{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"Contributor":[{"label":"Contributor","value":"Gibbon, A. 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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":" \"~~^\u2122^^WT\u2014\n60\nYears of\nDaily Service\nto the Kootenays.\n0Ui\nc3lo>5\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny and warm.\nWinds light. Low and high at\nCranbrook, 35 and 75; Crescent\nValley, 40 and 80.\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the-Kootenay-Golumhia area\nVol. 61\nN&SON, B. C, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 5, 1962\n10 Cents\nNo. 115\nWins\nB$\nvelstoke Byelection\nKennedy Admits in Note u-.rjy\nHave Invaded Russian Territory\nKilled\nIn Plane (rash\nRAVENNA, Ohio (AP)-A twin-\nengined private plane believed\ncarrying two pilots and at least\nnine passengers\u2014including executives from three oil companies\n\u2014 crashed with a fiery explosion\nin a farm field southeast of here\nTuesday night.\nThere were no survivors.\nThe state highway patrol said\nIt had been told by an official of\nthe Ashland Oil Company there\nwere 11 passengers aboard the\nplane, a Lockheed Lodestar.\nAt Buffalo, however, it was reported the plane's flight plan on\ndeparture listed only nine passengers.\nThe craft had stopped at Cleveland for executives of the Allied\nOil Company, an Ashland subsidiary, then went to Buffalo to\npick up representatives from the\nPioneer Oil Company, another\nsubsidiary, before heading back\ntoward home base at Ashland,\nKentucky.\nAshland Oil identified the pilot\nas Blaine Berkstresser and said\nco-pilot Ronald Roberts also was\nalong.\nRuss Protest Calls for Strict\nPunishment of Guilty Persons\nWASHINGTON (CP)\u2014The United States acknowledged Tuesday that an American U-2 plane may have\nflown over Soviet territory last Thursday.\nThe acknowledgement was made in a note dispatched to Moscow with President Kennedy's approval\njust a few hours after receipt of a bristling Russian protest.\nThe note said that \"precautions intended to prevent\nsuch incidents are under review.\"\nBut state department officials declined to describe\nthe note as an apology. They said it was an explanation\nof what happened.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CPl-Canadian\ndollar 1-32 higher at 92 55-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n92 53-64. Pound sterling unchanged at $2.80 5-32.\nThe Soviets alleged lhat a\nhigh-flying U-2 reconnaissance\nplane flew over part of southern\nSakhalin, a Russian-held island\njust north of Japan, for nine\nminutes during the night of Aug.\n30.\nThey recalled the famous\nMay, 1960, flight by a U-2\npiloted by Francis Gary Powers\nwhich went down deep inside\nSoviet territory, touching off an\ninternational incident.\nREPEAT WARNING\nThe note declared that the\nSoviet warnings of retaliatory\nmeasures against U-2 bases\n\"remain fully in force.\" It reserved the right to raise \"this\nnew gross violation\" at the\nforthcoming United Nations\nGeneral Assembly.\nThe protest called on the U.S.\ngovernment to  \"punish  strictly\nThat time, a state department\nspokesman started out by denying there had been any deliberate attempt to violate Soviet\nair space. Subsequently President Eisenhower admitted U-2\nflights had been made over\nRussia and said they would be\nstopped.\nThe U.S. reply said \"investigation revealed that an unintentional violation may in fact\nhave taken place.\"\nWAS IN AREA\n\"A patrol craft operated by\nthe United States Air Force was\nill the northern Pacific area east\nof Sakhalin at about the time\nspecified in the Soviet note.\n\"The pilot of the aircraft has\nreported that he was flying a\ndirected course while outside\nSoviet territorial limits but encountered severe winds during\nthe persons guilty of organizing j this night-time flight and may\nthis flight.\nFrom Kennedy down, U.S.\nofficials were anxious to avoid\na repetition of the 1960 affair.\nU.S. Challenges\nRuss Match West\nGENEVA (Reuters) - The\nUnited States Tuesday called on\nthe Soviet Union to match Western moves to break the deadlock  over nuclear tests.\nU.S. delegate Arthur Dean\ntold the nuclear test ban subcommittee of the disarmament\nconference that the U.S. and\nBritain have moved forward to\nmeet the Soviet Union on many\nissues.\nHe said the West is willing\nto negotiate on either of its\nnew draft treaties providing for\na comprehensive ban or a partial ban excluding underground\ntests.\n\"If negotiations, and not a\n'dialogue of the deaf are to\nmark our continued discussion,\nit is up to the Soviet Union to\nmatch these constructive moves\nwith constructive moves.\"\nGIVES   NO  REPLY\nSoviet delegate Vasili Kuznet-\nsov meanwhile gave no reply to\nthe Western proposal that the\nnuclear test ban subcommittee\nshould meet during the two-\nmonth disarmament conference\nrecess starting Monday.\nHe said the proposal\u2014to enable negotiations to go on without   pause   to   meet  a   Jan.   1\ndeadline for agreement \u2014 was\nstill being studied.\nKuznetsov said the Soviet Union was prepared to explore any\nproposal to deal with the question of nuclear tests as a whole\nbut the provisions of the comprehensive Western draft could\nnot be taken as a basis for\nagreement.\nOne main reason why the Soviet Union objected to the draft\nwas because it provided for obligatory on-site inspection.\ntherefore have unintentionally\noverflown the southern tip of\nSakhalin. . . .\n\"If the pilot of* the aircraft'\nin question did in fact violate\nSoviet territory this act was\nentirely unintentional and due\nsolely to a navigational error\nunder extreme difficult flying\nconditions.\n\"Precautions intended to prevent such incidents are under\nChiropractor\nConvicted in\nChild's Death\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - A jury\nconvicted a Sherman Oaks chiropractor Tuesday of second-degree\nmurder in connection with the\ndeath of an eight-year-old cancer\nvictim.\nThe panel of eight women and\nfour men returned the verdict\nagainst Dr. Marvin Phillips, 35,\nwho was charged after the death\nlast Dec. 28 of Linda Epping of\na tumor diagnosed as cancer of\nthe left eye.\nTestimony indicated she underwent treatment by Phillips from\nJuly 24 to Aug. 12, 1961. Phillips\nwas accused of telling her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Epping, that he could cure her with\nvitamins, minerals and iodine\nwater.\nPhillips testified he never promised a cure but merely tried to\nbuild up the girl's body in an\neffort to prolong her life.\nLinda's parents removed her\nfrom a medical clinic the night\nbefore she was scheduled to undergo surgery.\nDr. Kenneth Chapman, deputy\ncounty medical examiner who\nperformed an autopsy, testified\nthat if surgery had been done\nwhen scheduled, the child's life\nwould have been prolonged.\n^\u25a0-,.:-.:..:-:.-:>-w:.-.^:-::::\nVancouver Has\nRecord Rainfall\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Rainfall\nbroke records here last month.\nThe weatherman said Tuesday\n3.54 inches of rain was recorded\nat Vancouver airport. Previous\nj record was 2.57 inches in August,\n| 1948 .Average precipitation for\nthe area is 1.23 inches.\nMariner II to Come\nEven Closer to Venus\nPASADENs, Calif. (API\u2014The\nMariner II spacecraft will come\nwithin 9000 miles of the planet\nVenue \u2014 1000 miles closer than\noriginally planned \u2014 a scientist\nsaid Tuesday night.\nJack James, Mariner project\nmanager for the U.S. Space\nAgency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, made the prediction after\nprecise calculation of the spacecraft's trajectory following a\ncritical manoeuvre 1,500,000 miles\nout in space.\n\"Everything worked just as designed,\" James told a press con.\nterence.\nThere had been fears earlier\nthat the 447-pound space vehicle\nmight miss Venus by as much as\n23,3000 miles instead of flying by\nat a distance of 10,000 miles.\nThe only previous Venus rocket\n\u2014 launched by the Soviet Union\nlMi years ago \u2014 came no closer\nthan 62,000 miles. Its radios failed\nsoon after launching and no scientific information was gained.\nAlberta Sulphur\nGoes to U.K.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A cargo\nof 10,000 long tons of sulphur, the\nlargest single order of Alberta\nsulphur yet to be shipped to the\nUnited Kingdom, was loaded on\nTuesday from the nearby Port\nMoody plant o! Pacific Coast Bulk\nTerminals Ltd.\nThe cargo was loaded aboard\nthe Liberian freighter Manegina\nin the record time of Ti hours.\nThe sulphur was loaded at Red\nDeer in 150 railway hopper cars.\nFrost Hits\nNorthern Wheat\nSASKATOON (CPI - Farm officials here said Tuesday weekend\nfrost had knocked down wheat\ngrades in many northern areas\nbut an accurate picture was not\npossible until harvesting resumed. Wheat being harvested had\nbeen averaging No. 2 Northern\nbut it was expected that in the\nnorthwest where crops were later\nthan in other districts the grade\ncould go as low as No. 5 because\nof frost.\nThe northwest district of St.\nWalburg, Paradise Hill and\nFrenchman Butte, where crops\nwere late, had four or five degrees of irost. These temperatures continued through to Prince\nAlbert in the north.\nAbout 35 per cent of the wheat\nin the area had been swathed to\noffset mounting sawfly damage.\nLAST CAHEFREE DAY. Blue sky, a sparkling lake and a rod and reel are\nthe prefect combination for a boy wanting to forget that school begins today.\nThis lad \"goin fishin' \" is pictured near Kaslo and if you would see how his\nday turned out please turn to page 7.\u2014Daily News photo by Bob Blackmoie.\n300,000 West Qermans\nQive de Qaulle Welcome\nBONN (Reuters) More than\n300,000 West Germans in holiday mood turned out Tuesday\nfor the arrival of President de\nGaulle on a six-day state visit\naimed at cementing Franco-\nGerman accord.\nGerman officials said they\nwere astonished at the size and\nwarmth of the turn-out for the\nfirst official visit to Germany\nof a French head-of-state.\nDe Gaulle's visit also pro-\ndiced unprecedented security\nprecautions   by   police   fearing\nanother attempt on the French\nleader's life.\nFrench and German detectives mingled with the crowds\nand helicopters hovered overhead as de Gaulle and West\nGerman President Heinrich\nLuebke drove in an open car\nfrom the airport.\nTuesday night in Bonn, de\nGaulle and his wife attended a\nformal reception and dinner followed by a torchlight military\ndisplay in the grounds of Bruehl\nCaslte.\nDe Gaulle and Adenauer, the\nBen Bella Reclaims Algiers\n9\u00a3l fojminx^...\nWeekend\nMAGAZINE\nSATURDAY, SEPT. 8th\nCP From APReulers\nALGIERS \u2014 Deputy Premier\nAhmed Ben Bella reclaimed Algiers from dissident guerrillas\nTuesday night and declared Algeria's threat of civil war at an\nend. But early today shooting\nbroke out again in the Casbah.\nThere was no immediate explanation for the sporadic machine-gun fire rattling through\nAlgiers' ancient Moslem quarter,\na Ben Bella stronghold.\nThe rebel guerrillas had put up\nno resistance as the deputy premier and his political bureau\nmoved back into their headquarters in the Joly Villa.\nThe guerrillas had driven Ben\nBella and his political bureau out\nof Algiers Aug. 25 and vowed to\ndefend their positions to \"the last\ndrop ot blood\" against the well-\nequipped regular army forces\nbacking Ben Bella.\nBen Bella, who appeared unexpectedly Tuesday in the heart\nof the capital, made nis announcement to a crowd of from\n2,000 to 3,000 persons from the\nbalcony of the former French\ndelegation-general building.\nHuge cheers greeted the news\nof the agreement with the commanders of wilayas 3 and 4, the\nmilitary zones of the Algiers\nand Kabylie regions. Earlier\ntheir forces had fought a series\nof battles with Ben Bella's advancing regular army troops.\nThe two commands disagreed'\nwith Ben Bella's plan to convert\nthe guerrilla commands\u2014which\nfought the French for seven\nyears\u2014into a national \"people's\narmy\"  divorced  from  politics.\nThey accused him of wanting to\nbecome a dictator.\nSUFFER CASUALTIES\nThe announcement of a ceasefire, after several days of battles south and west of Algiers\ncausing numerous casualties,\nwas made by Lieut. Ali Al-\nlouache, spokesman for wilaya\n4.\nAllouache said that the principle on which the agreement\nwas achieved was that every\nwilaya would give one battalion\nto constitute the garrison of Algiers.\nHe said that talks would con-\nvinue after Tuesday night's\ncease-fire agreement.\nThe original announcement\nthat talks were to be held was\nmade by Col. Si Hassan, leader\nof wilaya 4. Hassan made the\nannouncement shortly after Ben\nBella showed up in Algiers.\nReports from the battle fronts\nto the south and west were confused by claims and counterclaims, but it appeared none of\nBen Bella's troops were within\n50 miles of the capital.\nWilaya 4 was claiming \"a\nbloody invasion\" was in progress, but the political bureau\nsaid that in many areas the opposing troops were fraternizing.\nMohammed Khider, Ben Bella's right-hand man and bureau\nsecretary, told the press conference the bureau had set up a\nclandestine radio station in Algiers.\nAs he spoke, demonstrators\nmarched through the streets,\ncalled out by wilaya 4 to protest against the fighting.\ntwo statesmen who have\nbrought about the revolution in\nFranco - German relations will\nstart their political talks today\nand continue them Thursday on\na Rhine steamer which will\ntake them to Dusseldorf and\nthe industrial Ruhr Valley.\nSocreds Give Close\nRace; Liberals Trail\nLUNDELL (SO 1,023; HOBBS (NDP-CCF) 1,095;\nJOHNSTON (L) 465.\nREVELSTOKE, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Mrs. Margaret Hobbs\nretained the provincial constituency of Revelstoke for\nthe New Democratic Party in Tuesday's byelection, The\nCanadian Press reported at 9:35 p.m. She defeated a\nLiberal and a Social Credit\nthan 100 votes throughout most\nof the count.\nMr. Lundell said at 9:45 p.m.\nwith 24 of the 28 polls in that\nhe was conceding the election\nand docs not intent to ask for\na recount.\n\"I can't see any object in\ncalling for a recount,\" he said.\n\"The total is so small that\nthere is a pretty small chance\nof any error.\nMrs. Hobbs said: \"I'm certainly very pleased with the results,\nwhich I'm sure are due to hard\nwork, sacrifice and enthusiasm of\nmy workers.\n\"I feel the issue was fought on\nColumbia River power and I shall\ncarry on our policy to oppose\nHigh Arrow dam, which is water\nstorage only. We support Mica\nCreek dam with generation installed for low-cost power.\"\nIn Vancouver, provincial Liberal Leader Ray Perrault said his\nparty was encouraged by the fact\nthat its percentage of the vote in\nI960 was maintained in the by-\nelection, despite two obstacles.\nOne, he said, was an understandable vote for Mrs. Hobbs\nby those who wished her to carry\non the work of her late husband,\nand the other was \"Premier Bennett's threat that a vote against\nthe government would be a vote\nagainst Columbia River development.\"\ncandidate.\nMrs. Hobbs, 52 - year - old\nwidow of the former member,\ndefeated Social Crediter Arvid\nLundell, mayor of this eastern\nBritish Columbia city, by a narrow margin in heavy voting.\nMore than 75 percent of the\n3,378 eligible voters went to the\npolls in the byelection, caused\nby the death last January of\nNDP - CCF member George\nHobbs.\nLibera! candidate J. Wallace\nJohnston, a 50-year-old Revelstoke businessman, was in third\nplace with less than one-fifth of\nthe vote. The Progressive Conservative party did not field a\ncandidate.\nAt the close of counting Tuesday night, Mrs. Hobbs held a\nlead of 69 votes with four of the\n28 polls still to report. The\ncount was Mrs. Hobbs, 1,096\nvotes; Mr. Lundell, 1,027; and\nMr. Johnston, 468.\nremain  to\nunreported\nAbout 100 ballots\nbe counted in the\npolls.\nThe result leaves the standing\nin the provincial legislature at\nSocial Credit 31, NDP-CCF 16,\nLiberal 4, vacant 1.\nAnother byelection is expected later this year following\nthe death of Mrs. Buda Brown,\nSocial Credit member for Point\nGrey.\nMr. Lundell, 62, took an early\nlead as the first votes from the\ncity and surrounding district\nwere counted, but it was soon\novercome by Mrs. Hobbs as\noutlying polls reported.\nShe   held   a  margin  of\nTHE WEATHER\nCanada low-high:\nKimberley  .:\t\nGrand Forks \t\n30\nNELSON\nWinnipeg\nless Vancouver\nMin Max Pre\n44 80 \u2014\n42 61 \u2014\n50    73     -\nHees Drives for\nMore Markets\nGARNER DIES\nIN GAS CHAMBER\nSAN QUENTIN, Calif. (API-\nLawrence Garner was executed\nTuesday in the California gas\nchamber for a double killing that\nended a wedding party of criminals.\nDuring his last days of life.\nGarner tried vainly to be granted\na one-hour meeting with his wife\nin prison, then settled for a 15-\nminute goodbye over the telephone.\nGarner was condemned for\nshooting down in the San Bernar\ndino desert Richard Lee Nowlen\n30. an escaped convict who was\non his way to be married in Las\nVegas, Nev., and the bride-to-be.\nMrs. Hurley Skene, 28, divorced\nLos Angeles narcotics parolee.\nGainer, 30, was the best man\nSan Bernardino county author\nities said the Sept. 6, 1959, shoot-\ning ended a combination bridal\nparty and forgery plotting expedition.\nSondra Grounds, now 24, was a\nfourth member of the party\nGarner subsequently married her\non a flight to Mexico, where they\nwere captured. She is serving a\nlife term for the murders in the\nCalifornia prison for women at\nCorona.\nBy ALAN DONNELLY\nOTTAWA (CP)-The trade\ndepartment's biggest export\npush yet was unveiled today by\nTrade Minister Hees\u2014a four-\npronged operation that will see\nmore than 700 foreign buyers\nairlifted to the doorstep of Canadian manufacturers.\nMr. Hees called it \"operation\nworld markets\" and informants\nput its total cost at more than\n$500,000\u2014an indication that despite its austerity program the\ngovernment is ready to spend\nmoney to help fatten the nation's export earnings.\nMain feature will be a three-\nday national samples show in\nToronto April 2-4 with more\nthan 500 buyers from around\nthe world flown in chartered\nplanes to see and order the best\nCanada has to offer in consumer  goods.\nDuring the previous week,\nmore than 200 airlifted foreign\nindustrialists and government\nofficials   will   be   touring   the\nplants of Canadian manufacturers   of   machinery   and  equipment.\nANNOUNCES  DETAILS\nLetters went out today from\nMr. Hees to some 5,500 Canadian companies announcing details of the national samples\nshow, and to nearly 500 machinery and equipment manufacturers.\nThe other two parts of the\noperation, under planning for\nmonths, involve the trade department's overseas sales-promotion force of some 120 trade\ncommissioners.\nThey'll be flown to Ottawa\nfor a week of discussions April\n4-11 on changing world trade\nconditions and special export,\nproblems.\nThen the trade commissioners will hold open house for\nnearly three weeks for any Canadian businessman wanting to\nget into the export business or\nexpand present overseas markets.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Thieves dined by candle light at a swank\nHornby Street restaurant during the weekend, then disappeared\nwith a safe containing $2616 in cash and cheques and $100 worth\nof liquor.\nPolice said Tuesday the burglars entered the laundry room,\ndragged the safe to a door where it was presumably loaded on a\ntruck.\nBefore leaving the thieves sat at a table, lit a candle, and\ndrank part of a bottle of liquor.\nPolice described it as a \"very neat\" job.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Peter Baronas has the fish story of the\nyear.\nHe told unbelieving friends this one Tuesday:\nSwimming at nearby Locarno Beach Monday Ihe 225-pound\nBaronas said he was \"attacked\" by a 7Vpound salmon.\nA couple of swipes did the fish in.\nNow it's salmon steaks at the Baronas household.\nKELOWNA (CP)\u2014Pinky, a pet skunk, has been kidnapped.\nRCMP said Tuesday the deodorized skunk was stolen from\na woman at nearby Okanagan Mission during the weekend.\nThey said it will be difficult to recover Pinky because people\nwho see a stray skiing aren't likely to try to find out 11 it is the\nwoman's pet.\nGRAHAM, N.C. (AP'\u2014 George Haste. 38, seeking to cash a\ncheque at the Burlington bus terminal, named Alamance County\nDeputy Sheriff Arthur Jones as a character witness. Bus station\nofficials telephoned Jones to come down and identify Haste. Jones\nidentified Haste and promptly served him with three warrants for\npassing bogus cheques.\n \u25a0II11--.\"P.\n\u25a0JUJUL,\n\u25a0T'PHfWPBIWpjp!^\nWW!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962\nLegal Action Studied as Sons\nContinue March to Agassiz\nWith 20 miles of a oOO-rnile trek them on their way.\" Mayor T. S.\nSpeedy Trials Elected\nBy 28 Sons of Freedom\nbehind them, Sons of Freedom\ncontinued their march from West\nKootenay to the Fraser Valley\nTuesday.\nThey vow they won't stop until\nthey reach a federal prison for\nFreedomite terrorists at Agassiz,\n80 miles east of Vancouver.\nThe estimated 600 marchers\ninclude about loo school age children, 75 infants, two expectant\nmothers, and at least 100 old\npeople.\nRCMP officers patrolled the\nhalf-anile long procession to maintain order and keep the road\nclear while the Freedomites moved along the Southern Trans-Provincial highway at about one mile\nan hour.\nThe marchers were ferried over\nthe Columbia river at Castlegar\nand bedded down for the night\non a farm field.\nErnie Eadie gave the Sons of\nFreedom the use of his four-acre\nfarm for the night after the party\nhad made several unsuccessful\nattempts to obtain a campsite,\ni Today the Freedomites will\nclimb into assorted vehicles for\nthe trip over the mountains to\nGrand Forks where they hope to\ndouble their number,\nA spokesmen said the group\nplans to arrive Thursday night\nat their destination of Agassiz.\nNear Brilliant the Freedomite\nmarchers stopped at the tomb of\nPeter (the lordly) Verigin, former\nspiritual leader of the entire\nDoukhobor community who was\nkilled in a mysterious blast on\nboard a train in 1924. However a\ngroup of 12 Orthodox Doukhobors.\nmen and women, stood guard and\nrefused to permit the chanting,\npraying Freedomites to enter the\nfenced-in tomb area.\nThe Freedomilcs knelt outside\nthe grounds and prayed, then\nwent on their way.\nVerigin's tomb has been bomb\ned nine times in recent years.\nThe prospect of legal action\narose (from two quarters Tues\nday, two days afler the Freedom\nites set out from their burned-out\nshacktown at Krestova.\nAttorney-General Robert Bon-\nner said in Victoria he has asked\nfor a police report on truancy and\nneglect of children among the\nmarchers. At Agassiz, municipal\nofficials said sanitation bylaws\nwould he enforced to prevent\nthe Freedomites from selling up\na shack town near Mountain Pr\nson.\nBut here fn Nelson, city officials wished the Freedomites a\nbon^voyage and hoped that they\nwould make il lo Agassiz.\n\"We feel we would like to help\nCASTLE   Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight \u2022 Thursday - Friday\n\"LET NO MAN WRITE MY\nEPITAPH\"\n(Two Academy Award Winners\nBurl Ives - Shelly Winters\n(Adult Entertainment I\nShows al. 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRA16. B.C.\nTonight \u25a0 Thursday - Friday\n\"ON  THE  WATERFRONT\"\nMarlon Brando - Carl Maiden\n\u2022 Adult Entertainment Only\nShow Time. Approx. 8 p.m.\nj  SicUiliqht j\nI Drive-In I\nLast   Time   Tonight I\n\"BIMBO |\nTHE GREAT\"\n(Color - Cinemascope)\nA Great Circus Show\nSHORTS and CARTOONS\n$1.00   A   CARLOAD I\nShow Time Approx, 8:001\nShorthouse said Tuesday.\n\"It's a pitiful sight in a way.l\nto see them on the road . . . but\nI'm sure it's just a big bluff and\nthey'll be hack before long.\"\nA spokesman for the group said\nthey'll use every means at their\ndisposal\u2014including a shuttle service of about 50 cars and trucks\n\u2014to reach their destination.\nThe spokesman was vague of\nwhat they will do when they get\nthere 'but there have been reports\nof attempts by Freedomites to\nbuy and rent property nearby\nAgassiz.\nSight-seeing motorists, many\nwith camras, lined up along the\nhighways watching the marchers.\nAt the head of the cavalcade\nfor part ol Ihe march was a\nbearded patriarch, wearing only\nshorts and rubber sandals while\nhe pushed a twoJwheel cart carrying clothing and food for the\ntrip.\nBehind him two habushka^wear-\ning women carried a banner\nquoting Canada's Bill of Rights.\nAt Mountain Prison, officials\nsaid the Freedomit terrorists are\nunaware of the march 'because\nthey have no access to newspapers, radio or TV.\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Attorney -\nGeneral Robert Bonner Tuesday\nasked RCMP for a full report on\nschool truancy and neglect of\nchildren in the Doukhobor march\nfrom the Kootenays to Agassiz.\nMr. Bonner said the government Is concerned on three counts\n\u20141. If the children are suffering\nneglect, exposure or hardship.\n2\u2014IT the children should be in\nschool; 3.\u2014If a large group of\nFreedomites in the Agassiz area\nshould threaten a breach of the\npeace.\nSo far the government has\ndone nothing but observe the big\ntrek.\n\"Our attitude Is one of official\nwatchfulness,\" said Mr. Bonner\nBut the government is prepared\nto lake action if there are reports\nof neglect, truancy or trouble.\nEducalion Minister Leslie Peterson said transients are usually\nallowed \"a reasonable time'\nplace children in school\u2014 which\nstalled Tuesday\nDuring the past year, he said,\nDoukhobors had proved them\nselves  \"diligent\"  In  school  at\ntendance.\n\"My main concern would be\nwhether the children were being\nneglected.\" he said\nIif necessary, charges could he\nlaid under the Child Welfare Act.\nhe added. One problem which\nmay have lo he faced is lack of\naccommodation at Agassiz.\nMr. Bonner said he had been\ninformed that local residents will\nnot rent or sell property to the\nFreedomites and there is not\nmuch public accommodation\nunless the Freedomites check In\nat the Harrison Hot Springs Hotel\nAGASSIZ (CP) \u2014 Two groups\nof Doukhobors have twice tried\nto buy farm land or rent houses\nin this area where a new federal\nprison to house convicted Sons of\nFreedom terrorists has been\nbuilt, it was disclosed Tuesday\nAl Marshal, president of the\nParent-Teacher Association, said\nthe first group appeared in town\nin early August and the second\ngroup only Iwo weeks ago.\nReal estate agent David A\nCairns, said Freedomites had\ntried to rent a five-room house\nHe added:\n\"Even if the housing was available, which it isn't, I don't think\nthey will move down here. They\nare not going to be tolerated here\nor allowed lo get away with what\nthey did in Kreslov\nMast municipal officials fell\nthe Fredomites would never com\nplele their long trek from the\nKoolenays.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00-8:20\n\"THE THREE STOOGES\nMEET HERCULES\"\nMickey   Mantle\nRoger Maris\n\"SAFE AT HOME\"\nTHURS.\nIt's The Merriest Mixings\nSince Girls\nWELD \u25a0 BEYMER THOMAS HOLM\nCIVI c\nfate* >\\\n*r        b\/ DELUXE\nBACK TO SCHOOL movement began in earnest yesterday as youngsters streamed\nInto stores and barber shops in\nlast-minute preparation. Roving\nphotographer caught Fred and\nWalter Zoobkoff watching Carl\nJolinson repair shoes, above. At\nkit, Keith Ross, getting haircut\nfrom George Clerihew, was one\nof many boys who grudgingly\nyielded lo pressure and beaded\nfor the barbershops. \u2014 Dally\nNews photos by Bob Blackmore\nTwenty-eight Sons of Freedom\nre-elected trial by judge alone\nrather than to proceed with judge\nand jury trials, as the special\nFreedomite Assize into terrorism\nopened in Nelson Tuesday.\nThe move on the part of the accused and their lawyer, Sidney\nSimmons of Vancouver, is expected to cut the special assize court\ntime by half.\nCounty court begins on September 11 and speedy trials lor all\nFreedomites who re-elected were\nset for then by Mr. Justice J. G\nA. Hutcheson.\nAs court convened Tuesday\nmorning the jury panel answered\nto their names but Mr. Simmons\nhalted proceedings when he ask\ned for an adjournment to make\napplication to the Attorney-General for re-election.\nThe 28 Freedomites all elected\nto be tried In the court of God at\ntheir preliminary hearings. They\nwere automatically set over for\njudge and jury trial.\nThe jury panel was dismissed\nuntil 2:30 p.m. today and it is expected they will be discharged\nfrom serving on the entire assize.\nEight women charged wilh\narson are also scheduled to appear at this assize for a judge and\njury trial but they, too, are expected to re-elect for a speedy\ntrial.\nCharges against the 28 men\nrange from arson, to placing\nbombs and conspiracy to commit\nboth acts. Several men face more\nthan one terrorist charge.\nFollowing are Freedomites to\nappear helore Judge E. P. Dawson, beginning Sept. 11. and their\ncharges:\nAlexander A. Hoodicoff, illegal\npossession of explosives.\nWilliam A. Kinankin, Nick Bill\nSaprikin, John J. Voikin, placing\na bomb by a power pole.\nNick Bill Saprikin, Thomas P.\nStrelieff, John J. Voikin, placing\na bomb near a power pole.\nFred P. Sherstobitoff, Nick Bill\nSaprikin  and  Paul  P. Chernen-\nSpeaks Here\nToday\nCHILDREN SET\nGRASS FIRE\nA grass fire (believed to have\nbeen set by children covered half\nan acre before the fire department brought it under control\nTuesday afternoon.\nTinder dry brush was threatened and an unocciiipied house\nwas also near the fire on the west\nend af Trevor Street. Firemen\nwer unable to determine who had\nstarted the fire.\nIt was the second\" call of the\nday for the department. The initiator was called to 512 Fourth\nStreet where an unsuccessful attempt to resuscitate Walter Bailey, who had collapsed, was made.\n18 TRAPPED\nEDMONTON (CP) - Eighteen\ncity of Edmonton employees were\ntrapped tor 35 minutes Tuesday\nin a slalled elevator at the city\nhall. There was no panic and no\none was injured\nWaller Bailey,\n:es\nA Nelson and district resident\nsince 1945, and member of the\npost office staff for 11 years, Waller Samuel Bailey, 65, died sud-\nREV.  E,  P.  BRUNER\nEducational consultant of the\nUnitarian Universalist Associa\ntion, Rev. Edna P. Bruner, is visiting Nelson during a Nortnwest\ntour.\nShe will give a talk and conduct an educational workshop on\nmethods of teaching children in\nSunday School, as guest of the\nNelson Unitarian Universalisl\nFellowship.\nMiss Bruner will address two\nmeetings at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Zcljko Kujundzic this afternoon and tonight. She will demon-\nslrate her teaching technique at\nthe afternoon meeting and the\nevening session will he devoted\nlo discussion of the philosophy of\nreligious education for the young.\nChairman ol the Nelson Fellowship, Lawrence Owon said all in-\nterst in religious education were\nbeing asked to attend.\nMiss Bruner leaves Nelson on\nkoff, placing a bomb by a power\npole.\nNick Bill Saprikin, William W. I\nKinakin, George J. Perepolkin,\nJohn J. Voikin, Paul P. Chernen-\nkoff, conspiracy to place a bomb\nunder the natural gas pipeline at\nShoreacres and actually placing\nthe bomb.\nThomas J. Koorbatoff, arson.\nAlex A. Hoodikoff, John J. Cher-\nnoff, Angus Osachoff. Mike L. Fa-1\nminoff.   placing   a   bomb   under\nrailway tracks.\nNick P. Chernoff, Alex J. Cher-\nnoff, Pete P. Chernofl, Eli J. Po-\npoff, Andrew J. Popoff, Angus N. I\nOsachoff. conspiracy to commit i\narson and actually carrying out\nthe conspiracy to burn the Apple-\ndale Roman Catholic Church.\nPete Podmoroff. Nick W. Gret-:\nchin, possession ol dynamite.        \\\nAlex J. Chernoff, arson in con-1\nnection with the burning of the\nAppledale community hall.\nHarry J. Malotf, transporting\ndynamite on a public highway\nand on various streets in the City\nol Nelson.\nAlex A. Sherstobittf, illegal possession of dynamite.\nHarry N. Koorbatoff, Nick W.\nGrelchin, illegal possession ol\ndynamite.\nGeorge W. Poznikoff, George\nG. Babakaeff, placing bombs\nnear power poles.\nBill Chernoff, Bill E. Podmor-\now, Fred Hoodikoff, Sidney Koff-\ninoff, conspiracy to commit\narson.\nOne case will be dealt with today when court reconvenes.\nPasses al 83\nMrs.\ndenly at his borne at 512 Fourth i Thursday for Vancouver, where\nStreet Tuesday morning. | she will be guest of the Unitarian\nBorn   in   Bristol,   England,   in \\ Church.\n1897, he joined the Imperial Army j  \u2014 \u2014 - \u2014\nduring World War 1 in 1915 and\nwas one of the first balloon men\nin the balloon section of the Royal\nFlying Corps. He later transferred to the infantry and served\nwith the Notts and Derby Regiment.\nIn 1920, be came to the Galahad\ndistrict of Alberta from England\nto join a brother. His parents and\nsister followed him the next year.\nThey farmed there until 1945,\nwhen he came to Taghum with\nhis father and sister, and purchased the Taghum store from\nthe late Ernest Marsden. He operated the store for about three\nyears, moving to Nelson after its\nsale.\nHe  then   spent   two   or   three  leader and church organist there\nThe group crowded into one of j years with Fred  Mawer  in  the for many years.\nThey  moved  to Nelson   about\nADDRESSING Nelson Rotary\nClub here Thursday night will\nbe Dr. Marcus Bach, whose literary work and lectures are internationally known. Dr. Bach\nhas lectured In Nelson many\ntimes and for years has maintained a summer home at Destiny Bay. He is the author of\n12 books and he recently returned from a research trip to\nJapan where he lived with Shinto and Buddhist leaders In a\ngoodwill visit.\nKILLED BY GLUE FUMES\nFALL RIVER, Mass. (AP) -\nA medical examiner Tuesday reported that Wayne McKowen, 16,\ndied Sunday from inhaling poisonous vapor from model airplane\nglue. Dr. Arthur Lasalle said the\nhigh school senior was killed accidentally by trichlor ethylene\npoisoning found in some glues.\nInvent 10-Key\nTypewriter\nMANCHESTER, England (AP)\n\u2014A British professor has invented\na typewriter with only 10 keys.\nEach letter is obtained by pushing\ntwo keys at once.\nThe invention was described\nMonday lo the annual conference\nof the British Association for the\nAdvancement of Science. The designer, phychology Professor\nReuben Conrad of Cambridge University, claimed a beginner on\nhis machine needs only 15 hours\nof instruction to reacli speeds\nwhich would take 50 hours on an\nordinary machine.\nThe operator produces figures, punctuation marks and capitals with a shift key. But the 10-\nkey machine produces only 25\nHarriet Albcrlina  Stuart  letters.   Q   is  sacrificed,   opera\nof South Slocan died al her home\nTuesday morning, aged 83. I\nBorn in Sheffield, England, she\ngrew up there and in her earlier\nyears she was a concert pianist.'\nand taught music, both vocal and\npianoforte, in the Old Country.    |\nShe married James Stuart at\nSheffield June 24, 1900. They\ncame to North Batlleford, Sask.,\nin   1921.   Mrs.  Stuart was  choir\nIhree   automatic   elevators.   The t wholesale gasoline and oil bust\nelevators  have  a   load  limit ollness.\n2500 pounds.\nWhen the 18 crowded into the\nelevator on the ground floor, the\ncar sank slowly until its floor was\nthree feet below Ihe basement\nlevel.\nThe building superintendent\nwas telephoned Irom an emergency phone. A carpenter opened\nthe doors 35 minutes later.\nIn  1951 he joined the Nelson\npost office staff, where he has\n1945 and took up residence on\nYmir Road. Mr. Stuart predeceased  here  in   1952.  and  Mrs.\nbeen employed since. He moved' siuart moved to South Slocan to\nto 512 Fourth Street from 1702 {iive wit\u201e ner son anc| daughter.\nFalls Street last May. Mrs. Stuart was always interes-\nMr. Bailey was a member ofjied in y01ltn work| including boy\nEast Pakistan Hopes for Bridge\nthe Royal Canadian Legion. He is\nsurvived by one brother, Louis\nMonelle Bailey of Wilseyville,\nCalif.; and one sister, Winifred,\nat home.\nTORONTO 'CP) - Junks and\nriverboats run a vague and\nhaphazard course down the\nwide Silaiakya River in East\nPakistan.\nEspecially    when    headed, .             .,,       ,\ndownstream,   the   flimsy   craft van^ \u2122'Te,e bndge (les'gn\nare swept along with the current\nand    steered    wilh    little    ar-1 \u00bb   comes   from   the   drawing\nThe whole project is seemingly devised to bring on an\narchitectural headache. .But an\nOntario engineering firm has\nsubmitted a plan which experts\none   of   Ihe   more   ad-\nsay\ncuracy.\nNow the East. Pakistan gov-\nernmenl wants a bridge to span\nIhe river; a bridge which, by\ndesign, should limit, as far as\npossible the chances of river\ncraft smashing into its supporting pylons.\nThe government has specified\nminimum of piers and the\nlongest spans  possible.\nBecause steel is especially\nexpensive in dollar-short Pakistan, it requires thai steel in the\nconstruction be kept to bare\nnecessity.\nin  the  world\nI    It   comes   from   th\nI hoard   of   the   two-partner   Toronto firm. Nicholas Damas and\nform of a hollow, triangular box\n300 feet long.\nThe roadway and sidewalks,\n40 feet in width, run along the\nbroad top of the triangle. The\nsides slope inward to a narrower base.\nAnother feature is that both\nIhe sections and Ihe 40-foot-high\nV-shaped piers would be cast\nby   digging   out   forms   in   the\nSMALL COUNTRY\nAndorra, a republic in the Pyrenees    between    France    and\nscouls, girls guides and handicapped children. i\nShe is survived by two sons,;\nGeorge James, South Slocan |\nand Frank Armstrong, Vancou- i\nver; one daughter, Mrs. D, C.'\n(Mary- Axworthy, South Slocan;\ntwo sisters, Mrs. J. Davies and\nMiss Frances Stephenson, both of\nRobert    W.    Smith,   specialists ' ground  at the  bridge site and\nand missionaries in the develop\ning field of pre-stressed concrete.\nThe   bridge    they   have   designed is a long, narrow affair\nwhich,   if   accepted,   will  be   a\nmajor first  for the company\nWILL USE  PONTOONS\nOne of the main features of\nthe Dacca - Chitt agong road\nbridge design is the use of pre-\nstressed concrete for spans of\n300 feet. This is achieved by\ncasting and pre-stressing in the\nSCHOOL   DAYS!\nDRIVE  CAREFULLY!!\nAnd Drive Up to Your ONE-STOP\nSCHOOL SUPPLIES STORE!\nSAMPLE'S\n\"YOUR\nPh. 352-23r\nNELSON\nPHARMACY LTD.\nFORTRESS OF  HEALTH\"\n639 Baker St-        Nelson, B. C.\nusing the plentiful supply of inexpensive  Pakistani labor.\nThe sections would then be\nfloated out on pontoons.\nOnly a lew similar structures\nhave been built so far, in\nFrance and  Italy.\nAlready employed as consultants on more than 150 structures lor the Ontario highways\ndepartment. Damas and Smith\nhope Hie Pakistan project will\nlead lo better-looking bridges\nfor Ontario.\nThe partners are convinced\nthe time has come lor Canadians to demand that public\nauthorities produce structures\nwhich are \"esthetically pleasing \"\nThe attractive Pakistan design, they suggest, will provide\nsome convincing argument for\ntheir campaign\nSpain which has been sovereign Sheffield, England; four grand-\nsince 1278, has an area of 191 j children and three great grand-\nsquare miles. | children.\ntors are told to use K instead.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (ReutersI - Results\nof soccer matches played in the\nUnited Kingdom Tuesday night:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nLeague Cup\nFirst Round\nBrentford 3 Wrexham 0\nDivision I\nArsenal  1  Aston  Villa 2\nBurnley 1 Leicester I\nDivision  II\nScunthorpe 2 Newcastle  1\nSwansea 2 Cardiff 1\nWallsall 1 Middlesborough 0\nDivision III\nBarnsley 1 Halifax 0\nBrighton 1 Swindon 1\nBristol R 3 Peterborough 1\nCoventry 3 Watford  1\nCarlisle vs.  Bradford  ppd\nDivision IV\nDoncaster Rovers vs. Exeter\nCity, Rochdale vs. Gillingham\nand Workington Town vs. Mansfield Town were all postponed\nowing to commitments in the\nFootball League Cup first round\nmatches this week.\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nDivision  II\nMontrose 2 Morton 1\nPHONE\n352-3031\nFor the Finest\nCOAL\nAll  Reliable  Brands\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nCOAL\nin Nelson\nDial 352-5018\n11 I've Only One Life to Live\nI'll Live It a\nMISS CLAIROL\nBLONDE\nCreme Formula Hair Color\nBath\nHoney Blonde - Ash Blonde\nChampagne Blonde\nor the glamorous new\nFLAXEN BLONDE\n$1.95\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold  Mayo (Prop.I\nCorner  Baker and  Ward Sts\nPh. 352-2613        Nelson\nAn air-breathing lung-fish inhabits the Chaco swamps of\nParaguay, where even the surface water seldom contains a\nmeasurable  amount  of oxygen.\nFriendly Welcome  in Store\nFor New High School Students\nA plan of action, forming three i but always with groundless fears, i with feats of pie-eating, string\ndays of fun. laughter and excite- will complete Ihe triple day plan. I chewing, wheel barrow races,\nment, has been devised by the Newcomers will be assigned to' balloon and obstacle race on the\nElders of L. V. Rogers High j \"masters\" and are expected to 'program. A parade of initiates\nSchool lo kick off the 1962-63 high | fu|fj|| (|iejr master's welcome. I about the gymnasium will mark\nschool campaign. | All Frosli must be on the grounds | Ihe start of Ihe track meet.\nThe three day kickoff is plan- j at 8:15 a.m. and are not allowed Friday evening, alter formally\nned to bring newcomers to the lo leave the grounds until 1 p.m. | heing inducted into the hallowed\nsecondary school in touch with | Frosh dress for the day is: | halls ol L.V. Rogers, the initiates,\nthe school's teachers, pupils and! Girls: Hair-four pigtails, wired i along with the school elders, will\nconstitution. stiff, with a different colored bal-1 attend the annual Frosh Dance,\nloon tied to the end of each pig-1 The dance starts at 9 p.m. and\nToday will be the first stage of\nthe plan and has been suitably\nnamed \"Hello Day.\" Second floor\nof L. V. Rogers has been dubbed\n\"Hello Hall\" and a compulsory\nlaw requires everyone to say\n\"hello\" to friend, acquaintance\nor stranger.\nThursday, teachers will be honored, as the day has been labelled\n\"Be Kind to Teachers Day.\" Requirements are that all students\nmust present their teacher with\nan apple, and must make a low\nbow to a teacher passed in the\nhallways.\nInitiation Day, usually feared\ntail: make-up-blue or green eyeshadow and lipstick: dress leotards and shorts, large T-shirt,\none-knee boot on left foot, one\nhigh heel shoe and one plaid knee\nsock on right foot.\nBoys: Head-beanie with balloon\non top; make-up lipstick, rouge,\nlarge earrings: dress\u2014ya-ya skirt\nover gym shorts, white T-shirt\nwith suspenders, white gloves:\nIwo high heels of different\nheights, ankle socks of different\ncolors.\nIn Ihe afternoon the annua! indoor track meet will take place\ndress is casual.\nKEYS CUT\nLOCKS\nREPAIRED\nCombinations   Changed\n\u2022 House Locks\n\u2022 Padlocks\n\u2022 .Suitcase and Trunk Lotus\n\u2022 Hinges \u2014 Hasps\nEDEYS\nLOCK & CYCLE\n737  Baker St.\nPhone 352-3245\nTROUBLE?\nWhen in need of plumbing\nor heating replacement or repairs,\nor a gas fitting  job . .  .\nFor Prompt,  Efficient Service\nCALL US AT 352-2454\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\n351 Baker St Nelson, B.C. Phone 35\" 2154\n\u00bb\n WP-\n.,.   ........     .,-,     .\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022-,-\u2022.\u25a0\n..|..-.LI-.l!lll,.i.lj.*\u00abJ^W\u00bbl>\nDoctor's Departure Leaves\nKaslo in Desperate Straits\nKEEPING UP A STEADY STRIDE becomes exhausting after a few hours linds Spokane Valley\nKiltie Band drummer Gordon Jenkins, left, who set a\nvigorous pace during band parades in Nelson on\nthe  weekend.   At   right,   \"nearly-3-year-old\"   Patrick\nHamson is seen reinforcing himself during Highland\nGames events with his little drum and tinker toy sticks\n\u2014 his Glengarry set at a rakish angle. He is the son\nof Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Hamson of Nelson.\n\u2014Daily News photos by Bob Bhckmore.\nNew Bank Regulation, Tardiness\nBCHIS Payments Cause Hardship\nCASTLEGAR - Necessity of\npublic hospitals operating in the\nred due to delay in receiving pay\nments from the B.C. Hospital In\nsurance scheme will be brought\nto attention of the West Kootenay\nregional hospitals council.\nCastlegar and district hospital\nboard meeting expressed concern\nover this matter and proposed\nthat it be brought up at the coun\ncil meeting to be held in Trail\nSept. 17.\nIt Is expected that resolutions\nCharged With\nNon-Capital\nMurder ol Wife\nIN VERM ERE- Remand\ned without plea. Frank Sam ol\nSalmon Arm was charged in police court at Invermere Tuesday\nwith non-capital murder in connection with the death of his wife.\nEva Sam.\nThe 37-year-old man notified\npolice when he awoke beside the\nbattered body of his wile near the\ntrail to the Indian reserve above\nAthalmer Bridge Monday follow\ning a drinking party the previous\nevening.\nIt was reported the couple had\nquarrelled violently Sunday evening, with .Mrs. Sam's threats to\nleave her husband as the basis\nof the argument.\nKilled by Train\nSALMON ARM \"CP\u00bb \u2014 Clarence Arnouse, 20, died three hours\nafler he was hit by a train 20\nmiles west of here. Police said\nthe Salmon Arm man was lying\non the tracks Sunday when an\neastbound CPR train struck him.\nDate for an inquiry has not\nyet been set.\ndealing with financing of public\nhospitals will be passed for pre\nsentation at the B.C. Hospitals'\nAssociation meeting to be held\nin October In Penticton.\nTo meet its own operating ex\npenses, a note loan of up to $35,000\nwas authorized at the board's recent meeting to overcome the\nnew banking policy of not permit\nting current accounts to be overdrawn.\nMembers of the board of management were advised that the\nhospital's estimates for this year\nwere cut by $13,500, and net operating deficit to the end of July\nwas slightly over $8000.\nInstallation of a second boiler\nwill be completed before cold\nweather sets in. Tenders have\nbeen called and the board gave\nfinal approval to the plans, which\nwill be forwarded immediately to\nBCHIS.\nAddition of a biochemist to Ihe\nCastlegar Favors\nCominco Proposal\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 By unanimous\nvote, Castlegar has voted to support Cominco's application to the\nNational Energy Board to operate\nits electrical system inter-connected with the federal power system in the State of Washington.\nBy this plan, Cominco would\nfirm up additional Waneta power\nby means of equal exchanges of\nenergy between the connected\nsystems.\nAction by Die village commis\nsion on Ihe Cominco proposal was\nsought by Trail Mayor Joe Pa\nyga, who wrote enclosing a brief\nbeing presented to the Energy\nBoard by Ihe city of Trail.\nSince commissioners were in\nigreement that the Cominco proposal has \"potential advantages\no this area as well as to B.C\nind Canada,\" it was supported\nby all commissioners.\nregional staff to assist regional\npathologist Dr. J. E. Gnass was\nproposed. As a member of the\nWest Kootenay pathology service\nthe board approved this proposal\nin principle.\nCreston Apple\nCrop Estimated\n8,530,000 Pounds\nWest Kootenay and Arrow\nLakes, Grand Forks and Creston\nfigures show Creston tops in apple and pear production in the\nrevised estimates released by the\nprovincial department of agriculture.\nCreston's figure for apples Is\n8.530,000 pounds and 140,000\npounds of pears, with Grand\nForks production totalling 450,000\npounds of apples, no figure for\npears and Kootenay and Arrow\nLakes district with 300,000 pounds\nof apples and 50,000 pounds of\npears.\nThe provincial estimated crop\nis 242,616,000 pounds of apples and\n29,144,500 pounds of pears.\nGRAY CREEK\nMAN LAID\nTO REST\nGRAY CREEK -  Dr.\nB.   A.\nKASLO\nThis village of 500 doctor, if and when another doc-\ndesperately needs a second doctor, but despite efforts of the Hospital Board to enlist the services\nof another practitioner, Kaslo remains a one-doctor town.\nKaslo residents have long been\ndivided in their preference for\none or olher of two doctors who\nhave practiced here for the past\nseveral years.\nBickering between doctors led\nto bickering among patients until recently, when Dr. A. M. Bar-\nrera left for a post in the United\nStates.\nNow only Dr. Marion Irwin, a\nwoman practitioner, serves the\nneeds of Kaslo and district.\nMany residents of the area who\nin the past strongly supported Dr.\nBarrera, and just as bitterly opposed Dr. Irwin, find their ailments must be attended to by\nDr. Irwin.\nThese are the people who are\nmost vigorous in their demands\nfor another doctor to serve the\narea, but even Dr. Irwin's patients admit Kaslo's crying need.\nAfter a survey of the town the\ngeneral feeling of Kasloites appeared to be that one doctor can\nnot service the needs of the entire district.\nMany residents, including those\nwho have supported Dr. Barrera\nin the past, state that Dr. Irwin\ncannot be expected to work 24\nhours a day. \"Even a doctor must\nhave free time,\" several residents stated in the recent survey.\nDOCTOR UNAVAILABLE\nThe Kaslo doctor situation was\nbrought to a head recently after a\nfatal traffic accident. The man involved in the accident did not die\nimmediately and Dr. Irwin was\nsummoned but could not be contacted.\nAs was determined later, the\nman was in grave condition and\nit is believed i J. t\" ,< i survived\nhis injuries despite all medical\nattention lhat might haw been\nadministered.\nKaslo is ready to admit to this\nbut the question is asked, \"What\nj happens, though, when a person\nResker conducted the funeral ser- oou|d stjjj be saved but the doctor\nvice for Max Benthien at uV is not available?\"\nGray Creek Hall. |   One resident of Kaslo said il\n\"Such diligent workers as Mr.\nj has come lo the \"ridiculous situa-\n\u201e   \u201e .     , ,    ,,. tion that if you get hurt do it be-\nBenthien  have made this  coun-; ^ \u201e g m an(, s p m whM \u201e,\u201e\ntry,\" said Dr. Resker. I doctor is at the7?Tfice.\"\nPall bearers were H. F. Ben-     This same parly said capabili-\nthien, Clifton Derbyshire,  G.  J. ties of the hospital staff are being\nOliver, T. J. Oliver, J. A. Oliver,\nand T. A. Lymhery.\nInterment followed in Gray\nCreek Cemetary.\nMrs. Benthien is still a patient\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital in Nelson, recovering from\ninjuries she suffered in a fall\nsome months ago.\ntor arrives.\nPresident of the hospital board,\nBob Gilker, said as a preliminary\napproach to the problem he asked\nDr. Irwin if she would be willing\nto work in a clinic with another\ndoctor. Mr. Gilker said Dr. Irwin\nreplied she would be willing.\n\"But,\" he added, \"I doubt if the\nboard is in the financial position\nto build a clinic \u2014 unless possibly\nit was opened in the hospital.\"\nThis approach lo the problem is\nbeing talked over only, however,\nand no definite plans have been\nmade.\nMr. Gilker stated the hospital\nboard has advertised for another\ndoctor through the proper channels but to date no applications\nhave been received.\nKASLO UNPOPULAR?\nCommenting on a rumor that\nsome doctors had shown interest\nin a move from their present establishment, until they heard the\nname \"Kaslo\" mentioned, Mr.\nGilker said. \"I did hear that Dr.\nBarrera, before he left Kaslo, approached three doctors but they\nall said 'No' when Kaslo was\nmentioned.\" Mr. Gilker emphasized, however, this was only\nhearsay and he could not vouch\nfor its authenticity.\nHe said the hospital board has\nolher plans for attempting to obtain the services of another doctor but that he wasn't at liberty\nto divulge the plans at the moment. He hinted they may be\nmade known within a week.\nAll residents of Kaslo interviewed were adamant in their\nopinion that the town needs another doctor. All stated that Kaslo, with Lardeau, Riondel and\nother district points, can quite\nsupport two doctors.\nBut Kaslo is still a one-doctor\ntown and mothers worry that the\nphysician may not be available\nif one of their children is hurl.\nMonthly Get\nPopular \"55-\nSalmo Social\nSALMO (NDN Bureau) - Inaugurated last March and held\nonce a month since, Salmo's\n\"Plus-60 Club\" social evening,\nsponsored by the Ladies' Auxiliary of Salmo Branch, Royal Canadian Legion, has become one\nof the village's most popular\nmonthly affairs.\nDespite the fact that summer\nis an \"off-season\" for such indoors activities as checkers, crib-\nbage and bingo, attendance by\nsenior citizens has averaged\naboul 20 each month, and the\nsponsors are preparing themselves for even larger turn-outs\nduring the lall and winter.\nDespite its name, the club Is\nactually open to all villagers of\n55 years and older and \"open'\nIhe correct word, for there is no\nmembership fee, no registration,\nno formalities whatever in connection with becoming a member\nof the club.\nThe entire cost of staging each\nmonth's meeting is borne by the\nLegion Auxiliary. They provide\nall the~gaWs, bingo equipment,\nTogether\nand-Over\"\nEvent\nMrs. H. A. (Bud) Adams, Mrs.\nPaul Kootchin, Mrs. Ira Tom-\nbaugh, Mrs. A. Peters and Mrs\nJ. Walton.\nAmong prize winners were G.\nReed, Mrs. V. Gibbon, R. Mc-\nNowan, V. Esposito, A. White and\nMrs. I. Fair.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT\n3\u00a3H\n3, 1962 \u2014 3\nYear's Sawlog Figures\nContinue Ahead of 1962\nNelson Forest District sawlog\nproduction in August was about\neven with August, 1961, but the\noutput for the year to date continued to run well ahead of the\nprevious year.\nSawlog scale for August was\n50.100,089 feet board measure,\nslightly higher than August, 1961.\nThe figure for the year to date\nreached 429,439,127 fbm, more\nthan 35,000.000 fbm above last\nyear for the same period.\nThe figures in detail:\nSAWLOGS          1961 1962\nFir                 14,225,585 18,223,553\n3,121,365 3,458,414\n12,811,448 15,337,587\nCedar\nSpruce\nLodgepole\npine\nHemlock\nBalsam\nWhile pine\nYellow pine\nCedar palings\nSt pickets\nLarch 10,968,253\n1,393,654\n4,020,793\n285,341\n2,042,644\n648,524\n1,776,875\n3,523,212\n1,357,063\n1,885,853\n1,061,704\n28,836\n8,017,964\n9,561,402\n1,044\n10,608\n77,050\n4,520,208\n1,215\n6,605\n59,175,711   59,199,089\nSalvage\nAspen \t\nBirch\nCottonwood\nTotals for\nmonth\nTotals to date\nfor year   393,624,073 429,439,12'\nMINOR PRODUCTS\n(1961 figures in brackets);\nPoles and piling 225,989  i\n1601 lineal feet.\nMine   timbers,   33,485   ('\nlineal feet.\nMine props, nil (241) con\nCordwood, 47 (145) cords.\nFence posts, 711 (800) cord\nSERVE EGGS\nDietitians recommend that\neggs \u2014 which contain phosphorus, calcium, iron, fat, protein and vitamin A\u2014be served\nat least three times weekly.\nNELSON -- CASTLEGAR - KASLO\nRESIDENTS\nHave Your Driveway Paved\nBefore Winter!\nPHONE   352-7621\nNelson Asphalt Paving Ltd.\nP.O. Box S60\nNelson, B. C.\n.,     , ,   ,    , \u25a0 sandwiches, cake and coffee, as\ntaxed with only one doctor to ser-:,, as l|)(,    ,zes ,or fte various\nvice Ihe needs of all. It was his | w||]ners    Besides   (he   cribbagc\nobservation that the situation has , am, checker tournaments, ther\npassed too many responsibilities I are several games o[ bingo ol\non to the nurses. I different formations.\nOne   businessman   on   main |   Hostesses, all members of the\nstreet  said  the  answer  to  the Legion   Auxiliary,    vary   from\nwhole problem would be to build meeting to meeting. Those serv-\na clinic for Dr. Irwin and another I ing  at  the  last  affair  included\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP)\nand analysts searching (or a\nclue to the post-Labor Day\ncourse of the stock market were\noverwhelmed by minus signs\nTuesday.\n. Although prices edged upward\nat the opening, they quickly\nsettled back. The remainder of\nInvestors   the  session   was   spent  on  the : yet U.S. Steel fell l'u, Jones and\n| downside with prices closing at I Laugblin was off 1sj, and Armco\nlowest of the day. Many | l'e.\nChrysler,   GM\"   and\nTeachers Workshop\nIn New Math To Be\nHeld at Castlegar\nFernie Ski Hilt\nChalet Progressing\nFERNIE - Despite rainy\niveather, work is progressing at\nf'ernie's new Snow Valley ski\nSill. A heavy layer of gravel laid\n\u2022ecently provides good traction\nm the access road from No. 3\nhighway.\nTwelve-inch concrete basement\ncalls for Ihe chalet were poured\nasl week by a 15-man crew under\nontractnr Nolan Smart of Cran-\nrook Home Improvements. 60\n\u25a0ihic yards of gravel and 300\njigs of cement were used. Two\n\u25a0ement mixers, fed by a back\nhoe. kepi the wheelbarrow men\nbusy. The chalet is 32 by M feet,\nof A-frame, plank and beam construction.\nFirst sections of steel for the\n4500-foot T-bar lift are on the site\nand the towers should begin arriving in a week or so. Other parts,\nincluding motors, cable, gears and\nso forth will follow.\nThe lift line has received ils\nfinishing touches and clearing of\nthe main ski runs should get under way this week.    .\nCASTLEGAR - Workshops for\nteachers will be held in Castlegar.\nthe first on Sept. 20 for the new\nmathematics course, to be con\ndueled by co-author of the text\nbeing used for the new course.\nProfessor Robert Eicholz will\nhold the workshop for Math 8\nteachers from districts 7 to 11.\nAnother workshop has been ten\ntalively arranged for education\n407, placing emphasis on elemen\ntary basic subjects, for teachers\nfrom Castlegar and district.\nFive school district represenla\nfives will attend the East and\nWest Kootenay school trustees\nseminar at Kootenay Bay Sept.\n14 and 15, when R. E. Lester,\npresident of Ihe B.C. School Trustees Association, will be present,\nSCHOOL ADDITIONS\nCOMPLETED\nAdditions to the Twin Rivers\nand Robson schools have been\ncompleted and equipment has\nbeen moved into the schools, the\nschool board building committee\nadvised at the board's recent\nmeeting.\nConstruction is progressing well\nat Blueberry Creek and Ootis-\nchenia and summer maintenance\nof all schools is completed, ready\nfor occupation Tuesday and today.\nFencing will be erected along\nthe highway at Tarrys school this\nfall.\nThe board approved $15,050 ten\nder of the Alberta Bus for a new\n67-passenger school bus. Approval\nwas given of a ticket system for\nall students entitled to ride the\nschool buses, to assist in controlling bus loads.\nDepartment or highways has\nbeen contacted regarding improvements lo the railroad crossing at Glade and grading of the\nPass Creek road.\ntheir\nblue-chip issues fell a full point I    Although\nas the market gave up almost j American Motors August output\nall of Friday's late gain. I was reported above a year ago.\nBased on Ihe decline of The j all three declined. Ford fell l'\u00ab.\nAssociated Press 60-stock aver- Granby Mining shone among\nage, nearly $3,000,000,000 was j Canadian issues, up Hi. Dome\nclipped  from the  quoted value   Mines finished \"i higher. Up >\nof stoqks listed on the New York\nStock Exchange.\nThe brief upward move at the\nstart was credited to weekend\nrecommendations by advisory\nservices and possibly to some\ncarryover from Friday's surprise spurt.\nThe Associated Press 60-stock\naverage fell 2.0 at 223.2. The\nDow Jones average of 30 industrials dipped closer to the cru-\ncual 600 level, closing at 602.45,\noff 6.73.\nCHEMICALS SLUMP\nMany issues and groups remained unaffected by good news.\nThe chemicals were generally\nlower despite predictions ol record sales this year and higher\nearnings. Steel production moved\nup to the highest since May 12,\nWindermere Teaching\nPositions Filled\nINVERMERE - Teaching post\ntions are filled in all schools in\nNo. 4 (Windermerei School District.\nTeaching staffs are:\nAt Canal Flat Elementary-Senior High, H. Paish, R. Passmore,\nW. Kovalevich. Mrs. B. Hansen.\nMiss K   McCoy.\nWindermere Elementary. Robert Dearin. Mrs. P. Paulsen.\nDavid Thompson Junior-Senior\nHigh. G. Eacrelt, Henry Walms-\nley, Thomas Fespie, Mrs. R. B.\nHarris, G. Lechuk, Henry Block,\nD. M. George. Miss L. Ferguson,\nF. Gibbons, Miss Dorothy Wors-\nley, Miss Evelyn Kerr. R. Camp-\nsail, Mrs. Ian Weir.\nInvermere Elementary, Harold\nBates, Mrs. Frank Hackler, Miss\nE. Robins. Mrs. A. Cunliffe. Mrs.\nArthur Bowen, Mrs. Gavin Rum-\nsev, Miss Leslie Spry, Mrs. Ian\nWeir.\nWilmer Elementary, C. Saville,\nMiss A. Smith.\nMineral King Elementary, D.\nR. Evans, Miss B. Heslop.\nRadium Elementary, R. Barnes, Mrs. M. Cleverley.\nEdgewater Elementary. Mrs.\nBruce Kohorst. Mrs. G. E. Moore.\nEdgewater Elementary Junior\nSenior High. J. E. Bastin, R. W\nDouglas, G. Lepine, Mrs. H.\nPeachey, Mrs. E. J. Bastin.\nBrisco Elementary, Miss Mary\nHenriksen.\nGalena Elementary M i s.s A.\nWade.\nwere Walker-Gooderham and\nHudson Bay Mining. Interna-\nlional Nickel was off 5i. Mc-\nIntyre Porcupine and Aluminium Ltd. were off % and Canadian Pacific v4.\nAmerican Stall-Scurry Rain\nbow Oil was down 3b and Cana-\nian Marconi 'h. Brazilian\nTraction was up '\u25a0\u00ab and Shawinigan \"s.\nMONTREAL (CP) _ Stocks\nwere mixed lo higher on the\nMontreal and Canadian exchanges in moderate trading Tuesday.\nCalgary Power gained Pi to\n24 among utilities, while Shaw-\nnigan was up % al 24'i in\nOil rose s'a to 39-Vb in active\ntrading and Power Corporation,\nthe largest single shareholder in\nCanadian Oil. added ':> lo 57'z.\nSteels were lower. Stelco\ndropped 3\u00bb to 163i, Algoma Steel\nlost U lo 40'i, and Atlas Steels\nlosl *r lo 34'-!.\nBanks were also lower. Rank\nof Montreal fell Hi to 55. Ban-\nque Provincial at 47 and Canadian Imperial Bank of Com-\nmerce al 56 each dropped 3i\nRoyal Bank lost l'\u00bb to BB'i.\nMassey-Ferguson added '4 to\n9.3 in active trading. 0'1i'\"ie\nFlour dropped H to 51 and Canadian Breweries eased 'i to\n95i. Hudson's Bay Company was\nunchanged at 11.\nIn mines. Majortrans fell 1'4\ncents to Vi cents. Keeley-Fron-\nier dropped two cents to 46\ncents and Mount Pleasant rose\nfive cents to $2.07.\nOn index, banks were off 0 68\nat 59.78, utilities up 0.5 at 132 0,\nindustrials off 0.8 at 299,5, combined off 0.3 ,at 243.7, papers un\n1.9 at 481.2 and golds off 0.22\nat 79.51.\n;    '.:;\u00bb\n'*\u00bb,\u2022\u2666\"*'',\u2022\n'**\u00bb, ,\u00ab\nModel 2103A\nNOW!\nSPACE AGE\nGAS HEATING\nFOR COMPACT\nHOMES\nAS LOW AS\n2oo\nPER MONTH\nCount down of savings with natural gas heating.\nSave valuable space.\nSave on monthly heating costs.\nSave on house cleaning - no ashes, no fumes.\nSave on annoying adjustments - automatic controls\nand power blower for even temperature heating.\nSave on high installation costs.\nSave on repair bills - heat exchanger guaranteed\nfor ten years, burner guaranteed for life.\nSave on fuel supply worries - no fuel tanks lo store.\nSave on work - no ashes or clinkers to haul,\nSave the decor of your home - modern Coleman\nspace heaters for every interior decor.\nColeman\n2.00\nPER MONTH\nNO DOWN PAYMENT\nINLAND NATURAL GAS\n607 Boker Street\nPhone 352-5566\n ^^^\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m^^m\n\u25a0PWPP^\n\u2014r^\u2014PPP^^\n^^\"^\"^^^^^^^\n\u25a0MMBM\nftfclamt 9atly Nntts\nEstablished April 22   1903 Nelson. B C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Buker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSunduys and holidays in the centre ol the Kootenays with\nthe.largest daily circulation in the Interior ot B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand tor Payment ol Postage in Cash.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CAWADlAiN  DAI1.V NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters tn this\npaper and also the local news pubhshed therein.\nWednesday, September 5, 1962\nNew Future for Today's School Child\nThe children are back in school\ntoday and what should be a joyous\nadventure into the realms oi knowledge is much more likely to be a\nweary grind through the years to\nmaster subjects which it is believed\nwill help them to be a success in our\nmodern world.\nNo one knows exactly what the\nworld will be like in twelve years\ntime when today's beginner at school\npasses his junior matriculation examination. It was believed that scientific\ninvention and automation would lead\nto the golden age but already there\nare signs that though there may be\nmore leisure there will also be much\nmore unemployment and a great\nmany unemployables.\nIt is ior this reason that children\nare expected to do so much work at\nschool, to master mathematics and\nscience and pther subjects which\nmany not only dislike but some have\nno aptitude for. Faced wilh this new\nworld the individual loses his individuality and becomes not merely a\ncog in the machine but a slave to\nautomation so that even today there\nare many people who do not live their\nown lives but regard life as a problem\nrather than a gift to be enjoyed.\nIf automation will displace men\nit will also mean a fierce competition\nfor what lew jobs the new world will\nhave to offer. This will mean more\npressure on pupils in school  to  fit\nthemselves to meet this competition.\nIt is possible that quite half of them\nwill be out of the race from the start\nbut that will make little difference,\nexcept that when they leave school\nthere may be no jobs ior them.\nAutomation makes for shorter\nworking days and week and thus\nthere will be more leisure time for\nthe workers. Just what this will mean\nis not certain but before the Chant\nreport educationists were convinced\nlhat there should be education for\nleisure. The Chant report swept this\nnonsense away and declared that\nschools should be realistic and concentrate on only the bread and butter\nsubjects, there was no room for frills\nand education for leisure was unthinkable.\nWith this bright and beautiful\nSeptember weather, the blue sky and\nthe golden sunshine it must be confessed that the leisure lo enjoy it is\na gift we should all like to have. To\nfish or to hunt or merely to sit in\nthe sunshine and forget the cares of\nthe world in the realization that man\ndoes not live by work alone, which\nis something which makes life well\nworth while.\nAnd so somewhere in the syllabus\nof the school it is to be hoped that\nchildren are taught to love the simple\nthings of nature as well as the wonders of science. They may have much\nmore leisure than their parents.\nTwenty Years Ag,o\nThere are areas in France that are\nforever Canada. Vimy is one and\nDieppe is another. The former reflects\na great victory, a red-letter event in\nCanadian military history; the latter\nrecalls a failure in the tactical sense\nbut of later blessing.\nAnd one. is no more sacred to\nmemory than the other.\nIt was 20 years ago that a Canadian force went forth in its first bloodletting of the last war to probe the\nstrength of the Hitler-held fortress of\nEurope. This was a tentative and hazardous large-scale reconnaissance, a\nsacrifice in the interests of allied victories to come.\nIt was a costly venture. Out of\nsome 5000 troops engaged in a nine-\nhour battle the Canadian force suffered 3369 casualties, including 1944\ncaptured by the enemy, more prisoners than the Canadian Army lost\nin all the eleven months of its Northwest Europe operations or during the\n20-month campaign in Italy.\nBut in this early attempt to fathom\na breach of the Nazi defences the\nDieppe raid returned valuahle lessons. The official view is that the\nexperience thus gained paved the\nway for the successful landings in\nNorth Africa and on the Normandy\ncoasl.\nDieppe was therefore not in vain,\nbut instead an operation that saved\nmany lives in the engagements that\nfollowed.\nAbove all it revealed the shining\nvalor of the officers and men who\ntook part, serving as an inspiration\nand example to the later deployment\nof Canadian forces in action.\nAppropriate ceremonies were held\nin this part  of France that is  now\nCanada, for some of the bravest and\nbest of this country lie there in honor.\n\u2014Victoria Colonisl.\nWho Wants\nBe Free\nTo\nHusbands casting envious eyes al\nIhe freedom beyond Ihe marital cage\nmight well consider the orangutans\nof Borneo \u2014 and ponder.\nBecause these hairy red apes\nwere in danger of extinction, a number were rounded up and caged by\nnaturalists until a small delta in the\nSarawak River could be set aside as\na sanctuary.\nCame freedom day and the cages\nwere thrown open. The first apes out\nmade piteous attempts to get back\ninto their cages. Even now, after several months of \"rehabilitation\" most\nwill go no further than 3Q0 yards\nfrom their-. cages \u2014 unless accompanied jbjMheir. keeper.\n \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0      \u2014 Financier\/Posf.'\nMoscow Fair\nSoviet space achievements do not\nseem to have diverted Russian attention entirely from some of the shortages that afflict them here on earth,\nif one can judge from a brief news\nstory in the Moscow News. The story\ndescribes an exhibition that has open'\ned in that city, where 30,000 items\nof new consumer goods are on display \u2014 on display, bul not yet available to the envious viewers. Committees, says the paper, will look\nthe ilems over and recommend the\nbest for mass production.\nThe meagreness of present Russian living is implicit in the proud\nlisting of the goods on view \u2014 all of\nthem commonplace in Western\nhouseholds. The plastic tableware\nand utensils, the ladies' handbags\nand costume jewelry, the featherweight camping equipment and fishing tackle, the thousand new designs\nfor men's ties.\nThe exhibition is a hopeful one for\nthe West. It says thai the Russian\npeople, who have been deprived of\nmuch lo put their twin astronauts in\norbit, are now beginning to demand\nsome of Ihe products of their own\nlabors. The more of their energies\nthat are channelled into producing\nthe necessities and the luxuries of\nlife, Ihe less will be left to produce\nIhe instruments of dealh. And a man\nwho is choosing among a thousand\nties, or flexing a new lightweight fishing rod, is nol in a mind for national\naggressions,\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail!\"\nRebel Resistance\nBrushed Aside\nPacific Ocean\nBy ANDREW BOROWIEC\nALGIERS (APi-Ahmed Ben\nBella's army brushed aside\ntoken rebel resistance and\nrolled on toward Algiers today.\nGuerrilla defenders c o n c e n-\ntrated their out-manned, outgunned forces in the suburbs,\nvoting to hold the capital.\nAdvance elements of Ben\nBella's 30,000 regulars were reported in the Meda area, 55\nmiles south of Algiers. Another\ncolumn bypassed Orleansville\nand was reported less than 100\nmiles southwest of the city on\nthe Oran-Algiers highway.\nSome retreating guerrillas\nblew up bridges and barricaded\nmountain passes in an attempt\nto slow the Ben Bella thrust.\nBut mostly guerrillas fled or\nsurrendered after brief encounters with the regular troops\ncommanded by Col. Hourai\nBoumedienne, the army chief\nof staff.\nCvilian crowds organized hy\nthe guerrillas to block the invading soldiers' routes often\ncheered the regular army instead.\nWEAPONS INFERIOR\nThe small guerrilla forces,\nequipped with rifles and light\nmachine-guns, were no match\nfor the army with its Communist-bloc artillery, mortars and\nheavy machine-guns.\nReports indicate about 10 persons  have  been  killed  and  30\nwounded in the few skirmishes\nsince Ben Bella's troops began\ntheir advance Saturday to\nwrest Algiers and the surrounding countryside from the control of the rebellious guerrillas\nof wilaya (zone) No. 4.\nBen Bella told reporters in\nOran that his forces were under orders to avoid bloodshed\nwhere possible and that his advancing troops had \"their rifles on their shoulders and\ntheir cannon covered with tarpaulins.\"\nHe said the political bureau,\nAlgeria's de facto civilian government, is determined to reestablish its authority in Algiers, taken by the wilaya 4 guerrilla command Aug. 25.\n111-1 L\/UlfLJIft\nIndian Ocean *\"&   0*\n500\no0\"\ne@\nMil<\nes\nAUSTRALIA\nMeany Foresees Us\nRecession in 1962\nNEW FKDERA'i iGi\\ Pi^ANiVKi) \u2014 Britain and Malaya\nhave agreed to a five-territory merger to create Malaysia, a\nnew state in Southeast Asia. The new federation (shaded area)\nwill embrace independent Malaya, self-governing Singapore,\nthe oil-rich sultanate of Brunei and the British colonies of North\nBorneo and Sarawak. It is scheduled to be officially created\nAug. 31, 1963. (CP Newsmnp)\nCanadians Made September\nHoliday One Full of Fun\nBy  THE   CANADIAN  PRESS\nLabor throughout Canada\nworked during the weekend at\ngetting all the fun it could out\nof the last holiday break before the autumn.\nToday children returned to\nschool and adults were back at\nwork after three days of leisurely pleasure under mainly\nwarm, sunny skies.\nThe c o u n t r y's estimated\n6,877,000 work force organized\nfew special events to mark a\nday celebrated at various times\nof the year throughout most of\nthe Western World as Labor\nDay.\nAn occasional serious note\ncame during speeches by labor\nleaders.\nIn  Toronto,  Donald MacDon-\nTragic Scenes Bring Tears\nTo Workers in 'Quake Ruins\nBy  DAVID   LANCASHIRE\nDAN-ISFAHAN, Iran (AP>-\nWeeping workers dug body\nalter body today from the ruins\nleft by Iran's worst earthquakes\nin 70 years and hurried them\ninto graves lo counter the threat\nof epidemics.\nThe official death loll from\nthe tremors that devastated\nabout 100 villages in northwest\nIran Saturday night rose to\n\"more than 4,000.\" The Iranian\nRed Cross said the dead might\ntotal 10,000 and that the number\nof injured were \"beyond counting.\" Premier Assadullah Alam\nplaced the loll at 20,000 dead\nand injured.\nThe Western world's governments and relief organizations\nassembled aid shipments for air\ntransport. U.S. forces in Germany mounted an airlift to\ntransport 10,000 blankets, 1,001)\ntents and a 100-bed hospital unit\nwithin  the next 48  hours.\nThousands of soldiers and\nvolunteers dug Ihe bodies in the\nwreckage of mud huts scattered\nover 23.000 square miles of\nnorthwest Iran. Trains, buses\nand trucks took the injured to\noverflowing district hospitals\nand to Tehran.\nThe three savage quakes hit\nhardest in the oasis town of\nDan-Isfahan, home of 4,200 per-\nsons 150 miles northwest of\nTehran. Only 700 persons were\nleft alive.\nAs the temperature reached\n100, the stench of death he-\ncame almost unbearable.\n\u2022WHAT  SHALL   I  DO'\n\"What shall I do, God, what\nshall I do\" wailed a little boy,\nids face stained with dried\nblood, as he banged his head in\nthe dust beside the neatly\nwrapped bodies of his father,\nmother and seven brothers and\nsisters.\nWomen and children huddled\nin rows of tents hastily set up\nhy troops and Red Cross workers. Food trucks came along a\n20-mile cart track from the\nmain road with bread.\nIn nearby Kiavan, only 95\npersons survived from a population ot 495.\nThe government ordered\nmourning and cancelled all music on radio broadcasts. Special\nprayers were said for the dead\nin all mosques.\nReports were still to come in\nfrom many villages far off the\nmain roads.\nThe exact toll probably never\nwill be known.\nTOURS   DISASTER   AREA\nPremier Alam, after touring\nthe disaster area with tears in\nhis eyes, said: \"The catastrophe is enormous. The disaster\nis big, the misery indescribable. It is beyond imagination-\nAllah help us.\"\nThe Canadian embassy announced that six Canadian employees of the Ontario Hydro-\nElectric Power Commission are\nsafe.\nThe Ontario workers are in\nIran under long-term contracts\nsigned with a New York commission,  a  private agency that\narranges   aid   for   underdeveloped countries.\nThey are helping to set up a\npower station at Dez, in the\nstate of Khuzestan, about 290\nmiles southwest of Tehran.\nAbout 100 Canadians are registered in Iran, mostly in Tehran, Shiraz and Abandan.\nThe Canadian Red Cross So-\nciety authorized a $10,000 cash\ngrant to Iran and said it is prepared to provide more assistance if requested.\nThe  Red  Cross   accepted  the\noffer of an RCAF Yukon transport aircraft to take relief supplies to Iran.\nDLIVERS   IIIEQUE\nPresident Kennedy cabled\nAmbassador Holmes instructing\nhim to provide all available assistance.\nHolmes delivered a $10,000\ncheque, and the American Red\nCross cabled another $10,000.\nThe state department said U.S.\nrelief measures would exceed\n$500,000 in cost.\nThe world headquarters of\nCare in New York directed its\nmission chief in Iran to hurry\n$100,000 worth of food and other\nassistance to the stricken area.\nThe League of Red Cross So-\ncities in Geneva forwarded its\nmember societies an franian\nappeal for emergency shipments of tents, blankets, anti-\nsepetics, sedatives, antibiotics,\nvitamins and cash gifts.\nThe Dutch Red Cross assembled 500 blood plasma units,\ntents for 400 persons, clothing\nand milk for air shipment to\nTehran.\nLong Weekend Gave Canada\nSecond Worst Accident Toll\nCivil Defence records reveal\nlhat 104 individuals from East,\nand West Kootenay have received\ntraining at the Civil Defence College at Arnprior since 1954. During the same period 121 individuals have received training in\nprovincial courses at Victoria\nand Vancouver. The number\ntrained municipally would rim into thousands.\nBy   THE   CANADIAN  PRESS\nTraffic accidents and drownings struck viciously during the\nlong weekend to give Canada\nits worst Labor Day toll on record and the second-highest holiday  fatality  total   in  history.\nAt least ion persons met violent death, and the highway total of 71 exceeded the previous\nrecord of 62 on the three-day\nLabor Day weekend of last year\nand  Dominion  Day of  1960.\nHUBERT\n\"Hey, Harry\nThe over-all toll exceeded the\nprevious Labor Day record of\n92 last year. High mark for any\nthree-day holiday was on Dominion Day of 1960, when 122\npersons died.\nThe traffic fatalities this year\nfar exceeded a pre-holiday prediction of 55 by the Canadian\nHighway  Safety  Council.\nMultiple - death accidents\npushed the traffic toll upwards\nin the period from 6 p.m. local\ntime Friday to midnight Monday surveyed by The Canadian\nPress. Six persons died in one\naccident and five in another, in\nOntario alone.\nThe fatalities by provinces,\nwith   traffic   deaths   bracketed:\nOntario 40 (281; Quebec 29\n(21); British Columbia 14 (101;\nNova Scotia 6 '5); Manitoba 5\n(41; New Brunswick 2 (II; Saskatchewan 2 111; Alberta 1 (II;\nNewfoundland 1 (0'. Prince Edward Island was fatality-free.\nTwenty - four persons were\ndrowned\u201410 in Ontario, seven\nin Quebec, two in B.C., and one\neacli in Newfoundland, Nova\nScotia, New Brunswick, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.\nIn Ontario, one person died\nin a fire and another was electrocuted. In B.C., a man was\nfound dead beside railway\ntracks and a child choked to\ndeath while eating. One person\nwas killed in a fall in Quebec.\nThe survey does not include\nnatural deaths, industrial accidents, slayings and known suicides\naid, secretary-treasurer of the\nCanadian Labor Congress,\ncalled for a more mature relationship between management\nand labor.\nHe said it may be difficult,\nif not impossible, for Canada to\nrally its resources unless there\nis co-operation to eclipse anything attempted so far.\nfn Ottawa, William Dodge, ex-\ncutive vice-president of the\nCLC, spoke of labor's big battle\nto organize white-collar workers.\n\"We   must   devise  new  tech-\nniques  to win  them over,\"  he\nsaid.\nHIGHWAYS BULGE\nRailways from coast to coast\nput on extra coaches, highways\nbulged at the pavements and\nTrans-Canada Air Lines celebrated its 25th anniversary with\nextra flights.\nProvince by province, this is\nhow labor enjoyed its last summer fling;\nBritish Columbia \u2014 All major unions have signed long-\nterm contracts. The province's\n623,000-strong labor force celebrated accordingly in sunny\nweather.\nHighlight of the weekend was\nthe official opening Monday of\nthe Trans-Canada Highway by\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker al\nRogers Pass.\nAlberta \u2014 Labor marked an\nincrease of 14,000 workers over\nlast year for a total of 520,000.\nThe Western Canada motorcycle championships in Edmon-\nlon was the main attraction.\nSaskatchewan \u2014 An estimated\n350,000 labor force had a special event to celebrate, the acceptance of a provincial medicare  plan.\nManitoba \u2014 Workers marked\nthe day wilh the knowledge that\nthere has been a decline in the\nnumber of persons seeking jobs.\nIt was a cool, cloudy day with\na high of only 55 degrees.\nOntario \u2014 Labor Day was\ncelebrated by 3,500,000 workers\nand some 95,000 jobless men\nand women in balmy summer\nweather.\nA Labor Day parade was disappointing. It drew only 0.000\nof the expected 10.000 marchers.\nQuebec \u2014 Generally sunny\nweather greeted the estimated\n1,800.000 labor force. A parade\nof 20 floats organized by workers converged on the city hall\nin Quebec City.\nAtlantic Provinces \u2014 A sunny\nweekend brought a welcome end\nto one of the wettest summers\non record. Continued difficulties\nin the coal industry provided a\nsombre Labor Day for many of\nthe area's 95.000 work force.\nWASHINGTON (AP) - AFL-\nClO President George Meany\nthrew a note of warning into\nthe celebration of Labor Day,\npredicting a United States recession this winter.\n\"I hope to heavens I am\nwrong,\" added Meany.\nBut the labor leader, in Seattle for a speech at the World's\nFair, told reporters:\n\"We are not growing fast\nenough economically to keep\npace with our growing population, and sooner or later we will\nbe in serious trouble.\"\nRetiring Labor Secretary\nGoldberg, who Friday was appointed to the U.S. Supreme\nCourt, called labor - management relations more important\nthan ever \"in this period of\nstress and strain for America.\"\nGoldberg attended the annual\nLabor Day mass at the Shrine\nof Ihe Sacred Heart in Washington. Afterward he spoke at\na wreath-placing ceremony at\nthe statue of James Cardinal\nGibbons, a champion of labor.\n\"All   of  us   must  serve  our\ncountry, and serve the national\nwelfare and common defence to\nthe best of our abilities,\" said\nGoldberg.\nURGES CO-OPERATION\nMore than 1,000 government\nofficials, labor and management executives and others at\nthe mass heard the Most Rev.\nPatrick A. O'Boyle, Roman\nCatholic archbishop of Washington, urge organized labor to\n\"lean over backwards to co-operate with management in every reasonable effort to stabilize costs.\"\nPresident Kennedy hailed the\nend-of-summer holiday with a\nstatement that about 70,000,000\nAmericans now are employed,\nmore than ever before.\nA rallying cry was sounded\nby James B. Carey, president\nof the International Union of\nElectrical Workers.\nSpeaking in Pennsauken,\nN.J., at the grave of Peter, J.\nMcGuire\u2014the founder of Labor\nDay \u2014 Carey urged organized\nlabor to battle for a 35-hour\nweek and called for a guaranteed  annual  wage.\nMedical Profession's Intern\nPolicies Example for All\nBy STUART LAKE\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The medical\nprofession's policy of requiring\ngraduate doctors to go through\na period of intership was held\nup Monday as an example for\nother professions to follow.\nRay Jones, a vice-president of\nthe E. B. Eddy Company, 52,\ntold a students seminar that\ntoo many university graduates\nenter industry with the mistaken notion they are ready to\nlake over key positions.\n\"The graduate must realize\nthat he is only equipped with\nsome tolls am; gimmicks and\nmust learn how to use them,\"\nsaid Ihe Hull. Que., executive.\nThe four-day seminar, sponsored hy the National Federation of University Students, is\nstudying the impact of the university on Canadian life. About\n150 students representing 40\nuniversities  are  attending.  The\nseminar   goes   into   its   second\nday today.\nOther speakers Monday included Dr. J. H. S. Reid, executive director of the Canadian Association of University\nTeachers.\n\u2022LACK IDENTITY'\nDr. Reid, who resigned as\nhead of the english department\nat United College in Winnipeg\nin 1958 after a colleague was\nfired for criticizing the college\nprincipal,, said there is no academic identity in Canada.\nUniversity men seem to reflect only the thoughts of Canadian society.\n\"Don't be a trouble-maker if\nyou want to suceed,\" he told\nthe students.\n\"You might become a vegetable at your work and you\nwon't find it very exciting but\nat least you'll get ahead.\"\nAussie Prime Ministers\nDetermined to Avoid Row\nLONDON (CP) - Two Commonwealth prime ministers\u2014\nRobert Menzies of Australia and\nKeith Holyoake of New Zealand\n\u2014arrived today determined to\navoid a row with Britain on the\nCommon Market issue.\nMeizies and Holyoake expect\nto play a leading part in the\nCommonwealth prime ministers\nconference opening here Monday.\nThe Australian leader told\nreporters that lie had not come\nin the role of an enemy adding:\n\"That would be absurd. I am\na Commonwealth man myself\u2014\nalways have been and always\nwill be.\n\"We have never taken up the\naltitude that it is for us or other\noutlying Commonwealth countries to exercise the veto over\nwhat Great Britain might do.\nThat is absurd.\"\nMenzies' definition corresponded to the views of the British government that the Common Market question is one\nwhich Britain alone ultimately\nmust decide.\nAustralia. New Zealand and\nCanada \u2014 all large producers\nof temperate foodstuffs \u2014 fear\nthat a  British linkup with the\nCommon Market will damage\ntheir export trade. Behind this\nlies a fear that the Commonwealth itself might suffer permanent damage.\nThe Commonwealth conference is expected to focus most\nof its attention on the Common\nMarket question.\nHolyoake said his country was\nthe most dependent of all on\nexporting foodstuffs to Britain.\nThe problem of Commonwealth foodstuffs has been only\npartially agreed thus far between Britain and the Common\nMarket six\u2014France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg.\nEdward Heath, lord privy\nseal and chief British negotiator, will tackle the problem\nagain when he resumes discussions with representatives of\nthe six in Brussels in October.\nBritain has sought entry into\nthe Common Market under conditions which would prevent\ndrastic shocks to the economies\nof Commonwealth countries.\nHolyoake was accompanied\nby Deputy Prime Minister John\nMarshall, External Affairs Secretary A. D. Mcintosh and Deputy Secretary Foss Shanahan.\nJohn M c E w a n, Australia's\ndeputy premier and trade minister, arrived here this morning.\nToday\nIn History\nSept.  5,  1962  .  . -.\nIgor Gouzenko, a Soviet\ncipher clerk, delected from\nthe Soviet Embassy in Ottawa 17 years ago today\u2014\nin 1945 \u2014 taking with him\n109 documents which exposed inportant information\non Soviet espionage activi-\ntis in Canada. The 26-year-\nold clerk took the documents\nto the RCMP two days later,\nand on Feb. 5, 1946, a royal\ncommission was appointed\nto investigate and evaluate\nthe evidnce.\n1755 \u2014 The deportation of\nabout 14,000 Acadians from\nNova Scotia began.\n1936 \u2014 Mrs. Beryl Mark-\nham arrived at Louisburg,\nN.S., completing the first\neast - west Atlantic solo\nflight, non-stop from Abing-\nton, England.\nMAST-ERS-Two   crewmen   ot   the   Australian   challenger\nGretel   (left I  and  the  America's Cup defender  Weatherly\nwork high un tuwering masts at tjie Newpurt, R. I., Shipyard.\nThey will race Sept  15.\nPUBLIC RAILWAYS\nThe state-owned railways of\nWestern Germany total 18,957\nmiles and the privately-owned\nrailways 3.400 miles.\n*\n 51^\n(About ihsi J own.\nPhone 352-3552\nDr. and Mrs. Bert Auld, Shelagh and Kathy, have\nreturned to their home in Palo Alto, California, after spending a holiday with Dr. Auld's mother and sister, Mrs.\nF. M. Auld and Miss Lillian,\n421 Nelson Avenue.\nand Mrs. J. F. Waters, 811 Carbonate Street.\nMaking a 2000-mile circle tour,\nMrs. Edith Jorgensen, 510 Sixth\nStreet, has returned after accompanying her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. R.\nMacBain of Brilliant, to Radium\nHot Springs, north to Golden,\nGore Street, have as their guests j west to Revelstoke, on to Quesnel\nfor two weeks their son and j and then to historic Barkerville.\ndaughter-in-law. and Mr. and j They returned by the Fraser Can-\nMrs. Settimo Zanon. and infant j yon, over the Hope-Princeton\ndaughter, Laura, from Woburn. I Highway to Osoyoos and back by\nMass. | the  new  Blueberry-Paulson cut-\n\u2022   \u00ab   * off. During the trip they enjoyed\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Vicker- good roads nearly all the way.\nstaff of Victoria are visiting Mr. good weather, and saw a lot of\nVickerstaff's uncle and aunl, Mr. | \"beautiful B.C.\"\nRon Ebdon, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. J. Ebdon, 511 Behnsen Street,\nhas relumed to University of Alberta in Edmonton, where he is\nentering his second year in the\nfaculty of dentistry.\nMr. and Mrs   Joe Zanon, 214\nEviri'Jones Principals\nMaking Home in Nelson\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK - Mrs. S. Smith\nleft during the weekend to make\nher home in Vancouver. She had\nmade Deer Park her home for\nthe pasl  five years.\nMr. and Mrs. Leonard Lacey\nand daughter Elinore of Brandon,\nMan., were recent visitors to\nDeer Park. Mr. Lacey. a former\nresident of Deer Park, left here\nwith his parents about 40 years\nago to make their home at Brandon.\nRecent visitors at' the Deer\nPark Youth Hostel were Mr. and\nMrs. Ray Allen of Vancouver and\nMiss Maureen Brady, also of Vancouver.\nMr and Mrs Robert Nelson\nand children have returned to\ntheir home at Bowness. Alta.\nafter spending the past two weeks\nat Ihe home of the laller's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W M. Douglas.\nStan Pearce of Trail and his\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr and\nMrs. Peter Hansen of Laverna,\nSask.. were recent visitors to\nDeer Park\nMr and Mrs R L Heywood\nand their son .Jason and daughter\nDelia returned to their home in\nVancouver a! the weekend after\nspending the past week al the\nJamieson home here\nMr. and Mrs. R Kerrison and\nchildren of Edmonlon are spend\nmg a holiday al Ihe home of thr-\nlaller's parents. Mr. and Mrs. J.\nStucklberger.\nMrs M Maja and children\nhave returned to their home al\nNakusp after spending a camping holiday al Deer Park\nMr. and Mrs. .John Palerson.\nfheir son and daughler-in-law,\nMr  and Mrs. Val Palerson. with\nyoung son, Johnny, all of Portland, Ore., were recent guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Briggeman.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Briggeman and\nsons Wayne and John Victor of\nKinnaird were also recent guests\nof the Briggemans. as were Mrs.\nEthel Lamont and daughter Clarissa and Mrs. J. V. Briggeman\nof Trail.\nM. A. Kirkendall and his grandson, Wayne Phelps, returned from\na three-week holiday spent at\nMaple Creek, Sask.. and other\npoints where they visited friends\nand relatives. On their return\nthey were accompanied by his\nson and daughter-in-law. Mr. and\nMrs C M. Kirkendall of Harrop\nand family, who spenl the holiday weekend at Deer Park.\nMr, and Mrs. John Kirkman of\nHarrison, B.C., returned to their\nhome after spending a few days\nas guests of the former's father\nand sister. J. Kirkman and Miss\nM. R   Kirkman.\nMr. and Mrs C, McCullough of\nTrail and Mrs. D. Phelps of Salmon Arm were recenl guesls of\nIhe laller's sons and their families. A. A. Phelps and C. S.\nPhelps\nMiss Brenda Phelps. 8-year-old\ndaughter of Mr and Mrs C. S\nPhelps, relumed from Castlegar\nwhere she was a patient in Castlegar and District Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs P. Romaine of\nKinnaird. and the former's\nbrother. Jim Romaine of Vancouver, were weekend visitors at the\nRomanies' home in Deer Park\nMr. and Mrs. J. Reimer and\ndaughters, Sharon and Wendy,\nwere visitors at the home of the\nWilliamsons en roule to their\nhome al Nakusp. after spending\na few days al Renata.\nMaking their home in Nelson\nfollowing a honeymoon trip to\nSeattle, Victoria and Vancouver\nare Mr. and Mrs. John Evin, who\nwere united in marriage at St.\nPaul's-Trinity United Church on\nAugust 18.\nRev. Peter W. Faris read the\nservice for the former Carol Ann\nJones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nMelvin Jones of Crescent Valley\nand Nelson, and John Evin, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. William Evin of\nSlocan Park.\nThe bride wore a traditional\nwhile floor-length gown of lace\nand organza, with bouffant hooped skitr featuring lace inserts,\nthe lace bodice topped by a\nsquare neckline and featuring\nlong sleeves. Her embroidered\nshoulder-length veil was caught\nby a pillbox headdress and she\ncarried deep red roses.\nShe was attended hy Miss Pat\nHamillon, as maid of honor,\nwearing yellow organza with\nmatching veiled headdress, and\nMaureen McCrory and Betty Lou\nJones, sister of [he bride, in turquoise chiffon with floral headdresses.\nMr. George Wishlow supported\nIhe bridegroom as best man and\nushers were Mr. Bill Evin and\nMr. Gerald Conkin.\nA reception was held at the\nhome of the bridegroom's parents\nin Slocan Park.\nFor travelling, the bride changed in a pink brocade sheath dress\nwith white accessories.\n^\nMR. AND MRS. JOHN EVIN OF NELSON\n\u2014Phofo by Renwick Studio.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962 \u2014 5\nCanadian Missionary, Wife Buck\nImmigration Laws for Chinese\nNelson VOW Reviews Active\nYear at Garden Supper Party\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP\n\u2014 To thousands of Chinese\nscraping their living in the tiny\nBritish colony of Hong Kong,\nCanada is like a paradise\nguarded by a huge and implacable dragon\u2014the immigration\ndepartment\u2014says a Canadian\nmissionary.\nRev. Walton H. Tonge, chaplain and dean at Chung Chi\nCollege about 15 miles from\nHong Kong's capital of Victoria, says Canadian immigration laws work hardship on the\nChinese  in two ways.\nCanada was lagging in accepting Chinese students from\nHong Kong for study at universities in this country. And it\nwas difficult for 'Chinese families in Canada to adopt orphaned children from Hong\nKong.\nMr. Tonge, minister 10 years\nago of Lakefield United Church\nnear here, is home on a year's\nleave with his wife and four\nchildren.\nFor students, he says. Canadian immigration policy presents more difficulties even\nthan Australia which permits\nno permanent Chinese immigration but has opened its universities to Hong Kong students.\nMany students from Chung\nChi College went to the United\nStates and Britain. Few came\nto Canada, The only universities\nhere thai welcomed his students\nwere McGill in Montreal and\nWestern Ontario in London. The\nothers, especially the University\nof Toronto, did not seem to\nwant Hong Kong students at all.\nMrs. Tonge does her part in\nhelping handle the chronic social problems brought about, by\nAmidsl pleasant surroundings\nof Mrs Betty Drew's garden at\n37 View Street, recently, members of Nelson's Voice of Women\ngroup enjoyed a pot-luck supper.\nThe occasion was primarily a\nsocial gel-togefher and members entered into the spirit, of a\n\"Lucky Dip\" and a \"Silent Auction\", with Mrs. Arne Lame calling liie highest bidders. From\nthe $17 raised in this way, $13\nwill be forwarded to the International Conference of Women to\nbe held in Montreal, Sept. 14 as a\ncont ribution from the Nelson\ngroup.\nTwo Housewives Supervise\nHouse Construction, Decor\nMONTREAL    fCP>\nmodel homes under construe\ntion in suburban Lorraine will\nappeal to every housewife, the\nbuilders think.\nRoberta   Schreiber   and   Hannah  Goldstein combined  exper-\nTwo | ience as housewives with busi\nness acumen to help architects\nplan the houses. Now they are\nsupervising every step of the\nconstruction work and decorating.\nBoth   in   their  20s,   they   are\nA WEDDING TRIP to Seattle, where they attended\nthe World's Fair, Los Angeles and Arizona followed\nth\u00a9 recent marriage at Brilliant of Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nXozakoff. The bride, who wor6 a traditional Russian\nsuit of lace over satin with lace shawl, satin shoes and\ncorsage of red roses for her wedding, is the former\nNettie Voykin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alec Voykin,\nand the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Mary Kozakoff.\nThe bride was attended by her sister, Miss Nancy\nVoykin, and the bridegroom by Mr. Peter Strelioff,\n\u2014Phofo by Renwick Studio\nsisters and natives of New\nYork. Mrs. Schreiber has lived\nhere since her marriage to a\nMontreal builder.\nThey are strongly convinced\nof the need of design and furnish homes with women in\nmind. Although neither has any\nformal training in building, both\nknow something about, it\u2014Mrs.\nSchreiber as the wife of a\nbuilder and decorator of her\nown home, and Mrs. Goldstein\nas an enthusiastic amateur carpenter.\nOne feature of the houses is\na single color scheme\u2014the mixture of white, grey and beige\nblends with everything. Play\nareas indoors and out are. easily\nsupervised from the kitchen.\nThe size and location of closets,\nposition of shelves and size of\ndoors have been carefully\nplanned\nEASY TO REPAIR\nLabor - saving materials and\ndevices have been used. The\noven door can be removed for\neasier cleaning. Kitchen cabinets are finished in maple yet\nare completely washable. The\nceramic tile counter tops are\neasily repaired \u2014 if one tile\ncracks it can be replaced separately, without removing the\nentire counter top.\nSafety is an important consideration. The stove is regulated by pushbuttons at the\nside, rather than on the headboard, eliminating the danger\nof burns from steaming pots.\nThe sliding glass patio doors\nhave security handles that can\nbe raised out of children's\nreach.\nThe two sisters are experienced business women \u2014 they\nboth majored in business administration, and Mrs Goldstein runs an insurance brokerage agency and a cosmetic distributorship \u2014 and have had no\ntrouble supervising the crew of\nmen.\nThey don t hebr-vf m carn-\nfiang their femininity tn their\n.lob. houcer. and dress in\nsmart sheaths and coats at the\nwork site The only concession\nthey do make to their occupation is *o wear flat shoes.\nPresident Mrs. Zeljko Kujundzic drew attention to the world-\nrenowned women expecting to attend; Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt, and\nDr. Margaret Mead from the U.S.\nMadame Pandit and Rajkumari\nArm-it  Kaur   from   India;   Mrs.\nGray Creek\nJohn Oliver, hunting in the East.\nKootenay, shot a mountain sheep\nwith fine horns on Bull Mountain.\nMrs. Horst Wirsrg and Mrs\nGeorge Botham were co-hostesses\nat a shower for Mrs. Andrew\nBorzak. a recent bride. Games\nwere enjoyed and gilts were presented to the guest ot honor in a\nred laundry basket by Miss Sig-\nlinda Wirsig.\nMr. and Mrs, George Petrescu\nand family have returned from\na camping trip, travelling to Osoyoos, through the Okanagan valley to Salmon Arm and on to\nKamloops and the Cariboo where\nthey stayed at Canim Lake. They\nenjoved the drive through Rogers,\nPass and relumed down the! Wllh a sprinkling of grated\nWindermere Valley to Cranbrook) cheese or a covering of smooth\nand home. cheese sauce.\nDiane Collins. Mrs. J. B. Priestly jnd Mrs. Anne Allen from England. Delegates from Japan, the\nNetherlands, the USSR and U. S.\nhave confirmed reservations, wilh\na certainty of representatives of\nAfrica, South America. Australia\nand Indonesia and a possibility\nfrom China and the West Indies.\nTheme of the conference will\nhe \"Search and Research for\nPeace,  New  Approaches.\"\nII was pointed out that one of\nthe original objectives of Voice of\nWomen, an International Co-operation Year will be adopted by\nthe United Nations Genera! Assembly when it meets again this\nmonth.\nA review of the activities of the\nlocal group indicated that it has\nhad an active year.\nThe annual meeting and election of officers for the ccmiin\nyear is scheduled for Sept. 27 at\nthe home of Mrs. James Harvie,\n812 Carbonate Street.\nCOOK WHOLE\nFor variety,  cook a  head of\ncauliflower    whole    and    serve\nSalmo Notes\nJerry Schimpf has returned to\nSalmo from a vacation spent at\nKelowna visiting relatives.\nMr. and Mrs M J Bush or\nSalmo have as guests Mr. Bush's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. F. R. Bush and their family\nof Vancouver.\nthe continuing stream of  refu-   a home for unwanted babies,\ngees into Hong Kong. She runs'    Dozens of abandoned children\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nIt's going to be difficult to resist investing in one\nof the colorful tweed suits that mark the new season.\nEasy, comfortable, beautifully cut lo match the rich\nfabrics, these suits are real investments. Davidow,\na past master in daytime suits, does this typical number. Of teal blue tweed, soft and supple, the revers\nof the jacket are faced to match the wool challis\noverblouse, The skirt is slim and straight, yet geared\nfor walking.\nfind their way into her care,\nare nursed back to health and\nthen an effort is made to find\nhomes for them.\nIn the adoption field the Canadian immigration department\nhad turned the problem over to\nprovincial child welfare authorities. The Ontario government\nhad decided, Mrs. Tongue says,\nto allow Chinese babies in for\nadoption only if there is none\nseeking adoption in the prov\nince.\n\"This means never,\" Mr.\nTonge says.\nEven Chinese familes in Ontario who would eagerly adopt\na Chinese baby were prevented\nfrom doing so by this regulation.\n\"The Canadian Council of\nChurches has appealed to the\ngovernment to allow 10,000 Chinese families from Hong Kong\ninto Canada,\" says Mr. Tonge.\n\"So far the government has\nsaid it will admit too families.\n\"Canada should show an example to other countries in the\nWestern world over this. Where\nCanada led, the United States\nand Australia might follow.\nThose families won't be the\nslightest help to the problems\nof Hong Kong, but 50,000 or 60.-\n000 families would make a difference.\"\nSHIP SOLD\nSEATTLE (API - Sale of the\nold B.C. coast steamship Catala,\nnow in use as a World's Fair\nhotel ship here, was announced\nMonday.\nWilliam R. MacPherson. head\nof a Seattle group which brought\nIhe vessel here from Canada, said\nhe sold it to Mr. and Mrs. Earl\nRack of Los Angeles.\nMacPherson said Mr. and Mrs.\nBack plan to convert the Catala\ninto a nightclub and restaurant.\nII will continue as a hotel ship\nuntil the middle of this month.\nThe sale price was reported to\nbe about $150,000.\n?0\n<A&*0\nP '\nADVERTISING\nIS NEWS,\nTOO!\nA WHITE LACE Russian suit was worn by Mary Ozeroff,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Ozeroff, when she exchanged\nmarriage vows with Mr. Larry P. Popoff, sod of Mrs. Annie\nPnpn!!, recently at receptions held in Glade and the Silver Room\not t.he Hume Hotel in Nelson. The bride was attended bv Gloria\nKoorbatoff,\"who wore a pink nylon suit for the occasion. The\nbride carried pink carnations and the bridesmaid white carnations Mr. John Sookerotl attended the bridegroom. The newdy-\nweds are residing in Nelson following a wedding trip to Radium,\nGlacier National Park and the Okanagan. The bridegroom is\nemployed bv Reuben Buerge Motors in Nelson and the bride\nis on the stall ol Wood, Vallacce Hardware Co. LW.\n\u2014Photo by Renwick Studio.\nPeople buy this newspaper for news of the world, the\ncountry and our community in particular. Our readers\nare also interested in news about food, clothes,\nentertainment, automobiles, furniture and all of the\nnecessities and luxuries that have to do with daily living.\nThrough advertising in this paper you can give our\nreaders the up-to-date news about your merchandise\nand services. Each one of your advertisements can be\na newspaper within a newspaper.\nOf course you should know all about, the circulation of\nthe newspaper that is carrying the news of your\nbusiness. How many people buy the paper? Where\nare they located? How was the circulation obtained?\nTo give you this information and many other facts\nthat you need and have a right to know when you\nbuy advertising space, this newspaper is a member\nof the Audit Bureau of Circulations.\nEstablished in 1914, the Bureau is a cooperative,\nnonprofit association of 3,575 advertisers, advertising\nagencies and publishers. Its purpose is to furnish\nadvertisers with verified reports on the circulation of\nits publisher members.\nAt regular intervals one of the Bureau's\narge staff of experienced auditors makes a\nthorough inspection and audit of our circu-\nation records, just as the bank examiner\nmakes a check of your bank's records. The\ninformation thus obtained is published in\nofficial A.B.C. reports. When you buy space\nin tliis newspaper our A.B.C. report tells\nyou just what, in circulation values, you get\nfor your advertising investment.\n\u00a3  y^gB^.   \/ This newspaper is a member ot Ihe\n^ \/M\\ |    |V\\ O Audit Bureau of Circulations.\ni Advertisers are invited to ask\nO for a copy of our latest A.B.C. report.\n\u2022fas\nA.B.C.  REP6RTS~40   YEARS   OF   F A C t-M N D I N 6   A N D ; F A C f,-R E P O R T I N G\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962\n|>\u00bbl\u00ab\nri*\nytOP0**\ni>**>s\u00bbiv*\n,V''   '*-'--'': T'<-\u00ab \u25a0   y^ * V-^f-* w' *\"''\"   '-\u25a0\u25a0'\n:\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0::>:: -^ ' \\G\\V^9\n.M    f\u2122 \u25a0   (UfTi     V    |.fl .   M .   ,       .\u201e   >'*    .,.. \u25a0''\nafcv*   ,v i* ...\n, m*\nYour Favorite Newspaper\nThe Nelson Daily News\nNow Will Bring You a\nBig Roto Magazine\nwith a wide variety of features coming from all over\nthe world, others concentrating on Canadian\nbeauty, developments and topics of the day. Black\nand white and full-color photos and drawings by our\nskilled artists illustrating all features.\nPllAA. . . .\nFULL COLOR\nCOMICS\nOne of the Finest Selections\nAvailable to Entertain Every\nMember of the Family.\n WP\n\u25a0 \u25a0 .. ,......\u25a0 ...\n11\n\u25a0\u25a0..-\u2022.J.',.'-    \u00bb! \u25a0\u201e..,..,\/,'.. .,...,.,. ,.\"....   ;...   , .'.  .IL. .-. '.. 1.,.. JL.i....,.l     .\"!...\u00bb-\"'! .      .      . .       I,       .      ,\n^PSPB^^^\nAngels Do It Again\u2014Take Yanks\n2,^\nDodgers Take Giants,\nEven Crucial Series\nBy  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS\nThe amazing Los Angeles Angels, whose late-inning heroics\nhave tightened the American\nLeague pennant race, did it\nagain Tuesday. They defeated\nNew York Yankees 7-6 in Yan-\nHaddix doubled in the third\nand scored from third base\nthree plays later on an infield\nout. In the fifth, Haddix\ndropped a double over Gene\nWoodling's head and tallied on\nBill Virdon's single,\nkee Stadium on the wings of a | Home runs by Stan Musial\nsix-run seventh inning rally and j and Gene Oliver helped Larry\nBob Rodgers' run - producing ! Jackson to his fourth straight\nsingle in the ninth j victory as St. Louis  Cardinals\nThe setback r e d u c e d the hf Chicago Cubs 7-1\nYanks' first-place margin over I Cubs Ken Hubbs had one put-\nidle Minnesota to 2V4 games out to draw within one of Bobby\nand over third-place Angels to i ?,fr s ma>or league \"\"^ \u00b0\n34 games. The Twins were:414 successive chances without\nrained out of their game with: an enor'\nWashington. i REDS BELT BRAVES\nLos Angeles broke loose for' Cincinnati Reds unloaded a\nits big inning after veteran | 15-hit attack, including homers\nWhitey Ford had pitched three- bv Vada Pinson, John Edwards\nhit ball over the first six inn-! and Marty Keough, and belted\nings. Trailing 4-0, they put together four hits,  including Lee\n! Milwaukee Braves 9-6.\nBraves rapped out 14 hits, in-\nThomas' 22nd homer, and two\nwalks plus an error by shortstop Tonny Kubek for the six\nruns. Kubek's error with the\nbases jammed enabled the Angels to move in front 5-4 and\nthe sixth run scored on a\ngrounder by Rodgers.\nYANKS BATTLE BACK\nThe Yanks battled back to tie\neluding a pair of homers by\nEddie Mathews, his 24th and\n25th of the year, Jim O'Toole\nwas credited with the win,\nHouston Colts, without benefit of hexers, witch doctors or\nblack cats, beat Philadelphia\nPhillies 4-1 and avoided an unwanted major league record.\nHouston's   only   victory   this\nthe score on Cletis Boyer's two- j year  over  the  Phils  came  in\n  their   18th   and  final   meeting,;\nthus keeping the Colts from be- i\ncoming the first club in big\nleague history to lose an entire\nseason's series to another team.\nBob Bruce pitched a strong\nfour-hitter for the Colts and\nchipped in with two runs batted in with a double and sin-\nrun  homer  in the eighth\nWith southpaw Bud Daley on\nthe mound. Joe Koppe opened\nthe ninth with a single, moved\nto second ona walk and scored\nwhen Rodgers' lined a single to\ncentre.\nJulio Navarro, a right hander\nbrought up from the Pacific\nCoast League last week, held\nthe Yanks in check in their\nhalf and picked up his first major league victory.\nLos   Angeles   Dodgers   scored\nthree runs in the first inning and\nrelief pitcher Ron Perranoski sur-\nThe  Yankees   played   without! vived a rocky ninth inning to de-i\noutfielder    M i c k e y j feat San Francisco Giants 5-4 be-!\nfore 51,567 fans.\nslugging\nMantle, who suffered a rib injury in batting practice before\nthe game.\nRookies George Alusik and\nEd Charles drove in two runs\napiece for Kansas City to help\nAthletics to a 7-2 victory over\nBoston.\nEd Rakow went the distance\nfor Kansas City though he was\ntouched   for   a   dozen   hits,   including  Pumpsie Green's ninth\ninning bases empty homer. Rakow, beating Red Sox for the\nfirst time in four decisions over j\nthe  past  two  years,  was  win- j\nning his 13th game against 15'\nlosses.\nAl Smith's bases-loaded pinch j\nsingle with tw- out in the 13th I\ninning gave Chicago White Sox j\na 3-2 victory over Cleveland Indians.\nSmith's hit gave Dick Donovan his eighth defeat against 18\nvictories. Donovan went all the\nway for the Indians while\nFrank Baumann, pitching six\nscoreless innings in relief,\ngained h i s seventh victory\nagainst five losses.\nHarvey Haddix smacked two\ndoubles and a single and\npitched Pittsburgh Pirates to a\n5-1 victory over New York\nMets.\nThe win put the Dodgers backi\n3V4 games in front of the Giants i\nin the National League race andi\nevened the current, crucial four-!\ngame series at two apiece. !\nWith one out in the ninth Har-i\nvey Kuenn singled and Jose Pa-;\ngan hit his sixth home run into!\nthe left field pavilion for two\nGiant runs.\nPerranoski then struck out Willie Mays and Orlando Cepeda to\nend the game.\nLislon Mad\nFor First Time\nDrug-Filled\nTennis Queen\nWins Match\nLOOKING BACK on glorious\nholiday fun today will be youngsters who have turned in fishing\nrods and swimsuits for school\nbooks. At left, seemingly lost\nin sad thought on the coming of\nschool days is Alexander\n(Lexie) Jones of Kaslo as he\nfished in Leviathan Lake, two\nmiles up the mountain near\nCampbell Creek across from\nKaslo. Some of the dozen eastern brook trout he caught, proving his mind was on his fishing,\nare pictured above. \u2014 Daily\nNews photo by Bob Blackmore.\nWelcomes Rowers\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962\u20147\nFootball Teams Face Heavy\nStretch Minus Many Stars\nLUCERNE, Switzerland (AP)\nPresident Paul Chaudet of Switzerland opened the world rowing\nchampionships Tuesday night\nwith a speech of welcome to\nteams entered from 27 countries.\nCanada  is represented  by a j\ncrew of oarsmen from the Uni- j the Saskatchewan Roughriders\nversity of British Columbia.      ' Winnipeg Blue Bombers' clash\nBy THE  CANADIAN PRESS\nBattered, bruised and with\nsome of the brightest stars on\nthe shelf, teams of the Canadian Football League groan into\nthe thick of the football fight\nin the next 10 days.\nHardest-hit in the Western\nConference are the already injury - riddled Edmonton Eskimos. Out for at least four weeks\nperhaps longer, is all-star quarterback Jackie Parker, shelved\nwith a broken collar-bone.\nParker suffered the injury in\na Labor Day tussle with Calgary Stampeders when he was\nbounced as he took a sideline\npass during the second quarter.\nEskimos lost the game 49-17.\nWAS FILLING IN\nAt the time of the injury\nParker was filling in at the\nhalfback spot for sophomore\nBobby Walden, back only briefly\nafter missing a couple of games\nwilh a pulled hamstring muscle.\nWalden, in his only play of\nthe game, made a 59-yard return of Ihe opening kickoff,\nthen was decked by the muscle\ninjury again. It was not known\nhow long he would be out this\ntime.\nWith Parker out indefinitely,\nand the load thrown on Cana-\nnadian quarterback Don Getty,\nEskimos hustled to plug the signal-calling gap Tuesday.\nThey called in for \"talks\"\nquarterback Jim Walden from\nWyoming (no kin to Bobby Walden). Quarterback Walden was\nreleased by Calgary Stampeders\nat the weekend after being\nplaced on waivers.\nOn the Eskimo 30-day injury\nreserve list are rookie halfback\nAllan White, linemen Gino\nFracas and Mike Kmech, defensive end Ed Gray and another Labor Day injury, linebacker Ted Tully.\nRIC.NEY  OUT\nIn Winnipeg, Frank Rigney,\nCanadian lineman of the year\nin 1961, will be out for a week\nor 10 days with a stretched\nknee ligament.\nRigney   was   injured   in\nMonday in Regina which Bombers won 30-7.\nFullback Charlie Shepard Is\non the club's 30-day injured reserve list with a pinched nerve\nin the neck.\nCoach Bud Grant has halfback Joe Williams of Iowa back\nand he is expected to make the\neastern road trip with Bombers\nFriday, as is end-tackle Billy\nWhisler, who joined the team\na week ago from Washington\nRedskins of the National Football League.\nIn the East, Hamilton Tiger-\nCats quarterback Bernie Fal-\noney injured his right hand and\nreinjured his knee in Monday's\ngame with Montreal. The hand\ninjury has been diagnosed as a\ncracked bone at the base of his\nthumb. It means he'll miss next\nM o n d a y 's game at home\nagainst Winnipeg and probably\nHamilton's trip west to Edmonton and Vancouver.\nToronto Argonaut's T o b 1 n\nRote still has an ailing finger\nwhich somehow refuses to respond to treatment. With it still\nswollen, he's an unlikely starter.\nLIONS  GET READY\nIn Vancouver, where coach\nDave Skrien was preparing his\nBritish Columbia Lions for a\ntwo-game foray against Montreal and Toronto, linebacker\nTom Brown was in the doubtful category for the trip.\nAbed with tonsillitis and a\nfever of 104 degrees at the\nweekend, he was out for an\neasy bit of practice Monday.\nAlso ailing with a bad cold\nwas linebacker By Bailey, being carefully watched by club\ndoctors since pneumonia laid\nhim low last, season.\nDefensive half Baz Nagle, who\nmissed Lions' last game against\nEskimos, is still limping. De\ntensive tackles Barney Tlier-\nrien, Tom Walker and Bill\nGraham are all nursing knee\nhurts.\nOttawa Rough Riders reported\nthat offensive guard Marv Be-\nvan has stretched knee ligaments suffered in the game\nSaturday against Toronto Argonauts and is not expected to be\nin the lineup when Riders meet\nWinnipeg in Ottawa Friday.\nProbable replacement Is Norb\nRoy.\nThe third-place Saskatchewan\nRoughriders have only one\ngame in the next 10 days, a\nhome encounter with Montreal\nAlouettes.\nWinnipeg's road trip puts\nthem against Ottawa Friday\nand Hamilton next Monday. Edmonton meets Calgary at home\nthis Saturday and plays host to\nHamilton the following Friday.\nCalgary meets Montreal at Calgary Sept. 15.\nMontreal Alouettes reported\na number of players suffered\nbruises in Monday's game in\nHamilton but there were no major injuries.\nAlouettes have scheduled light\nno-pad workouts for Tuesday\nand Wednesday nights In preparation for Thursday night's\ngame at home against British\nColumbia Lions.\nMonday's game In Hamilton\nlaunched Montreal on the toughest stretch in their season\u2014four\ngames in 13 days.\nBrampton Wins\nLacrosse Opener\nCancerous\nVICTORIA (CP) - Brampton\nExcelsiors picked holes in Victoria's power play to score five\ngoals while shorthanded and defeat the Shamrocks 13-10 Tuesday night in the opening game of\nthe best-of-seven Canadian Junior\nlacrosse final.\nMODERNIZE\nYOUR  HOUSE\nInstall . . .\nELECTRIC\nHEAT\nCall\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nLtd.\n502 Front St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-3175\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y. (API-\nWimbledon queen Mrs. Karen\nHantze Susman, bolstered by\ninjections of penicillin and antibiotics, staggered to a 6-1, 8-6\nvictory over little Mimi Arnold\nTuesday and kept alive her\nhopes for the women's crown\nin the national tennis championships.\nIt was a close call for the\n19-year-old newlywed from San\nDiego, Calif., second-seeded in\nthe tournament behind Australia's  Margaret Smith.\nKaren, stricken with a virus.\ntwo days ago, has been running B* PAUL RIMSTEAD        I urday   and   out-punched   tough I he   said,   \"but   maybe   they'll\na  102-degree  temperature.  She I    TORONTO  (CP)  - If deter-1 Cal Osmond of Sarnia, Ont., in! change their minds now\n,MBm.    ,\u201e   ,.p,       r,  , , had   to   postpone   her   second   mination  and  desire  were  the i the finals Monday night. i    He   also   plays   football   and\nAUKUKA,   111.     Al      -   UUll-j d tch   wjth   Mjss   A|.nold reouiremenls     needed     In\nlenger Sonny Listen said Tues-   \u201e, Santa Barl)        CaW    Mo\u201e.   \"^   requirements   needed   to\nday  heavyweight  champion.  .     because of illness \u2022 make Canadas British Empire\nFloyd Patterson   \"will   be   the j    Roy   Emcrson   0f   Australia, | Games   boxing   team   -   Orvin\nNew Canadian Bantam Champ\nFights With Withered Leg\nfirst fighter I have ever met\nthat I actually have been mad\nat.\"\nListon, relaxing after a rugged l'j-hour workout in which\nhe boxed four rounds with a\npair of sparring partners, told\nreporters:\n\"Never before have I had\nsuch a feeling against any\nfighter I have ever met. It is\nbecause of the small 12'i per\ncent of the proceeds from this\nfight that I was forced to take.\nAl]  of  the  olher  fighters  that\nIhe second-seeded men's defend-   Combs    would\ning   champion,   turned   back   natural choice.\nMarty   Riessen.   youthful    U.S.\nDavis Cup team member, in a\nstadium match 6-2, 11-9, 6-3.\nhave   been    a\nWhat he lacks in footwork, he j baseball\u2014any  position,\nmakes up with hard punching, i    In   the   finals  Monday  night,\nMAY  CHANGE  MINDS j he received enthusiastic verbal\nHis  parents  are  not enthusi- j support  from  members   of  the\nastic  about  his  boxing  career. I Alberta  team who  gathered at\n\"They   Ihink   I   should  quit,\" ' his corner for the bout.\nTop Drivers in\nCanadian Event\nPatterson   has   taken   on   have ] signed for the Canadian sports |\nBut, experience is important\nin international competition and\nthis is why Orvin will have to\nwait.\nHe's only  16 years  old.\nOrvin, a farm boy from Dray-\nI ton Valley, Alta., who was the j    Queens Hotel and Nelson Hotel\nj youngest boxer in the Canadian   (ook a one-game lead in the best-\n| championships   here  this  week- j 0f-three   A   division   semi-finals\nTORONTO  (CP)  - Four lop , end,  is  Canada's  new bantam-1 Tuesday night, as Queens dumped\ninternational drivers have been j weight champ. \u00bb \u2122 \" -\nPlay-for-Fun\nSoftball\ngotten 20 per cent\n\"I feel that this is entirely\nPatterson's idea and that he\nhonestly thought I would turn\ndown a fight with him if offered\ncar   Grand   Prix   at   Mosport\nPark. 60 miles east of here.\nThe sponsoring British Em\npire Motor Club (Toronto) an-\nnounced Tuesday  thai   in  addi-\nTee Time\nGuests from Calgary, Barbara\n!mith and Corinne Taylor, joined\nhe 20 women participating in\n'.adies' Night al Nelson Golf and\n\"ountry Club Tuesday evening.\nHidden hole prizes were won by\nHart Paterson and Mildred Bat-\ney.\nThe club will tee off at 12:15\nSaturday in a tournament. Up for\nI'ay are the Marion Blackwood\nTrophy, for under-30 handicaps,\nnd the Blanche Pollard Trophy.\nor 30 and over handicaps.\nBruce\nMcLaren, the 250 - mile race\nSept.   22  will   be  contested  by\nonly  12'2  per cent.  My feeling j tion   to   New   Zealander\nabout him is centred around all\nthis.\"\nPatterson, who gets 45 per\ncent of everything, will put his\ncrown on the line against Lislon\nSept. 25 at Comiskey Park.\nWinning a national boxing\ntitle at Ihe tender age of 16 is\namazing in itself\u2014but there's\nmore. Orvin was seriously injured when he was nine years\nold but overcame his injury in\nremarkable  style.\nSweden's Joakin Bonnier, Mex\nican    Pedro    Rodriguez    and\nAmericans   Dan   Gurney\nRoger Penske.\nBonnier, driving an outclassed\ncar in two previous Canadian\nappearances, will be a favorite\nthis time in Porsche's new\nsports model powered by the\nflat eight-cylinder engine that\ncarried Gurney to victory in the\nFrench Grand Prix in July.\nGurney will drive a Lotus 19.\nRodriguez a Ferrari and Penske\na special constructed from a\n1960 Formula One Cooper chassis with two - litre Coventry-1\nClimax   engine.\nMcLaren, whose entry was\nannounced earlier, will drive a\nnew Cooper-Monaco with 2.7-\nlitre engine\nHis right leg was mangled by\na   belt   in   his   lather's   planing\nmill  and  is so badly withered\nand | he  hides   il   in  bandages  when\nhe fights.\n\"That's why I'm a southpaw,\"\nsaid the likeable youngster after\nwinning his title. \"My leg\nwasn't strong enough to box\nrighthanded.\"\nHe says he started as a\nnatural righthander but his\nwithered leg wasn't fast enough\nto get him out of trouble spots.\n\"I was getting hil too often\nso   I   switched,\"   he   said.\nHe wasn't hit very often this\nweekend\nOrvin took a decision from\nJimmy Paul of Yellowknife,\nN W f , in the semi-finals Sat-\nB-T-N 6-2 and Nelsons edged Savoy Hotel 8-6.\nQueens, first place finishers in\nIhe A division, out-hit and outplayed B-T-Ns as southpaw Donny\nRail rimiled the combined club\nto five hits, including a double to\n,1. Osachoff and a triple to Al\nSwellikoe.\nF. Kooznetsoff burled for the\nlosers allowing 12 hits, with doubles to Ball and Tom Marshall\nIhe big blows.\nIn the Nelsons-Savoy contest.\nNelsons came up with five runs\nin Ihe fourth inning to come from\nbehind for the victory.\nThe winners collected eight hits\noff Savoy hurler B. Zoobkoff.\nCharlie Burdette paced the winners at bat with a three-run\nhomer in the fourth frame. F.\nChambers hit a double.\nM. Renwick went the distance\nfor the Nelsons, scattering seven\nhits. John Engleman smashed a\ntriple and Bill Taylor a double for\nSavoys' only extra base hits.\nB-T-N 001 001 0\u20142   5\nQueens             001 113 x\u20146 12\nSavoys\n130 000 2\u2014\u00ab   7   1\nNelsons 210 500 x-8   8   1\nA five-run outburst in the sixth\ninning gave Eagles a 5-1 victory\nover North Shore Tigers in a B\ndivision round-robin semi-finals\ngame Tuesday night.\nThree home runs accounted for\nthe four-run rally with C. White,\nS. Siminoff and F. Bach clouting\nthe circuit drives.\nK. Loewen hurled the Birds to\nvictory, giving up only two hits,\na double lo J. Cain and a single\nto B. Nuyens. Eagles collected six\nhits off the Tiger pitchers.\nNorth Shore 000 000 0\u20140   2\nEagles 000 104 x-5   6\nCemetery Ghosts scored nine\nruns in the seventh frame to\nswamp Royal Hotel 19-6 in a second B division semi-final game.\nWarren He led the Spook batters with a home run, triple, double and two singles in five times\nat bal. W. Zaitsoff followed with\na home run. triple and double.\nHugh Hooker added a four-bagger\nwith D. Johnson, Paul Peters and\nVic Grill hitting doubles.\nDale Skapple paced Royals at\nhat with two home runs and a\ndouble. H. Hufty and S. Gill added two-baggers.\nr.hosts 002 233 9\u201419\nRoyal* 013 020 0\u2014 6\nModel C6303 Chassis-Gail\nModal C4303 Chassis-Cab\nCANADA'S HANDIEST TRUCKS\nCANADA'S BIGGEST M0MMKERS\nCHEVROLET'S UNMATCHED\nVERSATILITY AND COST-CUTTING\nECONOMY MEAN MORE PROFIT IN\nANY KIND OF OPERATION. THAT'S\nWHY TO-DAY THERE ARE MORE\nCHEVROLET TRUCKS THAN ANY\nOTHER OPERATING IN CANADA!\nChevrolet Trucks earn their keep in jobs of every description\u2014from\nhectic city deliveries to rough, off-the-road hauling. Chevrolet takes\nit all in its stride. With a choice of eight proven power plants (two\nSixes, four V8's, and two Diesels) . . . automatic and 3-, 4-, and\n5-speed Synchro-Mesh transmissions . . . single and 2-speed rear\naxles plus 4-wheel drive ... Chevrolet gives you the versatility you\nneed for the loads you haul. And as for Chevrolet's economy and\ndurability . . . they've been proven time and again in some of the\nlargest fleet operations in the country! For the full story on Chevrolet\nTrucks, talk to your local Chevrolet dealer. It's a story you should\nhear before you invest one penny in another truck!\nA GENERAL MOTORS VALUE\nCHEVROLET\nJOBMASTER\nTRUCKS\nBe sure to see Bonanza on the CBC-TV network each Sunday. Check your local listing for channel and time.\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\n323 Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-3121\n ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n. \u00bb..  I\n\u25a0J?\"\"\"!?\"\u2014 -   ..  I' .\nAWAWIMWl-.yJ.:\nP\u00ab\u00abF\u2014\nTSJJWWB)\n! ! . ,i \"\n'      \u25a0   ,\"'\n\u25a0   '\u25a0     .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\"\u25a0   . ' '  '. .       mi   i.\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBeth Cop\n2.18\nCanam\n.12\nCanusa\n.07\nCariboo Gold\n1.00\nCowichan Cop\n.57\nCraig\n17.75\nGiant Mascot\n.71\nGranduc\n3.35\nHighland Bell\n2.50\nKamloops\n.07\nKoot. B M\n.40\nMl. Washington\n1.15\nNatioanl Ex\n.05 Vi\nPend Oreille\n1.80\nQuatsino\n.09 V4\nReeves MacDonald\n1.30\nSheep Creek\n1.21\nSherritt Gordon\n3.30\nSilbak Premier\n.39\nSilver Ridge\n.03\nSilver Standard\n.21\nSkeena\n,11 Vi\nSunshine Lardeau\n.09\nTorwest\n.26\nWestern Exploration\n.12\nWestern Mines\n2.40\nOILS\nA P Consolidated\n.46\nCalgary & Edmonton\n29.3714\nCharter\n.95\nHome\n10.3712\nPacific Pete\n.10\nPeace River Gas\n.10\nRoyal Can\n.22\nUnited\n.05\nVantor\n.10\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers Vt\n1.90\nB C Forests\n12.37',!\nB C Power\n16.50\nB C Telephone\n47.50\nBurrard Mort\n6.00\nCanadian Collieries\nCrestbrook Pfd.\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\nMacM & Powell River\nTrans Mtn.\nWestminster Paper\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canda Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast VT\nBANKS\nBank of Mont.\nImp. Bk. of Com.\nRoyal Bank of Can.\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.\nAll Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nDiversitied B\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGroujed Income\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual Aecum.\nMutual  Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada \"C\"\nUnited Ace. Funds\n6.12\n25.50\n21.00\n5.00\n4.70\n18.50\n13.87 hi\n26.00\n26.3714\n19.75\n14.00\n14.75\n.75 55.87\n.00 56.00\n.37   69.37\n13 8.91\n.77 6.33\n81 8.51\n.61 10.54\n.22 9.01\n4.30\n4.61\n3.\n4.\n3.34 3.65\n6.19 6.73\n11\n6.\n3.\n1.69   12.71\n5.90     7.56\n.59\n3.62\n7.20\n5.33\n6.30\n6.11\nBUYING GUIDE\nAn 80-page Meat Book, a\nbuyer's guide to recognizing\nand cooking retail cuts, is pub\nlication 971 sold at 50 cents by\nthe  Queen's  Printer,  Ottawa\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1390 ON  THE  DIAL\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,  1962\n59\u2014Sign On\n: 00\u2014News\n05\u2014Farm Fare\n:15-Wake-Up Tune\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Direct Report\n40\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n55\u2014News\n00\u2014Chapel In The Sky\n15\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Wake-Up Time Continues\n30\u2014Opening Markets\n45\u2014The Archers\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Alan's A.M. Spol\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Birthday Book\n: 05\u2014Kitchen Klatter Contest\n: 10\u2014Birthday Book\n: 15\u2014The Three Suns\n30\u2014Pacific Express\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Morning Melodies\n45\u2014Men and Mandolins\n00\u2014Let's Sing Along\n15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Duncan's Diary\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014September Song\n3:30\u2014Georges La Fleche Show\n3:45\u2014Eleanor Sings\n4:00\u2014Chamber Music\n4:27\u2014News\n4:30-Teen Time\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014The Highway Patrol\n5:30\u2014Report From Parliament\nHill\n5:35\u2014Highway Patrol Continues\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n5:30\u2014Highway Patrol Continues\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15-Our Date With History\n6:30\u2014Cale La Ronde\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014 Introduction to Wed. Night\n7:40-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-CBC Wednesday Night\nContinues\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\n11:01\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC  DAYLIGHT TIME\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6,  1962\n6:0O-Morning Show\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15\u2014Playroom\n10:30\u2014Pacific Express\n11:00\u2014Gospel Time\n11:15\u2014Off The Record\n11:45\u2014The Maurice Pearson\nShow\n12:00\u2014Four Gentlemen\n12:15\u2014News, Weather\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Curiosity Shop\n1:15\u2014The Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Pot Pourri\n2:30\u2014News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Vancouver Theatr'-\n4:00\u2014Music 1 Like\n4:27\u2014Tempo\n6:15\u2014The Troubadors\n6:30\u2014Can't Help Singing\n7:00\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Satin and Snuff\n8:0O-Real World of Women\n9:00\u2014Choral Music\n9:30\u2014Jazz Workshop\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:57\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Sound About\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n00 World of Tomorrow\n30 Howard K. Smith *\n00 Focus on America\n30 Top Cat \u2666\n9:00 Hawaiian Eye '\n10:00 Naked City *\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:30 M-Squad\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n6:30 Men Into Space\n7:00 Wanted Dead or Alive\n7:30 Alvin Show *\n8:00 Window on Main Street\n8:30 Checkmate *\n9:30 Dick Van Dyke\n10:00 U.S. Steel Hour '\n11:00 II o'clock News\n11:30 Tonight Show *\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Death Valley Days\n7:30 Wagon Train *\n8:30 The Rebel \u00bb\n9:00 Mystery Theatre *\n10:00 Manhunt\n10:30 David Brinkley's Journal\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Late Movie:\n\"Gorgeous Hussy\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson. Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nROBERTSON - MILLIARD - CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.\n456 Ward St. Nelson Phone 352-7252 for Information\n\"INSURANCE FOR EVERY PERSONAL\nAND BUSINESS NEED\"\n3:15 News\n3:30 Intermezzo\n4:00 Playground\n4:30 Vacation Time\n5:30 The Living Sea    .\n6:00 Playbill\n8:00 Dennis The Menace\n8:30 Parade\n9:00 Mystery Theatre\n10:00 Sighlline\n10:30 Hancock's\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nTHURSDAY\n1:30 Test Pattern 6:30 Western Theatre:\n2:00 Stage Seven \"Fort Defiance\"\n4:00 The Tea Zone 8:00 The Real World of Woman\n3:30 Travelogue 9:00 Ghost Squad\n\u2022 Title T.B.A.) 10:00 Naked City\n4:30 Vacation Time 11:00 CBC News\n5:30 Dick Tracy 11:15 Champagne Theatre:\n6:00 Sports, Weather, News \"Black Tuesday\"\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible to the event\nol an error in the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate 6.10\nAgnico .71\nAnacon Lead .33\nAumacho .08\nAumaque .0514\nAunor 4.15\nBarnat 1.25\nBase Metals .OTA\nBrunswick 3.10\nBuffalo Ank 1.50\nCampbell C 3.80\nCassiar 11.25\nCentral Patricia 1.12\nChimo .47\nCoin Lake .25\nCons. Discovery 1.15\nC G Arrow .54\nCons Halliwell .35\nConwest 4.30\nCopper Corp. .23\nCraig 18.00\nDenison 10.75\nEast Sullivan 1.89\nElder 1.22\nFaraday 1.75\nGeco 24.25\nGiant Yel 12.00\nGunnar Gold 8.40\nHarminerals .17\nHeadway .41\nHollinger 21.37'A\nHudson Bay 50.87'\/2\nHydra Ex .38\nIron Bay .99\nJonsmith .13%\nR J Jowsey .37\nKerr Addison 7.90\nLabrador 23.50\nLeitch 1.50\nLittle Long Lac 1.85\nLorado .99\nMacDonald .22\nMcLeod 1.20\nMadsen 2.15\nMalartic .90\nMarboy .15\nMaritime Mining .55\nMcKenzie .43\nMining Corp. 13.25\nMulti Mins. .25\nMurray .93\nNew Hosco .87\nNorgold .07\nNorpax .14\nNorlh Rankin .27\nOpemiska 5.20\nPick Crow .65\nPlacer 26.00\nPreston 6.35\nQuebec Lithium 2.99\nQuemont 9.70\nRadiore .42\nRayrock .83\nRio Algom 10.37'.!\nSan Antonio .45\nSherritt Gordon 3.40\nSiscoe 2.10\nSteep Rock 5.15\nTeck Hughes 1.53\nThomp-Lund .59\nUnited Keno 10.12'4\nUpper Canada 1.70\nViolomac ].52\nWright Hargreaves .80\nYale .09'4\nYellowknife Bear 1.01\nYoung Gold .19\nOILS\nBailey S.A. 7.15\nBanff Oils 1.03\nCalgary and Edmonton     29.00\nCanadian Delhi 2.89\nCanadian Devonian 3.60\nCdn Highcrest .21\nHome A 11.62',i\nMidcon ,23',i\nNat. Pete 2.70\nOkalta .11\nPacific Pete 14.00\nPlace .67\nPonder .50\nProv. Gas\nStanwell Oil\nTriad\nNnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nAnalog\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\nBeatty Bros.\nBell Telephone\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCan Cement\nCan. Malting\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Celanese\nChan. Chem Co\nCanadian Dredge\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Mining & Smelling\nCons Gas\nDist Seagram\nDom Magnesium\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chemical\nDom Textiles\nEddy aMlch\nEddy Paper\nFalconbridge\nFamous Players\nFord Can\nGatineau\nGen Steel  Wares\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Ace\nInt. Nickel\nLobiaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMtero Com\nMetro pfd.\nMolson Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp\nShawinigan\nSimpsons A\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nWeston George\n1.45\n.27\n1.35\n1.40\n.09\n4514\n40 V4\n25\n1.65\n34%\n30\n12\n51%\n1214\n15\n16%\n8\n26Vi\n65',2\n9%\n30\n391\n2214\n3.90\n20\n17%\n43'n\n8%\n12'\/i\n17%\n17%\n2814\n25%\n51%\n16%\n149'A\n31'\/<\n1014\n44\n14\n2314\n66%\n8'r\n83i\n11%\n7\n21 '4\n25\n1214\n4514\n291B\n18 Vi\n5714\n24 Vj\n25%\n16%\n45'2\nlfl34\n161s\nDEATHS\nPlctou, N.S. \u2014 George C.\nMurray, 56, publisher and editor of the weekly Pictou Advocate and past president of the\nCanadian Weekly Newspapers\nAssociation.\nNorth Conway, N.H. \u2014 Poet\ne. e. cummings, 67, also a novelist, playwright, painter.\nHollywood \u2014 Billy Wilkerson,\n72, founder of Hollywood Reporters and the men most credited with developing Sunset\nStrip into a plush night - life\narea.\nTcrracine, Italy \u2014 Mau-\nrizio Sarra, 28, noted underwater swiwmer who wrote the\nbook, My Friend the Shark,\nafter being attacked by a\nshark.\nZomba, Nyasaland \u2014 Dun-\nd u z a Chisiza, parliamentary\nsecretary to Nyasaland finance\nminister, in a car accident,\n%wtkout$L\nFOR THE NURSERY\nChild's favorite prayer \u2014 wonderful gift! Embroider in vivid,\npaintbox colors.\nThese pictures remind a child\nto say bedtime prayers \u2014 easy\nembroidery, so colorful. Pattern\n642: two 10xl4-inch transfers;\ndirections.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coin\n(no stamps, please) for this pattern, Nelson Daily News Pattern\nDept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNEWEST RAGE - SMOCKED\naccessories plus 208 exciting\nneedlecraft designs in our new\n1963 Needlecraft Catalog \u2014 just\nout! Fashions, furnishings to crochet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern.\nSend 25c now!\nyyiwiwt MaAiln.\nPrinted Pattern\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nDOWN\n1. Unadorned\n2. S-shaped\nmolding\n3. Wash\n4. Perish\n5. Container\n6. Dry\n7. Bundle,\nas hay\n8. Afresh\n10. Speed,\nometer\nindicator\n11. Retain\n16. Still\n18. Of the ear\n19. One more\nthan two\n20. Tuber:\nSo. Am.\nB\nV\nb.\nL\nE\n5\nP\nO\nL\nR\nA\nK\nO\n3\n:^H\nh.\nC\nr\nO\nR\nQ\no\nL\n5\nE\nR\nQ\nb.\ns\np\ne\n1\n_\n_\ne\n1\nT\nC\nA\nN\nfi.\nr\nE\nN\n\u25a0-\nr\n\\:\n\"\n'\u2022'\n<\nb\n6\nC\nfi\nA,\nIS\n1\nN\n(\\\nN\n.-_\nT\nF\nm\nK\nP\n0\nM\nA\n5\na,\nb\n1\nP\np\nI\nTV\nI\nF\nF\nA\nN\n5\nC\nu\n\\\nN\nE\n\u25a0 p\nN\nA.\nl\nR\n&\n1\nl\n*\n6,\nP\nE\ne\nL\n21. Greek\nletter\n22. Cape\nMass.\n24. Duck\ngenus\n25. Hawaiian\ngarland\n26. City\ntrains \"Yesterday*! Aniwer\n28. Completely:\ncolloq.\n30. Fuss\n32. Askew\n33. Fills with\nreverence\n34. Infant\n35. English\nboy's\nschool\n37. In this\nplace\n38. Saturn's\nrings\nprojection\n39. Poems\n41. Conclusion\n43. Cherished\nanimal\nACROSS\n1. Courageous\n5. Turkish\ntitle\n9. Once more\n11. Mohammedan,\nscriptures\n12. Mississippi\nembankment\n13. Banish-\n14. Scotch\nriver\n15. Bud of a\npotato\n17. Moisture\n18. Highly\nskilled\n20. Mysterious\n23. Robust\n27. Small,\nroutine\ntask\n28. Asian\ngazelle\n29. Verdi\nheroine\n30. Greek\ncomic\ndramatist\n31. Cup-like\nspoon\n33. Presidential\nnickname\n36. Court\n37. Chinese\nweight\n40. Ancient\n\"element\"\n42. Set on\nend\n44. Hard, dark\nwood\n45. Succinct\n46. Dispatch\n47. Afternoon\nreceptions\n9-5\nDAILY CRYPTOQtIOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs     LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the, code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n;    OHNFG     CNX     XYPCYQKXF\nVXXP CYF JXY OI\nPMYQLXG.\u2014VLKKXN\nYe\u00a7terday's Cryptoquote: LEARNING WITHOUT THOUGHT\nIS LABOR LOST.\u2014CONFUCIUS\n(O 1962, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)\n1\n2\n3\n4-\n^t\n%\n''\/,.\n5\nb\n7\n8\ny\n\\o\n%\nII\n12\n%\n13\n14-\nV\/t\nIS\nifa\nVA\n17\n%\n\"A\n%\n18\n19\nVA\nd\n^\n20\n1\\\n11.\nyA\n\u25a023\na*\nis\n2fa\n27\n%\n28\n29\nV\/r\n30\n''\/\/<\n%\n31\n3a\n%\n%\nVs.\n33\n34\n35\n^\n3b\n%\n37\n38\n33\n-to\n41\n^\n41\n45\n44\nl\n45\n41.\n%\ni\n''A\n47\nOI     PDXHN\nP D X H N\nSTEP INTO FALL!\nLEAN LINES and dashing details make this step-in a fashion\nwinner from the word go! Yes,\nthose are pockets beneath the\ncardigan neck.\nPrinted Pattern 9322:: Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16. 18. Size IB\nrequires 3'\u00ab yards 39-inch fabric.\nFIFTY CENTS 150c I in coins\nno stamps, please, for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER\nSend your order to Marian Mar-\nlin, NDN, 60 Front Street West,\nToronto. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER and your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nFIRST TIME EVER! Glamorous movie star's wardrobe plus\n110 exciting styles lo sew in our\nnew Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog.\nSend 35c.\nWIPES  OUT  MVD\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Russia officially wiped out the title \"ministry of internal affairs\" \u2014 the MVD. Monday\nwhich still reminds Soviet citizens of Stalin-era terror. Tn fu\nture it will be \"ministry of public law and order.\" according\nto a three-paragraph decree of\nthe Supreme Soviet of the Rus\nsian Federation, the largest\nrepublic in the Soviet Union.\nThe other 14 republics are almost certain to follow suit.      ,\n .3133\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962 \u2014 9\nW^IMAtl\nfihoruL\n352-3552\nBIRTHS\nKOFTINOFF-To Mr. and Mrs.\nWalter Koftinoff of Crescent Valley, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospilal, August 31, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nHELP  WANTED\nYarder Operator\nWanted\nCapable of Training Men and\nTaking Charge of a\nBU 16  SKAGIT\nApply in Writing to\nP.O.  Box 2501,\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nOPPORTUNITY IN TIRE SALES\nAND RETREADING FOR AMBITIOUS MAN. Basic salary\nplus liberal commission. Duties\nare divided between shop work\nand calling on district dealers\nwith company truck. Prefer\nmarried man with Grade 12\neducation and some automotive\nexperience. M.S.I., pension fund\nand other benefits. Apply Box\n496, Nelson Daily News.\nOPPORTUNITY TO LEARN\nnewspaper work for young man\ninterested especially in sports\nreporting and editing. See A. W.\nGibbon, editorial dept., Nelson\nDaily News, after four p.m.\nEXPERIENCED MEN WANTE\"\nfor expanding interior shake\noperation. Buckers, block makers, packers, re-saw operator.\nSteady work throughout winter.\nApply Box 4!)8, Daily News.\nTRAILERS\nRA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES\nRollohome and Safeway Dealers New and used. Trades and\nterms. We specialize in parts\nTrail, B C.\nSEWERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY. Work at home doing\nsimple sewing. We supply materials and pay shipping both\nways. Make up to $1.40 an hour.\nPiece work. Apply Dept D-4,\nBox 7010, Adelaide Post Office,\nToronto 1, Ontario.\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. Just show North Ameri\ncan Fashion Frocks to friends.\nNo canvassing, investment or\nexperience necessary. North\nAmerican Fashion Frocks. Ltd\n3425 Industrial Blvd., Dept\nK-2738, Montreal 39, Quebec.\nSTART YOUR OWN CAREER\nin an exciting business with unlimited opportunities for advancement as an Avon Representative. Apply to: Mrs. E. C.\nHearn, Avon Manager, Apt. 15,\nThe Glenview, Trail, B.C.\nHOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN\nat Edgewood. Care for teacher's 2 children. Apply Nelson\nEmployment Office.\nBABY SITTER FOR 3-YR.-OLD\nchild required from 8 a.m. to\n5 p.m. Ph. Noreen al 352-3121.\nWANTED-ELDERLY LADY TO\nbaby-sit. Apply Box 307, Nelson\nDaily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNELSON SEPTIC TANK SER-\nvice. Reasonable, dependable\nservice. Phone 332-3663.\nPETS, CANARIES,  BEES\nWANTED - GOOD HOME FOR\nPurebred German Short Hai\nPointer (male), 2 yrs. old. Good\nbirddog and watchdog with no\nbad habits. Ph. Trail 364-2284\nMUST SELL 45x10 DREAM-\nhome trailer. Excellent condi\ntion. Cedar Crest Trailer Court,\nCastlegar.\n45 x 8 ROLLERHOME TRAILER j P R E TTY   KITTENS   WOULD\nApply to K. Gohlke, Riondcl.    I    like a good home. Ph. 352-2752.\nK 9 REG. BOARDING KEN-\nnets. Fruitvale Highway G. A\nCrawford prop. Ph. 367-2483.\nwantedTg^od tom1csfor~2\npuppies: also for small English\nsheepdog. Box 7948 Daily News\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAsphalt Paving\nNelson Asphalt Paving Ltd.\nPhone 352-7621 - Nelson, B.C.\nAutomobile  Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac \u2014 Buick\nVauxhail - GMC\n70! Baker St.        Phone 352-6641\n24 Hour Wrecker Service\nFront End Aligning -\nAutomatic Service\nBody and Paint Shop\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231\nRENAULT SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411 295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 7 a.m.-11 p.m.\nAcross Lake Phone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.      Phone 352-5335\nAustin - Morris - MGA \u2022 Wolseley\nCars and Parts Depot\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE LTD.\nYmir Rd.     Ph. 352-7421     Nelson\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n373 Baker- Nelson -Ph. 352-7434\nBox 653 - Creston - EL 6-4224\n909 Baker-Cranbrook-JU 6-3622\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nWONG YUK PING, DECEASED\nTAKE NOTICE that creditors\nand others having claims against\nthe estate of Wong Yuk Ping, deceased, are required to send in\ntheir claims to Official Administrator County of Kootenay-Nel-\nson, administrator of the said estate, at the Court House, Nelson,\nB.C., on or before the 28th day of\nSeptember, 1962, after which date\nthe assets of the said deceased\nwill be distributed amongst the\nparties entitled thereto having re-\ngard to the claims of which the\nsai dadministrator has then notice.\nDATED this 31st day of August,\n1962.\nOFFICIAL   ADMINISTRATOR\nCOUNTY OF\nKOOTENAY-NELSON\nBy:\nWragge, Hamilton & Arnesen\nIts solicitors.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSOB\nConcrete Ltd,\nRENTALS\nAIR CONDITIONED\nLOW RATES\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   room,   weekly,   monthly\nrates.   Dishes,   linen  supplied,\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker\nAVAILABLE NOW - NEWLY\nrenovated two room and bath\nself-contained suite. Heated,\nwashing facilities. Phone 352-\n5872.\nYOUR CHOICE SELF CONTAIN-\ned one bedroom apartments\nwith ranges and refrigerators\nJ35-$90. T. D. Rosling & Son\nLtd.  352-3581.\nSMALL 1 BDRM. HOUSE, N.\nShore, 2'A miles from bridge.\nWired for range, winterized,\nunfurnished. Rent $40 per mo.\nAdults only. Phone 352-7717.\n2 RM. STE. GROUND FLOOR.\nNewly renovated. Gas, light\nand waler supplied. Apply 140\nBaker Street.\n3-B.R. FAMILY HOME, CEN-\ntral location. Gas furnace, garage. $75 per month. Phone C. W.\nAppleyard Co., 352-3944.\nMINING MACHINERY. 315 CFM\ncompressors, mucking machines, all types of mining equipment for sale \u2014 rent or rental\npurchase. Phone Slocan 355-\n2241.\nNORTH SHORE 2 BEDROOM\nhome. Lake frontage, \"4 mile\nfrom bridge. Phone 352-5231 or\n352-3072.\n1 FURN. LIGHT HOUSKEEP-\ning room. Private entrance,\nvery close in. Ph. 352-2977.\nPHONE 352-3828\n.ETE\nFor ALL Building Purposes\nSAND and GRAVEL\nNEED\nFLOOR COVERINGS?\nSee Simpsons-Sears. Low, low\ncatalogue prices. Fast shipping\nservice from Vancouver. Complete selections oi samples at\nnur store.\nLARGE HOME NEAR S. NEL-\nson schools. $75 month. Available  Sept.   15th.   Ph.  352-5401.\n2 BDRM. COTTAGE FOR YEAR\nround tenancy with beach access at 6 Mile. Ph. 352-5695.\n3 B.R. HOUSE, NO YARD, 220\nwiring, gas heat. Reasonable\nrent. Ph. 352-6554.\nUNFURNISHED ONE BDRM.\nsuite. Bevanne Apts. Phone\n352-6538.\n6 RM. APT. PERMANENT. AD-\nults only. Box 8615, Nelson\nDaily News. \t\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C Land Surveyor and Engineer\n369 Baker St. Nelson. Ph. 352-7117\nGarages\nSHELL SERVICENTRE\nPhone 352-2014\nWheel Aligning and Balancing\n301 Nelson Avenue \u2014 Nelson\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2525\nSIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c lb.\nSides ol grain fed pork, 37c lb.\nBacon and hams. Newdan\nFarms, Creston, Ph. EL 6-9901.\nFree weekly delivery.\nGUARANTEED REPAIRS TO\nall Singer sewing machines.\nCompetent adjustments to all\nother makes. Written estimate\nin advance. Singer Sewing\nCentre. Phone 352-3631.\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE  BUILDING SUPPLY  LTD.\nEverything in waterproof plywood\n301 Baker St. Phone 352-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St. Phone 352-6661\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n901 Front St. Phone 352-5571\nZEEBEN LUMBER CO.\nYmir, B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375\nInsurance\nAllstate Insurance Agent\nSimpsons-Sears, Trail Ph. 364-1144\nNelson: Saturdays. Ph. 352-5531\nJewellers\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nFor fine watches and repairs\nPhone 352-9012      511 Baker St.\nNovelty Shops\nSOUVENIRS! NOVELTIES!\nThe Cutest - HOBBY SHOP\nCleaning Service\nWe Clean Offices, Stores, Houses\nFree Estimates\n. DUTCH CLEANING SERVICE\nPhone 352-6323\nContractors\nFor a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPLE LEAF CONSTRUCTION\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S.. P. Eng\n218 Gore Street. Nelson\nPhone 352.1341\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nI C Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St\nPh 365-5342 - Castlegar. B C.\nPaint Contractors\nF. H. DOYLE\nPaint Contractor\nPhone 352-7311 - Nelson\nPrinting\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nSaws Sharpened\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n395 Baker St.       Nelson\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street    Phone 352-7741\nTopsoil,   Gravel\nLarry's Topsoil. Sand and Gravel\n9th and Da\\ les  Ph  352-2355 days\nor 352-7576 evenings.\n\/.ENITH COAL AND WOOD\nstove, warming closet and water jacket: also Fawcelt wood\ncirculating heater, brown enamel finish. Apply A. Perever-\nzeft, Shoreacres. Ph. 359-7339.\nSECOND CUT ALFALFA HAY,\n$18 per ton pick up behind\nbaler. Also oat straw at 15c per\nbale. Phone EL 6-9969 or EL 6-\n2901.\nEXTRA SPECIAL . - TEEN-\nagers' and women's shoes on\nsale at $3.99. H. Andrew & Co.\nGRADE \"A7, BEEF~ 100 TO 200\nlb. side 40c: 201 to 250 lb. side\n37c. Phone 352-6866.\n30-INCH ELECTRIC RANG E\nwith automatic clock and light\n$100. 122 High St. after 5:30 p.m\n2 WINTER COATS AND 1\nshort, 3 uniforms. 2 dresses,\nhousecoat. Phone 352-6127.\nELECTRIC-BENCH SAW, 35\nMM camera, draperies and\ncurtains, etc. Ph. 352-2977.\nSEWING\nSMALL N.S. COTTAGE. PER-\nmanent. Adults only. Box 8912,\nDaily News.\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - 2\nbedroom house. Adults. 316 Ce\ndar Street. Evenings.\nDUPLEX. 3 RMS. AND BATH\nlarge basement, electric range,\nheated. Ph. 352-7491.\nfBDROOM. COTTAGE WILLOW\nPoint, fully modern. Available\nSept. 15. Ph. 352-7484\nMODERN\nunfurnished\n352-3417.\nMACHINERY\nMORE\nGOOD  USED\nAT BARGAIN PRICES\nAll Guaranteed\nALSO\nSALE   PRICES\nOn 1962 Discontinued\nNew McCullochs\nModels 142 - 152 -172\nCall, Write or Phone\nMAC'S\nWelding  &  Equipment Co\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\n$1000 DOWN. TD 18 CAT, CARCO\nwinch and hydralic angle dozer\nnewly overhauled. Full price\n$5500. Slocan 355-2241.\n20 LB. MINE RAIL AND 2\"\nblack pipe for sale. Phone Slocan  355-2241.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,   ETC.,   FOR  SALE\nSEWING MACHINES\nBEFORE YOU BUY A SEWING\nmachine see the new Kenmore\nPush-Button Twin-Needle Automatic Zig-Zag at Simpsons-\nSears. Only $99.88. Backed by\nour famous 20 year guarantee.\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nLISTING OF 2 B.R. HOME RE\nquired in Fairview. Buyer wil\npay $2000 down and up to\n$10,000 F.P. Call William Kaly-\nniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-2425.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '53 Consul, '52 Chev.\npickup, '55 Ford pickup, '53\nZephyr, Plymouth, Fords,\nChevs., Pontiacs, Morris Oxfords, Vi ton Fargo, 15\" wheels\nfor Ford, Chev. and Dodge.\nGood motors, 270 G.M.C., '57\nDodge V-8, '49-'53 Ford. '53\nZephyr, '52 Pontiac, '52 Chev.\nPhone 352-5815, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road.\nHuge Crowd Gathers to\nMeet De Gaulle in Bonn\nNEW CAR GUARANTEE - 90\ndays or 4000 miles. New pep for\nyour old car with an Allstate re-\nmanufactured engine. Guaranteed trade in allowance regardless of condition. No crate deposit needed. Fast shipping service from factory. Priced as\nlow as $11.00 monthly. Simpsons-Sears Limited, 556 Baker\nSt., Nelson, Phone 352-5531.\nBALFOUR LAKESHORE - WE\nhave been favored wilh instructions from Capt. D. MacPherson to sell his Balfour lakefront\nproperty. \u2014 1 acre level, landscaped, park-like with 110 ft.\nlake frontage. Modern bungalow with attached garage. L.R.\n13x20 with fireplace and picture window, kitchen wired 220,\ndinette, 2 bedrooms with closets, complete bathroom, colored\nplumbing. Full basement, concrete foundation and floor above\nhigh water, piped hot air furnace with stoker, space for additional room. Age, 10 years.\nPrice $19,500. Terms. Furniture\ncan be purchased. For full particulars. T. D. ROSLING &\nSON LTD.. 352-3581.\nJfalamt\nSatlg 2faaifi\nCirculation Dept., Phone 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 35 cenls\nin advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy Mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month        $ 2.00\nThree months       5.00\nSix months     10.00\nOne year ... .... .   18.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe Commonwealth\nOne month          $ 2.00\nThree months      6.00\nSix months     11.00\nOne year     20.00\nBy mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month   f 2.50\nThree months      7.00\nSix months     13.00\nOne year    24.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,   phone   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillison;\nIn Trail, Mrs. W. E Spooner:\nIn   Kimberley,   Mrs.   A.   W.\nBrown.\n'56 FORD <A TON, 4 SPEED\ntransmission, new engine, muffler, king pins, paint job, 4 tail\nlights, extra heavy rear bumper with trailer hitch. Good tires.\nPhone 352-2042.\n1959 Vi-TON CHEV. TRUCK.\nNew condition, low mileage.\nIdeal for Ihe outdoor man.\nEquipped with plywood camping van. Can be seen at Upper\nFairview Motors. Ph. 352-2525.\n$350 CASH FOR 2 JEEPS. ONE\nin fair condition. One for spare\nparts. Swan Lundgren, Ymir.\nPh. Salmo 357-9506 after 5 p.m\n'54 OLDS. 98 CONVERTIBLE.\nAll power. Radio. $1100. Phone\n352-6259.\n'53 METEOR. NEW MOTOR AND\ntransmission; radio and signal\nlights. Ph. 352-2150.\nMUST SELL 1958 VOLKSWAGEN\nDeluxe. Good shape. Radio.\nTerms. Phone 352-5944.\n1958 RENAULT, 2 1950 CHEVS.\n1953 Austin. North Shore Ser\nvice. Phone 352-2929.\n'52 PLYMoWlTH^RrJTOP\" RA-\ndio and heater. Ph. 352-6748.\n'55 METEOR NIAGARA. OVER-\ndrive. Radio. Ph. 352-5760.\n'57 GMC   '.4-TON.   LOW  MILE\nage. Phone 352-3919.\n1950 CHEV. SEDAN. GOOD CON\ndition. Phone 352-3401.\nBy HAROLD KING\nBONN (Reuters) - President\nde Gaulle of France arrived\nhere by air from Paris Tuesday\nto begin a six-day state visit to\nWest Germany aimed at cementing Franco \u2022 German accord.\nA huge crowd was outside the\nairport gates to watch him arrive with his wife and son. naval Capt. Philippe de Gaulle,\nand Foreign Minister Maurice\nCouve de Murville.\nDe Gaulle was welcomed by\nPresident Heinrich L u e b k e,\nChancellor Konrad Adenauer,\nForeign Min i s t e r Gerhard\nSchroeder, Bundestag Speaker\nEugen Gerstenmaier and other\nleading government and parliamentary representatives.\nMassive security precautions\nsurrounded de Gaulle's journey.\nThousands of West German\npolice were put on round-the-\nclock  duly to guard him.\nPainstaking measures were\ntaken for his departure from\nVillacoublay military airfield\nnear Paris\u2014it was on his way\nto Villacoublay Aug. 22 that de\nGaulle narrowly escaped an assassination bid by gunmen, the\nthird in the last year.\nPLANS  15 SPEECHES\nDe Gaulle will spend the first\ntwo days of his visit in the Bonn\nand Cologne area. Then he will\ngo to Duesseldorf, Duisburg,\nHamburg, Munich, Stuttgart\nand Ludwigsburg. He will make\nabout 15 speeches, many of\nIhem in German.\nThree thousand police have\nbeen assigned to security duties\nin Munich alone\u2014believed by\nGerman police to be the No. I\ndanger point.\nFormer French premier\nGeorges Bidault, head of the\nanti-de Gaulle \"National Council of Resistance,\" successor to\nthe Secret Army Organization,\nis reported to be in hiding\nthere, although police have\nfound no trace of him.\nDuring his Munich stopover,\nde Gaulle will ride in a bulletproof car\u2014which he docs not\nuse in France\u2014and every door\nand window in his residence\nwill be guarded by armed men.\nThe purpose of de Gaulle's\nvisit is twofold: To get the\nstalled six-power talks for a\nEuropean politifal union back\non the rails, and to enable him\nto address the West German\npeople directly, as he does ill\nhis French provincial lours.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AnTTrOOM FOR 1 OR\n2 young gentlemen. Ph. Mrs.\nTruscolt, 352-5658.\nROOM   AND   BOARD   AVAIL\nable. Ph. 352-6352.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntlemen. Phone 352-6051.\nLUNCH BOX\nThe school lunch box should\ncontain a balanced meal\u2014including  a  vacuum  jar of  hoi\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY.\n3 or 4 bdrm. _bouse. Please\ncontact Ralph Johnston, 352-\n2211 or Cabin 24, Lakeside\nMotel.\nNews Briefs\nOUTLAWS NRC\nPARIS (API _ The French\ncabinet made a new move\nagainst right-wing subversion\nMonday by outlawing the National Resistance Council, believed to be successor of the\nterrorist European Secret Army\nOrganization. French officials\nsaid the move would make it.\neasier to pursue persons suspected of belonging to the clandestine organization.\nCRASH  KILLS  PILOT\nCHINO, Calif. (AP)-Stunt\npilot Cliff Winters, 33, was\nkilled Monday when his specially built Ryan biplane\ncrashed during a double snap\nroll at the National Air Fair.\nAn estimated 15,000 spectators\nsaw the craft hit the ground\nshortly after flying under two\nobstacles and through a wall of\nflames.\nBUSINESS BUILDING 30x70 FT.\ntwo apartments upstairs, good\nlocation, Ideal place for drug\nstore, only one drug store in\ncity, or any other business.\nBox 609 Grand Forks, B.C.\nand\nONE BDRM. APT. j 2 BDRM. WARTIME HOME,\nheated. Ph. j corner lot. 1528 Falls St. Full\nprice $6500, terms available.\nContact Nelson Railway Employees Credit Union, 253 Baker\nSt. or Phone 352-7383.\nSELF   CONTAINED   UNFURN\nished suite. Ph. 352-6307.\nCENTRAL   APARTMENT,\nrooms. Adults. Ph. 352-6024.\n5   ROOM   HOUSE,   GAS\nnace. 404 Silica St.\nFUR-\n2 RM   STE. ALSO HSKPG. RM\nApply 140 Baker or Ph. 352-3384.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS  FOR\nrent. 705 Victoria St.. alley.\nIFOR QUICK SALE CLEAN 3-\nbdrm. house. Down payment to\nequity. Bal. easy monthy payments. Ph. 352-3681.\t\n\u25a0TbEDROOM HOUSE ACROSS\nfrom Junior High for sale or\nrent. Ph. 352-6866.\nTREADLE    SINGER\nmachine. Ph. 352-6997\nPERSONAL\nEND CONSTIPATION WITH EL-\nik's Botanical Herbs. A sale\nherbal medicine in powder\nform, no boiling, no steeping\u2014\nready to use. It insures complete bowel movement wilh\nease and comfort. Promotes\nnormal bowel action. Prices $2.\n$3 Order to-day from Elik's\nDrugs Store, Dept. NDN. Saska\ntoon, Sask.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED\nACCOMMODATION REQUIRED\nby Sept 14th for incoming ar\nstudents Both room and board\nand light housekeeping desired\nPlease phone Barry al 352-6051\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nBOAT HOUSE FOR SALE S40\ndown, bal terms Norm's Sport\nShop   Phone 352-2015.\nSMALL APARTMENT. 810 Victoria St. Ph. 352-2902. __\nSUITE FOR RENT. PHONE 352-\n7195. \t\nifROOM OFFICE SUITE AT 303\nBaker St. Ph. 352-2023.\nHSKPG. RM. PRIVATE Entrance, fridge. Ph. 352-2796.\nFOR RENT - LARGE HOUSE,\n1 bedroom. 75 High Street.\n1   BEDROOM\n352-6366.\nHOUSE.   PHONE\nHOUSEKEEPING\nquiet gentleman.\nROOM   FOR\nPh. 352-6889.\n2-B.R. SUITE FOR RENT. CALL\n352-5426 after 6 p.m.\nBuyin\n-Rentinj\nLEVEL   BUILDING   LOTS.-\nTerms. Phone 352-5418.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED. J. O. PATENAUDE\nCanadian Silver Dollars, paying $10 and up for each dollar.\nPlease advise dale and condition ot coin also quantity available. W. E. Agnew, 163 Oak-\nridge Drive, Scarborough, Ontario.\nBUYING - TRADING - SELL^\ning Canadian - U.S.A. coins.\nSend want list. Current market\nprice. P. Polovnikolf, Box 2.\nNelson, B.C.\nWARM 2-BEDROOM HOUSE. -\nFurnace, garage. Ph. 352-2806.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nWELSH GELDING, 2 YEARS,\nwell broke, sweet tempered:\nblack older gelding, good for\nchildren, good home wanted;\nbay mare, 10 years: bay yearling filly, registered half-Arab;\nflower stamped semi - roping\nsaddle, like new. Phone 356-2154\nor write Box 520, Creston, B.C.\nFOR SALE: 15 GRADE HOL-\nstein cows with or without 250\ngal. 7ipi bulk tank. Phone Andrews} 7-7339 or write Eugene\nLong, Copeland, Idaho, U.S.A.\nGOOD MILKING COW. PHONE\nCastlegar 365-4748.\nONE    JERSEY    COW,   THIRD\ncalf App John Kabatoff, Glade\n2TRESH MILK COWS'PHONE\"\n359-7236.\nWOULD LIKE TO BUY A COUP-\nle of J.O.P. silver dollars any\ndate for collection. Keep them\nin this district, write me. .1.\nStier, Burton. B.C.\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANT1\nques. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531.\n413 Hall\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" sq. 10c a lb. Nelson Daily News.\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n^^^\nFIRST UNI\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD UNI\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH UN!\nSEVENTH LIN!\nEIGHTH LINK\nPut one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count ai ont word)\nPut Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\nBox Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO   CALCULATE   RATES,   USE   THIS   TABLE:\nPir Lin*\n1  Insertion\n2 Consecutive Imertlom\n3 Comeeutive Insertion!\n6 Comeeutive Insertions\n26 Comeeutive Insertions\nI .20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge II two lines\n\u2022 Add 15e for Box Number\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low iht tlm* rate\nSTEEL COAL AND WOOD FUR-\nnace with blower. Fred Savin-\nkoff, R.R. 1. Winlaw.\nASHBY WOOD HEATER IN\ngood condition. Box 327, Castlegar.\nOLD AND NEW GUNS. NORM'S\nSport Shop. Phone 352-2015.\nWANTED - BANDSAW. GOOD\ncondition. Apply 352-7784.\nCOAL AND WOOD STOVE. Mc-\nClary preferred. Ph. 352-6168,\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20? a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run ,\t\nIfOUR NAM! .\nADDRKS \t\nBill Me;_\t\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified  Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C*.\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 5, 1962\nIf You Didn't Get Them Yesterday\nThere Are Still Plenty to Choose From\nin the\nSchool Supply\nSection\nTODAY\nAt\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\n^Miii'iiimiiHinmiiMHiiiiiiii\"\"\",\"|\u00bb|l\"\"\"\"\",\"\"\"\"\"\",,I\"i\",iiiii\nYour Individual I\nHoroscope      [\n.niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBy  Frances Drake \"'\niiiiiiiiiniiiiir.\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Thursday, Sept. 6, 1962\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\nSomeone may be trying to reach\nyou through your emotions. Clas:\nsify all things according to law\nand order. And truth!\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014A tendency here to over-speculate \u2014 not only with finances but\nwith ideas, energies, etc. Take\nheed and take care. Begin with,\nand maintain, a steady pace.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nMajor Gains in '62 Failed\nTo Keep Trade Deficit Down\nOTTAWA (CP) - Despite a\nmajor gain in exports to the\nUnited States, Canada rolled up\na trade deficit of $126,300,000\nduring the first half of the year,\nmore than 50 per cent higher\nthan the $81,700,000 deficit in\nfirst-half 1961.\nTotal exports for the six\nmonths rose 12.4 per cent to\n$3,012,700,000 from $2,681,200,000\na year earlier, due entirely to a\n24.4-per-cent gain in sales to the\nUnited States, the Dominion\nBureau of Statistics reported today.\nBut imports climbed even\nmore rapidly, rising 13.6 per\ncent to $3,139,100,000 from $2,-\n762,900,000.\nThe total trade of $6,151,800,-\n000 was a first-half record and\nthe bureau said the higher levels of both exports and imports\nare due in part lo the reduced\nexchange value of the Canadian\ndollar.\nAt mid-year last year the\ndollar's value declined from a\npremium above the U.S. dollar\nto a discount, and since May 4\nthis year it has been pegged at\n92^ U.S. cents. Since most export   and   import   transactions\nare in U.S. dollars, this means\nhigher values in Canadian dollar terms.\nEXPORTS RISE SHARPLY\nDuring the April-June second\nquarter, exports rose 14.1 per\ncent from a year earlier to $1,-\n617.400,000 from $1,417,200,000.\nThe bureau said it was the highest second-quarter sales total in\nrecent years.\nSecond - quarter imports\nreached $1,668,800,000, up 12.7\nper cent from $1,481,400,000.\nThis left a trade deficit of $51,-\n400,000 compared with $63,800,-\n000 in the second quarter of\n1961.\nIn June, exports totalled\n$542,033,000, up 6.7 per cent\nfrom the year-earlier $507,950,-\n000, while imports rose 7.2 per\ncent to $531,141,000 from $495,-\n436.083.  This produced  a trade\nNews Briefs\nUninvited Guest\nConspicuous in\nDetroit Parade\nDETROIT (AP - An uninvited guest\u2014George Romney\n\u2014was conspicuous in Detroit's\nbig Labor Day parade and celebration Monday.\nThe Republican candidate for\ngovernor of Michigan in the\nNov. 6 election met with sharp\ngibes at times but also friendly\nexpressions.\nRomney, who had been declined a request to speak last\nweek by the sponsoring Wayne\n(Detroit) County AFL-CIO.\nshowed up as both a parader\namong union colors and emblems and member of an audience hearing speeches by bis\nDemocratic rival, incumbent\nGovernor John B. Swainson, a\n. native of Windsor, Ont., and\nWalter P. Reuther and others.\n\"I was well treated,\" he said\nafterwards. \"Union members\nwere very  friendly.\"\nThere were some lively moments.\nOne unionist engaged Romney\nfor 10 minutes in a heated argument. A woman carrying a pic-\nlure of Swainson walked up to\nRomney, smiled and said\n\"Hello, millionaire.\"\nThree boys carrying Romney-\nfor-governor signs were asked\nto leave the State Fair Grounds\nband shell when they were\nbooed.\nWith shirt sleeves rolled up,\nRomney marched near the head\nof the parade into the fair\ngrounds.\nThe former American Motors\nCorporation president grinned\nand exchanged banter on the\nway.\n17  LEAVE   JAIL\nALBANY, Ga. (AP)-Seven-\nteen churchmen left jail Monday after nearly a week behind\nbars   in   protest  against  racial\nsegregation in this southwest i creased to $98,600,000 from $54.\nGeorgia city. Only one person, m-m and that country be-\na  Negro  woman,  remained  in   came   Canada s    fourth-largest\nsurplus for June of $10,892,000,\nslightly smaller than the surplus\na year earlier.\nDetailed trade figures for the\nJanuary-June periods of this\nyear and last, in millions of\ndollars:\nExports\nUnited. States\nUnited Kingdom\nOther Cmwlth\nAll others\nTotal\nImports\nUnited States\nUnited Kingdom\nOther Cmwlth\nAll others\nTotal\nThe big rise in sales to the\nU.S. for the six months resulted\nmainly from big increases in\niron ore, aircraft, woodpulp,\nlumber,  petroleum  and  nickel.\nThe U.S. took 59.2 per cent\nof total Canadian exports in the\nperiod, compared with 53.4 per\ncent a year earlier. The share\nof Canadian imports provided\nby the U.S. rose to 69.3 per cent\nfrom 68.\nSix-month exports of Canadian-made goods to Communist\nChina \u2014 mainly wheat \u2014 in-\n1962 1961\n$1,802.4 $1,448.3\n429.4 430.7\n148.4 164.0\n632.5 638.2\n3,012.7 2,681.2\n2,212.2 1,879.9\n289.9 313.7\n143.2 129.9\n492.8 439.4\n3,139.1 2,762.9\njail after 75 persons were arrested during a prayer vigil in\nfront of the city hall last Thursday.\nIDENTIFIES BODY\nMARIANNA,    Ark.    (AP)-A\nmarket, ahead of West Germany and' just behind Japan.\nAmong Canadian-sourced exports, newsprint remained in\nfirst place with exports of $362,-\n000,000,  down  slightly  from  a [ cise, honest efforts.\nInfluences mostly favorable, but\nbe wary of those who come exuding quick friendship or gushing\nwith flattery. The thoughtful per\nson will listen graciously, and do\nnothing. Keep today \"on its feet.\"\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014You can run an efficient, flexible program, geared to handle\nthe constantly changing situations\nif you keep your normally logical mind well-ordered and free\nof irrelevant things.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014Do not be misled by rosy promises of possible gain, nor by the\nfalse exteriors of deceptive devices. Imposters threaten now.\nBut you'll run into some good\nsituations, too.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPEMBER 23\n(Virgo)\u2014Do not miss a chance to\nemphasize your wit and aptitude.\nEveryday issues will thrive and\nplease under them. Manner of\nexecution of so-called \"unimportant\" things is important. Time\nit now!\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra)\u2014There should be little\nlo prevent you from enjoying this\nday if you cooperate with associates. Strengthen personal affairs, accuracy.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio)\u2014Some sound diver\nsification called for. Are your general efforts practical? Develop\neverything for a better whole\nSpread talents over sufficient\narea, but do not scatter energies\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEM\nBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 There's\nno panacea available tor solving\nproblems. But the working out\nof situations is itself vital to\nknowledge and health. Ferret solutions with the help of knowing\nminds and through new ideas.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Do not be dis\nappointed if others seem to sur\npass you. Keep trying. Lavish the\niull strength of your abilities on\nthe essentials of this day. Many\ndividends will ensue.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius)\u2014Wait until noon or\nafter and see if you can clear up\ndoubts in your mind. If you need\nadvice, seek it from experts.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014Neptune's aspect sug\ngests that you make a firm decision to support a positive ap\nproach, a concise program, a\nfully understood and workable\nmethod. Big benefits through pre\n..HanoverV^^FFN\n1  i*~    .'?    t\n(\n>\nA\n,Frankfurt\n\\ GERMANY\nFRANCE\n\/\nCZECHO\nSLOVAKIA\n-VV AUSTRIA\nBl\n\\v\t\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line bold face type;  larger type rates\non request. Minimum two Uses.\nBest materials used on your shoes\nat  TONY'S  SHOE  REPAIRS.\nWell Women's Clinic\nToday \u2014 Phone 352-5521.\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2 - 4 p.m.\nRegular meeting tonight, 8 p.m\nSave Gears and Tears\nPh. 352-5252 - Stirling Hotel\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\nTrail Ride to Crawford Bay\nSaturday, 9 a.m. Phone for\nreservations. H. Harrop.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8 P.M.\nL.A. TO F.O.E.\nMeeting Tonight, 8 p.m.\nUNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST\nFELLOWSHIP\nMeetings 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. at\nhome of Mr. Z. Kujundzic, 107\nHigh St. Religious educational\nworkshop by Rev. Edna P\nBruner. All are welcome.\nCOLD WAR ISSUE \u2014 Divided Germany and Berlin persist\nas focal points of the Cold War. The West steadfastly claims\nits rights of occupation In Berlin and in the three air corridors\nlinking West Germany and West Berlin. Map shows division of\nGermany and the air access routes to Berlin \u2014 from Hamburg,\nHanover and Frankfurt.  (CP Newsmap)\nAllies Appear Ready\nFor Talks With Russ\nyear earlier. Wheat sales rose\nbody which has lain in a Ma- to $294,000,000 from $274,900,000\nrianna   funeral   home   for   53 while sales of lumber and tim-\nycars was identified by a Pine ber jumped to $191,600,000 from\n\u2022 Bluff, Ark., woman Monday as woodpulp  advanced  to $185,30,-\nthat  of   W.   M.   Kerr  of   Pine 000 from $169,000,000.\nBluff,   who   was   last   seen\n1909. Mrs. J. V. Parker of Pine\nBluff, who said she was Kerr's\nfoster aunt, made the identification. She said Kerr was 32\nwhen he disappeared.\nAmong other major increases,\ncrude oil exports nearly doubled\nlo $116,000,000 from $63,300,000\nand iron ore shipments more\nthan doubled to $79,100,000 from\n$34,700,000.\nYOU BORN TODAY are purposeful, innately religious, faithful to a trust; may be too unyielding on occasions; have a winning\npersonality. Develop your reasoning faculties and artistry. Virgo\nis technical; many new discoveries boast Virgo as their researchers, assistants and final\nanalyists.  Living on the higher\nplane,   you   are   warm,\ngenerous, steadfast.\nhelpful,\nCommon Market Issue Hangs\nLike Question Mark Over UK\nBy DOUG MARSHALL\nLONDON (CP) - Political\ncomment here is beginning to\nconcentrate heavily on the Common Market issue as the Sept.\n10 deadline for the Commonwealth prime ministers conference approaches.\nBritain's application to join\nIhe European Community hangs\nover Westminster like a huge\nquestion mark and its implica-\nlions punctuate policy discussion on all levels.\nThe Commonwealth conference, the 11th meeting of the\nprime ministers since the Second World War. is likely to be\na historic if not necessarily a\ndecisive gathering.\nThe 14 or 15 Commonwealth\nleaders, most of ttiem with several   members   of   their   cabin-\nRUFFLED FEATHERS\u2014Startled by a plane taking oft from\nMeigs Airfield in Chicago, hundreds of purple martins shoot\nfrom their resting places in trees.\nets, will confer for the first\ntime at Marlborough House,\nQueen Mary's former residence.\nIt was presented by the Queen\nas a centre for Commonwealth\nactivities.\nThe prime ministers of Canada, Australia and New Zealand plan to discuss the Common Market issue and their\nmutual problems in an informal\nsession before the main conference  begins.\nCANADA ON FENCE\nMost observers here class\nCanada with Tanganyika as\ndoubtful about British entry.\nNew Zealand, Nigeria, Ceylon,\nPakistan and the West Indian\ncountries are considered likely\nto support entry with reservations. Australia, Ghana and India are thought to be opposed\nunless present terms can be altered.\nThe Observer says Canadian\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker is\nexpected to walk softly in London because of his government's weakened position after\nthe election and the Social Credit party's violent opposition to\nthe market.\nfort to protect the vital\u2014if ill-\ndefined\u2014Canadian   interests.\"\nThere    is   some   speculation\nthat  the   controversy  may  yet!\nsplit  the  Conservative  party,    j\nThe Economist says that if j\nMacmillan meets with flat opposition from the Commonwealth and decides to press on\ninto Europe anyway, some 50\nTory members of Parliament\nmight revolt.\nBERLIN (AP)\u2014The Western\nallies appeared ready Tuesday for\na showdown with the Russians\non Western demands that Soviet\narmored units take a shorter\nroute to the Russian war m\nmorial in West Berlin.\nU.S. soldiers in battle dress\ntook up positions at the Sonne-\nnallee, Oberbaum Bridge and\nHeinrich Heine Strasse crossing\npoints in the Berlin wall. The\ncrossings are normally manned\nby West Berlin police.\nAt Checkpoint Charlie, the\nfourth and principal U.S. sector\ncrossing, U.S. soldiers were not\nwearing their battle gear. However, the 20-man military police detachment normally stationed there has fighting equipment on hand.\nWest Berlin police erected\nbarricades at Sandrug bridge in\nthe British sector, one of two\ncrossing points the allies told\nthe Russians to use in changing\ntheir guard at the war memorial. The olher is the Brandenburg Gate. The Sandkrug barricades had gates wide enough\nto allow heavy trucks and buses\nto pass through.\nSTATION TROOPS\nA small detachment of American soldiers also was stationed\nat Glienicker Bridge, at the\nsouthwestern tip of the U.S. sector. The bridge is used as a\ncrossing by members of U.S.,\nBritish and French military\nmissions attached to the Soviet\nheadquarters at Potsdam in\nEast Germany.\nEyewitnesses reported seven\njeeploads of U.S. soldiers were\ndeployed at the Kleeblatt\ncloverleaf, where the autobahn\nsuperhighway leaves West Berlin on its way to West Germany.\nThe French also stationed\ntroops at the crossing points in\ntheir sector \u2014 four jeeps wilh\neight men at Bornholmer\nStrasse and two with five men\nat Chausseestrasse.\nBritish soldiers, who guard\nboth the Soviet memorial and\nils Soviet guards, were in battle\ndress this morning instead of\nIbeir usual uniforms. West Ber-\nup at Sandkrug Bridge. West\nBerlin police said the barricade\nthere had been built on British\norders.\nAn American statement said\nU.S. personnel had been stationed at \"six access points'in\nthe U.S. sector to determine the\ndegree of compliance with the\ninstructions with respect to the\nmovement of Soviet guard per-\nFresh skim milk 15c qt. In proven\nsanitary container (glass) from\nK. V. CO-OP DAIRY. Ph. 352-7317\nNatural matchstick bamboo\ndrapes, 3'x7', 4'x7', 6'x7'.\nSTERLING   FURNISHERS\nNew shipment of blouses,\n6 to 14 yr. old.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP\nChurch of The Redeemer\nSunday  School resumes  Sunday\nnext, 9:45. Evening Services at\n7:30 p.m.\nSay It With Flowers\nThey   speak  your   thoughts  and\ncarry your love for all occasions\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFairview United Church\nKindergarten will open on\nMonday, Sept. 10.\nPhone Mrs. Zacharias 352-6825.\nPatients In Kootenay Lake Gen\neral Hospital can have The Daily\nNews sent to them every mom\ning. Phone 352-3552, Circulation\nDept., Nelson Daily News.\nsonnel to their memorial in\nWest Berlin, as far as the U.S.\nsector is concerned.\"\nClasses in Highland Dancing\ncommencing Sept. 10. For regis\nI (ration  and   information,   phone\nMrs.   J.\nnings\nGentles,  352-6575,  eve\nThe stationing of the troops at' Square Dance Class\nthe  crossing  points aroused   wl11 commence shortly Tuesday\nspeculation that the U.S.  com\nmand was preparing to put into\neffect its order that the Soviet\nstop using Checkpoint Charlie\nfor their daily afternoon changing of the war memorial guard.\nThe Americans said the purpose was to reduce the possibility of attacks by West Ber-\nliners on the Soviet vehicles.\nWOULD LOSE FACE\nUse of either alternate route\nwould result in a loss of face\nfor the Communists. The Brandenburg Gate, which is 200\nyards from the memorial, is\nsealed with mortar, barbed wire\nand tank obstacles as part of\nthe Communist wall divising\nBerlin.\nThe East German Communists restrict Sandkrug Bridge,\nabout a mile from the memorial, to Germans. The Reds require all non-Germans to use\ndrive to the memorial in the\nBritish sector.\nMonday heavy Soviet armored cars took the guards\nthrough Checkpoint Charlie\nwithout interference.\nThe Russian guards began\nusing armored cars two weeks\nago after West Berlin mobs\nstoned Soviet buses and cars\ncarrying the guards. The\ncrowds were enraged by the\nslaying of an escaping East\nGerman teen-ager who was shot\nby East Berlin guards and left\nto bleed to death on the east\nside of the Communist wall.\nevenings\nFor information and registration\ncontact Vic or Millie Graves,\nPhone 352-2429,\nRegular general meeting tomorrow, 7:30 p.m., followed by cabaret and dance. Bring the wife.\nATTENTION\nROYAL CANADIAN LEGION\nAND LADIES' AUXILIARY\nMEMBERS\nMembers are requested to meet\nat the Royal Canadian Legion\nHall, Thursday at 10:30 a.m. for\nthe purpose of attending the funeral of our late comrade, Walter\nS. Bailey.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSTUART \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Harriet Albertine Stuart\nof South Slocan, will be held at\nthe Thompson Funeral Home,\nFriday at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Canon\nW. J. Silverwood will officiate\nand cremation will follow the services. In lieu of flowers, friends\nare requested to make memorial\ndonations to the Kootenay Society\nfor Handicapped Children, c\/o\nMiss E. Hamson, 1017 Hoover\nStreet, Nelson.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBAILEY\u2014 Funeral services for\nMr. Walter Samuel Bailey, will\nbe held at St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church, Thursday at 11\na.m. Rev. Peter W. Faris will officiate and interment will take\nplace in Nelson Memorial Park.\nThompson Funeral Service.\nSnap-Tab\nWHITE\nSHIRTS\nBy Forsyth\nIn the new TAPERED\nFIT for the slim, trim\nlook.\nEvery Forsyth shirt carries a Guaranteed Insurance Policy for high\nstandard of fit, workmanship and finish.\nPMORY'Q\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nSchool opening Special on Reconditioned Typewriters. Royal Underwood and Remingtons \u2014\n$28.50 ANP UP - ALL\nGUARANTEED\nJ. T. Mowatt & Co., Nelson, B.C.\n10 Week Course\nBALLROOM DANCING\nby Mr. and Mrs. J. G. James,\ncommencing October 12.\nRegistrations limited.\nPhone 352-5274.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nLATORNELL \u2014 Funeral services for Miss Doris Marie Latornell will be held at St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral, Friday at 11 a.m.\nRev. Canon George W. Lang will\nofficiate and interment will take\nplace in Nelson Memorial Park.\nThompson Funeral Service.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nJOHNSON \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mr. Halvard Johnson will be\nheld at the Thompson Funeral\nHome, Friday at 2 p.m. Capt.\nRobert Moffatt will officiate and\ninterment will take place in Nelson Memorial Park.\n'FLASH,\u2014V,Tlan Prochaaka,\n18 and a student at the\nCleveland Institute of Music,\ntfl the Cleveland Newspaper\nPhotographers Association's\n\"Miss Photoflash.\" She will\ncompete tn the national contest in Wyoming next spring.\nBELMONT\nCLIPBOARD\nNew \u2022 Modern - Different\nPushbutton Steel Clip\nHolds Up to 100 Sheets\n79<!\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611\nBox 460\nTWO-YEAR CROP\nGovernment agriculturists say\nstrawberry blossoms should be\nlin police were putting up bar- i plucked the first year to encour-\nriers to keep back any crowds j age runner growth  and a bet-\nthat might appear. | ter crop of berries the second\nA British armored car turned year.\nCommonwealth PMs Arriving\nIn London for Trade Talks\nBy   MOHSIN   ALI\nLONDON (Reutersi \u2014 Commonwealth prime ministers began arriving here today for\ntheir Sept. 10 \"summit conference\" to discuss the Commonwealth's future in the face of\nBritain's plans to join the European CommonMarket.\n\"Mr.\nFirst to arrive was Keith\nHolyoake, prime minister of\nNew Zealand. Australian Prime\nMinister   Robert   Menzies   and\nNigerian Prime Minister Alhaji I \u00b0M   Macmillan,   who   will   pre-\nDiefenbaker   wants   no   Sir   Abubakar   Tafawa   Balewa i sic|e   at   the   conference,   has\nain joins the Common Market,\nare sending high-powered delegations.\nThe Canadian team, led by\nPrime Minister John Diefenbaker, is due here Friday. External Affairs Minister Howard\nGreen will accompany the Canadian leader.\nGIVES ASSURANCES\nBritish   Prime   Minister   Har-\npart of any responsibility there\nmight be for scuttling an alliance between Britain and the\nSix.\n\"He would be happy to leave\nquietly with renewed assurances from the British government lhat it is making every ef-\nTORONTO (CP)-The 3,000,-\n000th visitor to the 84th annual\nCanadian National Exhibition\nentered the Princes' Gates\nMonday night. Lorrie Running,\n10, of Toronto, was the 31,299,-\n500th   CNE   visitor   during   the   days. It is the biggest in Corn-\nwere   flying   into  London  later\ntoday.\nThe Australian delegation\nalso will include Trade Minister\nJohn McEwen and Treasurer\nHarold HIol while the other\nmembers of the New Zealand\ndelegation are Deputy Prime\nMinister John Marshall, External Affairs Secretary A. D.\nMcintosh and Deputy Secretary Foss Shanahan.\nThe 15-country conference\u2014\nwith certain colonial territories\nalso   represented\u2014will   last   10\nlast 11 years and will receive\na plaque. This year's attendance was the highest ever recorded.\nmonwealth history.\nThe Australians, Canadians\nand New Zealanders, whose\neconomies might suffer if Brit-\ngiven repeated assurances that\nBritain will not join the six-nation European Economic Community unless the Commonwealth's vital interests are protected.\nLord Privy Seal Edward\nHeath, Britain's top negotiator\nat the Brussels talks, has made\nconsiderable progress toward\ngetting an outline of the terms\nunder which Britain could join.\nBut Macmillan's hope of getting a complete outline of an\nagreement on Britain's application received a severe setback\nat the beginning of August,\nwhen a weary Heath and the\nsix Common Market ministers\nadjourned their marathon talks\nwith vital points unsettled.\nHeath now has dropped his\ndemand for \"comparable outlets\" in the Common Market\nfor Australian, New Zealand\nand Canadian farmers if Britain joins.\nHe is trying to win reasonable future opportunities for\nCommonwealth farm products,\nand wants the six to agree to\nkeep future farm prices low\nenough to discourage European\nfarmers from producing enough\nto make Europe self-sufficient,\nthus giving outsiders a chance.\nBut the signs are that Australia and New Zealand are\nlikely to oppose the approach.\nSNOW CROSS\nHoly Cross Mountain, Colorado, was named for two huge\nsnow-filled ravines which have\nthe appearance of a cross.\nHave the Job Done Right I\nVIC GRAVEC\n^ LIMITED       **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nNO\nFISH\nSTORY\nTHIS!\nIn advertising, a\nfishing,  results  are\nthe true measure\nof success.\nIn newspaper advertising, proven circulation brings sure\nresults.\nReaders that are unmeasured, unnamed\nand unknown also\nprove to be undepen-\nable and unprofitable.\nWhen you advertise,\nnever ask what's\nyour circulation?\nAsk, may we see\nyour proven circulation lists. When you\ndeal with the Nelson\nDaily News, ask for\nour ABC audit\nreport.\nInvest your advertising dollars in a paper\nwith reliable circulation \u2014 use the\nlailg\nThe Audit Bureau of Circulation was incorporated by the\nlarger advertisers and their\nagencies to guard against\nfalse circulation claims.\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_1962_09_05","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0434439","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":"1962-09-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1962-09-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}