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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Nelson's  Record\n2259\nTraffic Fatality-Free Days\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Widely scattered\nshowers occasionally showers of\nmixed rain and snow at higher\nlevels. Little change in temperature. Winds light. Low and high\nat Cranbrook and Crescent Valley\n35 and 40.\nsmi\nVol. 56\nNELSON, B. C., CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAYCORNING, NOVEMBER 12, 1958\nNot More Than le Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 171\nSCORES OF CITIZENS joined Canadian Legion\nmembers in paying tribute to war dead at Nelson Cenotaph yesterday. Part of crowd can be seen in foreground\nas Legion and Ladies' Auxiliary members and representatives of other armed services and Nelson organiza\ntions join in the solemn ceremony. Eight men drawn\nup on boulevard with hands resting on rifles, fired three\nvolleys in new feature of the service.\n\u2014Daily News photo by Ian Brown.\nTCA Denies\nService\n..inefficient\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nOTTAWA (CP)-A Trans-Canada\nAir Lines official Tuesday denied\na charge of inefficiency lodged\nagainst the publicly-owned system\nby the head of Canadian Pacific\nAirlines, which is seeking to cut in\non TCA's transcontinental business.\nJohn T. Dyment, TCA's -chief\nengineer, took issue with evidence\ngiven before the air transport\nboard by CPA president Grant McConachie to the effect that TCA's\ndomestic operation is \"very inefficient.\"' .-,.--;*\"\u25a0\u25a0'   ,-f\nThe board is hearing an application by Canadian Pacific for a,\ntranscontinental franchise that\nwould crack TCA's long-standing\nmonopoly on this lucrative route.\nScholarship\nScope Broadened\nMONTREAL \u2014.Two scholarships, awarded anually by the Canadian Pacific Railway Company to\nemployees under 21 or to minor\nsons and daughters of employees,\ncan now be used to take a bache-l\nlor of science on agriculture\ncourse, it was anonunced by R. A.\nEmerson, vice-president.\nThe course is of four year's duration and is giffin in the faculty of\nagriculture section at MacDonald\nJordan to Accuse\nSyria of Aggression\nHoliday Declared to Celebrate King\nHussein's 'Escape' in Plane Incident\nBy JOSEPH E. DYNAN\nAMMAN (API\u2014Premier Samir Rifai told a cheering\nemergency session of Parliament Tuesday night that Jordan\nwill accuse Syria of an act of aggression for intercepting\nKing Husseins vacation-bound plane. (See also story\npage 10. '\nthen ,unaftimo;usIy\n\u201e.anplause ..>. greeted\nParliament\nThunderous,     .        \t\nVts\" announcement, that the government would bring the case before the United Nations Security\nCouncil and ask Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold to take\nquick measures for a debate,\nadopted a resolution giving the\nany action necessary in the new\ngovernment a free hand to take\ncrisis.\nThe premier spoke as the country went on a spree ot celebration.\nA national holiday was declared to celebrate the young\nking's eseape from what he\ncharged was an attempt to kidnap\nor kill him in a flight over Syria\nMonday.\nEMERGES AS HERO\nHussein,    who   celebrates   his\nCollege.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nEugene Can Now Resume\nHis 30-Year Slumber\nSABINA, Ohio (AP) - They\nbrushed old Eugene's clothes\noff dusted him up a bit and\nput him back On his little couch\nTuesday ahd said tsk, tsk, tsk,\nwhat a thing to do to a corpse\nEspecially Eugene. When a\ncorpse has lain nice and peaceful for nearly 30 years in his\npleasant little brick house and\nalways looked so\u2014eerie in a way,\nbut sort of beautiful\u2014you figure\nhe's earned a little more respect.\nBut there are always pranksters around and in Tuesday's\nearly morning darkness they\nbroke into old Eugene's place\nand carted him 45 miles and\ndumped him on a bench on the\nOhio State University campus\nIn Columbus. -\nElige Kellem, an OSU employee, found him.\nWell, there wasn't much Kellem could do but call police. So\nhe did, and it wasn't too long\nbefore one of them remembered\nabout Eugene.\nAnd by 8:30 a.m. Eugene was\nback home, much to the relief\nof Bart Littleton, ..operator of\nthe Littleton Funeral Home in\nthis southeastern Ohio community of some 1,700 people.\nEugene's home is behind the\nLittleton place.\nSomebody \u2014 nobody remembers who \u2014 first saw Eugene\nJune 5, 1929, walking through\nSabina. The second time they\nsaw the middle-aged Negro, he\nwas leaning against a fence\npost, very relaxed and sort of\nthoughtful \u2022 looking. He may\nhave been relaxed, but he\nwasn't thinking. He was dead,\napparently of a heart attack.\nThe 1929 owner of the funeral\nhome, Olin R: Moon, now dead\nhimself, embalmed the stranger\nand put him in the back building. He thought someone might\ncome along and identify him.\nThe body was out there quite\na spell, but no one ever came.\nIn time it became apparent\nthat an extraordinary embalming job had been done.\n\"We don't know why he\nnever buried him,\" Littleton\nsaid. \"The thing just kept going as it was.\"\nSomehow along the way, the\ncorpse got named \"Eugene.\"\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllll\n24th hi>thdaEjR:iB.y7 emerged ffl\na hero: w afcfyihjj, the Synah\nMiG fighters and making a successful getaway.\nSome officials suggested President Nasser's United Arab Republic\u2014of which Syria is a brov-\nmce\u2014 attempted to kidnap the\npro-Western king and force him\nto abdicate in favor of a friendly\nregime.\nThere were clear indications\nthat if this was the plot\u2014and the\nU.A.R. denies any plot at ail-\nthat it backfired. The young monarch gained popular support for\nhis determined stand of independence.\nWhile Jordanians celebrated in\na carnival spirit mixed with bitter demonstrations against Syria,\ntwo new British jet fighters flew\ninto Amman.\nFIRST OF DOZEN\nThey are the first of 12 Hawker\nHunters being given Jordan under a U.S.-British military aid\nprogram.\nAn official said the other 10 are\nto be delivered on Hussein's birthday.\nDiplomatic sources said there\nwas strong feeling among ths\nranks and army officers for taking some sort of action against\nSyria.\nIt was learned reliably that\nseveral Bedouin regiments Moil-'\nday night preDared to move to\nthe Syrian frontier and were\ncalled back only throueh the personal intervention of Hussein.\nVIOLATED RESOLUTION\nRifai was particularly bitter in\nhis address to Parliament because Cairo Radio resumed its\npropaganda warfare. He said that\nviolates the UN Arab resolution.\nHe referred to the Cairo Radio\nbroadcast that described Monday's incident as a \"figment of\nHussein's imagination.\"\nSoviet broadcasts teamed with\nthe U.A.R. to deride King Hussein's version of the incident.\nThe Russians said Hussein is\nhated by his. own people and invented the story of the attack to\nwhip up sympathy.\nVATICAN CITY (AP) - Pooe\nJohn XXIII probably will take\nformal possession of the Basilica\nof St. John Lateran, his see as\nbishop of Rortie, Sunday, Nov. 23.\nNine Planes\nIn Air Search\nKAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) - A radar-equipped Neptune aircraft and\na twin-rotor helicopter have joined the steadily growing search for\na private aircraft with two men\naboard, missing in the B.C. interior since last Tuesday.\nThey bring to nine the concentra*\ntion of RCAF planes taking part in\nthe hunt for the twin-engined\nApache aircraft.\nAboard the plane when It disappeared between Calgary and Kam-S\nloops on a flight to Vancouver weraf\npilot Fred Royce, 36, and C. J. Jan.\nick, 42, both of Cadillac, Mich.    5\n.fiCAF officials said Tuesday it\nhad-been learned that the missing\nT>laitt!-had a \"radar deflector, in Its.\nemergency kit, and the Neptune\naircraft was ordered into the\nsearch by Wing Cmdr. J. W. Borden, searchmaster.\nSummit\nKjleet\nUrged\nJifOSCOW (CP) - A new.call for\na summit conference was sounded\nTuesday night by the Soviet Union\nand Poland.\nThey said its aim would be to\nsolve problems of disarmament\nand strengthen world security.\nA joint communique was issued\nhere and in Warsaw after the wind-\nup of Moscow talks between Premier Khrushchev and Polish communist chief Wladyslaw Gomulka.\ni It said: \"The delegation of the\npolish Peoples' Republic decidedly\nsupports the Soviet proposal for a\nsummit conference to examine and\nsolve the most pressing problems\nof disarmament and to decide on\nsteps to be taken to strengthen the\nsecurity if Europe and the rest of\nthe world.\"\nThe communique also said it is\nnecessary to strengthen the Warsaw pact, the East European alliance set up as a counter-balance tp\nNATO,' Such action is necessary,\nthe statement said, because of \"delaying-and dodging tactics pursued\nin the first place by the U.S. government.\"\nUnemployment\n'No. I Problem'\nTftRONTO (CP) - Liberal Leader Pearson said Tuesday the \"num-\nI ber1 one problem\" -facing Canada\nthis.winter is unemployment.\nHe told the Toronto Liberal Business Men's Club the federal government's winter work program\nhas been made too late to be of\nmaximum effect this winter.\n\u25a0\/The $1,000,000,000 nubile works\nprogram has made little or no impact on employment.\"\njvT)ie government's attack on jobs\nHas been \"un-Coordinated, unplanned\u2014actions whioh have resulted\nJo large expenditures of money\npwithout corresponding results in\nterms of employment,\" Mr. Pearson said. \u25a0 ;\nThe Liberal leader said trade is\nanother problem requiring urgent\nconsideration by the government.\nHe saW -(felines'in exports* d*\ning.iihe last two months are wor-\nrying'.and \"the drop of even'$25,-\nono .000 fon nine months ^m^itt.\ncause for \"Satisfaction when the\ntrade figures for a country like\nCanada must continue to go op\nif we are to maintain prosperity\nI at all.\"\nUN Deadlocks on Free\nKorean Elections\nBy LLOYD MCDONALD\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP>-\nWestern pressure prevailed again\nin the United Nations Tuesday as\nthe General Assembly's political\ncommittee called for free elections\nin divided Korea. But the voting\nvictory leaves the same stalemate\nthat nas prevailed since hostilities\nended more than five years ago.\nThe vote in the committee \u2014\n. VANCOUVER ,*iCP\\ - PoUce\nChief George Archer says his department is satisfied that Merrell\nO'Donnell, a former DEW Line\nemployee, died by his own hand\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0l1lllMI.illllll.il Ill lll<\nReally Helpful\nSEATTLE (AP) - Australia's Ambassador Harold Beale\nsays he knew all along Ame-\ncans are helpful people, \"but\nIhadn't realized how helpful\nuntil I came to Seattle.\"\nArriving here to head his\ncountry's delegation at the Colombo Plan conference, he was\nmet at the airport by a limousine sent by Washington's Governor Albert D. Rosellini and a\nuniformed state patrolman to\nride escort on his motorcycle.\nAs the car drove into Seattle\nwith the patrolman following at\na discreet distance, Beale was\nstartled to see another car\ndraw alongside and the driver\ngesture urgently.\nBeale rolled down the win-\"\ndow.\n\"Pssst,\" said the man, \"I\nthought you'd like to know.\nThere's a state cop following\nyou.\"\nIllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllll\nwhich acts mainly as a steering\nbody in passing political agenda\nitems up to the UN assembly itself\n\u2014had been predicted long, before\nthe six-day debate ended Tuesday.\nPredicted too was the non-compliance of North Korea and Communist China in allowing Korea-wide\nelections to take place. -\nA neutralist attempt to bypass\nthe East-West disagreement and\nsubstitute Asian observation teams\nrather than those of the world organization in supervising any Korean elections did not gain enough\nsupport to go before the UN committee in voting form.\nPEIPING STAND\nCommunist China once again\nused the issue as a pressure move\nfor its own admission to the UN\nand gave notice from Peiping even\nbefore the vote that no elections\ncould be held in the presence of\n\"foreign forces.\"\nThe Peiping cause was backed\nby the UN member countries from\nthe Communist world\u2014Russia and\nits eight East European satellites\nThe 10th Communist power, Yugo>\nslavia, abstained on Tuesday's\nvote.\nThe count was 52 in favor, the\nnine Moscow-bloc members opposed, and 18 abstentions.\nLater two members of the 81-\ncountry committee, Jordan and\nParaguay, asked that they be put\non record as voting for the majority, although they were absent in\nthe roll-call. This made the final\nofficial figure 54-9-18.\nCanada was a supporter of the\nWestern-backed resolution and voted for it. although delegate John\nHolmes earlier in the debate had\nsuggested a \"flexible\" approach to\nthe problem should there be any\nhope of agreement along the lines\nproposed by the neutralists.\nThis was not forthcoming.\nDec. t Deadline Set\nFor Railway Strike\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii\nSafe Too Tough\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A thief\nfound a beer parlor safe here\ntoo tough to crack \u2014 and left\na note saying so.\nThe yegg, who signed himself\nThe Unknown, managed to enter the beer parlor of the Union Hotel, stole an undetermined amount from two cigaret-\nvending machines, but failed to\ncrack the sate,\n\"Thanks very much, your\nsafe is tough, though,\" wrote\nthe thief.\n\u25a0\u25a0Ill11111.llllllll.llltlllllllllllllllllll.il\nFire Death Toll\nMounts to U\nMONTREAL (CP) - The number of persons known to have died\nin a weekend apartment fire in\nmid-town Montreal rose to 13 on\nTuesday as firemen continued the\nsearch for bodies in the rubble.\nIn all, at least 18 persons are\nfeared to have died in the blaze\nwhich destroyed the Oldfield Apartments. Thus far 13 bodies nave\nbeen found and four of them identified.\nWith the memory of the tragedy\nstill fresh, the five-man civic executive committee said Tuesday\nit has decided to revive a subcommittee set up 10 years ago to make\nsuggestions for a city are protection code.\nThe subcommittee is to meet on\nThursday to draft amendments to\nbuilding regulations and fire prevention rules.\n\u25a0Jus-\nGets 3 Weeks to\nTake Action\nAgainst Bonner\nVANCOUVER''tt;PV;i. Mjfi\nGeorge lawyer John Meredith Taylor three weeks to proceed with his\naction against Attorney-General\nBonner and 25 others including 19\nbenchers of the B.C. Law Society.\nThe jurist ruled in Supreme\nCourt Monday that unless Taylor\ndelivers a statement of claim within the time limit he will dismiss\nthe case.\nIn a writ issued several months\nago Taylor claimed unstated damages for alleged conspiracy to in\njure by preventing him from prac\nUsing, law.\nJohn L. Farris, appearing for\nthe defendants, applied to have the\naction dismissed for lack of prosecution.\nCONDITION IMPROVES\nOTTAWA (CP)-Hospital officials said Monday,that the condition of Earl Alexander of Tunis,\nadmitted to hospital here Oct. 27\nafter suffering a heart attack,\ncontinues to be satisfactory.\nHowever, the 66-year-old former\ngovernor-general of Canada still\nis not receiving visitors.\nno alternative if wages and working conditions of railway employees were to be kept in 'sortie decent relationship to those et\nworkers in other industries.\nWhile wage scales for non-operating workers range widely,\naverage hourly earnings amount\nto about $1.62.\n75 Unions fo Strike\nli Pay Demands Not Met\nBy ROBERT BICE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Fifteen railway unions representing\n130,000 non-operating workers Tuesday served strike notice\non Canada's major railways, threatening to Ue' up both\ntranscontinental carriers Dec. 1 if wage demands are not met\nThe unions set 6 a. m. regional!\nstandard time, Monday, Dec. 1\nfor the country-wide walkout.\nDecision to go on strike in 20\ndays was made by the joint negotiating committee of the 15\nunions after results of a strike\npoll showed a \"great majority\"\nof their membership in favor of\na \"peaceful' withdrawal.\"\nThe unions immediately prepared to notify their members of\nthe strike action, which \u2014 if it\ngoes through\u2014would be the second big railway strike this year\nand the fourth since 1950.\nSTRUCK IN 1050\nThe non-ops \u2014 workers who do\nnot actually operate trains\u2014last\nwent on strike in 1950 to back demands fbr a five-day week. The\n11 - day strike was ended when\nParliament intervened. The firemen's union went on strike for\nnine days against the CPR in\nJanuary, 1957, and again, for\nthree days in May of this year.\nSettlement of the wage dispute\n\u2014Canada's biggest single labor\nsquabble \u2014 hinges on a board of\ntransport commissioners' ruling\non a railway application for a 19-\nper-cent freight rate increase.\nThe railways promised to settle\nwith the unions if they got the\nfull rate boost \u2014estimated to be\nworth $60,000,000 a year.\nThe unions have accepted a\nconciliation board majority, report that recommended a wage\nincrease working out to about 14\ncents ;an hour, spread in. three instalments over a two \u2022 year contract., \u25a0.\u2022'\u2022\u2022- :-y -.'\u2022\"  \u25a0-'\u25a0\u2022'\nA* yea' ago, when fie^bflstlbils\nfirst opened,,, the unions demanded a 35 - cent - an - hour increase but agreed to the conciliation: award \"ih the interests of\nindustrial peace.\" During, wage\ntalks and subsequent conciliation\nhearings, the railways maintained they could not afford to\npay any increase without getting\nan equivalent freight rate; increase.\nUnion spokesman Frank H.\nHall of Montreal'said the strike\naction was. approved with \"great\nregret.\"\nHe said there appeared to be\nMOSCOW CEREMONY\nMOSCOW (AP) - Representatives of eight non-Communist nations held a brief Armistice Day\nobservance Tuesday at a cemetery in, the heart of Moscow.\nFrench Ambassador Maurice De^\njean placed a wreath at the memorial for French veterans killed\non Soviet soil since 1812. Also participating were the U. S., Britain,\nItaly,. Belgium, Canada, India and\nJapan. \u2022  '\nTo Decide Fate\nOf RCAF Division\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Future of the\n12-squadron RCAF Air Division in\nEurope should become; clearer\nafter the annual NATO council\nmeeting in Paris next month.\nAuthorities said Tuesday nothing\ncan be decided until Defence Minister Pearkes confers with other\nNATO defence ministers and military leaders.\nThey said it is generally recognized that the division mil have\nto be re-equipped, hut what form\nthis new equipment wUl take ls\nstill up in the air\nGen. Lauris Norstad, supreme\nallied commander in Europe, said\nrecently.that the number of missile-equipped units will be expanded with a' consequent elimihation\nof 30 to 40 conventional aircraft\nsquadrons.\nThis does not necessarily mean\nthat any Canadian squadrons will\nbe eliminated but Gen.. Norstad's\nNATO partners have more advanced fighter planes than the RCAF.\nThe Canadian division is\nequipped with the Sabre and CF-100\njets, both high-altitude Interceptors.\nSee No Need to\nUp Milk Prices\nVERNON. <OP>'_-j\nfor two Okanagan Valley dairy cooperatives said Tuesday that despite an increase awarded recently\nto dairy fanners, there is no necessity for any increase in .milk prices\nto consumers at this time.\nT. E. Clarke,' general manager\nof Shuswap Dairy Industries Cooperative Association and J, Mullen, general manager of the Arm-.\nstrong cheese factory, said in a~\njoint statement the.farmer-owned\ndairy plant operators believe that\nmore' efficiency' in distribution\nmethods can hold the line on costs\nand prevent any increase te consumers.\nThey said, however, that th e\naward to dairy farmers was \"long\noverdue.\" \u2022\nWreaths Placed at Cenota\\\nAcross Canada to Honor Fallen\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanadians remembered their\nwar dead Tuesday as with heads\nbowed they observed two minutes\nof silence at the Uth hour.\nIn many centres, wreath-placing\nceremonies were held along with\nreligious services and parades by\nthe armed forces and veterans\nunits.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker attended Armistice day services at\nVerdun, France, a First World War\nbattleground. An RCAF guard of\nhonor and a pipe band took part.\nLEGION CEREMONY\nAt Vimy Ridge in France, members of the Canadian Legion observed Remembrance Day in ceremonies at the Canadian memorial.\nMost of the overseas servicemen\nobserved Remembrance Day Sunday when parades and other ceremonies were held at army bases in\nUniversity President Heads Revamped CBC\nBy BERNHARD DUFRESNE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada's national broadcasting system Tuesday got a new double - pronged\nstructure, with a university president as chairman of the new\nBoard of Broadcast Governors\na n d an experienced broadcaster\nas president of the publicly-\nowned CBC.\nDr. Andrew Stewart, 54, president of the University of Alberta\nheads on a full-time basis the 15-\nmember BBG. Appointed to the\nolher two full - time posts were\ntwo newspaper men\u2014Roger Du\nhamel, 42, chief editor of the\nMontreal weekly La Patrie, as\nvice-chairman; and Carlyle Allison, 51, editor - in - chief of the\nWinnipeg Tribune, as permanent\nmember.\nJ. Alphonse Ouimet, 50, generai manager of the CBC foe almost six years, will take on the\nadditional new position of president as head of an 11 - member\nboard of directors. He is an electrical engineer with 25 years in\nthe broadcasting field.\nMoving up to vice \u2022 president,\nalso a new post, is Ernest L. Bus-\nnell, 58, who retains his present\nposition of CBC assistant general\nmanager. He has been in broadcasting for almost 30 years.\nTAKES OVER POWERS\nThe new setup replaces that\nwhich existed under the CBC\nboard of governors, with the BBG\ntaking over from the now-defunct\nCBC board all regulatory powers\nover broadcasting and the new\nCBC directorate confining its activities to the national radio and\ntelevision services of the publicly-owned corporation.\nRevenue Minister Nowlan, who\nreports to Parliament on broadcasting matters, announced the\ncomposition of the two new\nboards at a press conference during which he indicated there will\nbe no quick changes in basic government policy.\nMr. Nowlan said it is unlikely\nthe government will consider before 1959 relaxation of its single-\nservice television policy, whereby\nonly one TV outlet is licensed in\nany single area. Ottawa and Montreal each have CBC French-language and English-language outlets broadcasting on separate\nchannels.\nPOLICY WILL CHANGE\n\"The time is rapidly arriving\nwhen the policy will have to be\nchanged,\" he said, but he could\ngive no indication of when that\nmight be.\nIf and when the government relaxes the policy, the BBG will\nthen be able to entertaih applications from private broadcasters for TV licences in such large\ncities as Halifax, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg and Vancouver,\nnow served by CBC outlets.\nOne of the BBG's first jobs,\nMr. Nowlan said, will be the\ndrafting of broadcasting regula\ntions. He expected the BBG to be ment.\nfully operative by Jan. 1. Until\nthe formulation of new regulations \u2014 covering such things as\nadvertising content, Canadian\ncontent in programming and the\nlike\u2014existing regulations passed\nby the old CBC board will \"continue in effect.\nThe BBG will regulate both privately- and publicly-owned broadcasting, but will have no control\nover the CBCs finances, which\nwill come under the jurisdiction\nof  the government  and Parlia-\nGermany and air force bases in\nFrance and England.\nAt home, parades and services\nwere also held by many organizations Sunday while Tuesday was\na working day for many.\nAt the National War Memorial in\nOttawa, a silent crowd of about\n10,000 gathered under cold, overcast skies to watch the placing of\nwreaths at the base of the memorial. \t\nAs the clock in the Peace Tower\nstroked 11 a.m., the crowd stood\nwith bowed heads for two minutes'\nsilence. Governor-General Massey\nplaced the first wreath. He was\nfollowed by Mrs. Helena Forres-\ntell of Coniston, Ont., who lost\nthree sons with the RCAF. during\nthe Second World War. Her wreath\nwas placed on behalf of the fnother-\nhood of Canada.\ne, 68, to\nAnd in This Corner * * *\nKNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)\u2014Arthur Lemons, 73, was granted\ndivorce Monday on grounds Including the refusal of his wife\ncook Mm biscuits and cornbread.\nEAST ST. LOUIS, 111. (AP)\u2014Whoever stole Charles Shockley's\ncar Monday night didn't speed away in it. \/',',;\nThe black and red auto, measuring eight feet long and three feet\nwide, is powered by a washing machine motor.\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014The Fraternal Order of PoUce Lodge 102 gave\nthe public schools here 11,000 rulers bearing the legend\u2014\"Play sate\n\u2014rule out accidents.\"\nSchool officials promptly sent them back.\nThey said the metal edge made the rulers unsafe.\nWHEATON, 111. (AP)\u2014Mrs. Ina Sales, 44, agreed to a swap In\ncourt Monday.\nShe agreed to get rid of 13 of her 18 angora cats in return for a\nreconciliation with her husband, Leonard, 60.\nLeonard said he will consider. He said the only cause of friction\nin the couple's 17 years of marriage was not that his wife kept pets\nbut that she kept too many.\nIn addition fo the cats, two large boxer dogs made things a\nlittle crowded in the Sales home.\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP)\u2014A Dallas department store put out a Christmas catalogue with a page of gifts listed as \"frankly fabulous,\"\nand, pardner, they weren't kidding.\nGifts Usted include \"black gold,\" a royalty Interest in more than\n750 producing oil wells In the SACROC unit in West Texas. Titled\n\"For your most gifted heir,\" It was priced at $8750. But don't rush,\nsomeone already bought that one.\n\"Around the world in 98 days\" is another stunner. It's described\nas a trip \"off the beaten track\" to \"places by-passed by time itself.\"\nThere are plenty of those in stock. They're $12,800 for two or $8000\nfor one.\n1\n .\n\t\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1958\nLast Times Tonight \u2014 Show* ot 7:00-8:20\nFirst-time together!\n\u25a0    In a riotous 6oMiecnl\nMickey\nRooney\nPlus\u2014\"Tarzon's Fight for Life\nTOMORROW\nA CARL fQREMAN Picture    .\n\\WILLIAM a) SOPHIA\nHOLDEN u LOREN\nTREVOR HOWARD\n.in Caroi Reed's Production\nKlaisn t ttmti    Bryifi     hit*-\n\u00abh MOOSE      UE      FORBES    L_I!JJ_H\n\u00abOSCARHO_0LKA\nCIVIC\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"HELL ON FRISCO BAY\"\n(Cine. - Adult)\nAlan Ladd \u2022 E. G. Robinson\nFEATURETTE and NEWS\nChamber Heads\nIn Nelson Today\nNelson Chamber of Commerce\nnoon luncheon meeting at the\nwill hear two Coast speakers at its\nShamrock today.\nG. F. Dunn of Victoria, president\nThe last game saw the Tigers\nof Commerce, and Charles K..Bantock, B;C. manager of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce and\nmanager of the B.C. chamber, will\nbe heard.\nMr. Dunn.was elected president\nin May and he is immediate past\nvice-president of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce. Mr. Bantock was appointed to his two posts\nin February, 1953, and has visited\nthe Kootenay on a number of occasions.\nThey spoke In East Kootenay\ncentres before coming to Kaslo\nTuesday, and will move on to Trail\nafter their Nelson visit.\nHockey Standings\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nP  W  L  T  F  A Pt\nBoston     15   7   5   3   50   41 17\nMontreal      13  7  4  2  51  38 16\nChicago ....   14  6  6  2  44  53 14\nNew York    15  4  6  5  43  45 13\nDetroit     13  6  7  0  27  31 12\nToronto ....   12  5  7  0  26  33 10\nMrs. Dennes Dies\nAl Cranbrook\nMrs. Bessie H. Dennes, 83, widow\nof the late Richard F. Dennes, died\nin St. Eugene Hospital at Cranbrook Sunday night. Formerly of\n414 Park Street, Nelson, she moved\nto Cranbrook five months ago to\nlive with her son, Richard.\nBorn in Saltburn, England, in\n1875, she came to Canada in 1912,\nand was married at St. John, N.B,\nMr. and Mrs. Dennes moved to Sirdar and lived there from 1912 to\n1933, when they moved to Nelson\nMr. Dennes was a carman witb\nthe CPR and was killed in a railway accident in April, 1935.\nOnly survivor is her son, Richard\nof Cranbrook.\nRites for Infant\nFuneral service was held at\nSalmo Community Church in Salmo\nTuesday afternoon for Dawne Ail\neen Lewis, infant daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. G. R. Lewis of Salmo,\nwho died Friday. Rev. J. C. Davenport of Fruitvale officiated.\nHymns sung were \"God Sees the\nLittle Sparrow Fall\" and \"When He\nCometh\". Mrs. W. Milburn was\norganist.\nPallbearers were Henry Mang,\nHerman Mang, Fred Middleton and\nDon McDonald. Interment was in\nSalmo cemetery.\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON   35 41 .4!!\nMonday   34 .42\nKimberley   31 40 .01\nPenticton  43 47 .11\nPrince Rupert  37 44 .18\nSpokane   37 48 Tr\n$65,000 Project Adds\nTelephone Facilities\nExtensive cable additions are\nunder way in the Nelson exchange\narea, reports B.C. Telephone Company district commercial manager\nV. C. Owen.\nCosting almost $65,000, the project will make possible a reduction\nin the number of subscribers on\nDRISTAN\nCOLD TABLETS\nand\nNASAL SPRAY\nNow In Stock.\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your  Fortress of Health\"\n433   Josephine   St..   Phone   1303\nmany multi-party lines within the\ncity itself, and provide additional\nfacilities sufficient to meet present\nand future demand for telephone\nservice in the Rosemont and Fair-\nview subdivisions and in the downtown business districts.\nCompletion is scheduled for early in the new year.\nMr. Owen also reported plans\nfor additions to the switchboard in\nthe Nelson telephone office on Stan\nley Street. At present this switch\nboard consists of 24 operator positions, half of which deal with local\ncalls and half with long distance\ncalls. The new additions, which\nare planned for early next year,\nwill bring the number of long distance positions to 14.\nThe number of long distance\ncall's handled by the Nelson office\n\u2014 which also looks after Creston's\ntoll needs \u2014 now totals more than\n1001) per average business day. The\nnumber of telephones in the Nelson\nexchange stands at almost 4400.\nFor Service\nCall . . .\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.        '    Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and Heating Service\nDistrict College Committee\nWorks on Brief for Cabinet\nActing on a suggestion by Hon.\nW. D. Black, provincial secretary,\nthe .District College steering committee has launched into preparation of a brief to present to the\ncabinet before the end of November.\nThe committee met Mr. Black-\nduring his visit to Nelson at thq\nweekend and Monday night a group\nof representatives from the school\nboard, teachers, school inspector\nNelson'A. Allen and other citizens\nmet to'draft a general outline for a\nbrief.     *  -\nTentative date for a meeting\nwith the cabinet is November 20\nand it is expected two persons will\nform the delegation, representing\nthe Chamber of Commerce, City\nCouncil, Parent-Teacher Associations, and the teaching profession.\n. Mr. Black, expressing his support of the plan to establish a junior college in Nelson district, advised the committee a brief should be\npresented this month so that it\ncould be considered for next year's\nestimates.\nA brief is being prepared for a\nschool board meeting Thursday\nnight by a committee of E. Baravaile, G. H. Lee, L. V. Rogers High\nSchool principal, A. Cartier, R. A.\nPhillips and J. H. Coventry, chairman of -the chamber's Civic Affairs Committee, which sparked\nthe move for establishment of a\ncollege..        \u25a0,.\u2022.';\nIf the school board sees fit to\nWorld Needs\nGood Men\nLegion Told\nWorld Wars I and II were blamed\non politicians'Who were not statesmen and professional jealousy in\nthe officers' ranks of all armies,\nby Rev. E. A. Hircock. He was\none of two speakers at the Remembrance Day dinner in the Legion, Tuesday night.\nHe went on to say that the main\ndifficulty in the world today was\nthe lack of good men. To explain\nthis he said, \"all those who were\nleft on the battlefields were strong\nmen and those who are trying to\nstart wars today are weak. A war\nnowadays means only one thing\u2014\na country wants more money, or\nthey are fighting to see who's best.\nBoth these reasons are senseless\nand it is a waste of good life.\n\"I hope that in the place where\ngood infantrymen go, the ones\nthat have given their lives wiU\nfind some peace of mind.\"\nRev. Father F. Monaghan, the\nother speaker, said Tuesday's parade was the best he had ever\nseen in Nelson.\nHe was proud, he said, of the\nway the Canadian Legion members turned out in such strong\nforce on such a poor day weather-\nwise. As far as the dinner was\nconcerned, he felt that membership and attendance at,a club function was the main, thing behind the\norganization, and after seeing the\npeople attending the supper he\nfelt that the Canadian Legion had\nall these qualities.\nPresent at the 'dinner were 144\nLegionnaires, their wives, and widows of men who died in the wars.\n'The supper was followed by a\ndance.\nmake application to the government, the brief would be supplemented by letters of supoprt from\nvarious organizations. Another\ncommittee is at work on this phase,\nseeking support from the whole\ncommunity.\nSuch a show of support would be\nof great value in presentation of\nthe brief, it was stated. This will\nbe the first, time the cabinet will\nhave considered such an application under the new B.C. Schools\nAct. Special grants are now available from the government for colleges and the Canada Council\nwould also aid.\nIt was pointed out at the meeting that if the college is established and Notre Dame college became\naffiliated with it, a number of advantages would accrue to both\nschools, eliminating duplications\nand resulting in economies.\nA preliminary survey had Indicated some 350 to 400 students\nmight enroll and it was felt that\nadding a teacher training course in\na short time would also be popular.\nThe Chamber offices are serving\nas a clearing house for all suggestions and Indications of support of\nthe proposal.\nSmokies Fall Before\nSpokane Flyers 12-4\nTRAIL \u2014 Spokane Flyers nf the\nWestern Hockey League swamped\nTrail Smoke Eaters 12 \u2022 4 in an\nexhibition hockey game-- before\n1258 fans here Tuesday night.\nThe Flyers, in supurb condition, ran up a 4-0 lead in the first\nnine minutes of the game, increased it to 7-2 in the second and\noptscored Trail five goals to two\nin the third stanza.\nAd Tambellini scored two of\nTrail's goals, one each in the second and third periods. Cal Hockley\nslipped in another late in the\nthird period on a sparkling play\nwith Bobby Kromm ana Ron\nFlinn; and Gerry Penner got\nTrail's other goal.\nLeading scorers for Spokane\nwere Bev Bell, Frank Kubasek,\nLloyd Maxfield and Max Meklinko\nwith two goals each. Meklinko and\nBell also assisted on three Other\ngoals while Lionel Repka had\nthree assists and Benny Woit four.\nWalt Bradley, Bell, Kubasek\nand Ching Johnson gave the Flyers their first period lead. Tambellini csored Trail's first midway\nin the second while the Smokies\nwere playing with a man advantage, but the Flyers continued to\npoke away at goalie Seth Martin.\nBlinky Boyce and Maxfield\nscored the next two and then Penner got his on an assist from Ed\ns,8UBi|0ds log 0!|Uti)|OTAI \u25a0ipjoisuo\nlast goal of the period.\nThe Flyers reeled in five straight\nsoals in the third on shots by Art\nHart, Kubasek, Meklinko, Maxfield and Bell. Trail's two goals\ncame in the last five minutes of\nplay.\nThe forward line of Kromm.\nHockley and Flinn showed best\nfor Trail against the pro opposition while Joe Conn and Ed Cris-\ntofoli turned' ln a fine performance\non defence with only three of the\nSpokane goals coming while they\nwere on the ice.\nThere were only three penalties\ncalled by referees Sarge Sammartino and Norm Hyssop. Spokane\ngot them all, one in each period,\nVs Whip\nLeafs 6-2\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 Penticton\nVs of the Okanagan Senior\nHockey League scored an easy\n6-2 win over Nelson Maple Leafs\nof the Western International\nLeague in an exhibition game\nplayed here Tuesday night.\nPenticton took a 2-0 first period\nlead and stretched it to 5-1 before the end of the second. The\nVs outshot the losers 43-21.\nLyle Willey and Yogi Kraiger\nscored for Penticton in the first\nperiod. Tick Beattie, Wendy Kel\nler and Pat Coburn beat Nelson\ngoalie George Wood to make it\n5-0 before Bill Thieman put the\nLeafs on the scoreboard.\nJoe Kaiser scored Penticton's\nsixth early in the third period and\nMickey Maglio scored Nelson's\nsecond at 10:55.\nNelson's Andy Drobot was\nRiven a misconduct penaltv in\nthe third period after arguing a\ntwo-minute slashing call. He was\nhanded a game misconduct by\nreferee Harry Harris.\nNo Need For\t\nElection -Bennett\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Premier\nBennett returned from an Arizona\nholiday Tuesday and told Interviewers here there is no need for\na general election in British Columbia. There had been predictions\nof an election within six months.\nThe Social Credit premier said\nthe result of the Sommers bribery-\nconspiracy trial has strengthened\nhis party's position with the people.\nMr. Bennett also said he thought\nit \"very wise to have an immediate byelection in Rossland-Trail,\"\nthe seat left vacant by the resignation of former lands minister Robert E. Sommers, who stands convicted of conspiracy, and accepting\nbribes.   \u25a0\nWhen asked what effect Sommers' conviction would have on the\nSOcial Credit party, Mr. Bennett\nsaid \"if anything, It has strengthened us.\"\nSkit Enjoyed\nBy Rotarians\nA hypothetical case of unethical\nadvertising was presented in a skit\nat the Nelson Rotary Club luncheon in the Hume Hotel Silver Room\nMonday.\nThe situation, acted out by E. S.\nW. Batty, D. C. Martin and John\nMorrey, and directed by Max Robinson, posed the question, \"should\nmisrepresentation in advertising\nbe used to sell 'white elephant'-\nstock?\"\nThe amusing discussion that followed brought out the general\nopinion that advertising should be\nhonest, and that a retail merchant,\nif-trying to sell an excess of stock\nshould say so in his advertising and\nset his prices accordingly. It was\nnoted that the most ethical and\nhonest advertising occurs in ads\nfor luxury items; liquor ads were\nespecially cited.\nIt was announced that at a social\nevening at the Fairview United\nChurch hall Nov. 24. the speaker\nwill be Willard Ireland, provincial\narchivist.\nStan DeBou and Ted Walprile of\nvancoi^er, and Tom Boderson of\nCalgary were guests.\nCurlers Choose Rinks\nFor First Competition\nPersonnel for rinks in the first\nclub competition of Nelson Curling\nClub has been chosen. In order of\nskips, thirds, seconds and leads,\nrink members are: (See draw on\nsport page)\nW. Marr K. LePage, D. H. Sil-\nger, B. McKae.\nE. Hunt, A. Stephenson, F. Bambrick, G. MacLean.\nJ. Sutherland, P. Scott, G. Trkla,\nG. O'Neal.\nF. Carmichael, J. Taylor, -S.\nCameron, T. Flamank.\nJ. R. Bailey, D. McQuaig, M. R.\nStern, H. Stewart.\nR. Carmichael, R. Boates, W. Irvine, L. Catonlo.\nF. Farenholtz, W. KittO, G.\nGrant, T. White.\nH. Moore, R. Nuyens, A. Heighton, L. Lehlre.\nN. Sardich, E. W. Robinson, G.\nKoehle, D. MacDonald.\nW. Triggs, R. Edwards, O. W,\nMills, L. Renwick.\nL. Peerless, K. Campbell, B.\nMawer, S. Benedetti.\nW. Duckworth, I. Hendrickson,\nR. Benedetti, G. Saunby.\nH. Ronmark, A. Ferworn, K.\nRussell, L. Massey.\nM, Sample, W. Stern, G. Harvey,\nA. Maida.\nR. Bruce, A. Dayman, J. Spencer, C. Kershaw.\nJ. Harvey, D. Winlaw, D. Martin,\nR. Hickey.\nL. Bicknell, B. Hans, Ernie Mason, F. Tedesco.\nR. Chandler, G. Barefoot, G\nKleef, J. Willie.\nL. J. Maurer, M. Buerge, K\nWhite, B. King.    .\nE. S. W. Batty, R. McNabb, S\nShukin, D. Marquis.\nW. Wait, J. Hartridge, V. Davies\nR. Hamson.\nJ. Leeming, L. Nicholson, L.\nChase, D. Kettleson.\nD. Meakins, W. Ebdon, G. Craig,\nJ. Elser.\nN. Lutkiwich, B. D. Balderston,\nM. Morrison, R. Cox.\nW. Tickner, M. Gee, R. Maber,\nJ. Brindley.\nA. Waters, L. Shockey, T. McGovern, F. Johnston.\nM. B. Ryalls, J. Grieve, R. E.\nRobinson, K, Wickens.   .\nA. VanSacker, P. Drysdale, R.\nDuffin, J. Randle.\nA. Hamson, H. Weins, W. Cartwright, L. Atwell,\nW. Tozer, R. Nash, J. Alexander,\nB. Irvine. ,  ,\nEarl Mason, L. Kelsch, E.\nOwens, A. Ford.\nD. Cathcart, R. W. Koehle, E.\nSmith, W. Bruells.\nJ. Haines, J. Seaby, T. Henshell,\nM. Home. ,   -i  _\nD. Porteous, J. Braybrook, O. J.\nMacintyre, D. Capper.\nA. Reid,-F. Koehle, A. McKim\nF. Waters.\nD. Benedetti, Bud Hesse, H. Mil\nIar, M. Schwindt.\nA. Ronmark, John Milne, A,\nKienburger, Fritz Koehle.\nit's all\nPRE-PLANNED\nOur experts \"blueprint\" every detail In advance-\ntake all th* work and worry off your hands. And\nwe move you in a \u00aeSanitized Van I No extra co*.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n719 Baker St.\nAGENT\n\u2022 -POR mi\nPhon* 33\nNelson, B. C.\nIVJNOpfiTED;\nCANADA, AlASKA,        <S\nHAWAII PUERTO RIC^\n \\'>-\nOFFERING for nomination as\nSocial Credit candidate In the\nRossland-Trail bye-election December 15 is Mayor Harold S.\nElmes of RosBland. He told league president Angus Drinnan of\nTrail yesterday he would allow\nUs name to come before the\nnomination convention Monday.\nD. L. Brothers is also seeking the\nnomination.\nLarge Crowd Attends\nCenotaph Ceremony\nThree volleys by a firing party\nadded a touch of grandeur to Remembrance Day services at the\nCenotaph Tuesday, as eight members of the Ulth Battery RCA\nhonored the fallen with a three volley salute.\nThe firing party, trained by Sgt.\nMichael Bennett, marched down to\nthe cenotaph before the main body\nof the parade and formed up on\nthe boulevard facing the cenotaph.\n2000 Attend\nTrail Service\nMrs. F. Krown\nPasses al 54\nA resident, of the district for\nabout 20 years, Mrs. Mabel Krown,\nwife of Fred Krown, 172 Trevor\nStreet, died at her home suddenly\nMonday. She was 56.\nMrs.. Krown was born in Kam-\nsack, Sask., April 9, 1902, and was\nmarried in 1922. With her husband,\nshe moved to B.C. in the 1930s,\nliving at Glade for a time, then in\nBonnington where Mr. Krown\nworked for Col. Goode. They moved to Nelson 14 years ago and Mr.\nKrown worked for Kootenay Forest Products until his retirement\nthis year.\n, Besides her husband, she is survived by one daughter, Lydia, at\nhome; her mother, Mrs. Polly Rel-\nkoff; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Savin-\nkoff, Taghum, and Mrs. Anna\nHlookoff, Nelson; and one brother,\nMike Relkoff, Nelson.\nCadet Injured\nAt Cenotaph Service\nArmy Cadet Allan Campbell was\ninjured when he fainted and fell\nagainst a curb during the Remembrance Day services at the Vernon\nStreet Cenotaph Tuesday.\nHe suffered several broken\nteeth and a badly cut Up, but was\nreported \"doing well\" last night\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital, where he was taken for observation.\nHe is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nK. M. Campbell, 424 Robson\nStreet.\nTRAIL \u2014 Though the day was\ncloudy and threatening the rain\nheld off during the morning on\nRemembrance Day. A larger\ncrowd than on previous years attended services at the cenotaph\nto honor the fallen of two world\nwars and the Korean conflict. It\nwas estimated that around 2000\npeople turned out.\nIn the evening a Remembrance\nDay banquet put on by the Trail\nbranch of the Canadian Legion\npacked the large assembly hall\nwith local veterans and visitors.\nMayor L. A. Read praised the\nbranch for the fine work it was\ndoing about the city and promised\nsupport of the council In their\nundertaking;.\nP. F. Mclntyre brought best\nwishes from Cominco for the future of the Legion.\nLloyd Williams, Reeve of Tadanac, assured members that the\nwork and affairs of the Legion\nwould always have the sympathy\nof the Tadanac council.\nHarry Simpkinson, chairman of\nWarfield board of commissioners,\nbrought good wishes from the\npeople of the village.\nHi W. Herridge, MP for Kootenay West, sent best wishes. Mr.\nHerridge was attending services\nat Edgewood.\nChairman of the banquet was\npresident J. J. Weber.\nA '%,-ge crowd of citizens gathered for the ceremony.\nThe parade, led by the Kootenay\nKiltie Pipe Band, and under the\ncommand of parade marshall C.\nW. Reeve Harper, was composed\nof representatives from the Canadian Legion, Legion Ladies Auxiliary, 111th Battery RCA, R.C.M.P.,\nHampton Gray Sea Cadets, Nelson\nAir Cadets and the City Band.\nFour men chosen from R.C.M.P.,\n111th Battery RCA, Sea Cadets and\nAir Cadets formed an honor guard\nat the cenotaph.\nBugler Paul Gergley played tha\nLast Post to the accompaniment\nof a hymn played by the City Band,\nfollowed by the Pipers Lament\nplayed by Bill Phillips. After the\ncommemorative volley, Paul Gergley played Reveille.\nRev. Father F. Monaghan, Aid.\nB. C. Affleck and Rev. E. A. Hircock addressed the assembly, after\nwhich wreaths were laid by representatives of the Legion and the Legion Auxiliary, City of Nelson,\nR.C.M.P., Ulth Battery RCA.\nHampton Gray Sea Cadets,- Nelson\nAir Cadets, I.O.D.E., F.O.E..\nI.O.O.F., Nelson Post Office Staff.\nbusiness firms and citizens.\n\\Mfiip*lQf\\\nToday's Insurance\nX Problems\n| Answered by\nI Your Insurance Advisors *\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILV\nNOV. 12th and 22nd\nOLD P.O. BUILDING\n\\ QUESTION: In applying l\n' for insurance, must we *\nI include our 20-year-old f\n$ son as a driver under 25 $\nf when he is in the army |\ni and drives the car only \u00a7\nT      UfHAM    ItAntn   mm    Uaun. X\ni\ni\nt\ni\ni\ni\ni\n\u00a7\nwhen home on leave?\nANSWER: No. Your son, In\nthis Instance, Is not considered a part of your\nhousehold.\nHave you an insurance problem of your own? Come in\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nh3lp you without charge or\nobligation of any kind !\nRobertson-\nHilliard, Cattell\nC.  D. Blackwood Agency\n456 Ward St.\nPHONES 1912 -IMS1- 64\nHere is the tire\nHour\ncarSAFE.QBEDIENT\nand RELIABLE through\nany winter weather\nREGoodrich\n\u25a0\nIMMWH. MIIHI1WWIIIIWMW\n(RMMAKER\nUniwestioMbii; Cuutld's Finest Wintci lire\nPari oi thi li, .Imakc' i.-fine performance\nli due m lis large traction ere;]. rn\u00ab tread\nli, I'\/S\"-wiflsi than ordinary wihtej   .\n77: Bii 1 Tracjidn;js mofe I half atea.-;: f \\\nIn showor. slushormud, your tires need: \u25a0 \"\u25a0:\na deep tread to bits in and push your car.\nThaTr.il makerm id i ,ilnn.ua% deeper\nThe. tread Is \"tractionized.\" Thousands ot\n.     small gripping sui facte!; give stability-to\n.. .your car on slick, slippery loads.\n-' Further traction combs from Kerf ing, the -..;.;\u25a0\nprtta n nf ingled cuts throughout the tu.nl\ndesign, that puts more gripping surface on\ntho road The TryHrAjI'ir's curve..) tread bars\nscoop a bfg, hrm r:tip m snow arid slush, '\nEach new Trailniakar has up to six pounds\nmore rubber-available on 'either a Nylon\nor Rayoocarcassconstruction, This gives\nsumiies of extra Wear, TrailnraKer tires :\nill test you for Winters to come.\nThere's no need,: then, to wait until the ..'7:\nfirst snowfall to invest in the security\nof a sot of B.t%Goodrich Trailrrtaker tiros.\nQivo yourself and ydur family the happy\nassurance of all-winter safety,\nEnjoy tne all-weothsr performance of\nB.F.Goodrich TrOilmaker Tires\nfor miles and miles of happy mileage\n-that'ST '\n******\nft\/fea^\/\nREGoodrich\nSilver town tires\n'6\nBalfour Ferry Serviee\nBalfour, B.C. Phone 30\nB&W Serviee\nSalmo, B.C. Phone 34\nCity Auto Serviee\nGranite Road        Nelson, B.C. :\nPhone 447 I\n a^3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1958\u20143\nTHE STORY of Kimberley's North Star ski hill where new run has been\ncompleted is one of constant improvements. Here is shown progress made\non the machinery building for T-bar lift.\nSMOOTHING OUT of in-run in front of the ski lodge is done by tractor\noperator. The lodge itself has been much improved with installation of an\noil furnace and other equipment.\nONE OF MANY members who have worked hard to ready T-bar lift,\nRoy Moe demonstrates welding skill on the second tower from the top of\nthe run.\u2014Photos by Raine Korbin\t\nCoast Couple Give Surprise\nAssist to Cranbrook Home\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Henry G. Jones\nand his wife, Ada Leota Jones of\nVancouver, virtual strangers to\nthe people of this district may be\nthe agents through whom the final\nnecessary funds [or the Dr. F. W.\nGreen Memorial Home are realized. Method of utilizing to the best\nadvantage their generous offer is\nnow being considered.\nMr. Jones' recreation the past\nfew years has been fall hunting in\nthis area and for this purpose he\nmaintained a 25-foot custom built\ncompletely equipped trailer located\npermanently in Skookumchuck.\nFour years ago he had a sudden\nheart attack there, and was brought\nto St. Eugene Hospital by Cranbrook District Ambulance where\nhe made an excellent recovery.\nDuring his convalescence, garage-\nman George Haddad, on request of\na Vancouver friend, visited him\nand did small errands for him.\nThis fall Mr. Jones dropped in on\n$20,000 'Phone Cable\nProject Under Way\n' NEW DENVER - A major\ncable project costing more than\n$20,000 is under way in the New\nDenver-Silverton area, the B.C.\nTelephone Company reports.\nForeman Harlon Jorgensen's\nheavy construction crew has already completed the placing of\ncable between the two communities and within Silverton itself,\nand is now preparing to go ahead\nj with Ihe building of pole lines in\n. New Denver.\nT. E. Brett, B.C. Telephone\nC o m p any   district   commercial\nSalmo Expands\n'Phone Exchange\nSALMO \u2014 A second operator\nposition is being added to the Salmo switchboard, the B.C. Telephone Company reports. -\nInstallation of the new position,\nwhich is scheduled to be in service\nby mid-November, is now underway.\nExplaining the reason for .the addition, V. C. Owen, B.C. Telephone\nC o m p any district commercial\nmanager at Nelson, said, \"With\nthe number of telephones in the exchange now standing at almost 300,\nSalmo has outgrown a one-position\nswitchboard. This second position\nwill ensure that calls are put\nthrough promptly, and will minimize the likelihood of delay at peak\ncalling periods.\"\nmanager at Trail, explained that\nthe project has four aims. \"It will\nmake possible a reduction in the\nnumber of subscribers on many\nrnulti-party lines in the area, will\ngreatly increase facilities in New\nDenver's business district, improve the quality of service in Silverton, and provide us with a margin of facilities to meet demand\nfor service for some time to\ncome.\"\nAs an indication of telephone activity within the exchange, Mr.\nBrett also reported that the two-\nposition switchboard now handles\nalmos 80 long distance calls and\nmore than 700 local calls per' average business day. The number\nof telephones in the exchange\nstands at>2.\nLarge Attendance\nAt Memorial Service\nINVERMERE \u2014 Remembrance\nDay Service was held here Tuesday in the-Lake Windermere Memorial Community Centre, with a\nlarge turnout of veterans and Legion Ladies' Auxiliary members.\nLake Windermere and Windermere Girl Guides, Wolf Cubs and\nBrownies took part.\nLegion president Joe Pietrosky\nconducted the service, assisted by\nRev. R. D. F. Kimmitt.\nThe groups paraded from the\nCanadian Legion club rooms to\nthe centre. Legion flag bearers\nwere Carl Jones and Mrs. Jessie\nLewis. Guide bearers were Heidi\nHromadnik and Maryann Hall-\nbauer.\nFOR\nECONOMICAL\nEFFICIENT\nFurniture\nStorage\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n(Nelson) LTD.\nAgents For\nWilliams Moving & Storage\n(B.C.) Ltd\nMr. Haddad to outline a proposition. He was retiring from hunting\nand with his wife, moving to Florida, he said, and had no further\nuse for the trailer or 1953 sedan\ndelivery with automatic transmission, for moving it, and he was\ngiving them to Mr. Haddad to dispose of, entire proceeds to go to\ncharities. Single stipulation was\nthat half the gross return must be\ncontributed to the B. C. Women's\nAuxiliary of the Canadian Arthritis\nand Rheumatism Society.\nMr. Haddad was to name the\nrecipient of the other half and he\nhas designated the Dr. Green Memorial Home Society. He estimates\ndirect sale return from the truck\nand trailer would be $3500 but\nsuggests considerably more could\nbe derived through province-wide\nticket sales campaign over the\nnext several months, toward a\ndrawing in the spring.,\n' Combination of these two causes\nseems happily appropriate on a\nprovince-wide basis. CARS benific-\nence in assisting victims of arthritis ahd rheumatism is widely\nknown, and native British Columbian Dr. F. W. Green was one of\nits; most enthusiastic supporters\nand served as honorary chairman\nof' Cranbrook branch from its\nfounding until his death. He was\nborn and grew up in Victoria, practised medicine almost 60 years in\nthis area, and was member of the\nLegislature in the 1940s. His Mend-\nships were province-wide.\nDecision as to how this generous\noffer will be realized will be made\nnext week by the Dr. Green Memorial Home Society, ways and\nmeans committee. Meanwhile the\ntruck ahd trailer are on display\non Cranbrook Street.\nRITES HELD FOR\nMRS. HOLM\nROSSLAND - Rev. A. J. Lawton\nofficiated at funeral services here\nfor Mrs. W. C. Holm of Rossland,\nMany friends were in attendance,\nand there were many floral\ntributes.\nThe congregation sang \"Unto\nthe Hills Around\" and the 23rd\nPsalm.\nPallbearers were nephews Robert Pickering jr., Gordon Picker\ning and Robert McCandlish, Nelson; Gary and Bud Kilberg of\n\u25a0Cranbrook and Albert Holm of\nRossland.\nInterment was in Mountain View\ncemetery.\nMrs. Holm was the second\nyoungest daughter of Mrs. Anna\nKilberg, who predeceased her\nsome years ago.\nOdds...\n\u2122d Ends\n..by M.D.&\nWell, a year ago we had just\nopened the bridge\u2014it seems incredible so much water has gone under\nit!\n* * \u2022\nSpecial thanks to those stores\nwho put in Remembrance Day\nwindows. Those who lost sons,\nfathers and brothers overseas appreciate the gesture.\nGlad to see the old Strathcona\nsite is to come to life again. The\nhotel burned down in May, 19.55,\nso it's over three years the corner\nhas stood empty.\n* * \u25a0*.\nI have two champions as far ds\nthe tamarac-larch discussion'goes\nOne says \"tamarac is an Indian\nword, synonymous with larch\" and\nthe other says \"tamarac in the\nEast is the eastern larch. Our tamarac is the western larch. However\nour's is taller and in every way\nmore imposing than the eastern\nlarch, (see Encyclopeadia Britan-\nnica\"). As for me I think I'll call\nthem tamaracs, I like the sound of\nthe word\u2014it sounds like the noise\nstout trees make in a heavy wind\nstorm. Thank you all for your interest in the matter.\n.-..-.\nAnd here is a bit of a poem J\n-managed to muster with regards\nto the passing season:\nAutumn,\nThat once was spring\u2014\nA blithe young thing\nWho laughed and danced the time\naway;\nWith sunbeams in her eyes\nAnd lilacs in her hair,\nWas there a heart so gay?\nAutumn,\nThat once was summer time\u2014\nThe maid to,beauty grown,\nAll.charm and. loveliness,\nThe rosebud's comeliness\n\u25a0Became' the rose full bloom.\nAutumn,\u2014\nShe dons her gayest gown\nOf amber, red and gold;\nBut through the night she'll weep\nAnd sigh herself to sleep,\nBecause she's growing old.\nCaltleguard\nPlan Approved\nCRANBROOK - J. E. Milroy,\nagrologist with the B.C. Forest Office, Nelson district, and supervisor of range and ministration,\nwas guest speaker at the November meeting of Cranbrook Farmers' Institute.\nAgreement was reached between\ncattle ranchers of Bull River-Fort\nSteele section and the B.C. Forest\nService concerning maintenance of\nthe cattle guards on the road to\nprevent wide straying of range\nstock.\nApplication of Robert Cockwell\nfor purchase of 128.6 acres of land\na few miles northeast of Cranbrook\nwas approved.\nProgram for brusellosis vaccination of calves in Cranbrook district,\nscheduled to start November 15,\nwas,reported. Calves to be vaccinated will be assembled a various\ncentral points in the district for the\nschedule drawn up by vaccination\nofficer Dr. John Lancaster.\nTwo films on agricultural sub-\njetcs, \"Food for Thought\" and\n\"This Is Our Land\" were shown\nby Mr. Milroy. Planner for the\nnext meeting is projection,of \"Legend of the West\" which is a widely known documentary film on\ngame animals'. The December\nmeeting will be a social meeting in\nkeeping with the Christmas season,\nPM Spends One\nDay in Italy\nROME (Reuters)\u2014Prime Minister Diefenbaker arrived here\nTuesday from Germany on a one-\nday private visit.\nHe will meet Italian President\nGiovanni Gronchi and Premier\nAmintore Fanfani.\nHe leaves Rome Wednesday\nnight for Pakistan.\nGirls Answer\nCyprus Appeal\nLONDON (AP) - About 130\ngirls applied Tuesday to go. to\nCyprus' to help boost morale\namong British troops. -K.\nThe stampede of volunteers\ncame after an appeal Monday\nnight for Britons to work in place\nof Greek Cypriots, banned as security risks after two British servicemen were killed Saturday\nnight by a bomb planted in a Cyprus canteen. The girls will work\nas waitresses in the army canteens.\nThe first batch of volunteers will\nbe flown to the troubled island\niater this week, an official said.\nNAAFI wants girls between 18\nand 45. NAAFI boss H. P. T.\nPrideux, said \"most of the jobs\ncan be carried out by either men\nor women, but the troops would\nrather see a pretty girl about the\nplace than a man.\"\n50 Dial'Phone Sets\nQoing in at Edgewater\nEDGEWATER - Three B.C.\nTelephone Company crews are in\nEdgewater this week completing\nthe installation of more than 50 dial\ntelephone sets in preparation. for\nEdgewater's incorporation in Radium's new $76,000 automatic telephone system Friday.\nInteresting features of this system are \"two - letter - five-figure\"\nnumbering, and \"harmonic\" ringing.\nR a p i dly becoming universal\nthroughout Canada and the United\nStates, two-letter-five-digit numbering is part of a vast continent-\nwide plan that eventually will enable subscribers to dial their own\nlong distance calls to almost anywhere on the North American continent,\nThis plan calls for the identification of each exchange by its own\ndistinctive designation. In the case\nSenior Citizens\nName Hudson\nCRANBROOK \u2014 East Kootenay\nRegional Council of Senior Citizens recently elected Clifford Hudson of Creston as their new chairman when the; separate representatives from local councils had a\nspecail meeting. This was necessitated by the death in early fall of\ntheir chairman for the past- two\nyears, T. S. Dawson of Kimberley,\nOther officers named were Mrs,\nAnne Weston of Canal Flat, vice-\nchairman, Mrs. Charles LaFleur\nof Cranbrook secretary, and executive members, Mrs. A. Blake of\nEdgewater, Mrs. Laura Douglas\nand Mrs. Barbara Archibald, Kimberley, Mrs. Eva Hansen of Golden, Mrs. Norris Biccum of Creston, Mrs. Helen Andrews and Mrs,\nFerguson of Canal Flat and Frank\nMcDaniel of Cranbrook.\nThe council will have its quarterly meeting at.Kimberley November 26 to consider resolutions for\nsubmission to the next annual provincial convention.\nLocal Senior Citizens Associations are scheduling their annual\nelection of officers later this\nmonth.\nof the Radium exchange this designation is \"JUniper 7\". All Edge-\nwaetr telephones have been assigned four numbers prefixed by this\ndesignation. When dialing a local\nnumber it will be necessary to dial\nthe first two letters \u2014 JU \u2014 of the\nprefix, then 7, and finally the four\nfigures of the particular number\nbeing called.\n\"Harmonic\" ringing is a system\nwhereby code ringing on party\nlines is eliminated. By virtue of\nthis method the only party-line\nphone to ring is the one actually\nbeing called.\nAll Edgewater subscribers are\nlisted in the recently published\nRadium directory. Next June this\ninterim directory will be discontinued and Radium and Edge-\nwater listings incorporated in a\ncomprehensive East Kootenay\ndirectory.\nB.C. Chamber\nHead Tours\nEast Kootenay\nCRANBROOK - G. F. Dunn of\nVictoria, president of the B. C.\nChamber of Commerce, at a dinner meeting at the Cranbrook Hotel Monday evening, described the\nseparate responsibilities and functions of the chamber at the Dominion, Provincial and local levels.\nIn a question period following\nhis address he described the practical aspects of one of the 151\nchambers of the province in soliciting for its resolutions support of\nthe other chambers. There was a\ngood attendance from Cranbrook\nchamber at the dinner and seven\nmembers of Kimberley chamber\nattended.\nProvincial manager for the chamber, C. K. Bantock, is accompanying Mr. Dunn on his trip through\nthe Interior, They began their East\nKootenay tour at Golden and continued through Creston and Kaslo\nTuesday.\nIN THE GREAT\nNORTHWEST\nChamber Action Begins at\nLocal Level, Board Told\nINVERMERE - \"The Boards of\nTrade and Chambers . of Commerce at the local level are the\nlifeblood and vitality of the provincial Chamber of Commerce.\"\nG. Fitzpatrick Dunn, president\nof the B. C. Chamber, told, the\nWindermere District Board of\nTrade Monday, \"that is a fact we\nnever lose sight of at the provincial level,\" he added.\nMr. Dunn addressed a luncheon\nmeeting at the Skookum Inn, Windermere, which was attended by\ntrade board members from Golden,\nCanal Flats, Edgewater, Radium,\nAthalmer, Windermere, Fairmont\nand Invermere.\nMr. Dunn spoke of the necessary\ndifference of viewpoints of local\nboards of trade and the provincial\nchamber but emphasized that action originates at the local level.\nThen it is carried to the parent\norganization, which is the spokesman to the legislature.\nThe speaker said there are 115\nboards of trade or chambers of\nCommerce in B. C. and that the\nWindermere board has gained ft\nreputation for a broad outlodk and\nconstructive thinking.\nHe paid high tribute to Dr. F. E.\nCoy, East Kootenay representative\nto the provincial chamber, for his\nclear, concise thinking.\nMr. Dunn briefly described resolutions submitted by the provincial champer to the cabinet, among\nthese, a resolution originating\nfrom the Windermere board concerning stock on the highway..\nFollowing his address, the meeting heard C. K. Bantock, manager\nof the B. C. chamber and B. C.\nmanager of the Canadian chamber, described how resolutions submitted by local boards and approved by the provincial chamber\nare carried on until the result is\ndetermined.\nDr. Coy presided at the luncheon and Chris Madson, presidentelect, of the Windermere board,\nthanked the speakers.\nBREWED IN THE\nKOOTENAYS TO\nKOOTENAY TASTES\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n mm ;\t\nNrlamt Daily Nnw\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nInterior firlflsh 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 \u2022\u25a0 Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT      iREAU O.   CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Ot THB 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 ih this paper,\nand also the local news \"\"\"dished therein.\n.'\u25a0\u25a0' Wednesday, November 12,1958\t\nLet's Qet on With New City Hall\nThis Insistence upon trying to fit\nthe old post office building to use as\na city hall has reached the point where\nit now becomes ridiculous.\n.. Once again the experts have stated\nunequivocably that the building cannot be satisfactorily converted to even\nsemi-satisfactory use for city hall purposes and now the city council is\nasking\u2014at the taxpayers' expense, for\nanother set of plans.\nThe consulting architects state that\nthe building could be put to better use\nas a community building, though reading between the lines it is evident that\nthey are not enthusiastically in favor,\nof that. But the fact remains there is\na need for such a building and the\nold post office would fill that need.\nIt is to be presumed that the consulting architects know their business.\nIf- they say lt Is useless for the purpose, then the city council should accept their verdict, and look elsewhere\nfor a city hall. As lt stands at present\none councillor seems determined at all\ncost to have his own way in the matter\ndespite the experts.\nThis city must continue to progress\nand it cannot do that by hanging on\nto the past. It should be ready to\naccept new ideas. The city has lost\none matchless chance to have a new\ncity hall at a reasonable price by\nrejecting the Towers Hotel projegt.'It\ncannot afford to still further advertise\nits lack of progress by dithering around\nabout the old post office.\nIt has been known for some years\nthat a new city hall would be needed\nand in that time suitable, sites have\nyear by year become fewer. There\nshould be no more time spent on unprofitable consideration of the old post\noffice site, but the council should\ngather up its courage and consider its\nmain purpose\u2014the provision of a new\nbuilding. They must be prepared to\nspend a great deal of money. There is\nno cheap way of building these days.\nJust to stimulate their imagination,\nit might be as well if they acquired\nthe old Ritchie lot next door to the\npresent city hall, built offices on it and\nthen tore down the old building and\nextended the new one westward.\nIn Defence of\nBaseitients\nOh* cannot criticize very much the 102\nhousewives from all states of the Union who\nturned thumbs down on basement bomb\nshelters at the Congress on Better Living\nheld In Washington, D.C. When the children\nneed shoes or the couch requires covering,\nit hardly makes sense to spend a lot of\nmoney On a place to hide from a catastrophe\nwhich one \"just can't believe Will ever happen.\"\nBut that SB per.cent of the ladles should\nreject basements In toto and another 16 per\ncent show a don't-care attitude is open to\ncriticism. Especially since more storage\nSpace was the ''general cry\" of the assembly,\nas the Associated Press put It.\nWhere do the feminine symposlasls think\nthey will find more storage Space in their\nfavorite one-\u00abt4rey, 2i4-bathroom, picture-\nwindow house, if there Is no basement? There\nis no attic, either, In such a house, and the\ngarage is large enough only for the two\ncars, the power mower and a few cupboards\ncontaining the bare essentials of living.\nThe basement has done as much as the\nfamily-sUe farm to stabilize America. One\nreally doesn't have one's roots down until\nOne haa collected three or four generations\nof memorabilia within the basement's musty\nconfines.' \u2014\nThere is the massive gilt frame which\nsome day one hopes to hang in the den with\na better looking picture in it than the one\nof Great Aunt Jennie it now contains. There\nis the crockery antedating the family's acquisition of inside plumbing. There are the\ntrunks, boxes ahd cartons containing the\nunpasted scrapbook material, yellowed clippings, report cards from the years 1918-24,\nbaptism certificates, the sword Grandpa carried at Manila and all the Other mlleposts\nmarking several generations' progress toward eternity.\nRoots down, did we say? They're down\nso deep in the basement that it seems best\nto a lot of us to live out our days where\nwe are and let the next generation move to\nthe basementless, atticless ranch house.\n\u2014Portland Oregonian.\nInterpreting the News\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Statt Writer\nPresident Eisenhower's five signposts for\nInternational aid to free Asian countries are\nfurther pointers to a new liberalism in United\nStates economic thinking.\nIn a shrinking world, the U.S. has moved\na long way from the isolationist attitudes of\nlittle more than a quarter of a century ago.\nMr. Eisenhower said at Monday's opening of Colombo Plan consultative committee\nmeetings at Seattle:\n\"In vast stretches of the earth, men\nawoke today in hunger.\n\"They will spend the day in unceasing\ntoil. And as the sun goes down they still will\nknow hunger.\n\"They will see suffering in the eyes of\ntheir children.\"\nThe president was not talking about unemployment in or near North America. He\nwas thinking of the 700,000,000 people in\nsouth and southeast Asia, only about 10 per\ncent of whom receive a formal education.\nHe was thinking of an area in which\nAmerican policy has come under considerable criticism^ Aspects of that policy, Yale\nuniversity president Dr. Witney Griswold said\nln Ottawa recently, were conceived in \"simple innocence\" of Asian problems.\nYet economically, the recent \"American\nrecord bears close inspection.\nIn the last fiscal year ended June 30,\nthe U.S. spent some $900,000,000 In aid of\nvarious forms to countries in south and southeast Asia.\nAlthough it did not join the Colombo Plan\nconsultative committee until late in 1950, the\nU.S. in 1950-57 provided $3,000,000,000 of the\napproximately $3,500,000,000 contributed to\nthe recipient nations by all the donor countries, plus the World Bank.\nThe donor countries, besides the U.S., are\nCanada, Australia, Britain, New Zealand and\nJapan. Canada, a Colombo Plan member\nsince the program's Inception In January,\n1950, will have spent some $230,000,000 by\nnext March.\nMr. Eisenhower's five-point program\nstressed the need for expanded trade, private\ninvestment, public loans on normal bankable\nterms, development financing affording\ngreater flexibility in repayment terms and\nincreased technical assistance.\nOf these, one of the most significant Is\nthe indication of a possible expansion In\nprivate investment.\n-The U.S. is studying how private capital\ncan play a bigger part, Mr. Eisenhower said,\nand \"I am confident that we will discover\nmethods of enhancing the constructive role\nof private investment In promoting the growth\nof less developed areas.\"\nMr. Eisenhower also said he would like\nto see an international development association, as a means of \"effectively mobilizing\nthe financial resources contributed by the\nfree world as a whole.\"\nThe dveelopment association would be\na sort of second world bank, specializing in\nsoft-currency loans. It arises out of proposals\nby A. \u00a3>. (Mike) Monroney, Democratic Senator from Oklahoma, and more is expected\nto be heard of it In the months to come.\nEvangelical Missions\nImportant Says Bishop\nBy EDNA USHER\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (dP)-BVahgelical\nmissions are essential to enable\nAnglicans to dial with canvassers from religious sects, says\nlit. Rev. Kenneih livans, bishop\nof Ontario,\nSpeaking Monday at the annual\nmeeting ol the executive council\noi uie General Synod of the\nAnglican Church di Canada, he\ntold 114 bishops, priests and lay-\nment: \"Many sects with their\norigins In the United Stales believe that Canada ls a prime missionary field and they are trying\nto proselytize our people by distributing literature.\n\"Our people want the answers\nto many half-truths that confront\nthem.\"\nHe reported that 1958 is the\nthird year Of intensified Anglican\nevangelism in Canada.\nDISCONIENT\n\"This Concern for' evangelism\nis not ot a brief and passing nature, it appears to spring from\na profound discontent with the\nlistless, apathetic kind of church-\nmanship so general only a few\nyears ago,\" he aald.\nA survey in the diocese of New\nWestminster, B.C., showed only\nabout three per cent of.these attending evangelical missions\nwere not members of the Anglican Church.\nThe work of the Anglican\nFoundation \u2014 a fund to lend\nmoney to churches for building\nand special proejects\u2014is limited\nthrough lack of funds, P. H. P.\nDawson of Victoria reported.\n' More than $135,000 has been\ndistributed ln loans and grants\nfor building churches and rectories and for mission work.\n\"We could , easily lend another\n$200,000,\" he said.\nBrig. J. W. Forth, chaplain-\ngeneral of the Canadian forces,\nwas named Archdeacon to the\nforces by Rt. Rev. I. A. Norris,\nAfter 1000 Years\nTen Canadian Eskimos were taken to\nGreenland on a visit sponsored by the northern affairs department, following a route\ntaken by others of their race 1000 years\nago, and we regard this as the most peaceful International story of the last month.\nEveryone was pleased. The Greenland\nEskimos did not want technical assistance\nfrmo the Canadians. The Canadians did not\nlook down their noses at Greenland habitations because they were batter than most\nof those in the Canadian North.\nThey talked about hunting and game;\nthey drank tea and beamed at each other;\nno one complained about it being hot or cold\nor suggested that there might be health\nhazards in the local water.\nThey parted, too, with a fair guess that\nthey would not be seeing very much of eaeh\nother in the future.\nAll in all, a most suoccssful visit. No one\nwas auspicious, there were no axes to grind,\nand, after 1009 years, the Canadians had\nno instructions from their wives fo look up\ndistant cousins gone to Greenland.\n\u2014The.Ottawa Journal.\nQuieter Please\nSeventy members of the Commons wear\nhearing aids in the chamber. We suspect that\nthe popular impression that this indicates our\nMPs are ancient is wrong on two counts.\nFirst, probably many of them developed bad\nhearing after a year or two of over-exposure\nto bad speaking. Second, many's the artful\ndodger who has found he can stick ear plugs\ninto good ears and thus isolate himself from\nany noisome pestilence that may be around.\n-Ottawa Journal.\nThcyH Do It Every Time\nBl6-HE_RTED\nCMEDD4R\nDOESN'T MIND\nT\/JBLE-HOPPIN&\nAll OVER THE\nOPRCE CAFETERIA\nTO FOK_&E FOR\nWH4TEVER HIS\nE4TIN6 MLS\nW4NT\u00ab\"\nBut _,t home\nlet the missus\nforget to put\nEVERy-THlMS\nRI&HT IN FRONT\nOF HIM\/dND\nW4R IS   \u201e\nDECLARED\/\/\n7M4NX4ND4T1POF\nTHE HA7LO WT ID\nW.I.BR0CKUCHER, I\nNO 8 ROMONAAe.,\nEL CerRito 8,:\nC4LIF. iHlOm^i\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nHe that salth he ls the light nnd\nhateth his brother, Is ln darkness\neven until now.\u2014I John 3:9.\nHow can we claim to love God\nwhen we hate His children?\n(hint dis\u00b1.\nEmmie says she never has heard\nof anybody gettin' insulted on\naccount of attendin' to their own\nbusiness,\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nbishop Ot Brandon and bishop ordinary to the forces,\nTEN CHAPELS BUILT\nBrig, Forth reported 16 chapels\nare being built at radar stations\nin northern Canada.\nThe council for Toronto il to\nbe host In 1963 to the Anglican\nworld congress \u2014 a meeting ol\nrepresentatives of clergy and\nlaity from every diocese Of the\nAnglican Church. The last congress was held in Minneapolis in\n1684.\nIt was announced ths Revised\nPrayer Book of the church will\nbe available for study In March.\n1956, but will not be used In\nchurches until authorized by the\nGeneral Synod. That could take\n15 years, Rt. Rev. Philip Carrington, bishop Of Quebec, said.\nOPPOSES PROPOSAL\nG. M. Wright of Saskatoon opposed a suggestion that a needed\nextension to Church House in Toronto, headquarters Of the church\nin Canada, could be partly financed from, royalties from the\nRevised Prayer Book.    .\n\"That is not the way to use\nthe money,\" he said. \"We Anglicans cannot exist without a\nprayer book, ahd soon every Anglican in Canada will need a re-\nVised one. The prayer book is almost a means of grace.\n\"When a tax was put on a\nmeans Of grace before, the reformation resulted.\"\nHe Suggested if royalties were\nnecessary, the money should be\nspent on buying cheap books for\nevangelical purposes, or lt should\nbe spent on missionary work,\nThe council ordered further\nstudy of the proposed building\nextension and methods of financing it.\nGROWING AUDIENCE\nWith Sydney and Melbourne\nhaving the only television stations, Australia had 357,780 TV\nsets licenced in August, 1983.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nL-_B*  Fr\u00abi\u00abi Dwki-\nLook in the section ln which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor Friday, November U, 1958 '\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 60 (Aries)\n- Four major planets are in fine\npositions and a grand day is predicted even though your Mars ls\nnot among them. Sound business\nand financial matters, personal\n\u00abuln, mental work favored.\nAPRIL 81 to MAY 21 (taurusl-\nVou have excellent Influences with\nwhich to work. Your fine mentality\nshould help you to pick - and stay\non - the right course. Attention\nto details will be important.\nMAV 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini I-\nThis can bo one of your most\nbrilliant days with your imagination, intuition and ingenuity working at top speed. Get all the good\nyou can out of this day. Try new\nIdeas and methods. Be happy.\nJUNE tt to JULY 23 (Cancer)\nMoon, Mercury and other splendid\naspects strengthen and enliven the\nday. Be in there planning and\nworking at your best to achieve\nYour share of benefits. Difficult\nsituations can be handled easily,\nJULY 24 to AUGUST S3 (Leo)-\nSome of your opportunities may\nlie in outside channels now. Listen\nwell to those who have gained\nthrough experience and don't overlook advantages which may not be\ntoo Obvious at first.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Your Mercury in fine\nposition. It's greatly up to you and\nnow you handle operations how\nfar you progress. Your splendid\ngift of discernment should prove\nmost helpful now.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) -- Sensible planning\nat the beginning of your work day\nshould bring you better and bigger\nreturns  now.  Artistry,  skill  and\nproper  allocation  Of  tasks  will\nsimplify matters.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 21\n(Scorpio) \u2014 YOU should benefit in\nall activities where logic and\nclever management are requisites.\nContinue to keep emotions under\ncontrol.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n$1 (Sagittarius) \u2014 A most encouraging day. But you must do your\npart, of course. Thoughtful preparation will be essential tn important undertakings. Give your\nbest; It Is to your Interest,\nDECEMBER 62 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) - Strictly confidential\naffairs, government matters and\nInvestigate work among the many\nand varied activities favored now,\nHousehold and domestic interests\nalso under fine aspects.\n> JANUARY 21 tO FEBRUARY 18\n(Aquarius) - A good day. Urge\nyourself forward where you know\nyou have talent and ability. Don't\nshy away from big deals. An\nexcellent period for investigations,\nsolving mysteries, etc,\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You have similar indications to Aquarius. Be alert,\nready for action and decisions.\nYour natal planet, Neptune, ls in\nhighly favorable position and your\nspecial interests are sponsored.\nYOU BORN TODAY are prac-\ntical-mindcd and dignified, but\nslightly self-centered and domineering. You are quick of action,\nmentally and physically; ara wonderful in emergencies and make\nexcellent surgeons and physicians.\nYou have talent for music, science,\nmechanics, architecture, building;\ncould be a capable business head,\nBirthdate of: Sir Charles Lyell,\nfamed geologist.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nNEW MEDICAL\nEXPENSE POLICY\nNow Metropolitan Life announces\na new Insurance policy \u2014 supplementing the\nProvincial Hospital Plan \u2014 It helps you pay bills,\nboth in the hospital and at home, for:\n\u2022 Semi-private or private room \u2022 Medical expenses such as phy-\nhospital accommodation sieians' charges, registered\n5 Surgical expenses nurses' charges, and certain\n\u2022 Maternity expenses medical services and supplies\nThe cost of illness ot injury in your family\ncan be sizeable. Consider the cost today of\nitems such as physicians' bills, surgeons' fees,\nspecial nurses \u2014 in hospital, at home, or both\n\u2014 special prescriptions, prosthetic appliances,\nand similar expenses.\nAlso, when a member of your family must be\nhospitalized, you may well require room\naccommodations more private than those\noffered.\nAnd so, Metropolitan has designed a NEW\nPOLICY to supplement the benefits available\nto you under the Provincial Hospital Plan.\nIt is available to you either as an individual or as a family head, including wife and\nchildren, at a cost within the average budget.\nNow is the time to review your Medical Care\ncoverage. See if it meets the needs of you and\nyour family. Sound advice by an insurance\nexpert can help tailor a plan suitable to\nthose needs.\nYour Metropolitan Representative is such a\nperson. He has been carefully trained in the\nanalysis of insurance needs \u2014 and he is\ninterested in helping you get the most coverage\nfor your money. Call him today through the\nlocal office below.\nMetropolitan service is\nas local as Main Street\nat close os yeur phone\nCO_-_OHT \u00abNABA. IM - METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY\nMETROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY\n(A MUTUAL COMPANY)\nCanadian Head Office, 180 Wellington Street, Ottawa 4, Ontario\nNELSON DISTRICT\nROBERT J.  PETTY, MANAGER\n415 Kootenay Street Nelson,  B. C. Phone 700\n <5W^\nAbout the Town\nPHONE 1844\nMrs. Fred MaWer, 615 Second\nStreet, left Sunday for Vancouver\nwhere she will visit her son-in-law\nVlssdkatayL\niStf, ahm\/ia. (jJhsslsA\nTOT'S FAVORITE\nBe a real Santa Claus\u2014make this\nplump and jolly Santa doll to delight a child at Christmas.\nLittle-money Ohristmas doll \u2014\nmake it yourself and save. Use a\nman's size 12 sock, remnants for\ncostume. Pattern 592; directions,\npattern pieces.\nA new 1959 Laura Wheeler\nneedlecraft book, just out, has\nlovely designs to order: embroidery, crochet, knitting, weaving,\nquilting, toys. In the book is a\nspecial surprise to make a little\ngirl happy \u2014 a cut-out doll and\nclothes to color. Send 25 cents\nfor this book.\nICALL\nWEST\nTRANSFER\nCO.\n719 Baker St.   -   Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 33\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Whalley, for ten days.\n* *  +\nMr. and Mrs. Pat Murray of\nCapilano Highlands near Vancouver are visiting their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Niven, 410 Sixth Street.\n* *  \u00bb\nMiss Leona Boss, 180 Baker\nStreet, returned Monday from a\nthree weeks' holiday in England,\nwhere she attended a dedication of\nthe Brockwood Memorial in Brockwood Military Cemetery, New\nWoking, Surrey.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. K. Rauch and\nfamily, formerly of Trail, have token up residence at 1910 Kootenay\nStreet.\n* *  *\nMiss Doreen Allan, 818 Hendryx\nStreet, who .leaves at the beginning of December for Vernon,\nwhere she has been transferred by\nthe Bank of Montreal, goes today\nto Kaslo, where she will relieve in\nthe Kaslo branch of the bank for\nthree weeks.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson A. Allen,\n621 Gore Street, have had as'guests\nMrs. Allen's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. S. G. DeBou\nand son David from West Vancouver.\nHISTORIC SPOT\nRichmond Castle on the banks\nof the Swale River, ip Yorkshire,\nEngland, dates from'\"1071.\nOhsM, Mp. With,\nmorion. Tftwdin.\nPrinted Pattern\nWARDROBE \u25a0 BUILDER\nBetter Half to all your separates\n\u2014this smart skirt has slim lines\nin front, back-interest panelling,\nSew it easily in tweed, miracle\nblend, or faille with our printed\npattern! Ideal for school, career,\nsuburbs.\nPrined pattern 9184: Misses'\nwaist sizes 24, 25, 26, 28, 30, 32.\nSize 28 takes 1% yards 54-inch.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, and\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.\nToronto. Ont.\n|Wftl( gladly check Foot Sizes for you\nHere's what Doctors advise\nAges one to nine\nAges ten to twelve\nCfwk V\nm'\u25a0 \/mt eneiy\n\"Teen-Agers\"\nCM ^\nat haul every\nFor healthful, happy test we feafuro shoes by\nHewetson\nR* Andrew & Co*\nAN ANNUAL IODE Memorial Day gesture is carried out by Regent MrB. A. E.\nDalgas for the Kokanee Chapter Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire, as she\nplaces a wreath on the Nelson Cenotaph to honor the memory of the war dead at\nRemembrance Day services Tuesday. Other members of the chapter attended -services with their standard borne by Mrs. Nelson A. Allen.\n\u2014Daily News- photo by fan Brown.\nSandwich Fillings* Cookies*\nOffer Variety for Lunches\nSome unusual sandwich fillings\nas well as a good egg salad sandwich filling and a refrigerator\ncookie recipe are presented today\nas a variety for recipe books.\nBACON-PEANUT BUTTER\nFILLING\nOne-half cup peanut butter, Vt\ncup chili sauce, Vt cup chopped,\ncrisp cooked bacon.\nCombine ingredients and spread\ngenerously between buttered slices\nof rye or pumpernickel bread.\nMakes approximately VA cups for\n6 double sandwiches.\nNOTE: Keeps well in the refrigerator.\nSUNSHINE SPECIAL FILLINGS\nOne cup chopped dates, 1 cup\nshredded raw carrot, Vt cup chopped nuts (peanuts, walnuts, etc.),\nVt cup salad dressing.\nCombine ingredients and spread\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - The United\nChurch Girls' Home in Burnaby,\nB.C., will be sent $10 as a donation from the Women's Association\nof Turner Memorial Church, which\nmet at the home of Mrs. L. R.\nCampbell recently. Members Mrs.\nCampbell, Mrs. J. Forsythe and\nMrs. R. Burkett reported collecting $25 for the British and Foreign\nBible Society.\ngenerously between buttered slices\nof enriched white bread or between\nbuttered halves of fresh rolls.\nMakes approximately 2 cups\u2014for\n6 double sandwiches.\nEGG SALAD SANDWICH\nTwo tablespoons prepared mustard, 2 tablespoons mayonnaise, Vt\nteaspoon paprika, 2 tablespoons\nchopped celery, 4 hard cooked eggs\ndiced, 2 tablespoons chopped olives,\n1 tablespoon chopped sweet pickle,\n1 tablespoon chopped, pimento.\nAdd. mustard and paprika to\nmayonnaise, Combine all other ingredients and fold in mayonnaise.\nMakes VA cups filling, 6 sandwiches.   ...\n_:_.. * .-*. * , ..\nBUTTERSCOTCH\nREFRIGERATOR COOKIES\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1958\u20145\nHall Improvement Aided\nBy North Shore Teenagers\nThe Teen-Age Club of the North\nShore commenced Winter activities with a potluck supper'and election of officers Sunday night in the\nNorth Shore United Church Hall.\nWith an attendance of 17, election proceedings resulted in appointment of Bonnie Hughes as\npresident, Janet Neale as vice\npresident and Robin Amsden as\nsecretary-treasurer.\nThe young people, who meet on\nalternate Sunday nights, conduct\ntheir own business and fellowship\nmeetings with an adult couple as\nhosts. Their meetings start with a\npotluck supper. Members are plan\nning to hold a work party each Saturday to clean up or assist with\nother work organized by adults to\nimprove the hall.\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Burnham will\nattend a meeting once a month as\nclub counsellors to advise during\nmajor business discussions. Members are anticipating proposed badminton and square dance sessions.\nbrown sugar, 1 egg, 1 teaspoon\nvanilla, VA cups sifted pastry flour,\nVt teaspoon salt, Vs teaspoon soda.\nMelt margarine in a 1V_ quart\nsaucepan. Remove from heat. Add\nsugar, egg and vanilla and beat\nuntil smooth, about one minute. Sift\nflour, salt and soda over mixture\nand blend thoroughly. Place pan\nwith dough in refrigerator 30 minutes. Divide chilled dough in half\nand shape each half in a roll VA\ninches in diameter. Wrap in waxed\npaper and return to refrigerator for\nat least one hour. Slice Vi-inch\nthick and place on greased cookie\nsheet. Decorate with pecan halves,\nif desired.\nBake in a moderate oven (350\ndegrees F.) 10 to 12 minutes. Makes\nKorean Women and\nGirls Cared For\nWith Help of YWCA\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The rehabilitation of women and girls in\nKorea requires care and understanding, says Viola Williams.\nMiss Williams left her native\nEngland in 1953 to start Women's\nInstitutes in Malaya, and then\nwent to Korea to run farms and\norphanages for 'teen-age girls..\n\"Aside from the fact that most\nwomen in . Malayan Institutes\ncouldn't read or write, the program followed the same lines as in\nBritain and Canada,\" she said.\n\"Teen-age girls in Korea are a\nreal problem. Many have no\nhomes, no relations, no jobs.\n\"Some 50 are housed in buildings leased from the Australian\nPresbyterian Mission for from one\nto two years and given training.\n\"We fed and clothed them and\ntaught them weaving, . domestic\nwork and home craft. If we\ncouldn't arrange marriages for\nthem we found jobs and watched\nthat they were not exploited and\nwere able to carry on.\n\"There is an excellent Korean\nhouse mother now ih charge who\nstresses Korean preservation and\nhome-making.\"\nMiss Williams plans to travel\nacross Canada to visit YMCA organizations that contributed to her\nwork in Korea.\nVOTE FOR SIGNS\nTORONTO (CP)-City council\nvoted Monday to spend $60,000 to\nilluminate overhead signs at the\nrecently - installed pedestrian\ncrosswalks. The decision follows\na recommendation by board of\ncontrol and a series of disagreements which arose at all levels\nafter several accidents at the\ncrossings. Pedestrians have the\nright of way Over motorists at\nthe crosswalks.\nOne-half cup margarine, Vt cup approximately four dozen cookies.\nHigh Admission Standard Set\n200 Negro GirlsFor Acceptance\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nOTTAWA (CP) - Some 200\nNegro girls from the West Indies\nfederation and. British Guiana are\nentering Canada as landed immigrants this year.\nThey will swell to' 700 the total\nadmitted since Canada agreed in\n1955 to requests from Jamaica\nand Barbados\u2014now part of the\nfederation\u2014that this country ac-\nEttabllshed Since 1907\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nSet for cold weather\u2014whether it's rain, snow or juat\nplain frosty\u2014kindergarteners and first graders will look\nmanly in this cozy outfit. The leggings ars leather from\nthe knees down, to look like boots or puttees. With them\nis a trimly styled matching coat, accented with a velvet\nover-collar and pocket flaps.' A snug cap with a chin\nstrap tops the outfit.\ncept a limited number annually\nfor a year as domestic servants.\nViolet P. King, a liaison officer with the federal citizenship\ndepartment, says the girls are\nquickly becoming integrated into\nthe Canadian way of life. Miss\nKing, a native of Calgary, in 1955\nbecame the first colored woman\nadmitted to the bar in Canada.\n\u25a0 She w r i t e s in Canadian' Welfare, bi-monthly publication of the\nCanadian Welfare Council, that\none reason for the girls' rapid integration is that they live in Canadian homes in close contact\nwith the Canadian people.\nAbout 35 of the 80 sent here\nsince the program began still are\nin the Ottawa area. The others\nhave gone mainly to Toronto and\nMontreal where there are Negro\ncommunities ahd better job and\nmarriage opportunities.\nStandards are high for admission. Applicants must be single\nand, with some exceptions, between 21 and 35 years old.\nEach girl pays her own passage. The girls must also pass\nmedical examinations and meet\nnormal immigration requirements. Priority is given those\nwith more than five years' formal education and special training in homemaking. The federal\nlabor department finds them\njobs, usually in Ottawa, Montreal\nor Toronto.\nVARIED JOBS\nAfter their year's domestic\nservice, many get work as hospital kitchen help, bookkeepers,\nstenographers, nurses, nurses'\naides, store clerks or factory\non condition that the girls work\nworkers. Several have sponsored\nimmigration of their fiances and\nhave since married.\nThe girls usually have trouble\nat first with Canadian currency,\nclimate and food. But they\nquickly take to football, hockey\nand square dancing. Many take\nnight courses to improve their\neducation.\nThe militia is another popular\nleisure-time activity, especially in\nOttawa. Several girls have joined\nand acquired such varied abilities as truck driving and teletyp-\ning.\nHowever, Miss King writes,\n\"they have found it difficult in\nOttawa to find employment\nwhere training can be acquired\non the job or where their present\neducation is adequate. They\nthemselves feel that their color\nhas been the real objection.\"\nMUSIC  LOVERS\nOne leisure-time help is a British West Indies club Miss King\norganized at the Ottawa YWCA.\nThe girls lOve to entertain and\nhave presented calypso programs\nto several groups in the capital.\nDespite difficulties, they intend\nto remain in Canada. Miss King\nwrites:\n\"Looking at this Ottawa group\nas immigrants, I feel that their\nadjustment has been rapid and\nfavorable. For most of them Canada now is their home.\n\"Most expect to return to the\nislands for occasional visits but\nI know that already several of\nthem are waiting with keen anticipation the day when they can\ndisplay their certificates of Canadian citizenship.\"\nVolunteer Work Groups to\nHasten Hall Completion\nVolunteer work parties were\nplanned at a meeting of the North\nShore Couples' Club Saturday night\nwith a view to finishing the North\nShore United Church hall for\nchurch and community activities.\nChosen to head the group were\nG. V. Frederiksen and F. H. Lowe.\nMen of the Couples' Club will try\nto bring one other worker each to\ndouble the present manpower and\nhasten completion of several tasks,\nit was decided.\nThe Couples' Club met in the hall\nwith W. Rosling, secretary-treasurer, conducting the meeting in the\nabsence of president Paul Riley\nand vice-president Gordon Sutherland.\nRental committee members said\nthey have been approached by\nvarious groups wishing to rent the\nbuilding but until the hall is nearer\ncompletion, they must be refused.\nThe owner of a local service sta\ntion has offered his commission on\nall gas sales November 17 to assist\nin the raising of funds, it was reported. Suggestion was made that\ncoffee and talent parties be held\nin various homes and proceeds be\nturned over to the hall finance\ncommittee. A date will be set for\na whist drive to be held in the hall.\nAnnouncement was made of the\nfirst church service to be held the\nafternoon of November 16, with\nRev. H. R. Whitmore officiating.\nMembers agreed to holding of services alternate Sundays for three\nmonths on a trial basis.\nHighlight of the evening was presentation of a copper tea service\nand tray to Mrs. C. E. Cummins\nin recognition of her years of service as mail courier. A pot-luck\nsupper was followed by entertainment in the form of a spelling-bee\nand hula hoop contest, winners\nbeing Mrs. S. Lowe and Mrs. L. R.\nBurton. \" l\nGrandmother on\nMercy Flight\nWOMBWELL, England (Reuters) \u2014 Mrs. Annis Hibbard, 60,\nleft Tuesday for Vancouver and\nthe hospital bedside of her granddaughter on a mercy flight her\nneighbors helped to finance.\nThe granddaughter, 15-year-old\nChristine, has been calling for\nMrs. Hibbard ever since she was\ntaken to hospital in Vancouver for\nthe amputation of a leg.\nMrs. Hibbard, a widow with a\nsmall pension could not afford the\ntrip until her neighbors started a\nfund to pay for the flight.\nMrs. Anderson\nHeads WI at\nSlocan City\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Re-elected\npresident, Mrs. I. M. Anderson will\nguide the Women's Institute\nthrough its new term with Mrs. D\nW. Hird as vice president, Mrs. B,\nLister secretary - treasurer and\nMrs. A. Osis and Mrs. E. H. Hird,\nas directors.\nThese were results of the annual\nmeeting and election of officers of\nthe WI. Arrangements were made\nfor sending Christmas presents to\nthe Institute's adoptee in the Children's Solarium and three patients\nin the mental hospital.\nFamily Fair plans were also\ncompleted, and a donation made\nfor a wedding present for Mrs.\nStella Gummow, superintendent of\nprovincial Women's Institutes, who\nis to be married soon.\nPANAMA DIVORCE\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress\nTerry Moore has gone to get a\ndivorce in Panama, where her\nhusband, businessman Eugene\nMcGrath, lives. A divorce can be\nobtained in Panama in one day\nand the proceedings are being\ntaken by mutual consent.\nJUST ARRIVED!\nCOFFEE TABLES\nSTEP TABLES\nEND TABLES\nSee Them ot\nBattered Tree\nGiven Reprieve\nWINNIPEG (CP) - The battered Wolseley tree that grows in\nthe middle of a Winnipeg street\nhas been given a reprieve until\nspring by the city public works\ncommittee.\nThe tree jumped into prominence last year when housewives\non Wolseley avenue defied workmen sent to cut it down. The\nwomen contended that it showed\ntraffic to a safe speed and Mayor\nStephen Juba supported them.\nHowever, since that much-publicized incident, several unauthorized attempts have been made\nto destroy the tree by fire and\nother means. The latest occurrence was the collapse of one\nsection of the old elm.\nThe committee agreed Monday\nto leave the remainder of the\ntree as it is until spring to see\nif it is still alive. If it is, it will\nbe allowed to live until it dies a\nnatural death.\nKILLED FOR DOG\nKALAMAZOO, Midi. (AP)-\nVernon Bailey, 22, gave his life\nfor his dog. Bailey was hunting\nwith the dog Monday when it ran\nonto a railway track. With a\ntrain coming, Bailey got the dog\noff the tracks but was himself\nstruck and killed.\nMRS. SMITH IS\nNEW PRESIDENT\nACT AUXILIARY\nA new slate of officers to begin\nduties in the New Year was elected at a meeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Associated Canadian\nTravellers at the home of Mrs. W.\nJ. Hoobanoff recently.\nMrs. E. J. Smith was elected\npresident of the auxiliary for the\ncoming term, with Mrs. D. R. Ellefson as vice president, Mrs. P. S.\nCook secretary and Mrs. N. H. Collett as treasurer. Mrs. P. D. Mclnnes and Mrs. W. H. Burns are on\nthe phoning committee and Mrs.\nL. S. Bradley was elected to the\nsunshine committee.\nMrs. Mclnnes and Mrs. Bradley\nconducted the entertainment following election proceedings.\nCROSS BURNING\nHOUSTON, Tex..(AP)-A cross\nwas burned Monday night in the\nfront yard of Mrs. Charles White,\nwho was elected the first Negro\nmember of the Houston school\nboard last week. Her husband\nquickly extinguished the blaze.\nIndividual\nHOROSCOPE\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find what\nyour outlook is, according to the\nstars.\nFor Thursday, November 13, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Much can be done through\nclever planning, astute \"follow\nup.\" Put enthusiasm into your endeavors; it pays well. Be careful about expenditures, investments, however.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus) -\nBe direct but not abrupt, discerning but not critical. Associate with\nintelligent folk interested in the\nsame things you are. Don't hesitate to try something new just\nbecause it's unusual.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nFine Mercury rays! Still better\nones prevailing on Friday. Plan\nwell and wisely now. You can accomplish a 'great deal during\nthis period.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 3 (Cancer) \u2014\nYour Moon's position now suggests\nsome caution and a great deal\nof patience. However, you can\nachieve with honest effort. Do not\nwaste time; do your best.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nKeep going at a steady pace.\nThose who delay may miss out on\nopportunities to advance, An early\nstart will make it easier to put\nover your pet ideas \u2014 especially\nin line requiring skill and artistry.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Vibrations akin to Gemini's. Don't shirk difficult tasks or\nyou will thwart the progress which\ncan be yours. You possess the\nmental equipment to see you\n\u2022through to victory. Use it!\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Excellent influences!\nCooperate with smart, determined\npeople in making plans. Look for\nnew methods to enhance the quality of your performance.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 You can rely on your\nintuition how. Good, helpful lifts\nwill come from unexpected sources\nKeep eyes open so you will be\nable to take advantage of them.\nKeep emotions under control, however.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Stars are generally favorable today. You can\naccomplish in things for which\nyou are fitted if you put forth\nsincere efforts. Don't expect\nquick monetary, returns, however.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 You may have\nto call upon all your wits and talents to achieve now. BUT it can\nbe done. Combine your natural\ndexterity and reasoning power to\nbridge obstacles more quickly.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Be cautious in expressing opinions, giving advice.\nKeep alert to any and all opportunities whereby you can better\nyour status. Resist any tendency\nto be lax in duties. Resolutely\nachieve.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Mild influences. You\ncan make headway, however, by\nkeeping at the job and by refusing\nto be irritated by obstacles. Maintain high principles.\nYOU BORN TODAY are intuitive, imaginative, usually unassuming, generous and self-sacrificing toward those you love. You\nhave a practical outlook and can\nweek out unessentials to aid in\nbuilding a strong future. Give\nyourself sufficient time to absorb\ndetails necessary to formulate\nmost successful plans, then carry\nthrough resolutely. You can do a\nthorough conscientious job and\nearn the respect of others in the\ndoing. Curb a tendency toward\nstubbornness. Birthdate: Robert\nLouis Stevenson, novelist; Edwin\nBooth, tragedian.\nNorth American\nVan Lines\nir    A World-Wide Moving Service    *\nir  Wife - Approved Moves  ic\nLOCAL AGENT\n* STAR *\nTRANSFER LTD.\nPhene 505\n701 Front St.\n -'\n\u25a0\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNI5DAY, NOV. 12,1958\nArrest Bank Suspect\nIn Denver, Colorado\nDENVER (CP) - A man was\narrested Monday night in a night\nclub while sipping champagne\nand identified by police as an\n'Ottawa bank teller sought for\ntheft in the disappearance of\n$290,000 in cash.\nPolice who took Boyne Lester\nJohnston Into custody said they\nfound an estimated $200,000 in\nthe YMCA room where the 25-\nyear-old Imperial Bank of Canada employee was staying.\nDetectives Art Esterling and\n-Gene Ater quoted Johnston as\nsaying ln an oral statement that\nhe fled the bank with the cash\n\"because I wondered what it\nwould be like to have all that\nmoney.\"\n\"Now,\" he was quoted as adding, \"I know.\"\nBANK ADUIT\nJohnston left his Ottawa home\nOct. 26. An audit at the bank\ndisclosed $290,000 missing.\nJohnston was traced to Mont-\nlabor Retains\nWelsh Seal\nPONTYPOOL, Wales (Reuters)\nThe opposition Labor party retained a \"safe\" Parliamentary\nseat Tuesday in a by-election result\nthat demonstrated a continuing\nslump in the Conservative government's electoral prospects.\nLabor candidate Leo Abse won\nthe Pontypool seat with 20,000\nvotes, beating the Conservative\ncandidate, who got 6,273 votes,\nand a representative of the Welsh\nNationalist movement who polled\n2,927.\nThe last election in the constituency was in the general elections of 1955, when it was a\nstraight fight between Labor and\nConservatives. Labor polled 26,-\n372 and the Conservatives 9,800.\nCONSERVATIVES  DECLINE\nThe Conservatives' share of the\ntotal votes declined by 5.6 percentage points compared with\n1955. The Labor poll also fell-\nby 4.5 points. Socialists noted\nthat the fall in their actual majority coincided roughly with tho\nvote polled by the Welsh nationalists.\nThe contest was caused by the\nrecent bestowal of a life peerage\non D. Granville West, the former\nLabor member.\nStanding in the 630 - member\nHouse of Commons now is Conservatives and allies 338; Labor\n.280; Liberals 6; independents 3;\nvacant 3.\nWELFARE   WORKER   DIES\nSYRACUSE, N. Y. (AP)-Rt.\nRev. Joseph B. Toomey, prominent Roman Catholic welfare\nworker and president-elect of the\nCatholic Hospital Association of\nthe U.S. and Canada, died Mon-\n,Toomey had been suffering from\n'3\u00bb heart ailment. An assistant\npriest found him dead In his bedroom at the rectory of St. John\nthe Evangelist Church, where he\nwas pastor.\nreal. Ater aaid the Canadian\ntold him he travelled to Los\nAngeles by plane, went on to\nTwin Falls, Idaho, and came\nhere Nov. 3.\n\"I'm glad it's over, I knew I'd\nbe caught,\" Johnston was quoted\nas saying as he was led to his\ncell.\nPolice said Johnston \"guessed\"\nhe had spent about $60,000 in his\ntravels, including $4,150 here for\na sports car. It was Johnston,\npolice said, who made the estimate that he had $200,000 left.\nEsterling and Ater said when\nthey asked Johnston for his\nIdentification at the Chez Paree\nnight club he said he didn't have\nany. But, they said, a check of\nhis wallet showed his proper\nidentification.\nA $10,000 reward circular (com\nOttawa authorities led to Johnson's arrest. It arrived here Nov.\n7 and several downtown acquaintances of the police were informed.\nMonday night one of the persons called police and told them\na man fitting Johnston's description had been drinking champagne at the club for several\nhours.\nJohnston told officers he was\nstaying at the YMCA.\nPolice said a suitcase found in\nJohnston's room was crammed\nfull of bills.\nPolice said the estimate of the\namount recovered was made by\nJohnston, who \"guessed\" that he\nhad spent about $60,000 in Los\nAngeles, Twin Falls, Idaho, and\nhere.\nArrest While\nSlave Suspects\nJOLIETTE, Que. (CP)-Police\nsaid Tuesday they have arrested\nthree men suspected of white\nslave operations involving Joliette girls of 14 to 19 years.\nThe arrests followed the disappearance of one girl from her\nhome who, police said, was\nforced into prostitution in Montreal,\nChief Valmore Lapierre of tho\nJoliette municipal force and De-\ntective-Sgt. Jean-Baptiste Gauthier of the provincial police offices here have warned Joliette\nparents to be careful with whom\ntheir daughters associate.\nThey said they suspect a number of girls have been victims\nof the ring and that the girls,\nnow in Montreal, have been\nashamed to tell their parents\nwhat happened.\nPolice said ring operators invite young girls to spend apparently an innocent evOning at the\nmovies or to places where drinking is permitted. During the evening drugs are put in the girls'\ndrinks and the girls are taken\nby car to Montreal.\nThe two police officers said they\nare watching places where suspects are likely to gather, particularly on weekends.\nGood Printing\nNOT JUST PRINTING\nis what you get when your printing,\norder is placed with the best equipped\nprint shop in the area \u2014 The Dally\nNewi Printers.\nGood Printing\nis the result of fully trained craffsmen\nplus the correct inks and papers.\nGood Printing\nis the Hallmark of your business \u2014\nbe sure your printing doesn't downgrade your business.\nGood Printing\nIS QUALITY PRINTING\nyou get this kind of printing when your\nprinting work is done\nby the\nCOMMERCIAL\nPRINTING DEPARTMENT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPHONE 1844\nFor Printing\nSALES and SERVICE\nPlace Restrain!\nOn Credit Sales\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian\nmoney pot has been bubbling with\na heavy addition of new funds,\nbut the insatiable hunger for\nmoney\u2014and credit\u2014appears far\ngreater than the pot can provide.\nThus, with deepening concern\nover the possibility of inflation,\nthe Bank of Canada appears to\nhave imposed new restraints on\nthe expansion of the country's\nmoney supply.\nThat, perhaps Is one of the\nmain reasons why the central\nbank's interest rate has Climbed\nsteadily, week by week, reaching\nto 3.2 per cent last Thursday\nfrom the all-time low of 1.12 last\nAugust. The all-time high was\n4.33 per cent In August last year.\nSOME SHORTAGES LIKELY\nThe restraints appear to have\nbeen imposed amid prospects of\nsome shortages likely in the overall supply of mortgage money\nand heavy unemployment in tho\ncoming winter months.\nHowever, officials emphasized\nthat the central bank has added\nextensively to the country's\nmoney pot in the last 12 months,\nincreasing the over-all supply by\nsome $1,600,000,000 to a total of\nmorO than $13,000,000,000.\nThat, they say, is one of the\nlargest increases ln recent years,\nranging up to about 14 per cent\nfrom previous averages of about\nfour or five per cent.\nRISING DEFICIT\nThe expansion in the money\nsupply has provided the chartered\nbanks with a lot more funds with\nwhich to make loans\u2014and earn\ninterest. It was an indication of a\nheavy demand, mainly by the federal government, for more credit\nto cover a swelling treasury deficit.\nLet's just see how this works:\nThe government, looking at its\ncoffers, decides it can no longer\npay its way and must borrow\nheavily to cover expenditures,\nthe plains of the situation may\nbe that the available suoply of\nmoney just isn't sufficient to\ncover all the demand for loans.\nIs the government to compete\nsharply with other institutions for\navailable money\u2014and thus force\ninterest rates to unusual highs\u2014\nor is the Bank of Canada going\nto step in and increase the overall money supply by buying more\nof the government bonds?\nThe central bank earlier this\nyear decided to boost purchases\nof bonds. Over the years, it increased its holdings by some\n$213,000,000 to a total of $2,600,-\n000,000 or so.\nWIDESPREAD EFFECT\nOn the surface that doesn't look\nlike much of an Increase. But Its\nratifications are widespread. The\nmoney the government receives\nfrom the central bank in exchange for bonds is deposited in\nchartered banks. These deposits\nare then switched over to the\ncentral bank.\nNow for every $1 the chartered\nbanks have on .deposit with the\ncentral bank, they can lend about\n$12,50 to the public. That is based\non the regulation that only eight\nper cent of their total deposits\nmust be in the form of cash in\nthe till or deposits with the\ncentral bank.\nSo that every time the central\nbank lends money to the government it, ln fact, initiates an expansion in the country's money\nsupply. The central bank's fear is\nthat this expansion could lead to\nheavy inflation in the future.\nOther federal experts may discount Its fears, but the central\nbank has control over the money\nsupply. In the end, it appears that\nit is the decisions' .of the bank\nthat count.\nCanada's Prime Minister Takes\nPart in Verdun Chapel Service\nBy ALAN DONNELLY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVERDUN, France (CP) - The\ncity of Verdun, one of France's\nbloodiest and most valiant battlefields, Tuesday commemorated the\n40th anniversary of the First\nWorld War armistice in the company of Prime Minister Diefenbaker and French, Canadian and\nUnited States troops,\nThe prime minister placed a\nwreath inside the stone chapel\nbeneath the impressive statue\ndepleting a sorrowing France.\nRain fell gently at the Canadian leader, accompanied by military figures of the three countries, descended the 73 steps\nleading from the memorial,\nwalked along the ranks of the\nthree-nation' guard of honor that\nGen. Macklin Scores\nCanada Armed Forces\nOTTAWA (CP) - Maj.-Gen.\nW. H. S. Macklin, former adjutant - general of the. Canadian\nArmy, said Tuesdays Canada's\narmed forces are completely\nchaotic and unco-ordlnatcd.\n\"Thty cannot complement each\nother nor support each other in\nthe simplest operation of war.\"\nhe said in a speech to an Ottawa\nservice club.\n\"There is no over-riding policy\nor plan to use them in combination. Not one of them can carry\nout a strategic decision of its own\ngovernment without help from\nsome other  country.\"\nThe statements were included\nin a text of the speech issued\nto the press before delivery.\nCONSISTENT   CRITIC\nGen. Macklin, consistent critic\nof Canadian defence policy since\nhis' retirement from the army in\nWitnesses Refuse\nTransfusions\nWINNIPEG (CP) - A 14-year-\nOld boy denied blood transfusions\nbecause of his family's religious\nbeliefs was reported in critical\ncondition Tuesday in hospital.\nDonald Holland, 14, is unconscious as the result of a bullet\nwouhd suffered Nov. 4 on the\nfamily farm in th* Neepawa district, 105 miles west of Winnipeg.\nHis parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nLouis Holland, are members of\nthe Jehovah's Witness sect,\nwhose members are opposed to\nblood transfusions. They have refused permission for such treatment.\nSTOPPED ASKING\nA doctor said late Monday that\nhe stopped asking the parents to\npermit a transfusion because\nthey had repeatedly refused.\nThey knew what could be done\nfor the boy and it was up to\nthem.\nThe boy has undergone an operation and the ends of a severed\nartery have been tied.\nThe boy was riding on a tractor with his twin brother, David,\nwhen a .22 - calibre rifle discharged and the slug struck him\nin, the upper leg.\nHospital spokesmen said Tuesday\nthat the boy has not lost any bloOd\nsince the operation. There is nO\ninfection. ' '\nAttorney-General Sterling Lyon\nsaid he and his departmental advisors had reviewed the law and\nthe best advice he could got was\nthat the provincial government\ncould not interfere.\nHowever, he would review the\nmatter again.\nMr. Lyon said that under the\nlaw any individual has tht right\nto decide what medical attention\nis going to be given if the individual is able to make a decision. In\nthe case Of a minor, the right lies\nwith the parents.\nIf a doctor were to give a transfusion without Consent it would be\ntechnically a case of assault, he\nsaid.\nLONDON (Reuters) - The Polish government and Communist\nparty leaders visiting Russia for\nIhe last two weeks left Moscow\nfor home today, the Soviet news\nagency Tass reported.\nBritish Heckler\nHai Easy Time\nBy  ED SIMON\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) - The British\npublic, a correspondent wrote to\nThe Times, tends to be \"tolerant\nof men who interrupt its prime\nministers, however tiresome they\nmay be.\"\nThere is no defence, wrote another, for anyone who endeavors\nto prevent a prime minister's\nfreedom of speech.\nThe forcible removal of a number of right-wing hecklers during\nPrime Minister Macmillan's wind-\nup speech to the Conservative\nparty conference at Blackpool has\nroused a igorous debate that\nposes one or two tricky problems\nof legal interpretation.\nSHOUT  SLOGANS\nThe Interrupters were members\nof the League of Empire Loyalists, a small organization of extremists which frequently seeks to\npropagate its views by shouting\ndenunciations and slogans from\nthe gallery in the House of Commons and at political meetings.\nBoth Conservatives and Loyalists have threatened to take the\nBlackpool incident to court.\nThe language of the Loyalists is\nusually provocative. The eoithet\nof traitor is hurled impartially at\nprime ministers and opposition\nleaders, at archbishops of Canterbury and peers of the realm, They\nanpeared uninvited, sometimes\ndisguised, at nrlvate meetings.\nThe object of their actions is to\ncreate the greatest possible nuisance.\nThese facts are not in dispute.\nThe ouestlons that arise inolve\ntheir le. al right to disruot meetings and the rtoht of their victims to suppress the interruptions.\nThe Public Meeting Act provides that an interrupter can be\nimprisoned for a month or fined\nEB if he \"acts In a dlso-derly\nmanner for the pumose of pre-\nentlng the transaction of the\nbusiness for which the meeting\nwas called together.\"\nEJECTION ALLOWED\nThe Public Order Act entitles\nstewards at the meeting to eject\nhim, using \"no more force than\nis reasonably necessary.\"\nBut the Loyalists argue that\nneither statute applied to the\nBlackpool incident. They argue\nthat half a dozen Of their members could not possibly break up\na meeting of several thousand\nConservatives and that the treatment received by the interlopers\nwas far in excess of the \"reasonably necessary\" force required to\nremoe them.\nThe Conservative counter-argument implies that the Loyalists,\nas trespassers at a private meeting, were fair garpe. It adds that\nthe natur of' thir bhavior wht\ntumble.of political controversy.\nLord Hailsham, the Conservative party chairman, in his con-\n1955, said $17,000,000,000 has been\n(pent for defence since 1950.\n\"And what have we got?\n\"We have an .air force armed\nwith obsolete jots and strategically hog-tied to the U.S. Air\nForce, It has no air transport,\nstrategic or tactical, that can lift\nthe army with its equipment. It\nhas no tactical aircraft that can\nIntervene in a land battle.\n\"It (the RCAF)' ia preparing to\ngive up air warfare and get right\ndown to earth to fire untested,\nobsolescent American anti - aircraft missiles.\"\nCanada had a well - equipped\nnavy without a single merchant\nship of Canadian registry to escort.\nThe army had no reserves, no\nair transport, no tactical air support, no nuclear weapons.\nGLUED TO GROUND\n\"The army is as glued to the\nground as one of Caesar's legions,\"  Gen. Macklin said.\nThe general said the U.S. Bomarc anti-aircraft missile is unlikely to be any more useful than\nthe Arrow jet interceptor would\nhave been.\nGen. Macklin said there is no\ndefence against the hydrogen\nbomb and that there is not likely\nto be any.\nCanadian policy of reliance on\nnuclear retaliation had deterred\nRuska from nuclear war but it\nhad deterred She Soviet Union\nfrom nothing else.\n\"We have neglected and emasculated the conventional armed\nforces that could support tho opportunistic and mutable strategy\nthat we need to match Russia.\"\nProfit-Motive\nNot Evil\u2014Crump\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 N. R. Crump,\npresident of the CPR, Said Tues\nSay industry should not be afraid\nto emphasize desire for profit and\nfear of loss.\nMr. Crump told the British In\nstltute of Transport that profit\nmotive \"has been attacked by use\nof innuendo and other weapons\nas an evil thing.\"\nBut he said the motive Is the\nregulator in a free economy which\nbrings land, labor and capital together in combinations designed to\nmaximize the satisfaction of\nhuman wants.\"\n\"It is not incompatible with the\ncurrently popular measures for\nstate welfare, provided the .welfare plans are not administered\n... to destroy incentive for work\nor to seek better methods of production.\"\nHe said the attack against the\nprofit motive has made private\nenterprise \"prone in its public utterances to list profit as the least\nof its objectives, treating it as a\nnecessary but somewhat objectionable byproduct of an otherwise\nworthy undertaking.\"\ntribution to The Times  correspondence- columns, writes:\nVIOLENCE EXPECTED\n\"If I had behaved similarly at\nany comparable meeting of any\npoUtical party, or Oven of many\nreligious organizations, I should\nhave expected to receive physical\nviolence, however unjustified, as\na result of such foolish and provocative conduct.\"\nHis argument found favor with\nVicky, cartoonist for the left-wing\nweekly, The New Statesman, who\nproduced a gleeful effigy of a battered Hailsham staunching his\nwounds with a handkerchief labelled \"Blackpool aftermath.\"\nBut it was less warmly received\nby his fellow-correspondents in\nThe Times.\n\"To expect to be treated violently must give one a degree of\ntolerance towards those exercis^\ning violence,\" wrote one. \"And\nonce violence is tolerated, brutality and thuggery can easily become acceptable.\"\nstretched for two blocks and\nstood with head bared for one\nminute's silence.\nMANY REMINDERS\nThere were frequent reminders\nof the 1916 Verdun battle as the\nprime minister's party motored\nhere from the RCAF base at\nMarville, 23 miles away.\nMilitary'cemeteries marked the\nrolling countryside. The route\npassed close to the giant Verdun\nOssuary that holds the bones of\nthousands of French troops who\ndied while obeying the Verdun\nbattle motto \"they shall not\npass.\" The teakwood doors of the\nossuary chapel were donated by\nCanada.\nThe Canadian guard of honor\nwas made up of airmen from the\nMarville base and was accompanied by the RCAF pipe band.\nThe prime minister, who flew\nfrom Germany early Tuesday\nmorning, left immediately after the\nceremony on a flight to Rome-\nfinal visit in the European stage\nof his world tour.\nNorth of here, members of the\nCanadian Legion were marking\nanother Remembrance Day ceremony at the Canadian memorial\nat Vimy Ridge.\nLAYS WREATH\nLegion President David L. Burgess of Ottawa placed a wreath\nthere in the prime minister's\nname.\nBefore the Verdun ceremony\nthe prime minister and Mrs.\nDiefenbaker were honored in a\ncivic reception at the city hall.\nMayor Francois Schlatter gave\nthem each reproductions of the\nVerdun medal.\n\"I bring to you the deep appreciation of the Canadian people,\"\nthe prime minister said, for the\nvast sacrifices France has made\nin the service of freedom.\"\nBorrow confidently at HFC\nHousehold Finance is backed\nby 80 yeirs' experience in\nmaking prompt loftns. At\nHFC you may borrow up to\n$1000 for any good purpose.\nBorrow in privacy with repayment terms that suit yOUr\nincome best.\nOver 300,000 Canadian, borrow horn MFC every year\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nCtHp+td&ifK. if Canada\n\u00a3. G. Bernard, Manager\n608 Baker Street Telephone 1890\nNELSON\nENDORSES WORK\nMONTREAL (CP)-The Canadian Association for Retarded\nChildren Monday made public a\nletter from Prime Minister Diefenbaker who wrote he \"heartily\ncommended\" the association's initiative in sponsoring Canadian\nRetarded children's Week, Nov.\n16-27.\nKhrushchev's Berlin\nStatement Disturbing\nBy THOMAS P. WHITNEY\nAP Foreign News Analyst\nIf Nikita Khrushchev really\nmeans what he says about abrogating four-power rule in Berlin\nand freedom of transport between West Berlin and West\nGermany, there's going to be a\nnew and dangerous international\ncrisis.\nThe Western powers stood up\nto the Soviet Union 10 years ago\non this issue and forced a Russian backdown with the successful airlift.\nAnd this time, In contrast to\nthe Berlin blockade, the United\nStates, France and Britain could\ncount on the full support of a\npowerful West Germany in any\ncounter-measures.\nWhat Khrushchev said at the\nPolish-Russian friendship rally in\nthe Lenin Stadium in Moscow\nMonday was plain enough.\nHe said four-power rule in Berlin should be ended. He said the\nagreements under which tho\nWest has unhindered transport\nand communication rights between West Germany and West\nBerlin are obsolete and that the\nCommunists should free themselves from them. He said the\nWest Miould deal with East Germany directly on questions concerning East Berlin and stressed\nthat the Soviet Union would consider an attack on East Germany\nas an attack on the Soviet Union.\nSOUNDS MENACING\nThis sounds menacing. If Khru\nshchev ls really serious, then it\nwould follow that the Russian!\nwill formally denounce four-\npower rule In Berlin and the\nagreements on which it ia based,\nthat the East Germans will interfere with surface and air\ntransport into West Berlin and\nthat the Soviet Union would regard any action of force by the\nWest to break a blockade as an\nact of war,\nThe catch here is that, as\nKhrushchev no doubt knows, this\nwould mean world war. It seems\nquestionable that he intends to\nstart the world conflagration, at\nleast in this way.\nEven if Khrushchev doesn't\nwant a new world war, however,\nhe still might like to have some\nincreased international tension in\nthe atmosphere.\nThe Russians are in the midst\nof a crackdown all along the line\non malcontents, \"revisionists\"\nand intellectuals in general in the\nSoviet Union and the satellites.\nSharply Increased tension would\ngive an excuse to press this\ncrackdown:\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) .- Leona\nGage, who lost her Miss U.S.A.\ntitle when officials found she was\nmarried, plans to wed for the\nthird time next Monday. Miss\nGage, 22, now a show girl at the\nMoulin Rouge night club here,\nwill marry Nick Covacevich, 22,\nwho also dances at the club.\nSAY\n'before   \\\nyou say \\\nScotch!\nDEWAR'S\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTHE\nNelson Daily News\nIs Your\nSHOPPING\nGUIDE\nSAVE MONEY\nBy Reading the Display and\nClassified Ads\nAt the Same Time\nEnjoy the\nFINEST\nin\nReading\nEntertainment\n \u25a0    ^Pfppwsr\n5^1\nSailor's Guide\nCaptures\nInternational\nBy JOHN CHANDLER\nLAUREL, Md. (AP) - Sailor's\nGuide from Australia was declared the winner of the $100,000 Washington (D.C.) International Tuesday on a foul committed by Tudor\nEra, a United States-owned horse\nwho finished first by 3Vi lengths.\nThe largest crowd in Maryland\nracing history, 40,276, jammed this\ncolorful course. It roared wtlh excitement as the 10 horses from\nsaw Sailor's Guide beat out the\nseven countries iought it out and\nfavored Ballymoss from Ireland by\na head for second place.\nThen more roars went up as the\nobjection sign was flashed, Howard Brant, the rider of Sailor's\nGuide, claimed that Tudor Era\ncrowded his horse on the first\nturn. It was the first foul claim in\nthe history of the seven-year-old\nInternational.\nPackers Return\nCompliment 5-2\nSTOCKHOLM (AP) - Kelowna\nPackers Tuesday night avenged\ntheir loss In the first game of\ntheir   European    hockey   tour,\nsweeping over a Swedish club 5-2.\nThe Packers, playing a series of\nexhibition games here before going\nto Moscow for their series against\nRussia,   dropped   their   opening\ngame last Sunday 5-2.\nMore than 14,000 fans jammed\nthe Stockholm Olympic Stadium to\nwatch the game.\nSweden took a fast lead on a\ngoal at the two-minute mark by\nEinar Granat but Canada, skating\nmuch faster and passing with more\nprecision than on Sunday, moved\ninto a 3-1 lead on three goals\nwithin three minutes, by Jack Lancien, Mike Durban and Russ Kowalchuk.\nTom Stecyk counted in the second period and Brian Roche in the\nthird.\nK. S. Hedlund scored Sweden's\nsecond goal late in the first period.\nWolves, Rams,\ners Win\nTig\nTeams in the high school basketball league saw action again\nMonday night with three games\nbeing played.\nThe first was a see-saw battle\nbetween the Bisons and the Wolves\nin which the latter was victor,\n16-12. Ernie Wah potted five points\nfor the winners and the same number was put in for the losers'by\nWayne Farenholtz.\nIn the second game, Phil Engstad paced the Rams to an easy\n16-8 victory over the Juniors, with\nsix points to his credit. All junior\nscoring was evenly distributed.\nThe last game sa wthe Tigers\nwallop the Cougars 52-21, in the\nhighest scoring game this year.\nThe Tigers were led to the winner's box by Jim Beeland with 16\npoints, Jim Carter with 9, Carl\nHennig with 8, Roy King with 7 and\nBob Algar with 6. All five players\ncontributed to the slaughter. Gordie Jeffs potted 10 points for the\nCougars.\nLIONS BUY FIVE\nVANCOUVER (CP)-British Columbia Lions of the Western Interprovincial Football Union Monday\nannounced the purchase of five\nplayers from Sarnia Golden Bears\nof the Ontario Rugby Football\nUnion.\nLions' general manager Herb\nCapozzi said the deal is the largest\never made in Canadian football\nhistory, in terms of money and\nplayers.\nTOP WINNERS in Nelson Curling Club's Welcome\nBonspiel Monday night are pictured here. At left, skip\nGeorge Barefoot, top right, 5. Shukin, and J. Flamank\nand G. Grant, kneeling, defeated the Dr. L. J. Maurer\nrink 8-6 in an extra end game; at right, A. Stephenson,\ntop right, and Gerry Koehle, and Bob Robinson and\nFritz Koehle, kneeling, defeated Jim Learning's rink 11-3.\n\u2014Daily News phofo by Ian Brown.\nWhiteleys\nTake Algars\nMonday night in the Senior B\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nOil ihsL (point\nBaskS Leagu\u2122 the ffileyll ''\"''l\"\"\". \"'\"MIIMIIHII \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0Illlll I illlll I llllllll'\nhanded  the Algar-Dunlops  their The Leafs are presently visiting the Okanagan Valley.\nfirst loss by a closs 43-41 margin.]Last night they played Penticton, this evening they meet\nThe game was one of the most Vernon. Coach Dorohoy was scheduled to join the team in\nf,T.w hiSK).  play6d thls yeariPenticton wh\u00abe ,hre9 \u00bb\u00bbw players were also expected to\nThTimitTv. \u00ab,_\u25a0\u201e n\u00bbn.d hJdon Leaf sweater*. Hamilton, a prospective defenceman, and\nJYeag^sela87memPber,dJeb|f &$\u00a3 f^'l\"'98 f ^\u201eS?F\u2122 \u00ab\u00b0h. '*&\u25a0 ^0UtB\nCraig, with 13 points. iwhl'e the ,ea\u00bbn is on tour- All being well, Dorohoy hopes\nAl Duncombe, even though on l\u00b0 have his defence-bolstered Leafs ready and able for\na losing club, was top scorer of the big Trail game here Saturday night\n'? clul\nthe night as he potted 22 points.\nThe few fans that did show up,\nwere held spell-bound In the final\nminutes of play as the Algars tried\nto tie the score. Their first chance\ncame when the Whiteleys received\na technical foul and two foul shots\nwere cooly sunk by Bill Phillips,\nAlgar defenceman. The third shot,\nwhich would have brought the Algars into a near winning position,\nwas missed by Al Duncombe.\nIn the early part of the last quarter, Duncombe was slightly injured when he fell from a \"jump-\nball\" and hurt his elbow.\n' All through the game the Algars\nmanaged \"to keep the Whiteleys\nfrom running up a high lead and\nthrough long passes and little\ndribbling closed what small gap\nin the score there was.\nAlgars match their skill against\nthe City Auto team tonight.\nArgos to Keep\nHampton Pool\nTORONTO (CP)-Toronto Argonauts Tuesday announced they will\nretain coach Hampton Pool to run\nthe Big Four football club in 1059.\nArgos will also keep defensive\ncoach Steven Owen, former New\nYork Giant strategist, and- Joe\nThomas, Pool's assistant.\n750 YEARS OLD\nGreat Yarmouth in England received its first civic charter from\nKing John in 1208.\nIlllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAdditional Sport\nOn Page Two\n'iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nThe coach will be chiefly inter'\nested in experimenting with his\nnew material during the Okanagan\njaunt, with victories taking second\nplace. He wants to hit the ice Saturday evening with defence weaknesses corrected and will seek to\nJuggle his player strength for the\npurpose of achieving the best all-\nround lineup. If the- lads win\neither of their Okanagan games\nunder these conditions it will indicate one ,of two things: either the\nLeafs are exceptionally powerful\nby virtue af their new players,-or\nelse the Okanagan teams are less\nformidable than assumed,\n*  *  *\nWhile the major attention has\nfallen to the new players on the\nlocal team so far this season, familiar figures like Lee Hyssop and\nMickey Maglio have provided fans\nwith lots to talk abiut. Hyssop has\nbeen outstanding at centre ice,\ndisplaying speed, know-how and\nvigorous competitive spirit. Scores\nof fans have remarked upon the\nnew aggressive quality of both his\noffensive and defensive play. It\nwould appear that the popular centre is oft to one of his finest seasons. Maglio, too, always a tireless work-horse on the wing, is adding a great deal of hockey strategy to his long-standing reputation for dig and drive.\nWhen Dorohoy joins these two\nveterans Nelson fans will boast\nthe best forward line in ~the league\nto applaud. Forced to sit out recent games awaiting his official\nreinstatement as an amateur, the\ncoach is champing at the bit\nthese days awaiting the green light\nto join Lee and Mickey on the Ice\nlanes. The executive feels reasonably sure that the fans should see\n\"Mah, Fm.sold on\nADAMS OLD!\"\nglfaoma* \u00ae4cta*n4 ^#Oeu8&et.\nOR-58-1\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Conlrol Board\nor by the Government ol British Columbia\nthis line in action Saturday night\nagainst Trail, along with the additional player strength Dorohoy\ndecides to retain. Madigan will\nalso be returning after an injury-\nenforced absence.\nIf present plans are fulfilled,\nNelson fans will have an opportunity to see Penticton playing in\nthe local ice. arena on Tuesday or\nWednesday of next week. Art McElroy of the executive indicated\nthat this was under arrangement,\nfinal confirmation being expected\nduring the Leaf's Okanagan trip.\nThe Leafs are gunning for top spot\nthis year, and a visit from the Okanagan league will stir up plenty of\nfan interest. Top spot in the local\nleague will mean meeting the\nwinner of the Okanagan league\nnext spring. Penticton's visit may\njust be a preview of hockey hopes\nto .bet,\nThe Leafs were scheduled to\nmeet Smokies in Trail Thursday\nnight, but this game may be postponed. However, everyone can\nlook forward to seeing the resumption of hockey action Saturday night\nwhen Trail invades the Nelson\narena. Having defeated Rossland,\nTrail will be out to cop first place.\nThe Leafs, meanwhile, are being\nAls, Riders\nIn Sudden-\nDeath Today\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Coach Douglas Walker, edgy and fretting, turned author Tuesday with thevsame\ncautious regard for wordage that\ncharacterizes his conversation.\nWith Montreal football fans fast\nsteaming up for today's Big Four\nsemi-final between Walker's Alouettes and Ottawa Rough Riders, the\nconsidered opinion of the coach became a must.\nWalker retired to his private office and wrote this breathlessly-\nawaited statement, containing 28\nwords:\n\"Our team will have to be at its\nbest to win. We expect a hard,\ntough ball game. Ottawa Is a dangerous team any time we play\nthem.\"\nShatto, Parker\nNamed in Big 4\nTORONTO (CP) - Halfback\nDick Shatto of Toronto Argonauts of the Big Four and quarterback Jackie Parker' of Edmonton\nEskimos in the Western conference Tuesday were named the outstanding football players in the\nEast and West in a poll of sports\nwriters and sports-casters in the\nnine Big Four and Western. Interprovincial Football Union cities.\nreinforced with first place ln their\nown minds. Defence will be the deciding factor. Nelson fans will be\nwaiting for the face-off Saturday to\nfind out what Dorohoy has managed ln this department.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1958\u20147\nNetmen Busy as Smokies\nWallop Warriors 8-6\nROSSLAND\u2014Trail Smoke Eaters re-claimed a share\nof first place in the Western International Hockey League\nMonday night, downing Rossland Warriors 8-6 before 564\nfans for their third straight victory.\nAd Tambellini paced Trail with two goals and two\nassists while Ron Flinn also turned in a two-goal effort. Leo\nLucchini had two markers for\nRossland.\nThe Smokies used a junior,\nWayne Edwards on defence in\nplace of Ray Hamilton who is out\nwith an Injury. Cal Hockley moved\nup to the forward line.\nRossland led at the end of the\nfirst period but the Warriors were\nswamped in the first nine minutes\nof the second when they fell behind\n5-2. The free-wheeling middle\nframe ended 7-4 in Trail's favor.\nWarriors outscored Trail 2-1 in\nthe last period.\nPinoke Mclntyre and Bud An<\ndrews gave Rossland its first period\nlead as Trail could manage only\none goal by Ron Flinn.\nAHEAD TO STAY\nGordie Robertson, Bflb Kromm,\nJoe Conn and Gerry Penner then\nreeled off four fast goals to head\noff the second and Trail was ahead\nto stay. George Ferguson and Vic\nLofvendahl got the next two for\nRossland but Tambellini, the league's leading scorer, overshadowed their efforts when he banged\nin two goals in the last 39 seconds of the period.\nLeo Lucchini garnered two goals\nfor the Warriors ln the last stanza\nand Flinn got his second of the\ngame for Trail.\nReferees Sammartino and Hyssop called only four minor penalties, two to each team.\nLineups:\nTrail: Martin; Conn, Crlstofoli,\nEdwards, Robertson; Hockley,\nE. Secco, Kromm, Flinn, P. Secco,\nPenner, Tambellini, Bursaw, Godfrey.\nBilly Boucher Dies\nOTTAWA (CP)-Death by heart\nattack has claimed Billy Boucher,\nmember of one of the game's most\nbrilliant lines and of a talented\nhockey family.\nBoucher, a star performer In the\n20s, died Monday night on his 59th\nbirthday. He was en route to hospital after a sudden seizure at the\nend of a normal day's work with\nthe defence production department.\nHe helped Montreal Canadiens\nwin the Stanley Cup in 1924, playing right wing for the late great\nHowie Morenz, at centre, and\nAurel Joliat, still resident in Ottawa. Boucher was leading playoff scorer against Vancouver- and\nCalgary and the trio still draws\nnominations for one of the most\ntalented lines ever assembled.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nMobile, Ala.\u2014Ralph Dupas, 145,\nNew Orleans, outpointed Guy Sum-\nlin, 145, Mobile, 10.\nSalt Lake City\u2014Gene Fullmer,\n159, West Jordan, Utah, knocked\nout Joe Miceli, 153%, New York,\nsecond.\nNew York \u2014 Marvin McFarland,\n135%, Philadelphia, outpointed Isi-\ndro Martinez, 136, Panama, 10.\nMcDougall Top Ground\nFaloney Big 4 Passing\nGainer;\nChamp\nTORONTO (CP) -Halfback\nGerry McDougall of the Hamilton\nTiger-Cats won 'the ground-gaining\ntitle and quarterback Bernie Faloney of the Tigec-Cats took the\npassing championship in the Big\nFour Football Union this season.\nIt is the second successive year\nthat McDougall has won the\nrushing crown.\nBill Bewley of Montreal Alouettes won the league scoring title\nwith 62 points, five better than\nVic Kristopaitis of Toronto Argonauts. The Toronto-born Bewley\nhad two touchdowns and booted\n28 converts, six field goals and\nfour singles.\nHamilton, which finished in\nfirst place in the standings for\nthe second straight year, ended\nup with three individual championships, official statistics released today showed. The team's\nother pacesetter was home brew\nCam Fraser, who maintained his\nsupremacy as the league's top\nkicker.\nThe 225-pound McDougall, who\ncame to the Ticats from UCLA\nand then was ranked as a non-\nimport because his parents were\nborn in Canada, rolled up 1,109\nyards on 222 carries for an average gain of ive yards.\nFaloney, former all-Amerlcan\nwith the University of Maryland,\ntopped the passers with an average gain of 9.2 yards as he\ncompleted 168 of 309 attempts for\n2,852 yards and  18 touchdowns.\nQuarterback Ronnie Knox,\nloaned to Argonauts in mid-season by Chicago Bears of the National Football League finished in\nsecond place, averaging 8.6\nyards with 114 completions on\n193 passes for 1,658 yards. The\nformer UCLA star threw nine\ntouchdown passes.\nQuarterback Sam Etcheverry\nof Montreal Alouettes was third\nwith an 8.4-yard average. He\npassed for the most yardage,\npicking up 3,548 yards and throwing 18 touchdown passes in connecting on 247 of 423 tosses.\nBathgate, Litzenberger\nPush to Scoring Fore\nMONTREAL (CP) - The National Hockey League scoring\nderby last week took on the aspects of a traffic jam, with Andy\nBathgate of New York Rangers\nand Eddie Litzenberger of Chicago Black Hawks barging\nthrough to the front.\nBathgate, sharp - scoring right-\nwinger, rattled in three goals and\nscored an assist in New York's\nthree games to run his point total to 16. Litzenberger's output\nwas two goals and an assist, in\ntwo games, putting the lanky\nBlack Hawk on the same 16-\npoint plateau.\nBathgate takes top billing in\nthe official statistics, released today, because he has scored a total of eight goals to Litzenberger's four.\nCanadiens played only a single\ngame\u2014a 6-5 setback at the hands\not the Rangers\u2014but even in the\nfive - goal production Montreal's\nbig guns were almost silenced.\nJean Beliveau and Bernie\nGeoffrion, co-leaders a week ago,\nfailed to get a point and dropped\nback into a third-place tie with\ntheir 15 points.\nThree of their teammates\u2014the\nRichard brothers and Dickie\nMoore\u2014were scrambled ln a six-\nwqy tie at 14 points.\nHEADS GROUP\nTod Sloan of Chicago with nine\ngoals and five assists heads this\ngroup. Sloan had a 2-2 record for\nthe week. Maurice Richard, scoring one goal, is in the 3-6\nbracket, the same as MoOre who\npicked up a goal and an assist\nin his team's one game.\nBobby Hull. of Chicago, alio\nwith a 1-1 count for the week,\njoined the 14 \u2022 point contingent,\nrating ahead of Henri Richard of\nMontreai and Red Sullivan of\nNew York.\nJerry Toppazzini of Boston and\nSloan lead the goal-getters with\nnine each. New York's Sullivan\nleads the league in assists with\n18.\nRossland: Adams; Ferguson, Paolone, McCabe, Lofvendahl; Mclntyre, Jones, Demore, Lloyd, Birukow, Andrews, McKinnon, Lucchini, Davis.\nSummary:\nFirst period: 1, Rossland, Mcln-\nTyre (Jones, Demore) 12:47; 2,\nTrail, Flinn (Kromm, P. Secco)\n13:31; 3, Rossland, Andrews (Jones\nFerguson) 17:18.\nPenalties\u2014Paolone 5:05, Bursaw\n16:21.\nSecond period: 4, Trail, Robertson (Tambellini) 1:54; 5, Trail,\nKromm 8:08; 6, Trail, Conn (Cris-\ntofoli) 8:46; 7, Trail, Penner (Tambellini, Bursaw) 9:15; 8, Rossland; Ferguson (Jones) 12:42; 9,\nRossland, Lofvendahl (Birukow.\nDavis) 15:46; 10, Trail, Tambellini\n(Penner, Bursaw) 19:21; 11, Trail,\nTambellini (Penner)  19:54.\nPenalties\u2014E. Secco 10:45, Mclntyre 19:04.\nThird period\u201412, Rossland, Lucchini (Birukow, Andrews) 11:52,\n13, Trail, Flinn (Kromm) 16:17, 14,\nRossland, Lucchini (Birukow, McCabe) 18:56.\nShots on goal:\nMartin    8  11  8\u201427\nAdams   6   \u00ab 6\u201418\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nNelson Curling Club draw for\nthe balance of the week: (See list\nof personnel on page 2)\nWednesday, 7 p.m. \u2014 W, Marr\nvs E. C. Hunt; L. Peerless vs W.\nDuckworth; E. S. W. Batty vs W.\nWait; A. Hamson vs W. Tozer; J,\nSutherland vs F. Carmichael.\n9 p.m. \u2014 J. Bailey vs H. Farenholtz; H. Moore vs N. Sardich.\nThursday, 7 p.m. \u2014 A. Waters\nvs M. B. Ryalls; D. Cathcart vs\nE. Mason; J. Haines vs D. Porteous; D. Meakins vs J. Leeming;\nW. Tozer vs A. Ronmark.\n9 p.m. \u2014 J. Harvey vs R. Bruce;\nL. Bicknell vs R. Chandler; D. M.\nSample vs H. Ronmark; A. Reid\nvs D. Benedetti; W. Triggs vs W.\nMarr.\nFriday, 7 p.m. \u2014 W. Duckworth\nvs H Ronmark; W. Walt vs A. VanSacker; H. Farenholtz vs H.\nMoore; N. Sardich vs W. Triggs;\nN. Lutkiwich vs W. Tickner.\n9 p.m. \u2014 A. Hamson vs D. Cathcart; R. Carmichael vs J. Sutherland; E. Hunt vs F. Carmichael;\nL. J. Maurer vs L. Peerless; E. S.\nW. Batty vs J. Leeming.\nEsks, Bombers\nMeet in Finals\nEDMONTON (CP)-Edmon-\nton Eskimos coasted into the\nWestern football final Thursday trampling Saskatchewan\nRoughriders 31-1 to win the\ntwo-game, total-points Western semi-final by the whopping score of 58-12. Eskimos\nnow meet the Winnipeg Blue\nBombers in the final in Edmonton Saturday afternoon.\nRiders, who took a 27-11 thumping in the opening game of the\nsemi-final last Saturday in Regina, quickly hobbled away any\nhope they had of making a comeback Tuesday.\nTwo fumbles and a pass interception set up three Eskimo scoring plays in the opening half and\nEdmonton led 11-0 in the game\nand by 27 points in the series. The\nsecond half was no contest.\nFullback Johnny Bright went\nover for two touchdowns to lead\nEskimos' scoring Tuesday. Quarterback Jackie Parker fired a\ntouchdown pass to fullback Normie Kwong and Don Getty pitched to end Jim Letcavits for a 68-\nyard pass-and-run touchdown play.\nEnd Joe Mobra, handling placement kicking with Parker suffering from a sore toe, booted three\nconverts and a field goal. Letcavits, doing the punting in place of\nParker, also got a single.\nSaskatchewan's only point came\nin the third quarter when Frank\nTripucka punted deep and Rollie\nMiles was unable to run it out of\nthe end zone.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nNHL\nBoston 8 Chicago 4\nWHL\nWinnipeg 5 Victoria 4\nSeattle 1 Calgary 8\nSOUR'N SUNK\nSO LIFE\nLOOKS PUNK?\nThen make up your liter bile and\nlind life north living again.\nIf your liver doesn't pour up to two\npints of liver bile into your system\nevery day your food may not digest\n... you suffer from constipation and\nlife hardly teems worth living I That's\nwhen you need Carter's Little Liver\nPills. These mild and gentle vegetable\npills stimulate the flow of bile. Your\nsystem starts working naturally and\nthe world looks good. Remember, if\nlife's not worth living it may be the\nliver. Keep Carter's Little Liver Fills\non hand. Only 43c.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nT 0 D A Y\n8:00-10:00\nCOMING ATTRACTION\nHOCKEY\nCLUB DANCE\nFRIDAY, NOV. 14\nMusic by\nTRAIL SERENADERS\n[670 x 15 TUBETYPE: less trade-in\n670 x 15 TUBELESS: less trade-in _\n750 x 14 TUBELESS: less trade-in .\n$32.30\n$35.50\nAlio Available for Foreign Can.\nNO INSTALLATION CHARGES\nANDY'S Tire Service\nVULCANIZING\u2014RECAPPING\u2014BATTERIES\n323 Vernon SV Phone 1930\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1958\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily Newt does not hold Itsell respon. tile In tbe event\nol an r ror In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nCLOSING  PRICES\nAlgom Uranium    15.25\nAmal Larder\nAtlin Ruff \t\nAnacon Lead\nAubelle  \t\nAumacho  \t\nAumaque '.\t\nAunor  _.\nBarnat\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium .\nBibis Yukon\t\nBoymar \t\nBroulan \t\nBrunswick\n 13\n.....     .19\n 67\n 06\n 13\n 12%\n     2.50\n     1.60\n 20\n 15\n 06\n 07%\n 52\n 05\nBuffalo Ank      4.05\nBuff Red Lake  \\   .06%\nCampbell C      8.40\nCampbell R L'     8.55 '\nCan Met 85\nCassiar           9.20\nCentral Pat      1.13\nChimo    55\nCoin Lake  13%\nCons Denison     12.75\nCons Discovery      3.45\nCons Halliwell  79\nCons Howe            3.40\nCons Min & Smelt    22.12%\nCons Red Pop 09\nCon Regcourt       .16\nCon   Sub    90\nConwest      4.30\nCopper Corp 32%\nCopper Man        .17\nD'Aragon    32\nDonalda     12\nEast Amphi   15%\nEast Malartic      1.49\nElder Gold  76'\nFalconbridge       29.87%\nFaraday       1.03\nFrobisher       1.70\nMcMarmac\nMcKenzie R\nMilliken\nMining Corp ..\nMulti Mins ..\nNew Alger  ..\nNew Delhi\n.08\n.26\n2,40\n15.25\n.56\n.07%\n.28\nNew Hosco     1.40\nNew Jason 10\nNew Lund .\nNipissing .\nNisto\nLONDON (AP)-Sweden's King\nGustav celebrated his 76th birthday quietly ahd out of reach of\nofficial functions today. The king,\nin Britain on a private visit,\nspent the day with friends and\nrelatives at his London hotel.\nGeco\nGiant Yel \t\nGlen Uranium ...\nGold Eagle\nGolden Manitou .\n18.87%\n5.10\n.11\n.25%\n.29\nGunnar Gold     16.75\nHarminerals 20\nHasaga   17\nHeadway    48\nHollinger      28.00\nHudson Bay   60.00\nInt Nickel    87.25\nIron Bay     2.10\nJoliet Que 30%\nJonsmith 13\nR J Jowsey 60\nKerr Addison    18.12%\nLabrador    -    24.00\nLakeshore      4.00\nLexindin        .05\nLittle Long Lac     1.75\nLorado  45\nMacassa          3.00\nMacDonald     30\nMalartic G F      1.00\nManeast 09\nMaritime Mining      1.24\n     2.34\n 06%\nNoranda New     55.00\nNormetals        3.75\nNorpax      21\nNorth Can        1.10\nNorth Rankin  .'.     1.16\nOpemiska         9.25\nPickle Crow 87\nPlacer Devel       10.37%\nQuebec Copper  28\nQuebec Lab  06%\nQuebec Lithium      4.05\nQuebec Metallurgical  84\nQuemont    12.37%\nRadiore  50\nRainville  32\nRayrock 74\nRoche  14\nSan Antonio  52\nSherritt Gordon     4.35\nSteep Rock         13.00\nSlocan Van Roi ...:. 20\nSullivan Con      2.20\nSylvanite     1.05\nTeck Hughes      1.75\nTemagami        1.73\nThomp-Lund   66\nTombill    26\nUnited Keno        4.45\nUpper Canada  86\nVentures       29.00\nViolamac        1.18\nWaite Amulet      6.20\nWiltsey Goglin   22\nWright Hargreaves      1.24\nYale   29\nOILS\nAmer Leduc  17%\nBanff Oils          1.91\nBailey Selburn      9.80\nCalgary & Edm    27.75\nCdn  Atlantic       -5.80\nCdn Devonian     5.65\nDuvax 14\nHome A    18.50\nLong Island Pete  08\nMarigold 12\nMidcon 62 .\nOkalta        1.11\nPacific Pete    18.00\nDom. Textiles   10V4\nEddy Paper .1  54\nEddy Match   25%\nFamous Players   22 -\nFanny Farmer  \u201e. 21%\nFord A ''..'  103%\nGatineau 5% pfd  10\nGoodyear      180\nGypsum Lime   37%\nHoward Smith   38'A\nImperial Oil   43%\nImp. Tobacco   13%\nInt. Pete  47%\nLaura Secord  24%\nLoblaw A     33y4\nLoblaw B        33%\nMassey Harris     10%\nMcColl Frontenac   61\nMont. Loco   17'\/4\nMoore Corp.     86\nNat. Steel Car   22%\nPage Hershey   33%\nPowell River   38%\nPower Corp.  6\nRu.. Industries   10%\nShawinigan   33\nSicks Brew  30\nSimpsons A  30\nSoutham  61%\nStandard Paving   44\nSteel of Canada  69%\nTaylor Pearson      8%\nUnion Gas of Can  17%\nUnited Steel ,   20\nWeston George   33\ns\\\\t\\ott\u00ab\nRescue Crews\nSift Rubble\nMONTREAL (CP) - With the\naid of a mechanical shovel, fire\nrescue crews Tuesday sifted\nthrough rubble of a mid-town apartment building for more victims\nof Sunday's inferno.\nThe search resumed Monday\nnight after demolition crews\nbroke down the dangerously tottering shell of the Oldfield Apartments on Saint Mathieu Street.\nEight bodies had been recovered before crews were ordered\nto evacuate the building while a\ncrane swung a one-ton wrecking\nball agaiiist the remaining walls.\nAt least 10 and possibly more\nbodies may be in the ruins. A\ncivil defence spokesman said the\n10 are \"positively missing\" but\nmore persons may have been\nvisiting the building at the time\nof the holocaust and were\ntrapped.\nIn the pre-dawn fire, the roof\nof the five - storey building and\nthe top two floors collapsed\nsandwiching between them anything that may have been in the\napartments and rooms.\nCause of the fire remained uncertain. Detective Captain Cecil\nRowe of the arson squad said\nMonday the cause won't be ascertained until experts have burrowed1 into the wreckage and all\nbodies are recovered. He added\nit was established that the fire\nstarted on the third floor.'\n1.14\n3.25\n11.12%\n.17\n.73\n4.50\n2.20\n.10\n.18%\nPetrol\nProv Gas \t\nRoyalite\t\nSpooner \t\nStanwell Oil \t\nTriad' \t\nUnited Oils \t\nYank Canuck \t\nWestern Pacific .\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   37%\nAlgmoa Steel   32%\nAluminum   31%\nAtlas St  25%\nB.A. Oil   40%\nBathurst Power   47\nBeatty Bros     4.50\nBell Telephone   41%\nB.C. Electric 4s  6%\nB.C. Electric 4%s   90%\nB.C. Forest  14\nB.C. Power A   15%\nB.C. Power B  38%\nBurns A   14.\nBurrard A   7V4\nCanadian Breweries   36\nCanadian Canners   14*4\nCanadian Celanese   18%\nCan. Cement  34%\nCan Chem Co  8%\nCanadian Dredge  22%\nCan. Malting   66\nCan Oil  28%\nCanadian Pacific Rly  29%\nCan. Packers B  49%\nCockshutt   13%\nCons Gas   3BVi\nDist. Seagram   33%\nDom. Foundries *~ 38%\nDom Magnesium   12\nDom. Stores  75\nDom. Tar k Chemieal  14%\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n8:45 Good Morning\n9:00 For Love or Money \u2666\n9:30 Play Your Hunch *\n10:00 Arthur Godfrey *\n10:30 Top Dollar *\n11:00 Love of Life \u00bb\n11:30 Search For Tomorrow '\n11:45 Guiding Light *\n12:00 Pageant\n12:30 As The World Turns \u00bb\n1:00 Jimmy Dean Show *\n1:30 Houseparty *\n2:00 Big Payorr *\n2:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n3:00 Brighter Day *\n3:15 Secert Storm *\n3:30 Edge of Night *\n4:00 Matinee Theater\n4:30 Monster Matinee\n5:45 Cleaning Tips\n6:00 News\n6:15 Doug Edwards *\n6:30 Last of the Mohicans\n7:00 Pursuit \u00bb\n8:00 Millionaire *\n8:30 I've Got a Secret\n9:00 Circle Theatre *\n10:00 Mr. District Attorney\n10:30 Night Edition\n40:40 Post Time\n10:45 The Late Show\nKBQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n7:43 Test Pattern\n7:58 Bible Reading\n7:59 Program Previews\n8:00 Continental Classroom\n8:30 Q Toons\n9:00 Dough Re Mi *\n\u25a09:30 Treasure Hunt *\n10:00 Price Is Right *\n10:30 Concentration \u2022\n11:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n11:30 It Could Be You *\n12:00 Truth or Consequences \u2022\n12:30 Haggis Baggis *\n1:00 Today Is Ours *\n1:30 From These Roots *\n2:00 Queen For a Day *\n2:30 County Fair *\n3:00 Matinee on Six\n\"Foxes of Harrow\"\n4:45 Our Gang\n5:00 Five o'Clock\n\"Boys Town\"\n6:30 Weatherwise\nFront Page\n6:45 NBC News *\n7:00 Danger Is My Business\n7:30 Shirley Temple Storybook\n\"Ali Baba and the\n40 Thieves\"\n8:30 Price Is Right \u00bb\n9:00 Milton Berle *\n9:30 Bat Masterson *\n10:00 This Is Your Life *\n10:30 News\n10:40 Late Movie\n\"Flight Command\"\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n00 Star Performance\n30 Newsbeat\n00 Wednesday Night Fights *\n50 Hemmingway and the News*\n00 Lawrence Welk *,\n00 Ozzie and Harriet *\n9:30 Donna Reed Show *\n10:00 Patti Page \u2666\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:45 Football Forecast\n11:00 Channel 2 Theatre\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  \"-ROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1958\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:30\u2014All the Weather\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Country Caravan\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Time Out\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014The Woman in My House\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Party Line\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports. News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54-CKLN Reports\n1:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Matinee\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:40\u2014News\n2:00\u2014School  Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:40\u2014B C Road Report\n3:45\u2014Rocking with Boates\n4:45\u2014Tales of the Explorers\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014Ottawa Report\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Silent Friends\n6:30\u2014Old Favorites\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports\n10:15\u2014The Flying Heritage of B.C.\n10:30\u2014Architects of Modern\nThought\n11:00\u2014News\nU:05-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13,\n958\n6:00\u2014Sharp at Six\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:45\u2014Food Facts\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Woman in My House\n11:00\u2014One Man's Family\n11:15\u2014Fighting Words >\u201e\n11:45\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n12:00\u2014Nursery School\n12:15-CBC News\n12:25\u2014CBC Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014B.C. Roundup\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Music From Montreal\n4:00\u2014Marine Investigator\n4:30\u2014Tales of the Explorers\n4:45\u2014Musical Program\n5:00\u2014Through the Years\n5:30-CBC News\n5:40\u2014On the Scene\n5:45-Sports Desk\n5:55\u2014Byline\n6:00\u2014Music by McMullin\n6:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:40\u2014Rawhide\n6:55\u2014Preface\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Sweet and Sour\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:00\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:10\u2014Citizens' Forum, News\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber. Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-What Are Our Rights:\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00\u2014Thursday Concert\nll:57-News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD ffiffiH\n(Programs subject io change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Pebble\n(GiB.)\n6. Destroy\n11. Scruple\n12. The world\n13. Footed\nvasea\n14. Drink of\nthe gods\n15. Latvian\nriver\n16. Breezy\n17. River (It)\n18. Corda\n21. Malt\nbeverage\n22. Fireplace\nfloor\n23. Shoshon-\neans\n24. Dabble ln\n26. Mulberry\ncloth\n28.111 will\n31. Public\nnotices\n32. River boats\n(Can.)\n83. Biblical city\n34. Excludes\n35. Japanese\nmeasure\n86. Little lump\n38. Mountain\n3. Flowed\n4. Overhead\ntrains\n8. Type\nmeasure\n6. Malt\nbeverages\nT. Resembling\na network\n8. Skill\n9. Paper\nfastener\n10. Pangs\n14. Frightening-\ndream\n16. Species\nof\npier\n19. Grates\n20. Girl's\nname\n21. Chief\nrooms\n(Rom.)\n23. River\n(C.Afr.\n25. Makes,\nas lace\n26. Teases\n27.Dex-\nterous\nSO.Long-bllled\nbird\n30. Lives\n32. Ruby\n84, Prickly\nenvelopes\nof fruit\nanasca buhhe\nmaa dbbhhei\nHnnnwFiH    he\nEHEI   HHBtl\nnnHHCS   EHI3HH\nI3HE1I1   HHGI\nBO     HiSHHBBS\nHHI3HEIU      HHC\nHSHHH   EEHaHEl\nTuterdiy'i Aniwci\n87. Philippine\nfruit\ntree\n38. Feline\n39. Poem\n41. Cesium\n(abbr.)\n40. Coronet\n41. West Pointer\n42. Opposite of\nlee side\nof a crag\n48. Fret*\nDOWN\n1, To crush\n2, Vicar's\nassistant\n17\ni*\nU\nis\nW\nUt\n\u00bb\nvt\na.\nio\n11-12\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Hi\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIsLON.    FELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la\nused for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,\napostrophies, the length and formation of the words are all\nhints.   Each day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBLV ULOBCTCE JBCCG, PRE OTCV.\nVCV YTPS, VCCZ'E ON BPXC GRNUtt\nP ACOOCT EPS\u2014VJNOO.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: WHY, MAN, HE DOTH BB.\nSTRIDE THE NARROW WORLD LIKE A COLOSSUS-\nSHAKESPEARE.\n(C 1958, Xing Futures Syndicate, Inc.) 4\n'\n \t\n>\u2014\"^\u2014^^\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n1 \u2022 .\n3W\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  \u2014  PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW  PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nSTOOCHNOFF - To Mr. and\nMrs. William Stoochnoff of Sohe-\nacres, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, November 11, a daughter.\nARISHENKOFF - To Mr. and\nMrs. William Arishenkoff of Shore-\nacres, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, November 11, a son.\nCARUK - To Mr. and Mrs. Harry Caruk of Salmo, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, November\n7, a daughter.\nLEES \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nLees, 807 Anderson Street, at Koo-\ntenay Lake General Hospital, November 8, a daughter.\nCUNNINGHAM - To Mr. and\nMrs. Donald Cunningham of Riondel, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, November 8, a daughter.\nHELP  WANTED\nApplications for\nPosition of\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nRENTALS\nManager\nwill be received\nup to Nov. 15.\nState   Qualifications   and\nSalary Expected to\nSECY. CANADIAN\nLEGION,\nCRESTON, B. C.\nHERE'S HOW\nTo turn your spare time into\nCash. Write now tor our tree\ncatalogue. Illustrated to sell\nfor you. Nationally famous\nBrands of useful, easy to sell\nGifts and Housewares. No cost.\nNo obligation. Write to\nBOX 537, Toronto.\nWANTED - CONTRACTOR WITH\nlogging equipment to log and\nhaul to mill 10 miles. Interior\nB.C. Reply to Box 150, Golden,\nB.C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nBUGS, CARPETS, UPHOLSTERY\nDuracleaned in your home. Use\nagain same day. No obligation\nPhone Ken Forbes, Fabric Spe\ncialist, 446-R, 406 Nelson Ave,\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body\n1 mile Granite Road, or phonr\n\"bus 98 res  U8fiY\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED - 3000 WHITE FIR\nChristmas trees by Dec, 1. Contact Sherman Pierce, 2002 Bloyd\nSt., Kelso, Wash., ph. Exbrook\n5-0273 as to price and delivery\ndate.\nSCRAP STEEL WANTED - C\/L\nlots. Also auto body tin. Commercial Steel and Metals, 2581\nWillingdon Avenue, Burnaby 2,'\nVancouver, B.C.\nWANTED - HOUSE TRAILER.\nState size and price. Box 7785,\nDaily News.\t\nWANTED - A YOUNG GOOSE,\nany breed. C. Cleave, Kaslo, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES  ETC.\nFOR SALE - NEW HAMPSHIRE\nhens. 1-year-old. Good laying\nstrain. $1.50 each. W. S. Course.\nPhone Balfour 49.\nWANTED-FRESH COW. APPLY\nBox 7888. Nelson Daily News.\nFRESH COW FOR SALE. PHONE\n4949 Rossland, B.C.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES,\nFARMS. ETC., FOR SALE\nIf Listed at a\nFAIR PRICE\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.        Nelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE BY PUBLIC TEN-\nder. 3.33 acres with dwelling\nhen house and wood shed. Property at South Slocan, For further\ninformation contact A. R. Morgan, Veterans Land Act, Nel-\nson, B.C.\t\nFOR SALE-MODERN TWO-BED-\nroom home in Fairview. Oil heat,\ndrive-in garage. Phone 1795-R,\nNelson.\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED - 2-BEDROOM MOD\nem spacious apt. Adults only\nRent no object. Phone 1512-X\nmornings.\nSave $50 to $500\nAt\nReuben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\nOn Best Stock of Cars\nin the Interior\n1959 Chev.   Impala  Sedan\n1959 Chev.  Pickup\n1958 Chev. Sedan. $500 off\n1958 Chev. Pickup. New .\n1957 Buick 4-Dr. Hardtop\n1957 Plymouth Sedan\n1957 Super Olds. Sedan\n1957 Chev. Sedan\n1957 Chev.  Pickup,\n1957 Pontiac Sedan\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1956 Dodge Sedan\n1956 Chev.   Pickup\n1956 Chev. Bel Air Sedan\n1956 Chev. 2-Dr. Hardtop\n1955 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1955 Chev. Coach\n1955 Plymouth Sedan\n1955 Ford Sedan\n1955 Pontiac Sedan\n1954 Monarch Sedan\n1954 Chev. Sedan Del'y\n1954 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan Del'y\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Pontiac   Hardtop\n1953 Mercury Pickup\n1953 Chev. Panel\n1953 Morris Sedan\n1953 Chev. Sedan\n1952 Chev. Sedan\n1952 Pontiac Coach\n1952 Ford Pickup\n1951  G.M.C.  Pickup\n1951  Meteor Sedan\n1950 Vanguard  Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1950 Mercurv Coupe\n1950 Chev. Sedan\nTERMS and TRADES\nLots  of  Storage  Space\n$10 Per Month.\nEmerge\nMotors Ltd.\nChevrolet  - Oldsmobile\nCadillac\nPhone 35-36  '      323 'Vernon St.\nNelson. BC.\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs. Used parts, for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to '54 Morris Minor,\n'47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac. '52\nVanguard, '47 Oldsmobile 6, '49\nMonrach, '49 Chev. For sale, '47\nOlds motor. Cottonwood Wreckage Service, ph. 1363-L-2, Box\n382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nHAVE CARS-WILL SELL, AT\nprices so reasonable you'll be\namazed. All models, all years.\nPhone 1090, Peebles Motors, Nelson.\nWILL SELL '58 PLYMOUTH IN\nexcellent condition.. Cash or\nterms, $1600. Phone 1437-R.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,\n1179-X.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR BUSI-\nness man   Phone 284-R\nNelamt latlij Npuib\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month    ( 1.25\nThree months    $ 3.50\nSix month*      $ 6.50\nOne year . $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or the\nUnited States:\nOne month $ 1.75\nThree months       $ 5.00\nSix months          $ 9.00\nOne year   $18.00\nWhere extra postage ls  required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook phone Mrs Wm Stevely\nIn Kimberley. A  W  Brown.\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nUNFURNISHED UPSTAIRS APT\n1 block off Baker St. Kitchen,\nlarge living room, 2 bedrooms,\nbath, private basement, and entrance. Electric fridge and stove\nsupplied. $65 per month. Phone\n1924-Y.\nMACHINERY\nMACHINERY\n3-ROOM COTTAGE WITH BATH,\nfully furnished, including new\nfridge and washing machine. Apply Con Cummins, RR 1, phone\n940-X.\nLARGE APARTMENT, DOWN\ntown area. Steam heated, electric\nstove, frig., oak floors, cabinet\nkitchen, Pembroke bath and\nshower. Adults only. Phone 293,\n9 to 5, and 2077 after 5 p.m.\nGROUND FLOOR SUITE - FOUR\nrooms and bath unfurnished.\nGas piped in. Close in. On level.\n$55 month. Apply 1 - 373 Baker\nSt., phone 662 business hours.\nWILL RENT U-ROOM HOUSE,\nfurnished, as private home, or\n.rooming to reliable tenants. Central. For further particulars\nwrite Box 17,4, Nakusp.\nAPT. 3 RqOMS AND BATH. PRI-\nvate entrance. Hot water heated.\nElectric Range supplied. Phone\n978-R.\nLGE. UNFURN. HEATED 3-RM.\napt. Hot water, gas range. Priv.\nent. Apply Stirling Hotel.\nPRIVATE 2-ROOM SUITE. FURN.\nor unfurnished. Coal stove and\ngas plate. Apply 515 Hall St. or\nphone 1489-R.\nSELF-CONT. UNFUR. 6-RM. APT.\nBath, gas furnace. No small children. 410 Victoria Street.\nNEW CIVIC HOTEL. WEEKLY\nand monthly rentals available\nat winter rates.\nAVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.\nSmall modern lakeside cottage.\nPhone 1703.\nULTRA MODERN APT. 3-RM.\nand tiled bath, unfurn. Electric\nrange, fridge. Oil heat. Handy\nlocation. Phone 130.\nSELF \u25a0 CONTAINED, UNFURN.\nsuite, four rooms and bath. Gas\nfurnace. Phone 376-L.\nWOULD SHARE LOVELY APART-\nment with business woman. \u2014\nClose in. Phone 1233, mornings.\nWINTER RENTALS, A HOME\naway from home. Brad's Auto\nCourt. Phone 1680.\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM.\nStanley St. Phone 1329-R.\n914\nFOR RENT - SELF CONTAINED\napt. One bedroom. Gas heat. Ph.\n2053-R.\n;-RM. FURNISHED APT. ALSO\n2-rm. apt. Close in. Phone 1698\nafter: 12 noon.\n2 RM. SUITE..COUPLE OR TWO\ngirls preferred. 116 Vernon St.\nPhone 964-R.\nSELF CONTAINED CLEAN 3-RM\nsuite. Phone 1921-L after 6 p.m.\nNORTH SHORE MOTEL OPEN\nfor winter rentals, Phone 1684.\n2-ROOMED FURNISHED SUITE-\nApply 614 Victoria Street.\nMODERN UNFUR. SUITE. HEAT-\ned. Phone 2075.\nFOR RENT-1 BEDROOM COT-\ntage, redecorated. Phone 1954-L.\nONE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM\npartly furnished. Phone 1341-X,\nSLEEPING ROOM, GENTLEMAN\npreferred, 410 Victoria Street.\nrooms;\nHOUSEKEEPING\nheat. Apply Appleyard's.\nGAS\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron . Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Ph,\nPAcific 6357.\nREAL BUY-A.C. GENERATOR\n13% KVA-1200 RPM), with 20\"\nPelton wheel. Boats for sale,\ncheap! Automatic oil, water tank.\nAntler's Lodge. Phone 2-T.\nB1RCHWOOD FOR YOUR FIRE-\nplace. Order now. Ph.  1752-L-3.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings, 924 Davies St.\nK-3 'SCOPE. NEW, UNUSED, IN\nfactory box. $39.00. Phone 1483-X.\nPORK  FOR SALE, WHOLE   OR\nhalf. Ph. 714-R-l after 5 p.m.\nNEW AUTOMATIC KNITTING\nmachine, $85., Ph. Trail, 1900-X.\nPIANO. $150. PHONE 734-L OR\naoDly 918 Silica Street.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSASH AND DOOR BUSINESS IN\nthriving district town. Present\nowner 11=' year's. Reasons for\nselling. Other Interests. Full\nprice $11,000 cash. For full particulars, write Box 7986, Daily\nNews.\nBICK'S COFFEE SHOP. SMALL\ngrocery, also living quarters\nPriced low for quick sale Phone\n1288-L\nQUALITY!\nWARRANTY!\nPRICE!\nFinning Tractor gives you the\nbest in all three I Top quality\ndependable machines backed by\nFinning's exclusive warranty\npolicy and fair prices. And\nFinning's Bonus Certificate is\nworth up to $1000 too! Get all\nthree when you buy used equipment! See Finning Tractor\nTODAY!\nCot D-7 TRACTOR\nHere's a 1947 model with Cat cable\nangledozer, Hyster winch, guards.\nHas new and rebuilt rollers, rebuilt idlers, new links, shoes 70%.\nGood condition, top value. Certified buy, 30-day warranty, fob\nCranbrook. FT-4205.\nList price  $12,750\nCertificate price  ._ $12,000\nCat 30KW ELECTRIC SET\nModel D315, self-regulated, 60\ncycle, single phase, 1200 rpm.\nRadiator, base, safety shut-offs.\nBonded Buy, 90-day warranty, fob\nCranbrook. FT-3716.\nList price   $4,250\nCertificate price  $4,000\nCat D-8 TRACTOR,\n13A series 1954 model with Cat\ncable angledozer, Hyster winch.\nOver $10,000 spent on repairs to\nthis D8. Has new carrier rollers\nand tracks; rebuilt rollers, idlers,\ndiesel engine starting motor, steering clutches. Terrific value here.\nBonded Buy, 90-day warranty,\nfob Nelson. FT-4008.\n$28,500\n$27,500\nlnt...TD-9 TRACTOR\nOnly three years old, this TD9 is\na real A-l buy. With Smith hydraulic angledozer and Carco\nwinch, It's in very good condition\nand appearance. As Is, fob Nelson\nFT-4141.\nList price $9,500\nCertificate price _ $9,000\nSEE THEM TODAY\nat your\nCATERPILLAR\nDealer\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 187 \u2014 Nelson\nPhone JU-62281 \u2014 Cranbrook\nList price \t\nCertificate price\nfor Shop, Garage and\nFarm, will be held at\nteveesoe\nMachinery Limited\n708 Vernon St.    . Nelson\nNOV. 14th\nAT 7 P.M., .\nThe latest Gas and\nElectric Welding\nEquipment\nwill  be  demonstrated  by\nCanadian\nLiquid Air Co.\nBring Your Helmet\nand Goggles.\nBriggs & Strqtton\nParts and Service\nA Complete Stock of\nParts and\nSpecial Service Tools\nHas Just Arrived\nCall Us for Your Parts and\nService Requirements\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n514 Railway St. Nelson\nPHONE 1402\nFOR SALE - ONE COMPLETE\npumping unit consisting of two\npumps, 500 gal. pressure tank,\ntwo 7V4 h.p. electric motors and\nall control switches. For particulars write Secretary, Lumby\nWaterworks District, Lumby,\nB.C.\n1 MO. 2 AMERICAN SAW-MILL\nIncluding 105\" saw 1 - 12 inch\nendless drive belt, 1 \u2014 40 inch\nopen carriage, summer and winter dogs and receder gears.\nPrice $450 cash. C. O. Ogilvie,\nWynndel, B.C.\nD6 CAT 5R SERIES EQUIPPED\nwith hydraulic angle dozer,\nwinch and operator's guard, in\ngood condition. Phone 247-X.\nEXPERT ELECTRIC MOTOR\nand armature rewinding. Cole-\nman Elcetrlc, ph. 2055, Nelson.\nFOR RENT-210-AIR COMPRES-\nsor. Box 7862, Dally News.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nCANADIAN FRIENDS - WHEN\nin Spokane, stop at the Colonial\nHotel, 124V4 Past St., one block\nfrom stores and parking. Phone\nRl-79494.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE\nStipulated sum. contract proposals are invited by the undersigned\nfor construction of additions to the\nEdgewood Elementary School, located at Edgewood, B.C., and will\nbe received until 5:00 P.M., 20th\nNovember, 1958, at the School\nBoard Office, Box 189, Nakusp,\nB.C.\nForms of tender, instructions to\nbidders, plans and specifications\nmay be obtained Irom the School\nBoard Office by general contractors, upon receipt of a refundable\ndeposit of TEN dollars ($10.00) per\nset. A certified cheque in the\namount of 10% of bid must accompany each tender, and is refundable to unsuccessful bidders.\nSuccessful bidders must replace\nthis certified cheque with a performance bond in the amount of\n50% of the contract price, within\n30 days of the contract date.\nThe Board reserves\" the right to\nreject any or all bids, and the lowest bid not necessarily accepted.\nEnvelopes to be marked \"TENDER\".\n(Signed) Board of School Trustees,\nSchool District No. 10\n(Arrow Lakes)\nBox 189. NAKUSP. B.C.\nBUSINESS  AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH, S. ELMES, ROSSLAND. B.C.\nAssayer,  Chemist. Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON, B.A. Sc.\nB.C. Land Surveyor\n1015 Eighth St., Nelson, Ph. 144-R\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nC. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.   Nelson   Phone 1118\nINSTRUCTION\nNELSON COMMERCIAL\nTRAINING SCHOOL\n701 Front St. or phone 2109-L.\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nTRAVEL\nRail, air, steamship tickets\nSee Jim or Betty Vipond\nGLOBE AGENCIES LIMITED\n1146 Cedar Ave.    Trail    Ph. 2345\nPERSONAL\nFOR QUICK RELIEF FROM\nstomach distress, heartburn,\nacidity, use double-action Wild-\ner's Stomach Powder. First neutralizes, then protects the stomach lining. At all druggists.\nTRAIN BLOWN UP\nALGIERS (Reuters) \u2014 Five\nFrench soldiers and a woman\ncivilian were killed and 13 persons injured when a passenger\ntrain was blown up by a mine\nsouth of here Monday.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12, 1958\u20149\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  17\nBralorne     5.90\nCanusa .       0414\nCariboo Gold   .- 71\nGiant Mascot  08%\nGranduc       1.35\nHamll Sil (new)  1514\nHighland Bell      1.35\nPend Oreille      2.80\nPioneer Gold        1.10\nPremier Border 10%\nQuatsino  1914\nReeves MacDonald      1.25\nSheep Creek       .76\nShefritt Gordon      4.30\nSilback Premier ... 0514\nSilver Standard 17\nSunshine Lardeau 11\nTaylor   1514\nTrojan  13\nWestern Exploration  25\nYale   28\nOILS\nA P Consolidated  34\nCalgary & Edmonton     27.25\nCharter     1.35\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nNelson Ready-Mix\nCONCRETE\nFOR ALL PURPOSES\nPHONE 871\nPREMIER SAND 8. GRAVEL\nFor\nSand, Gravel, Crushed Rock,\nFill Cement and\n'    Pea Gravel for Roofing\nPHONE 1368 or 871\nHome     18.00\nOkalta Com  \u201e.     1.11\nPacific Pete   '  -.    17.62\nPeace River Gas  52\nRoyalite    .:.    10.25\nRoyal  Can 41\nVanalta  24\nVantor ...      1.17\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers   2.45\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.95\nB C Forests  14.00\nB C Power   38.50\nB C Telephone   41.50\nCan. Collieries   4.85\nCrown Zeller (Can)   20.25\nInt Brew B     4.25\nInland Nat Gas  7.50\nLucky Lager   5.12\nMacM & Bloedel B   37.00\nMid Western   1.65\nPowell River  88.00\nTrans Mtn (new)   10.62\nWestminster Paper   29.50\nWestern Plywoods   16.25\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk  20.62\nAuwon 11\nTrans Canada Com   29.00\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal  52.50\nCan. Bank of Com  58.00\nImperial Bank of Can  66.00\nRoyal Bank of Can   73.50\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund   6.11\nCommonwealth Int.  7.69\nGrouped Income ...u..\u2122. 3.82\nInvestors Growth  :  5.54\nInvestors Mutual   10.86\nLeverage     6.03\nTrans Canada \"C\"   5.90\nKeep Your Eye 01 Classified!\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED.\nillar & Brown Ltd.\nFREIGHT\nSERVICE\nDAILY FREIGHT SERVICE\nVANCOUVER\nto Rossland, Trail, Castlegar ond\nNELSON ;\nOvernight Service\nPhone Nelson 1106 or Trail 191\nBuying\u2014Sellin.\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy.\nORDER FORM\nWIST LINI\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD UNI\nFOURTH UNI'\nHUM UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nSEVENTH UNI\nEIGHTH UNE\nPut one word in each space.\n(Eoch group of numbers or letters count as one word)\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as four words.\n(Box OO Nelson New.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nPer Une\n1 Insertion '\n2 Contecutive Insertions ________\n3 Consecutive Insertions ,\n. 6 Consecutive Insertion! _______\n26 Consecutive Insertions \t\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20c a Line Per Time.\nI .20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge h two Rue*\ne Add 15,   for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above ratet if payment b\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rale\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nYOUR NAME\nADDRESS   \t\nNo7 of Days Ad Is To Run\nBill Me\t\nPayment Enclosed\nFOR SALE. \"HOUGH,\" RUBBER\ntired  loader.   %  yard  bucket,\n825x20 tires\u2014front, 1300x24 duals I\n*i \u2014rear.    Price   $1,950.    Nelson I\nREAD IHE CLASSIFIED DAILV    Machinery, Nelson. B. C. I\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson. B.C.\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1958\n\"A Qoodly Mixture\"\nand selection of economy priced books.\nNorris Cartoons (always a laugh) $1.00\nIdeals for School (most beautiful magazine)   1.50\nIdeals for Autumn (poetry, prose and pictures) 1.50\nLanguage Book      .60\nRogets Thesaurus (pocket edition)       .35\nFirst Aid :  .50\nand a\nBOOK NOOK\nfull of interesting reading for young and old.\nMAM rf\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 80c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount lor prompt payment.\nMen's Wool Gloves\u2014Half Price\nJACK BOYCE\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL-8 P.M.\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2-4 p.m.\nHOSPITAL AUXILIARY\nMeeting Friday, 2:30 p.m.\nGranite Road W.I. bake sale,\nMc and Mc, on Sat., Nov. 15th.\nNELSON FUNERAL HOME LTD.\nAMBULANCE SERVICE. PH. 53.\nFor your LATEST HAIR STYLES,\nCharm Beauty Salon. Phone 1922.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St., phone 1108.\nNumbered Paint Sets,\nArtist Supplies.\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nNew Winter Coats and Jackets,\nall sizes at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nReserve Friday, Nov. 28.\nLadies'   Auxiliary   to   Canadian\nLegion, tea, bake sale and bazaar.\nFlannelette Sheets 70x90\nReg. $5.95 for $4.95.\nSTERLING HOME FURNITURE\nPhone 2160 for plumbing and hot\nwater heating. Top quality work.\nAll work guaranteed. Pat May\nPlumbing, Nelson.\nPlywoods of all kinds.\nFull sheets or cut sizes.\nT. H. WATERS & CO., LTD.\nPhone 156    101 Hall St.    Nelson\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nJ76 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u00bb       LIMITED        m\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nTwilight Club Meeting Tonight\n7:30\nChamber of Commerce luncheon\nmeeting today, Shamrock Grill, 12\nnoon. Speaker, B.C. Chamber\nPresident, G. F. Dunn.\nDressers and chests, finished and\nunfinished. Oil heaters and chesterfields to clear.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 Hall Street\nEUMIG OF VIENNA. Europe's\nfinest movie cameras and projectors with a range of models all\nreasonably priced.\nCUSTOM CAMERAS\nStanley St. opposite \"The Bay'\nPatients In Kootenay Lake General\nHospital can have The Dally News\nsent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844\nCirculation Department,\nDaily News.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDENNES \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late Mrs. Bessie H. Dennes,\nwill be held at St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral, today at 2 O'clock. Rev.\nCanon G. W. Lang will officiate\nand interment will take place in\nNelson Memorial Park. Thompson Funeral Service.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nKROWN \u2014 Suddenly at home on\nNov. 10, 1958, Mrs. Mable Krown,\nbeloved wife of. Fred Krown, Neison, funeral services to be held\ntoday' (Wednesday) in the chapel\nof the Nelson Funeral Home at\n1 p.m. Interment will be at Shore-\nacres Russian cemetery at 2 p.m.,\nNelson Funeral Home in charge of\narrangements.\nDEATHS\nBy TBE CANADIAN PRESS\nMontreal \u2014 Lt. - Col. Robert\nBickerdike, 89, consulting engineer who worked with the United\nCounties Railway, Atlantic and\nNorthwestern Railway and the\nQuebec province department-of\npublic works.\nStamford, Conn. \u2014 Mrs. Eliza\nHelen Criswell van Loon, 76,\nwidow of Hendrik Willem van\nLoon who wrote The Story of\nMankind, The Story of the Bible,\nThe Arts and many others.\nParis \u2014 Cami, French humor\nwriter and cartoonist.\nt>\no^ZTJ\" **.\n*\n4\nTHI PIPtOT CANADIAN LOCOMOTIVE BUILT IN MONTREAL\nA DISTINGUISHED\nWHISKY\nAnother notable achievement in 1883 waa\nthe creation of the distinguished Canadian\nRye Whisky, Seagram's \"83\". Generations of\nCanadians since 1883 have enjoyed the distinctive\nflavour end bouquet of this fine whisky.\n83\nJordan Plane Incident\nUpsets Pres. Nasser\nBy JOSEPH E. DYNAN\nAMMAN, Jordan (AP) - Jordanians celebrated Tuesday the\nsafe return of King Hussein from\nwhat he charged was a United\nArab Republic attempt to kill or\ncapture him on a flight over\nSyria.\n(U.A.R. officials in Cairo denied the charges. They said Hussein's plane lacked proper clearance to fly over the Syrian province of the U.A.R.\n(President Nasser was1 reported\nto be convinced Syrian authorities acted properly but also to\nbe upset by the incident, which\nworsened U.A.R.-Jordanian relations after a recent improvement.) \u25a0\nNATIONAL HOLIDAY\nA National holiday was declared\nthroughout Jordan to celebrate\nthe escape of the 23-year-old king.\nHussein left Amman airport\nMonday in a twin-engined transport piane bound for. a European\nvacation. He later reported that\ntwo MiG jet fighters from Syria\nset upon him near Damascus,\ncapital of the Syrian province.\nThe MiGs tried to force his\nplane down but did not tire at\nft, the king reported. His oilot\ndropped down near the ground\u2014\nthe best defence from fast fighters\u2014for a wild hedge-hopping\nflight back over rugged country\nto Amman.\nRIDING AS CO-PILOT\nHussein, himself a flyer, was\nriding as co-pilot.\nHussein accused the Syrian pilots of violating international law\nby_ intruding in Jordanian air\nspace. The charge was made in\na broadcast to Jordan's 1,500,000\npeople.\nIn Cairo, an official spokesman\nshrugged off the incident, saying\n\"imagination had a big part to\nplay\" in the charges.\nOntario Damage\nBaffles Experts\nTORONTO (CP) - Mysterious\ncrop damage in the Port Colborne area appears to be baffling\nexperts.\nA. H. Martin of the provincial\nfield crops branch says shrubs,\ngrain and forage crops are being withered in an area extending up to 15 miles out of the\ntown.\nFarmers in the area suspect\nfumes from the International\nNickel Company refinery at Port\nColborne but a survey of investigators indicates there is no proof\nthat fumes are the cause.\n\"I believe it's fume damage,\"\nsays Dr. Donald N. Huntley, director of field husbandry with\nthe Ontario Agricultural College\nat Guelph, \"but so far we don't\neven know what chemicals are in\nthe air let alone whidi 'are to\nblame.\"\nDr. C. M. Jephcott, director of\nair pollution control for the Ontario health department, was\ncalled in by the agriculture department last July. Since then he\nhas had two chemists and a\nphysicist examining leaf specimens and air samples.\nNO PROOF\nDr. Jephcott remains close-\nmouthed about results to date\nbut he says there's no proof yet\nthat air pollution is the cause.\nInvestigations also are being\ncarried out by the Ontario mines\ndepartment.\nPort Colborne presents a different problem than Sudbury,\nwhere International Nickel has\nbeen paying crop compensation\nfor years because of sulphur\ndioxide released by its refining\nprocess. \u25a0\n\"No one knows yet what chemical is causing the damage at\nPort Colborne,\" says Dr. Huntley, \"but we do know that sulphur dioxide is not the major\nthing.\"\nComplicating the situation is\nthe fact that there are several\nplants releasing smoke in the\nPort Colborne area.\n\"If they've caused any damage, they'll have to pay for it,\"\nsays Mr. Martin.\nNEW  HOSTEL\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A $650,000\nhostel for cancer suffers to be\nopened here Wednesday will have\na beauty parlor and TV sitting-\nrooms on every floor. The new\nCanadian Cancer Society patients' hostel on downtown Jarvis\nStreet is believed the only one of\nits type in the world. The so-\ncity's Ontario division built it to\naccommodate cancer patients not\nsick enough for full \u2022 time hospital care.\nSaad Afra, U.A.R. director of\ninformation, said in a broadcast,\n\"It is quite evident from the Jordan communique that the plane\ndid not transmit to Damascus\nairport any details as to its identity or the presence on board of\nKing Hussein.\nSyrian Interior Minister Abdel\nHamid Seraj arrived in Cairo\nMonday. night, at, it was reported to show that Hussein's\nplane did not ask permission to\nfly over Syria. These sources\nsaid that Nasser wanted to know\nit the commander of the Damascus airport, who ordered the pursuit of the plane, knew Hussetn\nwas aboard.\nMachine Tells\nAge of Rocks\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - The federal\nmines department is building a\nspecial machine which will help\nCanada to learn more about its\nmineral wealth.\nThe machine\u2014known as a carbon 14 test apparatus \u2014 will be\nused to determine the age of\nrock formations. This information\nwill help later in the search for\nnew deposits of metals and petroleum.\nTests with the machine will enable mines department scientists\nto date the age of rock formations back as far as 30,000 to 60,\n000 years. With this information\nthey will be able to determine\nthe type and concentration of\nminerals likely to exist in various areas of Canada, particularly in the unexploited north\ncountry.\nARCHAEOLOGISTS TOO\nThe machine also will be used\nto help Canadian archaeologists\nlearn more about the people who\ninhabited Canada thousands of\nyears, ago.\nIt wil) be possible to determine\nthe age pf artifacts\u2014arrowheads,\npottery and other items of early\ncultures\u2014by submitting them to\ntests in the machine. Such tests\nnow must be made in the United\nStates. \u25a0\nThe age of rocks, minerals and\nartifacts will be determined by\nmeasuring the strength of the object's radioactive carbon 14 content. This isotope, found in all\nliving plants, has a half life of\n6,000 years.\nIf the isotope is only half as\nstrong as it should be the object\nbeing tested is 6.000 years old.\nIn other words, the strength of\nthe carbon 14 isotope determines\nthe age of the object.\nThe machine now is in its final\nstage of construction apd should\nbe operating next spring. It will\nbe installed in a special room in\na new mines department building\nalso nearing comoletlon;\nNO COST ESTIMATE\nThe department says it cannot\nestimate the cost of the machine.\nIt is being built by department\npersonnel mostly in their spare\ntime and they are using materials and equipment already in\nstock. Some of the equipment has\nbeen used previously for other\npurposes.\nPlumbers Out\nOf Work By\nEdmonton Strike\nEDMONTON CP)-A contract\ndispute that began last spring\nreached a head Tuesday when 500\ncity plumbers were thrown out\nof work following a lockout by\n36 Edmonton plumbing shops.\nIf the lockout continues, some\n15 other trades will be affected,\ngradually halting work on more\nthan $10,000,000 in construction\nprojevts in the city.\nA spokesman for the shop owners, who belong to the Association of Master. Plumbers, said\nthe action was taken following\nprolonged attempts to reach a\nworking agreement with Local\n488 of the United Association of\nJourneymen and Apprentices of\nthe Pumbing and Pipefitting Industry.\nThe union voted Oct. 30 for\nstrike action against nine of the\n36 shops, and began striking\nthree of them last week.\nINVOLVES LENGTH\nThe dispute involves the length\nof a hew contract. The employers have offered an immediate\nwage increase' of 25 cents an\nhour, bringing the wage rate to\n$2.60, on a two-year contract to\nend March 31, 1960.\nThe union accepted a conciliation board recommendation of\n$2.50 hourly from last June to\nlast Sept. 13, then a rate of $2.60\nuntil May 21, 1959. The owners\nrejected the award, countering\nwith the $2.60 proposal on a two-\nyear contract.\nOriginally, the union sought an\nincrease to $3.25 an hoUr from\nthe present $2.35. The union later\ndropped its figure to $2.85, and\nthe fringe benefits it had souitfit\nwere rejected by the conciliation\nboird.\nWeygand, 91,\nAttends Ceremony\nCOMPIEGNE, France (AP>-\nAn emotion-packed ceremony Tuesday marked Armistice Day on\nthe spot where the Germans surrendered to the Allied powers 40\nyears ago.\nPresident Rene Coty visited\nthe nearby clearing in a forest\nwhere the armistice was signed.\nTears rolled down the cheeks of\nmany spectators as Coty kissed\nthe flag of his First World War\nunit.\nThousands had flocked to the\nCompiegne forest in the early\nhours of the day.\nAccompanying the 76-year-old\nCoty was the only French survivor of the armistice ceremony.\nGen. Maxime Weygand, now 91.\n'He was general chief of staff of\nthe Allied forces in the First\nWorld War.\nCoty later visited a copy of the\ndining car in which the armistice\nwas signed by Weygand and Uie\niate Marshal Ferdinand Foch.\nThe original car, which the\nFrench kept in a museum, was\ntaken away by the Nazis in the\nlast war and never found.\nUniversities in Australia had\n36,815 students enrolled in 1957,\nan increase of 2,409 over the pre\nvious year.\nWhirlwind Tour Ahead\nOf the Diefenbakers\nBy J.   C.  GRAHAM\nCanadian  Press  Correspondent\nAUCKLAND, N. Z. (CPI - The\nadvance schedule of Prime Minister Diefenbaker's tour of New\nZealand next month points to a\nwhirlwind visit covering a large\npart of the country in a week.\nArriving at Christchurch, Dec.\n8 from Australia, Mr. and Mrs.\nDiefenbaker and their party will\nbe welcomed by a representative of the governor-general, a\ncabinet minister, Canadian High\nCommissioner G. R. Heasman,\nand the N.Z. secretary of internal affairs, A. G. Harper.\nThat night the mayor of Christ-\nchurch, G. Manning, will give a\ncivic reception for Mr. and Mrs.\nDiefenbaker. Next morning the\nvisitors will fly by Royal New\nZealand Air Force plane to Dunedin, most southerly of New\nZealand's main cities and chief\ncentre of Otago Province.\nThey will leave by air later the\nsame day for the North Island\nand will drive from Parapa-\nraumu airport to Wellington, capital of New Zealand. There they\nwill be guests at Government\nHouse of Governor-General Lord\nCobham and Lady Cobham.\nOn Dec. 10, third day of the\nvisit, Diefenbaker will call on\nPrime Minister Walter Nash at\nParliament House. He will attend a civic reception at the Wellington Town Hall, to be followed\nby a state luncheon given by the\nHouse.\nDiefenbaker  will   resume   his\ndiscussions ..with Nash and other\ncabinet ministers Dec. 11.\nFAMOUS   TROUT   AREA\nThe visitors will drive to To-\nkaanu, a fishing resort on Lake\nTaupo, one of the most famous\ntrout fishing areas in the world,\nand to Wairakei, centre of one\nof New Zealand's most interesting thermal zones.\nThe next three days will give\nthe party an opportunity to relax\nand will be kept free for fishing\nor sightseeing. < In this area are\nmany fabulous trout streams and\nlakes; the spectacular Wairakei\ngeyser valley, as well as an\narea of man-made geysers where\nunderground steam is is being\nharnessed  for electricity.\nDiefenbaker and his party will\ndrive Dec. 14 to Auckland, largest city in New Zealand. The\nvisitors will leave for Fiji next\nday.\nPaved Highway Stretches\nTwo-Thirds Across Canada\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer  \u25a0\nOTTAWA (CP)-A paved highway now stretches across about\ntwo-thirds of Canada's girth and\nit is expected the entire country\nwill be spanned by a ribbon of\nasphalt and concrete in the next\ntwo years.\nBy December, 1960, Canadians\nmay be able to drive in comfort\nover a coast-to-coast network of\nsurfaced roads, a national undertaking first advocated in 1910 by\nthe Canadian Highway Association.\nBulk of the surfaced road will\nbe highway built by the provinces\nand the federal government under the Trans-Canada Highway\nAct. Other sections will include\nroads built by. the provinces before the act was. passed in 1949\nand 400 miles of provincial highway through Quebec, which has\nrefused to sign a Trans-Canada\nHighway agreement.\n4,470 MILES LONG\nThe Trans-Canada Highway itself will be 4,470 miles in length\nexcluding highway through Quebec.\nA Canadian Press cross-Canada\nsurvey shows that Trans-Canada\nHighway building has picked up\nconsiderably in the last 16\nmonths. During this period construction of paved road totalled\nabout a third of highway paved\nin the previous 2Vt years.\nFrom the start of construction\nin 1950 to May 31, 1957, a total\nof 1,559 miles of highway were\npaved. However, in the 16-month\nperiod from May 31, 1957, to Sept.\n30 of this year 469 miles were\npaved.\nIn the 8V4 years 2,154 miles\nwere graded, compared with 533\nmiles in the 16 months. Construction of highway structures such\nas bridges totalled 186 in the\nlonger period and 83 in the\nshorter one.\nPaved highway at Sept. 30 this\nyear stood at 2,028 miles. There\nwere 2,687 miles graded, including'the miles paved. Structures\ncompleted totalled 269.\nWhile the amount paved to\nTrans - Canada specifications is\nonly 2,028 miles there are about\n1,200 additional miles paved to\nprovincial standards.\nDIVISION  OF COST\nThe federal share of building\nthe highway was limited to $150,-\n000,000 when the act was passed\nin 1949 and signed by all provinces except Quebec. Ottawa\nagreed to pay 50 per cent of the\ncost of new construction and half\nthe expense of bringing sections\nof highway paved before 1949 up\nto Trans-Canada standards.\nFederal spending was increased\nto $250,000,000 by an amendment\nto the act in 1956. The 50-50 split\nwas continued but Ottawa agreed\nto pay 90 per cent for the closing\nof vital uncompleted gaps up to\n10 per cent of the total mileage\nwithin any one province.\nThe amended act also eliminated the necessity of a province\nreconstructing sections of highway paved to provincial standard\nand made it possible to speed up\nwork ' on sections where reconstruction and paving was essential.\nAs a result of the faster rate of\nconstruction by the provinces, the\n$250,000,000 authorized federal expenditure will not be sufficient.\nThe government will ask the next\nsession of Parliament to vote additional funds of perhaps $40,000,-\n000 to $50,000,000 to cover work\nup to December, 1960.     \t\nBAN BEVAN\nLISBON, Portugal (Reuters)\u2014\nAneurin Bevan, Britain's opposition Labor party foreign affairs\nspokesman, has been banned\nfrom a proposed Portuguese lecture tour, the government said\nMonday night. It announced that\nit refused to allow an opposition\ngroup to organize a lecture tour\nby Bevan. He had accepted the\ninvitation, to lecture in Lisbon\nand other parts of Portugal, an\nopposition group spokesman said.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nFREE DELIVERY\nCity Drug\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiauor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCOAST TO COAST IN CANADA\nchoose from express Mercury services, First Clasa services by prop-jet Viscount,\nor thrifty Tourist flights\nUN ITED STATES    frequent flights to Seattle, New York and other major U.S. cities\nBRITAIN AND EUROPE\nfly the 'Hudson Bay' route \u2014 no change of plane from Vancouver or Winnipeg\nto London. Good connections from Western centres\nFLORIDA AND THE SOUTH     frequent flights to Florida, Bermuda, Nassau, Jamaica, Barbados and Trinidad\nFLY AND SAVE\nAsk about the popular\nFLY-NOW-PAY-LATER plan.\nAlso enquire about big\nsavings on family travel\nTRANS-CANADA AIR LINES\nSee your Travel Agent or TCA in Vancouver,\n656 Howe Street (opp. Georgia Hotel).\nCumulative federal and provincial commitments for highway\nconstruction at Oct. 4 totalled\n$435,422,301. Of this, Ottawa had\ncommitted $259,821,130 \u2014 nearly\n$10,000,000 more than the amount\nauthorized by the act. The actual\nfederal layout to Oct. 4 was\n$165,682,338,\nCOMPLETES WORK\nSaskatchewan bas completed\nits 406-mile section of highway.\nPrince Edward Island, with only\none mile left to pave, will complete its work next year.\nLess than 100 miles of highway\nare paved in Newfoundland\u2014only\n14 to Trans-Canada specifications\n\u2014but 270 miles have been graded.\nIt still is impossible to drive over\nthe 580-mile route on the island\nprovince without a car being\nmoved between Clarenville and\nGambo by railway flatcar.\nMileage paved to Trans-Canada\nstandards in other provinces at\nSept. 30, with total mileage for\nthe province in brackets:\nNova Scotia 26 (311); New\nBrunswick 94 (390); Ontario 499\n(1,436); Manitoba 276 (309); Alberta 265 (282); British Columbia\n284 . (568).\nMileage graded to Trans-Canada standards at Sept. 30 totalled\n270 in Newfoundland, 71 in P.E.I.,\n101 in Nova Scotia, 140 in New\nBrunswick, 658 in Ontario, 284 in\nManitoba, 277 in Alberta and 413\nin B.C.\u2014\nA total of 143 miles of the\nTrans - Canada Highway are\nthrough National Parks under\nfederal jurisdiction. Of this, 73\nmiles have been paved and 95\ngraded.\nLay Away\nfor\nChristmas\nDo your Christmas\nshopping now. Choose his\ngift while our stock of new\nmerchandise is complete.\nA small deposit will hold\nit until Christmas.\nEMORY'S\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\n\u2022 GETS PRISON TERM\nPONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Former Teamsters Union official\nHerman Kierdorf got a prison\nterm Monday which lie said\ncould mean \"a Ufe sentence for\nme.\" The 68 - year - old onetime\nTeamsters business agent and\nex-convict was sentenced to one\nto five years on his conviction of\npossession of a gun silencer, a\nfelony. Kierdorf's remark that\nthe prison term could mean a\nlife sentence apparently referred\nto his heart trouble.\nIbrCaiiadianstaLers,   .&\nhunters and outdoor men\nSTANFIELD'S\nNew Thermal Underwear\nWear less \u2014but keep warm\u2014with Stanfield's\nThermal Underwear... the same type as worn\nby Antarctic explorers! Thousands of tiny air\npockets capture body warmth-insulate you\nagainst the coldest outdoors temperature. Yet\nit's light weight cotton of finest quality, shrink\ncontrolled to hold its shape.\nSHORT SLEEVE SHIRT (9911)\nS. M. L $2.95\nLONG SLEEVE SHIRT (9913)\nS. M. L $3.95\nLONGS, DOUBLE SEAT (9912)\n30-44 $3.95\nAli prices shown are approximate.\nmake underwear, lingerie arid s\/eepwear\nfor him, for her and for small types loo.\nITANFICLD'S      LIMITED,      TRURO.      NOVA      SCOTIA\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_1958_11_12","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\/1.0430728","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":"1958-11-12 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":"1958-11-12 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":""}]}