive assistant, Ron Wor-\nley, asked the Sun publisher if'\nhe would accept my request to\ngive the premier of this province\nthe same space on the front page\nto reply to the unseemly front\npage editorial a few days ago in\nhis newspaper.\"\n\"Mr. Cromie has point-blank\" refused the premier this opportunity\nto reply.\"\nThis is the second time Mr. Bennett has specifically attacked a\nnewspaper. He said last Wednesday at a political rally that publisher Stuart Keate of the Victoria\nTimes and Editor Bruce Hutchison are \"deliberately smearing\"\nhis government and trying to confuse the public by hiding the real\nissues of the election.\nCONFERENCE TO\nSTUDY FORESTS\nBy   FORBES   RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nWINNIPEG   (CP)   \u2014  Canada's\nforests, out of which the average\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Senator John T. Hackett, 72, former\nProgressive Conservative member of Parliament, died 'suddenly\nSaturday.\nA life-long friend of Prime\nMinister St. Laurent, Senator\nHackett died at his h.ome in\nStanstead, Que. He was appointed to the Senate in July, 1955.\nA tall, distinguished looking\nman, with an unruly crest of\niron-grey hair, Senator Hackett\nwas an internationally known\nlawyer and a former president\nof the Canadian Bar Association.\nHe represented Stanstead In the\nHouse of Commons from 1930 to\n1935, when he was defeated. He\nwas re-elected In the general elections of 1945 and 1949. His\ngrandfather and his father had\npreviously represented the constituency.\nNationalize\nDistilleries\nSays Mutchmor\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Rev.\nJ. R. Mutchmor of the United\nChurch of Canada said Sunday\nCanada's distilleries should be nationalized to help combat alcoholism.\n...The secretary of the church's\nsocial service board told a United\nChurch congregation here that\nthere are 75,000 alcoholics in Canada.\nJUROR SLATER\nJAILED 5 DAYS\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 Don Slater\nmember af the Kamloops Elks\nhockey team, was sentenced Friday to five days in jail by Mr.\nJustice J. O. Wilson for leaving\nhis hotel room while serving as a\nmurder trial juror.\nThe jury was discharged and a\nnew trail ordered by the B.C. Supreme Court justice Wednesday\nbecause of what Mr. Wilson\ncalled the \"idiotic\" actions of\nSlater.\nBy JAMES F. KING\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 A shift in Western policy, ruling\nout force but remaining adamant against Egyptian demands for absolute rule over Suez Canal traffic, was evident here Sunday night.\nThis might lead to a situation that could find Egypt's\nPresident   Nasser   with   a\ncanal but few customers.\nThe new Western policy was\nshaping up in advance of the\nSuez users' conference in London\ncalled by Britain, the United\nStates and France to begin Wednesday.\nIt appeared that a formidable\ngathering of nations, representing\nJO to 95 per cent of the ships using\nthe 103-mile waterway, would be\npresent. The Big Three invited 15\nnations \u2014 the ones that supported\nthe original plan by U.S. State\nSecretary Dulles for international\noperation of the ^ canal. Nasser\nrejected that plan.\nECONOMIC SQUEEZE\nThe U.S. was seen here as\nunderwriting the new Western\npolicy. There were indications it\nwould emphasize an economic\nsqueeze as the most effective\nweapon against Egypt.\nDulles is reported to have offered $500,000*000 in loans to Western European nations to offset the\ncost of sending their ships around\nAfrica instead of through the\ncanal. He is said to believe success against Nasser lies in a\nwaiting game.\nThere was no official reaction\nin Cairo to the reported U.S. loan\noffer, but it clearly was a blow to\nNasser. Deprived of canal revenues, Egypt cannot hope to keep\nthe waterway operating without\noutside aid.\nSo far, however, traffic has\nbeen kept moving. through, .the\ncanal for two days despite the\nwalkout of foreign pilots and\ntechnicians. Forty-two ships went\nthrough Saturday and 36 Sunday.\nEmergency plans to handle a\nglut of ships passing through its\nports are being made in South\nAfrica, but officials there fear fa\ncilities will be inadequate t(\nhandle the 40 to 50 vessels that\nhave been passing through the\nSuez Canal daily.\nTwo factors emerged pointing\nto the shift in policy:\n1.   Increasing   acceptance   In\nles \u2014 acting under government\nadvice \u2014 are prepared to forego\nuse of the oanal If Nasser ban\nthe way.\nPrime Minister Eden has been\nunder strong pressure from the\nopposition and from a minority\nof his own party to disavow any\nidea of using force without UN\nsanction. '\nAlthough in last week's emergency debate in Parliament Eden\nrefused to give an outright pledge,\nhe made clear that Britain will\nkeep its guns in the holster except\nin some unforeseeable emergncy.\nAIMED AT ARAB8\nShipping and oil companies\nwere ready with emergency plans\nto keep Europe's fuel lifelines going should a Suez holdup drastically reduce oil supplies from the\nMiddle East.\nLondon oil men said these plans\nwere based on the assumption of\nAmerican co-operation in increasing western hemisphere output\nand taking its reserve tanker fleet\nout of mothballs. Political observers saw these plans as another aspect of the \"squeeze\" policy. With\nMiddle East oil production cut\ndown, Arab states now supporting\nNasser would lose oil royalties and-\nmight turn against his action.\nThe shift in Western tactics in\ndealing with Egypt appeared\nclearly aimed at letting Nasser\nmake the first actual move in defying the Suez Canal users' plan.\nPORT'SAID, TSgypt (Reuters}\"\u2014\nShipping agents said Sunday night\nthat   Sunday's    ship   convoysv\ncrawled through the Suez Canal.\nThe ships were barely moving,\nwhereas normally they are required to steam through at 7^4\nknots, the shippers said.\nThey pointed out that, while the\nfirst ships of Saturday's convoys\nmade the 101-mile trip in between\n11 and 12 hours, the last ship took\nsomething like 20 hours.\nAn Egyptian official said earlier\nthat traffic was moving smoothly.\nI Thirty-six ships joined Sunday's\nBritain and France of the. U.8. tw0 convoys, 22 southbound from\nposition that shipping powers] here and 14 nortribound from Suez,\ncannot shoot their way through, Sundays number was five below\nthe canal. I the daily average of 41 since the\n2, Growing evidence that Brit- canal was nationalized by Egypt\nl\u00abh shipping and tanker compan- July 26.\nyear more than in any previous Canadian draws 10 per cent of his\nyear. Chemicals are being used\non some forest but the old-fashioned pick and shovel have not\nbeen forgotten, either.\nBritish Columbia's 2592 forest\nfires reported this year led all of\nthe provinces by far. Other provinces reported figures below the\n1000-mark.\nFirefighting   in   B.C.   has\n$440,915. This year's number of\nfires reported exceeded the former record year of 2414 in 1931.\nincome, in one way or another,\nwill be under examination in a\nthree-day meeting which opens\nhere today.\nThe meeting is the national forestry conference\u2014the first such\ngathering in 50 years\u2014and has\nbeen called by the Canadian For-\n; estry Association, with the Cana-\ncost [ dian Chamber of Commerce, the\nCanadian Institute of Forestry and\nthe Engineering Institute of Canada as co-sponsors.\nFive Survivors Picked Up;\n31 of Crew Feared Lost\nBODOE, Norway (AP)\u2014A British trawler Sunday picked up five\nsurvivors among 37 men, from a\ndrifting lifeboat after the 7238-\nton freighter Pelagia, an American liberty-type ship loaded with\nLiberal candidate George Gregory\nwas prime target of three Social\nCredit candidates at a meeting\nhere. Mrs. Lydia Arsens challenged Mi-. Gregory to meet her on\nany platform between now and\nelection time.\nWorks Minister W. N. Chant\ncalled him a \"two-by-four lawyer\nwho should put his hat on before\nthe woodpeckers come,\"\nAid. Don Smith said bis father\ncould have taught Mr. Gregory\nsume manners.\nPITT MEADOWS, B. C. (CP)\u2014\nLowing of cattle and booing of\nfarmers formed an election symphony for the meeting addressed\nby Labor Minister Lyle Wicks and\nAgriculture Minister Kenneth\nKiernan here. Mr. Wicks was the\nchief target of farmers who had\nbrought horses and cattle to the\nmeeting by truck and' parked\nthem outside the hall. A recorder\ndelivered n dirge complaining of\nhungry cattle and overtaxed farm-\nera.\nVolunteers Speed\nApple Harvest\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 A small\narmy of volunteers moved into\napple orchards Saturday as ideal\nweather for apple harvesting continued.\nPacking houses were taking all\nthe apples they could get to fill\norders from B.C, Tree Fruits, the\nmarketing agency.\nHUNTER KILLED\nMERRITT (CP) - A 20-year,\nold youth was killed Saturday In\na hunting accident 20 miles south\nof this town in the interior of\nBritish Columbia.\nHis name was not released. He\nwas known to be a German immigrant who came to Vancouver\nabout three years ago.\nThe youth was found with a\nbullet wound ln his chest by three\ncompanions with whom he had\nbeen grouse hunting,\niron ore, broke in two during' a\ngale and sank north of the Arctic\nCircle Saturday night.\nThe British trawler Northern\nDuke, of Grimsby, picked up\nthe survivors drifting in the\nlifeboat of northern Norway's\ntreacherous coast. The trawler\nreported a sixth man was taken\nfrom it dead. The other 31 crew\nmembers were feared lost'\nSunday night, the search for the\nmissing 31 was abandoned as\ndarkness fell across the Arctic.\nOrders were sent out to rescue\nvessels to return to port\ncue despite damages she suffered\nin the same storm which wrecked\nthS Pelagia.\nThe trawler's captain refused\nby radio telephone to give the\nnames of the men he had picked\nup. All were Americans. He said\nthey were sleeping,\n\"The five men are in good\nshape considering what they went\nthrough,\" he reported.\nThe Pelagia left Narvik for\nBaltimore with 10,000 tons of ore\nFriday night and went down\nabout 6 p.m. Saturday. She broad-\nThe fishing cutter Blaamyra 1cast- SOS signals in mid-after\nnoon Saturday, and later reported\nshe was sinking fast and that the\ncrew was taking to four lifeboats.\nShe went down near the southern tip of the sheltering string of\nLofoten Islands, In treacherous\nwaters swept by the full force of\nstorms In the Norwegian sea.\nreported finding three lifebelts, a\nlifebuoy, an oar, hatch coVer and\nother debris from the -Palagia in\nthe area where the survivors were\npicked up.\nThe Northern D u ke turned\ntoward the far northern fishing\nvillage of Harstad after the res-\n\"RADAR TRAP\" designed to catch\nmotorists who fail to observe speed laws\nis pictured here during a demonstration\non the Nelson-Nelway highway. A car is\napproaching beam thrown out by radar\nequipment on tripod at left. This reflects\nradar impulses and converts them into\nmiles-per-hour speed of a1 moving car.\nThe speed is clocked on a dial shown be\nside graph on car at right, and is also\nshown in written form on the graph for\ncourt record. Long black streak in middle\nof graph above was caused by car travelling at 70 mph. The equipment will be set\nup in this district after it has been demonstrated to the various detachments. \u2014\nDaily News photo.\nAnd in This Corner...\nNEWARK, N. J. (AP) \u2014 Carmine Mereurlo had that linking\nfeeling Friday when he got Into hit car, stepped on the gas and\ndidn't move an inch.\nHe got out and soon discovered the trouble. No wheels. They\nhad all been stolen. The auto was resting on Its axles on four milk\nboxes.\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Pity the poor clerk who has to announce\na case which is now on the docket of United States district court.\nWilly H Watkins, injured aboard a Norwegian ship, is asking\n$50,000 from the ship's owner, a corporation named Dampskibsak-\ntiesclskabet Laly.\nROCKVIL-E, Md. (AP) \u2014 Ten-year-old Charles Cowell of\nnearby Twlnbrook can take It. He proved It Friday.\nAfter a civil defence drill Charles emerged from beneath hli\ndesk. He had a red, iwelllng, painful ear.\nTo hli teacher'! question he explained that a bee itung him\nwhen he dived under the deik.\n\"Why didn't you lay something?\" he was asked,\n\"We're supposed to remain quiet until the all-clear,\" hi n-\nplled.\n\u00bb\n  \u2014 , , __\u2014\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1956\nAll the Cats Are Comin' ... To See and Hear the\nScreen's  First Great Rock and  P->'l  Feature.\n8ECOND  BIG  ACTION   HIT\n'BLACKJACK KETCHUM DESPARADO'\nwith\nHoward Duff Victor Jory\nThe best killers money could buy, couldn't outgun notorious\nBLACKJACK KETCHUM\nTonight\nTuesday\n&*b\nShows at\n7:00 - 8:28\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY\nShows at 8:00 p.m. and 10:10 p.m.\n|   Step by step to ruin\nHUMPHREY AVA\nBOGART \u2666 GARDNER\nR. Duhamel Case\nAdjourned\nNelson Police Magistrate Robert\nS. Nelson adjourned the case of\nRaymond Leslie Duhamel, charg- j\ned with retaining goods valued at\nless than $50 reported to be stolen\nfrom the Canadian Legion branch\nat Castlegar on Sunday, August 5,\nto at least Thursday. The suspect\nwas released on $1000 bail and\n$1000 surety.\nProsecutor Leo S. Gansner requested the adjournment tn order\nto see if further evidence is available. Raymond's counsel, G. B.\nArnesen, objected to the adjournment on the grounds that Mr.\nGansner does not know if further\nevidence exists, but wants to continue investigations. Mr. Arne-\nsen's client has been in custody\nsince August 9 on various charges\nconnected with the case, and\nthere have already been numerous adjournments. Mr. Gansner\nobjected to Arnesen's statement'\nthat absence of RCMP officers\nfrom Saturday morning's trial indicated that Mr. Gansner had\nmade a foregone conclusion that\nthe adjournment action would be\ngranted.\nRaymond, a 28-year-old resident |\nof Port Coquitlam, was travelling '\nthrough the district with his wife.\nHe claimed that 84 packs of ci-1\ngarettes found in his car August\n9 when RCMP officers questioned\nhim in the ferry lineup on Nelson\nAvenue belonged to his shooting\ngallery in the Baddeley Brothers\nshows, and that he bought several\nbottles of liquor, which were also\nconfiscated, from a man in Vernon.\nREPORTER UNAVAILABLE       '\nBoth lawyers agreed that the\nprincipal reason for the adjournments was the accused's wish to\nhave a court reporter at all trials.\nVincent Moore, who has attended\nthe trials so far, will be out of\ntown part of next week, but expects t0 be available Thursday. If\nnot, the case will be postponed\nuntil Saturday, as other court reporters are not expected to be\nfree.\nMagistrate Nelson rejected Mr.\nFUNERAL HELD\nFOR SALMO\nACCIDENT VICTIM\nFuneral services were held at\nthe Salmo Pentecostal Church Saturday afternoon for Peter Misko,\nwho was killed in an automobile\naccident a week ago on the Salmo-\nNelson Highway.\nRev. R. A. Galgatty officiated,\nand interment was-in the Salmo\nCemetery. Pallbearers were C\nEsche, Otto Llndstrom, J. Roberts,\nEarl Beckman, Bud Taylor and\nKen Van Fleet. Hymns sung were\n\"Rock of Ages\", \"Abide with Me\",\nand \"The Old Rugged Cross.\" Mrs,\nA. W. Hearne was the organist.\n^radian Believes Prima Facie\n'M Fe Brought Against Sommers\nGREEN HOME\nFUND NEAR\n$25,000 Mark\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Friday blitz\ncanvass on behalf of the Dr, F. W.\nGreen Memorial Home returned\n$1713 the night of the canvass from\nthe city area, and $178 from the\nrural area at Wardner. Some of\nthe city area has not yet reported,\nand it appears likely the canvass\nwill exceed the $2000 mark. This\nputs the whole total of the fund\nin its two year history close to\n$25,000, halfway toward the local\nobjective which will realize construction of the home for 26 elderly citizens and be on a self-\nsupporting basis of, operations.\nArnesen's application to have the j\naccused freed on his own recog-\n] nizance  because  the  Crown  had\nI already had one month to build\nup its case.\nTrial of Clifford Arthur Du-I\nhamel, Raymond's brother, on pos- j\nsession of goods worth more than I\n$50, also stolen from the Canadian\nj Legion at Castlegar on August 5,\nwill proceed Monday before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans in lower court. Oliver Kenig\nand Emile Letourneau, his stepfather, friends of Clifford Duham-\ned's, are also awaiting trial in\nconnection with the same case.\nProceedings are being slowed\ndown because the same prosecutor and defence attorney are involved in each case.\nGRAND FORKS (CP) - Thej\nSocial Credit slogan \"Progress\nNot Politics\" indicates that Pre-1\nmier B?nnett is ashamed of his\npolitics, CCF leader Robert Stra-I\nchan contended here Saturday I\nnight.\n\"We can't-have some demagogue\nmoving in and doing away with j\ndemocratic processes,\" said Mr. \\\nStrachan, candidate in Cowichan-j\nNewcastle, a Vancouver Island\nriding.\nMr. Strachan charged the Social Credit party with accepting\ncampaign funds \"in unbelievable\namounts\" from factions which\nstand to gain financially through j\nthe party's return to power. ;\nSocial Credit is spending $3000\na day to have former Lands Min-,\nisler Robert Sommers re-elected,\nhe said.\n\"Mr. Sommers will not be the\nnext member from the Rossland- j\nTrail riding in-spite of the $3000\na day Social Crediters are pouring;\ninto the constituency.\n\"The honest vote of the people j\nwho want to protect our natural\nresources is the only thing which\ncan defeat that kind of backing,\"\nhe said, at a CCF rally backing;\nMrs. R. W. Haggen, Grand Forks-\nGreenwood candidate.\nPRIMA   FACIE   POSSIBLE\nAt Trail Friday night, Mr.\nStrachan, addressing a meeting of\nabout 100 persons here Friday\nnight in support of Rossland-Trail\nCCF candidate S. C. Muirhead,\nsaid he believed the RCMP report\non Mr. Sommers contains a\nstatement   that  there  is  enough\nI   V_l HB\u2014 uiimw u\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar. B.C.\nTONIGHT, TUE8., and WED.\nShows at 7:00 and 9:15 p.m.\n\"I'll  Cry  Tomorrow\"\nSUSAN   HAYWARD\nThe Weather\nNELSON       51   84\nVictoria       81   59\nSpokane      49   82\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL. B.C.\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY,\nWEDNESDAY, THURSDAY\n2 Complete Shows, 7:20 - 9:40 p.m.\n\"Country Girl\"\nBing Crosby\nCARTOONS\nCAKES AND ALE\nBousa,   a   beer   made   from   fermented cakes, is one of the favorite drinks in Ethiopia.\nFor Service\nCall . . .\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B C. Phone 666\nA  Complets  Plumbing  and   Heating  Service\ncash?\nNIAGARA\n\u25ba\nThousands of Canadians from coast to coast have\ncoma ta Niagara when they've wanted up le\n$1500 or mere quickly. The Niagara door It open\nlor you; in a private Interview your needs are\nlooked after promptly and courteously. Rales on\nmany Niagara loans are lower.. . . and loaht lo\n$1500' are life-insured al no extra cost ta you.\nThere's a wide variety of loan and payment plant\nfor your convenience ... to drop in anytime.\nHere are just a few of avr many lean plans\nYOU\nGET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\nU\n15\n20\n24\n$300.00\n600.00\n061.10'\n1250.00\n$ 21.37\n36.53\n116.45\n$23.35\n46.63\n95.55\n$36.43\n40.00*\n74.30\n$31.43\n63.60\n*Om of many of our convantant \u2022vtn-doMor paymtnr plan*\n_rop\\ nrnn       ,\t\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nUJJJJJ   \\_____J  BRAHCHI- FB0U COASMO-COAST\nLOCATED IN NELSON AT\n560 Baker St. Phone 1636\nBill States:\nEDITORIALS\nThe Liberals\nIn B.C.\nThe most significant thing\nabout the two political party\nconventiontj here last week ts\nthe Indication that the Liberals\nare regaining their grip.\nNot the least of these Indications was the standing vote of\nconfidence for the party's leader, Arthur Laing , . , That a\nparty with such traditions and\nsuch a long record of public\nservice appears to be getting\nre-established Is extremely Important to public life In this\nprovince.\nOur system of government\nworks best when there ,1s a\nstrong and determined opposition In the Legislature, and opposition that is equipped to\ntake over the reins of government when the party in power\nfalters.\nA perusal of the votes east\nIn the last general election,\nshows the Liberals have reason\nfor optimism, Although the\nCCF gained nearly three times\nas many seats In the House, the\nSocialists' total vote was only\n40,324 more than that of the\nLiberals. A relatively small\nshift In popular voting could\nmake the Liberals the official\nopposition.\nUnderlining the growing Importance of the Liberals Is the\nposition of the CCF party. The\nCCF has loet Arnold Webster\nas leader and In ao doing has\nlost a helmsman who could\nclaim wide respect both Inside\nand  outside the  Legislature.\nRobert Strachan, the Party's\nnew leader. Is a vigorous man\ndescribed as a \"Militant Socialist.\" It may be expected he\nwill try to lead the CCF toward\na closer adherence to basic\nSocialism.\nIn such a situation tlu> Liberal renaissance assumes highly significant proportion!.\nVancouver   Province,\nApril, 1958.\nDoukhobor Couple to\nAsk Child's Return\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A doukhobor couple, Mr. and Mrs. Bill\nPerepolkin of Crescent Valley,\nwill ask in habeas corpus proceedings for return of their 10-year-\nold daughter Irene and eight-year-\nold son Bill from the government's\nNew Denver sanitarium.\nlP. E. Hogan, counsel for the\nparents, will dispute the validity\nof orders under which the children were committed to the superintendent of child welfare and\nsent to the sanitarium.\nHe said he will claim that no\nevidence was taken by the magistrate when the children were\nturned over to government officials.\nIt is the first time proceedings\nhave been taken in Vancouver to\ntest government authority to take\ncustody of sons of freedom doukhobor children because their\nparents will not send them to\nschool.\nOne Bid Received\nFor Yohk School\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Tender of A\nE. Jones and Co. Ltd. of Cranbrook was the only one submitted\nfor construction of the new two-\nroomed rural school at Yahk, authorized along with a new ele-\nmentary school for Cranbrook in!\na ballot in early spring. Bid was I\napproximately $20,000 and was\naccepted by the Cranbrook District School Board. ,\nThe new building will be replacement at a new location of\nthe veteran Yahk school which is\ncut off each spring from access\nthrough flooding of the Moyie\nRiver. An immediate start is planned with the objective of occupation by the end of the year.\nSPEEDING FINE\nSydney Bass of Castlegar was\nfined $10 and costs Saturday morning when he appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans\nIn provincial court on a charge of\nspeeding on the outskirts of Nelson.\nevidence to establish a prima facie\ncase against the former lands and\nforests minister.\nMr. Strachan told the meeting:\n\"I believe one paragraph of the\nreport will read, \"without access\nto the bank accounts of those\nprincipally involved, it is impossible to come to conclusive proof\nbut there is, however, enough evidence to establish a prima facie\ncase.\"\nA prima facie case is defined\nIn law as one In which there Is\nsufficient evidence or Information to require an answer from\nthe person concerned.\nMr. Strachan also criticized Mr.\nBennett's   \"apparent\"   attitude   of\nnon-interest. The premier says, he\nhad  not seen  the RCMP report,\nhe   said,   \"but   surely   he   would\nwant to see the'report on one of\nhis own ministers. Or maybe Attorney-General Robert Bonner\nknows it will embarrass the premier and is holding it'until after\nthe election like a little god.\"\nHe said the people's rights had\nbeen hamstrung by the attorney-\ngeneral in his refusing to air the\nSturdy-Sommers case. Mr. Strachan said a civil court was not the\nanswer nor would Mr. Sommers*\nsuccess at the polls be. He said\nMr. Sommers could be guilty and\nstill win his suit against Mr, Sturdy. He said this would prove nothing.\nBLASTS  FEDERATION\nMr. Strachan also blasted the\nB.C. Federation of Trade and Industry as being a tool of Social\nCredit. He read excerpts from a\npamphlet circulated by the Federation but written by a Vancouver reporter who was formerly\nlegislative reporter , for the Victoria Times. The pamphlet carried\na misleading statement from an\naddress by Mr. Strachan made at\nthe time of his election as party\nleader.\nThe report stated that the CCF\ntrend was again towards the Regina Manifesto and the policies\nset up by J. S, Woodsworth when\nthe party was formed in 1932. It\nalso called Mr. Strachan a militant.\nMr. Strachan said the federation was \"talking out of both sides\nof its mouth about something it\ndidn't know anything about.\n\"What is it,\" he asked, \"and where\ndoes it hide between elections?\"\nThe opposition leader said definitely he was militant. \"I*m a\nfighter and will fight for what I\nbelieve in,',' he said.\nAsked If a CCF government\nwould abolish the toll authority,\nMr, Strachan said present structures under construction would\nhave to be completed. B.ut once\nthis was done It would be transferred to the highway authority.\n\"This is where your gasoline\nsales tax goes.\"\nCUBS, SCOUTS,       I\nLEADERS ATTEND\nC. A. EASY RITES\nServices for Clifford Anthony\nEasy who died in Nelson Thursday were conducted at Thompson\nFuneral Home Saturday morning\nRev. Carl J. Hennig officiated.\nA large number of Nelson Cub?\nand Scouts were in attendance, as\niVlr. Easy was a member-vof the executive of the Nelson District Boy\nScout Association, and chairman\nof the No. 3 group committee..District Cub and Scout officers at the\nservices included Cub master\nFrank Aikens, assistant District\nScout Commission E. K. Evans,\nacting district commissioner and\npresident of the Nelson District\nScout Association, J. J. McEwen,\nand Scoutmaster Gordon Fleming.\nThe scouts and #ibs formed a\nguard of honor at the Chapel and\nCemetery.\nA large grpup of friends and\nassociates of Mr. Easy also attended and there were many floral tributes.\nWilliam Mason, Paul Daum, Carl\nDaum, Ralph Hicks, James Ten-\nnant and Joseph Rosewarm, ail\nbrothers-in-law of Mr. Easy, were\npallbearers. Hymns sung were\n\"Rock of Ages\" and \"A Mighty\nFortress Is Our God.\" Mrs, W. A.\nManson was organist and interment was in Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nMISS CAMPBELL\nOF TRAIL DIES\nMiss Elizabeth Campbell, formerly of 1880 Oak Street, Trail, passed away at Mount St. Francis Friday at the age of 84.\nShe was born in Edinburgh,\nScotland, and cam* from the old\ncountry to Trail in 1924, where she\nlived until entering Mountv St.\nFrancis four years ago. She was\nthe Avon representative in Trail\nfor several years.\nTJne sister, Mrs. Helen Thomson,\npredeceased her in 1947 in Trail.\nShe is survived by one brother,\nin Scotland, and a niece by mar-*\nriage, Mrs. William Thomson of\nTrail.\nProgram\nNelson Rbcreation Commission,\nat a recent meeting approved the\nproposed Winter program of recreational director Joe Johnson.\nThe program, still to be okayed by\nthe Civic Centre Commission, includes a variety of activities from\nbadminton to basketball to gym\nclasses!\nA Saturday night \"senior citizens' night\" was proposed by Mr.\nJohnson and received approval of\nthe Recreational Commission but\nis still subject to Civic Centre\nCommission approval.\nInstruction classes are planned\nby Johnson. Under 12s will be\nsupervised by high schoolers and\nover 12s by teachers. A two-week\ncourse is planned for high school\nstudents and others who wish to\nbecome instructors.\nTweed\nTopcoats\n;      Only $37.50\nThese all wool, shower- '\nproof coats will solve i\nyour troubles for Fall, ]\ndoing double duty as\nTopcoat and Raincoat.\nMade in the rag Ian i\nmodel, regular and tails '\nand only\n$37.50 Each\n!     Other Smart Tweeds\nTo $59.50\nGodfreys'\nI    PHONE -WZ70-*! BOX\ni\n'\t\nWarned Against\nNut Throwing\nVICTORIA (CP) - A boon to\nsquirrels, new fallen nuts can be\ndangerous to youngsters.\nMrs. L. S. Lamb, (4190 Cedar\nHill Road), says her son Russel\nwas hit in the eye during an\nacorn - throwing duel with other\nyoungsters. It was touch and go\nat hospital whether his sight\nwould be impaired.\nDistrict police join Mrs. Lamb\nin warning other children of dangers in throwing chestnuts and\nacorns.\nCommittal Service\ni Held for H. Walton\nThe ashes of the late Herbert\nGeorge (Bert) Walton were scattered over the West Arm of Kootenay Lake at Crescent Beach Friday in a committal service con\nducted by Rev. K. Imayoshi. Relatives and close friends were\npresent.\nMr. Walton, 47. died in December, 1953,\nSOCIAL\n^SOCIAL CREDIT\nIssued by The B.C. Social Credit Campaign Committee\nVOTE RIGHT-\nVOTE WHITEI\nProvincial Eagles'\nHead Here Tonight\nE. W. Davey, of Abbotsford,\nprovincial president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, will speak\nin the Nelson Eagles Hall Monday\nevening. A social will follow the\nmeeting. Mr. Davey, accompanied\nby his wife, is visiting Nelson on\nhis tour of F.O.E. lodges in British\nColumbia.\nPHARMACY \u2022\nIS OUR  BUSINESS\nAnd  We  Are   Proud   of  It\nYOUR\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nCOMPOUNDED\nPromptly \u2022 Carefully\nAt Moderate Prices\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203      Nights: 394 L\nNATURAL\nGAS\nis\n\u2022 Economical\n\u2022 Clean\n\u2022 Easy To Use\nINLAND NATURAL GAS CO., LTD.\nI\nA PERSONAL LETTER TO VOTERS\nMy friends, among whom\nI count a number of Social\nCrediters, have asked me\nwhy I am standing as the\nLiberal candidate. The\nSocial Crediters give me\nthe impression that they\nadmire my nerve but feel\nsorry as I have not a\nchance against their machine. However, so many\nSocial Crediters have already promised me their\nsupport that it is clear\nlarge numbers of them\nhave become disillusioned\nwith the movement, and\nthat their machine is\n\"bogging down.\"\nMy personal opinion is that the people of this district, as in the rest of B. C, are not as gullible as\nthe Social Credit leaders' think. Surely all of us can\nsee the direction their policies are leading.\nBelow 1 sum up my reasons for taking the step I have:\n(1) I believe the Social Crediters are moving toward die-\n. tatorshlp because they do not carry out the wishes of\nthe people, as Indicated by the fact that they keep\nMr Gunderson In a high paid and powerful position\neven though the people have repudiated him twice at\nthe polls.  It this democracy?\n(2) According to the Social Crediters, theirs is a \"movement\" not a \"party\". This \"movement\" has struck a\nsymbol. Have you seen it? I stand against symbols\nfor political parties. What's wrong with our Canadian\nflag as such?\n(3) I stand against tolls on bridges, as they are against the\npolicy of free highways, and the Nelson bridge is an\n, integral  part of  aur provincial highway system.\n(4) I stand for a complete investigation of our agricultural\nindustry to discover why it is in such a deplorable\ncondition, and a full investigation of our marketing\nsystem of farm products Although the farmers and\nranchers have tried to brin? their plight to the attention of this government, nothing has so far developed.\n(5) The pres-nt aovernment Is spending the people's money\nlike a \"drunken sailor\" and u*lng every means at Its\ndlsporal to Inerea*^ Its hirrowlni o*>wer. They do not\n\u2022eem to be concerned about mortgaging our province's\nfuture.\nHOW DO YOU, YOURSELF, FEEL ?\nWhat Do You Think Now of the\n\"Pay-as-You-Go\" Promises\nthey made at the last election?\nDrop in some time to our headquarters next to the Imperial\nBank building in Nelson\u2014or next to the Bank of Commerce\nin Creston\u2014and discuss our problems with us.\nI would like to meet YOU at a public meet'nq to be\nheld at the Canadian Legion, Nelson, at 8 p.m.\nTONIGHT\nGUARD OUR  DEMOCRATIC  PRINCIPLES\nVote Liberal and Vote For\nElmer William White, That's Me!\nLIBERALly yours,\n\"*&>\"\n'\n World Scout\nJamboree Film\nShown At Riondel\nRIONDEL \u2014 The Boy Scout\nAssociation of Riondel sponsored\nthe showing at the Recreation Hall\nof the official film of the Eighth\nBoy Scout World Jamboree, taken\nat Niagara-on-the-Lake during\nAugust 1955. A large crowd en-\nJoyed the film and saw proof that\nall races, colors and creeds can\nlive together in peace and happiness.\nPHONE   1844  FOR   CLASSIFIED\nAbbey Says Will Consider\nEdgewood Packing Plant\nNAKUSP-Frank H. Abbey,\nKaslo-Slocan Liberal candidate in\nthe Sept. 19 provincial election,\naddressing a meeting here Friday\nnight, promised to look into the\npossibility of a packing house* in\nthe Edgewood area.\nMr. Abbey also voiced support\nof a road south from Edgewood\nfor marketing produce, and suggested relocation of the Kaslo-\nNew Denver road.\nMoney on terms\nyou select\nWhen a customer borrows from HFC, he is shown what\nwe call a payment table. This table (sample below) shows\nexactly how much you may borrow, how many months\nyou may take to repay, and the exact amount you pay\neach month. You select your own repayment plan, to\nmake repaying your loan as convenient as possible.\nThis dependable service is available to*you whenever\na prompt loan is needed for any worthwhile purpose.\nBorrow with\nconfidence from Canada's\nfirst and foremost\nconsumer finance\ncompany\nHOUSEHOLD FIHAHCE\nG. M. Chilton, Wonoger\n608 Bakar Street, second floor, phone 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nKIMBERLEY MANCHl 410 Howord Steal, pkonl LU 3-2220\nSAMPLE TABLE\nCASK\nYOU RECEIVE\nMONTHLY\nPAYMENTS\nNUMBER OF\nMONTHS\n$105.75\n300.30\n510.60\n756.56\n$10.00\n24.00\n27.00\n40.00\n12\n15\n24\n24\nHe came out in full support of\na highways commission and that\nthe forest management program\nshould be revised to \"protect the\nsmall operator.\" Power rates, he\nbelieved, were too high in B.C.\nPower Commission-served areas\ncompared to West Kootenay\nPower and Light Company rates\nin the Slocan Valley. Regarding\nthe proposed Mica Dam, he felt\nprovincial and federal governments should get together on a\nprogram.\nMr. Abbey spoke of his 50 years\nof affiliation with the Liberal\nparty in the Kootenays. Covering\nthe road program, he said he felt\ndue credit had not been given the\nlate public works minister Ernest\nCarson's program \"whereas the\npresent government is taking all\nthe credit.\"\nOther speakers were Thomas\nLeask. Mr. Abbey's campaign\nchairman; and Harry D. Harrison\nof Nelson.\nMr. Leask referred to the Gag-\nlardi-Wood-Harris clash in Nakusp stating he knew \"positively\"\nthe meeting had not been \"rigged\"\nas suggested by the highways minister. He also stated he had heard\n\"threats\" at meetings in the area\nthat \"the riding's road and power\ndevelopment would not continue\nif a Social Credit member was not\nelected.\"\nKEY WORDS\nOutlining Liberal beliefs, \"hand\ned down in Canada since Confed\neration,\" Mr. Harrison said it was\na \"fighting faith\" having origi\nnally come into being in Canada\nas a reform movement against the\nFamily Compact. Liberalism's had\nthree key words \u2014 unity, security\nand freedom, he said. He outlined\nLiberal party beliefs in detail and\nchallenged \"the newly-formed\nSocial Credit movement to tell the\npeople what their aims are.\"\nMr. Harrison made reference to\nstatements made by Premier Ben.\nnett against Liberal MLA George\nGregory and CCF leader Robert\nStrachan in which he called them\n\"unfit\" and \"who's sparring who.\nThe Liberal party subscribed for\n\"greater equity\" in development\nof power resources, especially in\nlumbering and logging, and pro\ntection of the B.C. fishing industry, said Mr. Harrison. He urged\nsupport of Mr. Abbey, \"a local\nman who knows local problems.\"\nChairman of the meeting was\nRussell Palmer.\nMr, Abbey addressed a meeting\nSaturday night at New Denver at\nwhich Miss Helen Criederman of\nVernon was guest speaker.\n: Public Meetings\nProcter - Tonight 8 p.m.\nSouth Slocan\u2014Tuesday, 8 p.m.\nSPEAKERS\nBoyd C. Affleck \u2014 Mrs.  W. A. Tickn.r\nJ. P.. Andrews \u2014 Mrs. F. W. M. Drew\n\"HUMANITY FIRST\"\n1 Constantly study the needs and the  problems  of  this  district  and  present\nthem vigorously in the Legislature.\n2 Keep in constant touch with the people and local organizations.\n3 Press for a complete examination of  the Sommers-Sturdy and Stewart-Cassiar questions for the proper information of the public.\n4 Work for the public development of   power on the Columbia River to bring\nmaximum benefits and jobs to Canadians.\n5 Maintain the  highest standards of personal   integrity,   and   insist  on   the\nsame in all the business of Government.\n6 Support the C.C.F. policy which will  benefit   YOU,    THE    PEOPLE   OF\nNELSON-CRESTON.\nVOTE for CCF. the People's Party\nVOTE for Boyd C Affleck\nThe People's Man\nInserted by the Nelson Creston C.C.F. Committee\nJays Local\nGovernments\nTraining Fields\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Local governments are the training places for\nwider fields of provincial and\nfederal governments, and offer a\nway to buy utilities .with our tax\ndollars, J. Brown, inspector of\nmunicipalities, stated in addressing a Chamber of Commerce-\nstaged banquet meeting the following the official openings of\nCastlegar\"s two new public building' here Friday.\nMr. Brown, who earlier in the\nday declared the new Castlegar'\nvillage office officially open ah-o\ndealt with the functioning of village councils, etc., in his talk to\n110 banquet guests. A. Horswill.\nvillage clerk, presented a framed\nphotograph  to  Mr.   Brown.\nJames Byrne, MP for Kootenay\nEast, 'who had been scheduled to\nspeak in the afternoon, but was\nde.ayed, congratulated the village\non its unique achievement of\nopening the two buildings \u2014 village office and post office \u2014 at\none time. Mr. Byrne spoke on be-1\nhalf of Hon. R. H. Winters, federal j\npublic works minister, and Hon. j\nJames Sinclair, federal .fisheries!\nminister. ;\nE. Kraft, village commission;\nchairman, thanked Chamber of'\nCommerce members and their!\nwives \"through whose efforts I\nthese opening ceremonies havej\nbeen made possible,\"\nSpecial guests attending, in addition to those taking part in the\nceremonies, were: Mayor and Mrs.\nH. S. Elmes of Rossland, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Millican of Tadanac, Mayor\nand Mrs. L. A. Read of Trail, City\nClerk C. W. R. Harper of Nelson,\nJames Draper of Nelson, and Mrs.\nJ. Brown, wife of the municipalities' inspector.\nRepresentatives of district organizations included L. Ackney,\nChamber of Commerce president;\nG. Craft, chairman of School District No. 9 Board; T. R. Deans,\nCastlegar postmaster; B. H. Harford, schools inspectors; Mrs. I.\nHorie, regent of local IODE chapter; Mrs. H. Hyson, Girl Guides\ncommissioner; Rev. and Mrs. L. C.\nJohnston, C. H. King school district secretary; E. McGauley, H.\nPitts, Canadian^Legion; W. T. Waldie and James Macbeth, president\nand secretary respectively of the\nAssociated Boards of Trade and\nChambers of Commerce of Southeastern B.C.; C. Loeblich, Castle-\ns>4\/5\nB. C* Development\nFabulous #* Black\nTRAIL \u2014 New industry is coming to British Columbia by the\nbillions of dollars worth, Hon. W.\nD. Black, provincial secretary and\nML^ for Nelson-Creston, told an\naudience of around 150 at the KP\nHall Friday. \u2022   ,\n\"The opposition told us that we\nwould scare industry away. The\ndevelopment taking place is fabulous.\"\nSome   $1,100,000,000   in   investment capital came to B.C. in 1955\nand  it  appears  that  this  figure\nwill be exceeded in 1956, he stated. ...\nSpeaking   of\" government  assistance  to   municipalities,' Mr.\nBlack said.the attitude towards\nlocal  jurisdiction.was  the  best\nin Canada. Answering questions\nlater Mr. Black said that the government looked  with a great\ndeal of favOr on amalgamation\nor metropolitan area schemes to\nsove such a problem as existed\nIn Trail.\nSpeaking on highways he said\nthat the program for next year\nwould exceed the tremendous program undertaken this year and\n1958 would almost see the completion of main arterials within the\nprovince. Questioned as to whether sufficient traffic would cross,\nthe Nelson bridge to pay for it'\nhe replied that the Salmo-Creston j\ncutoff would take about three;\nyears to complete. He felt there'\nwould be sufficient traffic to warrant the bridge and that the peo-'\npie of Nelson had waited over 40 j\nyears for it and that they would |\nhave it by June.\nIt was hoped to eradicate the\nnet debt by 1962. When that day\ncomes consideration to complete\nguarantee of municipal bonds will\nbe given.\nHe praised Trail for its housing\nprogram for the aged and its in\nterest in handicapped children. In\nboth cases the government was\npleased to give assistance, he said.\nThe minister had high praise\nfor R. E. Sommers who had played an active part in bringing about\nthe improvements that the people\nwanted in the management of\ntheir affairs.\nMr. Sommers, Rossland -, Trail\ncandidate, also addressed the\nmeeting,\ngar Projects Society; W. Shkwar-\nrok, chairman of the local centennial committee; D. Seaton and D.\nRoe, West Kootenay Health Unit;\nS. C. Muirhead, Kinnaird village\ncommission chairman; and Castlegar commissioners C. Cook, W.\nHarris, W. MacPherson and G.\nPettit.\nPublic inspection of both buildings was invited following the official opening of each?\nUphill Blasts\nSocreds7 Old Age\nPensions Policy\nFERNIE \u2014 Tom Uphill, Labor\ncandidate who has represented the\nFernie riding for the past 36 years\nblasted the Socred Government\nfor its treatment of the old age\npensioners when he spoke at an\nelection meeting in Jaffray Thursday night. The veteran Laborite\npromised that if he were re-elected the would continue his fight for\nthe \"senior citizens #ho he said\n\"should have more than just the\nbare necessities to keep body and\nsoul together.\"\nMr. Uphill charged that Mr.\nBennett had no intention to increase the old age pension bonus\nduring the last session or it would\nhave been mentioned in the speech\nfrom the throne. He claimed that\nhad it not been for his speech in\nthe house last January and the\nclamor of opposition members,\nmainly CCF, the old age pensioners would never have received\n\"the measly five dollars a month\nbonus Increase.\"\nDoug Gold, of Kimberley, read\na letter from the CCF party recommending that their members\nvote* for and support Mr. Uphill.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1936\u20143\nLondon Service To Honor Billy Bishop\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A mem- Florida earlier this week, will be\norial service for Air Marshal W.\nA. Bishop, Canadian air hero of\nthe First World War who died in\nheld at St. Pau\"s Wednesday.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nWhy Zenith alone\ncan offer this superb\nquality hearing aid\nfor only $50!\nTHE  ALL   NE\nFULL-POWERED\nZENITH a50-X\"\nwith four transistors and\nnew sensitivity swltchl\nBROTHERS OF\nGRAY CREEK\nMAN DIE\nGRAY CREEK-A. W. Lymbery\nhas received news of the deaths\nof his younger brothers, Aubrey\nFrederick Lymbery of Forest,\nGuernsey, Channel Islands, on\nSept. 1, aged 75, and Robert Gregory Lymbery of Sidney, B. C, at\nthe Fairhaven Hospital, Sidney,\non September 3, aged 73.\nDuring 1915 and 1916 Mr. and\nMrs, Aubrey Lymbery lived at\nGray Creek. Their daughter Audrey was born at Nelson hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Lymbery\nvisited Gray Creek on several occasions. A. W. Lymbery with his\ndaughter Alice, visited his brother Robert at Sidney in late\nJuly of this year.\nCare For Your Property\nIs Our Watchword!\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\nOur delivery men are trained to\ndrive, into  your  yard  with  care,\ndeliver clean Utah KING COAL\nAND LEAVE NO TRAIL\nOf   course,   it's   easier   to   make\nclean,    dustless    deliveries    with\nV-A     Utah KING COAL because\n'<i-Hk\\   it's   washed,   dried,   sized\nJ blended and oiled.\nTruly one of the most amazing achievements of Amer.\nica's great electronic age! All the superb quality and\nperformance which have made Zenith the world's\nlargest-selling hearing aid-offered now in the exciting\nnew Zenith \"50-X\" for only $50 complete!\nHere's the simple explanation! Only^enith's 37 years\nof experience and vast engineering facilities make the\nnew \"50-X\" possible at all. And only Zenith's dedication to its famed Crusade to Lower the Cost of Hearing\nbrings you the \"50-X\" at such an incredibly low price!\nUnbelievably small and light, the new Zenith \"50-X\"\noffers a combination of \"hear-better\" features found\nin no competitive hearing aid, even those priced at\n$250 to $300. Four transistors. Fingertip Sensitivity and\nVolume Controls. \"Float-mounted\" Permaphone.*\nNoise-limiting case. Operates for about 10\u00ab a week!\nPrice includes Ten-Day Money-Back Guarantee,\nOne-Year Warranty, Five-Year Service Plan. Find the\nnearest Zenith Hearing Aid Dealer in your classified\ntelephone book. Or- simply mail the coupon below.\nTwo other new models t\n1. Tks ZENITH\"DIPLOMAT\"-a lull,\npowered, 4-translstor hearing aid worn\nentirely at tha Bar. Only $115.\n2. Tha ZENITH \"CHEST\"-a ten-ln-on\u00bb\n4-translstor eyeglass hearing aid I Only\n$135, exclusive of Irames and other\noptional accessories. Lenses and all\nprofessional services connectad\nwith eyeglass feature available\nonly through your ophthalmologist, optometrist, or optician.\nFREE! One-year subscription to new magazine\nQUALITY\nHEARING AIDS\nZenith Hoarlng Aids are one of\nthe rare electrical or mechanical\nproducts which sell In Canada for tho\nsame price as In the U.S.A.\nZenith Radio Corporation of Canada, Ltd.\nHearing Aid Division, Dept.. \"\n1165 Tecumseh Road E.t Windsor, Ontario\nPlease mail (acts on new Zenith aids,\ndealer list, and also a free one-year\nsubscription to \"Better Hearing.\"  ,\n-ProWneeu.\nInquest Held\nFollowing\nFatal Accident\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Death of Joseph\nOmelusik of Cranbrook in Kimberley hospital Sept. 3, was ac-\ncribed by the jury at the inquest\nhere to an embolism resulting\nfrom injuries in a car accident the\nprevious evening on the highway\nnear Wycliffe. The jury was also\nof the opinion that the accident\nin which the vehicle left the road\nand overturned was due to interference of the victim, as passenger, with the driver, Nicholas\nBellanosky and to the mechanical\ncondition of the car in which they\nwere returning \u00abto Cranbrook from\nKimberley.\nInquest   with   Coroner   V.   M,\nBourne, presiding, was concluded\n| last week.\nOptical Prescription Co.\n405 Hendryx Street Phone 500\nAssociate Medical Building \u2014 Nfclson, B.C.\nthe understanding heart\nand the human touch\nFood, clothing, Bhelter ... yes. But it takes more than\nthese to lift the burden from despairing souls.\nThis The Salvation Army knows. In its hostels, havens,\nhomes and hospitals; in instances of emergency relief;\nthe understanding heart and the human touch\nare ceaselessly employed in mending shattered lives\nand kindling hope in spirits darkened by sin or suffering.\nThat this work may never flag, YOUR support is needed\nby faithful workers of The Salvation Army\ndedicated to these tasks of mercy.\nOBJECTIVE $3900\nLOCAL HEADQUARTERS   sisv.ctoriast.  nelson, bc    ,\n\u2022-\n  \u2014 \u2014\n' Nplamt lathi Nn\u00bb0\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street,. Nelson; British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to-The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\n'     \u25a0      Monday, September 17, 1956\nNo Bliss for Voters in Bennett \"Ignorance\"\n. Throughout the province the election campaign is gaining in strength\nand fury. Heated speeches are the\norder of the day and charges and\ncounter-charges fly thick and fast.\nCandidates seem to have a wealth\nof accusations to hurl against each\nother and meetings which were dull\nand uninspiring are now enlivened\nby audience participation\u2014good old\nfashioned heckling.\n. Questioning and even heckling,\nif properly controlled, provides answers on specific questions and calls\nattention to ' matters which the\nspeaker would' otherwise avoid.\nSometimes, too, it bares facts which\nwould otherwise be hidden.\nThe Sommers' matter has everywhere been an absorbing question,\nbut it remained for a questioner in\nSalmon Arm to draw from Mr. Bennett the fact that he had not read\nthe Charles Eversfield affidavit or\n,the RCMP report..\nOf the Eversfield affidavit he said,\n\"I am not going to say it is right or\nwrong. I don't know. I've never read\nit.\" Of the RCMP report he told the\nquestioner who asked if it would\nclear the problem, \"If you think that\nwill solve the problem, you may. I\ndon't know what is in it, I have never\nseen it.\" \u25a0 \u2022\nThis lack of knowledge may have\nits explanation. It may be an expres\nsion of complete trust and faith in\nthe former cabinet minister. Trust\nand faith in subordinates is an essential quality of leadership and Mr.\nBennett is undoubtedly a leader. The\nfact that Jie disclaims all knowledge\nof the affidavit and the report serves\nto place this construction on his\nreplies to questioners.\nOn the other hand, he may have\ndenied himself the knowledge because he fears the worst and wishes\nto put off the evil day. Whatever\"\nthe reason, there still remains the\nquestion of whether such deliberate\nignorance is just to the electorate.\nAt this time when the province\nis in the midst of a general election,\nwhen all the doings of the government are under review, when the\nconduct of individual cabinet members is a matter of concern to the\nelectorate, it seems that faith and\nloyalty to subordinates is less important than essential knowledge of\ntheir conduct to the voters.\nGood government does demand\ndecentralization and the placing of\nresponsibility in the hands of cabinet\nministers, but it also demands that\nthe premier be cognizant of all their\ndoings and be in a position to answer\nfor them to the electorate. Mr. Ben-,\nnett does not seem to have carried\nout all the functions of his office in\nthis respect. '\nLetters To The Ed itor\nLetten to tho  Editor on  any  topic of genuine Interest are welcome  If they  are\nbrief, accurate and fair   No letter will be Inserted In whole, or In part, except over the\n\u2022Ignature  and  address of  the   writer.   Unsolicited  correspondence  cannot   be   returnsd.\n\"Pure Fabrication\" To Say Nakusp\nMeeting Was \"Rigged\", Says Writer\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I was astounded'to read on the\nfrortt page of Thursday's Nelson Daily News\na statement by Highways Minister Gaglardi\nthat \"The meeting he addressed in Nakusp\nAllies Not Satellites\n(Calgary  Herald)\nTo be a Canadian, and proud of being\none to the point where we refuse to let ourselves be walked on, is certainly no crime\nin anybody's language. It is not \"anti\"*any-\nthing. T6 be otherwise is tantamount to volunteering for the job of being hewers of\nwood and drawers of water for a powerful\nneighbor, a suggestion which the great majority of Canadians will quickly reject.\nAs for the fact of American leadership\nin the world, no Canadian disputes that\npoint. But that does not mean that Canada,\nor any of the United States' allies, Should be\ndocile followers of Washington policy if\nthey believe it is unsound or basically\nwrong.\nCriticism and negotiation, the spirit of\ngive-and-take among allies, have always\nbeen the secret of the strength of the free\nworld and democracy, and we would not\nhave it otherwise.\nThe term allies is far different in meaning, from satellites, the first implying a full\npartnership with an equal voice On common\ninterests, the other implying an abject subservience to the will and the wishes of another, with scraps being thrown to them as\na reward for unquestioning obedience.\nCanadians have no intention of becoming a satellite.\nlast week was \"rigged.'' and that this is\n\"the insidious and diabolical method of\nthe opposition parties in this election.\"\nThis is a pure fabrication' The man who\ncaused Gaglardi lo make this statement is\nan open-minded individual and __q tool of\nany political party. He asked questions and\ngot mud slung at him, by a minister.\nI attended that meeting with the possible intention of voting Social Credit, but\nI and many others will never do so now\nafter being harangued for two hours by\nGaglardi on the wonders of Social Credit,\nwith many uncalled for references to the\nAlmighty, to back the truth Of his statements.\nWe noticed with amazement his sarcastic and insulting treatment of questioners. It is not good manners or the mark\nof a good leader to compare a respectable\ncitizen with a darky washerwoman. Nor\ndid the community relish a comparison with\nthe backward Ozarks, from the same platform. All this may be funny in a childish\nsort of way, but it does not appeal to mature\ncitizens as a sign of respectable leadership,\nApparently anyone who stands up at a\n, political public meeting to ask questions is\nliable to be considered by Gaglardi as the\nhired tool of an opposition party. If that\nis what is implied by the term \"rigged\",*\nwhat we are supposed to do is sit, and take\nhuge unpalatable doses of Social medicine\nwithout a murmur.\nSuch blood and thunder tactics go with\ndictators, as many of us who went through\nthe mill in '39 to '45 wili remember.\nYours for freedom of speech at least.\nC. SPICER\nNakusp, B.C.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Names ot\npersons asking questions' will not bs\npublished There is no charge tor this\nservioe QUESTIUNS WILL NOT g_\nANSWERED BV MAIL except where\nthere ts obvious necessity  (or privacy\"\nB. B\u201e Kimberley\u2014Where in Canada would\nI be able to get information on training\nfor a governess? I would like to go to\nEastern Canada if possible. Is there any\nrelated course through which I could\nget the information that would be helpful?\nYour best plan would be to write to Mrs\nEdna L. Page, 635 Burrard Street, Vancouver\n1, B.C.. describing the kind of course you\nwish to take. Mrs. Page will be able to\ndirect you to training centres for this work\nin eastern Canada.\nInterested, Rossland\u2014Would you mind telling me when the auditor-general's office\nin  Ottawa  first  came  into  operation?\nAlso, what exactly are its duties?\nThe office of the auditor-general came\ninto office in 1878. Its duties include auditing of expenditure and revenue of Canada,\nand reporting thereon to the House of Commons.\nT. T., Fernie\u2014Would you please explain\nwhat a \"caveat\" is in connection with\na patent?\nAny intending applicant for a patent\nwho has not yet perfected his invention, and\nis afraid of having his idea '.'stolen\", may\nfile in the Patent Office, Ottawa, a document describing his,.invention as far as it\nhas developed, with or without plans, at\nhis own desire; and the Commissioner, on\npayment of the required fee, shall cause the\ndocument\u2014\"which shall be called a caveal\"\n\u2014to be preserved secretly with the exception that he will deliver copies whenever\nrequired by the applicant or by any Judicial\ntribunal, The secrecy of this document ceases\nto exist when the applicant has obtained a\npatent.\nReader, Trail\u2014Will you please give me the\nname, and publishing address, of a reliable book listing mines now operating?\nCanadian Mines Handbook, price three\ndollars, published by Northern Miner Press\nLtd., 116 Richmond Street ^est, Toronto 1,\nOntario. The Department of Mines, Victoria,\nalso publishes a list.of active mines; and\nseparately, a list of Crown granted mineral\nclaims that have reverted to the Crown.\nFewer Farm Accidents'\nIn Days of Horses\nWhen the ta.mer stopped having to rest\nhis horses periodically he also stopped resting himself. The failure to observe rest\nperiods and the accompanying fatigue is\nblamed for many farm accidents, according\nto a report from the American Medical Association received by the Health League of\nCanada.\nDr. Franklin H. Top, from Iowa City,\npoints out that deaths from farm accidents\nin 1954 totalled 14,000, a rate of 61.7 deaths\nper, 100,000 residents. Motor vehicle accidents were responsible for the greatest\nshare, followed by \"work\" accidents, including accidents with farm machinery.\nAmong major industries farming rates third\nin the number of accidental deaths.\nThe high level of work accidents on the\nfarm, he says, is partially due to the shift\nfrom horse-drawn to motor-driven machinery.\n\"Horses had to be rested periodically,\nand .with this came rest for the driver. Furthermore, the same horses could not be\nworked 10 to 15 hours a day for several\ndays,\" he says, adding that it is not unusual\nfor a farmer to spend more than 10 hours a\nday in the field with a tractor, especially if\nhe gets a late start because of weather or\nsoil conditions.\nStudies show that there is a peak mid-\nmorning and midaftefnoon period during\nwhich the majority of accidents occur. Thus\na mid-morning break like that given in\nmost factories is a good idea for the farmer,\nhe say?.\nCarelessness in the handling of machinery and poor safety design also have contributed to farm accidents. Only in recent\nyears have manufacturer's been interested In\nfarm machinery, but the Safety devices now\nprovided are often removed by the farmer,\ninviting accidents.\n\u2014Health  League  of Canada.\nTragic Mission\nFaces Doctors\nCHICAGO (AP) - Little Robin\nSrter has never asked why her\nparents and only sister haven't\ncome to see her, and doctors be>\nlieve they know why,\nThey are convinced that the\nfive-year-old child suspects all\nother members of her family are\ndead and is afraid to ask for that\nreason-\nRobin suffered a broken shoul\ndor bone and brain injury in the\nsame Aug. 30 car collision in\nwhich they perished.\nIn most ways, her behavior follows fhe normal patterns. She\nlikes to play with other children\nin the hospital and with toys. But\nshe speaks only when spoken to.\nDoctors say she is wrestling with\na tremendous emotional problem.\n\"Robin appears to be in a tremendous cloud of an__iety,*' said\nDr. L. J. Halpern, hospital pediatrician. \"I feel she suspects her\nparents are dead, but that she is\nfearful to ask, afraiid to learn\nwhat's happened.\"\nDoctors wonder how to break\nthe news.\nTHE BAND0THAT\nOn* of the criticisms heard\nabout television is \"not enough\nmusic,\" which may explain why\nthe Lawrence Welk Show is one\nof tha TV tops. But it's not just\nmusic that makes Lawrence\nWelk click . . . it's music that\nmakes people happy . . . waltzes\nand polkas and homey tunes.\nDouglas Blanchard of the Star\nWeekly, who is touring TV Land\ndescribes the Lawrence Welk\nsuccess formula in this week's\nissue.\nYou'll like the Star Weekly.\nEverybody does. It will entertain,\namuse \\and inform you; keep you\nup to date with world happenings\nand the Canadian' scene. It has\npuzzles to work\u2014for Cash Prizes.\nThings to make and do. A\nvariety of Short Stories and a\nComplete Novel and 20 pages of\nthe best Colored Comics.\nThe Star Weekly \u2014 Buy It today\nLET'S FACE\nFACTS NOW!\nMore and Better Roads Can Be\nBuilt For Your Tax Dollar\nDespite the present feverish pre-election activity, the government b actually\nspending a smaller percentage of its swollen tax dollars on highway construction than most other Canadian provinces.\nLast year the Socred government actually spent less per capita on roads\nand allied work, than did the last Liberal administration in fiia year\n1952-1953.\nWhat the present government is spending, Is producing only a spotty,\ndisconnected program, extravagantly wasteful of men, machines and material.\nLoss of 18 top departmental engineers and the desire of the government\nto appear to be building roads everywhere, Has resulted in unplanned,\nhaphazard construction. No major highway has been completed In this\nprovince since the John Hart and Hope-Princeton Highways, which were\nconstructed by previous administrations.\nWe will:\n\u2022 give true road value for car and truck foxes;\n\u2022 build  roads   fhaf  are   competently  engineered   and  let  by\ncompetitive contract only;\n\u2022 have priorities and dates lor completion set\nby an Independent Highway Comm\/u\/on.\nThe savings made by this method\nof operation will mean more ond\nbelter roads, even though we are\npledged to cut all car licenses to $10.\njhcktf Count\n*J _\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0______-___-_> Arthur Lolng. Liberal Leader\nVOTE LIBERAL\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n!__.\u00ab_.       By Jimmy Hatlo\nDefense counsel whiterock had\na very tough time trying to get\nhis client to help mis c4se-\nSo THE JURY VOTED GUILTY.' NOW\nS4ID CLIENT CAtt THINK OF ENOUGK\nTHINGS TO WIN THREE CASBS!\n'A SWELL MOUTHPIECE VOU\nAffB!! WHY QN'CH4 PUT THE\n3U4MUS HACK ON THE 5T4N0?\nI TELL VA HE NEVER S4W\nME.' mYDHZMQETA\nSXrVBONES TO PROVE I\nCOULDhfr UFT-Ml SAtt\nON ACCOMA I'M MUSCLE'\nY-OurJO.^ND VOU-HOJLD4\nJWOSWEOOUTrtALF\n\u25a0.IW-T-URyFOffBEN1\n, PR-JUDISTJC4L\/\nWatch Your Language\nBUCKO \u2014 (BUK-6\u2014noun. A domineering, bullying fellow; \u00ab bully.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBy ye kind to one another. \u2014\nEpheilani 4:32.\nChrist gave a new commandment that ye love one another.\nSome imagine it is quite proper to\nhate those who differ from us in\npolitics or religion. Political cam-\npaigns'ar* often tilled with vituperation arid half-truth* or falsehoods.\ndunt dist\nThe only thing 1 see wrong In\nNature It that you still (eel young\nenough to hunger for lovin' when\nyou look too old to get any.\n\\\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nLESS DEBT\u2014In four years the net debt of the\nProvince has been reduced from $191 million\nto $114 million. Interest charges on the debt are\ndown from $9.3 million to $5.8 million in\nsame period.\nLOWER TAXES\u2014 Hospital Insurance premiums eliminated (industry now pays large part\nof hospital costs through sales tax). Sales tax\nremoved from children's clothing and exemption\non meals increased to $1. Home owners to get\nannual   basic  exemption   on   property  taxes.\nMORE HIGHWAYS, BRIDGES-Greatest\nroad programme in history of B.C. \u2014 400 miles\nof new main highway now under construction \u2014\nMarpole Bridge now being built and other\nbridges at Second Narrows, Agassiz-Rosedale,\nKelowna-Westbank, and Nelson also under\ntonstruction by Toll Bridge Authority.\nTHE P.G.E.\u2014Trains now running Into North\nVancouver \u2014 Peace River extension to bs\ncompleted in 1957. Since 1954 railway has\nshown an operating profit that is increasing\neach year. (1955 \u2014 $769,000).\nMORE SOCIAL SERVICE-Cost of living\nbonus for old age pensioners increased to $20\nmonthly \u2014 substantial increases in payments\nto social assistance cases \u2014 grants for housing\nfor senior citizens \u2014 a human approach to\nhuman problems.\nFAIR LABOUR LAWS -Two weeks annual\nholidays with pay guaranteed by law \u2014 important improvements in the Workmen's Compensation Act and its-administration \u2014 less time and\nincome lost because of strikes.\nFor four years Social Credit has given the people of British Columbia\nprogressive, stable Government. The interests of the worker have\nbeen protected and fostered; the natural resources have been guarded\nby rigid conservation requirements; new recreational facilities and\nprogrammes have been created. At the same time stability in Government has been a vital factor in winning the confidence of industry and\n. in fashioning, the greatest industrial development programme in\nour history.\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nVOTE PROGRESS-NOT POLITICS\nV\nIssued by The B.C. Social Credit Campaign Committee\n_______\n\u25a0a-..\n \u25a0   ;.\"\u25a0\u25a0;\n__._...\n_   -    ,    . \u25a0-\u25a0 \u25a0    \u2014\u2014   I    \u2014     \u25a0        \u2014     \u2014   .    \u25a0 \u25a0 .\u2014\t\naL\\a\nWillowPoinl     {Montreal Fashion Show\nFavors Fur Trimmings\nt\nWl Meets Again\nWILLOW POINT \u2014 The Willow\nPoint Women's Institute resumed\nmeetings Thursday afternoon in\nthe Church Hall with Mrs. B.\nTownshend, vice-president, acting\nin place of president Mrs. A. M.\nBanks.\nMrs. C, B. White, who went to\nthe international picnic of the\nHomemakers Club of the United\nStates at Sullivan Lake, Wash., in\nJuly gave an interesting account\nof the event snd stated that the\nHomemakers Club will visit here,\nat Balfour, September 24, and all\ndistrict members are invited. It\nwas agreed to canvass the district\nfor Salvation Army funds. A card\nparty with Mrs, I. C. Campbell and\nMiss C. F. Ross as hostesses will\nbe held September 27. Letters in\nthe Newsletter from Mrs. S. Gum-\nmow, superintendent and Mrs. C.\nDecca, provincial president, were\nread by the secretary,\nMrs. Campbell and Mrs. J. R.\nEamsden were tea hostesses.\nBy JANE BECKER\nMONTREAL (CP) - A' beige\nwedding dress. A two-piece evening coat. A design of huge pearls\nin clusters like grapes. And a suit\nQueens Bay\nQUEEN'S BAY \u2014 Mrs. N. I.\nHarrison of Ottawa, who has been\nstaying with her cousin, Mrs. F.\nM. Hughes, left last week for Victoria and Vancouver.\nThe monthly meeting of the\nQueen's Bay Church Guild was\nheld at the home of Mrs. G. Por-\nteous. Rev. and Mrs. W. Edington\nwere guests. It was voted that $50\nbe allotted to the Church Vicarage Fund. Tea was served after\nthe meeting.\nMrs, T. Coram of Calgary was a\nguest of her sister, Mrs. F. M.\nHughes, who returned with Mrs.\nCoram to Calgary to spend the\nwinter.\nVote Stability\nin\nVictoria\nfor\nResponsible\nRepresentation\nVote Waldie\nVOTE\nLIBERAL\nwith sleeves buttoning all the way\ndown,\nCanadian cputuriers showed\nthese among distinctive features\nof a preview collection of 35\nmodels, strictly Canadian in style\nand fabric, in Montreal.\nIt was the 10th show in the history of the two-year-old Canadian\nAssociation of Couturiers, an organization backed by Canadian\nfabric manufacturers with the\ntwo-fold purpose of promoting\nmaterials and designs.\nThe' couturiers liked soft, off-\ntone colors which' showed up well\nin synthetic fibres such as nylon,\nacetate, viscose and terylene. They\ndidn't attempt the Dior hemline or\nthe Balenciaga flare, but concentrated on unusual draping, tucking, color combinations and trim.\nGenerally waistlines stayed put\nand lines took their shape from\nfigures.\nIf you're looking for a Canadian\noriginal this season, chances are\nyou'll have it with fur. Nearly a\nthird of the collection used it\nsomewhere, not only on cloaks or\nstoles but in coat-linings, neck-\ntrimming, and even\u2014in one case\n\u2014half way down sleeves.\nHIGH SCHOOL\nAT HOME\nOver 150 Subjects to\nprepare you for business\nor college entrance.\nMATHEMATICS\nIndividual Subjects From\nArithmetic to Calculus\nDRAFTING\nIndividual or complete courses\nfrom Mechanical Drawing up\nto and including Designing and\nEngineering.\nLearn in Your Spare Time!\nPLEASE   SEND   FOR   FREE\nBOOKLET  ON   YOUR\nCOURSE   IN     \t\nAmerican  School\u2014Dept.  NE-8\n6381  Hollywod Blvd.\nLos Angeles 28, Calif.\nName    _ _ \t\nAddress     \t\nCity  Prov _\t\nfc\nOIL\nNATURAL GAS\nOIL\nNOW\nGAS\n.     SPECIAL\nLOW COST\nCONVERSION.\nGUARANTEED\ni        SAYS\nIt's as simple as this\"\nNatural got \u201e eoming to this area soon... you can\ntake advantags of this wonderful new fuel NOW\nwith the Armstrong Guaranteed Conversion Plan.\nThis scheme, the only one of its kind, gives you\nefficient oil heating for the coming winter, with an\nopportunity of switching lo gas later at a fixed cost\nfar below normal; here's how it works... we install\na new Armstrong Oil Furnace in your home, using\neconomical above-ground tanks, and we give you\na written guarantee that we will convert this furnace to natural gas when you're ready. You pay\nonly a nominal conversion charge to make ihe\nswitch... and meanwhile, your immediate heating\nneeds are taken care of. You ore protected against\nheavy conversion costs, and if you decide to stay\nwith oil heot... you have the best oil furnace on\nthe market...ARMSTRONG.\nHOW TO H\u00a3Ar? - ARMSTRONG SOLVES IT!\nt* Call or pJtone today... ask for tfie\nAKMSTROrW \"GUARANTEED  CONVSRStON\"  PLAN\nHurry - this offer is limited!\nYOUR  ARMSTRONG   rjwtlfi CWfttf.    DEAl*R\nKOEHLE & SON\n410 KOOTENAY STREET - NELSON - PHONE 1630\nBALFOUR Wl\nTO HOLD EVENTS\nFOR HALL FUND\nBALFOUR\u2014The first meeting\nol the Women's Institute after\nthe summer recess was held in\nWoodland Hall.\nA report. froA Mrs. W. \u25a0 Kline,\npresident of the hall committee\nwas given. Mrs, Kline stated volunteer workers were needed to\ncarry on work started on the new\nhall  site.\nIt was decided to hold a bake\nsale at Thanksgiving and a\nChristmas sale of work to raise\nfunds for the hall.\nMrs. W H. Saunders, publicity\nconvener read the \"newsletter\"\nand one from the president, Mrs.\nJ. C. Roylance of Grand Forks.\nThe suggestion of a cookbook for\nthe B. C. centennial year 1956\nwas endorsed by the members.\nMrs. Roylance also stated tn\nconnection with the celebration\nof the W. I. 80th birthday, a suggestion has been received from\nManitoba, the gist of the resolution being that the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada request the postmaster general at\nOttawa to issue in 1957 a postage\nstamp honoring Miss Adelaide\nHoodless and the founding of the\nWomen's Institute.\nAbout the Town\n\u25a0By Alice Stevens\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL \u2014 Mrs. Watt of\nVancouver is visiting here to look\nafter her property.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Olson have left\nfor Athabasca, Alta. They were\naccompanied by Mrs. C. Vogan,\nwho will visit her son and family at Edmonton, Alta.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Abbott were |\nvisitors to Spokane, Wash. j\nMr. and Mrs. E. A. Hackett, who i\nhave been visiting in Ontario forj\nthe past weeks, have returned\nhome I\nMrs. W. Towhey and son, of\nCalgary, Alta., are visiting here,\nguests of Mrs. Hayhurst.\nMiss P. Hulme leaves on Sunday\nto continue her studies at UBC.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Andestad and\nMiss Sheila Andestad have left\nfor Vancouver where Miss S. Andestad will enter UBC.\nA number of friends gathered at\nthe. home of Mr. and Mrs. J. J.\nFirth last Tuesday to honor Mr.\nand Mrs. Ed Firth, newlyweds\nfrom Lethbridge.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Firth, were\nmarried in Lethbridge, September\n3rd, by Rev. Cr. Woodcock. Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Moskaluk were their\nattendants. The groom is the el\nder son of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Firth\nof Wynndel and the bride formerly Miss Joyce Braddell, the\ntwin daughter of Mrs. W. Braddell of Lethbridge, Alta. The newlyweds will make their home in\nEdmonton.\nMr. and Mrs. C. O. Ogilvie and\nMr. and Mrs. M. Wigen are Nelson visitors for the Fair.\nNew Denver Wl To\nConduct Tag Day\nNEW DENVER \u2014 New Denver\nWomen's Institute made final arrangements for the tag day for the\nblind which has been an Institute\nproject for some years at a recent\nI meeting.\nj    September   12th   was   a   busy\n' evening in New Denver but the\n! Institute carried on as usual and\nhad their regular meeting, the at-\n1 tendance being small. Mrs. J, Tay-\nlor,  president,   presided.   During\nthe  evening   it  was  decided   to\nmake the final arrangements for\nthe tag day for the blind which\nhas been an Institute project for\nsome years.\nCentennial celebrations in 1958\nwere discussed and it is the hope\nof the members that West Kootenay with all its early history of\nmining will have a prominent part\nin the B.C. program. The Wl is\nstill working for a Community\nHall.\nC_r_?J,\nSMITH'S PLUMBING & HEATING\nCASTLEGAR - PHONE 3401. 2931\nRats for fell. 1954, as shown ln\nNew York, are bigger looking.\nYou've no doubt seen them pictured and if you have been wearing small hats, as many women\ndo, you wonder if you can find\na hat to suit you. \"Frame yourself for flattery, taking into\naccount your face and your\ncoiffure,\" advises G-wen Cowley,\nStar Weekly Fashion Editor who\npictures and describes New York'i\nmillinery showings tn this week's\ninstalment of her preview of\nworld fashion centres.\nLike fiction? There are several\nshort stories, a continued story\nand a complete novel ln each Star\nWeekly. Like picture .stories!\nSee the Star Weekly Roto Section.\nLike Comics? The Star Weekly\nhas 30 pages, in colors. Sport\nfeatures; articles on timely subjects; Fashion forecasts; 'new\nRecipes and Menus. So much for\nsuch a small price!\n.The Star Weekly \u2014 Buy It today\nMr. and Mrs. R. P. Allan of West\nVancouver are visiting their son\nand daughter-in-law, Rev. and\nMrs. J. N. Allan, 406 Observatory\nStreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nVan Linden has taken up residence in his new home across the\nLake.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJack Morgan, Carbonate Street,\nleft Sunday to attend a meeting of\nthe B.C. Arena Association in Vernon. Mr. Morgan is president of\nthat association. He was accompanied by his mother, Mrs. Elsie\nMorgan, Front Street, who will\nvisit her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. G. (Buster) Morgan\nin Kamloops.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Alfred Limacher\nand family are visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Limacher, 918 Carbonate Street. Mr.\nLimacher has recently been transferred from Quesnel to Prince\nGeorge.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nTerry Elmes, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. H. Elmes, 609 Fourth Street,\nhas left to attend College of Education in Victoria.\nMrs. F. Badowich of Brandon,\nis visiting Mrs. A. Marshall, 202\nVictoria Street.\n* *   \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hipper-\nson of Diamond Lake, Wash, and j\nMr. and Mrs. Jens Petersen of\nFarmer, Wash, were guests at the\nsummer cottage of Mr. and Mrs,\nWilliam Hipperson on the North\nShore.\n* *   *\nA pretty miscellaneous shower\nhonoring Miss Dorothy Barret was\nheld at the home of Miss Vera\nheld at the home of Miss Verna\nA number of userul gifts were\npresented to the honoree in a decorated box. Prizes were won by\nMiss Mercedes Schwartzenhauer,\nMiss Lots Calbick and Miss Barbara Leslie.   '\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nMiss Hilda Abfalter, Third\nStreet, has returned from a ten-\nday holiday in Vancouver.\n\u2022 *   #\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Ronmark\nhave moved to 905 Edgewood\nAvenue.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nAmong those from Nelson who\nhave left to attend College of\nEducation in Victoria are Miss\nMary Ann Swanson, Victoria\nStreet.\n\u2022 *     4\nMrs. H. Houston, 811 Fifth\nStreet, has returned from visiting\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas McDonald\nin Kimberley. \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. E. Saxby-Hawkins of Sanca\nand   Mrs.   Cummins   of  Boswell\nwere Exhibition visitors.\n...\nAmong those attending the\nteacher's convention in Cranbrook\nare George Mermet, Nelson Allen\nand J. S. Livingstone of Nelson\nand Roy Mills of Slocan City.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. G. W. Bingay and\nMr. and Mrs. Vandenberg of\nSpokane were guests at the William Hipperson cottage at Duhamel on the North Shore.\n...\nSome out - of - town Exhibition\nvisitors were W. Mastin of Cloverdale, Michael Fisher of Vancouver,\nMr. and Mrs. G. A. Jones of Burnaby, P. A. Bateman and A. H.\nWood of Rossland, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. F. Bartan of New Westminster\nand F. Grace of Revelstoke.\n\u2022 *   \u2666\n.Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Telford of\nNanaimo are visiting Dr. and\nMrs. R. B. Brummitt, 820 Davies\nStreet,\nBogota, capital of Colombia, In\nCentral America, was founded in\n1538.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1956\u20143\nFruitvale\nFRUITVALE- Visiting at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. R. Hepburn\nIs their niece, Mrs. J. C. Ames of\nCalgary.\nRecent guests at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Barrett were\nMr. and Mrs. Howard Guthrie and\nson Randy of Sacramento, Calif.,\nMrs. Roy Faren and daughter\nVickie of Cherry Field, Maine, and,\nMr. and Mrs. James Ryder of Or-\nville, Calif. While here, a family\nreunion was held at the Barrett\nhome with the other members of\ntheir family in Trail and Fruitvale\njoining.\nMrs. Les Piatt and daughter Janice of Trenton, Ont., is renewing\nacquaintances in the district They\nare former residents. While here\nthey were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Pratt of Montrose.\nMiss , Marilyn Fricke has left\nfor Edmonton where she will continue her studies at Concordia\nCollege.\nMr. and Mrs. William Mauchlin\nand daughter, Marion, left on Saturday for Victoria where Marion\nwill enter the Provincial Normal\nSchool. Mr. and Mrs. Mauchlin\nwill spend a short holiday at the\ncoast.\nBoswell Notes\nThe Boswell and District Women's Club held its September\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. S. J.\nCummings. The club has reached\nits objective in the amount promised for the Handicapped Children's Society. This will be handed over to the Society shortly.\nTea was served by the hostesses,\nMrs. S. J. Cummings and Mrs. E.\nSaxby - Hawkins. The afternoon\nwas spent on the lawns where a\nprofusion of flowers still bloomed.\nMrs. Crayford has returned to\nher home, after spending a rfw\nweeks with relatives in Penticton.\nKenneth Schauto has left for his\nfarm at Vulcan, Alta., to superintend harvesting of his crop.\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PUN\n10% DOWN\nBALANCE 18 MONTHS\nGray Creek\nGRAY CREEK\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nW. G. Gibbs, one-time resort owners here, were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. C. Feenie. The Gibbs' now\nare at Westbank near Kelowna.\nAudrey Kocher is attending\nNormal School at Victoria. Gail\nKocher has started at Prince Charles high school, Creston. Ralph\nWirsig goes to {he University of\nAlberta at Edmonton and Peter\nStewart to UBC.\nMiss Elizabeth Oliver is visiting\nfriends at Portage la Prairie, Man.\nNewcomers are Mrs. Craig and\nson Grant, and daughter Eleanor\nfrom Saskatchewan. Mrs. Craig\nteaches at Crawford Bay school.\nGaffing Up Nighfs\nFor quick comforting help for Baofcuche,\nRheumatic Pains, Getting Up Nights, strong\ncloudy urine, Irritating passages. Leg Pain*,\nand few of energy due to Kidney ana\nBladder troubles, try OYSTEX. Quick,\ncomplete satisfaction or money back. Over\n900 million cvsTEX tablets seed prow '\nmfety, success. Don't suffer another day\nwithout asking tout druggist for OYSTEX.\n8WIFKNIT\nKNITTING   MACHINE*\n$49.95 and $69.95\nCLASSES BEGIN\nTHIS WEEK \u2014 7 P.M.\nFor Adults and Children\nLeather Work, Fibre\nFlowers, Copper Tooling\nand other subjects.\nEnroll Now at\nHobby Shop\nOpposite Bub Depot\ni PHONE 1708\nBiMJUhCotmdti\n British Soccer\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE CUP\nQuarter-finals, Second  Ltg\nClyde 3, Brechin City 1\nDundee U 2, Dundee 1\nDunlermlint A 3, Celtic 0   .\nParticle T 2, Cowdenbeath 1\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nAberdeen 3, Queen's Park 1\nFalkirk 3, Ayr United 3\nHearts 3, St. Mlrren 3\nMotherwell 2, East Fife 3\nQueen ef S 2, Hibernian 0\nRaith R 4, Airdrlconlans 6\nRanters 0, Kilmarnock 1\nDivision II\nAlbion Rovers 2, Stranraer 1\nAllba A 1     Third Lanark 1\nBerwick R 2, Arbroath 1\nDumbarton J, East Stirling 2\nMontrose 6, St. Johnstone 3\nMorton 8, Hamilton A 1\nStirling A 1, Stonhousomuir 1\nAMATEUR  INTER.\nEngland 9, Irelartd 3\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nArsenal 0, Newcastle U l\nAston Villa 2, Tottenham H 4\nBolton W 2, Cardiff City 6\nBurnley 1,- Portsmouth i\nCharlton A 1, Manchester C 0\nChelsea 1. Birmingham C 0\nLuton Town 3, Everton 0\nManchester U 4. Sheffield W 1\nPreston N _ 3, W, Bromwich 2\nSunderinnd 5, Blackpool 2\nWolverhampton W 1, Leeds U 3\nDivision II\nBarnsley 3, Blackburn R 8\nBristol It 1, Leicester City 3\nHuddersfield T 8, Grimsby T 1\nLeyton 0 1, Doncaster K 1\nLincoln City 1, Fulham 0\nLiverpool 0, Stoke City 3\nNotts County 2, Mldleabrough 1\nPort Vale 0, West Ham U 0\nRitherhom U 3, Nottingham F 2\nSheffield U 1, Bristol F 2\nSwansea T 3, Bury 0\nDivision III (Northern)\nAccrlntton 8 1, Chesterfield 1\nBradford City 2, Bradford \u00bb\nCarlisle V 8, Chester 0\nCrewe Alex 0, Worthington 1\nDerby County 1, Hull City 0\nGateshead 1, Darlington 2\nRochdale 0, Oldham A 2\nScunthorpe V 8, Halifax T 1\nStockport O 1, Hartlepools U 4\nTranmere R 1, SOuthpOrt 1\nWrexham 8, Barrow 0.\n\u2022 York C 3, Mansfield f 0\nDivision III'(Southern)\nAldershot 1, Shrewsbury T 1\nBrentford 8, Walsall 3\nBrighton and HAS, Torquay U\n0.\nColchester U 3? Reading 3\nCoventry C 5, Queen's P R 1\nCrystal Palace 3, Millwall 3\nCrystal Palace 2, Millwall 2\nExeter City 6, Southend U 1\nGilllngham  1, Bournemouth 0\nNewport County 3, Watford 0\nNorwich City 3, Plymouth A 0\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1956\nWIHL Schedule Released\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague play will get under way\nOctober 13 at Nelson and Spokane,\nwith Rossland and Trail the respective opposition. League schedule was released Sunday.\nRossland- will see their first\nWIHL game since re-entering the\nleague when they host Trail October 16. Nelson will be the op\n-__\u25a0_\nLiberty\nIs THE\nPlace\nto shop\nweek.\nfor feature! all\nPRICES  EFFECTIVE\nMON., SEPT. 17\nto\nSEPT.\nWe hope that we can keep the busy homemakers happier by featuring low pric es all week. Mrs. Homemaker can now\nsave everyday at Liberty, not just 3 days of the week. Liberty meets all competitors prices. Save time, in our one-stop\nstore. No pushing each other around in our wide aisles. Time to.switch to Libery for more foods per dollar. Phone 1192.\nfor delivery service.\n*eiue Ribbon Tea Bags\n* Blue Ribbon Tea\n* Coffee-\n* Crabmeat\n60's. Wonderful\nvalue.  \t\nSale. Lb.\nLiberty'* Blue Label.\nGround fresh when you\nbuy famous flavor. A treat\nin every drop. Lb.\t\nSalad favorite.\nKandy brand. 614\n65c\n$1.07\n$1.06\n_55c\nPork \u2014 Puritan,\nbarbacue sauce.\n* Spare Ribs\n* Lunch Tongue\n* Pink Salmon \u25a0\n* Lemon Cheese\nIn\n15 oz..\nPuritan. With\ngelatine.  10 oz.\nFancy Cloverleaf.\n15 oz\t\nNabob favorite filling\nor spread. 16 oz. \t\n47c\n53c\n47c\n41c\n-_*t nusr\u00abX_\nThe handiest tin on\nyour pantry shelf -\nTH! COCO* WITH THI\nnan chocolati ruvoi\nlb. tin\nFry's HOT CHOCOLATE\nlb. 63'\nSAVE MORE ON WASHDAY NEEDS AT LIBERTY-ON MONDAY'S\n3*\nOFF\nLUXtoilet\nSOAP\nSPECIAL!\nREGULAR SIZE\n3 for 24\n2 lge.cans\/7c\nsm2t\nLIFEBUOY\nregular size\n_J_E\nS LBS.\n\/,   Mttl>\"       .\nSO LBS.\n$3.35\nChocolate,\nwhite or\nycllc\ncake   mix.\nMonarch Fruit Cake Mix\nWith bake pan. Complete j   _y\n\u2022 Nalleys Tang      A^f\nSalad Dressing, 24 oz. ,  \" *** ^\nChristies Soda     55f\ni. Dackaae ^** ^** ^\"\n2 Ib. package\n11 oz\nHeinz Ketchup    29(\nNOW-dressed in\nModess\n^oo^t^\nThe 50 p*r cmnl nor*\nabforbenf tanltory\nnapkin ... available tit\n\u2022xchitrv* new choice of\npackage iIxm and\npricw ,.. \"JV ,,.\n\"l2'i\"(Ragular or Super)\n...\"20 V... \"40 V\n2 \u00abor 69c\nmORE   GOOD   BUv5\nYou'll like lervico plus self-service for real .aristae tion on quality meats. Double your money back If\nit fails to completely satisfy. Yes, it Is LIBERTY for meats.\nStew, Ib\t\nLiver,  Ib.\t\nRib Pork Chops, Ib.\nHamburger,   3 Ibs.\n49c\n39c\n55c\n85c\nMclNTOSH FANCY APPLES\n '239\nHandl-Pak\n20 Ib. box\n... h\ni_\nposition in tht first gams at Trail\non Octobar 18.\nComplete schedule follows:\nOCTOBER\nSat. 13 Rossland at Ntlion\nSat. 13 Trail at Spokana\nTut. 16 Trail at Rossland\nThu. 18 Nelson at Trail\nSat 20 Trail at Ntlaon\nSat. 20 Rossland at Spokane\nTut. .3 Nelson tt Rossland\nWed. 24 Nelson at Spokane\nThu. 25 Spokane at Trail\nFri. 26 Trail at Rossland\nSat 27 Rossland at Nalion\nSat. 27 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 30 Spokane st Rossland\nWed. 31 Spokane at Nelson\nNOVEMBER\nThu. 1 Rossland at Trail\nFri. 2 Nelson at Rossland\nSat. 3 Rossland at Spokane\nSat 3 Trail at Nelson\nTue. 6 Trail at Rossland\nWed. 7 Nelson at Spokane\nThu. 8 Nelson at Trail\nFri. 0 Spokane at Rossland\nSat. 10 Rossland at Trail\n8at 10 Spokane at Nelson\nSun. 11 Rossland at Spokana\nTut. 13 Nelson at Rossland\nWed. 14 Trail at Nelson\nThu. 15 Spokane at Trail\n8at 17 Rossland at Nelson\nSat. 17 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 20 Spokane at Rossland\nWed. 21 Nelson st Spokana\nThu. 22 Nelson at Trail\nSat. 24 Rossland at Trail\nSat 24 Spokane at Nelson\nSun. 25 Rossland at Spokane\nTue. 27 Trail at Rossland\nThu. 29 Spokana at Trail\nFri. 30 Nelson at Rossland\nDECEMBER\nSat. 1 Rossland at Ntlton\nSat 1 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 4 Spokana at Rossland\nWed. 5 Trail at Nelson\nThu. I Rossland at Trail\nSat. 8 Nelson at Trail\nSat. 8 Rossland at Spokane\nTue. 11 Nelson at Rossland\nWed. 12 Nelson at Spokane\nThu. IS Spokane at Trail\nSat, 15 Spokane at Nelson\nSat 13 Trail at Rossland\nSun. 18 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 18 Spokane at Rossland\nWed. 19 Rossland at Nelson\nThu. 20 Rossland at Trail\nSat. 22 Nelson at Trail\nSat 22 Rossland at Spokane\nWed. 26 Nelson at Rossland\nWed. 26 Spokane at Trail\nSat. 29 Rossland at Trail\nSat. 29 Spokane at Nelson\nSun. 30 Nelson at Spokane\nJANUARY\nTue. 1 Spokane at Rossland\nTut. 1 Trail at Nelson\nThu. ! Nelson at Trail\nSat. 0 Rossland at Nelson\nSat 5 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 8 Trail at Rossland\nWed. 9 Trail at Nelson\nThu. 10 Spokane at Trail\nSat. 12 Rossland at Trail ,\nSat. 12 Spokana at Ntlton\nTue. 13 Nelson at Rossland\nWed. 16 Nelson at Spokane\nThu. 17 Spokane at Trail\nSat 19 Rossland at Nelson\nSat 19 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 22 Spokane at Rossland\nWed. 23 Spokane at Nelson\nThu. 24 Nelson at Trail\nSat, 28 Rossland at Spokane\nSat. 26 Trail at Nelson\nTue. 29 Trail at Rossland\nWed. 30 Nelson at Spokane\nThu. 31 Rossland at Trail\nFEBRUARY\n8at. 2 Rossland at Nelson\nSat 2 Trail at Spokane\nTue. 5 Spokane at Rossland\nThu. 7 Nelson at Trail\nSat. 9 Nelson at Spokane\nSat. 9 Trail at Rossland\nTue. 12 Nelson at Rossland\nWed. 13 Spokane at Nelson\nThu. 14 Spokane at Trail\nSat. 18 Rossland at Spokane\nSat 16 Trail at Nelson\nWomen's Golf\nTitles Decided\nMist Joan SutcllHe won the\nchampionship flight of women's\nclub championship played at Nelson Golf and Country Club. Finals were played Sunday. Mrs. B.\nTownshend was runnerup. Winner\nwas decided on the 19th hole.\nIn the quarter finals for the\nconsolation of the first flight, Mrs.\nL. M. McBride defeated Miss Mary\nMcDougall. Previously Mrs. Dune\nJamieson defeated Mrs. Jack\nGreive ln consolation of first\nflight\nA nine-hole competition Saturday, in which 14 players participated, was won by Miss Lillian\nHickey with a low net of 30, and\nMiss Joan Sutcliffe with a low\ngross of 43.\nIn Noxon Cup play, a nine-hole\ncompetition with a three-quarter\nhandicap played through the summer, Mrs. B. Townshend has been\ndeclared winner with Mrs. 0. J.\nHesketh as runnerup.\nDGDEN'S\nf2\\\nTrans Canada Credit loans, protected\nat no extra cost by life-insurance,\nsolve budget problems for thousands\nof Canadian families\u2014without endangering family security. Solve\nyour money problems. Get a life-\ninsured loan, on your own credit\nCall os today.\nUICK CASH LOANS\nTHE ALL-CANADIAN\nLOAN  COMPANY\nmiiML\n525 VERNON ST. - PHONE 1690\nI\n \u25a0   .   .'\"\n \u2014\n5H<<?\nPORTS\nYanks Clinch Tie Spot-\nBrooks Half-Game Up\nBy The Associated Presi\nThe New York Yankees clinched\nat least a tie for the American\nLeague pennant and the Brooklyn\nDodgers moved out a half-game\nin front in the mad National\nLeague scramble Sunday.\nThe Yanks had hoped to wrap it\nall up in their doubleheader with\nCleveland.>They won the first, 10-3\nand thereby clinched the tie and\neliminated the Indians and Boston Red Sox, but the Tribe came\nback and won the second, 4-3.\nThat left only the Chicago White\nSox, who won a doubleheader\nfrom the Washington' Senators,\n1-5 and 7-2,.with a mathematical\nchance of catching the Yanks,\nThe Brooks, who started the day\na bare two percentage points\nahead of the Milwaukee Braves,\n\"stretched\" their margin with a\n8-2 decision over the Cincinnati\nRedlegs. The Braves, scheduled\nto play the New York Giants at\n:mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:m:iiiiiiiiiiii':\n\u00a7 Headquarters           jjj\n= for Official            =\n1 BOY  SCOUT    I\nI OXFORDS      I\n| and   HI-CUTS   |\n= Black and Brown Mocc. _\n| Oxfords, Gro-Cork Soles \u00a7\n= New  Black  Brogue        1\n= Oxfords            '            5\ni Brown Strap Oxfords      ~\n= Brown Hi-Cuts                =\nE All sizes and widths avail- a\n= able at competitive prices. 3\nI ANDREW'S I\nS Leaders in Footfashion       3\n= Establiehed 1902             =\nthe  Polo  Grounds,   were   rained\nout.\nIt was a particularly significant victory for the Dodger., Not\nonly did It give them a working\nmargin over the Braves, but It\npractically eliminated the Red-\nlegs from contention. Birdie\nTebbetts' operatives now are\nthree games 'back with only a\ndozen to play,\nHere is now the race stands:\nW   L   Pet. GBL Left\nBrook      86   56   .606 12\nMil       86   56   .601     %   11\nCin        83   59   .585   3       12\nIn other American League action, the Detroit Tigers, won a\ndoubleheader from the Red Sox,\n5-4 and 8-4, while Baltimore and\nKansas City ' split. The Orioles\ntook the first, 3-2 and the A's the\nsecond 10-1.\nThe other National League\ngames wound up In splits. St.\nLouis whipped Pittsburgh, 3-2, in\nthe opener, but the Pirates came\nback to take the second, 9-3. Chicago won the first game from\nPhiladelphia, 7-4, but dropped a\n4-1 decision in the night cap.\nThree scattered singles were all\nDon Newcombe allowed Saturday\nas Brooklyn gained a 3-0 decision\nover Chicago Cubs.\nMilwaukee Braves skidded in a\n6-5 defeat at Philadelphia. The\nPhillies, only club to take a season series from Milwaukee this\nyear, wrapped it up 12 games to 10.\nCincinnati defeated Pittsburgh\n6-4 and St Louis defeated New\nYork Giants 9-4 In the other National League games.\nNew York Yankees dropped a\n6-2 decision to Detroit and Boston,\nwith Ted Williams hitting his 22nd\ntyome run, defeated Cleveland 5-3.\nKansas City smacked Washington 10-5 and Baltimore defeated\nChicago White Sox 4-1.\nVANCOUVER WINS\nSOCCER\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nVANCOUVER (CP) -' Vancouver Halecoi, displaying tup-\nerlority both In attack and on\ndefence, defeated Winnipeg Ger-\nmanla 5-1 Saturday night to win\nthe Dominion locoer championship In a sudden-death final before 3000 fans.\nGeddes Captures*\nJunior Golf Title\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Second annual junior golf tournament, again\nat Cranbrook under continued\nsponsorship of the Cranbrook\nFoundry, saw Brian Geddes of\nCranbrook win the boys' championship with 130 for 18 holes, and\nGail Achtzener of Kimberley the\ngirls' championship.\nMedal play was 27 holes for the\nboys and 18 for the girls, and the\ntourney was run off by Cranbrook\nclub 'pro Frank Tesluk. Dave\nPearson of Kimberley with 133\nwas runnerup and Doug Quinn of\nKimberley with 134 was third.\nRon Stone of Trail won the first\nflight, with Brian Mansfield of\nCranbrook second and Buck Redding of Kimberley third, and Bob\nCorrigan of Cranbrook won the\nsecond flight, with Gary Holmes\nof Kimberley second and Don\nThompson of Wardner third. Joan\nProvenzano of Cranbrook was second among the girls for the\nchampionship and Lou Sullivan\nthird.\nRon Stone was first on boys'\nlong drive, Buck Redding second\nand Doug Quinn third. Paul McKinnon of Cranbrook won boys'\nchip nearest the hole, with Ron\nStone second. Joan Provenzano\nwas first in girls' long drive, Lou\nSullivan second and Margaret Be-\nlanger third. Gail Achtzner won\nthe girls' chip competition with\nMargaret Belanger second. Trophies and prizes were presented\nat the end of the meet by Eric\nMacKinnon, wfeo founded the\ncompetition last summer.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nSOCIAL CREDIT    ~1\nPublic Meeting\nZfaqiofL dialL, TlsdaOfL    II\nTuesday, Sept. 18th        ||\ni.hlmilllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIII\nWomen's Fastball Series Tied 2-2\nROSSLAND \u2014 Rossland Royals rallied In the face\nof pending elimination Sunday afternoon to defeat Nelson Royals 18-12 in the second half of a doubleheader to\neven their best-of-five West Kootenay Senior Women's\nSoftball League final, 2-2.\nNelson had taken advantage of an 11-run outburst in\nthe first inning of the seven-inning opener to pile up a\n15-6' victory. Rossland trailed 11-9 after 5V_ innings of\nthe nightcap, but Lucille Pighin, Joan Molyneaux, Pris-\ncilla Heywood and Pat Nora collaborated'to comb Ruth\nBambrick for nine runs in the sixth and eighth frames.\nBambrick pitched the entire 16 innings for Nelson,\nwhile Heywood, daughter of the Rossland Coach\u2014who\nalso is president of the league\u2014pitched the entire first\ngame and seven innings of the nightcap.\nFifth and final game of the series will be played at\nQueen Elizabeth Park Wednesday evening. \u25a0\n!HIIIIIIMMIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIM|llllllinillllll||ll|lllllllll|llllll\nTakes Women's\nOpen\nTrail Runner\nSets Two Records\nWHITTIER,  Calif.   (AP)\u2014Diminutive Marlene Bauer Hagge of\nSarasota, Fla., won the $5000 Women's Professional Golfers Asso-\ni\nciatlon Invitational open tournament Sunday, her eighth of the\nyear.\nSecond was Joyce Ziskf, Waterford, Wis., at 296. Tied for third\nat 297 were Patty Berg, St. Andrews, 111., and Betty Jameson,\nSan Antonio, Tex.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Three\nCanadian and six Britain Columbia junior track and field records\nwere broken Saturday in the British Columbia junior track and\nfield championships.\nThree Vancouver athletes shattered Canadian marks.\nAllen Andrews ran the juvenile\n440-yard in 50.8, shaving four-\ntenths of a second off the previous\nrecord. Wendy Kellond, 16, set a\nnational javelin mark with a\nthrow of 110 feet and Freyd Ber-\nman ran the midget class 60-yard\ndash in 7.4 seconds for the third\nCanadian record.\nNina Brown, 13, from Trail, B.C.\nset two provincial marks. Her records were 16 feet iy\u00ab inches in the I    TORONTO (CP) - Young Bob\nbroad jump and 83 feet, ZVi Inches;*? Allan came back to haunt his\nScores Knockout But\nOpponent Missing\nDORTMUND, Germany (AP) \u2014\nCharles Humez of France, Euro\npean middleweight champion,\nscored a knockout win Sunday\nnight while opponent Peter Mueller of Germany was nowhere in\nsight.\nReferee Albert Nuss stepped In\nthe third round to separate the\nfighters after warning the German several times for hitting after the break. Mueller fell down\nslowly and rolled out of the ring.\nWith no more Mueller in sight,\nNuss started counting and declared Humez the winner by a knockout in the non-title fight, scheduled for 10 rounds.\nN--SONJ>AI-Y NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1956\u20147\nB.C. Lions Crushed;\nStamps Take Bombers\nNanaimo Leads\nMann Cup Series\nin the discus.\nWard Captures\nU.S. Amateur\nLAKE FOREST, 111. (AP) \u2014\nHarvie Ward Jr. waited for Chuck\nKocsis' aging legs to falter and\nthen poured on the pressure Saturday to win his second straight\nUnited   States   A m a t e u r   Golf j him lo one goai and tte score wg-\nold teammates here Sunday and\nlead Nanaimo Timbermen to a\n15-13 victory over Peterborough\nTrailermen in the first game of\nthe best-of-seven Mann Cup Canadian lacrosse championship.\nAllan shot two goals in the first\nperiod as Nanaimo rolled to a 3-0\nlead. He picked up two more in\nthe second to help put Timbermen up 7-4 at half time.\nPeterborough boxed in the 21-\nyear-old forward \u2014 a Trailerman\nhimself until this year \u2014 holding\nLethbridge ANAF\nGrid Champs\nFERNrE - Lethbrdige ANAF\nwon the Grand Central Cup Sunday when they defeated Michel\nBuffalies 3-1 in the final of the\nCrows Nest Pass Football League\none-day tournament here Sunday.\nFive teams, Cranbrook Rovers,\nMichel Buffaloes, Lethbridge ANAF, Fernie United and Lethbridge\nLegion entered teams. Lethbridge\nANAF ousted Cranbrook Rovers\n3-1 in the opening game.\nFernie United were then eliminated, losingv out to the ANAF\n2-1.\nLast year's cup holders, Lethbridge Legion, went down to defeat at the hands of Michel Buffaloes by a 3-1 score.\nTwo goals in less than eight\nminutes by Tony Bazooyen got the\nANAF off to a fast start in the\nfinal against Michel. Anselmo cut\nthe margin to one before half\ntime. Steve Mezei got the final\nANAF goal in the second half.\nChampionship, 5 and 4\u2014the first\nrepeat winner in 21 years.\nWard, of San Francisco, smoth\n13-7 for Nanaimo. Those five were\nall he could manage\u2014along with\none   assist   \u2014   as   Peterborough\nBilko PCL's Best\nLOS ANGELES (AP)  - First\nbaseman Steve Bilko, who has hit\n55 home runs this season, Sunday\nwas named the Pacific Coast\nLeague's most valuable player by\nthe Pacific Baseball Writers Association.\nIt is the second year in a row\nthat the Los Angeles player has\nreceived the award. Bilko leads\nthe league in homers, hits, total\nbases, batting, walks, runs and\nruns batted in.\nered the 43-year-old former pro[sLruck back with a drive that al_\nfrom  Royal  Oak, Mich.,  with  a | most pulled the game out of the\ndazzling four-hole winning streak\nmidway of the afternoon round.\nThe victory established Ward,\n30 - year \u25a0 old son of a Tarboro,\nN.C., druggist, as the world's No.\n1 amateur golfer. Winner of the\nBritish and Canadian titles ln\nthe past, he became the first golfer since Lawson Little in 1934-35\nto put two of these championships\nback-to-back.\nat 8 p.m.\nSpeaker:\nHon. W. D. BLACK\n    Provincial  Secretary and Minister  of  Municipal  Affairs\nSome of the Things Your Social Credit Government Is\nDoing for Nelson-Creston Constituency\nBALL SCORES\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nHollywood 5-3 Portland 4-1\nSan Francisco 10-3 Seattle 6-2\n;    San Diego 7-1 Las Angeles 8-2\n\\    Sacramento 6-5 Vancouver 7-1\nYour Social Credit Government's policies\nare developing the Nelson-Creston Constituency.\nYour Social Credit Government has authorized the expenditure of $2,585,371.00 for\nhighway construction In the Nelson-\nCreston Constituency.\nYour Social Credit Government is building the Nelson Bridge which was promised by previous Governments for over\n40 years.\nYour Social Credit Government guarantees school bonds for local School Boards,\nthereby reducing Interest rates and saving\nthe local taxpayers' money,\nYoup Social Credit Government will help\npay taxes on homes.\n\u2022 In 1956 your 8oclal Credit Government's\neducation grants to School Districts\nNo. 6 and No. 7 In Nelson-Creston\namounted   to  $872,979.00.\n\u2022 Your Social Credit Government supplle*\nyearly unconditional grantB which In\n1956 amount to: Nelson\u2014$96,264.00; Village of Creston\u2014$27,472.00; Village of\nSalmo\u2014$9,712.00. These grants may be\nused on .streets or for any other purpose\nchosen by the respective Councils.\n\u2022 Your Social Credit Government Is developing the  Kokanee  Park.\n\u2022 Your Social Credit Government Is building the Salmo-Creston  Highway.\nMiss Thriftwoy Wins\nWASHINGTON CAP) \u2014 Proud\nMiss Thriftaway of Seattle, perse'\nvering with a patched up hull,\nwon speedboating's President's\nCup from Detroit's Miss Pepsi\nSunday on the wind-whipped,\nbouncy Potomac River.\nMiss Pepsi, Roy Dossin'g red,\nwhite and blue hydroplane,\nsnatched the last heat from Miss\nThriftaway but couldn't overcome\nthe points Willard Rhodes' Seat-\nlie boat had built up on two ear-\n; lier triumphs in the cup series.\nVOTE\nIffH\nMU*P\nCANADA\nLIFE INSURANCE\nTHAT FITS YOUR\nNEEDS AND\nYOUR BUDGET\nAttention\nHUNTERS\n(Juntlng Season is now under\nway. \u2014 Chances are you will\nshoot game birds or animals\nyou would like to have\nmounted.\nHere Ii Good News!\nYou Now Have a Local\n, Taxidermist\nO.W.Aasland\n25 King Street\nCastlegar, B. C.\nPHONE 2698\nfire. The desperate Trailermen,\ndown 14-7, scored six straight\ngoals \"before Don Ashbee put the;\ngame on ice with a goal two seconds from the final whistle.\nBRITISH CRICKET\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Saturday's cricket results:\nScotland 111 and 81, Australians\n318. Australians won final match\nof tour by an innings and 126 runs.\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Edmonton Eskimos pulled the stopper\nSaturday night and British Co-\nJumbia Lions' newly-discovered\nhope was drained out beneath a\ncrushing 34-8 score that gave the\nleague-leading Eskimos their 19th\nstraight home victory ln Western-\nInterprovinclal Football Union\nplay.\nEskimos, who have won six of\nseven starts this year, haven't lost\nat home since Sept. 27, 1854.\nLions whipped Calgary 45-15\nlast weekend with Jerry Gustafson at quarterback for the first\ntime and the possibility they couW\nend Eskimos' home winning streak\n\u2014plus an hour-long pre-game\nmilitary show \u2014 brought a record\nClarke Stadium crowd of 21,737,\nnearly 3000 more than the previous best here, set in 1954,\nBut the usual brilliance of\nquarterback Jackie Parker, terrific line plunging by fullback\nNormie Kwong and expert defensive work' by halfback Rollie\nMiles spoiled Lions' first appearance of the season here and overshadowed Gustafson.\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Strong line\nplay and an electrifying 61-yard\nend run by halfback Joe Pagliei overcame three Calgary\nfumbles Saturday night ai\nStampeders trimmed Winnipeg's\n\"13th-man\" Blue Bombers 16-6\nIn a Western Interprovinclal\nFootball Union game before 12,-\n789 fans.\nPagliei took a pltchout from\nquarterback Don Klosterman at\nthe Calgary 49-yard line early in\nthe fourth quarter and went all\nthe way down the sideline for a\ntouchdown that put Stampeders\nout of reach of a Bomber field-\ngoal victory.\nKlosterman, who completed six\nof the'nine forward passes he attempted, threw one for a touchdown to Ron Clinkscale and booted a convert and a field goal for\nthe rest of the Calgary scoring.\nBy The Canadian Press\nOttawa Rough Riders, improv-\nBatteries\nMINING  -  LOGGING\nAND  AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs  to All   Types\n609 Lake St. Phone I\nARROW  BATTERIES\nIng with every outing, snapped a\nlosing run of four games with a\n20-9 victory Saturday over Montreal's skidding Alouettes.\nRiders had to come from behind\na 7-0 first-quarter deficit In a\nhard-fought effort to stop the All\nfor the first time in four meetings\nso far this Big Pour season. Tha\nwin left Ottawa still In last place,\nbut only two points behind Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Toronto Argonauts, idle during the weekend,\nwho are tied with six points each.\nAlouettes, who now have dropped\ntwo games, still lead with eight\npoints.\nFootball Standings\nWIFU\nWL T    APt_.\nEdmonton    6 1 143   99 12\nWinnipeg,    3 3   96   81   \u00ab\nB.C. _  3 4 101 117   6\nSask  3 4 112 127   \u00ab\nCalgary     2 5 124 152   4\n$U\u00a3Z\n^_L\n5^23_\u00a7E__g_^_SBjp\nHitler, Mussolini, Stalin \u2014terrorized the world. And now a\nnew despot is in the spotlight\n. . . Nasser of Egypt, aided by\nRussia and surrounded by former\ntop German Faclsts. William\nStevenson, Star Weekly staff\ncorrespondent who was twice\narrested and finally expelled\nfrom Egypt outlines the Nasser\nphilosophy and the Egyptian\nsituation in this week's issue.\nRead \"Guns Over the Suez,\"\nPictures that tell Interesting\nstories; Articles on Currant\nEvents and People in the Public\nEye; Stories to Entertain you;\nPuzzles to work\u2014for Cash Prizes;\ntimely Sport Features; N\u00abw\nFashions; New Menus and Recipes. 20 pages of Colored\nComics and a Complete Novel.\nThat's the Star Weekly.\nThe Star Weekly \u2014 Buy It today.\nValue that says:\nBUY!\nn\nSee your Mutual Life of Canada representative:\nArt Anderson, Casrleaor,    \u2014    Ed Daloise, Trail, B.C.    \u2014    Rick Hood, Creston\nDesmond Hood, Rossland,    \u2014    Alex   Basar.ba, Cranbrook,    \u2014    Earle Tabor, Natal\nT\nArthritis -\nRheumatism   ,\nVital Facts Explained\nFREE  DESCRIPTIVE  BOOK\nAs a public service to all\nreaders of this paper, a new 36-\npage highly illustrated book on\nArthritis and Rheumatism will\nbe mailed ABSOLUTELY FREE\nto all who write for lt.\nThis FREE BOOK fully explains the causes, ill-effects and\ndanger in neglect of these painful and crippling conditions. It\nalso describes a successfully\nproven drugless method of\ntreatment which has been applied in many thousands of\ncases.\nThis book is yours WITHOUT\nCOST or obligation. It may be\nthe means of saving years of\nuntold misery. Don't delay. Send\nfor your FREE BOOK today.\nAddress The Ball Clinic, Dept\n^244. Excelsior Springs, Mo.\nChampion 2-Door Sedanet\nat a price that says:\nNOW!\nLook how much more you get for your money in the big, beautiful, value-packed Studebaker!\nTake a new look at <Ae low price field!\nDon't misB the big new Studebaker\u2014the car that\nwill open your eyes to what \"value\" really means!\nStudebaker point, the way to better safety, bigger\npower, greater economy, and more tasteful styling-\nmore for your money than you've ever known before!\nYou'll find your Studebaker Dealer is giving the best\ndeals in town now\u2014including unheard-of over-\nallowances on your present car! And Studebaker\ngives you so much more to choose from\u201416 new\nmodels\u2014including the fabulous Hawks, America's\nfirst family sports cars.\nSo check the best deal\u2014drive a big new Studebaker\nat your Dealer's today!\nStudebaker C*fr\u00ab*p **%&\/\n8TUDEBAKER-PACKARD OF CANADA, LIMITED-WHERE PRIDE OF WORKMANSHIP 8TI.L COMES FIRST.\nDefoe SCIL*Vie\u00a9 Ltd.      213 baker st.      nelson, b.c.\n^^^^^^^^\nJ\n ;.= : \u25a0' ;  \u25a0',-   - \u25a0       \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0,     '\":\u25a0.;\u25a0'.      \u25a0   ,    ;.'\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1956\nExhibition Prize Winners\nHome Cooking\nCAKES\nLayer, iced\u20141, Mrs. Ted Swenson, 1221 Kootenay; 2, Mrs. Elsie\nGoresky, Castlegar.\nChiffon, uniced\u20141, Mrs. J. S.\nScott, Box 295; 2, Mrs. Ted Swenson, 1221 Kootenay.\n\u25a0 Angel, uniced\u2014 (no first prize\nawarded); 2, Mrs. C. McEachern.\n904 Victoria.\nSponge, uniced\u20141, Mrs. Ted\nSwenson, 2, Mrs. A. Swoiski, Rion\ndel.\nPlain White Butter\u20141, Mrs. Rex\nLittle, 532 Park; 2, Mrs. L. Bobier,\n912 Latimer.\nChocolate, plain\u20141, Mrs. Rex\nLittle, 532 Park; 2, Mrs. S. Braga-\ngnola, 1022 Park St.\nSpice Cake, plain\u2014(no first\nprize awarded); 2, Mrs. Rex Little,\n532 Park.\nDate and Nut Loaf\u20141, Mrs. S.\nBragagnola, 1022 Park St.; 2, Mrs.\nAnnie Currie, 824 Baker St.\nNut Bread, plain\u20141, Mrs. Rex\nLittle, 532 Park; 2, Mrs. Rose Bradshaw, 102 Silica.\nLight Fruit, plain\u20141, Mrs. J. A.\nGordon, 238 High; J, Mrs. R. B.\nBishop, 240 High.\nGingerbread\u20141, Mrs. L. Bobier,\n912 Latimer.\nCake, Doughnuts\u2014(no first\nprize awarded); 2, Mrs. Ted Swenson, 1221 Kootenay.\nJelly Roll\u20141, Mrs. Mary Nelson\nGolf Links Rd.; 2, Mrs. Elsie Goresky, Castlegar.\nShortbread\u20141, Mrs. G. A. Stewart, 508 Third.\nOatmeal Cookies\u20141, Mrs. G. A\nStewart, 508 Third; 2, Doris\nWright, 605 Cedar.\nTeabiscuits\u20141, Mrs. C. McEachern, 904 Victoria, 2, Mrs. G. Ward,\nR.R.I.\nRolled Cookies\u20141, Mrs. G. A.\nStewart, 508 Third, Mrs. J. S.\nScott, Box 295.\nDrop Cookies\u20141, Mrs. A. C.\nMorton, 1623 Falls; 2, Gloria Cat-\nton, Crescent Valley.\nPastries\u20141, Mrs. M. Caruk, 121\nRichards.\nCream Puffs\u2014(no first prize\nawarded)'; 2, Mrs. G. A. Stewart,\n508 Third.\nMacaroons\u20141, Mrs. A. C. Morton, 1623 Falls; 2, Mrs. G. A. Stewart, 508 Third.\nCupcakes\u20141, Mrs. Elsie Goresky, Castlegar.\nMatrimonial Cake\u20141, Mrs. A.\nSwolski, Riondel; 2, Mrs. N. R.\nSardich, 402 Nelson.\nBran Muffins\u20141,. Mrs. Hex Little\n532 Park.\nDecorative Icing for party cake\n-1, Mrs. Ann Sodloski, R.R.I.; and\nZeta Schneider, 1117 Front, (tie).\nPIES\nApple\u20141, Mrs. G. Ward, R.R. 1.\nRaisin\u20141, Mrs. G. Ward, R.R. 1.\nPumpkin\u20141, Mrs. Ivan E. Lewis,\n1309 McQuarrie Ave.\nAny  other   variety   \u2014  1,  Mrs.\nMary Nelson, Golflinks Rd.\nBREAD\nWhite\u20141, Mrs. Lorna Hamilton,\nI R.R. 1; 2, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Box 295;\n3, Mrs. L. Bobier, 912 Latimer.\nBrown\u20141, Mrs. J. S. Scott. Box\n295; 2, Mrs. Jack Whiteside, R.R. 1;\n3, Mrs. R. Mills, 515 Third.\nWhite buns \u2014 1, W. H. Bain-\n\u2022bridge, Willow Point; 2, Mrs. G. A.\nStewart, 508 Third; 3. Mrs. Elsie\nGoresky, Castlegar.\nBrown buns\u20141, Mrs. J. S. Scott,\nBox 295; 2, Mrs. Jack Whiteside,\nR.R. 1.\nParkerhouse rolls \u2014 1, Mrs.\nElsie Goresky, Castlegar; 2, Mrs.\nJ. S. Scott, Box 295.\nCinnamon rolls \u2014 1, Mrs. Elsie\nGoresky,   Castlegar;   2.   Mrs.   L.\nBobier, 912 Latimer St.; 3, Mary\nKarpowich, Boswell.\nCANDY\nFudge\u20141, Mrs. E. Dill, 916 Edge-\nwood Ave'.; 2, Mrs. Elsie Goresky,\nCastlegar.\nHard Candy\u20141, Mrs. G. A. Stewart, 508 Third; 2, Mrs. Elsie Goresky, Castlegar.\nChocolates\u2014Mrs. J. Doerkson,\nKnox Road.\nELLISON'S SPECIAL PRIZES\nBest: white\u2014Mrs. L. Bobier, 912\nLatimer; 2, Mrs. G. Ward, R.R. 1.\nBest wholewheat\u20141, Mrs. R.\nMills, 515 Third.\nBest  white  cake\u20141,   Mrs.  Ted\nSwenson, 1221 Kootenay; 2, Mrs,\nL. Bobier, 912 Latimer.\nROBIN  HOOD SPECIAL PRIZES\nBest white\u2014Mrs. J. S. Scott,\nBox 295; 2, Mrs. Elsie Goresky,\nCastlegar; 3, Mrs. J. Ward, R.R. 1\nBest whole wheat\u20141, Mrs. J. S.\nScott, Box 295; 2, Mrs. Jack Whiteside, R.R. 1.\nArts and Crafts\nWEAVING\nNeedle\u20141, Mrs. H. Carlsen,\nKaslo; 2, L. Grant, Harrop.\nBox loom \u2014 1, L. Grant, Har\nrop; 2, Mrs. John Gentles, 713\nMill  St.\nTreadle loom \u2014 1, Mrs. W. G.\nKennedy,  Robson;  2,  Mrs.  Nora\nBoyd, Argenta.\nART\nOil colors \u2014 1, Rolfe Brock, 308\nUnion; 2, C. W. Appleyard, Terrace Apartments, 3, Winnifred\nBailey, 1702 Falls.\nWater colors\u20141, K. Lymbery,\nGray Creek; 2, Mrs. D. Bennett,\n31  Annable  Block.\nPen and ink drawing \u2014 1, K\nLymbery, Gray Creek; 2, Mrs. D.\nClarkson, 419 Silica St., and Ivan\nLaughton, 420 Second St. (tie.)\nPencil or charcoal drawing \u2014\n1, Mrs. Helen McLeod, Kinnaird;\n2, Mrs. D. Bennett, 31 Annable\nBlock, and K. Lymbery. Gray\nCreek,\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nChildren and pets \u2014 (no first\nawarded); 2, Mrs. H. Sanders,\n1912 Stanley St.\nScenic\u2014J. Jenkins, 310 Second:\n2. Elsie B. Pegg, 312  Silica  St.,\nGeneral interest \u2014 1, Elsie B.\nPegg, 312 Silica St.; 2, Mrs. H.\nSanders,  1912 Stanley.\nSnaps, mounted, six \u2014 1, Don\nCamerr\/n,   Procter.\nSnaps, mounted, 12\u20141, Don Cameron, Procter.\nLEATHERCRAFT\nTooled handbag \u2014 1, Mrs. Elsie\nGoresky, Castlegar; 2, Mrs H,\nCarlsen, Kaslo.\nTooled project \u2014 1, Mrs. H.\nCallsen, Kaslo; 2, Mrs. Elsie Goresky, Castlegar.\nCarved leather handbag \u2014 1,\nHarry Sommers, 1905 Falls; 2,\nMrs. Elsie Goresky, Castlegar.\nCarved leather\u20141, Keith Holmes, 320 Richards; 2, Mrs. Elsie\nGoresky, Castlegar.\nHand-sewn leather gloves\u2014 1,\nElsie   Goresky,  Castlegar.\nNon-tooled  project \u2014   1,  Mrs.\nHelen  Armstrong,  215   Chathem;\nHarry Sommers, 1905 Falls.\nMETAL WORK\nTooled picture \u2014 1, Lillian Hockey, 818 Hendryx; 2, Ernie Cook.\nKnox Rd.; 3, Terry Moran, 723\nHendryx.\nTooled   planter   \u2014   1,    Lillian\nHickey, 818 Hendryx; 2, Mrs. A.\nH. Wilson, 12 Gyro Park Rd\nMODELS\nToothpicks\u20141, Mrs. K. Arthur,\nMirror Lake.\nWooden or plastic\u20141, Mrs. Rose\nBradshaw, 102 Silica; 2, Mrs. K.\nArthur, Mirror Lake.\nPottery, fired \u2014 1, Neil McLeod\nRR1.\nHand-moulded \u2014 1, Mrs. Helen\nArmstrong, 215 Chatham; 2, Mrs.\nK. Arthur. Mirror Lake.\nShellcraft\u20141, Mrs. D. Bennett,\n31 Annable Block; 2, Mrs. Joseph\nFlorio, 704 Hoover.\nWood carving \u2014 1, Mrs F. Ca-\npalbo, Trail; 2, V. C. Owen, RR1.\n3, R. A. Waldie, 214 Morgan.\nWhittling   \u2014   1,   Mrs.    R.    S.\nWoods, Kootenay Bay; 2, Mrs. K.\nArthur, Mirror Lake.\n. Wood   fretwork\u2014Mrs.   K.   Arthur, Mirror Lake.\nWood inlay \u2014 1, L. Hanic, RR 1.\nWood, lathe-turned \u2014 1, Keith\nHolmes, 320 Richards.\nWood, other projects \u2014 1. Mrs.\nK. Arthur, Mirror Lake, 2, Mrs.\nHelen Armstrong, 215 Chatham.\nDriftwood \u2014 1, Daniel F. Mc-\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n:00\u2014Sign On\n:30\u2014As the World Turns\n:00\u2014Valiant Lady\n:15\u2014Love of Life\n:30\u2014Houseparty (L)\n:00\u2014The Big Payoff (L)      \\\n:30\u2014Bob  Crosby   (L)\n;00\u2014The Brighter Day (L)\n: 15\u2014Secret  Storm\n:30\u2014Edge of Night\n:00\u2014Variety Hour\n:30\u2014Searcli for Tomorrow\n:45\u2014Guiding Light\n:00\u2014Garry Moore  (L)\n:30\u2014Peter   Lind  Hayes\n:45\u2014What's Cookin'\n:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n:00\u2014Western  Roundup\n:00\u2014Weather Vane\n:05\u2014News\n:15\u2014Doug Edwards (L)\n:30\u2014Looney Tunes\n:00\u2014Summer Theatre (L)\n:00\u2014Burns and  Allen  (L)\n30\u2014Talent Scouts (L)\n00\u2014Charlie Farrell Show (L)\n30\u2014Vic Damone Show (L)\n00\u2014Susie\n:30\u2014Fabian of Scotland Yard\n:00\u2014Famous Fights\n:45\u2014The Late Show\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n8:10\u2014Test Pattern\n8:15\u2014Color Test Pattern\n8:25\u2014Bible Reading\n8:30\u2014It Could Be You\n9:00\u2014 Ding Dong School*\n9:30\u2014Fun  to Reduce\n9:45\u2014Today on the West Coast'\n10:30\u2014Tennessee  Ernie  Ford*\n11:00\u2014Matinee Theatre**\n12:00\u2014Queen for a Day*\n12:45\u2014Modern Romances'\n1:00\u2014It's Always Jan*\n1:30\u2014Band   Stand*\n2:00\u2014My Little Margie\n2:30\u2014Trouble  With Father\n3:00\u2014Women\n3:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n4:00\u2014Producers Showcase**\n5:30\u2014Cartoon Carnival\n6:30\u2014Weather Wise\nFront Page\n6:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air**\n6:45\u2014News Caravan*\n7:00\u2014Playhouse Six\n8:30\u2014Robert Montgomery\"\n9:30\u2014Waterfront\n10:00\u2014People's Choice\n10:30\u2014Boston  Blackie\nKREM TV - Channel -\n2:15\u2014Test Pattern\n2:30\u2014Glamour Girl\n3:00\u2014Movietime on Two\n4:00\u2014Tic Tac Toe\n4:15\u2014The Ruggles\n4:45\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00\u2014Sky King\n6:30\u2014Bold Journey\n7:00\u2014Dottle Mack\n7:30\u2014Voice of Firestone\n8:00\u2014Monday Evening Film Fair\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Weather Reporter\n9:10\u2014Monday Evening Film Fair\n(Cont.)\n10:00\u2014Famous Playhouse\n10:30\u2014News\n10:35\u2014Sleepy Time Gal\n10:50\u2014Weather Reporter\n10:55-Curtain Calf\n(Programs \u00bbub)eci  to change by stations  withoul  notice i\nKay, Box 100; 2, Hazel Randall.\nKootenay Bay; 3, Zetta Schneider,\n1117 Front.\nTextile painting \u2014 1, Mrs. M.\nHillestad, Renata; 2, Mrs. Helen\nArmstrong,   215   Chatham.\nPainted Dresden figurine 1,\nMrs.  H.  Carlsen, Kaslo;  2,  Mrs.\nHelen Armstrong, 215' Chatham.\nFIBRE   FLOWERS\nPotted plant\u20141, Mrs. H. A.\nMoir, 524 Gore; 2, Gerry Neighbour, 610 Silica.\nCorsage \u2014 1, Mrs H. A. Moir,\n524 Gore; Mrs. A. Prysiazniuk,\n214 Vernon.\nTable centre arrangement \u20141,\nMrs. A. H. Wilson, 12 Gyro Rd\u201e\nBEADCRAFT\nCork ball tie set \u2014 1, Mrs. Joseph Florio, 704 Hoover; 2, Phyllis Prysiazniuk, 214 Vernon.\nHOBBY CLLECTIONS\nNatural History \u2014 1. Richard\nRussell, 311 Hall Mines Road; 2.\nEileen Goresky, Castlegar; 3. J. H.\nRingrose, 703 Third St.\nForeign (no first prize awarded)\n\u20142. Anna Dolphin, Annable Apts.\nSpecialized \u2014 1. Wayne Cameron, 815 Victoria; 2. Bryce Chris-\ntinsen, 345 Hamilton St.; 3. Mike\nInglehew, 821 Hendryx.\nSorts \u2014 1. Gerald Bishop, 240\nHigh St.\nJewellery \u2014 1. Sandra Tindale,\nBrilliant; 2. Dr. W. B. Goresky,\nCastlegar; 3. Joanne Bytalan, 504\nRichards.\nNovelties \u2014 1. V. C. Owen, R.R.\n1; 2. J. T. Brown; 3. Mrs. Mary\nLuciak, Rosemount.\nOthers \u2014 1. Dr. V. B. Goresky.\nCastlegar; 2. Betty Bishop, 240\nHigh; 3. Mrs. Helen Armstrong,\n215 Chatham.\nHandi-Craft \u2014 1. Mrs. L. Morel,\nKerr Apts.; 2. Mrs. K. Arthur,\nMirror Lake; 3. Mrs. R. S. Woods,\nKootenay Bay,\nWOMEN'S ORGANIZATIONS\nWinner of women's organization display was Fairview Catholic Women's League; 2. Granit*\nRd. Women's Institute; 3. Canadian Legion Auxiliary Branch.,\nNelson.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nMONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,  1956\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n1:10\u2014CKLN Reports\n7:00\u2014News\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n7:05\u2014March of Truth\n1:45\u2014Western Serenade\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n2:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n2:15\u2014Pacific News\n7:30\u2014News\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matin*.\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n3:30\u2014Woman's World\n7:40\u2014Wake-up Time\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n7:45\u2014Roads and Weather\n4:30\u2014Fable Time\n7:50\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n4:45\u2014Hidden Pages of the Air\n8:00\u2014News\n5:00\u2014Summer Skies\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n5:30\u2014Closing Markets\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n5:35\u2014Musicale\n8:30\u2014Home Gardening\n5:40\u2014Sport News\n8:35\u2014Musicale\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Spares\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n5:50\u2014News\n8:55\u2014Entertainment   World\n6:00\u2014LPP Talk\n9:00\u2014News\n6:15\u2014From Parliament Hill\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n10:00\u2014News\n6:55\u2014Social Credit Talk\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n7:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n8:00\u2014Rhythm Pals\nU:00\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n11:05\u2014Story Parade\n9:30\u2014Musicale\nll:15-rTwo for a Quarter\n9:45\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n11:30\u2014Morning Melodies\n10:00\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Bev Foster Show\n12:20\u2014News                               .\n10:30\u2014Dance with Harry Booa\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\nll:0O-NEWS Nightcap\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1956\n:00\u2014B.C. Fishermen's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n:55\u2014March Past\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n15\u2014Morning Music\n:00\u2014BBC News\n:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n:30\u2014Laura Limited\n45\u2014Composers' Corner\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n: 15\u2014Happy Gang\n45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n00\u2014Melodic Moods\n:15\u2014B.C. Political Party\n30\u2014Personal Choica\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:15\u2014Today's Guest\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Marine*\n3:30\u2014Playing Favorite!\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014The Magic Carpet\n4:45\u2014Story Man\n5:00\u2014Summer Skies\n5:30\u2014Traffic Jambore*\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014Byline #\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014T-Canada Sports Review\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014Music by McMullin\n8:30\u2014June Eyre\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Musi* ,\n9:30\u2014Canadian Symphonies\n10:00\u2014News .\nBroadcast\n10:30\u2014James Duncan ChortM\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n2. Period of\nof time\n3. Blunders\n4. Beverage .\nG. Ghost\n6. Head\ncovering\n7. Sick\n8. Tiny\nobject\n0. Lucid\n11. Delineate-!\n15. Cargo\n18. Interjection\n(Ger.)\n19. A basis\nfor\nperfume\nl\u00bbJHHUI:J   HldMGfi\naHBBB  MhllHla\n_hbh TiUHfinn\nma gieb am\nB-IHHBH\nlira mum _h_ee\n-ffliilldM   URHIIH\n21. Strife\nbetween\nclans\n22. High\ncard\n23. Sourcn\nof\n'    light\n25. Aegean\nisland\n26. Frag-       **t-r.n\"i Antww\nranee 85. To dim\n27. Windowed     36. Slide\nbalcony J7. Comfort\n29. Rasped 3D. Man's\n30. Made of oats      nicknam*\n32. Ejects 4& Epoch'\nHHH  HHH   Kian\nHH1D   HE\nn.yllHM   WlrlMi-,..\n-BBSS   GMHW\"\nz\nli,\n1\n1\n1\n_\u25a0>\nACROSS\n1. Man's\nnickname\n5. Vessel\n9. Job\n10. Grew white\n12. Girl's name\n13. Type of\ntanker\n14. Norse\ngoddess\nof healing\n(poss.)\n15. Pro\n16. A Burmese\nnative\n17. Like\n18. Chest\n19. Kitten's cry\n20. Surface\nagain\n23. Prosecute*\nJudicially\n24. Sea urchin\n26. Fever\n28. Oriental\ntree\nSI. Afraid\n(Scot.)\n32. Exclamation\n33. Radium\n(sym.)\n34. Fictional\nland\n35. Still\n36. Chair\n38. Mixes (arch.)\n40. Raise the\nspirits\n41. Around\n42. Ascended\n43. Pronoun\n44. Mimicked\nDOWN\nL Light\ncarriage\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Iti\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIn LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is use!\nfor tha thres L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, aposi\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words sr* til hint*\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nJZP   LWJPK   WN   LPPMBUD   AMWOQK\nXMP    UWJ     JZP     JZBUDK    JIXJ     XMP\nYWMP    PI APFFPU J \u2014 OX JK WW\nSaturday's Cryptoquotei WHEN ONCE THY FOOT ENTERS THE CHURCH, BE BARE. GOD IS MORE THERB\nTHAN THOU\u2014HERBERT.\nDistribute, by Kins Fe-tum tyndlut*\n1\n53\nVII\n\t\n E*''' I\nmipu ..uu--\u2122-'^ .^.j^ jwwipww' \"wpwwp\t\n\u25a0 \u2122wm*\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURN\nThat's the Want Ad Story   - . PHONE . 1844\nBIRiHS\nLEES - To Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nLees, 313 Second Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nSept. 15, a son.\nPOWELL - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRichard Powell, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, September 15,\na son.\nNEY - To Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nNey, 1323 Hendryx Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospita,l. September 16, a son\nMEAD - To Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mead of Salmo, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, September\n16, a daughter.\nhelp wanted\n\"automotive trade -\nAggressive and \u2022 reliable salesmen now calling on service stations, garages, truck fleets, and\nautomotive trade, to sell our terrific new line of \"ROUGH SERVICE\" Auto and Truck Bulbs\nand Sealed Beam Headlamps,\nAn excellent money - making\nsideline with consistent repeat\nbusiness. Highest commissions,\nchoice territories now open.\nWrite Lightmaster Corporation\nLtd., Hamilton, Ont.\n^ \u25a0\n\\\\\\\n\"^\"tut?\nK MX     I\nWd\n\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0' <(d(   sK\n&. ^\nCp__J__^|\n(S8\n$&>\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES.    BICYCIES\nURGENTLY WANTED\u2014STEADY\npinsetters, boys or girls , at\nLucky Strike Bowladrome,\nCranbrook. Approx. 40 hours\nper week, $35.00. Start at 1:30\np.m. each day. Sunday and Monday off. Apply Box 688, Cranbrook, or phone JU 6-351 or\n611 6-4828.\t\nDraftsmen are in-great\ndemand. Train at home in spare\ntime for these well-paid secure\njobs. Diploma awarded Free\nfolder. Primary School of Drafting, Dept G, Box 123. Station\n\"Q\", Toronto.\nWANTED - EXWRIENCED\nplaner man, capable of setting\nup planer and grading lumber\nSmall mill, good job for right\nman. Nelson Lumber Co. Ltd..\nFruitvale. B.C.\nSOLOIST REQUIRED FOR SUN-\nday morning service for Nelson\nChurch. Salary. Apply Box 8281\nNelson Daily News.\nCOUNTER SALESMAN WITH\nautomotive experience. Apply\nin person. Acme Automotive\nSupply t Ltd,\nHANDYMAN FOR WASHING\ncars, repairing tires, etc. Apply\nPeebles Motors. Nelson, B.C.\nHELP   WANTED - FEMALE\nCLERK STENOGRAPHER!\nGRADE. 1 OR 2\nB.  C.  CIVIL  SERVICE\nDEPARTMENT OF TRADE AND\nINDUSTRY. NELSON.\nCLERK STENOGRAPHER\nGrade 1: Salary: $144, rising to\n$180 per month. Typing speed 40\nwords per minute: shorthand\nspeed 80 words per minute.\nCLERK STENOGRAPHER,\nGrade 2: Salary, $180, rising to\n$218 per month. Typing speed 50\nwords per minute: shorthand\nspeed 100 words per minute.\nShould have at lease two years'\nstenographic experience. Interesting work with promotional\nopportunities. Generous vacation and sick leave; superannuation plan. Applicants must be\nBritish Subjects. For further information and application forms\napply to the Government Agent.\nNelson. Applications to be completed and returned not later\nthan September 26. 1956.\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. Just show North American Fashion Frocks to friends-\nNo canvassing, investment or\nexperience necessary. North\nAmerican Fashion Frocks. Lid.,\n2163 Parthenais St.. Dept. W-\n3882, Montreal. P.Q.\nCREATE GLAMOUROUS COS-\ntume Jewellery. Easy to make\nand sell. Best selling season now\nstarting. Rush 50c for beautiful\nJewelled Brooch Kit and wholesale coloured catalogue. L. G.\nMurgatroyd Co., Agihcourt, Ont.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1956  Oldsmobile  Hard\nTop Coupe\n1956  Chevrolet   Del   Ray\nCoupe\n1956 Ford Customline\n1956 Ford Fairlane\n1956 Meteor Hard Top\n1956 Dodge Station\nWagon\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Bel Air\nHard Top\n1954 Oldsmobile 98 Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet Coach\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1952  Chevrolet  Coach\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Plymouth Sedan\n195) Austin Sedan\n1951   Chevrolet Sedan\nCome  in  today  and  see our\nTop Sale Values at\nROCK BOTTOM PRICES\notors I _\nYour\nCHEVROLET   OLDSMOBILE\nDealer\n323 Vernon St Phone 35\n(Formerly  Nelson Transfer)\nFOR SALE OR TRADE. '47 MER-\ncury 2 ton flat deck Phone 91-R\nSalmo. BC\nOLD    NEWSPAPER    BUNDLES.\n10c  Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE - KITCHEN STOVE\nand oil heater. Phone 1441-X.\nFURNITURE, WASHER, TOOLS\nPhone 328-L-3.\nRENTALS\nMODERN 2-BEDROOM HOUSE\nwith garage, garden space. Suitable for workers in Nelson or\nCastlegar. Low rent. Apply J. M\nCunningham, Crescent Valley.\nB. C. Phone 4M.\nFOR RENT - STORE SPACE IN\nour modern building\u2014space 15x\n50 or 30x50, suitable for any type\nof store or office. Reasonable\nrent. Nelson Lumber Co. Ltd..\nFruitvale, B.C.\nON SILICA ST. QUIET HOME,\nlarge clean bed-sitting room and\nkitchen neatly furnished. Heat\nand hot water. $45 per month\nPhone  mornings, 335-X.\nFOR RENT - OFFICE SPACE\navailable in business section of\nKimberley. For particulars write\nto Box 59. Kimberley, B. C, or\ntelephone, LU-2-3385.\nAUSTRALIAN COUPLE, TWO\nchildren, want to rent two bedroom furn house or apt., from\nOctober. Write to D. Tait, 171\nBaker St., Nelson.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, fully furnished with frig\nday week or monthly rate Allen Hotel. 171 Baker St\nLARGE 1 ROOM APARTMENT,\nsuit couple, fully furnished with\nfridge, gas stove, automatic heat.\n171 Baker.\nFOR RENT - SMALL APART-\nment, heated, furnished. 916\nEdgewood, phone 1703.\nLARGE SELF - CONTAINED\nsuite, 2 bedrooms, electric range.\nPhone 1113-R or 1828,\n3 BEDROOM APT. CLOSE IN.\nApply Box 8596, Nelson Daily\nNews.\n3 ROOM HOUSE, FAIRVIEW\nkitchen range and oil heater\nPhone 1281-L after 5 p.m., $45.\n1953 OLDSMOBILE, GOOD CON-\ndition. Bids accepted at Traders\nFinance, Nelson.\n1951 AUSTIN A40 SEDAN, GOOD\ncondition.  Phone 629-Y.\n1948 CHEV. PANEL. GOOD CON-\ndition. $475. Phone 1362-L.\n1952 CHEV., GOOD CONDITION\nCan be seen at 406 Silica.\nOR SALE MISC-'LAN-OUS\nDEALERS IN, ALL TYPES Or\nuf-d equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and user)\nwire rope, pipe, and fittings\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 2511\nPrior SI.. Vancouver B C Ph\nPArifir 6357\nSTENOGRAPHER WANTED -\nMust be good typist Salary\nopen. Apply Wood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nWANTED - HOUSEKEEPER -\nlight duties. 1 boy school age.\nApply Box 4192, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nGIRL FOR HOTEL WORK -\nsteady position, monthly salary.\nWith paid holiday. Phone 385\nafter 6 p.m.\nEXPERIENCED WAITRTTSS\nwanted \u2014 $100.00 per month\nplus room and board. Apply K.\nStocker, Rock Creek Cafe.\nWANTED - TWO USHERETTES.\nApply Civic Theatre evenings.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWOMAN WILL~DO~HOURLY\nwork or baby-sitting. Ph. 217-R\nafter 3 p.m.\nFOR HANDYMAN AND ROUGH\ncarpenter, phone 256-R.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED - BEST ROUNTJ~CE-\ndar fence posts; also small cedar\npoles. 20 ft.. 5 Inch tops to 30 ft.,\n6 inch tops. Not class poles, in\ncar lots. Charles Cook, 507 Baker\nSt., Nelson, phone 1612.\nWANILD R( BUY - I'lMB-H\nand bush land in vicinity ol\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News\nURGENTLY REQUIRED SAW\nlogs all species top prices Ph\n1200   Kootenay Foresi Products\nCASH PAID FOR SCRAP MET-\nai large oi small amounts Box\n10811!, Nelson Dally News.\nAPPROXIMATELY 50 SOLID\noak school desks, good condition with adjustable top and\ndrawer under seat, $6.00 each.\nApply Columbia Trading, 902\nFront St.\nBUY DIRECT FROM THE MILL\nLumber, plywood, doors, building supplies Write for complete\ncatalogue. Vancouver Sawmills\nLimited, 1111 E 7th Ave., Vancouver 12. B.C\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM FOR\nrent, near Baker. Petty Apartments, phone 1184-Y.\nFOR RENT \u2014 FURN. 2 ROOM\nsuite on ground floor. Apply 140\nBaker or phone 491-L.\nFOR   RENT   -   FURN.   LIGHT-\nhousekeeping room. Ph. 1765-R.\nSUITE\n316.\nFOR    RENT.     PHONE\nCottage for rent at 3-\nMiie. Phone 1155-R-l.\n3  ROOM  COTTAGE,  BEALBY'S\nRoad. Phone 328-L-3.\nROOM FOR RENT. DOWNTOWN\nPhone 934-R.\nFOR RENT - 2 ROOM FURN\nished apt. Phone 337-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. Phone 1564-X.\n4  ROOM  SUITE  FOR  RENT \u2014\n68 Front St.\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE HOUSE-\nkeeping units. Phone 1684.\nFOR  RENT -   2   ROOMS-\u00a3ND\nbath. Apply 125 Silica St.\nFOR   RENT\u2014MOD.   2-RM.   APT\nPhone 583-R after 7.\nDRY PLANER ENDS FOR KIT-\nchen range, fireplace or furnace\n$1000 a cord Fir slabs and edging, long lengths. 2 targe cords\n$15.00  Phone 1757-R\nFOR SALE - SMALL FRIDGE,\ngood condition; chesterfield and\nchair; heater; small cook stove;\nand miscellaneous articles. Apply 907 Fifth St. mornings.\nMASON\" 4 RISCH UPRIGHT\ngrand piano. Very good condition. Suitable for stage or home.\nPhone 334-Y.\nNEW STEVENS 12 GAUGE\npump gun. $45 00. Also binoculars; coil water jacket heater\n$20.00. Phone 1949-R.\nOIL RANGE COMPLETE WITH\ndrum and stand, $100.00. Contact Mr. Dayton at 80.\nCOLEMAN GRAVITY FURNACE\n60,000 BTU with pipes, in A-l\ncondition. Phone 1340-R,\nICE CREAM \"CABINET, 3-HOLE.\nas new. sacrifice. Ph. 1420-R.\nFOR  SALE\u2014SET  OF  ORCHES-\n- tra drums   Box 406, Nelson, or\nPhone 1088-L.\nAPPROX 40.000 BM 2x4, 2x6.\n1x8, 1x6 lumber $30 per 1000 S\nKudra. phone 1757-R\nPEARS, BARTLETTS, SHIPPING\ncanning. 40 lbs. $1.25 Bring container. Eaton,' Longbeach.\nTHREE USED WINDOWS, 3 FT\n4 ln. by 2 ft. 11 In., 3 lights. Ph.\n283-Y.\n(Continued  in Next Column)\nROOM   FOR   RENT\u2014CLOSE  IN\nPhone 1005-L.\n2~Rl56lO;UIT_~F6R~RENT ~^\n620 Victoria, phone 450-Y.\n2 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nPhone 1685-Y-l.\nFOR RENT - 4-ROOM APT. AP\nply Bush's News.\nFOR RENT - 2-ROOM APT. AP-\nply Bush's News.\nFOR RENT - 3-ROOM APT. AP-\nply Bush's News.\n2   BEDROOM   FURN.   APT;  PH.\n423-Y.\nBUSINESS  OPPORfUNITIES\ntraii7property\"for sale-\non good corner lot 100 ft. by 50\nacross from bank and supermarket, store and restaurant\nwith 18 rooms above restaurant. Will sell business (cafe) as\nwell. Apply Chow John, Trail\nCafe.\nPOOR HEALTH, MUST SELL -\ngas station and store, a going\nconcern. Apply Box 281, Kimberley\nGAR-\ngood\nBUSINESS FOR SALE'\nage \u2014 service station      b v *. ..\nrevenue.  Apply Box 150, Rossland.\nBUSINESS FOR SALE -WELL\nequipped and stocked for sales,\nservice, repairs. Enquire Edey's\nGun, Lock and Cycle Shop.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED TO BUY - 3 BED-\nroom house In or close to Nelson Musi be fully modern. Apply Box 281. Kimberley.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,  ETC., FOR  SALE\n1\u2014A ^4-roomed house with full\nbasement, located on 2 level,\ndeveloped  lots.  Fairly   close\n\"J\"11 $3000\nWith.only $1000 Cash\nRequired!\n2\u2014A small house close in\u201e with\ncombination K. and L.R., 1\nlarge B.R. and first class\nbathroom. Full concrete basement. Located on 2 lots. \u2014\nFul^pnce $40()0\nWe could help finance.\n3\u2014Here is a 3-B.R. house close\nto schools, churches and\ndowntown area. Has good-\nsized L.R., 3 B.R.s and modernistic K. and bathroom \u2014\nall on 1 floor, Developed\nground. Full basement. You\nshould see this one. Gas range\nand floor oil heater included.\nNewly roofed and  sided.  \u2014\nPrice $6000\nBut $5500 Only for Cash!\nWe  could  helo  finance  this\none!\nHerb Peacock\nReal  Estate and  Insurance\nAgency\nBill   Kalyniuk. Salesman\nPHONE 68       532 WARD ST.\nOFFERS INVITED FOR THE\ndemolition and' removal of\ndwelling situated at 724 Nelson\nAve., Nelson, B.C. Apply N. S.\nRoss, above address, phi 750-L\nor 1454.\nFAIRVIEW CORNER LOCA-\ntion, comfortable home. 3 bedroom wired for range and TV\nnew garage, full basement, fur\nnace, $7700 Terms Ph 1842-L\n7 ROOM MODERN HOUSE FOR\nsale in Grand Forks with 2 large\nlots. Apply Box 9875, Nelson\nDaily News.\nREVENUE1 PROPERTY ON 4TH\nSt. at Gordon Road, 5 lots. Send\noffers to Box 4197 Daily News\n4 BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE\nSome   terms    206   Victoria   St\n\u2022Call1 between 6 and 7 evening\nWANTED\u20143 BEDROOM HOUSE\nln or near Balfour Phone 780\nNelson\n12 ACRES OF LAND. 5 CULTI-\nvated, reasonable Pete Rezans-\noff. Tarrys P.O., Thrums. B.C.\nLOTS FOR SALE - REASON-\nable. Water available. 2 miles\nfrom Nelson. Phone 476-L-4.\nFAIRVIEW \u2014 MODERN 3 BR\nhouse, full basement, furnace,\nh.w. floors, garage. Ph. 1731-R.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFOpr\"sALE~OR_TRADE~_ONE\nlarge team work horses. Enquire\nShorty's Repair Shop, 714 Baker\nSt., Nelson.\nJERSEY COW FOR SALE -\nfreshened July. C. A. Noakes.\nBalfour.\nGOOD, BIG HORSE FOR SALE,\nsuitable for logging or farming.\nApply L. M. Popoff, Brilliant.\nPORK FOR SALE - REASON-\nable, all or half. Halves must be\nordered. Phone 171.\nCOW FOR SALE-APPLY FRED\nPlanidin, Slocan Park.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND  MINB\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE  W  W1DDOWSON & CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St  Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND   BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS  AND  8URVEYORS\nG  W   BAERG. BC.\nLAND SURVEYOR\nBox 34. Fruitvale. and\n373 Baker St.. Nelson. B.C.\nBOYDC AFFLECK. ME1C\nBC Land Surveyor P Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St    Nelson   Phone 1238\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS TIMITED\nMachine    Shop    Acetylene    and\nelectric   welding,   motor   rewind\nIng   Phone 593       324 Vernon St\nTIMBER CRUISING\nFORTsT   RECONNAISSANCE\nCo, Box 666 Castlegar  ph  3266\nTimber listings wanted\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 or Phone 366-R\nBEAT THE CLIMBING COST\nof-living and \/eel really secure\nwith a Family Security Plan\nfrom Hal) Securities L t d.\nStrand Building, Trail,' BC\nPhone 2378 In Kimberley see\nMax Tenenbein\nfBuy  Ssll, Trade the Want Ad Way\nMACHINERY\n1 COMPLETE SAWMILL WITH\ndiesel unit $1600. Phone 3495,\nRobson.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SAFE - 15 FOOTTrun-\nabout with 25 h.p. Evenrude.\ncomplete. $450.00. Phone 559-X-l\nNrlium iaiht NrttiB\nCirculation Dept Phone 1844.\nSubscription Rates\nPrice pei single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday\nBy carrier   per week\ntn advance .   N .35\nBy Mail tn Canada outside Nelson\nOne  month                $ 1 25\nThree monthi         $ 3 50\nSix months       .     $ 6 50\nOne year $12.00\nBy   mail   to   United   Kingdom  oi\nthe United States\nOne month $ 1.75\nThree months      $ 5.00\nSix  months            $ 9 50\nOne year        $18.00\nWhere extra postage ts required\nabove rates plus postage\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBuilt   for   Performance   by\nMARATHON\nMay be used as a round log gang,\nor as a combination unit (or\nrutting round logs and cants\nMarathon has been proven in the\nfield\u2014When you buy Marathon\nyou are buying the best Designed for small sawmill operation\nor large, stationary sawmill operations.\nNOW AVAILABLE\nThe Large Model 300. 28 x 28.\nThe   complete   particulars   on\nthese gang saws can be\nobtained at\nNelson\nAchinery\nCompany Ltd.\nCALL or PHONE\nDAYS-18      EVENINGS-1914\n\"If It's Machinery  You Need.\nConsult Us First\"\n214 Hall St.       Nelson, BC.\n'Continued In Next Column)\n34a i\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1756\u20149\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0By Frances Drake-\nLook In the section In which'\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according to the stars.\nFor Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Stand firmly for your principles. Don't lose faith if faced\nwith setbacks, but keep going\nforward with ambitious hope.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Give careful thought to your\nwork but do not worry to the extent of jeopardizing nerves, mind,\nhealth. Try to vary the monotony\nof routine. At leisure time try\nsomething different; it eases ten1-\nsion.\n\u2022 MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014Don't make rash decisions today. Deliberate carefully; weigh\nthe' pros and cons of all matters.\nDeal thoughtfully with superiors,\nelderly people.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nPerceive, observe. Read up on\nliterature, art, music; this may\nbring about a change in hobby,\neven work. Take time to think\nthings out if they are important.\nJULY 22 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014When taking on a new task,\nconsider it carefully.1 If at a new\nplace, study the advantages of the\nlocale, the people. In conversation,\ndon't stay on one subject too long.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Try to improve your\npersonality now. Don't let jealousy dominate your thoughts. Be\nyour fcheerful self; don't declaim\ntoo forcefully. Use talents to best\nadvantage.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Today the individualist is newly favored, IF he remains reasonable. Use your imagination to achieve better returns.\nOCTOBER 24 to NQVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Line up some varied  activities.   Spend  some   time\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n(Continued)\nBefore you buy\nTRY A\nMcCULLOCH\nNEW\nmodel 33-B\n10 mo\/or improvements\nNo other saw can beat a McCulloch\nModel 33B for high speed woodcutting, light-weight and\nprofessional-quality features. Has\nautomatic clutch, built-in chain\noiler, rewind starter, and floarless\ndiaphragm carbureter for full-\npower starting in any position\nwithout adjustment. Don't be\nfooled; before you buy, test the\ncutting speed and easy handling\nof a McCulloch\nModel 33B\nAvailable with\n12,16 or 20-inch\nblades.\nSee\nSee  H.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz\nC.  Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.   LTD.\n614 Railway St Nelson. BC\nPHONE 1402\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nCONCRETELTD.\nPHONE 871\nof the day on a hobby. If you do\nmental work regularly, get some\nphysical exercise in free hours,\nand vice versa.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 If a person has\na difficult time getting acquainted with a job, help out. It is always worthwhile Jo be co-operative.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Turn a deaf ear\nto those who would disrupt law\nand order. Help with ideas to improve home, the office, factory,\nfield, community, anywhere you\ncan\u2014and YOU can.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Speak up for what\nis right; don't be afraid of what\npeople are going to say. If you\nhave a big problem, ask advice\nof experts\u2014not casual acquaintances.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Aj>leasant, gainful day\neither for finishing incompleted\nmatters or'for planning new projects. Make time for healthy recreation for the sake of health.\nYOU BORN TODAY are endowed with versatility, artistry,\nwillingness to work hard, steadiness of intent, keenness and a fine\nmemory. You are sometimes an\nextremist, especially about foods,\nthings you like. Always sincere\nabout causes you back, you are,\nhowever, often adamant about\nhaving your own way; Thoroughness can bring you top rewards\nbut do not permit it to make you\npicayune or fussy about details.\nInflation Held\nSays Banker\nHALIFAX   (CP)   -  \"Inflation,\nat the present time, seems to b\u00ab\nsomewhat arrested,\"  A,  C.  Ash* '\nforth, president  of the Toronto-\nDominion Bank said here.\nHe told a press conference that\nwhile Canada's high rate of pros-\nj perity seems .to have levelled oftf,\nit   would   likely   continue   at  Its\npresent level \"at least until 1057.**\nMr.   Ashforth,   along   with   officers and directors of tha bank,\nis   touring   cities   in   the   bank'i\nI eastern division, Beginning Sept\n, 23 another party of directors will\n\u25a0 tour Western Canada.\nI Thev left Sunday for Toronto.\nj Mrs. Ashforth said that whJl\u00ab\nI inflationary practises have been\nj cut by banks, no resident has been\n| placed on persons borrowing\nsmall amounts of money. But\n: long-term   loans   and   those   fof\n\u25a0 large sums of money have been\ndiscouraged to some extent.\nGrey Skies Cancel\nHistoric Flypast\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Grey\nleaden skies over London Saturday caused the air ministry to\ncancel the traditional Battle of\nBritain flypast over the city.\nToday, the whole nation wai\ncommemorating the 1940 battla\nand remembering thq exploits of\nthe fighter pilots who, in their\nHurricanes and Spitfires, blasted\nGerman invaders from the skies.\nBirthdate of: Trajan, Roman\nemperor; Samuel Johnson, writer,\nlexicographer.\nKing Feature!\nfclllMty\nWORSE\n0itW\\\nd\n\u00absas\n.>\nThis ultra-mo^-m styled F-M Furnace Is\ndesigned to e the highest heating\nefficiency. It rs more than just ordinary automatic neat... it also conditions\nthe atr, givinjj the advantages of moist\noutdoor air. The F-M Furnace is finished\nin attractive green and designed as a\ncompact unit that uses only a small floor\narea. It is available in 5 sizes. Let us give\nyou the complete story of the F-M Oil\nFired Warm Air Furnace.\nThese furnaces can be quickly and easily converted for natural gas as soon as natural gas is\navailable.\nBennetts Ltd.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St.        Nelson, B. C.        Phons 593\nEXECUTORS   AND  TRUSTEES   FOR   OVER   HALF   A   CENTURY |\nwith\nplans for your\nWILL\nTHE\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\nAsk for our\nbooklet \"Practical\nHints on Planning\nYour Will\".\nUBS GOVERNMENT, VICTORIA   \u2022   \u00ab2\u00ab PENDER ST. W, VANCOUVER\nR. W. HUPPS, MANAGER GEORGE O. VALE, MANAGER\nSOCIAL CREDIT CETS THINGS DONE\nlulled by The B.C Social Credit Campaign Committee\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1956\nWe'll wcger that only 25%\nof the men who use electric shavers\ndon't use any preparation for their shave.\nand again we'll wager\nif these same men use\nSCHICK\nElectric Pre*Shave\nLotion\n$1.00\nthey will jump with joy\nat the difference it makes.\nC-\u00bb*vtv\u00bb_\\\n4J-_-4,C~*4.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nDoubts Lack Of Mortgage Money\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The president ot the National House Builders' Association says legitimate\nCanadian builders will not suffer\nfrom a lack of motgage money in\nthe future.\nHarry Long of Toronto pre- j\ndieted before the association's Ot-1\ntawa chapter that the future flow j\nof mortgage money \"will be ade-i\nSOCIAL\nCREDIT\nMi0 vote\nHi   l.\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nquate for the number of houses\nthe federal government thinks\nshould be built annually.\"\n\"I don't think any honest, fair-\nminded, legitimate builder is going to suffer from a lack of mortgage runds,\" he said.\nPrincess Margaret\nTo By-Pass Egypt\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Princess\nMargaret will by-pass Egypt In\nflying to Mombasa, Kenya, next\nweek for her royal tour of east\nAfrica, Buckingham Palace di>-\nclosed.\nSIX CARS IN MASS OF VEHICLES shown in this picture\nwere involved in a pileup after a truck went out of control on the\nbrow of a steep hill on Josephine Street, two blocks above Baker\nStreet, Robert C, Quln of Nelson steered the truck backwards\ndown the hill as best as he could when It wemt out of control.\nWith two alarmed children to contend with In the cab and the\nknowledge that it would probably roll over and perhaps seriously\ninjure them because It gained momentum so quickly, he also had\nto try to guide the truck away from oncoming vehicles and people\ncrossing the Intersection at Baker Street, There were BOO pounds\nof sand tn the truck box. Enroute to his home after shopping, Mr.\nQuln told city police he was un_tble to shift from second to low\ngear and that the brakes failed when he attempted to stop the\ntruck. Nearlng the Intersection, a car driven by H. W. Golberg of\nNelson came into his view and to avert a serious collision and also\nto avoid smashing into pedestrians, Mr. Quin said he swung the\ntruck Into the parked vehicles that can be seen at left. The Goldberg car, extreme right, was sideswlped, then the truck rammed\ninto a parked1 truck (beside boy facing camera), owned by D, J,\nNorcross and In the chain reaction, cars owned by J, N. Bachynskl,\nMrs. A. H. Allan and F. J,,Waters were damaged. Damages were\nestimated at $2000. It was explained that the brakes failed when\nthe master cylinder gave out. The truck was taken for mechanical\ncheckup by police, a routine procedure, when mechanical failure\nIs suspected In an accident, and later released. Insurance was carried by Mr. Quin. \u2014Dally News photo.\nKimberley Man,\nJ. E. McKay, Dies\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Hev. Ralph\nKirchen officiated at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church here\nWednesday at the funeral for John\nEdward McKay, who died at his\nLois Creek home Monday after a\nlong illness.\nHe was born 48 years ago at\nMoyie and, grew up there and at\nKimberley where the family, settled in 1921. He operated the City\nDairy with his father until 1028\nwhen he began Cominco employment which he continued until his\nhealth failed. He was an energetic\nworker in the Presbyterian\nChurch, and was particularly interested in construction of the\nchurch camp at Wasa. In lieu of\nflowers, donations to the camp\nwere asked of friends.\nSurviving by his wife, Bee\nMaurine, and two sons, Burton and\nWarner at their home, two brothers, Eugene in Marysville and\nCorey in Vancouver, and three\nsisters, Mrs. F, W. Bidder in\nMarysville, Mrs. Rr B. Waldie in\nKimberley and Mrs. D. J. Downey\nin Cranbrook.\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty   Culture\nand Cold  Waves\nMedical  Arts. Bldg.\n'hono   1922 Ste.   211\nHelen McCallum. Prop.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical   Arti  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nIssued by The B.C Social Credit\nCampaign Committee\nt$@l HA\u00ab6H\n|T*S        TRU-ART\n\u00a7 <2, ___f     Beauty Salon\n\\       ^*              Phone  327\n~     *r'*           676 Baker 8treet\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditon\n676 Baker St                    Phone 235\nTODAY'S 5 STAR SPECIAL\nONE ONLY\n1950 Austin A40 Pickup\nMotor A-l shape. Body in-good shape.\nGood rubber. Our 5-Star price only ...\n$295\nCASH \u2022 TERMS - TRADES\nWiginton Motors Ltd.\nPHONE 122 NELSON, B.C.\nNEW  BUICKS -  PONTIACS \u2014 G.M.C.l and\nVAUXHALLS for Immediate Delivery\nOdds...\na*d Ends\n...byM.D. B.\nHello, I think I saw just everyone at the fair, but hello anyway. And speaking of the fair,\nany who think at wasn't a good'!\none should get themselves elect-;\ned to the next Exhibition com-!\nmittee. The exhibits which really!\nare the fair, were of the usual!\nhigh standard. The floor show, j\nwhich is incidental, seemed a\nlittle accidental in some parts,\nbut two of the acts were really\nttfpnotch, I figured. The kids\nfrom about ten to my age found\nthe midway highly disappointing.\nIt's too bad when the city seems\nto allow this sort of thing in only\nat fair time that it couldn't have\nbeen a good one.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nSaw two Chinese gentlemen,\nbelonging to a race Ot inveterate\ngardeners, discussing the merits\nof the vegetables on display.\n\u2022 \u2022    a\nAt the Thursday afternoon\nshow was surprised to see Nelson\noldtimer Rube McCandlish assisting the musicians on the\ndrums. Better, be careful, Rube,\nI understand that sort of thing\ngets into your blood. Before you\nknow it you'll be hitting the road\nwith a troupe of those gypsies.\nBut, say, didn't he play a mean\nset of drums, you'd have thought\nhe was really on? oi the boys.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nWhat always amuses me about\nthese wandering musicians is the\nnonchalant way they treat national atthems. O, Canada's maple\nleaf must have curled a little at\nMrs. Patterson Of\nCranbrook Dies\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Lifelong resident here, was Marjorie Mae\nPeterson, wife of James Peterson, died suddenly at St. Eugene\nHospital Wednesday.\nShe was the younger daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Top Pattinson,\nand was born in Cranbrook in\n1925. She grew up here, attended\nCranbrook schools, and her marriage took place here in January\n1948. She belonged to the Auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railway Firemen and Enginemen.\nSurviving her are her husband,\na young son, James William, two\nyoung daughters, Colleen Ann\nand Maureen Mae at their home,\nher parents, who now live in\nKimberley, and one sister, Mrs.\nLloyd McLellan also in Kimberley.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line  40e line black face type; larger type ratet en\nrequest Minimum two llnsa, 10% discount for prompt payment\nDON   ELDER  STUDIO\n405 Hall St Phone 1205\nOil Burner Service. Phone 385,\nAll  makes serviced.\nRotary Luncheon Monday 12:15\npm. Hume- Hotel\nWanted to buy: Apartment size\ni piano. Ph'one 1619-L.\nLIBERAL CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS ARE LOCATED AT\n605 BAKER. PHONE 1895.\nFor Custom Made Drapery-\nFit any style of window\u2014\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nthe edges and turned a little\nbrighter shade red. I was reminded of a staid old lady who suddenly starts to trip the can-can.\n...\nI had the good fortunef?) of\nhaving someone behind me explain the MC's jokes.\nSome of the brewers and soft\ndrink firms were well advertised.\nOne   exhibitor's   choice   blooms\nwere  displayed   in   several \t\nBeer bottles.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nOne of the most popular industrial booths' had benches\nwhere you could not cmly rest\nyour feet, but watch delightful\nmovies as well. Now, I know you\nwere all at the fair, so it's not\nmuch \"use my telling you anything more about it. By the way,\nI enjoyed my holidays and I'm\nglad to be back, honest,\nTHE CCF CLUBROOMS OPEN\nFROM 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. AT 425\nBAKER ST., PHONE 53.\nYou always pay less for knitting yarns when you buy them at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER Sf.\nI TONIGHT, 8 P.M., SOUTH SLOCAN   \u2014    BOYD    C.   AFFLECK,\nCCF.\nLost \u2014 Man's shoe, size 13,\nbetween Innis and Observatory\nStreet, on Stanley or Kootenay\nStreet. Reward. Phone 793-Y.\nEAGLES\nAll Eagles are requested to attend meeting Monday, Sept. 17,\nto meet Provincial President. Social following with refreshments.\nLadies' Auxiliary Invited.\nEnterprise oil range, tw0 years\nold, complete with electric blower $99.50. Studio Lounge, Al, $39.50\nWE  PAY CASH  FOR USED\nFURNITURE  AND  ANTIQUES\nBIRCH'8 FURNITURE\n307  BAKER ST. \u2014 PH. 47\nSouth Slocan residents \u2014 hear\nHon. W. D. Black tonight at W.I.\nHall.\nLarge Novelty Bath Towels Special, size 20x40, deep pile, each 95c\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nPlate and Sheet Glass Mirrors for\ncabinets, walls and doors.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\n.No more seasonal heating bills! Now you can\nspread your payments over a ten-month period at no\nextra cost! When you use the new Standard Furnace\nOil Budget Plan, we estimate your total annual\nFurnace Oil needs, and divide the cost into ten even\npayments. There is no interest or carrying charge!\nYou get the most heat for your money because\nStandard Furnace Oil is made from selected stocks\nand delivered to you clean. You get safe, clean heat\nfrom every drop you buy.\nFor Information on any Standard Oil product, call\nBUD MAWER\n95 Government Rd.' Telephone IT53\n\"Jhe-lfclemon does it!\"\nQMrt\nr$:   . i|\nilK-lfriV-'i-^r.'\n_________!______________,\nWANTED: PIANIST FOR\nATTREE DANCE STUDIO. AUDITION     LEGION     HALL,    SAT.,\nSEPT. 22, HOURS: 10-12, 1:30-2:30.\nTop Wool Brands for Indian\nSweaters, your choice of Mary\nMaxim or Polar yarn.\nAll your knitting needs at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nCAMPBELL \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Miss Elizabeth Campbell will be held at Thompson\nFuneral Home Tuesday at 10:30\na.m. Rev. H. R. Whitmore will officiate and interment will take\nplace in the Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nClassified  Ads Get Results\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Boke Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome Made  Bread.\nELLISON MILLING\na ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPHONE 238\nOUTSTANDING  AT\nANY EVENT\nNew Fall\nSLACKS\nOur new fall slacks are\nreally outstanding.\n\u2022 FUNNELS\n\u2022 TWEEDS\n\u2022 WORSTEDS\n\u2022 TWISTS\n$14.95 to $25.00\nPMORY'C\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nLATE START\nDaniel Defoe, son of a butcher,\nwas 58 years old when he wrot\u00ab\nthe famous story \"Robinson Crusoe\".\nPRESCRIPTION\nPOINTERS\nIfi woll to raimfflbtr... \u00ab\u00abr\nqualified priarma.liH us* only\nfroth, full ttrtngth nattrtoh.\nt Do.bto-efifltlc guaranttts a*\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nNELSON-CRESTON\nNeeds a Government Member\nBLACK\nBLACK, Wesley D.\nSocial Credit\nSUPPORT THE GOVERNMENT\nTHAT  GETS  THINGS   DONE!\nIssued by the B.C. Social Credit Campaign Committee\nBoys' flannelette Jack Shirts, serviceable  for  play.  Zipper  front,\nelastic waist, sizes, 2, 4, 6. Special.\n89c each.\nEBERLE'S ON  BAKER 8T,\nCOLLINS\nLIME-LEMON\nThe modem, easy way to make\na masterful Gin Collins!\nDelicious lime-loraon is already\nmixed with the G&W Gin.\nYou just add sparkling water ...\nsweeten . . . and you, sir, are the\nowner of a perfect Gin Collins.\nABk for the new G&W\nLime-Lemon Collins!\na product of G&W\nQ00DERHAM - WORTS LIMITED\nCanada's oldest distillery\n\u00ab*\u2022\u00bb.\n7 piece golden oak dining suite\n$49.50.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES\nFOR   USED   FURNITURE.\nHOME   FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE,  PH. 1560.\nAs I am leaving for England\nSept 22nd, kindly address all mail\nto me at House of Commons, Ottawa, after Sept. 18. Herbert W.\nHerridge, Member of Kootenay\nWest.\nBRITISH ISRAEL UNITED\nFIELD 8ERVICE CHAMBER OF\nCOMMERCE ROOMS SEPT. 18,\n8 P.M., NEL80N. SPEAKER: MR.\nJ. O. 8PROULE. SUBJECT;\nWORLD NEWS\u2014A RIDDLE.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED        *\"\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nThis advertisement Is not published oi displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government oi British Columbia\nRADIATORS\nCLEANEO ,\u00abnd REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 Front 8L Phone 63\nTHANK YOU\nPatrons, Exhibitors and\nAll Those Who\nAssisted\nYour Efforts Were Responsible for Making the\n1956 WEST KOOTENAY\nAgricultural and Industrial\nEXHIBITION\nA GREAT SUCCESS.\nWest Kootenay Agricultural and\nIndustrial Exhibition Association\nNELSON, 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_1956_09_17","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\/1.0430179","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":"1956-09-17 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":"1956-09-17 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":""}]}