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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":" SATURDAY EDITION    %\nm.\nw     o;\nwith COMICS - 10c     J^4Sht4\n2k\\S\nm\n\u2022 Vol. 56\n>Htj\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy with a\nfew light rainshowers. A little milder. Light winds. Low-high at Cranbrook, Crescent Valley 30 and 45.\nOutlook for Sunday\u2014Showers.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-. ATUHDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 11,1958\nNot  More Than 60  Daily,  10c Saturday\nNo. 146\nNationalists Say\n5 MiGs Downed\nTAIPEI (Reuters)\u2014Nationalist China claimed Friday\nIts planes shot down five Chinese Communist MiG fighters\nand damaged two others in a dogfight oif the mainland.\nThe government said the Communist jets were downed\nwhen six Nationalist Sabrejet fighters tangled with 20 MiGs\noff Fukien province, near the Matsu Islands.\nThe government described the air kills as a gift from\nthe Communists to mark the celebration today of the 47th\nanniversary of the founding of the Chinese Republic under\nSun Yat Sen.\nOne Sabrejet was lost when its pilot rammed a MiG\nin an attempt to'save another Sabre surrounded by Communist  planes,  the  defence   \t\nministry said.\nThe New China News Agency\nclaimed that three Nationalist\nplanes were shot down and a pilot\ncaptured in the clash. It made\nno mention of Communist losses.\nSince the Communists began\nshelling the offshore island of Quemoy on Aug. 23, the Nationalists\nclaim to have destroyed 31 MiGs\nwith the loss of three fighters and\nanother damaged.\nThe defence ministry said t h e\nresults of the dogfight on gun-\ncamera films \"showed that the\nRed planes burst into fireballs and\nsome of the Red pilots were parachuting down into the sea.\"\nFor the first time since 1950,\nFormosa marked Friday's anniversary with a non-miliwry parade.\nThe government in the past\nstaged full-dress marches of up to\n300,000 troops and displayed the\nlatest weapons obtained from the\nUnited States.\nSalk Vaccine Appears\nStemming Polio Tide\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Polio, once a\ndreaded killer and crippler, appears to be fading fast in Canada\nunder an all-out public health\noffensive armed with Salk anti-\npolio vaccine.\nBut a minor outbreak in Manitoba, where half of the country's\npoiio cases this year have occurred, stands as a sober reminder\nthat the battle has not yet been\nwon.\nHealth department officials here\nhave no complete explanation for\nthe; situation in Manitoba, which\nup .'to last Saturday had reported\n83-bf the total 161 cases in Canada\nsince the start of the year.\n\"It's a very capricious sort' of\ndisease,\" one expert said.\nHe suggested one reason might\nbo that the province's population\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNo Time to.\nArgue With Moose\nCHAPLEAU, Ont. (CP)-It's\nmoose-mating season in the\nnorth and,' as usual, the bulls\nare in a mean mood. Two incidents to prove tbe point:\nLloyd Woods, a deputy chief\nforest ranger, was driving a\ntruck near Island Lake one\nnight last week when a bull\nmoose stepped into his headlight beam.\nAssuming it would-move off\nInto the bush, Woods slowed\nthe vehicle but didn't quite\nstop. The bull charged, stopped the'' vehicle in its tracks,\nsmashed the grill, bent the\nhood and roof and tore a carrier off the top.\nWhile Woods sat surveying\nthe damage the animal sauntered off with a sore head but\n... proud pace.\nRanger   Harry   Kohls   was\nworking on a line-cutting pro-\n.   iect in a'nearby township when\nj'!, he heard a strange noise and\nm looked back to find a huge bull\nstalking him.\n' The ranger hurled his axe. It\nwas the wrong move. The bull\nstarted after him and Kohls\nfled. He still had a lead when\nhe reached a nearby road and\nwas picked up by a passing\ntruck.\nDistrict forester T. W. Hues-\nton comments in his weekly\nreport: \"The moose season got\noff to a fairly good start.\"   .\nIlllllilllllllllliillllllliilllilllliiillllili\n\u2014 relatively uncrowded and with\nhigh living standards \u2014 does not\nhave the natural immunity which\nis acquired through mild exposure\nto the disease at an early age in\ndenser populations with lower living standards.\nAS OBJECT LESSON\nWhatever the reason for the\nManitoba cases, health officials\npoint to them as an object lesson\nwhy Canadians should get Salk\nvaccine shots.\nThe people getting polio now are\nthose without vaccine, one official\nsaid bluntly.\nSince last spring the vaccine\ncampaign has been largely directed to having adults aged 20-40 and\npie-school children vaccinated.\nFederal officials say they have\nbeen informed that about half the\nManitoba cases were adults although, paradoxically, the province has a high proportion of its\nadults vaccinated., _,.,,.\n\u25a0;.: Because'the vaceifiati'oia .program\nacross Canada is directed by provincial and local authorities, the\nfederal health department has no\nup-to-date figures on the progress\nof vaccinations.\nMOSTLY CHILDREN\nUp to last June, about 5,200,000\nCanadians had received one or\nmore shots. Almost all were children. It is estimated that by last\nJune about 80 per cent of school\nchildren in the ftve-to-19 age group\nhad been yaccinated, together with\nabout 60 per cent of pre-school\nchildren.\nStill not definitely proved is the\nlength of protection given by Salk\nvaccine. But one expert here said\na report on the first big batch\nof vaccinations, carried out in the\nUnited States in 1954, showed that\nthe recipients \"still have a good\nimmunity.\"\nLAST WHEAT\nSHIPMENT SAILS\nCHURCHILL, Man. (CP) - A\nre(cord season, with shipments totalling 19,500,000 bushels of wheat\nwas marked up-Friday as the last\nship of the year finished loading\nand prepared to sail for Europe\nfrom this Hudson Bay port.\nThe 1956 total tops last year's\nrecord by 3,000,000 bushels.\nA total of 55 vessels have plowed\nthrough the Hudson Straits since\nthe season opened July 27 at this\nport, 610 miles north of Winnipeg.\nFirst ship to dock was the Richard\nde Larrinage, which made three\ntrips during the season.\nClash Hits Hopes\nFor Nuclear Test Ban\nUNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (CP)\n\u2014A Soviet-American clash in the\nUnited Nations Friday reduced to\nsome extent optimism over the\nprospect of an early worldwide ban\non nuclear tests.\nThe U. S., through Ambassador\nHenry Cabot Lodge, warned in the\nUN assembly's political committee that any Russian tests after\nthe opening of the Big Three Geneva conference Oct. 31 would result in the withdrawal of President Eisenhower's earlier offer for\na one-year suspension pending further agreement. \/'\/\/<\/\u2022\u25a0 '\"\ni ,Soviet delegate \/Valmah' Zorin\nreached sharply, apdustog the-U. S.'\nof using the test ban as a lever to\nwin other .disarmament concessions that Russia might not. be\nwilling to accept at this time.\nOVERNIGHT CONTRAST\nThe two committee speeches\nwere in contrast to the feeling on\nthe eve of the disarmament, debate here that the UN would tacitly agree to putting on record its\nsupport of the Geneva talks and\navoiding a controversial voting\nshowdown particularly on the vital\nweapons test issue.\nLodge had aroused even greater\noptimism by the unusual gesture\nof showing the Soviet delegate on\nFriday night a preliminary draft\nof the American-led resolution that\nwould put the UN formally behind\nthe disarmament talks by Britain,\nU.S. and Russia. A further indication of the overnight change was\nthe failure pf the American delegation to ^abie'this resolution before the,xofhiiiittee\/;adjourned for\nthe. weekend. , ( ,i. . .\n; There we're reports that'the Americans were having difficulty in\nlining up a wide-ranging geographical group of co-sponsors. d\nIt was learned that while Cait-\nada was still willing to go along\nw(th the U. S., another key middle power\u2014Japan\u2014was withdrawing from the original >linfeup; of co-\nsponsors.-The apparent reason was\nlack of unanimity in the committee\nexpressed in the two speeches on\nFriday by Lodge and Zorin.\nPope s Body Borne to St. Peter's\nTHIS OLD TURKEY is keeping her eyes open and .making herself as much\nof a pet of the family as she can to avoid the untimely fate that befalls such birds\nat this season. A Kimberley resident, Isobell (that's the turkey's name) allows Dianne Bozzer to dress frer up in the latest fashions. She, doesn't believe that fine\nfeathers make fine birds.\u2014Photo by C, Wormingtdn. ..' \":,   ,..\nliliiliiiilliiiilliiiiiiilliliiiiiiiiliiiiiill\nNo Paper\nMonday\nThe Daily News will not be\npublished Monday, October 13,\nowing to the-Thanksgiving Day\nholiday. The next regular edition will be published Tuesday.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiimiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiii\nSnow Threat May\nKeep Folk Home\nBy The Canadian Press\nChilly weather' conditions with\nthreats of continued show and rain\nin' many parts of the country: will\nforce a stay-at-home Thanksgiving\nweekend on many Canadians.\nThe outlook for the Prairies,\nwhere cold air is firmly entrenched\nin most sections, is the worst. The\nMaritimes have the best forecast\nwith chances of mid-50 temperatures. ,\nWinter has struck its first blow\nat British Columbia, bringing snow\nto, some interior districts. and a\nflood of traffic accidents on rainswept roads in the southern coastal\narea.\nA new disturbance is expected to\nbring more rain to the west coast\nbut Sunday should be more pleas\nant.  ''\nOvernight temperatures in Alberta and Saskatchewan will range\nbetween 25 and 15 degrees. Highs\nmay be around 30 to 35 degrees.\nChinook winds will keep the mercury at 45 in southwestern Alberta.\nSnow will continue over extensive areas of-Western Canada.\nHew Biskop of Melsaa ^\nTo Be Consecrated Dec* 1\nThe consecration of Rev. Father\nWilfred Emmet Doyle, newly appointed Bishop of Nelson, Will take\nplace at St. Joseph's Cathedral in\nEdmonton on December 1, it was\nannounced Friday in Nelson. Most\nRev. Giovanni Panico, the apostolic delegate. to Canada, will be\nthe consecrator, '-\"\u25a0'\nHe will succeed Most Rev. T. J.\nMcCarthy, who has been appointed\nBishop of the newly created diocese of St. Catharines, Ont.\nAs chancellor of the archdiocese\nof Edmonton, the 45-year-old\nBishop-elect has become one of\nthe .city's best known clergymen\nto Catholics and non-Catholics\nalike.\nHe is the first Edmontonian to\nbe raised to episcopacy in the\nRoman Catholic church. While a\nnumber of priests from the Edmonton archdiocese have been elevated to the hierarchy, Father\nDoyle is the only one who grew\nup in Edmonton and calls that city\nhis home.\nSince 1949 he has been professor\nof canon law at St. Joseph's Seminary as well as chancellor, and\nhas at various times served as\nadministrator in several city and\ncountry parishes.\nCHURCH BUILDER\nHe built St. John's and St. Theresa's churches in Edmonton, St.\nClare's at Redwatejy.and was in\ncharge of preliminary construction\nof the Assumption church in the\ncity. He also played a leading role\nin the construction of the flew St.\nJoseph's Seminary and the\/opening\nof Holy Cross cemetery, both on\nthe St. Albert Road just north of\nEdmonton.\nOne of a family of 12 children,\n11 of whom are still living, Father\nDoyle was born in Calgary on Feb-\nruary^ 18, 1913. When he was a\nyear bid; the family moved to Edmonton and a year later they went\nto Lafleche, Sask. His father, John\nJ. Doyle, a building contractor,\ndied in 1950. The family returned to\nEdmonton in 1922, and Father\nDoyle received his early education\nat Sacred Heart school and  St.\nREV. FATHER WILFRED E. DOYLE\nJoseph's high school. :He entered\nSt. Joseph's Seminary in 1931 and\nat the same time enrolled-at the\nUniversity of Albertd, receiving\nhis bachelor of arts degree in 1934.\nHe was ordained Juno 5, 1938, by\nArchbishop J. -H. MacDonald of\nEdmonton. :'.<\nHis first duties were os assistant\nat St.,,Joseph's Cathedral and assistant chancellor to yew. Father\nE. Q. Jennings, now Bishop of Fort\nWilliam. He also seryjjd the mission parishes of New Sarepta and\nRedwater.\nIn 1946 Father Doyle!-enrolled at\nthe Seminary of the University of\nOttawa for, further' studies, and in\n1949 was granted ther degree of\ndoctor.of canon law. He then resumed his position as chancellor at\nEdmonton and was named professor of canon law at St. Joseph's\nSeminary.  - -   .\nFather Doyle's mother and most\nof his immediate relatives now\nlive in .Vancouver. Four brothers\nare in the building construction\nbusiness there, and another is in\nthe plumbing business. One sister\nis a member of the Sisters of St.\nJoseph of Toronto.\nThe Nelson diocese was created\nin 1936 with Most Rev. M. M. Johnson, now coadjutor-Archbishop of\nVancouver as first Bishop. If. has\n46 priests and.31 parishes serving\n22,250 Catholics. A number of communities of Sisters also serve in\nfhe diocese.\nAirlift Rescues\n131 From Ship\nTAIPEI (AP) - The U.S. 7th\nFleet put an airlift into operation\nFriday and rescued 131 passengers\nwhose ship ran aground after\nleaving Red China.\n--\"Wflefl, Htatta.'liFeJ'is at; Stake\nwe make no distinction in political\nbeliefs,',' VicfcAdmiral. Frederick\nN. Kivette, fleet commander, said.\nThe flagship, the heavy cruiser\nHelena, dashed across the South\nChina Sea Irom war exercises off\nthe Philippines to the Nationalist-\nheld Paracel Islands for the mercy\nmission on a plea from the stranded craft, the 340^-ton Hoiwong, flying the Norwegian flag.\nThe Hoiwong, outbound to Singapore from Red Swaton on Formosa\nStrait, had run hard aground on\na reef 420 miles southwest of Hong\nKong. The hull was punctured and\nthe No. 2 hold flooded. Heavy seas\nbattered the ship.\nU.S. -naval headquarters here\ntold of the rescue:\nTwo helicopters handled the\ntransfer, flying above heavy seas\nthat \u25a0 precluded removal of the\npassengers by routine methods.\nSputnik Rocket\nDown in November\nCAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)-The\nfinal stage rocket that launched\nRussia's Sputnik III is expected to\nmake a flaming plunge to death\nlate in November or early December, the Smithsonian Astrophvsical\nObservatory said Friday night.\nThe satellite itself, a lte-ton\ncone-shaped moonlet, is expected\nto last a month longer. This is\nbecause it presents less atmospheric drag than the bulkier rocket.\nThe rocket now Is beginning\" a\nseries of visible morning passages.\nIt is orbiting about 600 miles above\nthe United States, travelling in a\nnorth-northwest to south-southeast\ndirection. It can be seen as it orbits\nin the morning twilight over Canada.\nCommittee Wants No\nExtension for Sons\n: TRAIL (CP) -Member?-of the\ncommittee for Canadian Doukhobor Affairs want no further extension of time allowed Sons of Freedom Doukhobprs wishing to move\nto RussisT.,\nDuring1 discussion on an extension to Oct. 21, allowed Freedom-\nites to file, their migration forms,\nmembers meeting here Thursday\nnight said they feel this alio, s\nample'time for forms, to be ..signed and lodged at'government o_\nfices.. \u25a0\u25a0-,\u25a0\u25a0:\nNick T. Oglow, chairman Of'the\nCastlegar village commission, said\nhe considers,that the actual signing of .the applications is not the\nreal problem. . ''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0': \"The. whole situation re$s;with\nthe Russian government as to -whether tiiese people would be accepted,\" he sdid. \"Until the Soviefchas\nindicated  its  position,  we   can't\nbring any pressure.\"\nMr. Oglow confessed he was in\nsome doubt whether Russia will\naccept the whole group into the\ncountry without giving consideration to each person individually.\nThe Castlegar commissioner said\nhe believes a number of Freedomites had signed application forms\nbut were withholding them until\nsome indication had been forthcoming whether they would be taken on Soviet soil.\n, Committee chairman Dr. C. H.\nWright of Trail said he is having\nan article translated from a Russian magazine which devotes considerable'space to the New Denver institution and contains a pic\nture giving the impression that\nchildren are confined behind a\nwire fence and guarded by RCMP.\nCrowds Line Route\nFrom Summer Palace\nTo Vatican City\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nVATICAN CITY (AP)\u2014The remains of Pope Pius lie\nin state under the towering dome of St. Peter's Basilica.\nRome, the Eternal City whose faithful he served as\nbishop, was plunged into deep mourning.\nWhile the great bells of St. Peter's tolled, the multitudes whocheered the Pope throughout the 19 years of\nhis reign looked on silently, awed by the splendid solemnity\nattending the funeral of Roman Catholicism's spiritual and\ntemporal sovereign.\nThe 261st supreme pontiff was borne in ancient,\nmajestic splendor irom Castel Gandolfo through Rome to\nthe seat of his reign, Vatican\nCity.\nNearly 1,000,000 persons lined the\n18-mile route from Castel Gandolfo\nto Rome, standing in hushed tribute as the cortege passed by.\nOther hundreds of thousands\npoured into Rome's sun-splashed\nstreets in token of their last respects of the \"pastor angelicus\",\nthe angelic pastor,\nHardly a whisper could be heard\nfrom the tremendous throng as the\nglass-walled hearse moved into the\ngreat square of St. Peter's.\nThe tolling of the giant campa-\nnon, the master bell ot St. Peter's,\nset the slow measure for the cortege's pace.\nACCOMPANY BODY\nA procession two miles loiig accompanied the pontiff's body from\nhis Roman see, the Cathedral of\nSt. John Lateran. Scores of dignitaries of the Roman Catholic\nChurch in their vestments, virtually all of Rome's multitude of\npriests, members of religious orders and uniformed members of\nthe Vatican' and Italian states\nwalked behind the hearse bearing\nthe red-draped coffin,\nDarkness Was {ailing as tlie coffin was taken-from the hearse and\ncarried slowly into the cathedral.\nBefore the coffin walked Die arch-\npriest of- IS*\u2014basilica;\" Federico\nCardinal Tedeschini, accompanied\nby the Pope's secret chamberlains. Doors were closed end outside-the great crowd began slowly\nand quietly to disperse.\nInside, all the cardinals now in\nVatican City waited for the body\nto be placed on a catafalque at\nthe spot where the papal throne\nusually is placed.\nThe catafalque is a structure six\nfeet- high, covered in red cloth,\nbordered with gold. Along both\nsides are long benches covered in\ngold cloth, Where the cardinals\nwill be seated during the rites still\nto come.\nIN R^iD CLOTH\nBehind the benches are three\nrows of chairs covered ln red cloth,\nfor the bishops, and beyond those,\nthree rows of 'benches covered with\ngreen cloth for the dignitaries of\nthe papal court and the diplomatic\ncorps.\nFour guards in their plumed golden helmets, breastplates of golden\narmor and red and black uniforms,\nand four Swiss Guards in the ancient colorful uniforms designed\nby Michelangelo took up sentinel\npositions around the catafalque.\nNuns and priests of the Vatican\nstaff began a vigil of prayer to\ncontinue through all the night.\nToday the pontiff's body, attired in the formal robes of the\npapal office, will be taken from its\npresent resting place to the spot\nwhere the Pope held his mass general audiences in the basilica.\nIN WHITE SILK\nThe body is draped in a cassock\nof white silk, its train drawn over\na white flowing vestment called the\nalb.\nOver the alb is a red and gold\ndalmatic, an outer garment worn\nby bishops for the most solemn\nceremonies. Over this is a red\nchasuble, or sleeveless cloak. Over\nthe shoulders is the pluvial, a full\ncape of white, dotted with gold.\nA tall, golden bishop's mitre is\non the head. On the hands are red\ngloves and on one of. the fingers\nof the right hand, a brilliant ring.\nThe feet are encased in scarlet\nslippers.\nThe Pope will lie in state for\nthree days. The public will be admitted Saturday to the basilica.\nMonday, the body will be laid to\nrest near the tombs of other popes\nin the grottoes under St. Peter's.\nPOPE'S SUCCESSOR\nWhile mourning the death of\nPope Pius XII, the thoughts of\nRoman Catholics throughout the\nworld are turning to the Cardinals\nwhose task it will be to select the\n262nd successor to St. Peter.\nTheoretically any male Roman\nCatholic could be chosen. St. Peter,\nthe first pope, was a humble fisherman ' who had served as one of\nChrist's 12 apostles.\n1 i3ut In .keeping with Ji practice\ndating back to 1378, the next pope\n\u25a0wnl be a cardinal aim'lrj all probability an Italian. All popes elected\nsince 1523 have been Italians.\nFail fo Form\nLebanon Cabinet\nBEIRUT (AP)-Hope of a quick\nsolution to Lebanon's bloody five\nmonths of strife faded Friday with\nthe failure to form amilitary cabinet.\nArmed Moslem demonstrators\nmilled through the streets demanding that Rashid Karami, a Moslem.\nTemain premier of this half-Christian, half-Moslem nation.\nKarami had paved the way for\na military cabinet by placing his\nresignation at the disposal of President Fuad Chehab,' a Christian.\nKarami and Pierre Gemayel,\nhead of the militant Christian Falange party, met Friday night to\nconsider how to end the crisis.\nIt was the first time in five\nmonths of bloody strife that any\nleaders of opposing forces have\nmet face to face.\nIt was reported the meeting was\narranged after Chehab's ultimatum that the two factions must\nagree on a cabinet or he will declare a new state of emergency,\nequivalent to martial law.\nThere were no results after three\nhours of talk. Gemayel is expected\nto confer with Karami again today\nand some sources predicted a new\ngovernment will be agreed upon\nthen. Karami told his followers he\nand Gemayel are near agreement.\nAnd in This Corner...\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\u2014Most Sydney University students\ncrawled into their shells Friday and refused to talk about the election of Nicolas A. Chelona as student council president.\nA re-election has been called\u2014with Chelona's name absent from\nthe ballot. A council official said: \"He's not a representative, he's\nnot a student\u2014and we're not even sure he's a 'he'.\"\nNicolas A. Chelona Is a turtle.\nNicolas beat out five other candidates after a sponsor wrote in\nthe student newspaper that he had spent three years In the chemical\ndepartment, was a keen student or natural science and was sure\n\"to prove a much faster worker than members of previous student\nrepresentative councils.\"\nAs to Nicolas' surname, Chelona is Greek for tortoise.\nROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)\u2014They just don't come any fairer than\nEarl B. Pugsley, a man of property and building inspector for suburban Irondequoit. , ;.,',     . \u25a0 \u25a0'       ,\nPugsley the houseowner wants to build an addition, but Pugsley\nthe official says he can't. ...\nThe particular change he has in mind, says Pugsley to Pugsley.\nis not allowed by the present zoning ordinance.\nSo Pugsley has applied to the zoning board of appeals for a\nwaiver.\nThe problem is this: Pugsley is also secretary of the board\nof appeals.\nPITTSBURGH (AP)\u2014Police were surprised Wednesday when\nthev found eight cases of stolen shoes worth $1780 strewn in Highland Park. Apparently the thieves were surprised too.\nThe shoes were samples\u2014for the right foot only.\nTETERBORO, N.J. (AP)\u2014Fourteen Russian tourists Thursday\nvisited\u2014of all places\u2014a vodka distillery.\nThey drank the stuff straight. No Bloody Marys or Screwdrivers;\nJust a little caviar.\nThe Russians\u2014a group of doctors, engineers, teachers and newspaper men-r-have paid $800 to $1000 for an 11-day tour in the United\nStates. They will visit Chicago. Washington, D.C.. Buffalo and\nNiagara Falls.   \t\nDrive With Care\n .\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1958\nGIANT KIDDIES' PARTY TODAY AT 2:00 P.M.\n\u2022\".-.'    FREE CANDY to the First 100 Kids .\nScreen\u2014\"WHITE FEATHER\"\nCARTOONS - SERIAL - COMEDIES\nTONIGHT - MON. \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00 \u2022 9:00\n\u00a5&fffl So great together you'll wish they'd never part t\nCARY GRANT INCRID BERGMAN\n-SUNDAY MIDNIGHT PREVIEW \u2014\n\u25a0HIM' NH|MIBhwi|JJli)IIGWIMIIfflll<l'''PW\"'        ' \"\nOut or thb silent dawn thby rom.\n| ALAN        |%ERNEST\nLTIDD-BORGNINE\n\u2122Badlanders\nKATY JuRflDO^CuillE KaiV'KmS\u00abn.-ilm\u00bb\u00bbPKwRlcmsoCoiUB!\nha\u25a0\"\u00bb\"\"\u00ab&\"\u2022 wrinDaHiBDaves- MnthAnwRosDieEN.\nCIVIC\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nModern\nPrescription\nService\nPrompt, Courteous Service\nWhile Yon Walt or\nBy Delivery\n(Service Is Our Watchword)\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your Fortress,of Health\"\nMl Josephine St.. Phone 12M\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST   TIMES  TONIGHT\n\"NAKED SEA\" in Color\n\u2014 Plus \u2014\n\"BLACK KNIGHT\" in Color\nAllan Ladd, Patricia Medina\nOne showing 7:30 p.m.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B. C.\nLAST   TIMES   TONIGHT\n\"OLD YELLER\"\n(Technicolor)\nDOROTHY McGUIRE\nFeaturette\n\"MAN IN SPACE\"\nt&tmff\nVIRIFAX BANTAM\nCOPIER\nA light, capable \"any job\" copier\nat lowest price of all\nAbout half the price of other \"low-oost\"\ncopiers! Yet the Bantam gives you all the'\nextras of Verifax copyingl\n\u2022 Makes 5 completely dr, copies of any document in\n1 minute for as little as 3'\/2\u00ab each\u2014on white bond-type\npaper, card stork, orinted office forms\u2014front or back\nif you wish.\n\u2022 All-important, too\u2014 Veritax copies are complete and\naccurate. All types of pencil and ink writing\u2014even\npurplish spirit duplicator copies\u2014are reproduced as\nreadily as typed data.\nThe Bantam is made by Kodak so you know it's goodi\nCall for free folder orMivery on approval.\n(RamMUjiL ?taomreera\nPHONE  106\nNELSON, B.C.\n\"Cayuse\" Travel in Kootenays\nStood Bishop in Good Stead\nRt. Rev. H.R. Ragg always\nthinks kindly of the Kootenays \u2014\nfor the experience this district gave\nhim.\nThe jovial energetic former Bishop of Calgary, in Nelson to conduct\na teaching mission at St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral, first served his\nchurch in Canada right here In the\nKootenays.\nRe was a young priest, a Cambridge man, newly ordained, and\nonly a few months in Canada, when\nhe was placed in charge of Fruitvale parish late in 1914.\n\"Fruitvale had three little stores\nand that was about all,\" the Bishop recalled Friday.\nHis parishoners consisted of\nabout 90 families in Fruitvale, 15\nin Salmo, six in Ymir and 20 at\nWaneta.\n\"I had a team of cayuses which\nI rode or drove, and one always\nhoped that one wouldn't meet any\ncars (there were only two in the\ndistrict, belonging to doctors from\nTrail), because whenever we did\nmeet, those horses really danced.\"\nOne of the most difficult routes\nhe travelled in those days was the\nColumbia Gardens-Waneta road \u2014\n\"a narrow track perched 400 feet\nabove the river.\nThe rule of the road when teams\nmet head on according to Bishop\nRagg, was that the lighter conveyance was held off the edge to permit the heavier to pass.\nFrom Fruitvale, ne was posted\nto Trail late in 1915. He was among\nthose clergy and laymen who elected the first Bishop Of Kootenay,\nthe late Rt. Rev. A.J. Doull. Later\nhe was at Chilliwack, then rector\nof All Saints', Winnipeg. He became Dean of Calgary in 1933, and\nin 1943 came his elevation to the\nepiscopate. As Bishop of the large\nDiocese of Calgary, he often had\nII  iSWLW^'     DRIVE-IN\nj LAST TIMES TONIGHT \u25a0\nI Time approx. 8 and 8:30 p.m.\n| zm*\u2122~Mmimaom*\\\nI We wish to take this op- I\nI  portunity to express our |\n\u25a0 appreciation to all who I\nattended   the   Starlight \u25a0\nI Drive-ln for 1958. We \u25a0\nI are looking forward to J\n\u25a0 exceptional  prog ram- I\n' mlng in  1959. \u2014 See  .\nII\nyou next Spring.\nI J\nAui-o-Vue  Drive* In\nTRAIL. B.C.\nLAST   TIMES   TONIGHT\nTime 6:45\n\"NAKED IN THE SUN\"\nJames Craig, Llla Milan\nPlus\n\"LOOKING FOR DANGER\"\nBowery Boys\nDR. LEE DE FOREST,\nVACUUM TUBE INVENTOR,\nPRAISES HEARING AID\nLee de Forest, who made modern\nradio and television possible through\nhis Invention of the vacuum tube fifty\nyears ago, recently lavished high\npraise on a revolutionary new hearing\ndevice called \"The Listener.\" \"It ls,\"\nDr. de Forest said, \"without question\nthe finest hearing, aid I have ever\nworn. Nothing compares with it for\nthe quality of hearing it gives.\"\nCommenting further, Dr. de Forest\ncontinued: \"The advantage of ear-\nlevel bearing and the elimination of\nIrritating clothing noises make 'The\nListener' a real pleasure to wear. In\nfact, it overcomes, all the objections\nI previously bad to wearing a hearing\naid.\"\nSo great haa been the Interest in this\nremarkable new electronic hearing\nachievement, the makers have prepared an illustrated report outlining.\nin detail how It functions, Those interested may obtain a free copy from\nB.C. Interior\nHearing Centre,\n618 Main St.,\n|   .       Penticton, B.C.\nI Withdut    tost    or    obligatibn.\nplease send illustrated factual\n| literature.\n. Name  \t\n' street  \t\nI City  Prov  I\nOtarion Listener of\nBritish Columbia\nHunter\nReported\nng\nSPOKANE, Wash. (AP)\nA Spokane hunter who was\nexpected back Wednesday\nfrom' a two-day hunting trip\nnear Salmo has not returned,\nhis : wife reported to police\nFriday.\nFrancis John Handwerk, 27, went\non a bear-hunting expedition alone\nnear -Salmo, and had planned to\npack in from just south of the\nCanadian line, his wife said.\nRCMP at Salmo Friday night\nsaid they had not received any report of the hunter being missing.\nand that no search was planned\nimmediately.\nRT. REV. H. R. RAGG\n\u2014Daily News photo.\noccasion to look back on his earlier\ndays in the Kootenays.\n\"When the clergy would tell me\nstories of rough times on the road,\nI would match them,\" he says,\nlaughing.\nWhen ill health forced him to resign in 1951, Bishop Ragg moved to\nthe Coast. Now, at nearly 70, he\ncontinues to devote his time to his\nchurch as honorary assisstant to\nthe Bishop of New Westminster,\nand, as eminent preacher, lectures\nat the Anglican Theological College and holds missions. Before\ncoming to Nelson he conducted a\nmission at Castlegar; on Nov. 9\nhe has another mission in Vancouver.\nMrs. Ragg has accompanied him\non this trip. They leave for the\nCoast on Monday.\nSawlog Scale Well Up\nAs Spruce, Fir Lead ,\nThree-fold increases In fir, larch\nand spruce sent the sawlog scale\nsoaring in Nelson Forest District\nin September.\nThe scale for the month totalled\n72,982,454 feet board measure,\nwhich is a tremendous jump over\nCanon Silverwood\nGets Appointment\nRev. Canon W. J. Silverwood of\nthe Church of Redeemer has received a three-year appointment at\nan executive meeting of the Diocese of Kootenay in Kelowna. .\nRt. Rev. P. R. Beattie, Bishop\nof Kootenay, named Canon Silver-\nwood to represent the diocese on\nthe Council for the Social Service\nof the Anglican Church.\nCanon Silverwood was accompanied by. Yen. Archdeacon B. A.\nResker of Castlegar, and Rev. E.\nH. Patterson of Trail. Mr. Patterson was appointed representative\nof the Diocesan Board of Religious\nEducation.\nthe 23,379,462 fbm of the previous\nSeptember, and brings the total for\nthis year to 319,005,365 fbm, compared with 265,516,121. fbm to the\nsame time last years.\nHere are the comparative figures:\nSAWLOGS (fbm) 1957 1958\nFir   ...-.    6,140,352    19,056,603\nCedar     1,155,101     5,085,502\nSpruce       6,571,218    19,788,710\nLodgepole i\npine       731,393     1,994,713\nHemlock     1,375,651     6,492,399\nBalsam .... 377,429 1.498,282\nWhite pine .. 904,002- 3,351,062\nYellow pine       249,645        568,417\nLarch     5,873,831    15,146,766\nBirch        840\nTotal    ..  . 23,379,462    72,982,454\nTotal to end\nof Sept. 265,516.121   319,005,365\nMINOR PRODUCTS\nPoles and\npiles (l.f.)       866,050   380,160\nMine props (cords) 484\nHewn ties (cds.) .. 2,913\nCordwood (cds.) - 98         23\nFence posts (cds.) . 705        581\nMermaid Dugongs Using\nHotel Swimming Pool\nMOMBASA, Kenya (Reuters) \u2014\nThe first two \"mermaid\" dugongs\n.ever captured alive splashed happily Friday in a hotel swimming\npool after being'Aetted off Malinda\nBaker Canada's\nRepresentative\nOTTAWA (Cf) i-iollcitoripp*,\neral Leon Balcer, a Roman.Catholic from Quebec-will goto RoWie\nnext week to represent, the. Canadian government at some of Ihe\nceremonies during the nine-day\nmourning period following Pope\nPius' death.\nMOSCOW (AP) - The Roman\nCatholic Church in Moscow celebrated Ma6s Friday in memory of\nPope Pius XII.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The lights\nof a huge cross atop Mount Royal\nin- the centre 6f Montreal, have\nbeen changed to purple from white\nto demonstrate the city's mourning for the death of Pope Pius XII.\nThe last time the purple cross appeared was after the death of\nKing George VI. \t\n70 miles north of here, in the last\n24 hours.\nIlj. ,'rare mammals have breasts\nand hufnan-like faces along with\nbig\/'thils. They were .given tranquilizers to help them settle down\nartd to help photographers take pictures.\n\"Ihe first dugong was caught in\na shark net Thursday. It measured\nfive feet in-length.\nFriday morning, a much larger\ndugong. was netted. This one\nweighs about 1000 pounds and\nmeasures 10 feet in length.\nSeveral have been caught in the\npast but died almost immediately.\nThe dugong is vegetarian in its\neating habits. They vary in size\nup to 15 feet.\nIn London, a zoo spokesman said\nthe zoo hopes to buy at least one.\nHe said: \"Dugongs are extremely rare. It is a mammal and presumably the mermaid legend\nsprang from it because they 6uckle\ntheir ybung while sitting on their\ntails.\"\nAt one time, dugongs were believed to be extinct. But they have\nWen seen in recent years in the\nIndian Ocean and the Red Sea.\nTHE WEATHER\nNelson 32 41 -\nWinnipeg     38 42 .11\nCalgary    29 33 \u2014\nKamloops \u00a3   34 45 .45\nPenticton     39 45 .59\nCARS Therapy\nVan Coming\nThe mobile occupational therapy\nvan of the Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society will be in the\nNelson area from Tuesday to October 17.\nIt will be the first time that Miss\nLily Waller, senior occupational\ntherapist of the Society, has vis\nited arthritics in this area.\n.Miss Waller and the \"workshop\non wheels\" will demonstrate a\nnumber of techniques and devices\nto aid arthritics, such as the making of a working splint to hold a\n'imb in good position and prevent\nstrain, and supplying a gadget to\nhelp an arthritic hand to turn a\ntap.\nCREDIT UNIONS\nPLAN CLINIC\nA clinic for credit union treas\nurers to be held in Nelson Oct. 25\nwas the principal subject for discussion at a meeting of the West\nKootenay chapter of Credit Unions\nheld in Nelson Thursday night.\nThe clinic will be conducted by\na team of experienced treasurers\nand will provide practical guidance for the treasurers.\nGuest speaker at the meeting\nwas J. R. (Rip) Robinson, manager of the B.C. Central Credit\nUnion.\nBaptist Minister\nTo Summerland\nRev. K. Imayoshi, minister of\nthe First Baptist Church in. Nelson, leaves today for Summerland,\nThe minister, ordained here four\nyears ago, expects to move to the\nCoast-after visiting his parents at\nthe Okanagan centre.\nInterim minister at the Fairview\nChurch is Rev. A. L. Foster, who\ncame here from Armstrong.\nFined for Speeding\nConvicted of speeding in the\nGrand Forks district, Harry L.\nKidd of Nelson was fined $10 and\ncosts of S5.50 in provincial court\nFriday. He pleaded guilty before\nStipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans.\niiiiii' iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiMiiiiiin\nWorld Wasn't\nTheir Oyster\nBALTIMORE (AP) - A couple of weeks ago, a fifth-grade\nclass, visited an oyster bar to\nsee what an oyster looks and\ntastes like.\nReactions of the youngsters\nwere varied. Some liked them.\nSome turned away, holding\nchurning stomachs. One had\nto whiff smelling salts after\nsomeone told him the oyster\nhe ate was still alive.\nThe account of the venture\nprovoked varied resoonses.\nThe Seattle Post Intelligencer\nsuggested editorially that since\nsome students didn't like Maryland oysters they should get\nWashington's \"peanut - sized\"\nvariety.\nA west coast company tobk\nthe hint and shipped the class\nteacher, Mrs. Iris Gray, and\nher 32 students eight jars of\nsmall Washington State oysters\npacked in ice.\nThe children  tried them.\nThe reaction was about the\nsame.\n\"Too cold and too sour.\"\n\"Taste like pickles.\"\nOne pupil, looking at the\nsmall size asked: \"Why don't\nthey let them grow up?\"\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII\nCanada  Rates Poorly  in  World\nIn  Fire  Damage  Per\nCanada has one of the worst per\ncapita records in the world in fire\ndamage statistics, Fire Chief E. S.\nOwens told the Kiwanis Club at\nthe Hume Thursday night.\nPer capita fir* loss in Canada is $8.18, compared to $1.23\nin 10 countries of Europe and $1.18\nin the British Isles.\nThe city of Chicago has more\nfires in one week than in the\nentire area of the British Isles.\nThe chief, speaking in connection with fire prevention week,\nsaid the fire department was a\ndemocratic organization \"for the\npeople, by the people and of the\npeople.\"\nBut the carelessness of people\nwas one of the leading causes oi\nfires. Last year, 697 lives were lost\nin [ires ih Canada.\nPeople still left children alone\nin houses and many died in fires,\nAny person who left children up\nto 10 years of age alone in a\nhouse could be convicted under the\nCriminal Code and were subject\nto a. penalty of two years in jail\nwithout option of a fine.\nHe had seen children die in\nfires and told the dub members\nthat, \"if you had seen the look of\nhorfor on the faces of the trapped\nvictims,-, the looks on' the faces\nof the firemen as they bring little\nchildren's bodies out, and then\nsee the stricken faces of the parents as they look on the dead\nfaces of their loved ones, you\nwould-no longer wonder why we\ngo out every day to stress! fire\nsafety measures to the citizens.\"\nThe firemen were often thwarted\nCapita\n,by \"the contemptuous and the\ncantankerous\" in their daily efforts to prevent fires, he said.\nUnder the Fire Marshal's Act:\nhe was compelled to take fire prevention steps ln city buildings and\nwas subject to a penalty of $50\nper day if he failed to do so. When\nhe came to Nelson nearly five\nyears ago. he estimated it would\ntake five years to bring buildings\nhere to the safest point, and after\nfive years' work he now felt it\nwould take another five years to\nreach this objective.\nPeople rush to the bidding of\nmedical science when dread disease struck down their children.\nand yet more children are killed\nby fire than a disease such as polio. The best firemen had to offer\nthe people was \"common sense.\"\n70 People Sign Up for\nNight School Classes\nSix adult education classes will\nbe opened at the Junior High\nSchool Tuesday night.\nOver 70 persons registered, Principal B. B. Crawford reports, and\nLutheran\nPaslors Confer\nHere Next Week\nSt. John's Lutheran Church will\nbe host to pastors representing\nparishes of the Lutheran Church-\nMissouri Synod in British Columbia from Tuesday to Thursday.\nSessions will begin Tuesday at\n10 a.m. with a devotion led by Rev.\nLester Carlson of Port Coquitlam.\nThe pastoral service, with celebration of Holy Communion, will be\nTuesday at 7:30 p,m. Rev. Harlan\nHarnapp of Courtenay will be guest\npreacher.\nMembers of the Ladies' Aid will\nserve all meals in the basement of\nthe church.\nHi-Life\n(Contributed)\nHello again from L. V. Rogers\nHigh!\nAs you know, our boys won the\nWest Kootenay High School soccer\nchampionship in Castlegar last Saturday.\nThe scoring punch of Bob McCandlish and Bill Lipsack accounted for our only two goals, one\nagainst Castlegar and the other\nagainst Trail in the final.\nOur girls were not as successful,\nlosing two games, hut Gwen Shannon, Terry Beauchamp, Glenda\nYates, Carol Waldie, Marilyn McEwen and Lynn Waldie made quite\nan impression on the soccer field\nin their knee socks. Much of the\ncredit for the fine showing of both\nteams is due to our coaches, Mr,\nMacKinnon and Mr. and Mrs. Slater.\nIntra-murals are progressing\nwell this year. The house standings\nto date are: House A, 241 points\nHouse B, 271: House C, 248; and\nHouse D, 250. The House A boys\nwon the senior touch football championship, ^he junior championship\nwas won by House D. House volleyball starts Tuesday.\nELECTED SPEAKER\nThis Monday we held our first\nmeeting ,'of Parliament. Bernie\nMonteleone was elected Speaker of\nthe House. Each of the ministers\nof Cabinet gave his report on the\nactivities pertaining to his department. A motion was passed that\nH. W. Herridge, MP for Kootenay\nWest, be invited to our next meeting of parliament.\nThe week proved to be a happy\none for Yankee fans. Dave Borch,\nBennie Arcuri and Lawrie Tees\nstill can't believe the Braves lost.\nA lot ot Brave fans are a little\nshort on pocket money after the\nfinal outcome of the series.\nThe week ended on a happy note\nwith a sock dance at noon hour,\nsponsored by the Red Cross Clufc,\nFriday was also Glub Day and\neach student attended his particular club meeting.\nThat is aboui it for the week.\nNext week I will let you know how\nour Bomber and Bomberette teams\nare shaping up for this year's\nbasketball season.\n\u2014Jim Rogers.\nfurther registrations will be accepted up. to opening night.\nThe classes to be taught are\nbookkeeping-. Sewing, English for\nMew Canadians , typing, wood\ncarving -and art. Other subjects\nwere offered but registration was\ntoo small to make up classes,\nTeachers of the night school program will be Hugh Herbison, English for new Canadians; P. Klassen, bookkeeping; S. T. Rogers,\ntyping; Miss L. Jones, sewing; M.\nT. Roberts, wood carving; and G.\nHubbard, art.\nHarrop Woman\nDies in Trail\nTRAIL\u2014Mrs! Margaret- Ormbnd\nSmart, former resident of Harr. p,\ndied in Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nFriday. Death of the 83-year-old\nwoman, wife of David Smart, followed a lengthy illness.\nMr. and Mrs. Smart returned to\nTrail recently from Harrop where\nMr. Smart received medical treatment. They had moved to the West\nArm community from Trail when\nMr. Smart retired from the Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany.\nShe was born June 17, 1875, at\nInverpeffer, Angusshire, Scotland,\ncoming to Canada 45 years ago.\nMrs. Smart was a member of the\nLadies of the Royal Purple.\nSurviving besides her husband,\nis one son, George in Rossland;\nfour grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; two brothers in\nToronto; and two sisters in Arbroath, . Scotland.\nCivil Servants\nBetter Treated\nSays Bennett\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Premier\nBennett told civil servants Friday\nthat the Social Credit administration has done more for them than\nany previous government.\nMore improvements have been\nmade in the working conditions of\ngovernment employees than over\nany similar length of time in our\nhistory,\" he told the 15th annual\nconvention of the B.C. Government\nEmployees' Association.\nEarlier, at a press conference\nthe premier told reporters: \"British Coiumbia's civil servants are\nthe best in Canada. They're a'so\ntreated the best in Canada. The\ndays of patronage are over.\"\nA NELSON boy, Gunner-\nApprentice -R. F. Abfalter,\n16, has begun training ai\nthe Royal Canadian School\nof Artillery at Camp Shilo,\nMan. He is the son of Mr.\nand Mrs. F. A. Abfalter, 722\nThird Street.\n\u2014Canadian Army photo.\n_m^\u00bb<\n*****\n\\timn\/**,ZQ?\\\nToday's Insurance\nProblems\nAnswered by\n\/our Insuran'p Advisors\ncrpT_XI.    1    .....    n.wli.r   9S     *\nQUESTION: I am under 25\nand my car Is In my name.\nI carry auto Insurance\nunder my Dad's policy to\nsave me a rate Increase.\nAm I protected?\nANSWER: Probably not, as\nthe application would state\nthat the applicant is the\nowner of the car. It would\nbe an untrue statement in\nthis case.\nHave vou an insurance problem of vour own? Come in\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nheln vou without charge or\nobligation of any kind !\nRobertson \u2022\nHiili .rd. Cattell\nC   0   Blackwood  Agency\n456 Ward St.\nPHONES   1912 1913-99\nDEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nKootenay Lake Ferry\nWINTER SCHEDULE\nEffective October 14th, 1958, the following\nschedule will be in effect for Kootenay Lake Ferry:\nLeave Balfour Leave Kootenay Bay\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME!\n6 a.m.\n7 a.m.\n8 a.m.\n-9 a.m.\n10 a-m.\n11 a.m.\n12 noon\n1  p.m.\n2 p.m.\n3 p.m.\n4 p.m.\n'   '   it \\-\n5 p.m.\n6 p.m.\n\\   .\n7 p.m.\n8 p.m.\n9 p.m.'\n10 p.m.\nu\n11  p.m.\".\n12 Midnight\n1  a.m.  \/.'- \/\n'\u25a0' \/'\"A. U.\nFREEBAIRN,\nDistrict Engineer1,\nNelson, B.C.\nOctober 8, 1958\n dM\n\"POKIE\", TH ETURTLE, may not be a track star\nhut he's an amiable pet, according to his young owners\nRene Trach and Howard Braden of Creston, who found\nhim in a creek. Besides, says \"PoWe\", who ever heard\nof getting traction on a tabletop?\n\u2014Photo by H. M. Buckna\nArmson al Helm\nOf Boat Club\nCASTLEGAR - The Arrow Boat\nClub has elected W. F. (Bill) Arm-\nson as commodore, succeeding Dr.\nC. S. ;(Pat) Fowler.\nIn two years the club has accumulated assets of $2500, conducts a $6000 a year business and\nhas grown from a handful of men\nte 80 families.\nOther officers are C. A. Anderson,! f'rst vice-commodore, Jiggs\nMauriello, second vice-commodore,\nMrf. ..Frances Cook, secretary;\nMrj. -Betty Turik, treasurer, and\nJohn McLeod, Howard Anderson,\nArt Lambert and Al Vyse, directors; '\nDr. Fowler, who received a vote\nofithanks for his founding, of the\ncrib, and leadership, urged increased moorage facilities, acquisition of a club house, and the\nstrengthening of tfie executive.\nAt least 14 safety shore markers\nare being constructed for planting\nbetween Castlegar and the International Boundary. These will be\nIn place within two weeks.\nA new constitution was also\nadopted by the club at its meeting.\nSnow, Rain, Fog-That's Still\nWeather Picture In Kootenays\nSnow, rain and low-lying cloud\ncontinued in the Kootenays Friday.\nHowever, communications were\nnot disrupted, as they were in the\nneighboring Okanagan at Kelowna.\nOvernight temperatures hovered\naround freezing at a number of\npoints and rain, sleet and fog covered the area as temperatures\n\\yarmed up during the day.\n\u2022 {Janadian Pacific Airlines planes\nencountered landing difficulty, first\nof the winter season. On the Vancouver to Calgary flight the plane\nmade scheduled stops at Penticton\nahd Cranbrook, but was unable to\nland at Castlegar owing to fog.\nLater in the day, the Vancouver-\nbound plane out of Calgary came\nin to both Cranbrook and Castlegar, but skipped Penticton. , . ,\n'\"It was the first time the Castle\ngar airstrip had been given the\ngo-by since this summer's thunderstorms.\nAt one of the highest inhabited\nspots in the district\u2014the mountain\nobservatory atop 7792-foot Old\nGlory peak near Rossland, three\nindies of snow lay on the., ground\nand the temperature stood at the\nfreezing mark Friday afternoon.\n\"It's been snowing for the last\ntwo days, but melting fairly fast,\"\nstation man Peter Holm of Rossland told The Daily News.\n\"Right now we're fogged in completely.\"\nManning the lonely observatory\nwith Holm are A. C. Laatsch and\nA. W. R. Storey.\nAt Cranbrook, Thursday night's\nlight snowfall at around 30 degrees\nabove zero disappeared quickly\nFriday, and although the temperature lingered in the low 40s, this\nwas considerably moderate compared with Wednesday night's 10\ndegrees above zero.\nHunters welcomed the snow since\nLOOK \u2014Every Week\n(or the LUCKY LICENCE NUMBER .\nit- may be yours ... ',,.;\nThis Offer Good When You Need It.\n360-764\n361-726\nI\n\u25a0\nI\ni\nCut this ad out and drive up to our station for a\nFREE LUBE JOB if vour licence number appears above.\n_________      _        __\n1955 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan\nExcellent Shape\u2014 $1179 .;\nStar Auto Service Ltd,\nPhone 1648 \u2014 Ymir fdad \u2014 Nelson, B.C;\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nI\nI\nI\nI\nCCF Leader\nScores\nSocred Policies\nTRAIL' \u2014 British Columbia's\nCCF leader Robert Strachan told\na meeting here Thursday that one\nof the biggest problems facing the\ncountry is unemployment.\nWith the continuing trend towards automation the problem\nwhich was most important was\n\"how are we going to organize our\neconomy so that millions of workers and their families will not find\nthemselves on the bread line.\"\n\"The Social Credit government\nelected in 1956 talked of a progressive policy and of keeping the\npeople informed,\" he said. The\npeople of B.C. were going into this\nwinter \"blindfolded\" because the\ngovernment refused to tell exactly\nwhat the situation is at this time,.\nOut of 14,917,000 man hours lost\nduring March, twelve and three\nquarter million were due to unemployment and some through sickness. Ninety nine thousand were\nunemployed in February. The\nproblem of unemployment had\narisen because the government\nhad not controlled industry's wide\nspread spending spree.\nCapital, he said, was used without, planning by both industry and\ngovernment, causing a disruption\nof the economy.\nThe answer to the problems was\nin the welding together of a strong\npolitical force of farmers, labor,\nwhite collar workers and all\nclasses.\nThe Labor Relations Board \"is\nresponsible for a lot of trouble we\nhave experienced this year,\" he\nthought.\nIt was impossible for trade\nunions to adopt a non-partisan attitude and expect to get anywhere.\nI think this man Bennett is too\nsmart to bring in restrictive labor,\nbut I am convinced he will go to\nthe employers and ask for funds to\nwin the election and then give the\nrestrictive legislation they want.\"\nIn answering questions Mr.\nStrachan said: \"As the provincial\nleader of the CCF I will say that it\nwill not inject itself into differences\nof opinion that may exist in i the\ntrade union movement. They must\nsettle the differences themselves. I\ncan work to help mend then}, tot I\nam not going to inject myself into\nthem.'.'.   .', .    .   ;',   y   s   v'.C    .,\nit brings game down from higher\nlevels.\nChristmas tree harvesters were\nalso happy, because sharp frost\nsets the needles. Cutting is now\nwell under way.\nTrio Unhurt\nIn Car Wreck\nNear Christina\nGRAND FORKS (CP)-Two Vancouver firemen and their Cloverdale friend escaped with minor injuries when their car ran off the\nroad and down an embankment\nnear Christina Lake, north of here.\nFiremen H. A. Greenaway and\nW. G. McDonald, and Jerry Bailey\nof Cloverdale, a trucking operator,\nwere on their way Thursday to\nBrooks, Alta., on a hunting trip.\nTheir car slammed down a bank\nand was a complete wreck, but the\nthree men and their two hunting\ndogs escaped with only minor\nbruises and a few cuts.\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL AND TRANSFER\nCd|tlegar'F|rry.UlM f\nTWffic;'ti,.plyy,:\";.'.;',,.;,\n'CASTLEGAR - Traffic over, .he\nColumbia River on the Castlegar\nferry was heavy during the month\nof August, comparative figures\nshow. These are the figures:\nAugust  August\n1957       1958\nAutos  and drivers   48,600    48,423\nPass.,  not drivers 107,796   113,724\nRound  trips       3,431     3,588\nTrucks, all types 14,841 14,064\nTrailers and semis      938      1,017\nMotor buses         431        654\nMotorcycles          22 24\nLivestock            43 75\nBritish Columbia\ninterior Vegetable\nMarketing Board\nNOTICE   TO\nRegistered Owners\nIN DISTRICT No. 9\nNELSON-TRAIL\nTHE   ANNUAL  MEETING   OF\nTHE REGISTERED OWNERS fol\nthe' purpose of electing one 11'\ndelegate to represent them during\nthe coming season will be held In\nthe residence of MR. COLIN\nMAJOR, R.R. No. 1, NELSON,\nB.C., ON WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5th, 1958, AT 8:00 P.M.\nALL REGISTERED OWNERS\nARE URGED TO ATTEND\nTHIS MEETING.\nThe B.C. Interior Vegetable\nScheme requires that all owners\nregister with the Board and defines an Owner as any person registered in the books an any Land\nRegistry Office as the owner in\nfee-simple of any land within the\narea, or as the holder of the last\nagreement to purchase any land\nwithin the area, and includes the\nholder of an agreement to pur\nchase land from the Director of\nSoldier Settlement (or his pre\ndecessor, the Soldier Settlement\nBoard) or Director, Veterans Land\nAct, and who in any case grows\nor causes to be grown for sale\nupon such land, comprising one\nquarter of an acre or more, any\nregulated product, and any holder\nof a lease of land in the area, of\nwhich land not less than three\nacres is used for growing any\nregulated product for sale, and\nwhich .leasees for >a termfbf three\nyears br.lbqre \u25a0>,'\",.    .,\/\nALL 0\\V_E$S are required to\nregijitei' with the BoaM. Those per\nsons not registered may obtain the\nnecjessary forms by writing to the\nSecretary, iE.6.. Interior Vegetable\nMarketing, Board,, .1476 Water\nStreet, Kelowna, B:C, and in the\ncase of a lessee, should produce\nevidence as to his lease.\nNOTE: Any owner who has not\nregistered can at the time of the\nmeeting file with the Chairman a\nstatutory declaration showing that\nlie Is qualified to be so registered.\nBY ORDER OF THE BOARD.\nDated at Kelowna, B.C., this\n1st day of October, 1958.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1958\u20143\nSite Bought for $2 Million\nCranbrook Shopping Centre\nTeachers Ask\nFor More Pay\nKASLO \u2014 A request from tbe\nKootenay Lake Teachers' Association for salary increases will be\nconsidered by the school board at\nits meeting on Tuesday.\nThe teachers' proposals would\namount to a budget increase of\n$1000 a month, or a raise equivalent to 11.4 per cent of the present\npayroll.\nThis term opened witb all tbe\nschools fully staffed. New members are E. M. Sanderson and Don\nCunningham of Riondel, Miss Flora\nMarchi of Argenta and Hugh Ector\nand Mrs. Mary Miller at Jewett\nschool at Meadow Creek,\nArmy Training\nSchool Proves\nSuccessful\nEDMONTON (CP) - A new\ntraining scheme attracted 150\nyoung recruits to the Loyal Edmonton Regiment (reserve) last\nyear.\nIt is a schedule of Saturday\ntraining for high school students\nmore than 16 years of age, with\nmonthly rather than yearly pay.\nThe scheme was designed by\nCol. R. A. Bradburn, commander\nof 23 militia group, and approved\nby Maj.-Gen. Chris Vokes, general commanding officer of Western Command.\nThis year it is being extended\nto all local militia groups and it\nhas already been broadened to\ntake in nearly all reserve army\nunits in Edmonton. Thus students\ncan train in the branch of service in which they are most interested.\n\"Discipline, physical development and a better understanding\nof the responsibility of citizenship\nis stressed through the training\nperiod,\" says Col. Bradburn.\n\"The financial assistance is putting boys through high school and\nhas proved helpful to many parents.\nLast year, the army obtained\nsummer employment for all applicants i who trained witb the\nLoyal Edmontons. The job assistance program will be continued in 1959.\nTwo-Block Area in Newly Developed\nPart of City Bought for Project\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Prelude to a $2 million shopping\ncentre construction project next spring by Warner Holdings\nof Calgary and Vancouver, a two-block site on which Silver\nRidge Sawmill is located in the southern part of Cranbrook,\nwas bought by the Holdings Company Friday from Steve\nShypitka. It is bounded by Seventh and Ninth Avenue and\nSixth and Seventh Streets\nsouth.\nMargaret Avey Realty Ltd., of\nRichmond was agent for the purchase and Harry Bernstein represented tbe Holdings company.\nIncluded in the $2 million development plan by Warner Holdings\nare a national chain supermarket,\napartment buildings, service and\nspecialty stores and medical and\nprofessional offices. The location\nis in the centre of the rapidly developing area annexed into city\nUmits two years ago. The new Elementary Amy Woodland School is\nin the adjoining block to the shopping centre site.\nMr. Shypitka is a partner in Silver Ridge Sawmills of which Vincent Downey is president and general manager; When the' sawmill\nwas constructed, it was well outside city limits, but city expansion\nin the past three years has been\nconcentrated in that direction and\nresidential area now completely\nsurrounds it.\nMins. Churchill\nTo Visit Germany\nBONN, West Germany (Reuters) \u2014 Canadian Trade Minister\nChurchill will pay a short visit\nto Bonn Oct. 13 for talks with officials of the food and economics\nministries, a government spokesman said Friday.\nHe said Churchill will come to\nBonn on his way to the General\nAgreement on Trade and Tariffs\nconference, due to begin in Geneva, Switzerland, Oct. 16.\nThe spokesman said Churchill\nwill have talks with Food Minister\nDr, Heinrich Luebke among others. It will he mainly a \"courtesy\nvisit,\" be said.\n\"But it is quite probable that\nthe further development of West\nGerman wheat imports from Canada will also be discussed.\"\nW. C. McNamara, chief commissioner of the Canadian wheat\nboard, is expected to accompany\nChurchill during his visit here.\nMcNamara will later attend the\ninternational wheat conference in\nGeneva Oct. 10.\nFind Elderly\nPeople Need\nMore Vitamins\nWINNIPEG (CP) A study of\nfood habits among older residents\nof Winnipeg indicates that protein and vitamin deficiency may\nbe fairly widespread, a report\nshows.\nThe study started Sept. 15 with\nabout 100 persons over 70 keeping track of the food they ate\neach day.\nThe meals consumed on four\nconsecutive days were noted as\nwell as information about cooking, storing, mode of living and\nattitudes toward food.\nPersons who volunteered to be\ntested also gave blood and urine\nsamples to be analysed for protein and vitamin content as a\nguide to the general adequacy of\nthe foods being eaten and their\nutilization.\nSimilar groups are being tested\nacross Canada.\nAPPOINTED assistant\nchief forester, operations\nbranch, B.C. Forest Service,'\nis Lome F. Swannell, who\nhas been district forester at\nKamloops. He succeeds R.\nG. McKee, now deputy minister of forests.\nTwo Men Fined\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Fines of $500\nand $6.50 costs each, were levied\non Thomas Ross of Trail and Albert J. Malnarick of Rossland by\nMagistrate W.* Roberts of Grand\nForks, when the two men were\nfound guilty of hunting with lig'j s\nnear Christina Lake, Oct. 3, between one hour after sunset and\none hour before sunrise. Their\nfirearms and two powerful lights\nwere confiscated.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILV\nAre You on ffie Spot 7\nYou may be behind the eight ball for ready cash\u2014\ndon't let this worry you \u2014 Just let the Nelson\nSavings Credit Union solve your money problems.\nInsured loans al low Interest rate\u2014plus\nyearly   interest   rebate   to   borrowers-\nNelson Savings Credit Union\n563 Ward St.\nNelson\nPhone 331\nFOR FAST, WRITTEN ANSWERS\nWE RELY ON\nB.C. TELEPHONE TELETYPE\"\nCharles G. McConville, comptroller, Alberta.,\nDistillers Limited, finds B.C. Telephone   '\nTeletype the perfect answer for getting-   .\nanswers\u2014immediately and in writing. ' ,'' \/,\n\"A teletyped conversation between otir \u25a0\nVancouver head office and our distillery w\nCalgary leaves no doubt about what 'w&s\nsaid or what was decided,\" says' Mr.\nMcConville.  \"When we found a single\nmedium of communication that combine^ ,\nthe immediacy of the telephone with''\"as, ,\u25a0;'\u2022'\npermanency of a letter, we didn't hesitate\nto make use of it. Its value to us has been\ni proven over and over again.\"\n.Large or small, two offices or a dozen,\nS.C. Telephone Teletype can save time\nfaSHd money for your business. No capital\nih^e|tment is required; the service is leased\nby 'us ah cl maintained by us. For complete\ninformation call General Sales, MUtual\n3-55li, Outside\" Greater Vancouver call\n\"Collect\" or ask the Long Distance\noperator' for Zenith 7000. There is no\ncharge for this call.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA     \/> J     TELEPHONE CO AIPA NY\nOffering teletype Connections Throughout North America\n  m-mmrr.\n\u25a0      \u25a0 \u25a0      \"\nNplmm Satin Ninns       $^Si$\u00a7|f#\nm,\\ t\\ \\i.\\t\\\\\\\\    it^W 14 .1     im\\ * HtSJ \"Good fences makegood neighbors;\"- ss\n^m\"  ' it. J.     _T_...     t-_._r1__._l    \u2022*_,_,_     0_,k_.\u00ab_     I_ _..(__      Mt\nEstablished April 22  IW12\nInterloi British Columbia's Largesl Daily Newspapei\nPublished every morning except Sunday ahd statutory\nholiday!   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED. 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized a. Second Class Mall Post 'Jffice Department Ottawa.\nMEMBER   Ol'   1'Hfc  AUUI'l   BURKAU  Ut   CIRCULATIONS\nMEMHKH Ot   l'lllS CANADIAN  . HESS.\nthe (Jsnadian Hress |s exclusively entitled to the use toi republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it 01 to 1'he Associated Hi ess 01 Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local new. published therein.\nSaturday, Ocfpb\u00bbr II, 1956\nVexing, Exasperating and Intolerable\nKooama J. Tarasoff, editor of the\nInquirer, a Saskatoon paper published\nior Doukhobors, accuses the press oi\nB. C. of inaccuracy, prejudice and discrimination in handling news about\nthe Doukhobors and the Sons of Freedom.\nIn particular, he accuses the press\noi making irresponsible statements by\nimplying that terrorism in the Kootenays and the Okanagan should be\nblamed on the Doukhobors or the Sons\nof. Freedom.\nIt is perfectly true, as he says, that\nno terrorism charge has ever been\nproved against a Doukhobor or Sons\nof Freedom, but the presumptive evidence is sufficiently strong to convince\nmost people that the outrages were\npart of their plan to embarrass the\ngovernment. It may be purely coincidental, but at the present time five\nSons of Freedom youths are in custody\ncharged with bomb making, and two\nunfortunately blew themselves up.\nMr. Tarasoff objects to the abbreviation \"Douk\" in headlines. We agree\nwith him. We don't like it either, for\nthe good reason that apart from the\nSons the Doukhobors are as a whole\nperfectly good citizens. But it may\nsoothe Mr. Tarasoff to know that not\neven in the schools do the children talk\nof Douks. In Nelson they are not a race\napart.\nMr. Tarasoff may be right when he\naccuses the Vancouver papers of refusing to publish letters giving \"di\nverse expression\". If they were like\nsome of the letters which.come to this\noffice it is probable that the editors\ncould not understand them, despite the\nfact that they were written in English.\nFundamentally Canadians have\nnever been able to understand the\nSons of Freedom or to make themselves understood. It has always been\na matter of faith with some people that\nif everyone learned to speak English\nwe should understand them. This Is\nnot so. At the back of the language\nthere is the method of thought, and no\none can claim that the Sons think as\nmost other Canadiana, They are Russian, and have the same characteristics as the Russians in Europe. When\nJohn Gunther in his book, Inside Russia, says of the Russians that they\nhave an answer for everything and\ntheir stubbornness, as well as nice\ncapacity for self-deception, can be\ndazzling, we recognize the same characteristics in the Sons of Freedom.\nWe recognize the same characteristics in the Sons, too, when he says of\nthe Russians, \"Because they do not\nalways follow Western channels of\nlogic Russians can be vexing beyond\nspeech, exasperating and Intolerable.\"\nThere simply is no use, therefore, in\ntalking to the Sons. The governments\nneed only to do and offer to do all\npossible to aid the Sons' return to\nRussia. This is the action that will\nprove the sincerity or the lack of sincerity of the Sons.\nInterpreting the NewS\n\"Good fences makegood neighbors,\" said\nthe New England poet Robert Foster, end\nhis words apply to nations as well as to individual farmers.\nTwo countries which have come to real-\nlie this truth are India and Pakistan. When\nthe former Indian Empire was partitioned\nIA 1947, the drawing of a boundary between\nthe two new States had to be done in haste\nand under great pressure. Of some 4000\nmiles of frontier, more than half have never\nbeen properly demarcated. Disputes have\nconsequently arisen oyer the ownership of\nvarious strips of territory and these have frequently led to border raids, armed clashes\nbetween troops and police, charges and counter-charges bf aggression. Combined with the-\nbitter unresolved qdarrel over Kashmir,\ntheso incidents have kept the two countries\nin a state bf chronic hostility not far short\nof war.\nit was to discuss these matters that\nPakistani Prime Minister Firoz Khan Noon\nvisited Prime Minister Mru in New Delhi\nthis month.Their meeting had had remarkably constructive results. Nothing was done,\nor perhaps could have been done, about\nKashmir. However, agreements were reached definitely fixing the boundary line in a\nnumber of disputed areas, while in other regions surveys are to be made to determine\nwhere the line ought to go. To secure a more\nrational frontier, it has been decided that a\nnumber qf small enclaves of Indian territory\nIn Pakistan and Pakistani territory in India\nshall be exchanged. Prisoners taken by both\nsides in recent border clashes are being\nreleased. .\nBy way of a final precaution against disorder, both Governments have issued an\nappeal to the inhabitants of territories scheduled to be exchanged,' urging them to stary\nin their homes; this is an attempt to prevent\nanother of those two-way flights of refugees\nwhich have added so much to the subcontinent's miseries.\nThese arrangements should do a great\ndeal to reduce the hostility which has existed\nbetween India end Pakistan since their creation. With properly demarcated frontiers,\nborder incidents should decrease, and perhaps an atmosphere may be created in which\neven the Kashmir problem can be approached rationally.\nIndia and Pakistan are not the only regions where a job of fence-setting le in order.\nThe world in general ls suffering from bad\nOr non-exitstent fences. This is particularly\ntrue of the frontier which separates the\nCommunist and non-Communist worlds.- In\nsome areas \u2014 particularly in Europe with its\nfamous \"Iron Curtain\", this is quite clearly\ndefined; and it is significant that here there\nhas been relatively little friction in the last\ndecade. But elsewhere \u2014 in the Middle Best,\nin Southeast Asia, and in the Far East \u2014\nthe borders are blurred and indefinite, and\nit is here that all the serious clashes have\noccursd In recent years. A definite, accepted\nboundary between the two worlds would\nhelp to make them, if not good neighbors,\nat least peaceable ones. ...,\u201e\nToronto Globe and Mail\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNews from the Middle East indicates\nthat President Abdel Gamal Nasser is putting his house in order \u2014 and perhaps dropping a few broad housekeeping hints to his\nneighbors as well.\nNasser has been comparatively quiet\nsince world attention shifted from the Middle\nEast to the Formosan straits. But renewed\nblasts of vilification from the United Arab\nRepublic's government-controlled radio may\nmean that the dictator is ready for a new\nphase of his pan-Arab campaign.\nHe has consolidated his domestic position\nby appointing a' 21-man cabinet to rule the\nU.A.R., just over eight months after it was\nformed by the union of Egypt ahd Syria.\nIn doing so, he gained tighter control\nover the Syrian region and pointedly dropped\none of-his Syrian vice-presidents, Sabri El-\nAssali, who was premier of Syria just before\nthe merger. Fifteen of the new cabinet members are Egyptian and six Syrian, roughly\nproportional to the. populations of the two\nareas. .,-, '-.'\nThey'll Do It Every Tuflfo V. \\\nNasser knocked on the head any lingering\nideas that Cairo and Damascus would be twin\ncapitals with the decree that Cairo alone\nwould be the heart of the republic.\nDevelopments in the new republic of\nIraq, meanwhile, indicate that pro-Nasser\nforces are active there.\nPremier Abdul Karem El- Kassem has\nfound it necessary to arrest his comrade-in-\narms and co-revolutionary, Col. Abdel Salam\nArif, who was deputy premier in the new\nIraqi regime until recently.\nThe premier moved in quickly when he\nheard that army supporters of the hot-headed colonel \u2014 who has made no secret of his\n\"affection for Nasser \u2014 were plotting to rise\non his belahlf. Salam Arif had.been far from\nsatisfied with the premier's-plan to send him\nto Bonn as ambassador to West Germany.\nIn the middle of all this, Nasser-controlled newspapers and radio stepped un their\ncampaign against British troops in Jordan,\nUnited States trops in Lebanon, and \"foreign\nimperialists\" in general, especially the U.S.\nSuch broadcasts are especially effective\n'In the ears of the 1,000,000 Arab refugees in\n_\\  k^ :h:,f. i^\nLong-Term Gov't Loans May\nBoost Canadian Exports\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nOTTAWA:-(CB) - cwSdian experts may be given a lift next year\nwith government-plans to move tn-\ntd the. field of long-term loans,\nmainly to stimulate sales of factories, mills and other projects requiring huge supplies of capital\n1oo\u00abtt.\"..-\u25a0-.. -,,...-\nAuthorities > say legislation Involving large-scale revision of the\n13-yeaf-old Export ftedlts Insurance Corporation likely will be Introduced at the next session of parliament to open in mid-January.\nInvloved in the long-term lending scheme would be attempts by\nCanada to compete, in a small way\nwith the United States, Britain and\nWest Germany for markets which\ncannot afford to buy big supplies\nof goods on a cash basis,\nThe loans would also be aimed\nat stimulating the flow of orders\ninto Canadian factories (seed with\nidle labor and machines.\nOfficials say that as envisaged\nnow, the loans scheme would cover\nsome agricultural products, such\nis wheat, as well as capital goods\nbut. would not likely include con-\nsummer goods.\nThe view Is tha the crown-owned\nExport Credits Corporation now\nprovides credit up to five years\nand this would be sufficient for\nsuch consumer products as refrigerators, washing machines, furniture and rugs.\nThe big problem is in the financ-\nSENTENCING SOY\nWORRIES JUDGE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Judge\nW. H. Dixon has sentenced a 14-\nyear-old boy to the. Boys' Industrial\nSchool because \"we really haven't\na suitable place to send him.\"\nthe youth admitted In juvenile\ncourt Thursday that they had set\nsix fires and turned in alarms on\nthree of them.\nJudge Dixon said it was one\nof the most disturbing cases ever\nto come ' before him. \"The boy\nobviously needs medical treatment\nand must be kept in custody,\" he\nsaid,\nBy Jimmy Hjtto, \u25a0\nJerebc.m\/ihestwjBpftgg^oopts|\nAMVT_I_& THAT'S L\"tf N6 AROUND LOOSE \u25a0\nKKunitv bathroom-\nBut when he leaves 4 sliver o.\nSMP, AND ITS NOT THERE WHEN HE\n60ES1D RETRIEVE IT\/V\u00bbW\/MURDER.''\nH'MM-SOME-Wg^\/\nBODy FORGOT AH'*\nLEFT THEIR HAIR\nTONIC AND RAZOR\nBEHIND- WELL-\nHeU-HEH-PWDERS\nKEEPERS.AS THE\nFELLA SEZ-\nMY SOAP!!A BRAND-NEW BAR.'\nTHIS JOINT IS PULL OF CB00K8\/\nI'M C4LLIN6 THE COPS\/\/\nSB4RCH EMERY ROOM?\nGttr EvBRyepoy\nOUT HERE\/\/\nGems of Thought\nBeautiful hands are those that do\nWork that is earnest, brave and true,\nMoment by moment the whole day\nthrough. \u2014Ellen Allerton.\n*     *     *\nTho' we travel the world over to find\nthe beautiful, we must have it in us or find\nit not.\u2014Emerson.\nthe Middle East and are a continuing source\nOf danger In Jordan, where refugees make up\nnearly half the population...\nThe \"hate campaign\" took an especially\nvirulent turn in an attack on President Eis^-.\nhower by the clandestine Jordanian People's\nRadio, which apparently Is based in Damascus apd handled by Jordanian exiles.\nReferring to Eisenhower's Illnesses, the\nradio said: \" . \\ . Apd as many patches on\nEisenhower's body WU eventually end him\nup on Hie city dump,\/so will the Imperialist\nStruggle definitely fall into the abyss.\" -\ni- r.! i '\u25a0:; f    '\u25a0  ',\/,    \u25a0    -\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nVltooAY's k\\m\nTHOUGHT\nHe heapeth up riches',rind know,\neth not who shall gather them.-\n, salms S9s6. , V    I'\nll riches are an end in themselves, we are beaten before we Starl -\nWe will find at last we have-, been-\ncollecting ashes.      ' i . -1  'v    f\nBOAC Not Cutting\n15 Boeing Jetliners\nLONDON (Reuters) - British\nOverseas Airways Corporation today denied newspaper reports that\nit intended to cancel an order for\n15 American Boeing 707 jet airliners and ordr more British-made\nComets.\nThe Boeing order was to fill a\ngap until a British airliner capable of making non-stop scheduled\nflights between London and New\nYork in both directions had been\nproduced. BOAC said.\nT\\y6 ' London ne#spapers said\nseveral' airlines were- thinking of\nswitching their orders for the Boeing 707 to the de Havilland Comet\nIV.\nIng Of huge, multi-milllon-dollar\nprojects, such as flour and steel\nmills. Britain. U. S. and West Germany now provide long-term credit, up to 25 years or more, for these\nkind's of projects.\nMAYBE 10 YEARS\nThe Canadian government may\nhot go that far, perhaps providing\ncredit up to 10 years, but the feeling among the experts is that this\nwould.,be ample. Importers contemplating a project that may take\nsome years to construct, would be\nable to borrow on each part pro-\npressively for the 10-year period.\nThe effect of this would be that\ncredit might be spread over a IS-\nyear period, or more, for the overall project.\nIn making such loans, Canada\nmight try to get the order not\nneeded once the mill or factory\nstarts functioning, for example,\nwheat in the case ofa new flour\nmill and iron ore ln the case Of a\nnew steel mill.\nThe government already has\nmade some nine-year loans to India, Pakistan and Ceylon for the\nsale of wheat. This form of credit\nmay also be Incorporated in the\nnew legislation, putting it on a\npermanent basis.\nMUCH REVISION\nfo achieve the government's\nalms, large sections of legislation\ntouching on the Export Credits\nCorporation wOuld be revised. A\nsister corporation also may be set\nup to handle the new forms of\nloans With one board chairman\nruling over both organizations,\nThe existing organization has\nshown marked success, officials\nsaid. Over the post-war years lt\nhas insured about $763,000,000\nworth of exports, helping to keep\na lot of firms.in business and ending up with a tiny over-all profit\nfor the federal treasury.\nBut now the competition for\nworld markets is stiffening. Major exporters are offering more\ninducements to customers. Exporters have complained that ex\nisting credit facilities are insufficient to meet the challenge of\ncompetitors.\nSTRENGTH CONTINUES\nCanadian exports have continued\nto show over-all strength though\nthere was a slight decline in August when shipments dropped Fo\n$416,000,000 from $437,400,000 a\nyear ago. However, the January-\nAugust total of $3,218,900,000 was\nstill slightly ahead of last year's\n$3,217,100,000.  \u25a0\nAbout 20 per cent of Canada's\nnational earnings comes from export trade. The importance of expanding exoprts was emphasized\nby Prime Minister Diefenbaker last\nMonday When he urged Canadians\nto gear themselves to the exports\ndrive even If this meant sacrifices\nfor labor and management.\nIt was no exaggeration, he told\na CBC television audience, \"that\nthe happiness and prosperity, of\nevery Canadian ls, In some way,\naffected by the state of our world\ntrade.\"\nRoblin Requests Intnl.\nAirport for Winnipeg\nWinnipeg (CP)-Pfemier Duff\nRoblin of Manitoba has asked the\nfederal government to establish\n\"an acknowledged international\nairport\" at Winnipeg and urged\n'hat the Scandinavian Airlines System be allowed to pick up and\nlet off passengers and freight here.\nIh a letter to Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker, the contents of which\nwere released today at the premier's weekly press conference,\nMr .Roblin pressed for a second\ncompetitive national airline.\nThe release Was made shortly\nVif-re the air transport board\nopened a hearing here to accept\nbriefs on competitive trans-continental air service.\nThe premier said that bv granting Canadian Pacific Airlines or\nsome other airline the right to operate on the Toronto-Winnipeg, Toronto - Montreal - Vancouver and\nVancouver-Victoria lines the first\nstep towards a second national\nservice would be completed.\nHe said landing rights for a Canadian carrier at Copenhagen\ncould be established by extending\nCPA's current European run and\n\"it would seem logical to grant\nreciprocal rights to SAS here.\"\nPOSSIBLE EXTENSION\nA two-way extension ot CPA's\nToronto-Lisbon run, to include\nWinnipeg at- one end and Cooen-\n'wen at the other with a possible\nlink to Stockholm, was envisaged\nby the premier.\nAcceptance of such a prooosal\nby CPA would provide necessary\ncompetition with Trans-Catjada Air\nLines on the Toronto-Winnipeg run\nand at the same time be consis\ntent with the air transport board's\npolicy of Strengthening the position\nof Canadian national and international carriers,\" said Mr. Roblin.\nAt present SAS uses Winnipeg:\nonly as a refueling spot on its\ntrans-polar run from Copenhagen\nto Los Angeles and cannot pick up\nor discharge passengers.\nWoman Doctor\nWins Appeal\nWELLINGTON, New Zealand .\n(Reuters) \u2014 A New Zealand\nwoman doctor Friday won her ap-'\npeal against a conviction for publishing a false medical advertisement for the Hoxsey Clinic in\nDallas, Tex.\nThe court upheld the appeal of\nDr. Eva Hill against her convic-i\ntion last January. The charges:\nwere laid after she allegedly told\na public meeting she had Seen-f\n\"near miracles\" in cancer treat-;,',\nment at the Hoxsey Clinic. V\nDr. Hill was treated for facial \\\ncancer at the Hoxsey Clinic in-'\n1954. When she returned to New ,\nZealand in 1956 she said she felt \\\nit her duty to report her expert-1\nences.\nIn a judgment handed down Friday, Mr. Justice Haslsm said:\n\"While accenting the Importance of protecting the public from\nquacks and charlatans, it may be\nmentioned that such persons are\nimposters who lack the virtues of\nhonesty, frankness and sincerity\nmanifested by Dr. Hill In the\nlower court.\"\nYOU\nCAN AFFORD ONE OF\nOUR BETTER\nFur Coats\nThe less money yeu have, the\nless you can afford to buy a\ncheap coat, for the reason that\na single coat, doing double duty,\nhas to stand up under constant\nand strenuous wear . . . and only\n1. good, coat can do that. A cheap\n:oat cannot stand dav-in-day-out\nservice, nor can lt stand run-of-\nthe-mill weather.\nLIBERAL   ALLOWANCE   ON\nYOUR OLD FUR COAT\nUSE   OUR\nLAY-AWAY   PLAN\nCustom Sewing Centre\n580 Bolter St.        ' Nelson, B.C.       ''Phene 1613\nOitnlXe\u00a3\nm\nlli.NX4ND4l\u00abTTIP\nI to MRS.JUl.IA    \\1\n1 Wilson,   ,\nbziUxjahSt.,\nDENVER,     '\nCOLO.\nBEtesaaffiLSaofxiii\nllO-IA\nThe more she! expects others to\nbe considerate of her feelings, the\nless she considers the feelings of\nothers;\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nKeep Your Feet Warm and Dry\n1\/iAteA FoAtiAlfji Ob \/ttAMpMAUM PtA\/M\nWomen's  Plastic\nOvershoes\nClear 1.98\nColors 2.29\nNew styles, new colors, new\nheels, to fit low or high heel\nshoes. Also styles to fit the\npopular taner foe pump, Sizes\n4 to 10, Flat heels ln clear\nonly.\n.Child's Misses'\nWarm Top\n4.95\nAU rubb.\nand   insl\n k\\\t\nFelt insoles for extra comfort.\nily: misses' 11 to\nwith fleece lining\nShearling collar.\nFull sues My. ....\n3, children's 5 to 12.\nInexpensive\nPlastic O'Shoes\n2.29\nThick, lightweight, durable\nplastic pulton overshoes for\nchildren wearing slz*s 6 to 12.\nProtection from cold, wet and\nmud.\nThese are only a\nfew of the many\nstyles now at the\nBay.\nMen's and\nBoys' Boots\n4.95\nMen's\n3.95\nBoys'\nShort, medium weight boots\nwith knurled nutsole with\nflanged edge. Re- outsole and\ntoo binding, black uppers and\nheel. Sizes: men's 6 to 11,\nboys' 1 to 5. (No half sizes.)\nMen's\nLow Rubbers\nThese ere dandy tor the wet\nor cold weather. They're high\nenough to protect from pud-\ndiss\u2014ideal for ley street'. In\nBlack. Sizes: - \"%L AC\nI tO 11  tm.fj\nMen's\nWe!t Rubbers\nSole rubbers for dress or\neveryday wear. Self - acting\nback means they're easy io\nslip on and off. *_ \"TIT\nBlack. < to UK.     JL.IJ\nMen's\nZipper Boots\nAU-rubber, concealed front\nslide fasteners. Fleece lining,\nfull bellows tongue, felt insoles. Zig-zag safety sole. \u2014\nBlack. Sizes: \u00a3 ftC\n\u00ab to 11  Q.7J\nBuckle Overshoes\nAll rubber with four clasp\nbuckles, Thick fleece lining\nfor warmth. FuU bellows\ntongue- Insures dryness. Sturdy\nsole. Black.\nMen's 6 to 11 \u2014 6.95\nBoys'  1  to 5 \u2014 S.95\niNCORPeiAT\u00abo ate m\u00bbv lera\n '-mtmp**\n3(*R\nRTTEN6\n\u00bbT THE CHURCH OF VOUR CHOICE\n\"A Day or a Way\nCome let us give thanks together, and\nconsider this thought at the morning\nworship service tomorrow at 11 a.m.\nFriends and visitors especially welcome. S.S. at 9:45 a.m. for Grade 2\nand up: at 11 a.m. for Grade 1 and\nunder.\n7:30   P.M\nSecond Evening Event\nSpades Are Trump'\n\u00a7\u00a3 laul'0-Srtttttg Inttri GUjur ,1}\n\"THE CHURCH WITH A CHALLENGE\"\nJosephine and Silica Streets\nMinister: REV. DONOVAN JONES, B.A., B.D., Tli.M.\nMusic Director: MERLIN R. BUNT - Phone 692-L-l\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nNELSON, p.C.\nDean: THE RIGHT REVEREND P. R.  BEATTIE.\nB.A.  D.D.  Lord Bishop of Kootenay\nRector: THE REVER '\"ND CANON GEORGE W. LANG.\nB.A.. L.Th.\nTHE NINETEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY\nOctober 12,  1958\n8:00 a.m.\u2014The Holy Eucharist.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014All Departments of the Sunday\nSchool.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Mattins, The Litany and\nSermon.\n7:30 p.m\u2014FINAL MISSION SERVICE.\nPreacher: The Right Reverend\nH. R. Ragg, M.A., D.D.\n\u2014 MIDWEEK SERVICES \u2014\nDAILY:-7:00a.m.-Mattins.\n7:30 a.m.\u2014The Holy Eucharist.\nWEDNESDAY: \u2014 10:00 a.m.\u2014The Holy Eucharist.\nSteutero Ittiteb (ftlntrrl.\nCorner of 5th and Elwyn Streets\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1958\nMinister: REV. II. R. WHITMORE\nOrganist:- Mr. Angus Fraser\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Junior, Intermediate and Senior Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Primary, Kindergarten and Nursery.\n11:00 a.m.-MORNING WORSHIP\nIn all things let us give thanks.\n\"THE MAGNIFICENT MINORITY.\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014A New Evening Series of Services:\n; \"HOW CAN I FIND GOD ,\"\n2. Are we hiding from Him \u2014 In refusing\nto repent,\nThis series is for all seekers after truth.\n\"A ERIENDLY CHURCH FOR FRIENDLY PEOPLE\"\nHARVEST HOME \u20142:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop  3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014North Shore United Church Hall Sunday School.\nlhH.\t\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\n'   ' vCGKureh of.\nThe' Redeemer\nSecond and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector\nCanon W. J, Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc.\n9:45   a.m.\u2014Sunday  School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Communion\nPreacher:   The Right\nReverend II. R. Ragg,\nM.A.,   D.D.\n7:30  p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nSOUTH SLOCAN\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Harvest Service\nIirat QUjurrlj nf\nQHjriat S>rtPtttt0t\nA Branch of the Mother Church.\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School: 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"ARE SIN, DISEASE, AND\nDEATH REAL 7\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting - 8:00 p.m,\nReading Room. 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily From\n2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday Evening\n7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nBethel\nTabernacle\nFormer St. Paul's Church\nCorner Stanley and Silica\nREV. R. SWANSON\nPhone 448-R\nCLOSING SERVICES\nWith Evangelist Bob Muir\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Thanksgiving\nService\n5:45 p.m.\u2014Bethel\nFireside Hour.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Service with a special\narrangement\nof Thanksgiving\nsinging by the\nchoir.\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples\nCORDIAL INVITATION IS\nEXTENDED TO ALL\nTO ATTEND\nMISSION\nCOVENANT\nCHURCH\n80S Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\nThanksgiving Rally\nTheme: \"Thanks To God.\"\nSATURDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's\nThanksgiving\nSocial.\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Thanksgiving\nService\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Afternoon Rally.\nGuest Speaker:\nRev. Langvand.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nGuest Speaker:\nRev. Langvand.\nSpecial Music at all services.\nMONDAY:\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Camp Business\nMeeting.\nTHURSDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting.\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's.\nAll Welcome\nSt. John's\nLutheran Church\nTHE CHURCH OF\nTHE LUTHERAN HOUR\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St. - Phone 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\nThanksgiving Service.\nB.C. Pastoral Conference of\nthe Lutheran Church, Missouri\nSynod, Oct. 14-16. Pastoral\nservice with Holy Communion,\nTuesday, Oct. 14 at 7:30 p.m.\nThe Rev. H. Harnapp of\nCourtney is guest speaker.\nALL ARE CORDIALLY\nWELCOME 1\nJirat Sajrttet\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nMinister:\nREV. A. L. FOSTER,\nInterim Pastor\nPhone 1880-179\nSPECIAL THANKSGIVING\nSERVICE\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"Expressing\nGratitude\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014''Paul's I Am of\nContentment\"\nItrai\nflrpabgtrriatt\nGMntrrh\nMinister: E. A. Hircock\n10:45 a.m.\nSunday School\n11:00 a-m.\nMorning Worship\nCORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL\nW$ ftthratum Armtj\nEVANGELISTIC\nMEETINGS\nConducted  By\nWbiL. Tftajot CamwjiIL\nFrom Oct. 10 jo 20\n8 p.m. Nightly, except Monday\nSunday 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nTOMORROW:\nThanksgiving Sunday display of Vegetables and\nFruit. Harvest Festival after Service 7:30 p.m.\nA cordial welcome awaits you at The Army, 513 Victoria St.\u2014 Phone 1148. , ,\"*\nMR. AND MRS. ELVIN WALLACE CARR.\u2014Phofo by Vogue.\nCandlelight Wedding Ceremony\nFor Carr<McFadden Nuptials\nSoftly glowing candelabra and\nyellow dahlias formed an attractive setting for tbe marriage in\nSt. Mathew's Anglican Church,\nSouth Slocan, of Barbara Joan\nMcFadden and Elvin Wallace Carr.\nLow arrangements of 'mums in\nthe windows of the church and satin bows marking the aisles completed tbe church decor when\nCanon W. J. Silverwood read the\ndouble ring service fof the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. K. McFadden of Bonnington and the son\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Carr of\nCalgary.\nThe bride, lovely in an Adeline\noriginal gown of imported nylon\ntulle, previously worn by her sister, was given in marriage by her\nfather. ,\"';\u2022\u2022'\nFolds of tulle outlined the scalloped neckline of the bodice and\nlily-point sleeves ahd- bouffant\nskirt with lace applique accented\nthe gown's graceful lines. A petite\nlace bridal bonnet held her veil\nof imported\" French illusion. Her\nwhite Bible, covered with yellow\nrosebuds ahd white heather from\nAberdeen, Scotland, was a gift of\nMr. arid Mrs. G. E. Miller of Calgary.\nSisters of the bride, Mrs. ftonald\nSchoen as matron of honor, and\nRobin McFadden as bridesmaid,\nwere attired in floral chiffon over\ntaffeta in autumn tones and they\ncarried cascading bouquets of\nautumnal 'mums. Bouffant skirts\nand cummerbunds were features\nof the attendants' gowns and their\nheaddresses were gold bandeau\ncrowns of feathered tullt.\nFlower girl Melanie McBain\nwore a frock of yellow taffeta and\ncarried a nosegay of 'mums. Ring-\nbearer Mark Berger, cousin of the\nbride, wore a white linen suit and\ncarried two rings on a white satin\npillow.\nLloyd Carr was his brother's best\nman and ushers were Ronald\nSchoen, the bride's brother-in-law,\nand Richard Young of Irricana,\nAlberta.'\nCaridlelighters were Helen Sinclair and David Marshall.\nMiss Louise Anderson of Nelson\nplayed the organ and accompan-\nKI.GH Women's Auxiliary\nLunches, Meets, Tours\nThree events filled the regular\nmeeting day of the Women's Auxiliary to Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Friday as members participated in a luncheon, business\nmeeting and tour of the new hospital.\nAttending a luncheon honoring\nMrs. C. W. MacBey of Trail and\nher mother, Mrs. W. T. Fothering-\nham of Nelson, 33 members con\ngregated in the Lord Nelson din\ning room. Mrs. MacBey is second\nvice-president of the provincial\nauxiliary.\nFinal plans for the annual chrysanthemum tea to be held next\nweek were made when members\nmove to the nurses' residence for\ntheir business meeting. Reporting\nfor the group convening the tea,\nMrs. R. S. Nelson and Mrs. H. B.\nHorton arranged various committees. Mrs. S. R. Brown is the\nthird member of,- the convening\ngroup.\nIn a letter from Mrs. MacBey,\nread by secretary Mrs. Louis Hanic, Mrs. H. E. Doelle was named\nchairman of the auxiliaries division of tbe regional council. Mrs\nDoelle, WA president, announced\nthat she will attend tbe provincial\nconvention later in Hie month as\ndelegate from the group. Mrs. K.\nD. McRae will also attend.\nA  letter,  which  the WA will\nsend to Prime Minister Diefenbaker inviting Queen Elizabeth and\nthe Duke of Edinburgh to visit\nNelson, was read by the secretary.\nThe letter was written at the request ot city council.\nFive new members were welcomed to the group: Mrs. R. L.\nDuncan, Mrs, Reg Taylor, Mrs. H.\nF. Lake and Mrs. G. R. Callbeck.\nSeveral committee reports were\nmade. Mrs. Doelle as representative on the hospital board. Mrs.\nE. Bergstrom for the hospital visiting committee on which Mrs. W.\nAnderson also acted, Mrs. William\nForsyth for the phoning committee and Mrs. W. A. Manson for the\nraffle committee.\nNominating committee for the\nSAINT\nPAuys\nEVANGELICAL    j f,\nLUTHERAN CHU.RChj\nCarbonate an* Ward St.     ,\n(The Friendly Church With *\nFriendly Welcome); .'\u25a0\nThe Reverend\nERNST H. NYGAARD,\nPastor, B.A.; B.D.\nWORSHIP SERVICE\nat 1:00 p.m.\n7:00 p.m.\nLuther League.\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF LATTER DAY: SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.-Sunday School\nEagles HaU. 641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President - Phone 372-L\nDecember election was appointed\nwith Mrs. E. M. Stiles as convener. Mrs. McRae and Mrs. H.\nD. Harrison will act on the committee.\nMrs. MacBey, who attended a\nrecent Grand Forks meeting, reported on her trip. She described\nthe regional council, of which Mrs.\nDoelle will be chairman, telling\nthe 38 members present that the\nregion is made up of auxiliaries\nfrom Grand Forks, Rossland, Trail,\nNakusp, New Denver, Kaslo and\nRiondel. The next meeting is scheduled to take place in Nelson next\nyear.\nMrs. MacBey spoke of the Vancouver convention and the meetings and functions which will be\nheld. She also suggested various\nactivities which the local group\nmight undertake when the new hospital is completed.\n\u25a0 To conclude the meeting, Mrs.\nDoelle read the report which she\nwill take to the Convention ,om\nthe auxiliary. She mentioned all\nactivities of the group which now\nnumbers 76 members. She said that\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\ncapacity of 96 beds, places the\nauxiliary in the second, group at\naries comprised this group last\nthe convention. Twenty-two auxili-\nyear.\nFinal event of the afternoon was\na tour of the partially completed\nhospital, which the auxiliary is\nhelping to equip through monthly\nprojects.\nied Mrs. Iris Hooker as she sang\n\"The Wedding Prayer\" and \"O\nPertecf Love\".\nThe bride's mother chose royal\nblue with matching accessories\nand the bridegroom's mother wore\nnavy with pink accessories. Yellow\nroses fashioned their corsages.\nNo. 3 Plant Hall at South Slocan\nwas decorated with fall flowers in\nbronze and yellow tones for the\nreception. The bride's table was\ncovered with hand-crocheted cloths\nmade by Mrs. C. Scally of Nelson.\nThe three-tiered wedding cake em\nbedded in 'mums was topped with\na sterling silver loving cup. Fall\ndecorations on the table were arranged by Mrs. C. D. Pearson of\nNelson.\nJock Hawkins, uncle of the bride,\nwas master of ceremonies and\nMrs. A. Dunsmore, aunt of the\nbride, looked after the guest book.\nRonaid Schoen proposed a toast to\nthe bride to which the groom responded. Lloyd Carr proposed a\ntoast to the bridesmaids and flower\ngirl.\nMrs. C. R. Dunsmore, Mrs. J.\nHawkins, Miss Hellen Sloan and\nMrs. C. D. Pearson poured. Others\nassisting were Mrs. A. Sinclair,\nMrs. J. Hawkins Jr., Mrs. R. Dunsmore, Mrs. T. Berger, Mrs. P.\nRobinson, Mrs. S. Marshall, Mrs.\nM. Harrison, Mrs. R. MacBain,\nMiss Doreen McDonough, Miss\nBobby McMasters, Miss Penny\nPenniket, Miss Leslie Hammond,\nMiss Jean Street, Mrs. W. McPhail.\nMrs. J. Spain, Mrs. J. Ostlin, Mrs.\nT. Wallach and Mrs. J. E. Parker.\nA dance followed the reception,\nFor her going-away ensemble\nthe bride chose a black and white\nLilli-Ann original suit with matching accessories.\nOut of town guests included Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Ford, Mr. and Mrs.\nT. Sadler and Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMitchell of Trail; Mrs. W. McCabe\nand Bruce of Castlegar; Mrs. J.\nWoodburn of Kinnaird; Mrs. K,\nMotley of Salmo; Mrs. E. Willey\nof Victoria; Mrs. T. Berger and\nMark of Vernon; Mr. and Mrs. G,\nEamar, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Carr,\nLloyd Carr and Miss M. Carr, all\nof Calgary; Dick Young of Olds,\nAlta.; Miss\"Hellen Sloan of'Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Schoen\nof Payette, Idaho; Mr. and Mrs.\nC. R. Dunsmore of Atbara; Mr\nand Mrs. N. B. Hickman, Mr. and\nMrs. R. Grayson, Mr. and Mrs. P.\nRobinson, Miss Louise Anderson,\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Hickey, Mr,\nand Mrs. R. Burton, Dr. and Mrs.\nR. B. Brummitt, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nFoster and Judith, Mr. and Mrs,\nC. Isakson, Miss Doreen McDonough, Miss Bobbie McMaster, Miss\nI. Laughton, Mr. and'Mrs. C. D.\nPearson, Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Pickering and Mrs. E. Jorgenson, all\nof Nelson.\nANOTHER WINNER AT SAFEWAY\nMrs. V. Peressini of 808 Front Street is\nshown being presented with the Grand\nPrise, a Westinghouse range, at the five-\nday Safeway Free Cooking School held at\nthe Capitol Theatre this week. Sutherland\nAppliances, 645 Baker Street, donated the\nrange plus four electrical appliances.\nIn addition to the grand prize, 75 grocery hampers were won by Nelson and District residents. Pictured from left ta right\nare Mrs. Peressini, Miss Grace Reeder,\nhome economist; Chas. Banner, manager\nof Fairview Safeway; and Ben Sutherland.\nAdvt.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1958\u20145\nUiUlli-\nthe\nPHONE 1844\nAlderman and Mrs. George Mermet, 302 Second Street, recently\nattended the wedding of their niece\nMiss Barbara Nixon, in Eugene,\nOregon.\n* \u2666  *\nA visitor to Uie Kootenay district\nhas been R. L. Davidson of Victoria who is supervisor of libraries\nfor the province.\n* *  *\nMrs. P. G. Lawrence, 805 Vernon Street, recently visited her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Alan Silverwood, in Vancouver.\n* *  *\nA model meeting of the Xi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi for the benefit of rushees was held at the home\nof Mrs. Clarence Stallwood, 703\nSilica Street, during the present\nrushing program. Guests at the\nmeeting were Mrs. J. E. Rooney,\nMrs. G. Houlden, Mrs. Florence\nStewart, Mrs. F. B. Jones, Mrs.\nRobert Foxall, Mrs. Douglas Askew, Mrs. L. Lefeaux and Mrs.\nK. Wickens. Papers on \"Stimulants\nto Thought\" were read by Mrs.\nV. Moore and Mrs. F. A. White-\nley. Co-hostesses with Mrs. Stall-\nwood was Mrs. Carl Linden.\n* *  \u2666\nSinging, games and piano music\nwere enjoyed by 28 guests at a\nshower for Miss Judy Seaby which\nwas held at the home of Miss Ruth\nAbfalter, 722 Third Street, Tuesday. Miss Seaby, whose marriage\nto Carl Johnson takes place today,\nwas the recipient of many gifts.\n* *  *\nIn honor of their golden wedding\nanniversary October 18, Mr. and\nMrs. H. W. Hankin, for many\nyears members of the IOOF and\nRebekah Lodge, were guests at a\nsurprise social hour following a\nmeeting of the Queen City Rebekah\nLodge No. 16. The couple were escorted to a table ornamented with\nyellow tapers, miniature golden\nslippers and an anniversary cake.\nNoble Grand Mrs. H. Bentham,\npresented Mrs. Hankin with a yellow rosebud corsage and Mr. Hankin received a rosebud buttonhole. Mrs. J. McClelland extended\nNew   Shipment\nDECORATOR\nCUSHIONS\nMany   Colors   to\nChoose   From\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Two young\ndaughters of Mrs. H. L. Taylor\nentertained 14 small guests recently at a joint birthday party.\nJoanne celebrated her seventh\nbirthday and Jill Mae her fourth.\nGames, favors and a large decorated birthday cake carried out the\nfestive note.\nSt. Stephen's Anglican Church\nHelpers held their first fall meeting at the home of president Mrs.\nStanley Pedley, with Mrs. H. W.\nMcKenzie of Victoria as visitor.\nPlans were made for a bake sale\nNovember 15. Mrs. Pedley and\nMrs. K. Smith were appointed to\nchurch cleaning for the month.\ncongratulations on behalf of the\nlodge and the guests of honor were\npresented with a golden vase of\ncarnations.\n* *  \u2022\nThe Protestant home in Vancouver and a new project, the senior\ncitizens rest home in Vancouver,\nwere topics of interest discussed\nat the Wednesday meeting of Fidelity 1116, Ladies' Orange Benevolent Association. RWGM Mrs. M.\nBean of Vancouver was presented\nwith a gift and corsage by Mrs.\nC. W. Paine and Mrs. J. Symington\nand Mrs. C. Hamm of the Trail\nLodge were welcomed as new\nmembers to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nDiscussion by Lady Lions meeting at the home of Mrs. G. F. Olson recently concerned raffle of a\nColeman stove and gun and holster\nset at the West Kootenay Fall Fair,\nas well as awarding of a silver cup\nto the boys' aggregate winner.\nMembers were entertained by the\nLions' \"Five Flats\".\nCome to HFC where\n10,000 Canadians\nborrow every week\nIf you need up to $1000 for any good\npurpose, see Household Finance,\nCanada's leading consumer finance\ncompany. HFC specializes in\nprompt, friendly loan service where\nyou borrow in privacy with up to\n30 months to repay.\nModern money servico backed by 80 years'experience\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nE. O. Bernard, Mmwger\n60S Bnfcer Street Telephone TOTO\nNELSON\nEurope Bound?\n...it's more\nfan afloat\no .il int\n'SevenSeas'\nto\nEngland \u2022 France\nHolland. Germany\nStep aboard for:\nFinest continental cuisine\ncourteous European Service\nimmaculate accommodation\nexcellent recreation facilities.\nTo Southampton, Li Havre,\nRotterdam, Bremerliaven\nFrom Montreal October 17\nFrom Quebec November 13f\ntltoos not call at Lo Hivia\n*******************\nSPECIAL  CHRISTMAS  SAILING\nFrom Quebec, December 10, 1958\nPersonally conducted by\nGERD N0LTE\nol the EUROPE-CANADA LINE oftlcs In\nToronto wno, as vour gonial host, will do\n!H3fi'\"\u2022 1\u2122*= tomato tills special\nW0 Burrard Street, Vatveojiver.\nOffices aim in:\nMontreal, Toronto and Winnipeg.\n\"See the Viponds\" at Globe Agencies Ltd.\nFor Information and Reservations\n1148 CEDAR AVE. TRAIL, B.C. PHONE 2S45\n : ; *-\n *Sfc\u00bb\nAgreement Near on\nUngava Development\n6\u2014nelson daily news, Saturday, oct. ii, 1958 Cabinet Scandal\nStrikes Bulgaria\nBUDAPEST (AP) - Cemmun-\nist Bulgaria is beset by a mania\ntor automobiles that has touched\noff e scandal involving four junior, cabinet members.\nBulgaria has few cari, even for\nimpoverished Eastern Europe. At\none of the- capital's main intersections, ln front of the old royal\npalace, a traffic policeman in a\nwhite tunic goes through elaborate signals for minutes on end\nwithout directing anything heavier than an occasional motorcycle.\nStanding around and looking at\nthe new cars in front of the big\nhotels is a favorite Sunday pastime in Sofia, the capital.\nOf the 434 cars Imported in 1957\nand January ef this year, 817\nwent to government organizations, according to the official\nparty daily Rahotnichesko Delo.\nMany second - rank government\nand party leaders went through\nair kinds of subterfuges to get\nheld ef one.\nOne car for a public health\nservice was bought with funds\ndestined for tuberculosis patients.\nA district council boss bought, a\ncar with funds appropriated to reward outstanding farmers.\nThe newspaper named as those\nchiefly responsible the deputy\nministers for trade, education,\nlght industry and agriculture. It\nsaid the cabinet dealt with the\nquestion and \"made a proper decision\"\u2014but it did not announce\nwhat it was.\n,       By DAVE OANCIA\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) - A three-\nway deal among Canadian, American and German steel interests will likely lead to the development of a new mine and the\nbirth of a new town of more than\n2,000 on the tree-less, rocky Ungava region of northern Quebec.\nInformants said Thursday final\nagreement is near on plans to exploit the huge, low-grade iron\nore deposits in Ungava\u2014a scant\n300 miles from the Arctic Circle\nand 1,000 miles north of Montreal.\nOnly a few financial and marketing details remain to be ironed\nout before the green light is given\nthe $200,000,000 program to ship\nultimately 3,000,000 tons of ore a\nyear from the region. If this\nagreement is reached soon the\nfirst shipments could be made by\n1983.\nEATON-KRUPP PROJECT\nKey figures in the project are\nAmerican industrialist Cyrus Eaton, who was born in Nova Scotia,\nand German steel magnate Al-\nfried Krupp, each with 50 \u25a0 per-\nVictoria Council\nApproves Wide\nOpen Shopping\nVICTORIA (CP) - City council\ngave approval Thursday for wide\nopen shopping for Victoria. Several groups of retailers immediately announced they would resist the\ntrend.\nBy a vote of 7-2, lt gave preliminary approval to a bylaw exempting 67 classes of shops from shop-\nclosing regulations. The bylaw re-\nqiures one more reading before it\ncan go into effect.\nThe 67 classes of retail outlets\nexempted from all closing regulations other than the Lord's Day\nAct appear to include every kind\nof retail business in the city.\nCouncil's decision ended a long\nbattle over store hours, one group\nof merchants fighting for a 514-day\nweek and one for a six-day week.\nFurniture, jewellry and appliance store operators met later and\nagreed to close all day on Wednesdays.\ncent  interests  in  the  Operating\ncompany.\nInformants said detailed plans\nhave been mapped out to deal\nwith the complex engineering,\nconstruction, mining, transportation and living problems which\nmust be solved before this treasure house of iron ore can be unlocked.\nThe chief problem in the barren area around Hopes Advance\nBay on the northern shores of\nQuebec is not to find the ore, but\nto find a way of getting it out to\nmarket economically.\nThe ore body is part of the\n\"Labrador Trough\"\u2014a. 600-mile-\nlong belt that stretches southward to the Quebec - Labrador\nborder. Its reserves are estimated at more than 3,000,000,000\ntons\u201440 times the present annual\nconsumption of all of Europe's\nsteel mills.\nRights to the Ungava deposits\nwere obtained by Eaton Interests\nseven years ago. Ungava Iron\nOres Company Limited was\nformed to develop them.\nCANADIAN FIRM\nThis is a Canadian company\nowned 50 - 50 bv the Champlain\nMining Corporation, representing\nEaton's Canadian and American\ninterests, and Ferrum Investments Limited, which represents\nthe five-company German group.\nPlans to graft a community\nonto the barrens call for construction of a 25-mile raiiwd a\nconcentrating plant, a nelletWng\nplant, a dock bit enough to hin-\ndle ocean freighters, a complete\ntownsite and a power plant.\nMining and concentrating the\nore will be a year-nwnd operation. But the Un\u00bbava Bav hsrhnr\nIs ice-free only about four months\na \"ear.\nTo overcome this handicap. Eaton Interests have simed an\nagreement with the Danish \"ov-\nernment to stockpile t h e nelWs\npi an ice-free Gr<\"Mii\u00bb\"d harbnr\n600 miles sway. FreWers will\nthen be able tn move the \u00ab\u2022!'\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\nto market every month of the\nyear.\nFOREST COUNTRY\nAbout 56 per cent of Sweden's\nentire iand area is covered with\nforest.\nCHARTER SHIPS\nAustralia has chartered two\nships for trips to its Antarctic\nresearch stations in 1958-50.\nSays Young Artists Try lo Paint\nBefore They Know How lo Draw\nTORONTO (CP) - -The trouble\nwith today's young artists is that\n\"too many of them think they\ncan paint before they know how\nto draw,\" says 98-year-old John\nDavid Kelly.\nThe dean of Canada's historical artists has been confined to\na sickroom five months. His eyesight, hearing are weak. His\nhands tremble.\nBut he still has advice for the\nyoung artists of today.\n\"Get an egg and learn to draw\nbefore you start to paint. Put\nthat egg on a table and keep\ndrawing it until you've something\nthat looks exactly like an egg.\nFew people are better qualified\n\u2022to judge.\nIn an artistic career stretching\nover 80 years Mr. Kelly won a\nreputation among artists as Canada's Mr. Accuracy.\nIn hundreds of painstakingly-\nproduced paintings, not a button\non a soldier's coat or the color\nof a feather in an Indian's headdress was out of place.\nEvery detail of the Kelly paintings was checked and rer-hecked\nwith his own collection of reference books and the Dominion archives.\nUntil 1955 he visited the site of\nall his historical paintings fo1- accuracy. To paint a picture cf the\ndeath of General Brock at Oiiee\"-\nston Heights he tramped the old\nbattlefield in snowshoes.\nOnly once did he make a mistake. In a scene of the late 1700s\nhe drew a tiny Union Jack which\nincluded the cross contributed by\nIreland. It was large eroiifh' for\nan observer to remind him that\nthe Irish cross was not added to\nthe flag until 1802.\nAlmost every Canadian ha*\nseen some example of Mr.\nKelly's work. An insurance Company uses his best-known paintings on its calendars; railway\ncoaches were decorated with his\npictorial maps.\nMr. Kelly was one of the first\n\"picture reporters.\" He was at\nthe Northwest Rebellion for Toronto newspapers, sent back battle sketches that still serve as a\nvivid reminder.\nHe showed his first painting\u2014\na sketch oi the America's Cup\nrace between Canada's Countess\nof Dufferin and the U.S. schooner\nMadeleine\u2014to teachers at Toronto's Ontario School of Art in\n1876.\nBORN IN ONTARIO\nMr. Kelly was born at Gore's\nLanding, near Peterborough,\nOnt. His father, a farmer, toured\ncountry fairs, returned with art\ncatalogues from picture exhibits,\ninsis'ed his house be full of magazines and pictures, and encouraged his three sons to become\nartists.\nAnother brother. Percy, did.\nThe third, Bert, was an artistic\nprinter.\nJohn David Kelly, only one of\nthe thr\u00bbe now living, worked for\nRolph Clark and Stone, a Toronto\niithogranhing firm, for 73 years.\nHe retired in 195S. Last May\ndoctors confined him to his bed\nin Toronto and gave him Just one\nw??k to live.\n\"I've been fooling them all.\"\nhe chuckled. \"But I don't believe\nI'll \u00bbet tn reach 100 after all.. . .\"\nHis wife died in childbirth 65\nyears  ago.  He has no children.\n\"But my paintings will last,\"\nmy children.\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nI or by the Government of British Columbia\nTeach English\nBy Television\nTo Mexicans\nMEXICO CIY (AP) - A class\nwhere Mexicans are leeming the\nfirst rudiments of English is being televised to almost a third of\nthe country.\nThe program is sponsored by\nthe Mexlcin-North American Institute of Cultural Relations.\nIt is on the air from 6 to 6:30\np.m., Mondays through Fridays,\nand the course is for 13 weeks.\nThe class goes out over six channels. Sponsors say It is being\npicked up in at least 92 cities and\ntowns.\nThe sponsors hope showing actual classroom activities will help\nhold interest. And the mistakes\nof the students, and how they are\ncorrected, should benefit the viewers.\nStudents were selected to represent a broad cross section of\nthe social strata. Other requirements were that they knew no\nEnglish beforehand, showed u|J\nwell on TV, and were not nervous.\nTextbooks issued by the institute for little less than $1 sold\nwell the day after the program\nbegan. Forms filled out at the\ntime books were purchased\nshowed that chambermaids, day\nlaborers and persons with college\ndegrees were among those studying.\nUrges CD Direction Under Joint\nFederal-Provincial Health Units\nKELOWNA (CP) - Dr. George\nWalsh, chairman of the B. C. Division, Canadian Medical Association's disaster planning committee,\nsays direction of civil defence activity should come from federal\nand provincial health services, But\nthe medical profession must stand\nready to help in the event of disaster. Speaking today at the CMA's\nB.C. division convention here Dr.\nWalsh said:\n\"An attempt is being made to\nco-ordinate the disaster plans of\nthe hospitals in the Vancouver\narea, but so far the chairmen of\nthe hospitals have been unable to\narrange a meeting to deal with\nthe first problem, that of overlapping medical personnel.\"\nHe slid he hoped such a meeting would be Arranged , for the\nnear future. \u25a0\nDr.  Walsh  criticized what; he\ncalled the lack of liaison between\nthe branches ef the federal and\nprovincial health services and the\nspecial medical committee.\n\"It would appear that both of\nthese bodies are taking a more\nactive part ln disaster planning,\"\nhe said, \"but our committee hears\nonly Indirectly of the activity\nthrough other channels and nOt by\ndirect communication. . . .\n\"I would feel that much of the\napathy among the profession is due\nto a lack of guidance. . . \" he\nsaid. \"Until such is forthcoming,\nthe actions of this committee are\nlikely to be fruitless.\nDr. Walsh said he felt that there\nis little use in proceeding to organize the profession to, meet a large-\nscale disaster until most'of, the hospitals in B. Cl haye workable dis-\naster 'plans..' ' j   I |   '\u25a0\nM , \\   I   \\\nCBC Governors Defer Power\nIncrease for Regina, Saskatoon\nOTTAWA (CP)-The CBC board\nof governors Friday deferred applications for power increases by\nradio stations CKRM, Regina, and\nCKOM, Saskatoon.\nCKRM of Regina sought authority to increase its power to 10,000\nwatts from 5,000 for day time\ntransmission.\nThe board said it is \"not yet\nsatisfied With the performance of\nCanada Needs\nWorkers Says\nMrs. Fairclough\nLONDON (CP) - Mrs. EHin\nFairclough, Canada's minister of\ncitizenship and immigration, said\nFriday the Canadian unemployment picture is approximately normal for the season, but hpr department is careful not to encourage\nimmigrants who Would have difficulty finding work.\nMrs. Fairclough. visiting immigration offices in the British Isles,\ntold a press conference onlv 1000\nof the 370,000 British immierants\nwho came to Canada in 1957 are\ndrawing public assistance.\nCanada badly needed medical\npersonnel, teachers, scientists and\ndomestias. \"But unless immigrants\nhave some skill, we do not advise\nthem to come to the country\u2014it\nwouldn't be fair to them.\"\nMr. Fairclough said a total Of\nabout 125.000 immigrants from all\ncountries are expected to come to\nCanada this year.\n\"What we need Is workers,\npeople who are willing to share\nthe load. .They can find a hap^y\nhome in Canada.\"\nlulheran Mercier\nSlock Removed\nDAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A major\nroadblock to a merger of the\nUnited Lutheran Church 10 America with three other Lutheran\nchurches has been removed.\nAt Thursdiy night's ses&ion of\nthe ULCA's convention here, a proposal to forbid ministers to.join\nlodges or secret societies was approved.\nA heated debate preceded the\ncrucial vote. It was considered a\nmajor concession hy the ULCA\nwhich does not forbid its ministers\njoining lodges.\nThe three other Lutheran bod'\nies \u2014 the Auguttaria Lutheran.\nFinnish Evangelical Lutheran ahd\nAmerican Evangelical Lutheran\nchurches \u2014 all ban lodge membership by their ministers., \u25a0\nThe merger of the tour chuches\ninto the United Lutheran\/Church\nof America is expected , to take\nplace in the\/ea'rly 1960s, I    . \u25a0-.\nAs adooted.by the convention the\nban would not apply' to laymen Or\nto ministers who,held lodge mem-\nCutliffe Family\nLeaves Cyprus\nUnder Guard\nNICOSIA (Reuters)-Sgt. David\nCutliffe and his five children left\nJypms under heavy guard Friday,\na week after his wife was shot\nIn the back and killed in Famagusta.\ntroops with machine - guns\nguarded the hotel in Nicosia\nwhere the Cutliffe family Spent\nthe night. It was a precaution\nagainst any attempt on the life\nof Margaret Cutliffe, 18, who was\nwith her mother and has helped\nin trying to identify the killers.\nGreek Cypriots say the killing\nwas not done by the EOKA terrorist organization. The Cyprus\ngovernment says it was.\nthis station nor with the way 'in1\nwhich this' performance < i\u00ab_ mm\nported.\"  \u25a0\u25a0',    l   \u25a0    \\ |'fe ;.,'-..;\n\"The board wISieS ah opportunity to see whether this station can\nlive up to the revised promise of\nperformance submitted at this\nmeeting.\" '   \\\nThe recommendations of the\nboard followed a public hearing\nhere Thursday, when Wilf Collier,\nstation manager, was questioned\non alleged infractions of broadcasting regulations concerning soot\nannouncements. Mr. Collier said\nhe would try to improve the situation.\nWILL SCHEDULE\nHe also agreed to submit to the\nboard a detailed schedule of between 32 and 37 hours a week of\nlive programing. The station Orig-\nally promised 62 hours a week\nbut Mr. Collier said this was \"unrealistic.\"\nCKOM, Saskatoon, asked permission to double its power to\n10,000 watts to improve reception\nin rural areas.\nThe board said it also wants to\nsee whether this station \"can live\nup to the revised promise of performance\" submitted at Thursday's meeting.\nPower increases approves included:\nCFAC, Calgary\u2014to 10,000 watts\nfrom 5,000 at 960 on the dial.    -\nCFJC, Kamloops, B.C.\u2014to 10,-\n000 watts from 1,000 day only at\n910 on the dial.\nU.S. Warns Russ\nAgainst Tests\nUNITED NATIONS, NY. (CP)\nThe United ISiates warned Friday\nthat a proposed one-year moratorium on nuclear tests will be\nnullified if Ihe Russians continue\ntest explosions after Oct. 31.\nAt -the same time, Ambassador\nHenry Cabot Lodge declared the\nUnited States cannot agree to a\ncomplete and .permanent cessation of tests until progress is\nmade on other phases of disarmament.\nLodge spoke before the United\nNations' '81-nation political committee as lt opened its disarmament debate.\nSoviet Deputy Foreign Minister\nValerian A. Zorin immediately accused the United States of being\nunwilling to seek agreement at\nthe coming Geneva talks on a\npermanent end to nuclear weap-\npris.,testing. The talks open Oct.\n.\"It ia not disarmament the\nUnited States seeks,\" Zorin aaid.\nV'The 'United States seeks to assume the role of a world gen\ndarme while trying to use its\nforte in various parts of the world\n(ind at the same time is trying to\nconvince us it seeks disarmament\"\n* Lodge said the U.S. offer to\nsuspend tests for one year was\nmade to facilitate the Geneva\ntalks \"and it would be regrettable indeed if the Soviet Union\ntook steps which had the opposite effect.\"\nAs the disarmament debate\nopened, the U.S. and other Western delegates were working behind the scenes on a resolution\nurging all the parties to the\nall tests while tne negotiations\nare in progress.\nLodge made no direct reference to this proposal in his\nspeech.\nImmigration Dept.\nSees 20 Seamen\nOTTAWA (CP)-the immigration department said Friday it is\n\"looking\" for about 20 NegrO seamen from the British West Indies\nsuspected of being in Canada illegally.\nThe seamen were among 57 who\nserved aboard Canadian National\nSteamship vessels sold recently to\nCuban interests. Some had served\non Canadian ships for up to 25\nyears.\nAn immigration department official said the 20-odd seamen have\ndisappeared. They were believed\nto be in Canada and were being\nsought because they had not ap-\nplled for and received permission\nMourning for Pope Opens\nIn St. Peter's Basilica\nVATICAN CITY (AP) - The\nnine days of official mourning for\nPope Pius XII will not begin until Saturday.\nThe entire service of mourning\nwill take place in St. Peter's\nBasilica,. without the usual final\nthree days of services in the\nSistine Chapel nearby.\nBurial in the grottoes beneath\nSt. Peter's Basilica probably will\nbe on Sunday, Oct. 19.\nAll these are changes from the\ncenturies-old procedure of the Roman Catholic Church for the\nfuneral and burial of its. popes.\nThe changes, decided upon by\na conclave of the cardinals already in Rome, were caused by\nthe unusual circumstance of Pius\nXH's death at the summer palace in Castel Gandolfo. It has\nbeen two centuries since any pope\nhas died outside Rome.\nThe modifications also are intended to make it easier for the\nhundreds of thousands of Romans and visitors to view the\nPope's> body and to participate In\nthe services.\nIn the past the bodies of popes\nhave been taken from their death\nchamber in the Apostolic Palace\nto the Sistine Chapel for formal\nrobing. The body of Pius XII waa\nrobed in his small, monastic bedroom at Castel Gandolfo.\nThe stop at the Basilica of St.\nJohn Lateran in Friday's solemn\nprocession back to the Vatican\nalso is a new procedure.\nNormally the nine days of\nmourning would have begun Friday.\nInstead the great doors of St.\nPeter's Basilica will be locked\nwhen the Pope's bodv ar\nrives. They will not be thrown\nopen again until Saturday morning, formally opening the nine\ndays Of services.\nThese will continue from Oct.\n11 through Sunday, Oct. 19. i\nDuring that time the services\nwill be in St. Peter's, Normally\nthe first six days of the services\nwould be held there and then\nwould have continued for the last\nthree days in the beautiful' but\nsmall Sistine Chapel.\nVYbvisi ^ouikL...\nKingpins Of Movie World Made\nTheir Way to Top by Hard Work\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - What\nmanner of men are the 12 famous\nstars who are the kingpins of the\nmovie world?\nThe majority come from the\nheartland of America. They were\nborn in such places as Winterset,\nIowa (John Wayne), O'Fallon, 111.,\n(William Holden) and Indiana,\nPa., (James Stewart). Only two\ncame from a metropoill \u2014 New\nYorkers Butt Lancaster and Tony\nCurtis.\nJust one was born outside the\nU.S.\u2014Cary Grant, born Archibald\nLeach in Bristol, England.\nMost came from humble beginnings. Gregory Peck's and\nWayne's fathers wire druggist\u00bb,\nCurtiss's was a barber, Frank\nSinatra's a boxer and Clark Gable's an oil field worker.\nUp THE HARD WAY\nAll came up the hard way. Before they clicked as actors, Lancaster was an acrobat, Grant a\nto remain in Canada as landed\nimmigrants.\nThe official said no deportation\norders have been issued against\nthese seamen. Their cases would\nbe considered if they were located in Canada.\nstiltwalker, Gable a lumberjack\nand Kirk Douglas a bellhop.\nIt may surprise you to learn\nthat the average age of the dozen\nmost successful film stars la 47.\nOnly Marlon Brando (34) and\nCurtis (33) are under 40. Three\nof the dozen are over 50: Grant\n(54), Gable and Gary Cooper\n(both 57).\nThey are not necessarily the I\nmost honored actors  in   films.\nOnly half of them have won academy awards.\nHALF MARRIED ONCE\nTheir records would seem te\nbelie the claim that Hollywood is\na shaky place for marriage. Half\nof the golden dozen have been\nmarried only once.\nBut beyond the statistics, what\nare the qualities that have made\nthem kings of the film world?\nBasically, they are thoroughly\nmasculine types. They seldom\nplay weak characters; when they\ndo, the result is usually a failure.\nBut manliness is not enough.\n\"The main thing we do is give\npeople an emotional experience,\"\nexplains James Stewart. \"If .we\ndon't get it into a picture, It's\nusually a flop. If we do get it,\nthe picture has a chance of being\nreally great.\"\nMaritime\nPower Boom\nTh* power potential of the Maritime Provinces Is rapidly being\nharnessed to play a vital part In a\nhoped-for economic surge ahead.\nDuring the last year l*rge new\nresources have been tapped and\nmade available to users.\nStir attraction Is New Brunt-\n*-   Eleeiric   Power   Commie-\n.    nm kw BeethvrtM h>\nmk     ?t$   h-\nThe New Brunswick tneta! discoveries in the northern part of\nIhe province promise to require\nv_st power, and it has been provided.\nA $225 million expansion plan to\nSrovide   700,000  kw   is  on   the\nrawing boards.     -\nNew Thermal Plant\nBy 1961 a further 50,000 kw\nthould be available from a new\nthermal riant to be built fn Saint\nJohn.\nI-\nth\nSeaway Nears Completion\nQueen to Open Huge Project in 1959\nCanada next year gets 3,000\nmore miles of Coastline and a rosy\nnew economic horizon.\nWhin Queen Elizabeth opens the\nmassive half-billion-dollar St. Law-\n' Seaway next spring, she will\nPowerful economic for-\ndimly seen.\n\u2022 \u00ab* the great days\nwill alter. There will be less transshipping percentagewise.\nTrans-shipment points for outbound bulk cargo \u2014 especially\ngrain \u2014 may tend to shift farther\neast.\nTransport of bulk product* will\nleip.\nWestern farmers will en'*\u00bb**\nlower grain shipping charges\nMost importan*. there i<\n\"ition o*       -^rall'\nSeaway, but the biggest won't\nRealistic studies of probable\nSeaway cargoes indicate that domestic bulk shipments will demand\nmuch of its capacity.\nSeawa\" traffic, according to\nfigure \u2022 *he rf*nt Canadian\nTrt \u2022  u e\u00abH*\nThat's i more realistic figure for\nimmediate consideration. It is exacted to bt reached within five\nyears.\nOf thlt, 18 million torn would\nmove downriver, would include 10\nmillion tons of grain and train\nproducts, three million ton. of soft\ncoal, and 1.5 million tons of iron\nand steel\nUpriver tonnage would be 26,$\nmillion, including 20 million tons\nof iron ore.\nThe. *\nthat\ng\u00ab\u00bb\n...to grow with Canada\nTm buying\n\"t; ; i. i> \u25a0 .   f I', I, T\nCanada Savings EfoncLi\n\u2022It,\nbershipft prior to the meri\niflge n\nam\nSaving !\u00ab easier when you buy Canada Savings Bonds\nthrdufch your convenient Payroll Savings Plan. Almost\nbefore you know it your bonds are paid in full. But\nwhether bought ort instalments or for cash, Savings\nBonds *arn high interest. They're cashable anytime,\ntoo \u2014 for never less than full face value. Available in\ndenominations of $50 and up.\nTerms can also be arranged at your bank, investment\ndealer, stockbroker, trust or loan company\/'\noff my i^^M%^&\u00bb^\n.      '\"      .7 '' \u201ef^ \u00bb '\nGodd Interest: 3V_%\/dr the first year ay&\ni 4Vi%\/or ^e next fourteen.\nMake a start today for the things you want tomorrow I\n 3fc5\/\nThese Men Guard the Queen\nBy FRANK WATSON\nLONDON \u2014 Everyone-from sultry movie star Ava Gardner to\nsmall boys have tried it. They\nhave used feminine wiles, wisecracks and ice cream cones, but\nthey couldn't do it.\nWhat they couldn't do is part\nof a \"game\" that fascinates Londoners ,; and visitors\u2014trying to\nbreakup the queen's horses and\nthe queen's men while they stand\n- on  duty  at  Buckingham  palace.\n; StiJames' palace and Whitehall.\n; 'However, sojldlers andiiteeds of\nthe Guards, keep silent;and, mo-\n! tionlfessJidunng their hour's.-duty.\nThe bor.es even,, resist .'.offers of\ngumdrojis, crfpffl. tad \\ce cream\ncones.'   ,-,'   \\V \"%;\u25a0     \u25a0\"\u25a0'.   r \u25a0\nWhat part 'do t these Guards,\nwith their 300 years of pomp and\nglory play ih these crisis-studded\ndays?\nHow does their past prepare them\nfor the present?\nIn peacetime, the Guards form\nan elite corps to carry out one\n' 'of the mdst important jobs in the\n\u2022 world\u2014guarding and escorting the\n\/ Queen,   a  task   they  have  performed  for  monarchs  since  the\nRestoration in 1660.\n\u2022 In wartime the Guards form\nfirst-class fighting men. Some of\ntheir units are organized for today's warfare with armored cars\nand tanks.\nIt is for their ceremonial duties,\nhowever, that the Guards are best\nknown today. The Household Cavalry Guards the Horse Guards\nbuilding in Whitehall while the brigade of Foot Guards takes over at\nBuckingham and St. James pal-\nBehind their changing of ths\nguard duties lie hours of that\ncommodity that every soldier\nknows\u2014spit and polish. The average trooper works about five hours\na day getting himself and his\nsparkling uniform ready for the\nWhitehall guard and another hour\nfrooming his horse. Those thigh\noots, for one, must be stiffly wax-\nA Guardsman carefully grooms the bearskin busby of hli pal,\ned. In combat, the Household Cavalrymen wear prosaic battle dress.\nThe two regiments of the Household Cavalry\u2014the Life Guards and\nRoyal Horse Guards (the Blues)\n\u2014assemble daily for inspection at\ntheir barracks and then ride into\nHyde Park to Whitehall\u2014a procession with troopers, in scarlet, and\nblue tunics, white breeches and\ngauntlets, gleaming cuirasses, helmets and thigh boots, astride coal\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n...   ..By Fr\u00abne\u00ab\u00ab Drak\u00ab\u2014\u2014\nFor Sunday, Oct 12, 1958\n! Look in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\n\u25a0 $ MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Look deeper if you would know\nj and,have the benefit of the many\n\/. values-, available on this somewhat\ni milted day.\n^VPRIL\"21 to MAY 21 (Taurusl-\n. Think before  you speak.  Others\n(may be touchy, irritable now. You\nI be   genial,   pleasant.   And 'don't\nargue 1\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nShortness in manner, - trying to\nhandle too much at a time, forgetting others' wishes as you ride\nthrough with your own are likely\nfaults now. Keep sn, ling, and be\ncooperative.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014You will do all right by yourself if you follow your best instincts and use your\" versatile talents to their utmost. Your Moon in\nfine position.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leol-\nThe stars indicate that certain\nactivities have a better outlook\nthan others. Be alert, ready to\ntake advantage of good opportunities. Achievement may entail more\n.etudy, quicker action, but the re-\ncults will be worthwhile.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 With your fnnate courage, keen sense of right and wrong\n, , apd natural perception, you should\n,. '.lm& 'the.' going   smooth.   Some\nI \/'checking may be.in crte. Don't\n-: 'take Anything'for granted-.'''.\/,\n, \u25a0'  SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\nijJS (Libra) \u2014 A fair day, but \/it's\n,',. i'no time for a too forceful attitude.\ni Av, djplopiatic, give-and-take manner will | carry you farther. Be\\vare\nof schemers;  sidestep, those who\nare scattefb.ra3ned.  , ,    :   'I,1\nOCTOBER' 24 tO:NdVEMBER 22:\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Yb'U energetic,! lively,\nfolks should take!periods Mguietf\nTf i^or\nLook in th^-sehtid,\nbirthday pom'es.anjj find ,wha. your\noutlook (_)according i&%he stars',,\ning resl, time out for thought in\norder to collect ideas, make summary of possibilities. Intelligent\neffort will bring good results.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Happy and\nbenefic configurations in your chart\ntoday. Show appreciation to those\naround you for your good fortune;\nhave good cheer and others will\nrejoice with you.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 For best results try\nto- promote -harmony* among :as-\nsocites. Sympathetic understanding , is. more rewarding . than a\ndesire to gain at the expense oi\nmisfortune of others.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 You are asked to be\nmore concerned about neighbors,\nfriends. When everyone is happy,\nlife is far more pleasant. Do your\nshare NOV\/!.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Auspicious influences\nfor things that really \"belong.\"\nAnd for those things that don't,\ndon't YOU give a care. Be thoughtful but not timid; enthusiastic, not\nanxious:\nYOU BORN TODAY are governed by Libra, the Sign of balance.\nYou have good judgment, know\npeople's needs, sympathize with\nthe underprivileged, and take,pride\nin breeding and forebears. When\nyou do a thing, you do it with\nvigor, determination; sometimes\nare too determined, stubborn. You\nare just and expect others to respect rights as you do. You thrive\non peace, i,are unhappy in inharmonious surroundings; are fond'oi\npleasures, so make it a rule to save\nregularly, and not spend too freely.\nYou make able salesmen, judges,\nlawyers, actors, inventors. Birthdate of: George W. Cable, American author.\nblack horses. The life guards and\nthe Blues alternate duty tours at\nWhitehall.\nMeanwhile, at the Queen's London home, the cry goes up that\nthey're changing the guard at Buckingham palace.\" Here the drums\nroll and the trumpets blare as the\nranks of Guards march from the\npalace courtyard. Ossacionally, the\nsame routine takes place at nearby\nSt. James' place instead of Buckingham palace.\nThe sentry on duty\u2014one of the\nmost photographed of all tourist\nsights\u2014stands with a starched\nspine, colorful in a scarlet tunic\nand a 20-inch-high bearskin hat\nthat dates back to the defeat of\nNapoleon at Waterloo.\nThe most spectacular array Of\nthe Guards\u2014ceremonies that rank\namong the most impressive in the\nannals of military pomp and circumstance\u2014is on display when\nthey escort Queen Elizabeth on\nstate occasions, such as the opening of Parliament, and the majestic trooping of the colors at Horse\nGuards's parade on the queen's\nofficial birthday early in June.\nThe Household Cavalry which\nmaintains in London the only two\nhorse squadrons left in the British\nArmy, goes back to the days of\nCharles II, at the Palace of Whitehall. All that remains of the palace\nis Inigo Jones' banqueting hall. It\nwas outside that spot where King\nCharles I was beheaded in 1649 on\na scaffold,    .    '.   . ,-j\nCharles II. then in exile In\nFrance in 1659, formed his Cavalier followers into his own body-\ngfiSrd, forerunner of the Life\nGuards. Parts of Cromwell's New\nModel Army strengthened, the original Life Guards, formed mostly\nfrom' veterans of the New Model\nArmy.\nDating also way back to \"King\nCharles'.Golden Days\" Is the Brigade of Foot Guards. Five regi\nments that make it up are the\nColdstream (three battalions), the\nScots (two battalions), the Irisi\n(one battalion, and the Welsh (one\nbattalion) Guards.    .\nIn war and in peace, the Guards\nare first in the hearts of their\nown countrymen.\nwuuim is,,-auvuiuiiiK ,iu , ic aim a\nMARCH. 21 to,,. P.RlL'M (Aries\n\u2014 The Mod_ Mar's and Jupiter in\nauspicious positions. This is an\nunusual combination; day promises\nmore interesting situations than\nusual. Think; do some creative\nwork.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nThere's plenty if opportunity here,\nto bestir yourself to achieve noteworthy goals. Aa excellent day for\nthinking and deriving constructive\npitas therefrom.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nProductive action, progressive\n*rowth indicated. Gather all the\nknowledge possible and apply it as\nneeded. Writing, advertising, mental work generally favored.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancerl-\nPoint energies to matters that\ndemand early attention. Be alert\n6 money matters, dealing with\nstrangers, the tempting \"bargain.\"\nIntelligent action and aggressiveness needed.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nBe alert to ever-present opportunity. Take things in stride and dovetail efforts to meet current demands. Industry, trade, finances,\nresearch especially favored.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 A fine outlook. Be alert\nto valuable contacts, advantageous\nlituations. Make use Of your fine\nIntelligence, ingenuity, imagination and intuition. Both business\nand personal matters favored.\nSEPTEMBER 24' to OCTOBER\n13 (Libra) \u2014 Aspects indicate reward for sincere effort, well-\nplanned action. Sound investments,\nbusiness and real estate deals\nunder beneficent influences. Be\nastute in allocation of energies,\ni   -       ft\nly, Oct. 13,1958\nft\\which your,,,,OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 You should have great\nincentive now. Be forceful, but\nnot too aggressive; careful but not\nover-cautious. Medicine and mecli\nanics under excellent influences.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagitatrius) \u2014 Jupiter excellently situated. Gains possible in\nmany lines. Finances, business interests, especially favored. But\nthink and plan before you act.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Take care of the\nimportant tasks and duties early\nand the \"extras\" will come a lot\neasier, mistakes be less likely\nCurb a possible tendency toward\nimpulsiveness.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Pleasant events may\noccur unexpectedly. Contentment\nand satisfaction are the result of\ncontinued, competent effort. Master any tendency lo lose hope, or\nfear your ability to achieve.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Caution suggested in\nwater sports, handling liquids,\nchemicals, oils. Dealing in foods,\nwearing apparel favored. Don't\nact without investigating, ascer\nlaining facts; alter schedule if\nnecessary.\nYOU BORN TODAY are'innately\npeace-loving, yet in ..'-fig. ting, for\nprinciples, can present a\" strong,\ndecisive front. You are courteous,\nhappy, sociable, with a flair for\nmaking friends. You have a refined nature that appreciates the\nbetter things, and you are always\nstriving for them, if living up to\nyour best. You like power, can\nwield it ably, too; may dislike\nmenial, chores, but will work hard,\nand for good causes; are sensitive\nto surroundings.\nSTAMP CORNER\nBy JAMES  MONTAONtS\nThe start Of the school term Will\nbring many new school stamp\nclubs into being or revival and, will\npresent new opportunities for\nschool teachers to use postage\nstamps for classroom purposes,\nThe large number-of topical subjects depicted on postage stamps\nin recent years makes postage\nstamps an attractive medium for a\nvariety of school subjects.\nStamp clubs in schools can be\nschool-wide or just in one class,\nwith meetings held in recess or After school hours, or even In tome\ncases during a social studies or\nhistory period. Pupils can discuss\nsome historical or natural resources subject as depicted on postage stamps. Canada's recent\nstamps to early explorers, statesmen and historical events gives\nspecial emphasis to compositions\nabout stamps on such topics.\nStamp clubs can also be used for\npromoting the hobby, interesting\nnew collectors, trading stamps on\na catalogue basis, bringing in adult\ncollectors to talk on various phases\nof philately. Such clubs will alio\nserve to inculcate youngsters with\nprocedures for running a meeting\nand public speaking.\nThe teacher who wants to use\npostage stamps as a means to\nteaching will find a variety of sub-\njetcs to chose from. Topical stamp\ncollecting today is popular On marty\nsubjects, such as music, architecture, zoology, aviation, painter's,\nagricultural products am present\nand past rulers and statesmen.\nFor the subject of history, as an\nexample, there are Canadian\nstamps covering most of the major\npoints in Canada's history. For a\nquick look at South America's history there are stamps from most\nof the republics depicting battles in\ntheir wars of independence, stamps\nof the Indians who live there,\nstamps depicting such liberators as\nBolivar artd San Martin, stamps to\nfairly current historical figures, to\npresidents and military heroes.\nWithin the British Common\nwealth stamps ean portray *vehta\nin history over the past few hundred years. Sierra Leone has\nstamps to the fight against slavery,\nthe West Indian colonies in recent\nyears have had stamps to their new\nuniversity and this year to their\nfederation, and stamps of Rhodesia tell of explorations by Rhodes\nLivingstone.\nThe teacher who wants to teach\nthe youngsters the agricultural And\nindustrial products of any group of\ncountries, can find stamps of great\nuse, for many countries today advertise their farm products, dairy\nproducts and industrial development on stamps. Similarly a huge\nstamp zoo can bt built from postage stamps Of. the world showing\nOTTAWA (CP) - Works Minister Green announced Friday the\nawarding of a $1,354,023 contract\nfor construction of a science ser\nvice laboratory on the University\nof British Columbia campus.\nThe unit will comprise a three-\nstorey laboratory and a two-storey\nadministrative wing linked by an\nentrance lobby. Completion data is\nJune, 1960.\nThe contract haa bten Awarded\nto E. H. ShocklOy and Sorts, Ltd.\nVancouver.\nThe new building is to be erected\nunder an arrangement whereby a\nuniversity leases land to the federal government for Dominion Research Laboratories in which\ngraduate students art employed.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Revealed       21. Four\n3. Hewing (Rom.)\ntools             22. Mature\n4. Ore deposit    23. Ad.\n5. Place justs\n6. Liquor 24. Pi\nbottles\n7. Shun\n8. Earth\n9. Summit\n10. Mix\n16. Fuel\n17. Subtle\nemanation\n'ausa\n27. Exist\"\nSO. Particle\nof\nadd!,\ntion\n31. Greek       TciterJ ir'\u25a0 Amw   '\nletter 23, Game of\n33, Hastened chance\n18. Yeoman of    84. Game on       87. Untie\nthe royal horse' so. Bcott\/ah car\nguard back 40. Fetieii\n20. Guided 31. Destruction       (var.)\nACROSS\n\"i.u.s.\npresident\n6. Baby's word\nfor fathers\n11. Elf Ilka\ncreature\n12. Oust\n13. Occurrence\n14. Conns\n(hot.)\n15. Employ\n16. Overshoe\n17. Mulberry\n18. Musical\ngroup\n19. Most\nhomely\n22. Swiss\nriver\n25. Female\nsandpiper\n86. Tidal flood\n28. Sum up\n29. Tillers of\nthesoU\n$1. Lairs\n82. Close to\n83. Scatter\n86. Merriment\n88. Young\nturkey\n89. Argentine\ndance\n4L Choice\ngroup\n12. Egyptlen\nunit\nof capacity\n13. Germanic\ngod of\nthunder\n(4. European\nelk\nDOWN\n1. Simian\nDAILY CRYPTO QUOTE \u2014 Hefts'* how to work ftl\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this samplo A ll\nused for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,\nepostrophles, the length and formation of the wOrds art al'\nhints.  Each day the code letters are different\n\/ A Cryptogram Quotation  ' .->.\n\"FCX    SJV    NK.GX    HKX    YN*(SSVX    F\nHFGXVG       VFRSTFGX       00       V.VC\u2014\ntVCVROR, , f,\nYesterday's Cryptonu ofe! IT IS A VERY HARD UfrDE *\u2022\nTAKING TO S\/ilEK TO PLEASE UVBRYBODY-SX*. B,\nIS) 1903, Kins Fciturei. Syndicate, Inc.)\n1\n1\nV\nr-\nr-\n1\nto\n7\n\u00ab-\nf\"\nTT\nII\nl\n12.\n13\n%\n14\n%\nIS\n%\n16\nn\nfl\n%\nia\n%\nt\n|\n11\nM\nLl\n%\nii\n33\n34\nJ?\"\nl\nit.\n\u00bb7\n26\n%\n19\n3\u00b0\nfl\nt\n^1\ni\n%\niV\n33\nSt,\n35\n^<\n\u25a05m\n37\nsi\nl\nw\nmV\n3T-\nl\nli*\n43\n|\nM\nwn\nNumerous subjects feature this week's new stamps arriving\n....    ..,.,,..,      . j. ..      .   .    , ,,lf|an4a-Ta-\ncommeindratlvc for the discovery of Lake\n,..      j 100 years alto, from Ceylon a new val\nship, and (lower, left to right) from Italy for the 90th anniversary\nof tne death ot painter Giovanni Fatter), from Russia for the\nInternational Geophysical Year showing satellite tracking radio\nantenna, from Haiti for a world championship track event, and\nfrom Tunisia for agricultural workers.\nin Canada, including (tip, left to right) from Kenya-Uaandn-'l\nftanylka a commemorative for the discovery of Lakes Victoria ana\nTanganyika 100 years ago, (rem Ceylon a new value showing a\nnative falling boat, front Bulgaria a stamp for a chess champion-\nanimals, birds and reptiles of alt\nkinds. Trees, flowers, insects, butterflies and even mushrooms have\nbean depicted on stamps in recent\nyears, leading to a very variegated\ncollection indeed.\nThere are many aids in the form\nof books artd magazines on such\ntopical subjects for the teacher who\nwants to use postage stamps as a\nclassroom aid.\nNew issues . . . Australia il to\nhave a stamp on Sept. 16 for the\n76th anniversary of mining at Broken Hill. . . Luxembourg is to\nhave a stamp for the wine industry\nand for a theatre . . . Frartce,\nLuxembourg, Belgium, Netherlands, Italy and West Germany are\nto issue stamps for United Europe\non Sept. 13 . . . Japan Is issuing\nstamps to a national park . . . Ar-\nCanada Issued this Stamp on\nOCt. f to mark 200 years slftce\nthe first assembly was elected\nIn N6va ScOtla.\nAustralia Issues this stamp for\n75 years of mining at Broken\nHill on Sept. 10.\ngentlna Is to have stamps for a century Of its postage stamps . . .\nDenmark will issue a stamp to the\ncentenary of its veterinary and agricultural college . . . Switzerland\non Sept. 22 issues two sets of\nstamps for United Nations agencies\nwith headquarters In Switzerland,\ntha international Bureau of Education and the International Telecommunication Union.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1958\u20147\nTry and Stop Me\nBy BENNETT CERF\nA well-t0-d6 waiter from an expensive restaurant took his young\nson to the zoo one Sunday and the\ntwo watched he lions being fed.\nThe keeper threw a huge slab of\nmeat into the oage and went his\nway.-\n\"That wasn't very polite,\" criticized the son. \"Why doesn't he\nserve nicely, the way you do to\nyour customers?\"\n\"Confidently,\" whispered the\nfather, \"lions are bum tippers.\"\n*  f  \u2022\nSign in an Edinburgh cafe: \"In\ncase of attack by intercontinental\nmissiles, remain calm pay your\nbll land then flee for-shelter.\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nKHOTV - Channel 6\nSATURDAY\nSATURDAY\n12:15\u2014Gootl Morning\n8:45 I. E. Farm Summary\n12:30\u2014Race Of the Week *\n9:00 Ruff &. Reddy \u2022\n1:00\u2014Western Roundup\n9:30 Fury *\n4:oo-C6ptain KartgafOO\n10:00 Sports Page *\n4:30-Lone Ranger\n10:15 NCAA Football (\u00ab) \u2022\n(Ohio State vs, Illinois)\nSioo-Firmer Alfalfa\nB:30\u2014Mighty Mouse\n1:00 Football Scoreboard *\n6:00-Artni\u00ab Oakley\n1:16 Pacific Coast Hi Lites\n*:S0\u2014Starlight Stairway\n1:45 Forty Niners Football\n7;00-Michaels in Africa\n2:15 Western Theatre\n7:30-W*nted, D64fl ot Alive *\n\u00bb:0(M3a.   Storm \u2022 t\n4:60 True Story *\n4:36 Detective Diary \u2666\n\u00ab;to-Have Gun-Will travel *\n5:00 Wild Bill Elliott\nStbO^Gurtsmoke *\nS:3()\u2014Perry Mason\n10:80\u2014Late Show\n6:60 CaScy Jones\n6:80 Buckskip *\n7:60 Deflth Valley Day?\n7:80 People Are Funny *\n8:60 Perry Como (c) \u2022\n9:00 Steve Canyon *\n6:80 Cimarron City *\nl6;80 BrainS artd Brawn *\nSUNDAY\nS:3O-G0od Morning\nA:45\u2014Football Prtvlew \u2022\nll):00~Pro Football t\n1:06-WSC FOotball\n11:66 Late MOvie \"Meet th* GiflS\"\n2:0o-Oral Roberts\n2:*0\u2014ThU Is Th\u00bb Life\nS:0O-Early ShOw\n4:30\u2014Spng Shop\n5:00-SoortS Club *\nSUNDAY\n1:30 Christopher Series\n2:00 Mission at Mid Century\n2:30 How Christian Science Heals\n5:30\u2014News Commentary\n3:00 Boots .   Saddle\n6:Oo-Small World *\n*;30\u201420th Centufy \u2022\n7:00-Ldssi* *\n7:30-8acheior Father *\n5:30 Gray Ghost\n4:00 Official Detective\n4:30 Silent Service\n5:00 Ca'thollp Hour *\n8:00\u2014Ed Sullivan *\n5:30 Youth Wants to Know \u2022\n9:00-GE Theatre *\n6:60 Meet the Pfess *\n6:30 Stoiss Family Robinson *\n9:30\u2014Alfr6d Hitchcock *\n10:0o-$64.OO0 Question *\n7:80 Northwest Passage *\n10:30-What's My Line? *\n8:00 Steve Allen (c) *\n11:00\u2014Errtl Flynn Theatre\n9:00 Chevy Show, (c) *\n10:6o Loretta Young--*\n10:30 Late Movie XCenten'nial\nSummer\"    \u00ab\u2022-i..\nMONDAY\nMONDAY\n8; W'GOfd <%rnlng\n9:0o For LpV'e A Mqniy *\n-9:81) Pthy YourvHuneh \u2022\nf0:0o Godfrey Mme *\n8:00 Continental Classroom\n8:30 Q-Toons\n10:30 Top, Dollar, \u2022\n11:00 Love of tite *\nItiM Search, for Tomorrow *\n9:06 Dough Re Mi *\n9:30 Treasure Hunt \u2022\nMils Mini Light \u2666\nIVM Scie, oi' Theatre\n10:00 Price Is Right *\n10:30 Concentration *\n12:30 As ftnkWOrld Turns *\n11:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n1:00 Jirpmy Dean Show \u2022\n11:30 It Could Be You *\n1:30 Houseparty \u2022\n12:00 Truth or Consequences \u2022\n2:0O,Bi'g\\<'Pay6ff *\n12:30 Haggis Baggis *\n2:30 Verdict Is YOurS \u2022\n1:00 Tbday Is Ours *\n3:00 Brighter Day \u2022\n1:36 From These ROots *\n3:15 Secret Storm \u2666\n2:00 Queen for a Day \u2022\n3:30 Edge of Night \u2022\n2:30 County Fair *\n4:00 Matihee Theatre\n3:00 Matinee on Six: \"Untamed\n4:30 Monster Matinee\n4:45 Our Gang\n6:00 News\n5:06 Five O'Clock MOvie:\n6:10 Greater Spokane\n\"Port of Hell\"\n6:30 Weatherwise; Front Page\n6:15 Doug Edwards *\n8:30 Nam' That Tune \u2022\n6:46 NBC News *\n7:00 The Tekan *\n7:66 ftescue Eight\n7:30 Father Knows Best *\n7:36, Whirlyblrds\n8:00 Restless Gun *\n8:00 Danny Thomas *\n8:80 Ann Southern *\n8:30 Tails of Well* thtgo *\n9:00 Dssl-Lu PUyhoUS* \u00bb\n10:00 Capt. David Grief\n9:00 Pete Gunn *\n9:30 Hallmark of Fam\u00ab:\n10:30 Ni\u00abht Edition\n\"Johnny Belinda\"\n10:35 Post Time\n11:00 NewS\n10:40 The Late Show\n11:05 Late Movie:\n\"Sailor's Holiday\"\nKREM TV -\n- Channel 2\nSATURDAY\nSUNDAY\n2:00 Western Theatre\n1:00 Faith for Today\n3:00 Play of the Week\n3:30 Billv Graham\n1:30 American Rei. Town Hall\n2:00 American Leg*rtd\n5:30 Cap'n Cv'S Cartoons\n2:30 Telecourse\n5:00 Jubilee USA\n4:30 Bowling Stars *\n6:00 Championship Bowling\n5:00 Flash Gordon\n7:00 Paris Precinct\n5:86 Lone Rangers *\n7:30 Dick Clark *\n8:00 Star Performance\n6:60 Tale* of Texas Rangers\n6:30 SwOrd of Freedom\n8:30 Dial 999\n7:00 You Asked for It \u2022\n9:00 Lawrence WelkS *\n7:30 Maverick *\n10:00 Sammy Kaye *.\n8:36 Lawman *\n10:30 HOw to Marry a Millionaire\n11:M Winners Ciffle\nii:M Channel 2 Theatre\n9:66 Man Without a Gun *\n4:56 Wlnrttfs CirOl*\n6:35 Channel 2 Theatre.\nMON\nDAY\n6:66 Woody W\u00bb0dp*6ker\n6:86 Newsbeat\n9:56 Florian tabhth\n10:00 Parts Ffeeirtct\n7:06 U Of W vs. Stanford\n10:30 Nightbeat\n8:00 Command P*rf0rm4flce\n10:45 John Daly\n8:30 Bold Journey *\n11:00 Channel 2 Theatre\n9:00 Voice Of Firestone \u2022\n(Programs subject to Chang\n\u2022 by stations without notice.)\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PRO'  1AMS\n1890 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nSATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1958\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n2:00\u2014News\n7:00-Wake Up Time\n2:65\u2014Saturday Session\n2:30\u2014Sports College\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30-Nftws\n2:45\u2014Saturday Session\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n3:00\u2014News\n8:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Saturday Session\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:00\u2014News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n4:05\u2014Saturday Session\n8:30\u2014All Weather\n4:20\u2014News\n8:40\u2014News\n4:S0-NHL Hockey\n9:00\u2014News\n6:30\u2014News\n9:15-Story Parade\n6:35-N.Y. Philharmonic\n9:30-SPCA Talk\n8:00\u2014By Special Arrangement\n9:45\u2014Here's Health\n8:30-Now I Ask You\n10:00\u2014News\n9:00\u2014Marine Investigator\n10:05\u2014Saturday Session\n9:30\u2014Vintage Goons\n11:00\u2014News\n10:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Saturday Session\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014This Week\n12:25-News\n10:30\u2014Footloose\n12:30\u2014Saturday Session\n11:00\u2014News\n1:00\u2014News\nU:05-Sign Off\n1:05\u2014Saturday Session\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1958\n8I55-S1J,   On\n4:55\u2014News\n9:00\u2014News\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n8:15\u2014British Israel\n5:30-Church News\n9:80\u2014Harmony Harbor\n5:35\u2014Mantovani\n10:00\u2014News\n5:45-Bethel Fireside Hour\n10:16\u2014UN on the Record\n6:00\u2014News\n12:60\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Weekend Preview\n12:08-Fix It, Make It\n6:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n6:30\u2014Festival in Sound\n12:25\u2014News\n7:00\u201412 Million Sockeye\u2014\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\nBy Ted Oliver\n1:00\u2014Carl Tapscott\n7:30\u2014CBC Stage\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n8:30\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n2:00\u2014News\n9:00\u2014BBC Symphony Orchestra\n2:05\u2014Something for Sunday\u2014\n10:00\u2014News\n\"Wizard of Oz\"\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n3:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Absence Abroad\n3:05\u2014\"Rose Marie\"\n10:30-Sunday Chorale\n3:30-\"Merry Widow\"\nll:0O-News\n4:00\u2014News\nU:05-Sign Off\n4:05-\"My Fair Lady\"\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1958\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n12:31\u2014Farm Broadcast\n6:00\u2014News\n12:54-CKLN Reports\n6:05-Wake Up Time\n1:00-News\n6:30\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Matinee\n6:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n7:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n3:40\u2014B.p. Road Report\n7:30\u2014N*WS\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boatei\n7:3S-Wake Up Time\n5:00\u2014Npws\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05-iRolling Home Show\n8:10\u2014Spprts N*ws>;     -     -i:\n5:30-4)ttawa Report\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show\n8:20\u2014Varieties\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n8:30\u2014AH Weathers\n5:50\u2014Rolling Home Show\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n6:00\u2014News\n8:40\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotion\n6:15\u2014Parliament Hill\n9:00\u2014News\n6:30-01d Favorites\n9:10\u2014Musicale\n7:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Story Parade .\n7:30\u2014Hoedown\n9:30\u2014Country Caravan\n8:00\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n10:05\u2014Time Out\n9:00\u2014Italia Prize Concert   .\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:00\u2014News\n10:45\u2014Music Makers\n10:16\u2014Sports and Weather\n11:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\nU:05-Party Line\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n12:0O-Polka Party\nll:0O-News\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n11:05\u2014Sign Off\n12:25-News\n. \u201e \u00ab\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1958\n7:06\u2014Random Hour\n2:45\u2014In Reply\n9:60\u2014Chamber Music\n3:00\u2014Autumn Mood\n9: So\u2014Harmony Harbour\n3:30\u2014Postmark U.K. ,\n10:00-B.C. Gardens, Weather\n4:00\u2014Edinburgh Festival\n10:15\u2014UN on the Record\n5:00\u2014Serenade\n10:36\u2014In His Service\n5:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\nll:00-Folk Songs\n6:00\u2014News\n11:15\u2014Just Mary\n6:10\u2014Weekend Review\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n6:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n12:00-CBC News\n6:30\u2014Festival in Sound\n12:03\u2014Voices in Harmony\n7:00\u201412 Million Sockeye\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n7:30\u2014CBC Stage\n12:57\u2014Weather Report\n8:30\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n1:00-Carl Tapscott\n10:00\u2014News\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n10:15\u2014Absence Abroad\n2:00\u2014Music Diary\n10:30\u2014Sunday Chorale'\n2:30\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Winnipeg Symphony Orch.\n2:35\u2014Ask the Weather Man\n12:00\u2014News and Weather\n2:42\u2014Weather Forecast\nMONDAY, OCT\nOBER 13, 1958\n6:00\u2014Sharp at Six\n4:45\u2014B.C. Fishermen's Broadcast\n9:00-BBC News\n5:00\u2014Bands on Parade\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n5:30-CBC News\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n5:40\u2014On the Scene\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n5:45\u2014Sports Desk\n10:45\u2014Woman in My HOuse\n5:55\u2014Byline\n11:00\u2014One Man's Family\n6:00\u2014Music 201\nll:15-Now I Ask You\n6:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n11:45\u2014Kindergarten of the Air    \u25a0\n6:40\u2014Rawhide\n12:00\u2014Emerson's Digest\n6:55\u2014Preface\n12:15\u2014CBC Nfcws\n7:00\u2014News\n12:25\u2014CBC Showcase\n7:30-Recital\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n8:00\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n1:00\u2014B.C. Roundup\n9:00\u2014Italia Prize Concert\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n10:00\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n3:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n11:00\u2014Pattern of Music\n4:00\u2014Concert From Halifax\nll:57-News\n4:30\u2014Voyage Into Space\nTUESDAY, OCT\nOBER 14. 1958\n6:00\u2014Sharp at Six\n4:45\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n9:00-BBC News'\n5:00\u2014Through the Years\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n5:30-CBC News\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n5:40\u2014Neighborly News\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n5:45\u2014Sports Defek,\n10:45\u2014Woman in My House\n5:55\u2014Byline         '  i\n11:00\u2014One Man's Family\n6:00-The Stars Oblige\n11:15\u2014Footloose\n6:30\u2014Roving Reporter\nll:45-Kindergaften of the Air\n6:4(^-Rawhide\n12:00\u2014Nursery School\ne^S-Preface\n12:15-4News\n7:00\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n7:30\u2014The Harrison Lancers\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n8:00\u2014Drama in Sound\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n8:30\u2014Science Review\n\u20221:00\u2014B.C. Roundup\n9:00\u2014Jazz Workshop\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n10:00\u2014News\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee   :\n-iO: 15\u2014Critics At Large\n5:30-Directed by Dirk\n10:30\u2014University of the Air\n4:00\u2014Premiere on the Air    \u25a0'\u25a0'.\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n4:30\u2014Voyage Into Space\nll:57-News\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. IT, 1958\nHome Workshop\nThe ability to relax is becoming\n.one of the nation's most costly\nproblems. Hard-driving business-\nfejnen and housewives propel themselves into nervous wrecks or as\nHome Cooking\nOut of Favor\nHONG KONG (AP) - Home\ncooking is on the way out in Red\nChina in favor of mess hall feeding.\nChinese press reports give this\npicture:\n\"All the people eat together in\nthe mess halls and whole families\nand all people lead a collective\nlife. Women can be freed from\nhousehold labor connected with\ncooking and can devote all their\nlabor power to production, The\nproduction enthusiasm of each per\nson can be brought in play, and\nmuch grain can be saved all over\nthe country.\"\nThe mess hall system is a part\nof Red China's plan to push all the\nmasses into communes where\neverybody sleeps in dormitories\nand no one is allowed private possessions.\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\nPhone 1630 Nights 544-R\n410   Kootenay  St.\nNelson, B.C.\nfast trip to the cemetery because\nthey won't take the time to relax.\nFor a man, pipe smoking seems\nto provide some measure of satisfaction. When he lights a pipe its\ncustomary to move slower,\nWhere there are pipes, there\nmust be a rack, and this rack\nbrings up another form of relaxation \u2014 working with your hands.\nA full size pattern simplifies\nbuilding this rack out of scrap\npieces of wood.\nWhile the head looks like a single\npiece of carved wood, it's actually\ncut from three pieces and glued\ntogether.\nThe other pieces are also cut\nthe size of pattern, when assembled\nexactly as step by step directions\nsuggest. Ears and nose band can\nbe made from scraps of leather.\nSend 40c in coin or money order\n(no stamps, please) for Pipe Rack\nPattern No. 49. Send additional 55c\nfor 64-page catalog illustration\nover 300 other Build It Yourself\nprojects. Pattern Department,\nNDN, Quinn Lumber and Builders\nSupply Co. Ltd., 280 Maitland\nStreet, London, Ont.\nWater Hyacinth\nUnpopular Weed\nKAMPALA, Uganda (AP) -\nUganda is in a state of siege,\nhemmed in on three sides\u2014by a\nweed.\nIt is a pretty little blue flower\n\u2014the water hyacinth, the bane of\nmany countries.\nIn tropical regions it spreads\nwith phenomenal speed, choking\nwaterways and destroying fishing\ngrounds.\nNow the weed has invaded the\nNile and is growing over 80 miles\nof river between Khartoum and\nJuba, just north of the Uganda\nborder.\nNearly one-fifth of Uganda's\narea is water. Fishing is one of\nher most important industries. A\nwater hyacinth invasion would be\nan economic disaster.\nThe government is circulating\nposters and leaflets asking everyone to look out for the week gndi\nreport any specimen they find\/\nOnce it has established a firm\nhold it is almost impossible tot\neradicate. l\nFor Service\nCall...\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo. Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing, and Heating Serviee\n^yakxTjjtjyzA.\nEXPERT  PACKING\nMODERN STORAGE\n*5ao*ized service o\u00bbwet yov a ebon,\n- tale mow. And every detail is Pre-Ptanned\n\u00bbo save yov wot. worry. Mo extra cos*. Om\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n719 laker St.\nSI\nrWHaWj.  w. C\n\"w  \"^~^piii\nserving united sta\nCanada, Alaska;\nhawaii & puerto\nSqueeze Canada Out\nOf Chess Olympics.\nMUNICH, Germany (CP)-Can-\nada was just squeezed out of the\nfinals of the chess Olympics here\nFriday.\nThe Canadian team finished the\nnine - round elimination tournament with 19 points, one point\nshort of a placing. Finalists in the\ntournament section Canada\nplayed in were Czechoslovakia, 25\npoints; Yugoslavia 24, Switzerland, 20. Canada was fourth.\nIn the final round against Switzerland, Ross Siemms of Toronto\nwon his match, while Paul Val-\ntonis, Hamilton, Lionel Joyner,\nMontreal and Gezs Fuster, Toronto, had draws.\nCanada now enters a consolation round called the first classification group. Other'competitors\nwill be The Netherlands, Denmark, France, Finland, Iceland,\nIsrael, Hungary, Poland, Colombia, Sweden and Belgium.\nIsrael Renews\nPipeline Oiler\nJERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel has renewed her offer to the\nWest to lay a pipeline across the\nNegev Desert to carry east-Of-\nSuez oil to Western Europe.\nThe offer, made at the height\nof the current crisis in Ihe Middle East, is supported by arguments that such a conduit could\nfree Europe from dependence on\nEgypt's President Nasser who\ncan now close at will both the\nSuez Canal and the overland od\npipelines passing through the\nUnited Arab Republic.\nAccording to diplomatic sources\nhere, Israel has sought United\nStates backing for the project.\nLast year French investors, prepared to finance the pipeline,\nwere said to have been deterred\nby frowns from American oil interests.\nA \"green light\" from Washington should be sufficient, it. is\nthought here, to encourage\nFrench, Italian and Belgian financiers to set up a consortium,\neven without direct American investment.\n(60,000,000 INVESTMENT'-\nIsraeli experts say that the projected 190-mile 32-inch pipeline,\nwith an annual through-put capacity of 25,000,000 tons would require an investment of about $60,-\n000,000. They estimate it would\ntake six months to complete.\nExperience gained in Israel in\nlaying a small-size pipeline from\nElah, at the head of the Gulf of\nAqaba, to the British-owned refineries at Haifa has demonstrated that Israel has the skills\nfor such a project.\nThe main section of this pipeline, from Elath to Beersheba, is\n140 miles long and eight inches\nin diameter. It was built in four\nmonths and put into operation in\nApril of last year. The second\nsection from Beersheba to Ash-\ndod, on the Mediterranean coast,\nis 16 inches in diameter and was\ncompleted later in 1957.\nIn July of this year, Israel\ncompleted the 90-mile final section of this pipeline, from Ash-\ndod to Haifa.\n\"The \"international\" pipeline\nproject was first suggested by\nIsrael as early as 1950. Although\nnolitical considerations are an\nimportant incentive for carrying\nout the project at the present\ntime, Israeli experts agree the\nNegev pipeline is necessary for\npurely economic reasons. They\nsay that the steady increase of\nMiddle East oil production has\ncreated the need for an additional linfe-bfetween the Red Sea\nana tile' Mediterranean.\nThey claim the Suez'-fyhn. 1 has\napproached its maxipium Cc&pac1\nity for the passage of- fiiel arid\nfurther that the Negev pipeline\nWould make it possible to use\nsuper-lankers which cannot pass\nIJirough the canal.\nResidential Building\nBoosts Construction\nTORONTO \u2014 As the third quarter of 1958 ended, the Canadian\nconstruction industry could look\nback on nine months of bustling\nactivity in the residential and\nbusiness fields, but also would\nhave to reflect on a deflated industrial expansion program about\nhalf of that enjoyed in 1957 and on\nan engineering construction program which is just holding its own\nwhen compared to last year.\nFigures based on information\ncollected by Hugh C. MacLean\nBuilding Reports show that the\ncumulative total of construction\ncontract awards for the first nine\nmonths of 1958 is 20% ahead of\nthe total for this period in 1957.\nThis is mainly due to a 74% increase in volume in Residential\nconstruction \u2014 coupled with a\nhealthy 37% gain in the Business\ncategory. Engineering construction\nis about even \u2014 just 7% behind\nthe total for the period last year.\nBut Industrial construction mars\nthis otherwise rosy picture \u2014 this\ncategory is 50% down from the\n1957 total, a trend which developed\nearly this year and has carried\nthrough the month-by-month tally\nof contract awards.\nThe grand total of contract\nawards for all categories for the\nfirst nine months of this year is\n$2,639,248,900. This figure is up\n$443,187,000 over that for 1957, and\nis second only to the record set\nin 1956 for the period \u2014 $2,683,-\n874,200. Regionally, all areas are\nup except in the West where a\nslight drop of 5% is recorded.\nI The total of contract awards for\nthe month of September 1958, at\n$317,151,400, is $99,186,900 up over\nthe same month last year. All\ncategories except Industrial recorded gains for the month, when\ncompared to September 1957, and\nall regions also were ahead for\nthe period.\nComparative national figures for\nSeptember 1958 for each category\n(with 1957 figures in brackets) are\nas follows: Residential, $119,553,400\n($54,827,000), up $64,726,400; Business, $90,671,100 ($53,338,800), up\n$37,332,300; Industrial, $15,960,400\n($32,209,500), down $16,249,100; and\nEngineering, $90,966,500 ($71,589,-\n200), up $19,377,300.\nComparative national cumulative\nfigures for the first nine months of\n1958, for each category (with 1957\nfigures in brackets): Residential,\n$1,038,128,600 ($589,551,000), up\n$448,577,600; Business $815,271,000\n($593,106,900), up $222,164,100; Industrial, $174,084,400 ($350,637,090),\ndown $176,552,600; and Engineering, $611,764,900 ($662,767,000)\ndown $51,002,100.\nComparative regional cumulative\nfigures for the first nine months\nof 1958 (with 1957 figures in brackets): Maritimes, $232,141,500\n($122,035,600), up $110,105,900; Quebec, $712,216,100 ($488,439,800), up\n$223,776,300; Ontario, $1,120,011,000\n($986,541,700), up $143,469,300; and\nWestern, $564,880,300 ($599,044,800)\ndown $34,164,500.\nRed China Tries Modern\nSalesmanship In Singapore\nBy A. L. McINTYRE\nSINGAPORE (AP) - Red\nChina is using food, consumer\ngoods and high-pressure advertising in a psychological and economic offensive aimed at the 3,-\n500,000 Chinese in Singapore and\nMalaya.\nFresh water fish packed in ice\nsell at 20 cents each, women's\nhandkerchiefs at four cents\napiece, and Lanchow watermelon,\nthe fruit of Chinese emperors', at\n60 cents each.\nThese are at present the rage\nof Chinatown, where residents remit a total of $700,000 a month\nto relatives in China to keep them\nfrom privation.\nRefrigerator ships brought millions of dollars worth of fish,\nfruits, nuts and vegetables from\nChina ports last year. Chinese\nfactories sent out $3,500,000 worth\nof cotton textiles and $1,500,000\nin manufactured goods.\nEYE-CATCHING DISPLAYS\nThe textiles are making inroads\ninto British and Japanese markets here. The food sells at one-\nthird the price of the Malayan\nproduct.\nPeiping also seems determined\nto set up the biggest and best exhibits at trade fairs.\nThrough merchants dealing with Peiping's import and export corporation, China put up an\nimposing pavilion on a one-acre\nplot at the Merdeka Trade Fair\nheld in conjunction with Malaya's\nattainment of independence in\nAugust, 1957.\nThis summer Malayan police\nouestioned sponsors of a trade\nfair in Kuala Lumpur at which\nthe showpiece was a 40 - foot\nmodel of an ancient Chinese pagoda with exhibits of Red China\ngoods ranging from machinery to\ncanned goods.\nAfter consideration, authorities\nbanned the Chinese exhibit, explaining:\n''\u25a0Government considers that a\ntrad*'fair, in which emphasis has\nbeen'\/,'plje'id on display of goods\nfrom ai foreign Communist country is .\"Round to constitute propaganda, Jm' behalf of that foreign\ndhmsL\nRAN  NC,  WSB-IOSS      : I\nFLOOR AREA, loss SjtMf\nTO NflLPINC CtKTRt PLAN &WICS, VAM0UVE .fc\u00a3\nUr-.-t '\u25a0 : ::7, j ;i J V'\/'\"1\",\nA HOUSE THAT IS BOl^H economical and attractive it plan\nNo. 1085. Three bedrooms ina'line, each, with its own good sized\ncloset, compact bathroom, nicely planned, \"bar' type kitchen\nopening into a dining area, and finally a \"geni\" of a living room\n... ._ ,loor layout of this\neconomIcal-to-'bulld house. Downstairs there is a future activities\nroonl ttitli roughed-in fireplace. By use of some of the new\nmaterials available, you can make this house into a special one.\nWc have pladod a good sized back porch on this house ao that\nmother has Jots of room to turn,around when she hangs out the\nfamily wash-^pr by placing a gate across the end, there Is plenty\nof room for little Susie to \u00bb1 a* Ih the sunshine. Working drawings,\ndesigned for' NHA approval, are available from the Building\nCentre (B.C.) Ltd., 116 E. Broadway, Vancouver 10. Our free\nplan boob, \"Select Home Designs\" now available. Send 25c to\ncover cost of mailing and handling.\ncountry or an international and\nforeign political organization.\"\nMORE COMMUNIST ADS\nIndications are that China products will command a major share\ndf a trade exposition to be held\nby the Chinese Chamber of Commerce next March to coincide\nwith Singapore's emergence as a\nself-governing state.\nDuring the last few months a\nnew form of Chinese influence\nhas shown up in Chinese - language newspapers.\nIt takes the form of display advertisements for Chinese cotton\ntextiles, woollen goods, patent\nmedicines, rubber goods and\ntires, and hardware.\nThe ads tell the Chinese community that China has emerged\nas an industrial nation. And they\ninfluence some newspapers, in\nthe interests of revenue, to toe\nPeiping's line in both news presentation and editorial comment\nabout Red China and its policies.\nBoats Once\nSailed From\nMedicine Hat\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta. (CP)-\nThere isn't a commercial waterway within hundreds of miles of\nthis southeastern Alberta area today, but 50 .years ago it was a\ncommon sight when a customer\nasked for a steamship ticket to\nBow Island.\nFor $5, the passenger could\nride in luxury aboard the\nsteamer, the City of Medicine\nHat, 30 miles west along the\nSouth Saskatchewan River to\nBow Island, a tiny community\nnow reached by car in about half-\nand-hour.\n\"It took us 12 hours to go to\nBow Island,\" says ex - captain\nAlex McColeman, -\"but returning\nwith the current behind us. we\nused to make it in two hours.\"\nLARGE  CRAFT\nMr. McColeman, now 84, recalled recently in an interview\nthat the Medicine Hat was the\nlargest river boat ever constructed in the Medicine Hat\narea. It was built during the winter of 1906-07 and was owned by\nCapt H. H. Ross.\nThe ship cost slightly more\nthan $28,000, measured 86 feet in\nlength and 24 feet across its\nwidest point. It was a double-\ndecker with a main and cabin\ndeck, complete with seven staterooms and a parlor.\nMr. McColeman says it was\nbuilt like any other river boat,\npowered by steam engines and\npropelled by the stern paddle.\n\"The day of launching was\nJune 4, 1907,\" he recalls, \"and\nthat was quite a memorable day.\nThe mayor proclaimed a half\nholiday   in   honor   of   the  new\n\"REAL CHAMPAGNE\"\nThe boat was christened by the\nmayor's daughter, Isabelle Cousins, with a bottle of \"real champagne.\"\nThe owner, Captain Ross, piloted the boat for less than two\nmonths before leaving for Manitoba to look over other shipping\ninterests. When he left, he appointed his first mate, Mr. McColeman, as captain.\nThe craft was used mainly to\ntransport drilling equipment from\nMedicine Hat to Bow Island, but\noccasionally it carried passengers\nand excursions seemed the popular evening entertainment, Mr.\nMcColeman says.\nHowever, its service was shortlived. In November, 1907, it made\nits last trip, then was tied up for\nthe winter.\nIn the spring of 1908, Captain\nRoss decided to move it to Manitoba and sailed it down river to\nSaskatoon. There the boat struck\na submerged ferry cable, turned\nsideways, crashed into a bridge\npier, broke in half and sank.\nMr. McColeman left his trade\nas shipping man then, working in\nbrick and tile industries here and\nin Moose Jaw, Sask., until he retired to Medicine Hat in 1941. He\nhad earned his captain's papers\nearlier during 13 years on th\u00bb\nGreat Lakes.\nJ Jul VYlad&hn cUoitul\n*&\u2022   T~*\nArchitect Dennis Peters, of\nOakville, Ont, designed this four-\nbedroom bungalow which has\nmany interesting features to its\nunusual interior layout.\nPoints to note are the Bving-\ndining area which overlooks and\nopens on to the back garden;\nthe arrangement for eating in\nthe kitchen; the access from the\nback door to the bathroom as\nwell as the privacy gained by\nhaving no windows in the side\nwall of the house. Also of interest is the master bedroom which\nis separated from the other bedrooms by the entrance hall.\nThe total floor area is 1,508\nsquare feet and the exterior dimensions are J2 feet by 29 feet.\nWorking drawings for this\nhouse, known as Design 803, are\navailable from Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation\nit minimum cost.\nEx-Enemies Make\nGood Buddies\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CP) - Two\nmen who work side by side in a\nchemical factory near here, use\nthe same bus and eat their\nlunches together, have discovered\nanother common bond: They\ntried to kill each other 14 years\nago.\nThe coincidence came out in\nconversation between Fred Gray\nand Paul Klante, shift colleagues\nat the Canadian Industries Limited Millhaven plant, 14 miles\nwest of Kingston.\nThey have pieced together a detailed picture of the event which\nmight nave cost one of them his\nlife. Here is their story:\nOn Nov. 12, 1944, the Tirpitz,\nlast battleship of the German\nfleet, was holed up in Kaa Fjord,\nNorway, after a battering from\nRAF bombers.\nAWAITED ATTACK\nIn a gun turret was a young\nsailor from Silesia, Paul Klante.\nThat morning 29 RAF lan-\ncaster bombers left a Scottish\nairfield. Their task was to sink\nthe scourge to Allied shipping\nlanes.\nIn the gun turret of one of the\nLancaster's was Warrant Officer\nFred Gray.\n\"We were to arrive on the target at daybreak,\" recalled Fred.\n\"I was 'uneasy because of the'\nsmall amount of ammunition we\ncarried.\"\nOn the Tirpitz, said Paul, the\nattack was expected. Extra antiaircraft guns were set up in every available space. Roughly 200\nguns were in position.\nWhat feelings ran thrpugh their\nminds? i\"'\nBATTLE TO DEATH\nSaid Paul: \"I was always a bit\nnervous ... but after the first\nshot we concentrated on getting\nas many planes as possible. They\nwere there to kill us. We were\nthe target and we tried to get\nthem first.\"\nSaid Fred: \"At the time we felt\nbetter about sinking a ship full\nof men than sinking an empty\none. We lost many of our own\nmen, many of them good friends,\nand we always felt better after\nwe evened the score.\"\nThe Tirpitz was hit many times\nPaul said explosions were popping off all around him. Fred's\nplan didn't score.\nThe Tirpitz began to settle in\nthe shallow water.- Then, suddenly, there was a loud explosion and the crew was thrown\ninto the water.\nAbove, Fred Gray looked back\nand saw his mission had been\nsuccessful.\nSAVED BY BUOY\nBelow, Paul Klante was swimming through a flame - covered\nsea to an anti-submarine buoy.\nAround him men were drowning\nand being burned to death. He\ngrasped the buoy, and held on\nweakly.\nIn Britain next day there were\nbig celebrations. Of the 29 Lancaster on the mission only one\nfailed to return.\nIn Tromso Paul Klante was being treated for burns in a makeshift hospital.\nFred flew other missions. Paul\nserved a few months on the Russian front. Then the war. was\nover.\nBotli men married. Fred came\nto Canada first. Paul followed in\n1956  Both have two children.\nHow do they feel now about\nthat grey morning in 1944? Paul\nsummed it up for both of th\u00bbm\nwhen he said: \"I'm a pacifist\u2014\nto the fullest extent.\"\nElectronic Engineers Hear\nOf New Aircraft Devices\nTORONTO (CP) - Electronic\nnavigation of aircraft and the\nsearch in Canada for a radio\nastronomy site were described Friday at the Canadian convention\nof the Institute of Radio Engineers:\nMilitary aircraft equipped with\nnew electronic devices soon may\nrely entirely on automatic navigation to find targets and return\nto bases, a paper presented by\nF. J. K. Goulding, Toronto project\nengineer, indicated.\nHe said a new military tape\nreader would provide the memory\nfor an airplane's computer before\ntakeoff. Information fed into the\ncomputer would include data on\nwind velocity, weather conditions\nand other essentials.\nThis information, recorded on\na magnetic storage drum, would\nbe \"read\" by the computor's\n\"memory\" when needed and control the aircraft accordingly.\nTELL OF SEARCH\nC. F. Pattenson and N. W. Bro-\nten of the National Research\nCouncil's radio engineering division outlined an extensive\nsearch which resulted in location\nof sites for studies in radio astronomy.\nRequirements were: Freedom\nfrom radio noise, a level area of\nat least a square mile, latitude\nnot higher than 51 degrees north,\nfreedom from heavy prevailing\nwinds, heavy snowfall, extremes\nof temperature or saity atmosphere, easy, accessibility, reasonable' cost ,for purcbasy and im-\nprovetrient'i1 of uie; site\/ ! A .'\nThe survey, \/urfdeftaken\" jointly\nby the NRC and IWsJ bo. mi on\nObservatory, selected such a slle\nat White Lake near Penticton\nB.C.\nOWN LANGUAGE\nYiddish originated in the Rhine)\nland in  the  19th  century  frm\nmedieval German as spoken byl\nJews.\nBaker-Flink\nSNOW  PLOWS\nond\nSPREADERS\nATIONAL\n[ACHINERY\nfn Limited\nIV5\nGranville   Ussmi\nVancouver 1. B.C.\nPHONE\n2160\nPLUMBING\n\"   and\nHot  Water\nHEATING\nTOP QUALITY WORK\nALL WORK GUARANTEED\nPAT MAY\nPLUMBING\nPhone 2160 '\nT\n*\nSYMBOL M> SERVICE\nSTAR TRANSFER LTD.\nPhone 505 701 Front St.\n\u25a0lor,:.\". :\nGENERAL CARTAGE, AND STORAGE\nHOUSEHOLD GOODS\nMOVING - PACKl|^^fiR^TING\nNorth Amer^jy^il (.ines\n\"SERVING THE MOViNCJl'jffiffi. ^^IdiNTINENT\"\nLINK WITH SUDAN\nLONDON (CP) - Postmaster-\nGeneral Ernest Marples exchanged telegrams with Sayed Ma-\nmoun Hussein Sherif. communications minister of Sudan, opening\nthe first direct radio-telegraph\nlink between the two countries.\nSAVE\nTHAT\nwmfm\ni i h i .if\nLet Us Equip !    '\nYour Home With\nHEAT - SAVING...\nCOMFORT - PROVIDING\nStorm Windows\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nPhone 156\n101 Hall St.\nf.i\n.A:\n m, \u2014\t\naka.3\nMlinillllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIMIMIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIII\nSPORTS\nIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nWeekend May\nSettle Big\nFour Playoffs\nCivic Centre\nCommission\nSchedule\nOetober 13-19, 1953\n; ; ARENA\nMONDAY '\n8:00- 3:06\u2014Minor Hockey\n4:00- 6:00-Figure Skating Club\n6:80- 7:80_-genlor Hockey\n8:00-10:00-ADULT SKATING\nTUESDAY\n2:00-4:00-TlNY TOTS'\nSKATING\n4:05- 8:S5-CHILPREN'S\nSKATING\n6:31. \"7:30\u2014Senior Hockey\n8:00-10:00\u2014Minor Hockey\nWEDNESDAY\n1:45- 4:8S-Figure Skating Club\n5:00- 8:06-Mlnor Hockey\n8:30- 7:80-Senior Hockey\n\u00ab:00-lo:06-ADUyr SKATING\nTHURSDAY\n2:00- 4:00-TINY TOTS'\nSKATING\n4:05- 5:55-CHILDREN'S\nSKATING\n7:00-i0;00-Mlnor Hockey\nFRIDAY\n3:45- 4:55\u2014Figure Skating Club\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Minor Hockey\n7:30- 9:30-GUYS AND DOLLS\nSKATING\n9:00 STUDENT DANCE\nSATURDAY\n7:\u00abi- 9:45-Figure Skating Club\n10:00-U:65-FAMILY SKATING\n12:30- 1:30\u2014Bantam Pool\n1:80- 4:80\u2014Minor Hockey\nSUNDAY\n9:00-12:00\u2014Commercial   Hockey\n2:00- 4;0O-FAMJLY SKATING\nAMUSEMENT   HAU\nTUESDAY\n2:30- 4:00\u2014Notre Dame\n4:(H)r 5:00-Junlor Twirling\n8:00-11:00\u2014Badminton Club\nWEDNESDAY\n8:00- 8:00\u2014Men's Basketball\nB:00-10:00-Ladles' Keep Fit\nMen's Keep Fit\nTHURSDAY\n2:30- 4:00\u2014Notre Dame\n4:00- 5:0O-Junlor Twirling\n8:00-11:00\u2014Badminton Club\nFRIDAY\n6:80-8:80\u2014Junior Beginners\n\"r\",'.        Square Dancers\n.9:00 STUDENT DANCE!\nSATURDAY,\n7:00- 9:0O^-Junlor Advanced\nSquare Dancers\nSUNDAY\n11:00-12:80\u2014Notre Dame\n1:00- 6:00\u2014Badminton Club\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe playoff picture may be clarified this holiday weekend as the\nBig Four Football League clubs\nmeet in a series of key home-\nand*ome doubleheaders.\nOttawa Rough Riders and Montreal Alouettes, separated for second spot in the standings hy only\none point play in Ottawa today and\nMontreal Monday.\nToronto Argonauts, fighting to\nkeep their slim playoff hopes -alive,\nco at Hamilton today against the\nTiger-Cats and the series shifts to\nToronto Thanksgiving Day.\nEach team has on!\" four rew\nlar-seasnn games left after this\nweekend.\nThe Montreal-Ottawa series will\nbe the last meetings of the two\nclubs and Alouettes will rely on\ntheir aerial attack, led by veteran\nSam Etcheverry. But two df his\nall-star teammates\u2014end Hal Patterson and fullback Pat Abbruzzi\nare still out with injuries.\n\"It's getting kind of hard to\nwin football gamis.\" said coach\nPeahead Walker. \"If we'd lost that\ngame in Toronto last Saturday we\nwould be in a pretty hard way,\"\nAls won 14-10.\nAlouettes are a point behind Ottawa, drubbed 14-1 last Saturday\nby the mi<. tv Ticats.\nCoach Frank Clair has been giving his Rough Ridera double workouts in preparation for the Montreal games.\nStrikes and Spares\nMen's Commercial League\u2014High\nsingle and aggregate, Bud Maglio\nof Fuller Brush, 343 artd 818, Team\nhigh single, RCMP, 1122. Team\nhigh aggregate, Headpin 5, 2860.\nSenior Women's League \u2014 High\nSingle and aggregate, Dot Herd of\nLena's, 308 and 732. Team high\nsingle and aggregate, Lena's, 1008\nand 2908.-\n10-Pin League \u2014 High single,\nPete Fahiman of Old Timers, 194.\nHigh agregate, Chuck Symmonds\nof Lucky Strikes, 477. Team high\nsingle and aggregate, Four Lads,\n036 and 2241,\nVariety Club - High single, Eileen Kennedy of Sputnlcks, 276.\nHigh aggregate, Kay Allan of Centennials, 589. Team high single and\nMinor Hockey\nSchedule\nSaturday\u201412:30 to 1:30\u2014Bantam\nPool for beginners.\n1:30 to 2:30\u2014Open Pee Wee practice.\n2:30 to 3:30\u2014Blackhawk bantam\npractice.\n4:00 to 5:00\u2014Canadien bantam\npractice.\n\u25a0 5:0D  to  6:00\u2014Canadien   midget\npractice.\n6:00 to 7:00\u2014Bruin Bantam practice.\n7:30 to 9:00\u2014Bruin and Blackhawk practice.\nMonday\u20148:00 to 9:00\u2014 Ranger\nbantam practice.\n9:00 to 10:00 Ranger midget practice.\n10:00  to  11:00\u2014Bruin  bantams\npractice.\n11:30 to 12:30-Bruin and Blackhawk midget practice.\n12:30   to   2:00\u2014Open   Pee   Wee\npractice.\nTuesday\u20148:00 to 9:00\u2014Canadien\nmidget practice.\n:00   to   10:00\u2014Open   Juveniles\npractice. ,\nSchedule for balance of week to\nbe announced later.\nStamps In For\nCrucial Weekend\nCalgary Stampeders face what\ncan be described rightly as a desperate situation as they head into\na doubleheader with Edmonton Eskimos this Thanksgiving weekend\nIn the WIFU.\nIf they lose both ends, the situation will be hopeless. Even a saw-\noff won't help much.\nThe Cowboys, in fourth place a\npoint behind Edmonton, meet Eskimos tonight In Emonton and\nagain Monday afternoon in Calgary. \/\nWinnipeg Blue B ombers meet\nB. C. Lions in Winnipeg Saturday\nafternoon and Lions meet Saskatchewan- Roughriders Monday in\nRe?ina in two.other WIFU games,\nA double victory for Stampeders would give them a three-point\ncushion in the third and last playoff position in the five-team league\nas they faced their last three\ngames\u2014two against the second-\nplace Riders and one against the\nleague-leading Bombers.\nEskimos, by comparison, have\nan easy two games against the\nlast-place Lions, who have won\nonly once in 11 starts, and one\nagainst Riders after this weekend.\nIf they win the pair with Stampeders and Riders beat Lions as\nexpected, the Cowboys will be all\nbut mathematically eliminated.\nBombers with a seven-point margin, are conceded the first-place\nfinish that gets the team a bye\nInto the league final.\naggregate,  Sputnlcks,  1018 and\n2599.\nJunior Women's Leage \u2014 High\nsingle, Gwen Buerge of Spartans,\n219: High aggregate, Lorraine\nLauder of Throwabouts artd Jane\nPearson of Mix-tips, tied, 544,\nTeam high single and aggregate,\nSpartans, 880 and 2348.\nMixed Commercial League\nWomen's high single, Alice Bond\nof Overwaitea, 294. Women's high\naggregate, Lena Koehle of Hume\nHotel, 687. Men's high single, Pate\nFahlman of Overwaitea, 279. Men's\nhigh aggregate, Bill Day of Queen's\nHotel, 747. Team high single and\naggregate, Hume Hotel, 1124 and\n3175.\nFriday Mixed League\u2014Women's\nhigh single and aggregate, Lorraine May of Hot Shots, 309 and\n777. Men's high single and aggregate, Garry Rosling of North\nShore 5, 298 and 725. Team high\nsingle, North Shore 5, 963. Team\nhigh aggregate, Hot Shots, 2861.\nBOMARK NOT\nEXPECTED TO BE\nMADE IN CANADA\nOTTAWA (CP) - There is little\nor no chance that Bomarc antiaircraft missiles will be manufactured in Canada, informants said\nFriday.\nHowever, there is some chance\nthat new electronic equipment for\nPackers Swamp\nMaple Leafs 10-4\nKelowna Paekera, last year's Allan Cup finalists, chosen to play\na five-game series In Russia this\nyear, trounced Nelson Maple Leafs\n10-4 here Friday night in their\nfourth exhibition game to date. It\nWas the first appearance for the\nLeafs who were still without a\ngoalie, a position temporarily filled by Trail Smoke Batata' goalie,\nSeth Martin.\nRuss Kowalchuk and Greg Jablonski were the big guns for the\nPackers, Kowalchuk banging in\nfour goals and two assists and Jablonski three goals and ope assist.\nAndy Drobot teamed up with\nGordon Garant ln the second period to score twice for Leafs. Others\nmarkers were Scored by Lee Hyssop With an assist from C. Forster\nin the first period and Bill Taylor\nwho rapped in the last goal of the\ngame in the third period with an\nassist from Lyle McNeil.\nShaky defence id the first half\nof the first period and at times\nin the third period resulted in goals\nfor the Packers. However, the\nLeafs buckled down to work ln the\nsecond period that saw some fine\noffensive plays with the Drobot-\nGarant team rapping in the goals.\nSeth Martin of the Trail Smoke\nSlaters was a solid standout who\nthe air defence system will be ....\nmade in this country, they addld. blocked three times the number\nBritain  Loses Top\nSpot in World Golf\nST. ANDREW'S, Scotland (CP)\nNew Zealand, the United States\nand Australia \u2014 three nations who\nimported golf from the Scottish\nspawning ground \u2014 routed Britain\nout of first place Friday in the\nworld amateur championship.\nThe Old Course of St. Andrews\nfinally calmed down, making wea\nther and playing conditions more\nlike home for the four-man teams\nfrom down under and America,\nand scores improved with the\nweather.\nThe New Zealand team threw\nthe hardest block. Bob Charles\nshot a 76. John Durry, 22-year-old\ngolf club maker, shot a 77, Ed\nStengel\u2014To Sign\nOr Not To\nm\nNEW YORK (AP) - The Casey\nStengel guessing game is on again,\nWill he quit as New \"York Yankee\nmanager? WiU he sign a new contract?\nThe New York Post's sports columnist Jimmy Cannon introduced\na new element Friday when he\nsaid dissension has spilt the high\ncommand with Stengel on one side\nand general manager George Weiss\nand co-owner Del Webb on the\nother.\n\"The chances are 50-50 Casey\n9S9 Chevrolet\u2014 coming soon\nentirety new models\nNEW IMPALA 4-DOOR SPORT SEDAN AND NEW IMPALA 4-DOOR SEDAN.\nNEW K1NGSWOOD STATION'WAGON WITH REAR-FACING REAR SEATI\nnew interiors new roominess,\nNEW COLOR HARMONIES,' NEW HOODED ^INSTRUMENT PANEL . . . AND^ORE!\nnew design with a practical stunt\nSLOTTED WHEELS HELP COOL  \u25a0\u25a0 \u2014 - ''M'\nTHE BRAKES, FRONT AIR SCOOPS CONTRIBUTE TO ENGINE COOLING!\nTin Ships ot TtilnD to Corns (rom Chevrolet\nfine new performance new hi thrift e...\nNEW V8 DEVELOPMENTS ... AN EVEN SWEETER TURBOGUDE AUTOMATIC DRIVE!   ;;\nfljiflfr ALL NEW AIL OVER 4^*f_V,\n^Br   place your order now at !'        ?\nStengel will never put on a Yankee\nuniform again,\" wrote Cannon,\nPrint was hafdly dry when the\nYanks denied the story.\n\"The story is utterly ridiculous\nand not worthy of comment,\" said\nBob Fishel, the Yanks' publicity\ndirector, who said he was speaking\nfor both Stengel and Weiss. \"I\ndoubt if there are two closer\nfriends in baseball than Weiss and\nStengel.\"\nThe Yanks will have a press con\nference with Stengel on hand early\nnext week.\nFINEST VICTORY\nThe grizzled Yankee skipper\nscored his finest triumph Thursday when he led the club to the\ngreatest baseball comeback- in 33\nyears. Even Stengel called it a\n\"truly amazing comeback\" to upend Milwaukee Braves after trailing 3-1 in games at one stage.\nStengel could not be reached by\nreporters. At their hotel suite, Mrs.\nStengel refused any comment except tbpay:\n\"This\" is Casey's greatest year.\"\nStengel-is finishing out a two-\nyear contract. He reportedly draws\n*bwt ,$75,000 a year. He is independently wealthy, owning several\noil wells and is a director of a\nGlandale bank.\nAccording to Cannon's story,\n6tengel was reprimanded by the\nfront office when the Yanks\nslumped in the final months of the\nseason after piling up a wide early\nlead: He said there has been disagreement because of Stengel's\nsystem of platooning players. This\nbreach, Cannon said, was widened\nbecause Stengel got too much personal publicity that the front office thought should have gone to\nthe organization.\nCannon said friends of Stengel\nin his hometown of Glandale,\nCalif., said he spent bis most miserable year of 10 as Yankee manager.\nMacdougall had a 72 and Stewart\nJones an 80.\nOnly the three best scores each\nday for each team are counted in\nthis new competition. This left the\nNew Zealanders with 225 strokes\nfor the day and a 34-hole aggregate of 687.\nThe United States, also with a\nthree-man best score of 225, moved\nInto second place with a 690 total.\nAustralia, posting a 221 for Friday's third round, edged into a\nthird place tie with Britain at 691.\nThe British scored 230 Friday.\nCANADA SIXTH\nCanada \u2014 with a best-three total\nof 228 Friday and a three-day total of 709\u2014was in sixth place, following South Africa in fifth.\nDoug Bajus of Vancouver shot\n79-80-77-236; Bruce Castator of\nToronto 79-84-76-239; Eric Han3on\nof Toronto 82-79-83-244; and Bob\nKidd of Vancouver 88-82-75-240.\nSouth Africa's players shot 229\nFriday, making a three-day total\nof 706,\nof shots fired at Gatherum. Gatherum also did some fine work\nbut with good defensive plays by\nhis own men, he did not have much\nto worry about.\nThe Kelowna Packers, who made\na good showing as compared with\nNelson, were, however, short their\nfive best men. Forward lines were\nmissing Moe Young, Joe Kaiser,\nBugs Jones and Bill Swarbrick.\nSUMMARY:\nFirst Period-1. Jablonski, 10:02;\n2. Kelowna, Jablonski, 12:48; 3.\nKelowna, Kowalchuk, 18:24.\nSecond Period \u2014 4. Kelowna\nRoohe, 1:14; 5. Kelowna, Jablonski, 2:10; 6. Nelson, Drobot (Garant), 8:24; 7. Nelson, Hyssop (Forster) 5:02; 8. Nelson, Drobot (Gar\nant), 12:48; 9. Kelowna, Roche,\n15:46.\nThird Period \u2014 10. Kelowna,\nKowalchuk, 6:22; 11. Kelowna,\nDurban, 9:57; 12. Kelowna, Kowalchuk, 12:18; 13. Kelowna, Kowalchuk,  15:20;  14.  Nelson, Taylor,\nPenalties\u2014Severyn\nler, 18:04.\n4:55;   Laid-\nBOYD WINS\nUNANIMOUS\nDECISION\nCHICAGO (AP) - Bobby Boyd\nwon a unanimous decision from\nJimmy Beacham of Miami Friday night in an action-packed 10-\nround bout at Chicago Stadium.\nBoyd weighed 160, Beecham 15914.\nBoyd piled up an early lead and\nmanaged to hold on in the later\nrounds when Beecham began scoring with an effective left book that\nusually found Its mark.\nBeecham appeared to be out of\nthe running in tbe fifth round. But\nhe came on and appeared tha\nstronger ef the two in tbe final\nrounds. In tbe sixth he hurt Boyd\nwith a hard right to the jaw. Beecham seemed to be the stronger\nof tbe two in tbe later rounds.\nAll three officials gave Boyd an\nedge of two or more points.\nOKANOGAN, Wash. (AP) - Superior Court Judge Joseph Wick\nruled Friday that Donald Stevens\nshould be held for extradition to\nCanada where he is charged with\nthe attempted murder of an RCMP\nconstable.\nRecords of the proceedings will\nnow be sent to the Secretary of\nState's office in Washington, D.C.,\nwhere final determination of the\ncase will be made, Judge Wick,\nsaid.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT, 11, 1958\u20149\nFlyers, Quakers\nWin WHL Openers\nBy The Canadian Press\nEdmonton Flyers, their defence\nstanding up well and their forwards hitting the mark often, shut\nout Calgary Stampeders 3-0 Friday\nnight in the opening game of the\nWestern Hockey League season for\nboth clubs at Edmonton.\nA crowd of about 4000 watched\nas 23-year-old goalie Dennis Riggin\nkicked out 22 shots to blank Calgary.-\nDefenceman Bud MacPherson\nand forwards Ray Kinasewich and\nChuck Holmes scored for Flyers.\nMacPherson in the first period and\nKinasewich and Holmes In the\nthird.\nAt Winnipeg, defenceman Gar;\nBlaine of Saskatoon Quakers spoil\ned Winnipeg Warriors' opening\nhome game of the 1958-59 Western\nHookey League prairie division\nseason Friday night, scoring three\ngoals in a 6-1 Quaker .victory before 3783 fans.\nBlaine, who played. briefly for\nWarriors -in 1956, scored once in\nthe first period and twice in the\nsecond. Bob Kabel, Bill Bucyk and\nElliot Chorley bagged the remaining Saskatoon goals. Rookie defenceman Don Johns was Winnipeg's lone marksman.\nVancouver Canucks edged Victoria Cougars 3-2 in a scrappy\nWestern Hockey League coast division game at Vancouver before\nmore than 3800 fans.\n_. perio\nsuccessfully launched a defence\nof their WHL crown. Capt, Phil\nMaloney, Walt Peacosh and Ron\nHutchinson scored for Canucks.\nGeorge Forbes got both Victoria\ngoals.\nIt was 1-1 at tbe end of the\nfirst period, 2-2 after 40 minutes\nand Hutchinson scored tbe winner early in the third.\nMaloney opened tbe scoring\nearly in the first when he slapped in Don Carter's rebound from\nclose in. Defenceman Kent Douglas also drew an assist.\nFourteen minutes later Ford got\nhis first goal, tipping in a drive\nfrom the right boards by Al Nicholson. Canucks forged ahead again\nearly in the second with Peacosh\nslapping in Maloney's pass. But\nFord again' tied the score, stealing the puck from the Canucks defence and beating rookie goalie\nBruce Gamble from close fi.\nHutchinson's winner came at\n2:59 of the third. He took Dan Be-\nlisle's pass near tbe right boards,\nskated in front of the Victoria net\nand put it into the top right-hand\ncorner.\nLONG-BOW TREE\nThe European yew, formerly\nused for making long-bows, bat\npoisonous leaves and seeds.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nStudent Dance\n9:00 p.m.\nCOMING ATTRACTIONS\nWorld's Hula Hoop Championship Oct. 18\nThe younger you are the easier it is\nThat's what the middle-aged \"duffers'' say on the golf course\nwhen a teenager breaks 80 for the first time.\nIt's the same story with family protection. The younger you are when you nrst\norange it, the more likely you are to be insurable.\nAnd the younger you are, the lower the premiums, tea\nHie Mutual Life of Canada is helping thousands of young Canadians\nplan for future security. Talk to a Mutual of Canada man soon\nand he'll show you how Mutual's outstanding dividend record really\npays off for the young man on his way up.\n9,M\"TUAHIFB\nASSURANCE COMPANY OP CANAW\n1ST. FLiiHCS IMt. MM OfTK* MTBLM.MT.\nyour local authorized Chevrolet dealer s\nC-257C\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nAdult\nSkating\nClub\nMONDAY\n8:00 - 10:00\nCOMING ATTRACTIONS\nHULA HOOP\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nSATURDAY,   10:00  a.m.\nF.nch boy or girl with a hoop\nwill be admitted FREE!\nML.I5B   .     . \/\nBranch Office: 450 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C\nFraser\" Tees, Branch Manager\n\/    Representative: G. A, Clark\n\u25a0\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1958\nf\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nD\nA\nN\nN\nY\nF\nO\nR\nT\nU\nN\nE\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nc\nK\nL\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\n-R\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\n...E\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nB\nU\nz\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nb:\nB\nA\nT\nL\nE\nV\nJ\nl\nG\nG\nS\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News doei not hold Itself responsible Ib the event\nof an e-ror In the following lilts.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n\u2022 (Closing Prices)\nMINES   ,\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAnacon Liad  .'.\t\nAnglo Rouen \u201e\t\nAtlin Ruff ,\t\nAubelle   :.,.....   _\nAumaeho\t\nAumaque\t\nBarnat ;.-.\t\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBoymar      \t\nBroulan \t\nBrunhurst\t\nBrunswick   \t\nCampbell C   \t\nCampbell RL ..:\t\nCan Met       \t\nCassiar  .'.\t\nCentral Patricia  '.\t\nChimo   .-. \u201e .:..\nChromium  \t\nCons Denison       \t\nCons Denison Wts\t\nCons Halliwell \t\nCons Howe \t\nCons M & S\t\nCon Regcourt \t\nCon Sub   \t\nConwest       \t\nCopper Corp\t\nCopper Man \t\nD'Aragon   \t\nDonalda      \t\nEast Amphi   \t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nElder Gold   \t\nFalconbridge\t\nFaraday     \t\nFrobisher  ..'.\t\nGeco \t\nGeo Scientific Pros\t\nGiant Yel \t\nGlen Uranium \t\nGold Eagle       \t\nGolden Manitou \t\nGunnar Gold  ,\t\nHarminerals \t\nHasaga\t\nHeadway\t\nHollinger \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration \t\nInt Nickel\t\nIron Bay \t\nJoliet Que    \u201e\t\nJonsmith\t\nR J Jowsey  .'.\t\nKerr Addison \t\nLabrador \t\nLakeshore   \t\nMacassa       \t\nMacDonald   \t\nMadsen R L  \t\nMalartic G F   \t\nMaritime Mining\t\nMilliken       \t\nMining Corp     \t\nMulti Mins\t\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Hosco\t\nNew Harricana\t\nNew Jason \t\nNew Lund     \t\nNipissing\t\nNisto   ...  ' \t\nNoranda New \u00bb.-..\nNorgold L...\nNormetals  \t\nNorpax    \t\nNorth Can\t\nNorth Rankin \t\nODemiska\t\nPickle Crow \t\nPlacer Develop\t\nPreston E D\t\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Lab\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont   \t\nRadiore      : .'.\nRainville\t\nRayrock   ..'\t\nSan Antonio \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nStadacona       \t\nSteep Jtock      \t\nSlocan Van Rot \t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite     \t\nTeck Hughes\t\nTemagami \t\nTombill      \t\nTrans ,Cont Res \t\nUnited Keno   \t\nUpper Canada \t\nVentura\t\nViolamac -.\t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWiksey Goglin \t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYale \t\nYellowknife Bear \t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc\nBanff Oils\t\nBailey Selburn\nCal & Ed\t\nCdn Atlantic \t\nCan Devonian .-..-' \t\nCommonwealth Pete\nDuvex   \t\nHome A\nLong Island Pete\nMarigold-..;.:..   \t\nMidcon\t\nNew Continental\nOkalta       \t\nPacific Pete\t\nPetrol \t\nPonder   \t\nProv Gas\t\nRoyalite   \t\nSpooner      \t\nStanwell Oil \t\nTriad   \t\nUnited'Oils  \t\nYank. Canuck ....:.\nWestern Pacific\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum \t\nAtlas St \t\nB A Oil \t\nBathurst Power\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian\nB C Elee 4s\nB C Elec 4%s\nB C Forest\nB C Packers B\nB C Power A\nBurns A\nBurrard- A\nCan Breweries\n.07-\n16.00\n.61\n.3?\n.19\nMVt\n.14%\n.09\n1.58\n.19\n.16\n.07\n.52\n.05\n4.00\n6.80\n8.05\n.98\n7.95\n1.05\n.63\n2.98\n13.59\n3.95\n.74\n3.15\n22.62%\n.18\n1.04\n3.85\n.35\n.18\n.47\n.13%\n.21\n1.46\n2.50\n.85\n28.50\n1.02\n1.90\n17.75\n.75\n4.90\n.12\n.21%\n.30\n17.\u00ab2%\n.17\n.19\n.54\n26.50\n59.37%\n.47\n89.50\n2.05\n.38\n.18\n.51\n18.12%\n21.50\n4.35\n3.00\n.28\n,34'\/8\n1.00\n1.29\n2.19\n14.50\n.63\n.29\n1.65\n.13%\n.10%\n.37\n1.99\n.06\n54,00\n.08\n3.60\n.26\n1.30\n1.17\n9:90\n,91\n10.37%\n6.75\n.40\n.06%\n.90\n12.75\n.45\n.50\n.75\n.62\n4.75\n.13\n13.87%\n.51\n2.40\n1,02\n1.70\n1.84.\n.25\n.18\n4.25\n.99\n30.50\n1119\n6.\u00bb0\n.20%\n1.27\n.29\n.96\nCan Canners   14\nCan Celanese     19%\nCan Cement  35\n7\n24\n27%\n29\n50\n47\n13%\n36%\nCan Chem Co .\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Oil\t\nCan Pac Rly ...\nCan Packers A\nCan Packers B ..\nCockshutt   \t\nCons Gas \t\nDist Seagram ...\nDom Foundries  38\nDom Magnesium   11%\nDom Stores         72%\nDom Tar & Chem  13%\nDom Textiles    9%\nEddy Paper       50%\nFamous Players  20%\nFanny Farmer   19%\nFord A     104\nGatineau    ,  37%\nGen Steel Wares    9\nGoodyear   168\nGoodyear pfd  48\nGypsum Lime  37%\nHoward Smith   38\nImperial Oil  45%\nImp Tobacco   13%\nInt Pete         48%\nLaura Secord   24V4\nLoblaw A      30\nLoblaw B   30%\nMassey Harris   9%\nMcColl Frontenac  67\nMont Loco     16%\nMoore Corp   80\nNat Steel Car   21%\nPage Hershey   32\nPowell River   37\nPower Corp     67\nRuss Industries   10%\nShawinigan    31%\nSicks Brew   30\nSimpsons A \u25a0  28%\nStandard Paving   42\nSteel of Can       69%\nTaylor Pearson      8%\nUnion Gas of Can  18%\nUnited Steel        15%\nWeston George   30%\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne       \t\nCariboo Gold\nFarwest Tungsten\nGranduc   \t\nHamil Sil     \t\nHighland Bell \t\nPioneer Gold   \t\nPremier Border ....\nQuatsino     \t\nSheep Creek    \t\nSilback Premier ....\nSilver Standard \t\nSunshine Lardeau .\nTaylor  \t\nTrojan        \t\nWestern Ex\t\nOILS\nAltex   \t\nA P Cons \t\nCal 4 Ed \t\nCharter \t\nHome\nOkalta Com\t\nPac Pete\nPeace River Gas .\nRoyalite\t\nRoyal Can \t\nUnited  \t\nVanalta \t\nVantor\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Dist   \t\nAlberta Dist Vt\t\nB C Forests \t\nB C Power \t\nB C Telephone\t\nCan Collieries \t\nCrown Zeller (Can) ..\nInt Brew B\t\nInland Nat Gas \t\nLucky Lager     \t\nMacM & Bloedel B ..\nMid Western ...\nPowell River\t\nTrans Mtn (New) ....\nWestminster Paper..\nWestern Plywoods ..\nUNLISTED \">\u25a0\u2022'.\nAlta Gas Trunk ..;'....\nTrans Canada Com\nWestcoast Com\t\nWestcoast Trans ....\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal ....\nCan Bank.of Com\nImperial Bank of Can\nRoyal Bank of Can \t\n.23\n5.90\n.73\n.11\n2.20\n.28\n1.40\n1.15\n.12%\n.24%\n.73\n.05%\n.16\n.10\n.12%\n.15\n.25\n1.65\n.34\n30.00\n1.85\n19.25\n1.03\n20.00\n.59\n11.00\n.46\n2.38\n.21\n1.29\n2.05\n1.75\n12.62\n40.00\n41.25\n5.25\n20.75\n4.15\n8.37\n5.25\n34.50\n1.70\n37.25\n11.12%\n29.00\n17.75\n21.37%\n36.50\n25.50\n85.50\n50.50\n54.00\n58.00\n72.50\nArt Graduate\nChosen NFCUS\nPresident\nOTTAWA (CP) - Mortimer\nBistrisky, 22-year-old arts graduate of Sir George Williams College, Montreal, is the new president of the National Federation\nof Canadian University Students.\nElections were held Thursday\nnight as some 100 delegates representing 30 universities and 60,-\n000 students wound up a five-day\nannual meeting.\nAbout 25 NFCUS representatives remained in the capital for\na NATO youth seminar, being\nh\u00bbM Friday and Saturday under\nthe auspices of the Canadian Atlantic co-ordinating committee.\nOpening sessions of the seminar\nwith Maj.-Gen. J. V. Allard, vice-\nchief of the army generai staff,\nas speaker, were closed to the\npress.\nMr. Bistrisky succeeds Walter\nTarnopolsky, University of Saskatchewan law graduate.\nOther officers include Ray\nKutz, Saskatchewan, international\naffairs vice-president, and Russ\nBrink, western region president,\nUniversity of British Columbia.\nAmong resolutions passed by\nthe congress was one reiterating\na request for governments immediately to make available at\nleast 10,000 scholarships and bursaries of up \"to $550 each.\nA brief incorporating recommendations for a national scholarship program was presented to\nfederal and provincial governments earlier this year.\nNFCUS officials said the scholarships would provide a minimum\ndifference between a student's\nverage summer savings, possible assistance from his- family\nand the average cost of one\nyear at university.\nVirginia Stands Beside\nArkansas in Color Bar\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Arkansas and Virginia, two old southern states that still cling to the\nclassical Confederate tradition of\nwhite race supremacy, are holding the line this year in the\nSouth's battle against school integration.\nBoth have about the same proportion of Negroes in their population\u2014approximately 25 per cent\u2014\nand both have closed public\nschool classrooms rather than\nobey Supreme Court orders tb\npermit Negro students to attend\nschool with white children.\nArkansas has closed the four\nhigh schools in the capital city of\nLittle Rock. Virginia has shut six\nschools in Norfolk, two in Charlottesville and one in the town of\nFront Royal.\nTENSION DIFFERENCE\nIn Arkansas the resistance to\nintegration has been marked by\ndemagoguery and threats of violence. In Virginia, where the\nschools are closed just as tightly\nas in Arkansas, the process has\nbeen orderly . and undemonstrative.\nThe difference lies in state\nleadership and politics \u2014 mostly\npolitics.  .''.'..\nIn Arkansas; the racial problem is under the. heavy hand of\nGovernor Orval Faubus, 48, a\nbackwoods product. who never\nsaw a Negro until he came out\nof the Ozarks in his teens.\nVirginia's resistance movement\nis guided by Governor Lindsay\nAlmond, Jr., who came off a\nfarm, worked his wav through\nlaw school and made the proper\nconnections with the political organization headed b\" Democratic\nSenator Harry F. Byrd of Virginia.\nIn Virginia, politics are dominated bv the smoothly functioning Byrd machine, once described\nas a sort of \"benevolent despotism.\"  Its  supporters  follow the\nconservative philosophies  of the\nsenator. .\nMACHINE WEAR\nArkansas has no such organization. Its senators exercise little or\nno influence in state politics and\nthe state Democratic party, of\nwhich Faubus is the leader, is\nsplit into several factions, each\nfighting.for control.\nFaubus, to overcome state tradition against a third two - year\nterm as governor, seized the volatile race issue last fall and used\nit to further his political ambitions. He threw his state militia\naround Little Rock's Central High\nSchool to bar Negro students\nfrom entering it and forced President Eisenhower to call out troops\nto ensure them safe conduct.\nThe gamble paid off this year.\nFaubus won the Democratic nomination for governor which, in traditionally Democratic Arkansas,\nis tantamount to election. The\nstate votes in November.\nAlmond has no need of such\ntactics. By state law, he is limited to one four-year term as governor but his political future, possibly as a U.S. senator, seems\nassured by his high ranking in\nthe Byrd organization.-\nTWO POLICIES\nFaubus, leaning heavily on\ndemagoguery, has isolated himself from the moderates in his\nstate. He has fought with the Little Rock School Board and hampered its efforts to meet federal\ncourt integration orders and bring\nabout integration in the city's\nschools with a minimum of racial friction.\nAlmond., on the other hand, has\nworked closely with the state's\nschool boards where they have\ntried to put integration orders into effect.\nDevelopments in both states are\nbeing watched by other southern\nstates that have school closing\nlaws on their own statute books.\nThe success or failure of the integration fight in Virginia and\nArkansas may set a pattern for\nresistance elsewhere.\nMARKET TRENDS\nTORONTO (CP)-Base metals\nand industrials climbed to 1958\nhighs as the stock market scored\na general advance Friday in active trading.\nThe final volume of 5,722,000\nshares was well above Thursday's\n4.510.000 and was the heaviest\nsince Aug. 8.\nInternational Nickel, Canada's\nleading copper producer, raised\nthe price of the red metal % of a\ncent and coupled with a like increase by Noranda Thursday it\nbested cnooer issues in a line.\nConsolidated Halliwell was the\nmost active issue, trading 321,220\nshares. Tt gained 6 cents at 74\ncents. Coldstream gained eight\ncents at 60 cents and Bouzan, 10\ncents at 87,\nCanada Permanent Mortgage\nled los\u00bbrs off 4% at 106% on two\nsales. Dominion Stores was off 1\nat. 72%..,,\nMclntyre was the leader among\ngolds, ahead 2 at 85% while Calgary and Edmonton scored a %\nwin at 30% among western oils.\nIndex gains: Industrials 1.65 to.\n504.21: golds .31 to 83.52; base\nmetals 5.78 to 181.19; western oils\n.39 to 141.88.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices\nwere generally higher in active\ntrading on th&., Montreal and Canadian Stock Exchange and market ended the week with a burst\nof power, rising to another record\nhigh in the heaviest trading of the\nyear.\nVolume soared to 4,610,000\nshares Friday compared with\n3,670,000 Thursday and was the\nbiggest since the year-end session\nof Dec. 31 when 5,070,000 shares\nwere traded.\nCoppers, steels, oils and drugs\nwere strongest. Motors were up\nmoderately except for Chrysler\nwhich dipped %. Industrials accounted for the lion's share of the\nrise. Rails Were mixed and utilities slightly higher.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks advanced 60 cents to\na peak of $198.70. .......\nThe Dow Jones industrial average rose 3.75 to a record 543.36.\nBethlehem Steel was the most\nactive stock; rising 1% to 51 on\n121,500 shares. Second was Alum-\nniiim Ltd., up % at 36% on 81,500\nshares.\nAmong Canadians stocks International Nickel jumped 2%, Hudson Bay Mining 2, Canadian Pacific and Mclntyre Porcupine %,\nDistillers Seagrams, Granby Mining and Waiker Gooderham %.\nDome Mines lost %.\nAmerican exchange prices\nalso rose with Eureka up 1, Shawinigan %, Preston East Dome\nVi and Canadian Marconi %. Fargo Oil and Richwell lost 1-16.\nBase Metals Trade Points\nTo Increasing Demands\nBy SAM DAWSON\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Solid evidence that better times are returning is offered by the metal\ntrades.\nProducers of steel, copper,\naluminum, lead and zinc all say\ndemand is on the upswing. This\nhas enabled all of them to raise\nprices since June. Lead, zinc and\ncopper have gone up again just\nthis week and producers and\nsmelters say customers haven't\nbalked at the higher prices.\nSteel, copper ahd aluminum\nproducers are stepping up output,\nlengthening work weeks or reactivating idle facilities to meet the\nnew demand. Lead and zinc producers are happily disposing of\nsome of the big' stocks of these\nmetals. U. S. producers have been\nhelped some by outside -circumstances as well as by improving\ndomestic demand.\nCANADIAN STRIKES HELP\nStrikes in the copper mines of\nNorthern Rhodesia and Canada\nhave cut into world supplies and\nstrengthened prices on the London\nmarket. Lead and, zinc producers\ngot a big assist from the imposition Oct. 1 by the United States\nof import quotas on the metals.\nWith part of this foreign competition cut off. domestic producers\nhave been able to raise prices.,\nBut the general recovery of the\neconomy has been helping the\nmost.\nSteel output now is back to 71\noer cent of capacity, the highest\nrate since last November. At the\nbottom of the recession it slipped\nbelow 50 per cent.,\nSteel men say orders are coming in at a satisfactory pace.\nThey say auto makers have been\nfrugal in their buying of metals.\nbut fullscale. production of 1959\nmodels should make- them more\nliberal in the corni\"\"' weeks. \/\u00bb ,;\nMORE CONSTRUCTI9N;\n(Increasing construction1 outlaws\nhive, been a _big' help to. the.\nrtiteta. . trade. \"Aooliance makers!\nare also better metals customers\n\u25a0and report, a '.general .rise in consumer demand.     ;'';,'\u25a0 r;   -'..VA;'^'1\nFarm efluinmeht thakers \\ re-\nnort inmroved sales, reflecting\n'he higher level of farm incomes\nthis year.\nZinc producers report that both\ngalvanjzers and die casters are\ntaking-more of the metal and the\nlead producers are counting on\nmore auto production to call for\nmore batteries.\nLloyd Accuses\nGaitskell of\nMeedling U.S.\nBLACKPOOL, Eng. (Reuters)-\nForeign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd\nFriday accused Labor party leader\nHugh Gaitskell of having done\n\"everything he could\" to embarrass the United States government in the Formosa crisis.\nLloyd addressed the Conservative party's annual conference\nduring a foreign affairs debate.\nGaitskell and other Laborite\nleaders have repeatedly urged\nhanding over the off-shore islands\nto the Chinese Communists and\nneutralization of Formosa under\na United Nations guarantee.\nLloyd said Gaitskell knew Britain had not been asked to offer\nmilitary aid and there was no\nchance of Britain being involved\nin the military defence of Quemoy and Matsu.\nSTILL WILLING\nBritain still was willing to ne\ngotiate with Russia and enter\ninto agreements \"provided they\nare specific and definite.\" Events\nhave made it clear, however, he\nsaid, that Moscow has not abandoned its objectives or methods.\nAt the conclusion of the debate,\nthe 4,000 delegates, who wind up\ntheir four-day conference Saturday gave a unanimous vote of\n^confidence to the government's\nforeign policy.\nIn a defence debate after the\nvote,, Defence Minister Duncan\nSandys warned that \"localized\nacts of indirect aggression, fomented or abetted from Moscow\"\nshould be expected.\nThe conference unanimously approved a resolution urging the\ngovernment to continue its strong\ndefence program and to ignore\ndemands for British unilateral\ndisarmament. .'*\n \t\n\u25a0\u25a0'-' ' \u25a0-.- \u25a0   ' -\t\nQ(o35\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE\nThat's the Want Ad Story ~ PHONE  1844\nYOU CAN  NOW  PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nHELP WANTED\nCITY OF FERNIE\nApplications are invited for the\nposition of city clerk, treasurer,\ncollector and assessor for the\nCorporation of the City of Fernie.\nApplications will be received for\nthe above position at the office\nol the City Clerk, Fernie, B.C.,\nup to 5 p.m., October 15, 1958.\nApplicants please state age,\nqualifications and salary expected.\n^Corporation of the\nCity of Fernie,\nS. E. Edgar, City Clerk\nLEARN ENGINEERING DRAFT-\ning or blueprint reading by home\nstudy for a secure, well \u2022 paid\njob.  Instruments supplied. Diploma awarded. Free folder. Mention course of interest. Primary\nSchool of Drafting.  Box  123-G.\n.   Station Q. Toronto, \u25a0\nONK SEWING MACHINE MECH-\namc and 2 salesmen wanted Full\n\u25a0   or  part-time   Apply  Box  6847,\nNelson Dailv News\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nMothers....\nNeed Money?\nCash in on the big fall and\nChristmas selling season.\nBe an\nAvon Representative\nin your community.\nTerritories in Nelson, Slocan,\nSalmo, Ymir. Write\nMISS L. BRADD\n\u25a0     471 Francis Ave..\n.   KELOWNA, B.C.\nHOUSEKEEPER TO HELP MAN-\nage modern house, .and assist\nowner. Must live in. Apartment\nsupplied. No objection to small\nfamily Apply to National Em-\nployment Service.\nCHAMBERMAID REQUIRED -\n(Permanent work for right per-\n: son. Phone 385 for interview.\nWANTED - HOUSEKEEPER TO\n1 care for two small children. Ap-\n\u2022  ply 318 Houston or nhone 1933-R.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus 98, res   1186-Y\t\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT-\nting, appliances, oil burners serviced Norm Bowcock,. Bonded,\nLicenced Gas Fitter, phone 385.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Or\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain,  steel  plate  and  shapes\n- Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B C Phone\nPAcific 635?\nCOAL & WOOD GRAVITY TYPE\nfurnace, in excellent condition,\nwith all-metal duct work, and\ncentral register. Price $60. .Sam\nFisher, South Slocan, ph. 106.\nUSKD OUTBOARDS, REFRIGER-\nators, washing machines Make\nus an offer. Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phone 1302. '4^6\n\"Ward St., Nelson, BC.\nGUNS, NEW AND USED. RE-\nloading supplies, custom loads.\nNorm Bowcock. 171 Baker St.,\nPhone 385.\nLADY'S FIGURE SKATES, SIZE\n8V. $6.50. Phone 672-R or call\nat 922 Front St.\nELECTRIC RANGE, A-l CONDI-\ntion; slightly used General Elec\n-  trie washing machine. Ph. 736-X.\n1 PAIR BOY'S HOCKEY SKATES\n1- pair girl's figure skates. Both\nsize' 5. phone 915-jC..    ',\/   -,'\nBEND t, \u2022 AUTOMATIC WASHER.\nGood  coifflition^'\n303 Silica'St.\n'Cheap. ..Apply\nINSTRUCTION\nLearn\nWomen wanted. Greater opportunity. Better pay. Pleasant\nwork. Catalogue free. \u2014 Write\n[arve!\n326 8th Avenue, Calgary; Saskatoon and Edmonton.\nCanada's National System\nLIVtSiOCK, POULTRY\n\\ND FARM SUPPLIES   ETC.\n3-YR.-OLD   REGISTERED   HOL-\nstein bull. Box 733, Creston, B.C\nHOi cLS  AND  MOTELS\nCANADIAN FRIENDS - WHEN\nin Spokane stop at the Colonial\nHotel. mVt Post St., one block\nfrom stores and parking Phone\nRt 79494\nRENTALS\nWANTED BY NOV. lST-^2 OR 3-\nbedroom 'house for young bust\nnessman moving to Nelson. This\nyoung executive and his family\nwill appreciate it if you will rent\nthem a home (unfurnished) in\nthe city or close in on the North\nShore. Phone or write Box 7371\nDaily News.\n4-ROOM SELF CONTAINED UP\nstairs suite. Large glassed-in\nporch. Private entrance. Uphill\ndistrict, 1 block from bus, 1 block\nfrom playground. Phone daytime\n1511, ask for George. After\nphone 2031-L.\nFOR RENT - UNFURNISHED\nbasement suite of 4 rooms and\nbath, fireplace, gas furnace and\nH.W. tank, new condition, $65\nper month. T. D. Rosling & Son\nphones 717, 1065-X.\nFOR RENT - MODERN 5-ROOM\nhouse at Ymir. Electric stove,\nannex garbage burner, water\ntank, floor oil furnace, full basement. Apply E. Haukedahl or\nMr. and Mrs. Noble Gould,\nGROUND FLOOR SUITE - FOUR\nrooms   and   bath   unfurnished.\nr vCfas\/toped in. .Close in. On level.\n$85 ipoBth- Apply 1 - 373 Baker\nSt., phope 662 business hours,\nNEWLY   DECORATED   UNFUR\nRENTALS\n3-ROOM FURNISHED APART-\nment, fridge, gas stove and heat,\nhot water supplied. 171 Baker St.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n3-ROOM  SUITE  FOR. RENT  -\nprivate bath. 131 Chatham St.\nONE   2-ROOM  SUITE.   614  Victoria Street.\nHEATED BEDROOM, GENTLE-\nman only. Central. 410 Victoria.\n5-ROOM APT., CLOSE IN. PH.\n526-Y.\nFURNISHED,   HEATED  APART-\nment. 713 Victoria Street;   \u25a0   ,\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE AVAILABLE\nimmediately. Phone 1933-L.\nNORTH   SHORE   MOTEL   OPEN\nfor winter rentals. Phone 1684\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE. CLOSE IN.\nModern olumbing. Phone 1941-L.\nMACHINERY\n'Tractors\nf .-\nBids will be received\nuntil 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, 1958,\nfor the following\nequipment:\n1 USED INTERNATIONAL\nTD9 CRAWLER TRACTOR,\nWith Isaacson Angledozer,\nLogging Winch,\nOperator s Guard.\n1  USED INTERNATIONAL\nTD14A\nSmith Hydraulic Angledozer.\nOperator's Guard.\nThis equipment can be\ninspected at our yard.\nHEALTH FOqD CENTRE OPEN\nday:pnd evenings 924 Davies St\n. 0AL:,.AJ1D WOOD WARM AIR\nheaferartd pipe,. Phone 1395-Y.\nused' Washer and fridge -\nalso used washer parts  Ph. 485\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nNelson Ready-Mix\nFOR ALL PURPOSES\nPHONE 871\nPREMIER SAND & GRAVEL\nFor\nSand, Gravel, Crushed Rock,\nFill Cement and\nPea Gravel for Roofing\nPHONE 1368 or 871\nSAND, CONCRETE MIX DE-\nlivered in city $1.65 per yd.\nCrushed Rock and Pea Gravel.\nPhone 984.\nPERSONAL\nA MILLION DOLLARS YOU CAN\nspend and not be able to retard\nyour unwanted hair! Try SACA-\nPELO an dsuccess will be yours,\nIt does not dissolve or remove,\nbut retards growth of unwanted\n- - hair. Lor-Beer Labs. Ltd., Ste. 5,\n679 Granville St., Vancouver 2,\nB.C.\nTED - CONTACT S. BRASHEAR\nMcHardy agency, phone 68, re\ngarding profitable investment Of\na Nelson busy coffee shop. Mary.\nOLD HOME\nP(e-Co!umbian men lived for\n8omel_000 years in Russell Cave\nin northern Alabama.\nnished suite ior rent. Three large\nrooms rindf4)9th.-Private entrance. Nice ,\u00bb)ew..of lake. \u2014\nPhone 3?6$ttv,,\"    \t\nOVER OUR' OFFICE - 1 LARGE\nroom w i*o\u201e if required. Bath-\n' room adjoins. Cabinet sink, gas\n\u2022 range,; some furniture supplied if\nnecesSftryi. Appleyard,       )\nOVflR OUR OFFICE - 21 BED-\ni;ooin,  'bathroom,   living ,< room,\n, kitchen. Gas range and'heater\nsupplied. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT - 1 BLOCK ABOVE\nbus depot on Hall St.-3 BR fur-\n.nished apt., only $50 per month.\n..See P. E. Poulin, 582 Ward St.\nFURN. 3-BEDROOM HOUSE, 2V4\nmiles east of bridge North Shore.\nImmediate occupancy. Apply 303\nSilica St.\t\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars,\nphone 77.\nSUITE FOR RENT - MODERN.\nself-contained, washing facilities.\nCar parking, excellent location.\n920 Edgewood Ave., ph. 1750-R.\n3   LARGE   ROOMS,   SELF-CON-\ntained. Ideal location, close in.\nHeated and hot water. Evenings\nnhone 482-X-3.   \t\nHOUShlftii^PlNG OR SLEEPING\nrooms:   furnished  and . heated.\nRates by day, week, mopth \u2014\nAllen Hotel, 171 Baker Street.\nSELF \u25a0CONTAINED. HEATED,\nmodern basement apt., [urn.\nvery small. North Shore, close\nIn. Phone 2055.\n6-ROOM UNFURN. APT., GAS\nfurnace, central. No small chil\ndren. 410 Victoria St.\nWINTER RENTALS - A HOME\naway from home. Brad's Auto\nCourt, phone 1680.    .\t\nSELF - CONTAINED, ATTRAC\ntive, heated and furnished 3-rooiA\nsuite. Phone 697-X after 1 p.m.\nMODERN COMFORTABLE 1 BR.\nsuite. Contact Roy Matheson,\nBevanne Apts.\nWOULD SHARE LOVELY APART-\nment with business woman. \u2014\nClose in. Phone 1233, mornings,\nDELUXE  CONT.  3 RM.  SUITE,\nunfurn., heated, el. stove, new\ncons,, $69.50. Phone 130.\n2-ROOM   SUITE,   PARTLY  FUR-\nnished. Phone 1341-X,\t\nCLEAN,  MODERN CABINS FOR\nrent. By week or month. Ph. 1828.\n& Equipment Go. Ltd.\n.   702 Front St.\nPhone 1810-100\nLOGGING\nTRUCK\nFOR SALE\nLC-182 International, with\nlogging bunks,and trailer.\nExcellent condition. Price\ncomplete\nKootfenay Forest\nProducts Ltd.\nPhone 1200 \u2014 Nelson.\nMcCULLOCH\nChain Saw Users Are Our\nBest Salesmen\nYou too can make your work\nmore pleasant by owning a\nMcCULLOCH SAW\nTRY AND BUY THE D44,\"\n.1 SUPER 44 OR SUPER 65\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.   LTD   ?:\n514 Railway St Nelson! B.C\nPHONE 1402\nREUBEN  BUERGE\nBARGAINS\nAS-IS SPECIALS\nMAKING ROOM FOR THE\n'59 CHEVROLET\n'M AUSTIN $195\n'49 DODGE $150\n'51 METEOR $175\n'51 STUDEBAKER $95\n'48 PONTIAC Coupe   ,\n$150.\n\u202251 OLDSMOBILE $195\n'46 PONTIAC $95\n'39 CHEVROLET $50\n'47 FORD $50\n'47 OLDS (with radio)\n$95\n'37 PONTIAC $45\n'48 CHEVROLET $75\n'40 PLYMOUTH $40\n'52 VANGUARD $95\n'48 DESOTO $75\n'49 METEOR $75\n'35 FORD 1\/2-TON $75\nLots of Storage Space.\n$10 Per Month.\nReuben';>\nBuerge\nMotors Ltd.\nChevrolet - Oldsmobile .\nCadillac\nPhone 35-36 323 Vernon St.\nNelson. B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO, CREDITORS\nIN THE MATTER OF THE-\nESTATE OF CHARLES WILLIAM WATSON, DECEASED:\nTAKE NOTICE that Letters\nProbate to the above Estate have\nbeen granted to Annie L. E.\nThompson, and all persons having claims against the said Estate are .required to file the same\nduly verified on oath, care of\nMessrs. Boyle, Aikins, O'Brian\nand Company, 208 Main Street,\nPenticton, B.C., solicitors for the\nExecutrix, before the 31st day of\nOctober, A.D. 1958.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that after that date, the\nEstate will be distributed having\nregard only to claims of which\nthe Executrix has notice.\nDATED this 28th day of September, A.D. 1958.\nBOYLE; AIKINS, O'BRIAN\nAND COMPANY,\n208 MAIN STREET,\nPENTICTON,\" B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young business girl or gentleman. Phone 1968-L.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,\n1179-X.'\" ,\"-' \"\nROOM AND BOARP FOR YOUNG\nworkipg man or girl. Ph. 1876-R\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman, 210 Vernon.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nLADIES' WEAR BUSINESS FOR\nsale. Health reasons. Terms.\nBox 7029, Daily News.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS. ETC., FOR SALE\nLOT 80 t 200 FOR SALE, NORTH\nShore. Overlooks city. Water,\npower, TV to property. Phone\n1662-X.\t\nFOR SALE - 3 BR. HOME ON\ntwo lots. On bus route,\nPhone 1989-X..\nUphill.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued) \"\nRR   1\nA modern, 6-year-old 2-B.R.\nbungalow situated on 1.9 acres\nwith approximately 190 foot\nbeach frontage. This property\nis directly opposite Fairview\nwith a full view of the city.\nThere is also a garage and\nfloat. The building is economically heated with electric\nheaters. Terms. -$9000\nPrice   \t\nUPHILL\nA comfortable. 4-B.R. home\nwith 3 lots, Heated with automatic coal stoker. Grounds in\niawn and garden. Also a double\ngarage. Terms. $8500\nPrice \t\nFOR RENT\nA 3-B.R. home on Front St.,\nwith oil furnace. Close to new\nSafeway. $100\nRent, per month      .\nP. E. Poulin\nRP.AL ESTATE and INSURANCE\n582 Ward St Phone 70\nLISTINGS\nHave you been wanting to\nsell your property? We require properties of every\ndescription. It costs you\nnothing to list. Kindly give\nus a phone call or come in\npersonally.\nWILLIAM\nKALYNIUK\nAGENCIES\nREAL ESTATE BROKER\nINSURANCE AGENT\n542 Baker St.      Nelson. B.C.\nPHONE 1777\nFOR SALE IN CRESTON \u2014\nHome building lot No. 6, of\nlot 525, Village of Creston\nPlan 2851. Make your offer\nto P. O. Box 700, Nelson,\nB. C.\n10 ACRES NORTH SHORE ON\nJohnston Road, 2 minutes west\nof bridge. Reasonable. Power,\nwater. Will divide to suit purchaser. Amsden, ph. 559-X-3.\n3-BEDROOM HOUSE - UNFIN-\nished.   Outside   city  limits   on\n-small acreage. Good condition.\nVery reasonable. Apply Box 7046,\nNelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE - 2% ACRES AT\nSouth Slocan, with three - room\nhouse, chicken house, barn, etc.\nApply 411 Carbonate St.\nFURNISHED 5 - ROOM HOUSE\nwith automatic washer and dryer, with good down payment and\nbalance as rent. Phone 445-Y.\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar   repairs   and   tractionizing,\nUsed parts for 1949 to '52 Austins,\n\u202249 to \"52 Hlllmans, '50 to '54\nMorris  Minor,  '47 Studebaker,\n'47 Pontiac,  52 Vanguard,  '47\nOldsmobile 6, '49 Monarch. For\nsale, '47 Olds, motor. Cottonwood\nWreckage, Service, ph, 1363-L-2,\nBox 382, .24 Ymir\/Rd;,,'Nelsdn,\n\"';.. ft ! QNLY $18?5 ':'\u25a0\u201e \/_.,..\n1957 'Wyfaouth jWj\/J 2-d0or\u00a3 new\ntires; heater, excellent condition.\nPhorie 2i70i or call Iffi 305- flail\nMines Rdad,   \u00a5M l,.,.],.---^ \u25a0\u25a0\nFOR SALE W\u201e5_i&fcACS AND\nwhite Monarch; Phaeton, 12,000\nmiles. Private.\" Ph'. 786 after 5\np.m.\t\nF6R SALE - 2 KNOBfeV ttftES,\n6 ply 6.00x16, with rims for '48\nPlymouth, 5000 miles. Phone\n1635-X-3.  \u2022\nSave! Save!\nFOR SALE - 1 1953 FORD PICK-\nup; 1 1949 Fargo 1 ton In good\ncondition, Quality Produce, ph.\n1812. -r.\t\nFOR SALE OR TRADE-1946 3-\nton Ford. Low mileage. Trade\nfor cattle or 4-wheeled tractor.\nPhone 24-F, Balfour.\t\nMUST SELL '57 DODGE CUSTOM\nSuburban V-8 push button. Many\nextras. Ph. 4641, Kinnaird.\nFOR SALE - 1955 FORD F-900\ntruck, 1955 Columbia 15-ton trail-\ner. Offers, phone Nelson 768-Y.\nFOR   SALE   -   1952   PONTIAC,\nfirst class condition. Ph. 596-X.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - GREY AND WHITE CAT\nDouglas Road area. Reward. Ph\n1064-Y. i\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH. S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer. Chemistr Mine Rep.:\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nFOR SALE - \"JAEGER\" TWO-\ndrum winch, size 2-B, 6 cylinder\nHercules gas engine, 4 - speed\ntransmission. Drum sizes 12\"\ndia., 22\" face, IVi\" flange. Price\n$1400. Nelson Machinery, Nelson,\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor\n1015 Eighth Sf\u201e Nelson, Ph. 144-R\nboyd c. Affleck, meic~\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nSee   Us   Before   You   Buy!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1.958r-.11\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS      PETS, CANARIES, BEES\nSCRAP STEEL WANTED - C\/L\nlots. Also auto body tin. Commercial Steel and Metals, 2561\nWillingdon Ave,, Burnaby 2.\nVancouver, B.C.\nWANTED-CHILD'S BQBSKATES.\nPhone 1329-R.     '\nFOR SALE - 1 MALE, 1 FE-\nmale, Golden Labrador pups. Ph.\n1985-Y.\nFOR SALE - 2 FEMALE SIAM-\nese kittens, $5 each. Ph Trail\n1900-X.\n1956 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n\u25a0 ..'.'   One owner. Low mileage. Immaculate\n\u2022: condition.\n1953 DESOTO SEDAN\n.A Real Beauty.\n1952 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR\nExtra good shape.\n1953 FORD 4-DOOR\nA real snap for $875\n1953 AUSTIN SEDAN\nClean, economical car.\n1948 CHRYSLER SEDAN\n1952 FARGO EXPRESS\nOne owner.   A-l.\n1957 DODGE 14-TON\nPowerflite trans.  V-8 motor.\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor,\n373 Baker St.   Nelson   Phone 1118\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Aiteneles Ltd.\nTRAVEL ;\nRail, air, steamship tickets    '\n!See Jim or Betty Vipond\nGLOBE AGENCIES.LIMITED\n146 Cedar Ave.    Trail    Ph. 2345\n'Drive a Peebles Bargain!\nPEEBLE* MOTOR* ltd\n[ HRY5 LER-PLYM 0 UTH- FARB0-J-<vtlRl5_\n1958 METEORS\nREDUCED TO CLEAR\n1 only METEOR RIDEAU 500\nFully. Equipped.\n1 Only NIAGARA 300 SEDAN\n6-cyl. white walls, 2-tone.\n1 Only NIAGARA 300 SEDAN\n2-tone. V8.\n1 Only MERCURY MONTEREY\nFully Equipped.\nUSED GARS\n1957 METEOR RIDEAU 500\n2-door hardtop\n1956 METEOR 2-DOOR R-WAGON\nV8. Radio.\n1954 MONARCH 4-DOOR SEDAN\nA Beautiful Car. ,\n1954 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR SEDAN\nReconditioned Motor\n1955 AUSTIN A50 SEDAN\nFully Reconditioned\n1953 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN\n;:       A One-Owner Car\nUSED TRUCK\nSPECIALS\n1957 MERCURY 1-TON $695\nChassis and Cab\n1953 FORD 1\/2-TON $795\n1952 MERCURY Yi-TOk $595\nDEAL WITH CONFIDENCE  AT *\nBeacon Motors Ltd.\nPhone 578 and 579\nNelson, B. C.\nShower\n...   of Bargains\nAt\nMel Buerge Motors Ltd.\n608 VERNON ST. \u2014 PHONE 1744        '.  .\u201e,\nor\nUSED CAR LOT  (Opp. Civic Centre)  PHONE 1133 -\nSee\nThe Outstanding\nTHUNDERBIRD\nNOW ON  DISPLAY\nPLUS:\n[any Models of\nBrand New and REDUCED for\nYear-End CLEARANCE!\nOur\nUSED CARS and USED TRUCKS\n1957 FORD RANCHWAGON\n1957 FORD SEDAN\n1954 FORD SEDAN (new motor, new paint)\t\n1953 PONTIAC HARDTOP (radio)\u2014\t\n1954 INTERNATIONAL LC182 \t\n1955 FARGO DUMP L_\t\n1955 FARGO 2-TON ' '   \";\u201e, ;\t\n1950 DODGE 3-TON FLAT DECK ,\t\n1950 G.M.C. 3-TON FLAT DECK\t\n$2495\n2350\n1500\n1095\n1695\n1495\n1195\n750\n650\nPlus Many, Many More!\nWe need late model trade-ins!\nNOW you can make the BEST deal at5\nel Bmeride Motors\n ^~\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1958\n1A8Y STYUNQ\nTHICKS ATHOMEI\n\u2022 BUY ADORN TODAY I\n\u2022 QETYOURFREE\nBOOKLET NOW I\nTALL., SLIM ATOMIZER\nHOLP8 % MORI SPRAY I ONLY\nLY I\n75\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nB.C. Lumber Operators Accused\nOf Inciting Cut-Throat Methods\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A union\nspokesman charged Friday that\ninterior B.C. lumber operators\nare. determined to maintain unfair competitive advantage over\ncoast operators and are attempting to incite cut-throat competition between northern and southern interior areas.\nDistrict president Joe Morris of\nthe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica said in a statement the\nunion's policy committee has\nrecommended rejection of the\nmajority reports by conciliation\nboards in the northern and southern interior areas.\nTlie statement said 7,000 will\nvote simultaneously on whether\nto accept or reject the board\nrecommendations and for or\nagainst authorization of strike\naction.\nThe  conciliation   board   which\nHove The Job Done R'aht\nVIC GRAVEC\n\"\u2022      LIMITED **\nPHONE 815\n\u2022 MASTER PLUMBER\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\n576 Baker St.\nPhone 387\nheard the dispute in tbe southern\ninterior recommended a two-\nyear contract with a three per\ncent increase each year. No\nchange. in tbe wage rate was\nrecommended in the northern\ninterior. The base rates in both\nareas are now $1.53 an hour.\n\"Once more we are faced with\na situation where no genuine\neffort has been made to conciliate a dispute,\" Morris charged.\n\"The majority reports, if implemented, will make a bad situation much worse. The interior\nlumber workers are now getting\n19 cents an hour less than is now\npaid for the same work in the\ncoast industry.\n\"The employers are evidently\ndetermined! to maintain an unfair\ncompetitive advantage over their\ncoast competitors in the Canadian and American markets, at\nthe expense of their employees.\n\"The proposal to introduce another wage differential between-\nworkers\" in the northern and\nsouthern interior industry . . .\nis regarded by the union as a\nbarefaced attempt to destroy the\nexisting wage structure by incit-\"\ning cut-throat \u25a0 competition between the two areas.\"\nMorris termed the conciliation\nboard majority ,reports. ''senseless slaps on the face that only\nintensify the dispute.\"\nU.S.-Canadian\nDiscuss Missile\nOTTAWA (CP)-The first of a\nseries of discussions on co-ordination of Canadian and United\nStates defence production facilities for missile defence has been\nheld between top officials of both\ncountries.\nI A high Canadian official said\nFriday that a one-day meeting\nhere Thursday came to no firm\n| decisions but that further discussions will be held to study the\nmatter in more detail.\nHe described Thursday's conference aa \"an exploratory meeting.\"\nOne main point of discussion\nwas the production problem\nraised by Canada's decision to\narm tbe air defence system with\nthe Bomarc ground-to-air guided\nmissile. This also involves the\nstrengthening of the Pinetree radar line and the installation of\nthe SAGE (semi-automatic ground\nenvironment electronic system to\ncontrol the interceptor flights of\nthe Bomarc missiles.\nThe government already has\nclearly indicated it would like\nCanadian industry to get a share\nof production orders for equipment required in continental missile defence.\nThis stems from the decision\nannounced last month to purchase\nthe Bomarc missile, and also\nfrom the announcement that the\nOfficials\nOutput\nSovernment has not decided to or-\ner into production- the CF-105\nsupersonic jet interceptor plane\ndeveloped by tbe A. V. Roe Company at Malton, Ont.\nANTS SHARING\nIn making the announcement\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker said\nthe government hopes \"that Canada's defence industry will be\nable to share effectively with the\nU. S. industry in one part or another of the major programs\" and\nthus, provide alternative employment for laid-off workers in the\naircraft industry.      -. '     ...\nAnd in a statement earlier this\nweek to a university student association: here, J. M. Macdonneli,\nminister > without, portfolio, said\ndiscussions will be held \"on the\nbest way for Canadian industry\nto share in the production urograms related to such missiles\nand  associated  equipment.\"\nA recent report here said the\nU.S. probably will share the cost\nof tbe Canadian program for Bomarc missiles, more radar stations and electronic computers.\nOne government source said that\nalthough no cost.sharing agreement had been reached, it was\nexpected the U.S. would pay two-\nthirds of the cost and Canada\none-third: This is in line with the\ncost-sharing arrangement for tbe\nPinetree radar line.\nManitoba's Special Fall\nSession Opens Oct. 23rd\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Premier\nDuff Roblin Friday announced a\nspecial -fall session of the Manitoba\nlegislature will open Oct. 23.\nThe session will be the first test\nfor.tbe minority Progressive Conservative government, elected on\nJune 16 in a -general election.\nTbe Conservatives hold the largest bloc of seats in the 57-member\nlegislature with 26. But tbe combined opposition of the Liberal-Progressives with 19 seats and the\nCCF's 11 is sufficient to defeat the\ngovernment. Winnipeg's Mayor\nStephen Juba was elected as an Independent.\nMr. Roblin anounced the date\nduring his weekly press conference.\nIt will be the first special session\nsince January, 1952, when the\nHouse was convened to consider\npurchase of hydro electric facilities.\nMr. Roblin promised the special\nsession during the campaign that\nresulted in the election of Manitoba's first Conservative government since 1915.- They defeated\nthe long-standing Liberal government of Premier D. L. Campbell.\nExpected to be considered at the\nsitting is legislation Covering increased farm assistance, the easing of whiter unemployment, in\ncreased grants to education, and\ntbe establishment of an industrial\ndevelopment fund. '\".-,\u25a0\nMr. Roblin said Thursday he\nplans to meet today with Mr.\nCampbell and CCF Leader Lloyd\nStinson. to discuss ' election of a\nSpeaker for the House: He said he\nhopes to have the three' parties\nagree on a Speaker and elect him\nunanimously.'\nHe said be could not disclose\nwhat course the government will\ntake if no agreement is reached\nand the combined opposition defeats the government on the question.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c Une, 40c Une black face type; larger type rates ou\nrequest. Minimum, two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nLast call for spring flowering bulbs Whist-Drive Monday, Sacred Heart\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP     Hall, Hall Mines Road, at 8 p.m\nROTARY LUNCHEON ....\nCANCELLED FOR MONDAY.\nRemember the UCWL fall bazaar\nand tea, Mon., Oct. 27, 2 to 5 p.m.\nCentennial Spoons and Souvenirs\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nFor Sale \u2014 1 22\" steel welded\nfurnace. What offers? Phone 2088\nafternoons and evenings.\nTINY ARMY\nMonaco's army of 65 men is\nthe smallest in the world.\nWhen chilly weather calls for real warmth\u2014\n*%ou4&iuwt*H&i heat saves\nmore money for more families!\nYou can save, too... Just phone your House-\n. warmer-ths authorized Standard Heating Oil\ndistributor in your am. He'll bring you clean,\n. dependable warmth plus these exclusive\nHousewarmor savings;\nmon pur* heat per gallon...because\nStandard Heating Oils are custom-\ntailored for today's heating\nsystems. Naturally, you'd expect them to burn cleaner,\nhotter \u2014 and they do!\nmore heat from your furnace.,.\nbecause Standard's exclu-- ,\nsive detergent-action\nThermisoi keeps your\nburner system I\nCLEAN-togiYe* '\nlow-cost, wbwjpxjr\noperation,   Mp. T\nj more efficient heating\nservice...because your\nHousewarmer 'b tips on\nheating can save neat,\n, save money.. because his\nautomatic \"keep-flllecl\"\nservice gives you steady,\neven heat all season long!\nNnumrmn for SUndird Hutlng Ollt '\nYour  Local  Standard  Oil. Agent \u25a0\nFRED   MAW ER\n95 Government Rood Phone 1153\nSTANDARD OIL COMPANY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA LIMITED\nTricks, Jokes, Hats, Noise Makers.\nHOBBY. SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St., phone 1108.\nAuction sale of vegetables and\nfruit at the Salvation Army, Monday, Oct. 13, 7:30 p.m.\nNew Winter Coats and Jackets,\nall sizes at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nReserve Wednesday, December\n3rd, for' Redeemer Church Service\nClub Christmas Tea.\nOIL HEATERS \u2014 New and used,\n$30 and up, to clear.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nH.E.U. Local 180 thanksgiving\nTurkey Raffle was won by Mrs. E.\nPommier, 915 Eighth St., Nelsdn.\nWhite pure virgin wool blanket\nwith multi-colored borders, 72x90,\n8 lbs., at $15.95 each.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nPhone 2160 for plumbing and hot\nwater heating. Top quality work,\nall work guaranteed. Pat May\nPlumbing, Nelson.\nFirst Church of Christ Scientist\nwill hold Thanksgiving service\nMonday, Oct. 13, at 11 a.m. Public\ninvited to attend.\nMOVIE CAMERAS\n\/..BMMEC'ftORS AND FILM\n\u25a0if \/ CUSTOM CAMERAS -\"   .<\u25a0''.\n$t^nh$y> St.' opppsije. \"The .Bay\".;.,\nI L'J.f\n.\u201e \/ rFl .. ,....v , .   ,,\nei Oriddnlere sweaters, reg. ,$8.95,\nnow $5.95'. All wool,'and mothproof.\nD'Arcy Hughes ll itiu idatron fsales,\n6\u00ab\u00a7;ffl;vw\u00abMs.4.; i   !\u25a0   \u25a0\nLAST DAY\nOf our 88c sale. Buys and Bargains\nby the dozen.\nWOOD. VALLANCE HARDWARE\nCHIMNEY BRICK, ROMAN TILE\nFlue liners, hearth tile and .mortar\ncement all available, at\nT. H. WATERS & Cb. LTD.\nPhone 156 1 1(11 Hall St;\nVETERANS WELFARE OFFICER\nC. L. Glibbery will be at the Canadian Legion, Tuesday morning, October 14, for interviews. Please\nphone secretary at 546.\nFOR YOUR SUN-DAMAGED\nHAIR \u2014 phone 1922. Reconditioning\nTreatment, Styling and your\nSpecial Fall Perms. .\nCharm Beauty Salon\nI\nFUR COATS OF DISTINCTION\nIn complete variety\nTrades Accepted.\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\n880 Bate St, Mm. BA\nSPECIAL THANKSGIVING\nDINNER\nFrom 12 noon to 10 p.m., Sunday,\nand Monday at the ROUNDUP\nROOM. For reservations ph. 391.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Hankin, Willow Point, will be at home to all\nfriends, Saturday, Oct. 18, from\n2:30 to 5 and 7 to 9, occasion of\ntheir golden wedding.\nThe Preacher at the 11 a.m. service next Sunday, Oct. 12, at the\nChurch of the Redeemer, will be\nThe Rt. Rev. H. R. Ragg, M.A.,\nD.D.\nLEAVING COUNTRY, MUST\nSELL 1881. Ghev. 2-door, heater,\nexcellent rtlre.s, very,good condition, low mileage. Phone 524, Trail,\nB.C.\nA limited number of memberships are still available at - City\nDrug for the 1958 series of the\nNelson Overture Concert Association. Date of the first concert will\nbe announced shortly.\nregular monthly meeting\nof beverage dispensers'\nunion, local 707, will be\nheld on october 12 at 8:00\np.m. at the Civic hotel, all\nmembers requested to atTEND.\nATTENTION\nCANADIAN LEGION MEMBERS\nReserve Friday; Oct6ber; 81* fpr ,a\nMasquerade .D.ance^bd^Sifppfej' io\nbe held in. ydiu* 'bfeY'ly miovated\nLegion Halls\/..Tickets ' $2.50 per\ncouple. 'BHz^j! ,'atid FaVors. Phone\n546\\fprftrdur reservations to be\nqtiad'e' M Saturday, October 25, as\nTKlKEt ^UPPLY LIMITED.\n\/;'' SMART\nFuneral services for the late\nMargaret Qrmond Smart, beloved\nwife of David .'Smart., .of 1955\nSeventh (Avenue^ Trail; iformerjy\nHarrop, B.C:>, will be held from\nthe First Presbyterian Church on\nTuesday, Oct. 14,' 1958, at 1:30 p.m.\nwith Rev. M. Reside of Kinnaird\nofficiating, interment to. take place\nin family plot of Mountain View\nCemetery. Clark's Funeral Chapel\nin charge, i\nDiesels Empty\nRound-Houses\nMEDICINE HAT, AHa. (CP) -\nThe 90-foot turntable in the Canadian Pacific Railway roundhouse\nhere has been virtually . empty\nsince the advent of the diesel locomotive.\nAt one time, 95 men. were employed in the roundhouse to keep\nart eye on the fireboxes and gauges\nof as many as 24 steam'locomotives.\nthe diesels now are serviced in\nthe big shops at Calgary tnd Moose\nJem.\nRailway Crews\nWasted  No\nTime Over PGE\nDAWSON CREEK, B.C. (CP)-\nRailroad crews didn't waste any\ntime pushing the Pacific Great\nEastern Railway extension 265\nmiles from Prince George to this\nnortheastern B.C. city.\nThe modern ghhdy dancers\nhammered an average lVt miles\nof track a day to reach Dawson\nCreek by Oct. 2. The PGE line,\nstretching from Vancouver, connects here with the Northern Alberta Railways line from Edmonton. '\nThe track outfit comprised 72\nsteel slingers, crane operators,\nballast men, engineers and general laborers.\n\"I've seen old-time tracklayers\nwatch us with- their eyes bugging\nout,\" says Hugh Bare, general\nsteel gang foreman on one section of the job. \"They find it\nhard to believe track can be set\ndown so fast.\n\"In the old days, it kept a steel\ngang hopping to lay 90 rails a\nday. Now, under good conditions,\nwe can, lay more than 400 in -10\nhours.\"\nMr. Bare says organization and\nmechanization are the big factors. A tie-dumping crew keeps\nabout six miles ahead of a crew\nwhich lines and spaces the ties.\nThis, crew works a. half - mile\nahead of the. steel gang.\nA crane lays the two ribbons\nof steel, taking an average of 60\nseconds to transfer the 33 - foot\nrails from flatcar to roadbed.\nBehind the crane come workmen\nwho lay tie plates: Two bolting\nmachines then secure and line up\nfhe rail joints. ,\nFour spiking machines each\npunching a big nail every five\nseconds complete the job although men with spiking hammers must\" still drive in the nails\nat rail joints.\nSeveral miles to the rear ballast crews fill spaces around the\nbare steel with .bower tampers\nand other stabilizing machinery.\nThe backbreaking labor that.\ncharacterized railroad building in\nthe past is obsolete. So are the\ninjuries that haunted every crew.\nNo one was injured on this job,\nalthough the line was laid through\nsome of the roughest country in\nnorthern B.C.\nPORTUGUESE FIND\nSt. Helena, British crown colony in the South Atlantic, was\ndiscovered by a Portuguese navigator in 1502.\nConsider Maple Leaf Good\nChoice for Canadian Flag\nBy FORBES RHUDE .\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nMONTREAL (CP) - The \"distinctive\" Canadian flag supported\nby the Canadian Chamber of Commerce at its annual meeting this\nweek, apparently means one without inclusion of the Union Jack\nor any emblem of France.\nThis was indicated by the Sarnia, Ont., delegation which presented the resolution. The delegation also indicated that the maple\nleaf would be a popular choice\nfor dominant position.\nThe chamber turned down an\namendment which would have recommended as the \"distinctive\"\nflag the Canadian ensign\u2014which\ncarries the Union Jack and arms\nof Canada and is the flag authorized to be flown until Parliament\ntakes other action.\nThe chamber resolution simply\nsays that it requests the Canadian government formally to\n\"adopt and authorize a distinctive\nnational flag.\"\nFAVOR FLAG\nThe preamble says Canadian\npublic opinion polls continually\nrecord- significant majorities favoring such a flag.\nThe Sarnia delegation, in a\nprinted, resume of its arguments,\nsays,' in part:\n\"The people of Canada have\nhereditary ties with many countries and our present ensign\nidentifies itself with only one.\n\"Canadians travelling abroad\nfind that the Canadian flag is not\nrecognized but is taken as some\nvariation of the British flag. They\nhave also noted the friendly recognition of the maple leaf, the\nbade design of, many Canadian\nfighting units iii two world wars.\nAPPROVE CONCEPT\n\"Recent public opinion polls indicate that younger people across\nthe country heartily approve the\nconcept of a 'distinctive flag.'\nYounger Canadians do not identify themselves with racial origins\noutside Canada as do some parents. This could mean that the\nstrength of the Canadian - flag\nsentiment will increase.   \u2022\n\"Recent flag - design contests\nhave produced comparatively few\ndesigns employing the Union Jack'\nor the fleur-de-lis. Almost 60 per\ncent bf the designs include the:\nmaple leaf. School children who,\nsubmitted designs completely\nomitted the British and French\nsymbols. Flag designs submitted\n20 years earlier carried a much\nhigher proportion of tbe Union\nJack and fleur-de-lis.  ,\n\"French Canadians, comprising\none-third of our population, want\na flag that is 100-per-cent Cana\ndian without symbolic representation of either Britain or France.\"\nThe flag resolution; once an issue which would have thrown tbe\nchamber into a first-class hassle,\ncaused hardly a ripple this year.1\nNOT UNANIMOUS\nThis doesn't mean ' that the\nohamber membership is by any\nmeans unanimous concerning.iHe\nnature of a Canadian flag. Ft ll-\nA number of hands were raised\nagainst the resolution \u2014 but the\nfact that it raised so little debate was regarded by some observers as perhaps one of tiie\nmost significant happenings in\nthe long-standing flag issue.\nThey regard it as significant\nbecause chamber membership includes local chambers and boards\nof trade in 783 communities across\nCanada, with a membership estimated at ,130,000.\nIncidentally, Ontario delegates\nmade up about half of the annual\nmeeting^ attendance of around\n700 \u2022\u2014 including accompanying\nwives. \u25a0 \u25a0 \"\nTIME\nTo\nCHANGE\nIt will soon be time\n\/\".yto change to\n1, .\"Long Johns\"\nW   \u2022<''*'\u25a0\nIVORY'S hove a complete stock of Fall and\nWinter Underwear in\nall styles.\nSEE US FOR WINTER\nCOMFORT.\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     f\nPhone 31 B& 108 -\nCanadian Electrical Business\nMade Over $1 Billion in Year\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) -\nThe Canadian electrical manufacturing industry last year produced\nmore than a billion dollars worth\nof goods fbr the. third year in a\nrow, it was announced Friday.\nThe figures, were given at the\nannual meeting pf\" the, Canadian\nElectrical Manufacturers' Association by' incoming President W. I.\nTurner-of Toronto.\nHe said 1957 domestic production\nreached '$1.22,000,000 arid -\"barring some unforeseen problem\" this\nyear's volume should prove to be\nahead.. The. 1956 figure was $1,129,-\n994,475.\nMr. BeH' told. the delegates Canadian manufacturers are doing a\nremarkable job, of competing\nagainst. American industry. ':. .\nAGAINST ODDS ';\nHowever; this success had been\nagainst great odds \u2014 \"pressure\nfrom     foreign-dominated     labor\nLONG JUMPER\nAustralian kangaroos have been\nknown to clear 30 feet in one\nleap.\nunions to bring Canadian wages\ninto line with hose paid iii; the\nUnited States\" and competition\nfrom     imported     manufactured\nBut the effort produced a low\nirofit margin averaging \"only 3.2\nper cent\u2014an extremely unattractive figure.\"\nPart of the solution, he said, was\nin public support of a \"buy Canadian\" movement. Secondary therefore \"Canadians will be helping\nthemselves when they buy Canadian.\nSEA-GIRT PROVINCE\nNo point in Prince Edward\nIsland is higher than 500 feet\nabove sea leyel.\nWe have all\nthe new\nKODAK\nFILMS\nt'liUti KuaALL PHARMACY\nCity Drug\nBox 46\nPhone 34\ncaporal\nfc\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_10_11","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\/1.0430903","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":"1958-10-11 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":"1958-10-11 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]. 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