{"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. W.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:contributor"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource.; Examples of a Contributor include a person, an organization, or a service."},{"label":"Contributor","value":"Ramsden, C. 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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":" \u2014 \u2014        \u25a0       - ; \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2014\u2014 ,  ;      %.\n\"\u2122.'.V.\\-':V:  ... . '  '     : ~\u2014:\u2014\u2022     . \u2022\u2014\u25a0\u2022-.-.   -.- : \u25a0 ; r\ntteon \\\nsn^'\nVol.'62 \u00ab^P\u00bb -  \u2022-'   *\" If \u25a0if^f jELSON, B. C, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 16, 1963 10 Cents .\u201e< No.m?\n\u2014 . vtgg  I : , $S ffiSKt\nGovt Faces Test at Federal - Provincial lileetl\nZorin Cannot See\nWhat Barghoorn\ns To Do With It\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin said Friday night he cannot understand\nhow the Russians' arrest ot Professor Frederick C. Barghoorn on spy charges \"can color the whole range of\nSoviet-American relations.\"\nDeploring President Kennedy's postponement oi\nnegotiations that were to have begun Tuesday on extension of the U.S.-Soviet cultural exchange program,\nZorin told reporters: \"I think it is a completely arti-!\nficial link.\" I\nMeanwhile Pravda, Communist party newspaper, ignoring\nthe tensions created by Barg-\nhoorn's arrest, published today\nan article declaring the Soviet\nUnion wants to co-operate with , , ,.\nthe U.S. for peace and also in ]s0\u2122 JlM^f ^\neconomic and cultural spheres.\nThe American diplomats\nstayed away to protest the refusal of Russian authorities to\nlet some consular official see\nBarghoorn or give them additional information on the rea-\nThe U.S. embassy pointed up\nthe American anger over the de-\nZorin talked with reporters at\nthe meeting, held under the\n.hairmanship of Mrs. Nikita\nKhrushchev,  wife  of  the  pre\ntention of Barghoorn, a Yale rnier. She is deputy chairman of\nUniversity professor who writes the Soviet Institute of Soviet-\nand lectures on Soviet affairs, j American Relations.\nEmbassy personnel boycotted a j The deputy foreign minister\nMoscow meeting marking the Sa\\A he did not know what the\n30th anniversary of U.S. diplo- next step will be in Barghoorn's\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPickersgill's\nFrench Address\nWell Received\nOTTAWA (CP)-State Secretary Pickersgill spoke in\nFrench during a Commons debate Friday, the first time he\nhas used that language for any\nextensive remarks in the\nHouse. He spoke for about\nthree minutes.\nGilles Gregoire (Creditiste |\n\u2014Lapointe) congratulated Mr.\nPickersgill \"most heartily\" for\nthe speech. He said the minister spoke \"very good French,\nvery clearly.\"\nThere was loud desk - banging applause from both sides\nof the chamber.\nMr. Pickersgill was born in\nOntario and educated in Manitoba and represents a Newfoundland constituency in the\nCommons.\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTHE WEATHER\nKootenay: A few showers or\nnowflurries. Little change in\n.mperature. Winds southerly,\now and high at Cranbrook 25\nnd 40, Crescent Valley 30 and\n10. Sunday: Unsettled.\n.04\nmatic recognition of the Soviet\nUnion.\nB.C. Indian\nChiefs\nVisit UN\nUNITED NATIONS (CP) -\nTwo British Columbia Indian\nchiefs visited the United Nations\n-Friday to-study the-operations\nof the UN commission on human\nrights. They also questioned U.S.\ndelegates about functions of the\nU.S. commission in Indian\nclaims.\nChief Edward Thevarge of\nD'Arcy, B.C., and chief Richard\nMalloway of Sardis and Fraser\nValley, B.C., go on to Ottawa\nto make representations in connection with the proposed estab- MIAMI, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Miam- j\nlishment of a Canadian commis- > ians shivered under record low\nsion on Indian claims. temperatures early Friday and\nThe chiels, who represent the I northern Florida mercury read-\nNorth American Indian Brother- j ings skidded to anipng the lowest\nhood,   were   accompanied   by I in the United States.\nClarence  Joe,  who  represents j    A low of 45 degrees in Miami\ncase.\nTold that Americans were\nconvinced Barghoorn is not a\nspy, Zorin said people should be\n\"careful of saying things like\nthat.\"\nHe indicated that the professor, who entered the Soviet Union last month as a tourist to\ngather material for a book,\n\"was not doing his proper\nwork.\" Barghoorn was last seen\nby Americans in Moscow Oct.\n31.\n.._Qe..Inst__ite.ior,Su_iet-Amer-\nican Relations Thursday sent a\ndelegation of prominent Russians to the United States in\nconnection with the anniversary.\nThey are being ostracized because of the Barghoorn case.\nMiami Feels\nWinter's Bite\nNELSON   \t\n    37\n44\nToronto \t\n    35\n46\nCalgary   \t\n    26\n45\n\"enticton \t\n    45\n50\nVancouver   \t\n    45\n52\nWhitehorse  \t\n      3\n5\nSpokane  ...\n36\n45\nBritish Columbia's Schelt, Powell   River.   Squirrel   Cove   and\nChurchhouse bands.\nPlans to establish the Cana-\nwas a new mark for this date.\nIt was 44 here Thursday and\nthat, too, was a record.\nTallahassee, in north Flordia,\ndian   commission,   which   will   reported 23 and freezing weather\nstudy the  claims of Canadian i occurred   southward   into   the\nIndians, were announced Aug. 15\nby Citizenship Minister Favreau.\nThe commission will be set up\nbefore the year-end.\nRAPE SENTENCE\nPRNCE GEORGE (CP) -\nFrank Dudley Wilbrand was\nfound guilty Friday in assize\ncourt on a charge of raping a\n12-year-old girl. He was sentenced by Chief Justice J. O. Wilson\nto eight years in the penitentiary.\ncentral portions of the peninsula.\nKey West had a record low of 57.\nThe U.S. weather bureau said\ntemperatures would begin returning to normal Friday.\nKITIMAT (CP) \u2014 A casting-\ndepartment serviceman Friday\n| was presented with his sixth\nl award from Aluminum Company\nj of Canada for an industrial idea.\nj George Barnes received $2000\nj for his outline of an equipment\nmodification in metal pouring\n'operations.\nPART OF HEISTED GEMS RECOVERED-Some of the loot recovered won after a $1 million, armed robbery in New York\nCity 1\u00ab examined by Lt Arthur Schultheiss at the 30th\nStreet Police Prednct A daring gang of hijackers, two\ndressed like poIlcemSi and two others \u2022 wearing Halloween\nmasks, kidnaped six guards In a pickup truck and stole\nthe jewelry. The FBI is helping the Investigation.\n4\nParliament\nFriday\nBy The Canadian Press\nExternal Affairs Minister Martin announced that a\" Caha9i_h\ndesigned nuclear power plant\nwill be built in India's Rajas-\nthan state.\nTransport Minister Mcllraith\nsaid his department is reviewing the safety regulations that\nmade Penhold unsuitable as an\nRCAF jet training base.\nDouglas Fisher (NDP \u2014Port\nArthur) said possible appointment of Justice Minister Chevrier as head of the CNR would\naccelerate the railway's destruction.\nGeorges Valade (PC \u2014 Montreal Ste. Marie) said a sessional\ncommittee should study the question of a new medium-range jet\nairliner for TCA.\nTlie House began consideration of mines department estimates of $45,000,000.\nMurdo Martin (NDP-Tim-\nmins) suggested that federal aid\nto gold mines would better be\ndirected to developing new mines\nthan keeping dying ones alive.\nChamber Backs\nPenticton Plan\nPENTICTON (CP) - The Pen\nticton Chamber of Commerce has\nlent support to the city's plan\nfor a $5,000,000 public and private\ndevelopment.\nTwo money bylaws go to a\nvote Dec. 5 for federal development loans representing $675,000\nof the city's $1,340,000 share of\ntlie total scheme.\nA one-mill increase in taxation would finance repayment of\nprincipal and interest.\nMayor M. P. Finnerty told the\nChamber Penticton's position is\nhighly favorable, with a borrowing power established by the\nprovincial government of $5,042,-\n775.\nKelowna's rating is $4,243,390,\nVernon $2,548,576 and Kamloops'\n$2,267,659.\nNICKNAMED BARNEY by the' Daily News staff,\nthis tiny barn owl was found Friday morning in the\n300 block Silica Street by Roland Paulson. The little\nbird is suffering a broken wing and made no attempt to get away from its rescuers. Several members of the staff have offered to take the bird home\nand nurse it-back to-*aalt^.il^)orter\u00bbBay-JIelgesoi. .\nis trying to tie the owl's wing to the bird's body in\norder that it may heal.\n\u2014Daily News pholo by Dick Proctor.\nNew Disarmament\nTalks Urged in UN\nUNITED NATIONS (AP)\u2014\nThe UN General Assembly's\nmain political committee approved Friday a call for new\ndisarmament talks in Geneva\nwith the aim of reducing risks\nof war.\nWithout a recorded vote, the\nIll-nation committee accepted\na resolution setting out guidelines for the 18-nation disarmament commission expected to\nconvene in Geneva early in\n1964.\n'The committee thus maintained the so-called Spirit of\nMoscow that has been under\npressure elsewhere since the\nsummer signing of the nuclear\ntest-ban treaty in Moscow.\nThe resolution sponsored by\n47 nations was introduced after\na U.S.-Soviet compromise on\nthe wording broke a week-long\ndeadlock in the committee. The\ncompromise was negotiated by\nan eight-nation group from\namong the sponsors.\nRESUME TALKS\nIn its main provisions the resolution called on the Geneva\nnegotiators \u2014 including Canada\n\u2014to resume negotiations in a\nspirit of good will on complete\nand general disarmament under\neffective international control.\nIt directs them to widen areas\nof basic agreements already apparent between East and West\nand to put special emphasis on\nmeasures that could reduce international tension, lessen the\npossibility of war and facilitate\nover - all disarmament agreement.\nIn Today's\nDAILY NEWS\nWEEKEND\nMAGAZINE\n48 Pages of Top-Flight Entertainment for\nEvery Member of the Family.\nPlus 12 Pages of Colored Comics.\nPrice 10 Cents\nLabor Heads Rap\nProposed Controls\nI    Applause rippled   briefly\nthrough   the   committee   room\n| after chairman C. W. A. Schur-\ni mann of The  Netherlands de-!\n\u25a0 clared the resolution adopted by j\nacclamation.\ni He cautioned that while the\nresolution did not solve the disarmament question it expressed\nithe \"fervent wish of all mem-\n| hers of this committee\" that\nI progress will be made in Ge-\n!neva.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Picket-\ncurbing controls sought by representatives of British Columbia\nmanufacturers were condemned\nFriday by labor leaders.\nThey were interviewed between sessions here of the annual convention of the B.C. Federation of Labor.\nThe B.C. division of the Canadian Manufacturers Association\nasked Thursday, in a brief to the j\nprovincial cabinet, for new!\nstrike controls including fines up,\nto $500 and three months in jail i\nfor \"mystery\" pickets.\nThe manufacturers asked spe-1\ncifically for restriction of picket-1\ning to plants where labor dis-!\nputes exist and laws requiring\npickets to carry identification\ncards_benring.unlqp, authoriiw.-\nttdti.\nThe brief said: \"The appearance during the past year of mystery pickets and ghost pickets\nas well as mobs of troublemakers has- done much to undermine\nthe intent of the Trade Unions\nAct and stir up unnecessary industrial conflict.\"\nCommenting, Pat.O'Neal, labor\nfederation secretary, said:\n\"This seems like a wild and\nunreasonable demand which I\nfeel sure the government will ignore.\n\"Of course, the CMA-are al\nways asking for restrictive labor\nlegislation and thus far they\nhave been quite successful in\nhaving the government accede\nto their wishes.\"\nPen Baskin, international representative of the United Steelworkers of America, said he is\nconfident the labor movement\nwill be united in opposition to\nthe proposals.\n\"I don't agree that any citizen\nin a free country is expected to\nbe subjected to this type of police\ntactics,\" he said.\nJack Moore, regional president\nof the International Woodworkers of America, said the proposed terms would be discriminatory because they single out a\nparticular type of protest.\n\"Since; the CMA. makes-, no\nmention of denying the right of\nother individuals to picket, once\nagain this is asking for legislation that discriminates against a\nsingle group of people,\" he said.\nRussel St. Eloi, president of\nthe Labor Federation, said:\n\"This is about the limit. Next\nthing they, will be asking us to\nwear tags.\"\nDOLLAR STEADY\nNEW YORK (API-Canadian\ndollar unchanged at 92 13-16 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n92 13-16.\nAdult Education\nExperiment\nPlanned\nPENTICTON (CP) - An imaginative experiment in adult\neducation, known officially as\n\"basic training for skill development,\" will begin here shortly\nMrs. Margaret Colby, director\nof adult education, says the program is to help adults bring the\nlevel of their formal education\nup to the standard demanded by\nmodern employment conditions.\nThe plan is divided into two\nsections. Mathematics, science\nand English to grade 10 level\nwill be offered in one and an advanced course\u2014to grade 12 level\u2014in the other.\nBUY BONDS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbians put $15,000,000 of\ntheir earnings into current Canada Savings Bonds in the first\nnine months of 1963.\nThe figure was 94 per cent of\nlast year's  final  total.\nWorld News Briefly\nNEW YORK (CP)-The Canadian labor movement believes it\nmust retain its right to make\ndecisions concerning its own national affairs, Executive Vice-\nPresident Joe Morris of the Canadian Labor Congress told the\nAFL-CIO convention here Friday.\nOTTAWA (CP) - Douglas\nFisher says he is \"personally\ndelighted\" that Donald Gordon\nplans to step down as head of\nthe publicly-owned CNR in the\nnext 16 months.\nln the same breath, the NDP\nmember, oPrt rAthur, expressed\nshock at speculation that Justice Minister Chevrier, a former\nLiberal transport minister and\none-time president of the St.\nLawrence Seaway Authority,\nmay step into Mr. Gordon's shoes\nas the $75,000-a-year. boss of the\nCNR.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Young\nLiberals across Canada were\nurged Friday to extend their influence up and down.\nTliey were asked to recruit intensively among young people in\nthe white collar and the working classes, and at the same\ntime to try to have the voice of\nyouth  listened  to  in  the  high\npolicy-making\nparty.\nranks    of    the\nFiscal Policy m\nCrucial Issue\nBy DON HANMGHT .   i    '\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The impending federal-prov%-\ncial conference is shaping up as a crucial test of the\nPearson government's ability to reconcile its twomajar\nobjectives in fiscal relations.\nBoth have been declared publicly since the Liberals took office seven months ago. They are these;\n1. The federal government is\nSAIGON (AP) - The exodus\nof 1000 U.S. servicemen being\nwithdrawn from South Viet Nam\nwill start Dec. 3, Maj.-Gen.\nCharles J. Timmes announced\nFriday. All are to be out by the\nyear end, reducing the American\ncontingent to about 15,500.\nTimmes' announcement came\nafter the bloodiest week in the\nlong war between Communist\nViet Cong Guerillas and U.S.-\nbacked government troops.\nready to get out of such pro\ngrams as hospital insurance and\ndisability pensions if the provinces continue in these fields,\nwhich constitutionally are\ntheirs.\nOttawa now pays about half\nthe costs of these plans. To\ncompensate the provinces for\nthe loss of the. federal share,\nOttawa would withdraw far\nenough from the income-tax\nfield so the provinces could step\nin and levy their own taxes to\nraise an equivalent amount of\nmoney.\n2. Ottawa must retain its ability to influence economic activity in Canada, which it does\nthrough tax policy, and by managing its own debt and the\nmoney supply in concert with\nthe Bank of Canada.\nBIG WEAPON\nTaxation power is one of the\nbiggest weapons in this economic arsenal. If taxing authority is diminished by giving\nmore of it to the provinces, Ottawa's capacity for not only influencing the economy, but\nequalizing the financial positions of the provinces, could be\nserjously weakened.\nThus lt is a dilemma of three\nparts \u2014 the constitution, the\neconomy and party politics.\nPrime Minister Pearson referred to the.situation thj^vyeek\nin tBe Cdmmons- when he said\nin part:\n\"I believe not only that the\nrights and privileges of the\nprovinces inside confederation\nare a basic essential for cooperative federalism; I also believe that the federal government must have enough authority to do the job entrusted to\nit by the people of Canada.\n\"Surely these two things can\nand must be reconciled.\"\nMOVE PART WAY\nThe provinces already have\nthe right to levy their own personal and corporation income\ntaxes and death duties. They\ngot part way into these fields\u2014\nwhich, again, are theirs constitutionally\u2014when the old tax-\nrental system was scrapped in\n1961.\nLast year, Ottawa abated its'\npersonal income tax rates by\n16 per cent, leaving the provinces free  to   enter  the  field\nWould Rename\nCranbrook-Hope\nHighway Link\nPENTICTON (CP) - The Pen\nticton Chamber of Commerce\nwants the stretch of highway 3\nbetween Hope and Cranbrook renamed \"Dewdney Trail\" in re\nspect to the late Edgar Dewdney.\nThe 19th-century trail-blazer\ncut the original trail between\nVermillion Forks\u2014later called\nPrinceton\u2014and Fort Steele in the\nKootenays.\nVancouver Nearly Booked for Grey Cup\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Grey\nCup City, 1963, is going to be\none crowded place.\nRoy Corbett, managing director for the B.C. Hotels Association, said Friday the accommodation picture is \"real tight\ndowntown\" and it's getting that\nway in the suburbs.\n\"All the good rooms for Grey\nCup week are pretty well booked\nin the downtown area,\" he said.\n\"Now we're \u2022 checking for cancellations \u2014 but very few cancellations are coming in.\"\nIt had been thought that when\nCalgary bowed out of the Western Football Conference final the\nhotels would be flooded with cancellation notices from disillusioned Calgarians.\n'There have been no cancellations coming through. I'm utterly\namazed. Maybe it's because their\nplans were so far advanced that\nthey're planning to come anyway.\"\nMr. Corbett said \"the situation was tight in 1960\" \u2014 the last\ntime the East-West football was\nheld here \u2014 \"but it looks even\ntighter now.\"\nThe Calgary contingent is one\nof the most catered-to by the\npeople who sell food and service\nto visitors. Traditionally the Alberta crew is the gang which\npaints the Grey Cup red, white\nand blue and their patronage is\nworth an estimated $1,000,000 in\nbusiness to . Vancouver during\nGrey Cup wedc\nMr. Corbett said his hotels as\nsociation had begun referring\nreservations to \"good, outlying\nhotels\" \u2014 and even \"some of\nthe better-class motels.\"\nHe said some people requested\nquiet, out-of-town accommodation, planning to rent a car for\ncommuting to Grey Cup city.\n\"I hope they won't be disappointed,\" he said.\n\"The rent-a-car people report\nvery heavy bookings.\"\nHe described as \"a good gimmick\" the action of a downtown\nluxury hotel in backing its faith\nin the British Columbia Lions\nmaking it to the Grey Cup.\nThe hotel announced Friday\nthat, should Saskatchewan\nRoughriders win the WFC final\nagainst Lions, all Saskatchewan\npersons resident in the hotel for\nthe deciding game or games\nwould receive their accommodation free.\nThe offer covers the four days\ntaking in the second game here\nWednesday and the third game\n(if necessary) the following Saturday.\nKILLED ON WAY\nTO FUNERAL\nHOPE (CP) \u2014 A Kelowna\nlawyer on his way to the funeral\nof a brother-in-law died Friday\nwhen his car plunged over a\n100-foot embankment.\nPatrick O'Neil, 41, was thrown\nfrom his nine-year-old car,\nwhich apparently skidded during\na light snow fall. 1\nThe accident occurred on the!\nHope-Princeton highway about\ntwo miles west of Allison Pass|\nsummit as O'Neil was on his way\nto Vancouver.\nwith their own rates designed\nto pick up.that slack or'more.\nThe federal abatement this year\nis 17 per cent. Under the current agreement, it rises on^\npoint a year to 20 per cent 'in\n1966. ,'    .   ,.\nIn addition, the federal-go*\"\neminent has abated nine percentage points of its rate of tqx';'\non corporation incomer-whlph'^\nworks out so the provinces get\nbetween 21 and 22 per.cent bt\nthe total tax \"take\" from corr;\nporations. And the .' prpvlptjes\nalso have 50 per cent ol tjl\u00bb'-;\nfield of death taxes.    \"..   \u2022*\u00a3,'*\nThen came last April's ultimatum from Premier-Cesag^ofi\nQuebec. He wants 25 J>er cant',\nof both the income tax fields,\nplus all the succession - duty\nfield. And he also wants an'-$tt\nto the joint programs, which\nwould mean even further fed*,\neral withdrawal from thesV\nfields of so-called \"direct taxation.\" - I\nFirst .reply to Mr. Lesage\ncame in the June 13 federal\nbudget, in which Finance Mm-\nister Gordon'said: .       -\n\"Most people will agree, \\ Bttl;\nsure, that if the federal government were to give up a majof\npart of its present revenue\nsources, even in exchange' for\ncompensating expenditure adjustments, its ability to 49S6ti:\u201e\nan influence through fiscal joU\nicy over the level of economic\nactivity in Canada would bt\nweakened.\"\nANOTHER SCANDAL\u2014Londoa\nofficials are Investigating\nanother scandal, this one the\ndeath ot 24-year-old Italian- \u25a0\nborn Julie Molley (above),:\ndental receptionist by day\nand known as \"High Priest-*\ness ot Love\" by night Her',\nbody was found on a bed in\na mansion near London- a;\ndrug bottle nearby. Diaries\nand compromising photographs tell a lurid story at\nsex ofgies involving social\nleaders, army officers,\nweaKhy businessmen,, and I\npossibility of .WactunaU. - '\nAnd in This Corner . ; .\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Poetry Is the answer to sex education, a\nToronto psychiatrist told the University Women's Club of sjjji-\nurban Etobicoke Thursday night.\nDr. John Rich, associate professor of psychiatry at the\nUniversity of Toronto, said there Is much down-to-earth talk\nabout the anatomy and physiology, but what the teenagers\nwant to know is how to handle excitement and passion.\nHe said: \"We run away from the emotional side of sex. If\nI were asked to give a teenager one book on sex, I would give a\nbook of poetry.\n\"It's too late to start teaching teens about the subject whet\nthey're 13 and 14 years old and out at drive-ins. It should -start\nabout the age of three.\" \u25a0 1  .\nTORONTO (CP)-\"The story of Christ is nothing but-.-a\nbeautiful fairytale,\" a University of Toronto audience was told\nThursday by Dr. William Swinton, director of the Royal, Opt\ntario Museum. ''\" \\\"   ?\n\"I think Christ was a failure in life, just as triost of us art,\nand the Resurrection and the virign birth were merely invejt-\ntions to glorify His life.\"\nThe church is a \"social institution,\" Dr. Swinton said. \"In\nToronto you pick your church as carefully as your golf. clUtt.\"\nMIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)\u2014A tiny Florida company hat\nlaunched a \"no-nicotine, no-tobacco\" smoking product m^d.\nof ground lettuce. .\u2022:.:*''\nGerald M. Schaflander, president of the company %ty>-\u00ab&\nmitted he didn't smoke, satd it would take some time td get\nused to the smell and taste of his product.\n\"It doesn't smell as good as a cigarette and when .It burn!\nit smells like . . . well, like burning lettuce,\" he said, \"\" \"\ntake a while to get used to.\"\nUS\n\u25a0MM\n ^ , ,,   v 1 ,,\u2014\n ,\u2014\u201e\u2014-T-_-_-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963\nSix District Men To\nAttend Military Colleges\nSix young men from East and\nWest Kootenay will start training in the Royal Canadian Air\nForce this fall under the Reg-\nI ular  Officers  Training  Plan.\nThey are a part of a group of\n239 men from across Canada\nwho will receive both military\nand university training in one ol\nthree military colleges or selected universities.\nM. A. Larson of Wynndel has\nbeen enrolled at the Royal Military College at Kingston, Ont.\nSelected for the College Militaire\nRoyal de Saint-John, a bilingual\ncollege in Quebec, were M. A.\nBlench of Rossland, J. M. Duncan of Nakusp and E. R. Sargent of Nelson. Another Nelson\nyouth, J. H. James, has been enrolled at Royal Roads College\nnear Victoria. J. H. D. Douville\nof Creston will attend one of\nthe selected universities as a\nsenior matriculation student.\nStudents attending the univer-\ncities are provided with tuition,\nboard,' lodging, uniforms, books,\ninstruments .medical and dental\ncare and-are paid a basic monthly salary: In the summer they\nare attached to a military unit\nand employed on regular milit\nary duties;\nTho ROTP is one of the main\nsources of career officers for the\nthree armed forces.\nStudents of senior matriculation standing enrolled at Royal\nRoads and College Militaire Royal de Saint-John, attend for two\nyears and are then transferred\nto the Royal Military College for\nan additional two years to complete their education for a degree.\nFor students accepted with a\njunior matriculation standing, a\nfurther preparatory year is offered at College Militaire Royal\nde Saint-John.\nIn The Courts\nRobert M. Lang of Nelson\npleaded guilty to two offences\nbefore Magistrate W. Evans in\nNelson Friday. Driving without\na driver's licence and having no\ninsurance. He was fined $10 and\ncosts Ior each offence.\nW. M. Leveque of Nelson was\nfined $10 and costs when he\npleaded guilty to driving a car\nwith no insurance while being a\nminor.\nRobert Golac of Nelson was\nfined $10 and cost6 for operating\na limited freight transport without a proper licence.\nEvening\u2014One Show Only at 8:00 p.m.\nMatinee Today at 2i00 p.m.\t\nTHE INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED HIT\nDAffl\/LEZANUCKS\nTHE\nwHh 42 International Stars I\nBated tirllit Back by COrWUUS RYAN \u00bb__\u00bb*\u00bb iy 10th CmttHy-fM\nDAY\nPRICES \u2014 Eves. $135 - $1.00 \u2022 35c    Matinee Mc - 50c \u2022 35c\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNewspaper\nAdvertising\nPays Over and Over\niiiimiimiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii\nI        i -\nLAY-MO\nInternationally Famous\nRecording Star\nIn Person\nBOBBY\nVINTON\nBlue Velvet\nand Other Great Hits\nAnd the Same Evening\nWe Present\nBOBBY\nCOMSTOCK\nAnd The COUNTS\nFor ati Exciting, Star-Studded\nEvening That Has Set\nEveryone  Talking\n9 to 1 \u2014 Adm. $2.00\nQIIIKE\nNELSON\nCIVIC  CENTRE\nSCHEDULE\nSATURDAY, NOV. 16\nARENA\n7:00- 9:25\u2014Figure Skating\n9:30-10:30-Mites\n10:30-11:30\u2014Leafs at Wings\n11:30-12:30\u2014Blades at Seals\n1:00- 2:00\u2014Bruins at\nHipp. Can.\n2:00- 3:00\u2014Hawks at\nRangers\n3:15-4:15\u2014Elk Jets at\nFlyers\n4:30- 5:30\u2014Cougars at\nHipp. Warriors\n5:30- 6:30\u2014Comets at\nFalcons\n7:45- 9:45-GUYS k DOLLS\nSKATING\nRECREATION HALL\n9:00-12:00\u2014Jr. Badminton\nTournament\n1:00- 2:00\u2014Girls' Trampoline & Tumbling\n2:30- 3:30\u2014Boys'  Trampoline U Tumbling\n3:30- 5:00\u2014Notre Dame\nBasketball\n7:00 BASKETBALL\nNOTRE DAME\nvs TRAIL\nSUNDAY, NOV. 17\nARENA\n9:00-10:00\u2014Air Cadets and\nSea Cadets\n10:30-11:45\u2014Independents vs\nNelson Hotel\n12:45- 1:45\u2014BEGINNERS'\nSKATING\n2:00- 4:00-FAMILY\nSKATING\n5:00- 7:00\u2014Figure Skating\n7:15- 8:15\u2014A.C.T.  Bucks\n8:45- 9:45\u2014N.D.U. Girls\nRECREATION HALL\n1:00- 6:00-Chess Club\n(Blue Room)\n1:00- 6:00\u2014Sr. Badminton\n7:00- 8:00\u2014N.D.   Basketball\ni\n -     '   \u25a0\n1\n^mA V^'*i*r]\nH\n|    J\n_BP\"''\n1 HW^tt\nlU\nvmm 1\na\/Kb ,  J '-IB\nJa\nI\n\u25a0        \/td^^H\n-H-^-a\n1\nr3_sN\n^r i\nmmm'mW' W\n\u25a0   1\nSMALL BUSINESS LISTENS. Five delegates lo Nelson tor the small business management workshop this weekend listen carefully to Roy Evans of\nBurnaby, far right, who is heading the course. This Is the second such course\nof several to be held in B.C. by the Department of Education after much\nenthusiasm greeted the first in Vancouver last year, Mr. Evans said Friday.\nOthers shown are, left to right, Hans Woudstra of Penticton, Ken M6rley of\nFernie, Jerry Byers of Trail, Frank A. Beresford of Nelson and John Jqpsen of\nCreston. More than 30 delegates gathered in Nelson Friday night; the course\ncontinues today.\u2014Daily News photo.\nCURLING\nRINK\nOPEN\nSunday\n10 a.m. to  10 p.m.\nMonday to Saturday\n7 p.m. to 11  p.m.\nNotre  Dame University\nof  Nelson, B.C.\n\"Contemporary '64\"\n\u25a0; PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES\nInvitation\nYou are cordially invited to attend a panel discussion on:\nv \"THE PLACE AND PURPOSE OF A\nJUNIOR COLLEGE IN THE KOOTENAYS\"\nTUESDAY^ November 19th, 1v\u00ab'\nat 8.00 p.m.\nST. MARTIN'S HALL,\nON THE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS\nPANELISTS: Mr. Frank Beinder, Executive Member for\nt, tlie West  Kootenays lo the B.C.  School\nTrustees' Association.\nMr. Charles Cuthbert. District Superinten-\nn dent ol Schools \\\nMr.   Gcrnld   11.   Lee,   Principal,   Nelson\n\"'  , School  District.\nPAME-t, CHAIRMAN- Hr. Martin L. Brown. Department\nOf Pliih snpliv   vnh<- Dame University ot N-Knn\n30 Businessmen Attend\nSmall Business Workshop\nBusiness men from points in\nHie Okanagan and Kootenays\ngathered in Nelson Friday night\nIor the start of a weekend workshop in small business management.\nMore than 30 men from Oliver,\nPenticton, Kelowna, Invermere,\nCreston, Fernie, Trail, New\nDenver, Castlegar, Salmo and\nNelson were expected to participate.\nNitroglycerine\nFound Near\nGrand Forks\nGRAND FORKS (Staff) - Two\nounces of nitrogylcerine with explosive power equivalent to 10\nsticks of dynamite were found\nnear the highway five miles east\nof here Thursday.\nPolice did not link the explosive substance with terrorist\nactivity.\nThe explosive material was\nfound by two local men, wrapped\nin a paper bag with three electric detonators.\nPolice believe the nitro could\nbelong to a safecracker and\ncould have been lying off the\nhighway for two weeks.\nThe explosives were set off\nby a demolition member of the\nNelson RCMP.\nThe workshop, the second qfiniques on each other and ih the\nDistrict To Take Part in Week's\nOral Polio Vaccination Program\nOrpl polio clinics will be held. and Friday. Clinics will also be\nin Nelson and at about 30 district j held Monday at Riondel, Remac\ncentres next week, Dr. M. R. I\nSmart, director of the Selkirk\nHealth Unit, said Friday. ,\nThe poliomyelitis vaccination\ncampaign will be conducted\nthroughout British Columbia. In\nNelson, the Kinsmen Club will\nassist.\nClinics will be held at the Kins-,\nmen Health Centre in Nelson\nMonday afternoon, and on afternoons and evenings of Tuesday\nand Silverton; Tuesday at Balfour, Salmo, Perry Siding, Appledale, Slocan City and East\nand West Arrow Park; Wednesday at Procter, Vallican, Slocan\nPark, Crescent Valley and Burton; Thursday at North Shore\nHall, Willow Point. Salmo, Pass-\nmore, Winlaw, Fauquier and\nNeedles: Friday at Kaslo, Rose-\nbery, Hills, New Denver and Nakusp.\nMayor Decides Not\nTo Seek New Term\nseveral to be held, in B.C.T is\norganized and sponsored by the\nAdult Education Division of the\nBritish Columbia Department of\nEducation.\nThe workshftp is being conducted by Roy Evans, conference chairman for the Technical\nprocess, acquire the spirit of the\nprogram.\nThe courses to be given in the\nlocal communities include record\nkeeping for management, retail\nmerchandising, marketing and\nmanagement accounting.\nMr. Evans said that when the\nenrollees complete the four cour-\nand Vocational Branch of thei ses they will be awarded a dip-\ndepartment of education. Assisting him are A. L. Cartier, director of Adult Education for B.C.,\nand S. Conger, supervisor of\nSmall Business Management programs for the department of\nTrade and Commerce in Ottawa.\nMr. Evans said (he program\nhas been the result of an exhaustive study of the problems\nfaced by small businesses in\nCanada today. He said studies\nhave shown that small business\nfailures or lack of efficiency are\nlargely due to inability to hire\nthe specialized skills necessary\nfor the most efficient management or decision-making.\nThe workshop head said the\npresent courses have been designed to remedy this deficiency\nand to be operated at the community level, They are based\nupon a case study approach in\nwhich the class practices the\narts of management on actual\ncases of small business problems.\nHe added, the delegates will\nlearn appropriate teaching tech-\nloma in business management\nby the Department of Education.\nMayor Thomas S. Shorthouse\nannounced Friday night that he\nhad decided against seeking another term as the city's chief\nmagistrate.\n\"After having served the city\nof Nelson for the past six years\nas mayor, it is my decision at\nthis time not to seek office for a\nfourth term,\" he said in a statement.\n\"It is with a full measure of\npersonal satisfaction that I review the many items of progress\nwhich have come to the community during my tenure of office.\n\"And any contribution that I\nhave made has been given in the\nbest interest of the city and district, of which I have been a part\nfor more than 30 years.\"\nThe mayor's decision left the\nmayoralty race to Aid. E. T.\nBodard and former alderman, B.\nC. Affleck. Alderman Bodard announced his intention to run for\nmayor a month ago, and Mr.\nAffleck tossed his hat in the ring\nThursday.\nPossibilities are strong, how-\nMAYOR SHORTHOUSE\never, that tlie mayoralty contest\nmay become at least a three or\nfour-man race.\nFormer alderman J. W. McClelland indicated Thursday he\nis giving the matter consideration; and Aid. Albert Maida,\nwhose term expires this year,\nsaid he would miike his decision\nknown next week.\nThe following week, clinics will I previously unvaccinated older\nbe held Monday at Canadian Ex-1 adults.\n\"Poliomyelitis tends to come\nin cycles,\" Dr. Smart said. \"And\nthe best way to protect ourselves\nagainst future outbreaks is to\nkeep our immunization level\nhigh, both on a personal and on\na population basis. Herein lies\nthe value of the oral vaccine\nmethod, for it is simple to take\nand its effectiveness is beyond\nquestion.\"\nTo those who were concerned\nas to the safety of the Sabin vaccine, he said that more than a\nquarter of a million people ln\nBritish Columbia took the vaccine last year without any harmful effects. Plans for this year's\nj campaign were based on the\nmost recent advice from the National Advisory Council on live\npoliovirus vaccines, recommending use of the oral vaccine as a\nreinforcing dose.\nploration and Edgewood; Tuesday at Salmo; Wednesday at\nHB mine and Thursday at Ymir.\nThe Sabin oral vaccine will be\ngiven to all school children at\nschools, and to pre-school children and adults at the clinics at\nthe various health centres.\nBOOSTER DOSE\nWhile the vaccine will be made\navailable to everyone on request,\nsaid Dr. Smart, it is primarily\nintended as a reinforcing or\n\"booster\" dose for those who\nhad had three doses of Salk vaccine or a previous dose of Sabin\nvaccine.\nAn initial course of Salk vaccine is preferable for babies and\nColorful Opening\nFor Winter Fair\nTORONTO (CP) - Militant\nsplendor and prancing equestrians were the prime features\nof the Royal Agricultural Winter\nFair which officially opened its\n30th show here Friday.\nFor the next week the magnificent steeds, their riders and the\nspectacularly colorful surrounding will continue to provide an\nexciting backdrop to the fair.\nCrowds of fascinated spectators took in the international\njumping show and also made\nthe most of an opportunity to\nview improved farming equipment, produce and the numerous\ndisplays that have become an\nintricate part of the fair.\nTeachers' Salaries Settled\nIn Nelson Area, Board Reports\nSettlement of teacherr' salaries^\nin School District No. 7 was\nmade Friday night, one day before arbitration date.\nR. A. Phillips, chairman of the\nschool board's teacher salary\ncommittee submitted his wage\nproposal to trustees who passed\nhis recommendation unanimously.\nMr. Phillips reported cost of\nsettlement to the board will be\n$27,129, just under three per cent\nof the total payroll.\nThe 1964 contract settlement\nbased over an 11-year period\nsaw innumerable increases with\nanother teacher classification.\nprofessional elementary, added\nto the previous six scales.\nRegional College  Plebiscite\nTo Be Asked  by School Board\nSchool board officials agreed\nto a plebiscite in the Dec. 5 civic\nelections to sound out people's\nfeeling on a regional college, Friday night.\nThe motion submitted by trustee Louis Hanic is subject to approval ol the council ol public instruction from the government.\nMrs. C. E. Bradshaw went on\nrecord opposing the motion.\nShe explained she was not opposed to the college, but to the\nmethod of financing.\nMrs.   Bradshaw   moved   an\nAUTO -VUE\nDRIVE-IN - Trail, B.C.\nLast Time Tonight\n\"A  THUNDER  OF  DRUMS\"\nStarring Richard Boone and\nLouanna Patten\nTravelogue and Cartoon\nOPEN WEEKENDS ONLY\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nSpecial Matinee Today 1:30 p.m.\n\"TARZAN AND THE\nLOST SAFARI\"\nI   Tonight - Monday - Tuesday\nJ \"ALL FALL DOWN\"\n(Adult Entertainment)\nI Eva Marie Saint, Warren Beatty\n'   Shows at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\namendment asking that it not be\nacted upon until a ruling from\ncity council desginated who\nwould be permitted to vole on\nthe plebiscite.\nShe rescinded her motion before a seconder was called by\nthe chairman.\nShe argued that it would not be\nElementary conditional scale\nover a five-year period ranges\nfrom $3080 for no experience to\n$4000. Last year's scale ranged\nIrom $3030 to $3950.\nElementary basic ranging\nfrom no experience to 11 years\nwas $3600 to $5800; last year it\nwas $3535 to $5700.\nElementary advanced ranged\nfrom $4050 to $6400; last year\nscale was $3880 to $6225.\nProfessional elementary (a\nteacher holding a Bachelor of\nElementary with four years university) starts at $4500 ranging\nto $7150.\nProfessional conditional (a\nteacher with four years' university) starts at $4500 up to $7150.\nLast year's scale was $4340 to\n$6900.\nProfessional basic (a teacher\nholding a Bachelor of Education\ndegree, secondary) starts at\n$5000 to $8300. Last year's scale\nwas $4850 to .$7950.\nProfessional advance (a leach\ner with a degree and five-year's\nuniversity) starts at $5450 to\n$8900.   Last   year's   scale   was\nfair to have tenants and resident i wnat was more important, the\nelectors vote as they would not j children's educational program\nGround Party\nTrying to Get\nTo Crashed Jet\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP) - A\nground party will trek through\nrugged country today in an attempt to reach a wrecked United!\nStates jet fighter and learn the\nfate of its missing pilot.\nThe radar observer of the\nWashington Air National Guard\nF8 Scorpion, which disappeared\non a training flight Thursday\nnight was rescued Friday from\nbeside a giant SOS he had stamped on the snow.\nAttempts to land a helicopter\nnear the wreck about 40 miles\nsouth of here near the international border were unsuccessful\nAct and therefore  all electors j university)   starts   at  $5450   to Friday   because   of   low   cloud\ncould vote. I $8900.   Last   year's   scale   was cover and rough terrain.\nCharles Cuthbert, district sup-,?5250 to $8500. j     ,     h \u201e,.,,. .,   .  \u201e.\nerintendent o, schools, said the    Mr. P \"\u00bbP-ePOrted CastlegarL1?^^^\nplebiscite was to ask voters two |and t,land Forks had reached 30 000 feet\nquestions: first .what education-,an aSreement on teachers' sal-1\nal facilities they want for the\nchildren and second, will they\npay for it.\nHe also asked Mrs. Bradshaw\nfit****\nTHE ALL-NEW\nHOMELITE\nCHAIN   SAW\nThe All\nCompletely\nNew\n\u25a0aries while Tra\nSO to arbitration.\nwhen liis  plane  be-\n,.\u201e\u201e,i,i i,      .   8an '0 Sirate after being put on\nwould have to automatic pilot\nhave to pay for the college\nR. A. Phillips pointed out these i\nvoters ultimately pay through j\ntaxes to the government who in\nturn pay 50 per cent of the school\ncosts.\nMrs. Bradshaw felt that landowners did not want the college I\nwould have to pay, if the other; the Kootenays) was to introduce\nelectors said 'yes. . posl.graduate education to any\nIt's not fair to go to the people | one who can profit by it.\nafter the election with a money j    This type of education is for\nbylaw as only the landowners\ncould vote on it,\"  Mrs. Brad-\nor property owners?\nPRINCIPAL SPEAKS\nG. H,' Lea, principal of L. V.\nRogers High School addressed\nthe board on the basic reasons\nfor a community or regional college in the Kootenays.\nHe said the universal concept\nol a college (which applied to\nThree School\nTrusteeships\nTo Be Filled\nCity Council met Friday to\nauthorize that the School Board\nvacancy left by George Mermet\nbe filled at the Dec. 5 municipal\nelection.\nMr. Mermet, who was transferred last summer to Penticton\nshaw said.\n\"This is not a true concept of\nwhat people think,\" she added.\nALL COULD VOTE\nMr. Hanic pointed out it was\nnot just a municipal vote but included all of the school district.\nHe also told her the plebiscite\nwas under the Public Schools\nperson of any age and with anv jllad ol,e nwe year to serv<! on\nstate of education Mr. Lee told |the board- T1,e vavancy will be\nfilled for a one-year term only.\nTwo  other  trustee  seats  for\nthe two-year term ol office are\nalso vacant.\nAn order-in-council was required so that the vacancy\ncould be filled in conjunction\nwith the mayoralty, aldermanic\nand trustee elections.\nAid. Edith Van Maarion point-\nBOXED\nBig Value! .....\nSpecial Value!\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\n.......... ^.....50 for $1.49\n21\nfor\nfor\n.79\n1.00\nSlims, Golden Accents  14\nAll With Envelopes \u2014 Many Others to Choose From\nSAMPLE'S gas\n\"Your\n6.39   Baker   St.\nPHARMACY LTD.\nFortress of Health\"\nNelson       Phone  352 2313\ntrustees.\nA community college to most\npeople is within communting distance. A prospective attendance\nfrom 500 to 1000 is needed to\nmake it practical, Mr. Lee said.\nThe college would offer two\nyear's technical .education or the\nsame period pf general educa-\ntion for a wider scope in various j^m ihe'provincial government\nfields he said. I couH  appoint \u201e  tmm for  a\nMost important would be the yeaf but comen Hmi m\nadult education courses, because\nwith more people interested in\nthe college It would be more\neasily paid for, the principal explained.\nIt would also serve fof an upgrading In courses or a high\nschool makeup program.\nMr. Lee pointed out Nelson\nWas not big enough economically\nor educationally for students fo\nhave a comprehensive college\nprogram.\nected representative would be\nmore favorable.\nTwo matters tabled at the\nspecial meeting were referred\nId the Works Utilities committee\nmeeting.\nThe matter of a full-time business manager for the Chamber\nof Commerce and authority to\nplace a store-keeper to look after all the equipment in various\ncity departments will be discussed Monday.    \u2022\nHe said here that he was ordered to \"ditch\" by the pilot,!\nFirst Lieut. Robert J. Boucher,!\n25, who was still missing. He did 1\nnot know what happened to the\nplane or pilot.\nHe raid he landed in a four-\nfoot snowbank and was not injured. He spent the night under his\nparachute and the next morning\nstamped tlie SOS in the snow\nand fired a flare and a rocket.\nHe was rercued at 10:30 a.m.\n8 Nelson Teams\nTo Trail Tourney\nL. V. Rogers, using its new\npolicy for sports teams in the\nschool, sends eight volleyball\nteams to Trail today (or the annual West Kootenay volleyball\ntournament.\nM. B. Slater, physical education instructor at the high school\nsaid Friday Nelson teams will\ncompete with Trail, Salmo and\nCastlegar teams.\nUnder the new system, L. V.\nRogers has made rep teams\nhere a thing of the past. Mr.\nSlater said this does not make\ntrophy winners a sure thing, but\nit does give participation a boost.\nHe noted that so far this season\nthe school has had about 50 per\ncent participation: last year\nthere was an average of five\nper cent participation.\nUsing the new system, Mr.\nSlater added, 74 students will\nrepresent L. V. Rogers, instead\nof just the zones who would qualify for a rep team under the\nold policy.\nHOMELITE\n\u2022 Featherweight\n\u2022 Powerful\n\u2022 New low parti prlcei.\nGET A FREE\nDEMONSTRATION TODAY I\nHomelite\nSales & Service\nPHONE 352-5225\n432 Stanley St.      Nelson,\nHelps Take the\nCravln'   Away\nKWITS\nAnti-Smoking\nChewing Gum\nSTOP SMOKING\nOnly 69c\n10 Tablets\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613        Nelson, B.C.\nYOU CAN AFFORD\nBULOVA\nEASY\nCREDIT TERMS\nDEWDR0P \"C\". Sparkling gem shaped\ncase with adjustable 3-chain bracelet. Shock-resistant 17 jewel movement. In 10 Kt yellow or while gold.\n569.95\n0EWDR0P \"A\". Classic circlet with\nflexible baguette bracelet. Shock-\nresistant 17 jewel movement. 10 Kt\nyellow or white gold. $59.95\nDEWDR0P \"E\". Dainty tricorne design with a tapered expansion-link\nbracelet. Shock-resistant 17 jewel\nmovement. In 10 Kt yellow or white\ngold. 564.95\nSee our complete selection of\nBulova watches...from $29.95\nto $2500\nMdachlan\nJewellers Ltd.\n\"BIG  ENOUGH TO SERVE\nYOU, NOT TOO BIG TO\nKNOW YOU\"\n561  Baker St.      Nelson\nPhone 352-2116\ne\nCELGAR LIMITED\nWANTED\nIMMEDIATELY\nReceptionist switchboard operator. The\nsuccessful applicant must have a high school\neducation, typing and clerical aptitude and the\nability to meet the public. This position offers\nexcellent employee benefits and working conditions with an attractive salary schedule. Apply\nin person ta Industrial Relations Department,\nColumbia Cellulose Co. Ltd., Celgar Pulp Division, Box 1000, Castlegar, B.C.\nV\n  ; -. \u2014 : ! \u2014\u2014- . .   -   i \u25a0 ;\u2014\u2014\n\"\u25a0'   \u25a0' '. *  <m \u25a0 y-**&. *\\y \u2022v\\-\"t :V' *   V'1*. '*'''\u25a0\"        \u25a0 '^f-\">.\"\" . \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0?\"\"{  ' \" \";\u25a0\u25a0'* \"    '.'-l;\";; T; \u25a0\u201e'-\"\u25a0 -''\". ''V:-V^''^}      \u25a0',''.:.\"!\n\u2014\t\na^s3;\nCranbrook Oldtimer\nTo Contest Mayoralty\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Mayor of\nCranbrook for seven years in the\n1930s, alderman for an additional 26 years, and a city freeman in acknowledgement of his\nlong service, Alfred J. Balment\nintends to oppose Mayor George\nHaddad for this office in the December municipal election, he\nhas announced.\nRemac To Pay\nRetroactive\nOvertime Pay\nThe Labor Relations Board has\nupheld a union allegation that\nsince December, 1961, Reeves\nMacDonald mining company has\nviolated contract hours of work\nprovisions with regard to overtime pay. This will affect about\n35 men who are currently on\nstrike at Remac.\nThis means that the company\nis ordered to pay an estimated\n$3500 on the basis \u25a0 that the alleged violation of contract existed for 17 months.\n\"It will be a very useful payment to the striker just now,\"\nsaid Mine, Mill western district\npresident Harvey Murphy.\nOne hundred men have been\non strike since May. It was an\nApril that the union referred the\nIssue of hours of work and overtime pay to the labor relations\nboard.\nMr. Balment is a retired railway conductor and came to\nCranbrook with construction of\nthe Crowsnest line of the CPR\nabout 1898. His reason for filing\nfor the office is in defence of\nthe 1954 city council which was\ncriticized as either \"apathetic\"\nor \"inefficient\" by the report to\nthe city council recently by two\naldermen authorized to investigate the city-television contract\nof that year. Mayor Haddad was\nalso a member of the 1954 city\ncouncil.\nThe controversial report has\napparently aroused interest of\nother citizens toward seeking\ncity office, with announcement\nby Gordon Lyons, barber, and\nFrank Spring, auto dealer, J. S.\nJohnston, insurance specialist\nand partner in Falkins Agenci.s\nLtd., they would run for aldermen, and Ed Leonard will seek\nre-election. Mrs.' W. 0. Green\nhas reached no decision whether\nshe will seek re-election, and\nJoe Ward, whose term also expires, will not contest the office.\nNominations close at 1 p.m.\nNov. 25, and election day is Dec.\n5. Mrs. Harold Lyons has been\nappointed returning officer.\nMrs. Heusion\nElected Area\nRepresentative\nBALFOUR \u2014 Mrs. J. W, Heu-\nsten was reelected school representative for Baliour at the annual school meeting Wednesday,\nThe annual report of School\nDistrict No. 7 was presented by\nW. H. Elmes, supervisor of elementary instruction; C. M. Mc-\nNown, maintenance supervisor,\nthe board of school trustees. Attending the meeting were J. S.\nLivingstone, secretary-treasurer;\nand trustee Gordon Sargent.\nPARIS (AP)-The final station in an 8,300-mile communications network linking nine\nNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization countries has been completed. Stations are in Norway.\nDenmark, West Germany,\nBritain, the Netherlands,\nFrance, Italy, Greece and Turkey.\nKimberley\nJCs Installed\nKIMBERLEY - The Kimberley Unit of the Junior Chamber\nof Commerce held an impressive\ncandlelight installation ceremony\nat Jaycee headquarters in the\nKimbrook Motor Hotel in Kimberley Wednesday.\nDistrict president Hugo Hess\nof Cranbrook installed 11 members and a director as well as a\ntreasurer and he related the purposes of Jaycees to those pres\nent. Canadianism, Fellowship and\nLeadership were stressed by\nMr. Hess.      ''\nThose being installed included\nJ. Ratcliffe, K. Roe, D. Medli\ncott, J. Richardson, N. Blaine,\nJ. Dickens, K. Griffiths, D. Mc\nClnre, B. Walsh, D. Lowe and R\nTetuch. G. College was installed\nas a director for this term and\nD. McClure officially accepted\nhis duties as treasurer.\nWorkshop for Mechanical\nTeaching Held  in Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Programmed\nlearning,  the  provocative     e-\nJCs Recruit 12,\nPlan Show For\nLocal Talent\nCRANBROOK - Recent recruiting drive by the Cranbrook\nJunior Chamber of Commerce\nbrought a dozen new members,\nwho were initiated at the first\nNovember meeting Thursday,\nwith Kootenay Regional president Hugo Hess officiating.\nMembership tally will stand at\nabout 44.\nMain project simmering in\nJaycees at present is the talent\nshow it plans to produce early\nnext year with tentative plans\nfor sponsorship of the winner to\ncompete on the Spokane television \"Starlit Stairway,\" and\nprizes for other entrants. Frank\nNeads has been named chairman for the show production.\nThe annual course in public\nspeaking is well underway, directed by Gerry Dorris, with\nseveral new members and also\nJaycettes participating in the\nweekly sessions. Jaycee president Fred Anderson was recent\nspeaker at the Jaycette meeting\nin a short course in parliamentary procedure aimed at familiarizing the group with orderly\ncarrying out of business at\nmeetings.\nchanical teaching under wide\ndiscussion through Canada and\nthe United States at present, will\nbe introduced to 30 East Kootenay teachers here in a workshop\nat Laurie' School Friday evening\nand all day today under in-service training projects of the East\nKootenay Teachers' Association.\nSteven Bahrey is chairmaa for\narrangements.\nExperts in this new field of\nmachine teaching, Bryan Vincent of Kamloops, and Miss\nNancy Peter of Burnaby, will\n(bhink Jb ihsb\nfcnxL of. (polk!\nListen to Gene Bodard speak on\ncity problems over CKLN,\n6:15 p.m. Monday\nORAL POLIO\nCLINICS\nOral Polio Vaccine Will Be\nGiven at Centres Listed Below\nm \u00abwmw m****** \u25a0\"\u25a0\u00bb '\"i m\u00bbm*\nKINSMEN HEALTH CENTRE\n503 Front Street\nMonday,    Nov.   18th,    1:30-4:00   p.m.\nTuesday, Nov. 19th,\n-1:30-4:00 p.m. \u2014 7:00-9:00 p.m.\nFriday, Nov. 22nd\n1:30-4:00 p.m. \u2014 7:30-9:30 p.m.\nNORTH SHORE HALL\nThursday,   Nov. 21st,   10:00-11:00 a.m.\nWILLOW POINT HALL\nThursday,    Nov. 21st,    2:30-4:00 p.m.\nBALFOUR\nTuesday,    Nov.   19th,    3:00-5:00  p.m.\nPROCTER\nWednesday, Nov. 20th, 3:00-5:00 p.m.\nKASLO\nFriday,   Nov. 22nd,   3:00-6:00 p.m.\nRIONDEL\nMonday,   Nov. 18th,   3:00-5:00 p.m.\nSALMO\nTuesday,  Nov.   19th\n1:30-4:30 p.m. \u2014 7:00-9:00 p.m.\nThursday,    Nov. 21st,    7:00-9:00 p.m.\nTuesday, Nov. 26th\n1:30-4:30 p.m. \u2014 7:00-9:00 p.m.\nREMAC\nMonday,   Nov. 18th,   1:00-4:00 p.m.\n\" CANADIAN EXPLORATION\nMonday, Nov. 25th\n10:00-11:00 a.m. \u2014 First Aid Station\n2:00-6:Op p.m. \u2014 School Room\nH.B. MINE\nWednesday,   Nov. 27th,   3:30-5:00 p.m.\nYMIR\nThursday,   Nov.  28lh.   2:00-6:00 p.m.\nSILVERTON \u2014 Municipal Hall\nMonday,   Nov. 18th,   2:00-5:00 p.m.\nPERRY SIDING \u2014 School\nTuesday,   Nov. 19th,   1:30-3:00 p.m.\nAPPLEDALE - School\nTuesday,   Nov. 19th,   3:30-5:30 p.m.\nSLOCAN CITY-Women's Institute Hall\nTuesday,   Nov. 19th,   6:30- 8:30 p.m.\nVALLICAN - School\nWednesday, Nov. 20th, 10:00-12:00 a.m.\nSLOCAN PARK - School\nWednesday,  Nov. 20th,   2:00-4:00 p.m.\nCRESCENT VALLEY\nWednesday,  Nov. 20th,   5:00-8:10 p.m.\nPASSMORE - School\nThursday,    Nov. 21st,    1:00-2:00 p.m.\nPASSMORE - Mill Lunch Room\nThursday,   Nov.  21st,   2:15-6:00 p.m.\nWINLAW\nThursday,   Nov. 21st,   6:30- 8:30 p.m.\nROSEBERY - Store\nFriday,   Nov. 22nd,   10:00-11:00 a.m.\nHILLS - Post Office\nFriday,   Nov. 22nd,   11:30-12:30 a.m.\nNEW DENVER - Health Centre\nFriday,   Nov. 22nd,   1:30- 8:00 p.m.\nEAST ARROW PARK\nTuesday,   Nov. 19th,   3:00- 4:00 p.m.\nWEST ARROW PARK\nTuesday,   Nov. 19th,   6:00-8:00 p.m.\nBURTON\nWednesday,   Nov. 20th,   7:00-9:00 p.m.\nFAUQUIER\nThursday,   Nov. 21st,   2:00- 4:00 p.m.\nNEEDLES\nThursday,   Nov.  21st,   7:00-9:00  p.m.\nNAKUSP\nFriday, Nov. 22nd\n2:00-5:00 p.m. \u2014 7:00-9:00 p.m.\nEDGEWOOD\nMonday, Nov. 25th\n2:00-4:00 p.m. \u2014 7:00-9:00 p.m.\nconduct the two-day workshop\noutlining the method and demonstrating the machines, largely\nvisual, for pupils in flashing\nquestions, and after an interval\nsupplying proper answers.\nThe 30 enrolled teachers from\nall parts of East Kootenay will\nthen prepare suitable programs\nin the special areas of study over\nthe next three weeks, and reassemble here Dec. 6 and 7 with\nthe same experts for evaluation\nof their findings in the interval\namong themselves and by the\nexperts.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: SOe line, 40c line bold lace type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nMary Maxim Wools\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\nDiamonds, Watches. Gifts,\nRepairs, Engraving\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\nChristmas Portraits\nOur Studio Special.\nVOGUE  STUDIO\nRedeemer Tea and Bazaar.\nParish Hall. Monday, Nov. 18th,\n2 - 5 p.m.\nCoco Mats, Rubber Mats and\nJute Mats for the porch.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nBake and Rummage Sale, November 16, 9 a.m. Gelinas' on\nBaker St.\nSADIE HAWKINS DANCE\nCostume prizes, refreshments.\nProcter Hall, November 23,\n9:30 p.m.\nTea and Bazaar at the Canadian\nLegion, 2:30 - 5:00 p.m. Sat.,\nNov. 16. Admission 35c. Door\nprize. Everyone welcome.\nSalvation Army Home League\nTea and Sale\nSaturday, November 16\n2:00 - 4:00 p.m.\nAttention Mothers. Free draw on\ntable lamp when family allowance cheque is cashed at\nMcLeods Ltd., Nelson.\n2 APTS. FOR RENT. SELF-\ncontained, heated. Not suitable\nfor children. $50 month. Apply\nTremain's, ph. 352-5636.\nGet yourself a folding clothes-\nhorse or ceiling dryer for easy\nclothes drying in the wet\nweather.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nKaslo School\nArea Trustees\nAppointed\nKASLO \u2014 The Kaslo school\nboard held its annual series of\nmeetings in the valley to\nacquaint the ratepayers with the\nyear's business and have new\nrepresentatives appointed where\nnecessary. Mrs. Bracconier, is\nthe new Jewett school representative. Steve Sawczuik was\nreturned as trustee.\nAt the Jewett meeting, a good\ncrowd was in attendance. Mrs\nSaalfeld spoke on the provincial\ntrustees convention. She also\nmentioned that the resolution\nput forward by the Kaslo Board\nre boarding allowances for students from outlying areas while\nattending university had been\naccepted and would be presented to the government.\nMr. Nugter presented the\nfinancial statement and explained the year's business.\nMr. Wright, the school superintendent, spoke on vocational\nschool courses.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963 \u2014 3\nKOKANEE CHAPTER I.O.D.E,\nRegular monthly meeting at the\nhome of Mrs. A. A. Taylor, 207\nHigh Street, Tuesday, Nov. 19th,\n2:30 p.m.\nSTUCK FOR A GIFT?\nWe have an excellent range of\nGift Items but if you are still\nstuck, give one of our well designed Gift Certificates for the\namount that suits your purse.\nBLAKEMAN'S\nCARD OF THANKS\nJobs Daughters and their\nGuardian Counsel would like to\nthank the Civic Center staff for\ntheir co-operation and supervision of the Hallowe'en Party\nand Dance. Thanks also to the\nmerchants who so willingly contributed prizes which added to\nthe success of this annual event.\nWinter Whist\nGames Begin\nAt Balfour\nBALFOUR \u2014 The winter series\nof whist parties, sponsored by\nthe Guild to St. Michael and all\nAngels Church, drew a large\ncrowd at the initial game Wednesday.\nScores will be kept and a final\ngrand prize awarded at the end\nof the season.\nHigh scores were held by Mrs.\nP. Peterson and J. Brown. Consolation went to Mrs. E. Pickard\nand J. Walden. Travelling prizes\nwere won hy Mrs. E. Noakes and\nJack Wellwood, hidden score\nprize to Mrs. O. Krane.\nHostesses for the event, held\nin the Balfour Hall, were Mrs. B.\nRinguis, Mrs. J. Walden, Mrs,\nE. Pickard and Mrs. W. Nelson.\nCreston To Vote\nOn Incorporation\nOf 130 Acres\nCRESTON \u2014 Creston citizens\nwill vote on whether to accept\nor reject the application for the\ninclusion of 130 acres of land\ncontained in the Truscott and\npart of McKay sub-divisions\nwithin the present town limits,\nat the civic elections December\n5.\nThree petitions bearing names\nof 101 landowners, 66 of them in\nfavor of annexation and 35\nagainst, were presented to the\ncouncil.\nThe area contains 130 permanent residences and 500 building\nsites. The cost of installing a\nsewer system in the area is estimated between $45,000 and $50,-\n000. The area is assessed for\n$500,000 and revenues would\nshow $10,000 from taxation, $8400\nfrom government grants and\n$1800 from sewerage rentals for\na total of $20,200 annually. In\npresenting the vote to Creston\ncitizens December 5, commissioners warned if the vote went\naffirmative, implementation of\ncivic services to tlie area would\nbe provided as revenue is collected. The area is in the Truscott\nand McKay sub-division along\nthe back road and then due north\nto come out at approximately the\n11\/2 Million\nPersons Over\nPass Since April\nREVELSTOKE (CPI - Almost 1,400,000 persons have travelled the Rogers Pass route since\nApril 1, it was announced Thursday. The park superintendent's\noffice said 226,894 cars carrying\n689,478 passengers entered the\nMount Revelstoke and Glacier\nnational parks through the east\ngate while another 228,495 cars\nwith 705,305 passengers entered\nthrough the west gate.\nBrae 'n' Brae Motel on the highway.\nCreston had Its worst year\nin   building   permits,   with   a\ntotal  to date of $156,537.  Of\nthis amount $37,136 was oassed\nlast week.\nJohn DeYoung gave a prelim-\ninary estimate of building of two\nfive-acre sewerage lagoons on the\nflats below Creston.\nIf the Libby and Duncan dams\nare not built, the cost would be\n$36,600. If the two dams are constructed the cost would be lowered to $22,000. The committee\nrecommended the building of the\ntwo lagoons be postponed until\ntlie two dams are constructed.\nCommissioner Marling told the\ncouncil petitions for a milk control board had been re-submitted\nto farmers and it was alleged\nthat enough names were secured\nwitli every possibility the milk\nboard control would go into effect in the near future.\nThe Milk Control Board wrote\nthe council they had no jurisdiction in setting boundaries for any\ndefinite area as such is done by\ngovernment legislation.\nThe council will send four delegates to the Kimberley Safety\nCouncil clinic next April.\nThe Cranbrook City Council\nasked if Creston was offering\nJurther protest to keep the CPR\npassenger service operating in\nthis area. The council stated\nthey were not opposed to the CPR\ntaking off the service and had\nnotified the Board of Transport\nto this effect.\nFollowing a meeting of outside\narea representatives on fire protection commission, along with\nprovincial authorities and the\nshowing of a film. Commissioner\nMarling stated a delegation would\nmeet shortly with the Commission on the matter. It was his\nopinion most people were in\nfavor of this protection.\nWE URGE EVERYONE TO ATTEND THE CLINIC NEAREST YOU\nOliver's\nBOOKS AND NEWS\n398 Baker St.               Nelson, B.C.\nLYONS SHOE STORE\nPhone 352-2814\n411  Baker St.               Nelson\nMann Drugs Ltd.\nDRUGS - BOOKS - STATIONERY\nNelson, B.C.\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON PHARMACY LTD.\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\n639 Baker St.               Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-2313\nNelson, B.C.\nHIPPERSON HDWRE.\nCOMPANY LTD.\n395 Baker St.               Nelson\nNELSON\nELECTRIC\nAuthorized General Electric Dealer\n574 Baker St. - Nelson - Ph. 352-5535\nLfEE J Ladles' Apparel\nTHE FASHION CENTRE\n535 Baker St.            Phone 352-2955\nRobertson, Hilliard,\n^Hp* Realty Co., Ltd.\n456 Ward St.    Ph. 352-7252\nEMPIRE\nDRY CLEANERS\nDRY CLEANING - DYEING\n321 Baker St.            Phone 352-3030\nMAYO\nPharmacy Ltd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPhone 352-2613              Nelson, B.C.\nRenwick's\nPORTRAIT STUDIOS\n577 Ward St.              Phone 352-5454\nRecreation\nHead Resigns\nTRAIL \u2014 The Trail-Tadanac\nParks and Recreation Commission announced Thursday the resignation of assistant superintendent Ray Gould.\nMr. Gould will be leaving Trail\nDec. 31 but said he was not at\nliberty to disclose details of his\nnew assignment.\nParks commission chairman\nR. K. Campbell said the board\nhad received Mr. Gould's resignation \"with regret\".\n\"Mr. Gould has been a valued\nemployee of the commission for\nthe past four years,\" said Mr.\nCampbell, \"and was with the\nTrail Athletic Association for\nsome six years before that.\"\nThe chairman said immediate\nsteps were to be taken to obtain\na replacement.\nMr. Gould has been closely\nidentified in Trail and district\nwith the development of athletics and is noted for his work\nin bringing local recreational arrangements to their present high\nstandards.\n14 Creston\nLions Honored\nFor Attendance\nCRESTON \u2014 Fourteen Lions\nClub members were awarded\nperfect attendance pins at the\nlast meeting of the club, which\nfeatured the visit of Roger Stephenson, zone chairman, and\nHarold Simms, past president of\nthe Bonners Ferry club.\nThose receiving pins presented\nby Mr. Stephenson were Archie\nGray, V. Mosher, R. McL. Cooper, F. Martello, A. Price, E. A.\nNicholson. J. DeYoung, T. Ric-\nketts, G. Sinclair, R. Hood, Rev.\nD. Holt, H. LeMoigne, T. Gautier\nand M. Murphy.\nM. Stephenson discussed Lion-\nism membership and the program for the mid-year conference in Prince George this year.\nLion Herb Dodd, member of\nthe Lion centennial project committee, asked the club members\nfor suggestions which would be\nrecommended to the over-all\ncentennial committee.\nE. Salvador, chairman of the\nproject committee, ielt his first\nimpression relative to a senior\ncitizens project was a home\nwith care, the latter to be\nlooked after by a matron in\npreference lo a low-rental\nhousing project. He will Investigate iurther.\nNELSON, B.C.\nExtends an Invitation To Their\nOPEN HOUSE\nMONDAY - NOV. 18\n9 a.m. to 12 noon\nOFF\nEvery bit of merchandise you buy in our\nstore during this gala open house.\ns-i\n *T* 1 ( -\u2014-\n\u2022   i[- \u25a0.,.-J\"-4\n\u25a0\"777\nPi\nPWpPPPippip\nlelsmt Sailg Nnua    ReP\u00b0rt From the Vqticqn\nEstablished April 22   1002 Nelson. B C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bake. Street, Nelson. British Columbia, mornings except\nSunduys and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe larqesl dully circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nauthorized as Second Class Mail, r'ost Otlice Department- Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF  THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusive!, entitled to the use for icpublication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters to this\npaper and also the local news published 'herein.\nSaturday, November 16, 1963\nA Case With Far-Reaching Implications\nThe Canadian and American\nheads ol the SIU seek an injunction\nin the Canadian courts to halt application of the trusteeship ol the SIU,\nwhile the legislation establishing it\nis attacked in the courts as unconstitutional and a contravention of\nCanadian Bill of Rights.\nThis promises to be a constitutional case of exceptional importance and the result should be of\nconsiderable interest since there is\nno clear conception of the Canadian\nphilosophy in such matters.\nThis is not  the  case  with the\n'Americans and the British. According to Life's World Library the most\nsignificant difference between the\n\"unwritten\" British Constitution and\nthe written U.S. Constitution is not\n: a;matter of form but of philosophy.\n; The  British  Constitution  embodies\n. the  proposition  that  the  supreme\n' authority must be concentrated at\none: point in government if public\n\u25a0 power is to be effectively exercised.\nThis supreme authority  was once\n' tne monarchy; now it is the \"Queen\nin Parliament.\" The U.S. Constitution\nis based on the principle that the\nsupreme authority must never be\nplaced at any single point if public\n., 'JJpwer is to be sctiely exercised. This\ngives rise to the lamiliar American\nseparation of powers between the\nexecutive, legislative and judicial\nbranches. In the U.S. none of these\ntjiree is supreme over the others,\nfylt jn Britain the Parliament stands\nsupifeme over all other public entities.\nFrom this supremacy flows the\nlact \u2014 remarkable to Americans \u2014\nthat the British courts have no power\nwhatever to review, modify or strike\ndown Acts of Parliament. In theory\nBritish judges may not even \"interpret\" parliamentary law in the\nAmerican sense of making a law\nmean what the judges think it means.\nParliament on the other hand, is\nfree in principle to amend or strike\ndown any part of the common law\ndeclared by judges in the course\nof deciding particular cases. If Parliament chose to abolish the whole\nsystem of British courts the judges\nwould be constitutionally bound to\naccept the result.\nThis is an American view of the\nBritish system which stresses the\nundoubted fact that the British regard Parliament as supreme. It is,\nin fact, the court of last resort, as\nits name, the High Court of Parliament, seldom used today, suggests.\nIt contrasts strongly with the American procedure where the Supreme\nCourt passes judgment on bills and\ninterprets the law as it sees it.\nThere is no such clear-cut Canadian philosophy and the matter is\nfurther complicated by the questions\nwhich may arise of provincial and\nfederal jurisdiction in such matters.\nMr. Bennett's expropriation of the\nBCE, it will be recalled, was declared invalid because of the fact\nthat the company exported power.\nSomething of the same kind may be\na factor in the success of an application for an Injunction, but in\nessence the application is an attempt\nto upset the law. It will be surprising if Parliament will tolerate this.\nComic Showdown\nBrazil has just announced that    service to join and the most \"worth-\nafter next January newspapers carrying comics will be required to\ncontain a fixed percentage of made-\nin-Brazil strips. Its \"nationalization\"\nof the funnies will require 30% Brazilian-created comics in 1964, 40%\nby 1965 and 60% by 1966.\nThe objectives of this move to cut\ndown on strips of foreign origin \u2014\nmostly American \u2014 are defined as\neducational and cultural.\nFar-fetched? Not necessarily.\nNote this remarkable information\nfrom the Pentagon in Washington.\nThe in-fighting between the U.S.\nnavy, army and air force for appropriations is nothing, it seems, compared lo the battle over the comic\nstrips.\nOver-anxious about their Impact\n: on the public, each of the three services offers everything short of mili-\n' tary secrets and financial aid to the\nI authors of the comic that presents\nit to the public as the most exciting\nJust One?\nThe founder and sole member of\nthe Victoria, B.C., kayak club says\nshe feels a little lonely sometimes.\nWhy? Far from being undesirable, one-member clubs should have\nnumerous advantages. They mean,\nfor one thing, the end of the search\nfor a club mirroring one's precise\ninterests.\nWrangles over dues, the merits\nof Ihe recording secretary, and suitability of prospective members are\n\" hOn-existent. The solo member merely pays what she can afford. Since\nthe money goes out of one pocket\ninto the other, this causes no financial hardship at all. As for the recording secretary, one who acts as\n- his-,own always does a superlative\njob. Blackballing? One may administer the occasional reprimand but\nbarred from the club? Never.\n-Loneliness shouldn't be a serious\nproblem. After all, most people join\nregular clubs to be wilh people they\nalready know anyway.\nwhile.\"\nGenerals of the U.S. air force are\nexultant. Their strip, Steve Canyon,\nAir Force Colonel, is away out in\nfront as the public favorite. Indeed,\nSteve usually takes the. official air\nforce view of the Cuban invasion,\nargues ior bigger air force appropriations and in other ways \"helps.\"\nBut then he's talking away against\na backdrop of accurate drawings of\nthe latest air force weapons and\nmissiles.\nAdmirals of the U.S. navy are\nmore or less satisfied. Their comic\nrepresentative, Buzz Sawyer, is running ahead of the Marines' Major\nDan Flagg.\nBut the brass of the \\y.S. army\n13 stomping up and down Inyrage.\nThey have inherited, unwillingly, a\nreally comic leftover from wartime\n\u2014 Beetle Bailey. Since the army is\nobviously no laughing matter, the\nU.S. Army's Office of Information\nhas told cartoonists it can guarantee\na wide circulation for a dashing new\nhero.\nWho says the comics aren't funny\nany more?\u2014Financial Post.\n(This is another in a series\nof letters from Most Rev. W. E.\nDoyle, Bishop of Nelson, who\nperiodically forwards reports to\nNelson on the Ecumenical Council being held at the Vatican in\nRome. I\nVia Latina 22.\n5 November, 1963.\nThe Council was in recess from\nthe session on October 3lst until\nit reconvened today, Nov. 5th.\nThe feasts of All Saints and All\nSouls are official holidays and\nthere are no sessions on Satur-\nBishops\nSeek Papal\nDecision\nBy BENNET M. BOLTON\nVATICAN CITY (AP) \u2014\nSources at the Vatican ecumenical council say 10 cardinals and\nmore than 300 bishops have petitioned Pope Paul to spell out\nhow he wants bishops to share\nwith him in the central government of the Roman Catholic\nChurch.\nThe petition was reported to\nhave been presented to the ecumenical council's moderators,\nwho are personal representatives of the Pope, in an effort\nto settle a major dispute in the\nassembly.\nThe petitioners want the pontiff to explain references to papal-episcopal power and reform\nof the Vatican curia in two September speeches.\nDisposition of the petition is\nup to the four moderators. They\ncan put it before all 2,300 council fathers for a vote, pass it\ndirectly to the Pope or turn it\nover to a special commission for\nstudy and amending. If the latter is done, afterward it would\ngo direct to the Pope or the\ncouncil for a vote.\nIn a Sept. 21 address to the\nVatican curia Pope Paul called\nfor reform of that central body\nof church administrators. He\nsaid he felt sure the curia would\nnot object if the ecumenical\ncouncil should desire to see diocesan bishops \u2014 from outside\nRome\u2014\"associated in a certain\nway and for certain questions in\nthe study and responsibility of\necclesiastical government\" with\nthe pontiff.\nIn his Sept. 29 discourse opening the council's second session,\nthe Pope said the council would\nprovide doctrinal and practical\nstandards for giving him \"more\nhelp and support, in ways to be\ndetermined\" for greater collaboration with his bishops.\nIn neither speech did the Pope\ngo into specific details.\nDuring recent weeks of council debate on the powers of bishops\u2014as outlined in the theological schema \"de ecclesia\" and\nin the practical schema \"bishops and diocesan government,\"\nnow before the council\u2014sharp\ndivisions have emerged on how\nbishops are to share papal authority and even whether they\nshould share it.\nIn test votes two weeks ago\nthe council, by a 6-to-l margin,\nshowed it overwhelmingly fav-\nored the \"collegial\" or sharing\nconcept. But conservative prelates have continued to argue\nagainst it.\nSources said the petition\nhanded to the council moderators carried signatures from\nmany regions, particularly\nLatin America, Africa, India,\nCanada and central Europe.\nTwo municipal studies will be\nheld in the Nelson Zone this\ntraining year. The first will be at\nKimberley and the second at\nTrail. The aim of these studies\nis to point to the need for organization and planning.\nday or Sunday. Yesterday on the\nfeast of St. Charles Borromeo\nthe anniversary of Pope John's\ncoronation was held. There was\nalso the 400th anniversary of the\nestablishment of seminaries by\nthe Council of Trent. It was St.\nCharles Borromeo, Archbishop ol\nMilan, who first established a\nseminary which the Council of\nTrent required.\n\u00bb   *   *\nThe booths for simultaneous\ntranslation at the Council have\nbeen in place, and last Thursday\nthey were testing the equipment.\nNo date for its general use has\nbeen announced. Actually it is\nnot simultaneous translation, but\nsimultaneous reading. The\nspeech to be delivered is handed\nin before delivery, and is translated into the five languages \u2014\nGerman, French, Spanish, English and Arabic. Then while the\nspeaker reads his in Latin, the\nvarious translations are read\nfrom the booths. Anyone can\ntune in to the language he wishes by a small transistor radio.\nAt least that is tlie way it has\nbeen explained unofficially.\nLast week at one of the lectures I was speaking to a priest\nwho is an Apostolic Prelate in\nSouth Africa. That means that\nhe has a Missionary territory to\ndirect, but the area has not been\nerected into a diocese. He has\nthe authority and responsibility\nof a bishop, but is not consecrated. He turned out to be a priest\nfrom Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. \u201e\nRather he was born there and\nthe family moved to Portland,\nOregon, where he joined the Ser-\nvite Fathers.\nThere is a rumor that the\nschemata on the Liturgy may be\ngiven final approval during this\nSession, so that it can be put into\npractice without waiting for all\nthe other matters to be finalized.\nThere will be only slight changes\nin the form of the Mass, such\nas the priest facing the people\nup to the sermon, and saying\nthe rest of the Mass at the altar.\nThe Council only approves the\nchanges in principle, leaving it\nto the Conference of Bishops in\neach country or area (West\nAfrica, etc.) to decide just what\namount of vernacular, at what\ntimes concelebration may be\nused, or Communion given under\nboth species, etc. Already the\nproblem of differences in the\nvernacular is being studied.\n\u2022  \u2022  *\nArchbishop O'Neill of Regina,\nwho is head of the Commission\non the Liturgy for English\nspeaking Canada, has been\nmeeting with other bishops from\nEngland, U.S.A., Australia, etc.,\nto discuss a common version of\nEnglish for the Mass, and a\ncommon translation of the Bible.\nThe great advantage of the\nLatin was precisely in this matter, that it was in use in all\ncountries.\nAt the same time there are\nproposals for the breviary in\nEnglish, with considerable\nchanges in the hours, and the\nform of the office, ft is likely to\nbe some time before they come\ninto effect.\nStrong Indonesia Not\nUsing Its Potential\nWallenda To\nMarry Nurse\nDETROIT (AP) - Crippled\nMario Wallenda of the famed\nFlying Wallenda circus troupe\nand the nurse who helped him\nthrough his disaster last year\nare going to be married.\nPretty Linda Croninger, 24,\nnurse at suburban Highland\nPark General Hospital, confirmed Thursday she and Wallenda, 24, plan to be wed within\nthe next few weeks.\nTheir romance goes back to\nJanuary, 1962, when Wallenda\nsuffered paralysing injuries and\ntwo colleagues were killed when\nthe Wallendas' \"human pyramid\" high-wire act collapsed at\na Shrine Circus at the Detroit\nFairgrounds Coliseum.\nMario, paralysed from the\nwaist down, now is in Sarasota,\nFla., having rejoined his circus\nfamily after a long hospital stay\nin Detroit.\nHUBERT\nTravelling, Barber\nDon Ciccio, the Italian barber\nwho hops into your car on the\nNaples-Rome highway and cuts your\nhair while you cover your next six\nand a-half miles, sounds like the\npoor man's answer to America's\ndrive-in emporiums. What happens\nthough if all interested customers\ndrive in the same direction, removing him more and more from his\nroadside launching pad instead of\nreturning him to it? And who will be\nto blame if, tickled by hair clippings,\nthe maddened motorist pulls up\nsharply, causing fhe barber to sever\nan artery or two? Don Ciccio had\nbetter take legal advice before\nbranching out into shavlng-while-\nyou drive.\u2014Punch.\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nJAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)-\nExpensive monuments dot Jakarta and even more expensive\nones are on the way. And millions ot Indonesians, in the\nmidst of natural riches, are hungry. They are going to get\nhungrier as the crisis involving\ncreation of Malaysia gets\ndeeper.\nWesterners look with astonishment at this nation of islands\nwhose 100,000,000 people represent great potential power in\nSoutheast Asia. They wonder\nwhat keeps the country's economy from complete chaos,\nThey use words like \"dangerous\" and \"critical,\" but the\neconomy somehow staggers\nalong.\nForeign Minister Subandrio\nsays Indonesia must build national character based on \"an\nideological identity.\"\n\"Indonesia will not collapse\ndespite the fact that our economy does not get first priority,\" he told this correspondent.\nPerhaps the building of \"national character\" explains all\nthe monuments. One vast area\nwill become a park dominated\nby a structure something like\nthe Washington monument.\nThere are monuments to the\n\"new emerging forces.\" There\nare monuments to the Indonesian revolution. New government\nbuildings go up where the old\nones would have served. Jakarta is building the biggest\nMoslem mosque in the world.\nThere is a huge Soviet-built\nsports stadium.\nCLOSE TO STARVING\nWhile all this is going on, peo\nple In rice - deficient areas are\nliving perilously close to starvation level.\nPresident Sukarno, 63, spry\nand merry, seems happily content to let matters take their\nown course. He appears to be a\nman without a worry in the\nworld.\nBut Sukarno needs an outside\nthreat, and the Malaysia issue\nis convenient.\nAfter years of clamor, Indonesia got West Irian \u2014 Dutch\nNew Guinea. Having \"liberated\" the non-Indonesian Papuans there, the Indonesian regime pictures it as satisfaction\nof the last territorial claim. But\nWest Irian, too, was a convenient issue which appealed to\nIndonesian patriotism, whipped\nup anti-foreign fervor, and took\nminds off economic woes.\nNow the regime has a new\nissue\u2014Malayasia. Indonesia denies Malaysia is the will of the\npeople of Sarawak and North\nBorneo. They call it a trick of\nBritish imperialism and Tunku\nAbdul Rahman, Malaysia's\nprime minister, a tool of imperialists.\nIf British troops are on the\nBorneo border, then Indonesian\ntroops will concentrate there.\nAdmittedly, says Subandrio, this\nis a dangerous situation.\nMALAYSIA A THREAT?\nMalaysia, to hear the Indonesian regime tell it, is a threat\nto Indonesia. Malaysia has 10,-\n000,000 people.\nPatriotic lervor is being whipped up in a violent hate-Malaysia campaign. But patriotic fervor is not edible.\nInflation is violent. There are\nno indications it is levelling off.\nYour Individual\nHoroscope\n__ By Frances Drake *__\ni-jum-uaA--,\n\"Apparently I said something about her mother\nthat she'd been, trying, to keep quiet.\"\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Sunday, November 17, 1963\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 It may seem somewhat difficult to keep matters in\nline now but there is ample\nroom for the diligent and knowing worker to succeed. Big\ngrowth potential.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Consider past week's trials,\nreturns, offerings, its whole picture. Start thinking about next\nweek's schedule before it is\nupon you or you may get off on\nthe wrong foot. But first. TODAY'S matters!\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 You may lose a little here,\ngain some there, but the overall picture is one of advancement. Planetary influences stimulate ingenuity, alert moves,\nquick thinking.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 You should, probably will, under favorable Moon rays, give\na good accounting of yourself\nnow. Have hope, put forth best\nefforts, new ideas of value.\nEven the smallest could produce fine results.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Roll up the merits \u2014 so many\noffered you now! And don't\nmake the mistake of looking\ndown on \"little\" gains. All add\nup to the total picture of success .\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 You may run into\nunexpected opposition, some\nrough areas. Be ready, take all\nwith your innate common sense,\nand try all the harder to\nachieve worthwhile objectives.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 A noteworthy day\ncan be yours for the making\nand the taking. Don't miss those\ngood \"little\" things along the\nroute. And DO give others a\n\"Kit\" by being your usual\ncheery self.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (ScorpioI \u2014 You do not wish\nto argue, have foolish disagreements \u2014 so don't! It takes two\nto make a quarrel. This will be\na day in which to avoid emotionalism, temperament.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEM\nBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Enterprise, resourcelulness and initiative should spark this day\nand give you new zest lor making nei:t week's plans. Travel,\neducation, domestic interests\nfavored.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Give all matters full and complete consideration. There is a tendency now\nto rush things through to get at\nsomething else. Let past experience guide you.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Some situations will be more understandable than others, but all may be\nequally vital. Expect contradictions, obstacles, and you will\nbe able to handle them more\neasily.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Tentatively reject\nuncertainties \u2014 until you have\nmore facts and a better guarantee of success. Monday's influences will be more generous\nalong this line.\nYOU BORN TODAY are noted\nfor your adaptability, strength of\nwill, desire to live in harmony\nand pride in your work. You can\nhurdle obstacles with extraordinary aplomb; can work wonders with a word of praise; love\nto assist charitable, children's\ngroups. Many fields of endeavor\nare open to you because of your\nversatility and willingness to\nstrive. You make friends from\nall walks of life and do not like\nsnobbery; you see through affectation and insincerity, but\nmay be fooled in some undertakings through over-enthusiasm. Maintain self-control, poise\nand your innate good humor to\nreach the high-level' of attainment you can. Birthdate of: Geo.\nGrote, historian of Greece.\nGaglardi Argues\nReligion, Politics\nVICTORIA (CP) - Highways\nMinister Gaglardi found himself\nat odds with a University of\nVictoria philosophy professor\nThursday when he argued that\npolitics and religion are compatible.\nMr. Gaglardi and Prof. John\nDelucca were members of a\npanel on the subject at the\nuniversity.\nThe professor said the \"rational standards of judgment upon\nwhich politics should be based\ncannot be maintained when religion enlers the arena of politics.\"\nRetorted Mr. Gaglardi, an ordained Pentecostal Assemblies\nminister: \"The greatest advocate of democracy is Christianity. It is not the legislature\nwhich has established our freedom but the ministry of the\nChurch.\"\nRev. J. L. W. McLean, a city\nalderman, agreed that Christian\nprinciples should extend into\npublic life but didn't think ministers of the gospel should enter\nparty politics.\n\"Only a ball of fire like Mr.\nGaglardi can handle the duties\nof both,\" he said.\nThe fourth panelist, editor\nBrian Tobin of The Times, felt\nany attempt to mix religion and\npolitics ends disastrously.\nPOPE   AIDS  VICTIMS\nTOKYO (Reuters)\u2014The for-\neigh ministry has announced\nreceipt of $5,000 from Pope\nPaul for the victims of last Saturday's coal mine disaster in\nKyushu, southern Japan, and\nthe triple train crash near\nTokyo. More than 600 persons\nwere killed in the two disasters.\nThe rupiah's legal rate is 45 to\nthe dollar. The black market\nrate has soared to 1,140 to the\ndollar.\nAs part of the anti-Malaysia\ncampaign Singapore, hub of Indonesian trade, is wholly cut off\nexcept for illegal operations.\nSmallholder rubber planters are\nseverely squeezed. Indonesia's\ntin once was processed in Penang, close by. It has a long\nway to go now, with Malaysia\ncut off. fndonesian pepper, coffee, tea and cocoa went to nearby Singapore. Only illegal trade\nslips through now.\nThe official Indonesian line\nseems to be to ignore the effects and prospective effects of\nthe Malaysia crisis, but Indonesia is in no position to revamp\nher trade patterns swiftly. Her\nbalance of payments and foreign exchange reserves are in\nextremely bad shape. She will\nhave to cut imports, and import\nduties were an important source\nof government revenue.\nB.C. Wants Same\nDeal  as Quebec\nTORONTO (CP)-University\nof Toronto student leaders are\nplanning a massive demonstration at the Ontario legislature\nNov. 22 to urge support for\nspecial concessions for Quebec\nat the federal-provincial conference later this month.\nS t u d e n t s' Administrative\nCouncil President Doug Ward,\n25, said Thursday night he\nexpects campus - wide support\nfrom the 15,000 students in\nasking Premier John Robarts to\nback such concessions at the\nconference opening in Ottawa\nNov. 25.\nMr. Ward said a brief would\nbe presented to Premier Robarts asking that:\n\"The Ontario government in\nthe coming . . . conference\nfirstly will think of the welfare\nof Canada and secondly will\nmaintain an understanding and\nflexible attitude towards the\nproblems which will confront\nthe conference.\"\nBritish Columbia Premier W.\nA. C. Bennett has indicated that\nif Quebec is given any special\nconsiderations he will demand\nthe same ones for B.C., the\ncouncil president said.\n\"We want the demands of\nQuebec to be met with the\nfuture of our bi-national country in mind,\" Mr. Ward said,\n\"and we hope the other provinces will appreciate Quebec's\nunique position.\"\nlllllllllllllllllllHlllHllllliillliillir.\nHis and Hers\nBathtubs      \u25a0\nLure Britons\nLONDON (AP) - To th*\njoys of the double bed, a    .\nBritish manufacturer Friday\nadded the double bath.\nIt comes in side-by-side\nor toe-to-toe versions and is\ncalled the forum bath. It\ncosts \u00a3250 ($750).\nApart from room for two,\nit has gold-plated fittings, a\ntray for drinks and remote\ncontrol faucets to obviate\nfiddling with the toe.\n\"Frankly e r o t i c,\" the\nsalesman at the London\nBuilding Exhibition called\nit. He said four have been\nsold but wouldn't say to\nwhom.\n111m111m111111111m11111111iMi1111.il\nRomney Bill Dies\nIn Legislature\nLANSING, Mich. (API-Michigan Governor George Romney,\nwho had made state fiscal\nreform his No. 1 objective, saw\nhis $306,000,000 program for tan\nrevision die in the legislature\nThursday night.\nMany of Romney's fellow\nRepublicans voted against his\nprogram, even though Romney\nsaid the future of the party in\nMichigan was tied to the program he had called \"jobs and\njustice.\"\nAfter a test vote in which the\nRomney program lost, the special fiscal reform legislative\nsession adjourned without even\ngiving his program a vote on\nits merits.\nThe decision could cast a\ncloud over the political future\nof Romney, often mentioned as\na possible Republican presidential nominee.\nRepublicans control the Michigan legislature. The House of\nRepresentatives has 58 Repub~\nlicans and 52 Democrats, the\nSenate 2 Republicans and U\nDemocrats.\nRomney, an industrialist who\ngave up the presidency of\nAmerican Motors Corporation\nto run for governor in 1962, has\nsaid repeatedly he is not a\nRepublican presidential nomination.\nSixteen Republicans were\nwith the majority in the 47-to-41\nshowdown vote on an amend-'\nment aiming to tie together\nRomney's major tax reform!'\nproposals\u2014a two-per cent state\nincome tax, .repeal of some\nbusiness taxes, and streamlining of property assessments.\nMORE WELCOMED\nBritain welcomed nearly\n2,000,000 visitors in 1962, an increase of 132,000 over 1961.\nF. B. Pearce Writes\nI am given to understand that\nthe rumor the CBC is considering sending a team to televise\nNelson's civic elections, is utterly and improbably false. It\nfinds it is beyond its occult powers to slow down its cameras to\nshow the reluctance of aldermanic candidates to come forward in relation to the speed\nshown by Mr. Bodard to immolate himself upon the altar of\nmayoral office.\nlt is a pity, for I could have\nprovided some parts of an interesting script. I would, for example have Alderman Maida impersonate a coy, if somewhat elderly maiden, wrapped in a\nwhite towel, gingerly extending\na toe into tlie calm and peaceful\ncivic waters to see if they are\nwarm enough.\nThe present mayor, our estimable friend Tommy Sliortliouse,\n1 would have dressed in a Roman toga, with a laurel wreath\non his brow and a scroll ol the\nMunicipal Law in llis hand. While\nAlderman Maida's speaking part\nwould be small, being merely\nrepetition of \"Oh, oh. I'm told\nit's cold,\" the mayor would\nhave a major speech Irom\nShakespeare.\n\"Friends, Romans, Countrymen. Lend me your ears. We\nccme to bury Bodard, not to\npraise him,- for who would fardels bear? To be or not to be,\nthat is the question, whether it\nis nobler in the mind to suffer\nthe pangs and sorrows of outrageous office or by resigning\nend tliem. Stand not upon tlie\norder of your going but go at\nonce. Vote as you choose but\ndo not vote tor Bodard.\"\nSo little am 1 acquainted with\ncivic affairs that I do not know\nif our fair Edith is up for reelection or not, but she would\nmake a beautiful Ophelia, with\nthe Mayor saying, \"Get thee to\na nunnery.\" But she would not.\nof course, be fitted [or the last\nscene, floating on the water\nwith flowers around her. She\nwould b eliable to get up and\nmake a speech.\nOn the other hand, that would\nbe perhaps a very good thing.\n1 have always wondered what\nOphelia thought of Hamlet.\nThe rest of the cast would be.\nas the stage directions say.\n\"Voices off\" represented by nebulous shapes saying, \"I'll think\nabout it. Oh I don't think I'm\ngood enough. Well, if you really\nthink I should.\" The nebulous\nshapes would indicate reluctance by faintly flickering forward.\nfncidental music would be supplied by the Chamber of Commerce and business men of Nelson. The theme song would be,\n\"Down among the dead men let\nus lie,\" most lugubriously performed.\nft may be objected that there\nisn't a laugh in all this, that it\nought to represent Nelson as the\ncity ot light and happiness with\na chorus of aldermen dancing\nthe can-can. This, of course, is\nso much old-fashioned nonsense.\nThe modern idea stresses realism and to be realistic in this\ncase does not involve laughter.\nFor the same reason the script\ndoes not call for a band ol\ncitizens and a torchlight parade\nescorting the new mayor home.\nThat stuff is as out of date as\nthe word enthusiasm. Instead the\nfilm ends with a fadeout of s\nfamily around the TV yawning\nheavily while father stretches\nand says, \"A pretty dull pro\ngram. What did they say the\nnew mayor's name is. Bode\nhouse?\"\nToday\nIn History\nTODAY  IN   HISTORY\nBy  THE  CANADIAN   PRESS\nNov. 16, 1963 ... i\nLouis Riel, convicted of\ntreason for the uprising by\nIndians and Metis in Saskatchewan, was hanged at\nRegina 78 years aso tahtv \u2014\nin 1885. Riel's Red River\nrebellion in 1870 had collapsed without bloodshed,\nbut the uprising in Saskatchewan was not crushed\nuntil regular troops fought\nand won a four-day battle\nagainst the Riel supporters\nat Batoche.\n1933 - The U.S. recognized the Soviet Union as\ngovernment of Russia.\n1957\u2014Fire killed 18 persons in a tenement at Niagara Falls, N.Y.\n - \u2014 r?T< TTTTT-\nWomen Hear Facts on\nCervical, Breast Cancer\ntlie Nelson branch of the B.C.\nDivision Canadian Cancer Society succeeded Thursday night\nin alerting a large number of\nwomen to the ease with which\ncancer of both the cervix and\nthe breasts may be detected.\nMore than 400 Nelson and district women attended a cancer\nforum held in the L.V. Rogers\nHigh School auditorium.\nTwo films were shown, \"Time\nand Two Women\" and \"Breast\nSelf-Examination.\" The first indicated the simple examination\nneeded to prevent spread of any\ncancer cells which may be\nsettled in the cervix and the\ntragedy resulting from putting\noff such an examination. The\nsecond film demonstrated the\nway   in   which   their   breasts\ndom? to (Eljurrt}\nUnited QHjttrrlj of Glana&a\nST PAUL'S-TRINITY\nJosephine and Silica Sts.\nSUNDAY\nMORNING\nSERVICES\n9:30 a.m.\n11:00 a.m.\nMinister:\nRev. Peter W. Faris\nFAIRVIEW\nFifth and Elwyn Sts.\n11:00 a.m.\nMorning Worship\nProcter 2nd and 4th\nSundays \u2014 2:00 p.m.\nSunday School\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Senior Dept.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Junior Dept.\n9:30 a.m.\u2014North Shore\nFamily\nService\nMinister:\nRev. J. Rae Allan\nEVANGELICAL\nCOVENANT\nCHURCH\n802 Baker St.\nInterim Pastor\nMr. I. L. Johnson\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning\nWorship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening\nService\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Men's League\nat home of\nDavid Aro\nWEDNESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer\nMeeting\nat home of\nFrank Denis\nFRIDAY:\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Trail  Blazers\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young\nPeople's\n>,    All Welcome!\n(Eljnat &tumttat\nA Branch of\nThe Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in  Boston, Mass.\nSunday School: 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service:  11 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"MORTALS AND\nIMMORTALS\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting \u2014 8:00 p.m,\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.,\nOpen Daily From\n12:30-3:00  p.m.\n\u2022Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday\nWednesday\n7:00-7:45 p.m.\nSunday Evening\n,7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nCorner of Kootenay and\nVictoria Sts.\nMinister:  E. A. Hircock\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nHoly Communion\nGuest Preacher\nDr. W. O. Nugent\nCORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL\nSt. John's\nLutheran Church\nComer Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St. Ph. 352-3882\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\nand Bible Class\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nALL  ARE   CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\ng>t. \u00a3>atmmt.'0\nfrn-QIa%bral\n(Corner Ward and Silica Sts.)\nThe Rev. T. D. Wilding\nPrlest-in-Charge\n\u25a0\/\u25a0NOV. 17,-1963\nj:(W a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n'H:00 a.m:\u2014Holy' Communion\nThe Ven. Archdeacon\n\"'\u25a0      \u2022   F. Wyatt\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong\nOlJjttrri] nf 0%\n(Anglican)\nSecond and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector:\nArchdeacon F. D. Wyatt\nPhone 352-5922\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Junior Confirmation  Class\nin Church\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Family Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong\nPreacher:\nT. D. Wilding\nNOV. 18\nFall Tea - Parish Hall\nSOUTH SLOCAN\n9:15 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nUKRAINIAN\nCATHOLIC CHURCH\nOf\nThe Sacred Heart\nof Jesus\n1209 Hall Mines Road\nMASS SCHEDULE\nFOR NOVEMBER\nSUNDAY, Nov. 17th:\nCranbrook, 10:30 a.m.\nSUNDAY, Nov. 24th:\nColeman, 10:30 a.m.\nBaptisms, Marriages,\nFunerals by Appointment\nPastor:   Rev. R. Martyniuk,\nC.Ss.R. - Phone 352-6231\nHow lovely is thy dwelling,\nO Lord \u00bbf Hosts! My soul\nlongs for fainting, it eagerly\ncovets thy courts, O Lord!\"\n(Ps. 83: 2)\nFIRST BAPTIST\nCHURCH\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nREV.   LYLE   KENNEDY\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\nWEDNESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Hour of Power\nSUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"Mercy\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"Burglar Proof\nReligion\"\nBETHEL\nTABERNACLE\n(PENTECOSTAL)\n702 Stanley St.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Radio  Broadcast\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\nWeeknight Services\nTuesday and Thursday\nREV. H. B. EGGLETON\nEVERYONE WELCOME\nTHE\nSALVATION ARMY\n513 Victoria St.\nCommanding  Officers\nCaptain and Mrs. R. A.\nNewbury\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation\nMeeting\nWEDNESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer   Meeting\nYou are never a stranger\nat the \"Army\"\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF   LATTER  DAY   SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n6  p.m.\u2014Sacrament  Meeting\nEagles Hall, 641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings Call\nBranch President, 352-6351\nshould be examined each month\nby women for early detection of\nlumps or irregularities.\nThe films and doctors forming\na panel to answer questions following the films both stressed\nthat many other abnormalities\nmay be the cause of lumps or\nirregularities and pointed out\nthat it is always better to check\nwith the doctor whether the discovery is benign or malignant,\nto avoid any chance of cancer\ngrowing undetected.\nThe doctors also stressed the\ndanger that often fear keeps patients from consulting their doctors \u2014 Time and Two Women\nindicated the way in which one\nwoman left advising her doctor\nof her condition until too late \u2014\n-he other woman showed wisdom\nin having regular complete\ncheckups, in which way the doctor was able to keep tab on\nany irregularity in cell structure\ntaken in a smear from the\nvagina.\nPrescence of cancer cells in\nthe smear specimen may lead\nlo correction of cancerous condition in the cervix before it is\nioo late lor a cure. The cancer\nol the first woman spread irom\nthe cervix to the uterus lining,\nvagina and bladder before she\nconsulted  her  physician.\nQuestions were answered by a\npanel of four doctors, Mr. David\nrioyes, associate director of diagnostic services at the cancer research laboratory in Vancouver;\nDr. M. E. Geissinger, Nelson\nsurgeon, Dr. J. C. Carpenter,\niNelson physician, and Dr. M. R.\nSmart, medical health officer\niur the Selkirk Health Unit, who\nchaired the question and answer\nQuestions asked covered a varied field of problems. Answers\nindicated that:\nAt least 50 per cent of lumps\nfound in the breast are not malignant; they may be due to granular or nodular condition of the\nbreast, which tends to increase\nwith menstrual age; fibrous condition, which should be removed,\nalthough it is innocent; a cyst,\nwhich should be removed.\nBiopsies are performed in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nPain is not a symptom in early\ncancer. Pain develops when the\ncancerous condition is advanced.\nCobalt therapy is the application of radiation to tissue which\ngrows faster (abnormal tissue)\nthan the normal. The administered dose is harmful only to\ncancerous tissue\nCandlelight Ceremony Unites\nSimpson-Bloom Wedding Couple\nCandlelight glowed softly on autumn flowers\nornamenting St. John's Lutheran Church ior the double-\nring ceremony uniting Twyla Louise Bloom, daughter\noi Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bloom, and Mr. Barrie Lyle Simpson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Percival Simpson, in marriage.\nRev. C. I. Hennig solemnized the marriage Nov. 8\nat 6:30 p.m., on the occasion of the silver wedding anniversary of the bride's parents.\nTne bride's wedding gown was\nfashioned with a wmte, nylon\nlace bodice and.floor-length skirt\ntrothing with alternate bands of\nlace and organza. Cap sleeves\nand scoop neckline were style\nitatures, and she wore elbow-\nlength gloves and carried a\nmouern cascade bouquet of golden shower baby roses and stephanotis, with green net and gold\nribbon intertwined.\nA circlet of lace and seed\npearls held her double, elbow-\nlength veil and her only jewelry\nwas a double strand of cultured\npearls, gift of the bridegroom.\nThe bride's attendants were\nMisses Dianne and Audrey Sand-\nvik, who were identically gowned in peau de soiewith matching\nsatin pumps. Their sequin-trimmed veils were held by gold circlets. Rusty bronze baby 'mums\ncomprised their colonial bouquets.\nOrganist was Mrs. R. L. Mc-\nCaig, aunt of the bride.\nSupporting the bridegroom as\nbest man was Mr. Wally Simpson, and Mr. Bob Rothery was\nusher.\nAssisting in the receiving line\nat a reception held in the patio\nlounge of Peebles Motor inn, the\nmother of the bride wore a blue\nwool ensemble trimmed with fur\nwith bronze 'mum corsage. The\nmother of the bridegroom chose\na white and teal double knit suit\nwith harmonizing accessories and\ncorsage of light bronze baby\n'mums. i\nLow table centres of fall-toned j\nchrysanthemums were arranged i\non the tables when wedding\nguests enjoyed a smorgasbord\ndinner. A toast to the bride was\nproposed by Mr. Arthur Foster.\nMrs. H. Rubbert, aunt of the\nbride, was in charge of the\nguest book. The best man read\ntelegrams.\nThe newlyweds passed a decorated basket of wedding cake\nto their wedding guests.\nFor travelling to Nevada and\nCalifornia, the bride changed\ninto a gold and white double knit\nsuit with black patent accessories. Her corsage was of\ntrenched tangerine carnations\ntied with gold ribbon.\nOn their return they will take\nup residence at 5217 Clinton\nStreet, South Burnaby, where\nthe bridegroom is employed by\nthe  B.C.   Telephone  Company. I\nAfter the departure of _he[\nnewlyweds from the reception,!\nthe guests were invited to the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Bloom on\nKokanee Street.\nOut of town guests included\nMr. and Mrs. Percival Simpson,\nMarsha, Linda and Wally of\nRichmond, B.C.; Mr. and Mrs.\nRudy Wiens of Burnaby; Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Rubbert of Vancouver; Mrs. R. L. McCaig, Mrs.\nM. C. Melhoff of Swift Current,\nSask.; Mrs. T. A. Bloom, Mr.\nand Mrs. Don Hesch, Ted, Donna\nand Kevin, all of Shaunavon,\nSask.\nMR. AND MRS. BARRIE LYLE SIMPSON\noi Burnaby.\u2014Phofo by flenwicfc Studio.\nPotluck Supper Precedes\nCWL November Meeting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963 \u2014 5\nGbouL ihji Jojlu\/l\nPhone 352-3552\nMr. and Mrs. A. V. Rowley,\n1113 Front Street, and their\ndaughters, Miss Maureen Rowley of Victoria, were honored at\na farewell party held at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nTriggs, 211 Willow Street, when\nneighborhood friends gathered to\nwish them well in their new\nhome at Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs, Rowley, who\nhave lived at 1113 Front Street\nsince their marriage, will leave\nSaturday Ior the Coast. Mrs. J.\nC. Eckmier was co-hostess. Corsages were presented to Mrs.\nRowley and Miss Rowley, and a\ngold and silver Nelson money\ntree was presented to all three\nmembers of the family.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nSt. Saviour's Mothers' Club\nmet at the Memorial Hall Thursday afternoon, with Mrs. D. Willis as tea hostess.\nThe Fourth Nelson First Baptist Cubs and Scout Mother's\nAuxiliary mel this week at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. R. W.\nHuestis,   410   Anderson   Street.\nMrs. Boudier\nHeads Invermere\nEvening WA\nINVERMERE - Mrs. Harry\nBoudier was elected as president of the Evening Branch\nWoman's Association to Christ\ni Church, Invermere, at the an-\nI nual meeting.\nI   Honorary  president  is  Mrs. j\nCarl Pearson, charter member j\nof   the  group;   Mrs.   Clarence\nDegerness is vice-president and :\nMrs. Wah Gee was re-elected j\nsecretary-treasurer. I    The  tantalizing  aroma  of albrances and congratulations on | Boyes on the occasion of their\nThe Girl's Auxiliary secretary : wide   variety   of   home-cooked j the occasion of their 25th wed-  25th   wedding   anniversary   re-\nis Mrs. William Mcintosh, with 1 fnnH \u201eru.d at (hp DOt.luck SUD.  ding anniversary, and from Rev.  cently.\nMrs. Roger Dalke and Mrs | \u00bboa serveo at me oowuck sup , D v Cul|en for work done on Mrs s Bragagnola reported\nLloyd Rodnigen as assistants, per which preceded thei Nov-1 ^ prospector subscription cam- [ that 14 members of the Cathe-\nThe Junior Auxiliary secretary ; ember meeting of the Cathedra :     jgn j drgl  parish  ^ aUende(j  th(j\nis Mrs. Gavin Rumsey and the | C.W.L.   promoted   a   spirit   \u00bb'\nSt. Martha's\nGuild Names\nNew Slate\nINVERMERE - Elected as\npresident of St. Martha's Guild\nto the Church of the Canadian\nMartyrs at Athalmer was Mrs.\nSiebolt Detmars of Windermere.\nFirst vice-president and membership convener is Mrs. Tony\nVob Neissen, and the second\nvice-president and spiritual convener is Mrs. W. D. MacDonald\nof Radium Junction. Third vice-\npresident and press representative is Mrs. E. J. Lambert.\nThe secretary is Mrs. J. K.\nChabot and the treasurer Mrs.\nRudolf Hecher,  both of  Inver-\nMain topic of discussion was the\nforthcoming father and son banquet, to be held Monday in the\nchurch hall. ',\n* *  *\nThe Naomi Group ol Fairview\nUnited Church named its new\nslate of officers at Wednesday\nnight's meeting, held at the\nhome of Mrs. Alec Koenig, 524\nSecond Street, with Mrs. E.\nWoolls and Mrs. N. E. Agnew as\ncohostesses. The executive wiil\ntake office in January. Mrs. Gordon Stewart is president; Mrs.\nAgnew, vice-president; Mrs. D.\nG. Preston, secretary; Mrs. Jim\nBoates. treasurer. Committee\nmembers are Mrs. W. C. Cur-\nran, manse committee; Mrs;\nWoolls, Mrs. D. A. Livingstone,\nphoning committee; Mrs. Gordon Webb. Mrs. R. N. Sweet,\ncatering; Mrs. R. C. Emory,\nsunshine representative.\nThe group discussed making\ndark fruit cakes for the tea and\nbazaar to be held November 30;\n* \u2666   *\nA miscellaneous shower was\nheld Wednesday night at the\nhome of Mrs. Fred Boates: on\nthe North Shore, honoring Miss\nCarol Joyce Walks, whose marriage to Gordon T. Taylor of\nYahk takes place Sunday at\nEastport, Washington. Cohoste'ss\nwas Mrs. Fred Denyer. Sixteen\nguests attended.\nA miscellaneous shower was\nheld tor the former Twyla Bloom\nprior to her marriage to Barrie\nLyle Simpson, at St. John's\nLutheran Church hall with Mrs.\nR. J. Rothery and Mrs. Carda\nSandvik as co-hostesses. The\ngifts were presented in a.hasket,\nand the guest of honor was as-\nsited in opening them by Miss\nDianne Sandvik and Miss Marilyn Rothery. St. John's Ladies'\nAid assisted with the shower.\nPink and white streamers ornamented the chair of the guest\nof honor and were arranged\naround the special shower cake.\nof\nCervical smear kits to be used, Little Helpers' secretary is Mrs.\nal, home are of no value, said\nDr, Boyes.\nBreast feeding does reduce the\ndanger of breast cancer.\nAges most susceptible to cancer altack are 37.4 years for incipient cancer and then a long\nlatent period of 15 years to 52 j and Mrs. Rumsey.\nyears of age for advanced can-1 ^^ ,*\u00a3&** de and      d    ish    \u201e.\nmembers present. Mr. Rumsey [ '\u2122ded Pnor to her departure\ntook the chair for the election ' for California, from Mr. and\nof officers. Mr*. W. H. Wilson for remem-\n, Letters were also read from | Women's Retreat held recently\nfriendliness and enthusiasm j ,he Canadian Cancer Society, in Trail and thal youth group\nthroughout the evening. j ,Ne|son  B|.ancn)  urging mem-  activities are off to a successful\nPresident Mrs,  M.  J.  Boyes; bers to take advantage of the I s(art,\nDavid Lewis.\nReports of activities for the I\n1962-63 year were read by the ]\nsecretaries. The W.A. decided to I opened  the  meeting  with   the j opportunity to attend the free\nhold a corporate communion the ! League   prayer,   and   following , film showing and forum being\nfirst Sunday of every month, j nie reading oi minutes by secre-\nThe annual Christmas party will lary Miss Mary MacDougall,\nbe held at the home of the Rev. I |e(ters of tnanks ^ere read fram j Cerebral Palsy Association ad-\nheld   at   L.   V.   Rogers   High\nSchool, and from Nelson District\nMrs. R. R. Brown for presenta-\nCancer is not hereditary, although it sometimes seems to\nrun in certain families, particularly with breast cancer, Dr.\nGeissinger pointed out.\nPatients are required to seek\nreferral to the cancer clinic\nfrom their own doctor, since the\nmedical men at the clinic are\ntrained specially for malignant\nconditions and are not. prepared\nto advise for any other condition they might find which are\nbenign, thus only cancer patients\nare received there.\nCancer ol the cervix is more\nlikely lo occur in women who\nhave had children.\nTlie way to avoid either type\nof cancer is with self-examina-\nlion n[ the breast and regular\nmedical checkups.\nvising of the forthcoming meeting.\nMrs. Boyes thanked members\nfor the parly held and presentations made to her and to Mr.\nbehind the wheel.\nNot because they were afraid\nof traffic or responsibility, mind.\nThe real reason was that they\nhad been seriously advised hy\nmedical authorities that constant\nMrs. H. G. Bentham was chair- j tapping of the toe on the ac-\nman for the program. Miss Mary I celerator would ruin the comely\nKershaw,  public  health  nurse.' shape of their legs.\nwas projectionist. I    Dragging cobwebs off the not-\nServices which included reading and writing letters, making\nappointments, and baby sitting\nfor new immigrants kept Ihe immigration committee busy, stated Mrs. Cristofanetti.\nMrs. W. H. Wilson apologized\nto members because the speaker\nwho was to be present at the\nmeeting was unable to attend\nbecause of illness and she had\nnot been able to find a substitute speaker on short notice.\nMrs. D. T. Littlewood stated\nthat membership was up to 83,\nwith the recent addition of\nseveral new members,\nMrs. T. Murphy reported that\nthere are now two helpers with\nTORONTO - It's no wonder I too-distant past of North Ameri-leds. were warned not to drive. Brownies, and that \u00bb Christmas\nthere were few women drivers can motoring. researchers for \" 'hey persist in getting in the; P\u2122gra m is be,,g P-rt\nin the early days of motoring. | the public 8Berviee division of driver's seat, the article pre- 'he group, and she also uigeri\nThey were scared  stiff to get | the Canadian branch of a British \\ dq'ed. \"ley \"wi'l soon have a\nStomping on Accelerator Bad for Calf\n40 Years Ago, Doctor Warned\nWomen Against Driving Bulge\nauto manufacturing firm found j right calf which will not con\nform  at  all  with  Ihe  shapely\ncharm of Ihe left.\"\nAt first investigators thought\nthe  newsman was just  gently\nattempting lo pull a leg. But no!\nThe report was in dead earnest.\na   telegraphed   dispatch, \\ The scribe quoted a respected\nthis    terrifying   item    in    the\nToronto Daily Star.\nThe yarn was in the Saturday j\nissue. November 3, 1923\u2014exactly\n40 years ago.\nIn\noriginating   in   San   Francisco\nflappers   and   particularly   co-\nEssence of WI  Given in Letter\n(Editor's note: The essence of Women's Institute work\nwhich has contributed largely to progress of communities,\nboth large and more often small, in the Kootenays and indeed\nall through Canada and the world, is contained in a presentation read at the Cariboo District WI conference and reprinted in the British Columbia Women's Institute News. It\nwas written by Mrs. J. Weaver ol Forest Grove Women's\nInstitute of the Cariboo District. 1\nWhy   join    the   W.I.'\nindeed!\nMy answer to ihis question\nwould be: because it has three\nthings to offer country women\neverywhere \u2014 friendship, opportunity and reward.\nIn the many rural areas\nthroughout the country, women\nhave the opportunity to take\npart in community projects by\nforming and belonging to a W.I.\nEvery housewife  can  make  a\nworthwhile contribution to the I couraged because too much is\nbetterment of the place m which ! being left to too few. We are\nshe lives. I often tired and feel we are work-\nsource \u2014 a physician at that.\nOn that day \u2014 only 40 years\nago - a Dr. Herbert R. Stoltz,\ndirector of physical education\nfor tlie State of California, had\nissued a bulletin to press and\npublic.\nThe startling news read:\n\"Driving gas chariots and using\nthe right foot to play tunes with\nHie accelerator is ranidly marking young women with two kinds\nof malformations.\" Dr. Stoltz\nasserted. \"One of them.\" \u2014 still\nDr. Stoltz talking \u2014 \"is medically called 'bulging shin.' This\nis likely to manifest itself any-\nIn    participation,    neighbor\nbecomes    acquainted    with\nneighbor; acquaintance brings\nfriendship  and  understanding,\nof one another's problems, and ' ,or '.. ,    , ,,\n,.      .. \u201e   ,,      ,.  ,    \u201e  done it unto the least of these.\nthen  the  realization  that  all\nbelong to that great sisterhood, the Associated Country,\nwomen of the World.\nAs an individual she may be\nshy, and lonely, too, sometimes,\nand kepi busy with all the many\nwhich   are   destitute   through\nsome misfortune, and when we\nsee wheel chairs for those who\ncannot  walk;   scholarships   for\ndeserving    children:    financial\nassistance through donations to\nWhy,  women meet and plan and work j crippled and retarded children,\non Ihe many worthwhile projects | to the mentally ill, to the Unit-\nfor home and country.\" i arian Service Committee of Can-\n' ada and to many other people where between Ihe ankle and the\nand causes too numerous to knee \u2014 but usually about half-\nmention here \u2014 then we can  way.\"\nremember   the   words   of   our,    Dr. Stoltz said \"bulging shin\"\nInasmuch  as  ye  have i was due to over-developing the\nelongated muscles covering the\nye have done it unto Me.\" and  shin bone.\nbe happy and  a little  proud.;    The  olher malformation Dr,\ntoo. that we serve not only our, stolt- ca||ed -bulging calf.\" He\nfellow  man.  but  the  King  nf j said Ulis conditi0n is  \"largely\nSometimes   we   become   dis-! Kings. ! what its name implies.\" The sad\nIn   these   familiar  words  of  result, said the State authority,\nour WI. Ode. \"But each shall j \"is an otherwise perfect girl with\n,     ,   . seek the common weal, the good ; ii\"1 limb bigger than the other.\"\ning for nothing and nobody ap-1 of a|] manklnd \u25a0\u25a0 is there not an j    The automobile manufacturer; tion from the Diocesan C.W.L\nmothers of guides and brownies\nto attend Guide Association\nmeetihgs held at the Boy Scout\nHall on the first Tuesday of each\nmonth.\nAlthough there was a decline\nin the number of parishioners\nconfined to hospital recently,\nMrs. E. Edgar stated that many\nvisits were made at Mount St.\nFrancis. She asked members to\nsend cards and letters to Mrs.\nBoyd, who is recovering from\nsurgery at Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nMrs. W. Palmer indicated that\nthe Altar Guild had been well\nsupplied with flowers, and she\nasked all those interested in\nhelping with laundry of altar\ncloths and Christmas cleaning of\nthe church to contact her.\nMrs. W. C. Murphy stressed\nthe importance of having Silent\nBazaar activity completed as\nsoon as possible.\nCircle Leaders Mrs. D. Carmichael, Mrs. E. Pepin, and\nMrs. D. T. Littlewood outlined\nthe wide variety of work and\nactivity carried on by their\ngroups.\nMrs. J. Fukala will be convener of the December 4 tea and\nbake sale, with St. Cecilia Circle\nin charge of the novelty table,\nSt. Theresa Circle the bake table\nand the tea table duties shared\nby St. Rose and Our Lady of\nLourdes Circles.\nIn response to a recommends-\npreciates our efforts anyway.\nHowever, when we see hospital\necho of our Lord's words?\nThis is our reward, this is the\nis firmly convinced \u2014 and would\nbe more than happy to prove\nit \u2014 that dear old Dr. Stoltz was\nthings  thai   keep   a   wife  and j wards being furnished, layettes , ,,       , .. - \u00ab _,-. -..\nmother busy from day to day.  being   provided,   and  blankets.  Jew(a.rd( we r*ce,ve throueh our  way. way out on a limb, and\nbut the WI. offers women the articles of clothing and food,\nopportunity to put their talents I supplies for families which have I\nto work right at home, where suffered  loss  through  fire,  or\nInstitute work.\nWhy   join\nindeed?\ni thinks that perhaps, somehow\nthe   W.I.?   Why, j his own shinbone was directly\nconnected to his headbone.\nthe council will have a radio and\ntelevision convener. Mrs. W.\nMurphy agreed to handle the\nradio aspect, and Mrs. Boyes\nasked her to arrange for a co-\nconvener to assist with televison\nand film details\nDAILY FLIGHTS\nto the enchantment of\nHAWAII\n\u2022 Daily except Monday*\n\u2022 Fastest, only one-airline service\n\u2022 Complimentary champagne from Vancouver\n\u2022 Special rate for golf clubs\n\u2022 Round trip $275.20, 17-day jet economy from\nVancouver. . . $249.20 by jet-prop\nTAKE A LOW COST TOUR OF HAWAII: 7 days only $49.80\nplus air fare \u2022 Tour price includes hotels, sightseeing, transfers \u2022 See your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office.\n\u2022ell. Doc. 15\n(ji\/iacfakwOacMc\n-FOR TICKETS and  RESERVATIONS, CALL-\nVIPOND FOR TRAVEL\nHume Hotel, Nelson \u2014 Trail \u2014 Cranbrook\n!\u25a0\u2022\nmm\n '\n\u2022'  ~\n\t\n\t\n ,\t\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963\nModern Living\nIn A Modern Age\nBetter Your Living in 1963\nCommon Household Stains\nHave Proven  Remedies\nNo matter how modern your\nhouse may be, and no matter\nhow good your appliances are, |\nyou'll have trouble, sooner or\nlater, with one kind ol stain or\nanother.\nHere are some of the commonest household stains and\ntheir remedies:\nRUST STAINS. You can sometimes remove rust stains in your\nsinks or wash basins caused by\ndripping taps if you rub them\nwith a penny. This turns the\n\u25a0stain black and it will then come\noff with an application of scouring powder. If the stain persists,\nuse a paste made from pulverized chalk and household ammonia.\n; WHITE WATER RINGS left\non tables or other furniture will\ndisappear If you rub them with\ncigarette ash and either lemon\na totally new\nheating system\n\u2022 \u2022\naqua@lectric\ngives you the best features\nof hydronic (hot water) and\nall-electric heating systems\n,,. at a cost comparable to\nordinary heating systems.\nSee it today!\nNELSON\nHEATING\nCO. LTD.\n824 Sixth St.      Nelson\nPhone 352-6821\njuice, linseed oil or turpentine\nRestore finish with varnish stain\nand ordinary lubricating oil on a\ncloth pad. If your finish is a\nFrench polish, use a mixture of\nhard furniture wax and shellac\nmixed on a cloth pad.\nPAINT STAINS ON BRICK\nOR CONCRETE will come off if\nyou apply the following solution\nto them: Mix one and a half\ngallons of caustic soda with one\ngallon of hot water. Brush this\nsolution onto the spots and then\nwash off with clear water. Repeat until the paint has disappeared. Be very careful not to\nget this solution on any part of\nyour body or hands, because lt\ncan cause severe burns. Rubber\ngloves are good precaution.\nRinse the solution down the\ndrain when finished: it helps remove grease from pipes.\nCHROME POX will disappear\nfrom car bumpers and grilles if\nyou wash the area, then remove\nthe rust with very fine steel wool\nor a moist cloth pad dipped in a\nscouring compound. When all the\nrust   is   removed,   wash   the\nBURNS \u25a0\nLumber Co. Ltd.l\n\"YOUR BUILDING SUPPLY\nHEADQUARTERS\"\n\u2022\nNELSON \u2014 Phone 352-6661\nCRANBROOK - Ph.   43.-3305\nI\nI chrome    again;    spray    with\nI lacquer.\n| To use steel wool without\npicking up those slivers in the\nJ tips of your fingers, cut an old\ntennis ball in half and fill each\nhalf with a pad of steel wool.\nYou can put as much pressure\nas you like on the pad then,\nwithout any danger of hurting\nyour hands.\nYELLOWED IVORY PIANO\nKEYS. If age has yellowed the\nivory keys of your piano, scrape\nthem gently with a razor blade.\nYou can't remove Ihese stains by\nbleaching. If the keys get dull\nand yellow over a shorter period\nof time, you can usually bring\nback their original whiteness\nby gently washing them with\nskimmed milk. Let the milk dry\non the ivory.\nGREASE MARKS ON WALLPAPER can usually be removed\nwith a paste of French chalk and\ndry-cleaning fluid. Apply the\npaste thinly over the stained\narea and allow it to remain on\novernight. When it is completely\ndry, brush it off. Repeat if\nnecessary.\nDULL BRASS WORK doesn't!\nhave to create a weekly clean- j\ning job. Instead, give your brass\ndoor knobs, letter box or other\nexterior fittings a good polish,'\nthen coat them with a clear!\nlacquer. You can buy this lacquer in a pressurized container\nand spray it on. j\nThe Royal William, 182-foot\nwooden paddle - wheeler\nlaunched at Quebec City in 1831,\nbecame the first British steamship to enter a U.S. port in 1833.\nHome of Your Own\nNHA INSPECTIONS | ter. The owner should be patient\nHave you ever wondered what I thouh, keeping in mind that the\npurpose NHA Inspections serve? j builder is the manager of the\nThese inspections are carried out j Job and has to rely on specialists,\nby inspectors from Central Mort- It takes a little time to get the\ngage and Housing Corporation right man and the right mater-\nwhile an NHA financed house is ial. Scheduling little repair jobs\nJim Wbdsxn H&msL\nisn't easy. And here's a useful\ntip, put your complaint in writing. Your builder is a busy man\nand may be called away on\nsomething urgent before he gets\na chance to make a note of your\ntelephone call.\nunder construction.\nThe inspections are made to\nensure that a house is built in\nreasonable conformity with prescribed housing standards and the\nplans and specifications submitted by the borrowers for loan approval purposes. If at any stage ELECTRICAL\nof construction it is found these i REQUIREMENTS\nare not being followed the fact!   Electricity  is  one  of  those\nwill be called to the borrower's things that we take for granted.\nattention so that he can rectify\nany infractions. NHA inspections\nare made to ensure that the\nhouse provides sound security\nfor the loan. Failure to correct\ninfractions reported by an inspector could result in cancellation of the loan.\nBUILDER'S RESPONSIBILITY\nWhen you move into a new\nhouse, do not expect everything\nto be perfect. The new house is\nsomething like a new car.\nIt is difficult to describe what it\nis yet it plays a key role in our\nlives.\nA case in point is the disaster\nthat arises from failure of the\nelectrical system of your house.\nYou can't see, you can't eat, you\ncan't wash, until it is repaired.\nModern houses have 100 ampere\nelectrical circuits. Domestic circuits usually carry 110 volts and\nail appliances, with the odd ex-\n1? I ception,  are designed  for  this\n11 I.._i.      rm..    J     :_\nneeds adjustments and breaking\nin. Sometimes lt is hard to define where the builder's responsibility ends and the owner's begins, but the simplest rule is that\nthe maintenance of the house is\nthe owner's job. In effect, he's\nthe janitor of his own house.\nIt's the builder's job to correct\nanything wrong arising out of\npoor workmanship or faulty material. Most builders are anxious\nto co-operate if you don't impose\non them.\nvoltage. The increase in the\nnumber of electrical appliances\nand miscellaneous gadgets has\nplaced a heavy load on existing\ncircuits.\nIn some older houses extensive\nrewiring is required and constantly needs to be checked in\nthe light of the ever-increasing\nnumber of appliances that come\non the market each year, generally to stay. Too many houses\nare destroyed by fire owing to\nfaulty wiring. Do not let this hap-\nhe should let the builder know\nabout it and the sooner the bet-\nupward\ngrowth\noutward\ndownward\n.\u2014\u2014\u2014~\u00bb\nxBXXSSX'&iM\nI pen to you. Check your wiring\nBuilders have naturally built  [or faults.\nup a resistance to owners who' ELECTmcAL OUTLETS\nexpect free repairs, but if an ow-!    Can  you   think   \u201e,   anything\n\"!r_u!La i^'uTl!,,'\"!\"^!!\"!! more annoying than too few outlets? There are so many things\nto plug in nowadays that a new\nhouse, and an older house too,\nshould be provided with additional outlets. The booklet \"Housing\nStandards,\" published by the National Research Council, and\nprescribed by CMHC for all construction under the NHA, requires a certain number of outlets and duplex convenience outlets for bedrooms, living room\nand kitchen.\nFor instance, there's a two-outlet minimum requirement for the\nkitchen for counter work and One\nfor the refrigerator. But, with\nthe counter outlets permanently\nin use for an electric clock or a\nradio, there's not much left for\nother incidental requirements\nsuch as the toaster, coffee percolator and electric kettle, not to\nmention electric fry pans and\nother equipment.\nRather than sit around in the\nmorning waiting for an outlet to\nget clear so you can make your\ntoast, consider the convenience\nOf plenty of electrical outlets.\nPLAN   NO. 833 \/     \\ fLOOK   AULA:\n\/        \\       633 ao.\/T.\nSlot Machines Vying\nFor Frenchmen's Love\n} *\nREGINA (CP) - The Regina\nChamber of Commerce Said\nThursday increases in minimum\nwage levels in Saskatchewan are\nunnecessary and might eliminate\nsome jobs. It said existing average wages are well above legal\nminimums in all fields.\nCominco first put down Its roots Into Canada's soil more than half a century ago.\nAnd since the beginning In 1906 the Company's history has been one of steady growth\nthrough constant research and expansion of products and markets. Today Cominco\nstands among the world's largest producers of lead, zinc and chemical fertilizers and\nIts growth is continuing with new vigour:\nUpward\u2014through a $30 million program of plant expansion In Canada\u2014to increase\nfertilizer production to nearly a million tons annually and add to the output of metals\nand other chemicals.\nOutward\u2014as a partner In a new zinc smelter and chemical plant In India\u2014Cominco\nBinani Zinc Limited\u2014a joint venture with a major Indian metal company.\nDownward\u2014by an active role In bringing Into production a large lead-zinc mine\nat Pine Point near Great Slave Lake.\nThrough these and many other dyrtamlc dev6lbpiVients Cominco is growing. It Is meeting\nand anticipating diversified needs of industry and consumers In markets around the world.\nCHOQUETTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352-7535\nThe Finest Stoker Cools\nORDER  NOW!\nOur Specialty \u2014\nSTOKER MIXES\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING AND SMELTING COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED\nMontreal 2, Quebec\nLEAD    \u2022    ZINC    \u2022    PIG IRON    \u2022    BISMUTH    \u2022    CADMIUM    \u2022    SILVER    \u2022    GOLD\nMETALS AND ALLOYS     .      aECTAONIC MATERIALS      \u2022      CHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nINDIUM    <    ULTRA-PURE\nINDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS\nAsk Us for Any\nStyle of\nMOULDING\nIf We DOn't Have It\nWe Will Make It\nBy DOUG MARSHALL\nParis (CP) - wine, women\nand politics still dominate the\npassions of male Parisians but\nthose machines\" from Chicago\nare fast becoming a fourth preoccupation.\nThe ultramodern electronic\npin-ball machines\u2014as complex\nas a jet cockpit\u2014are a central\nfeature of most working-class\nand Left-Bank bars.\nSometimes called \"10 true,\"\nmeaning simply' \"the thingumajig,\" the machines have inspired an urban cult that promises to be almost as feverishly popular as the outdoor bicycle races. In the student\nquarter a recognized heirarchy\nof experts has emerged in the\nlast six months.\nUnlike one-armed bandits \u2014\nrare in Paris\u2014there is no monetary payoff, although some side\nbets are placed. Winners merely\naccumulate free games or extra\nballs.\nSTYLE IS FRENCH\nAs many as four players can\ncompete against eaci. other,\neach paying 20 centimes for\nthree bails. But the addicts prefer to duel with the machines\nalone, pitting their human reactions against the scientific\ncunning of wires, flickering\nlights and electromagnetic coils.\nThe machines are American,\nthe instructions are in complicated English but the style of\nplay is purely French.\nStudents in particular take\nrisks that make experienced\nNorth Americans nervous\u2014jiggling, hanging and thumping the\nframework in a savage, oath-\nladen effort to keep the ball\nbouncing off the neon-lit stanchions. They seem to be doing an\nagonized twist.\n\"I've been watching these\nguys for two months,\" said an\nenvious New Yorker, \"and I\ndon't see how they get away\nwith it.\n\"Every time I try it the 'tilt'\nsign lights up ri&ht away.\"\nSpectators are rnore vocal\nthin the players, cheering good\nruns and groaning when the\nball finally vanishes down the\nchute. Amateurs are greeted by\nderisive hoots and fights sometimes break out.\nHELPS BUSINESS\nNews of a new machine soon\ngets around. The fortunate bar\nowner can be assured of an\nimmediate boost in customers\nas the riiasters Ahd their farts\ntrdbp in to test their skill and\nconquer the machine's individual quirks.\n\"One must know brte's machine,\" a top-class player explained. \"They are very much\nlike women. Some are hard,\nsome easy. Some want you to\nhit them, some want to be left\nalone.\"\nProprietors c o nvplain that\nmany of the players are little\nbetter than Bowery bums lubricating their reputations and\nspending little on beer. But machines have become a competitive necessity if bars want to\nstay ln business.\nSmartly designed for summer\nliving, this is a summer home\nthat is different, and could dou\nble, also as a ski or hunting cab\nin if desired.\nFrom a bird's eye view, the\nroof gives a diamond appearance\nbut the actual plan of the house\nis in the form of a cross, with\nthe living room forming the main\nsection and the bedrooms forming two of the arms, with the\nkitchen completing the arrangement. '\nNote that one bedroom is divided by folding doors so that it\ncould be made into two completely private rooms, each furnished with a bunk, and closet\nspace. The main bedroom is\ndivided from the living room by\na built-in storage unit, kitchen\nutilizes the back of the fireplace\nfor a bar section, with cupboards\nrange, and sink across the end\nwall.\nBath and shower complete the\nnecessary living conveniences,\nand the rest of the area is taken\nup with the really beautiful living room. Note the panoramic\nwindows In the living areas, and\nthe sun deck for outdoor living, sun bathing or whatever\nactivities the occupants wish to\nfollow.\nThis is a dream of a summer\ncottage but we can also see it\nbeing used as a ski cabin located\nin one of our popular skiing\nresorts or even as a hunter's\ncabin. It has tremendous possibilities.\nBlueprints are available from\nthe Building Centre (B.C.I Ltd..\n96 Kingsway at Broadway, Vancouver, B.C. New edition of Select Homes Designs available,\nwith price list for blueprints and\nbuilding information. Send 50c\nfor mailing and handling.\nWorld Briefs\nBANDMASTER  JAILED\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014A 51-year-\nold bandmaster whose failure to\nsound the Last Post on Armistice Day at the Arc de Tri-\nomphe angered President de\nGaulle is serving 30 days' disciplinary arrest, informed\nBources said Friday. He was\nidentified as gendarmerie Captain Monmege.\nWEDS  PEER'S  DAUGHTER\nSANDECK HALL, England\n(Reuters)\u2014An American businessman married the daughter\nof an English earl at a village\nchurch ceremony here Thursday. Hugh Wiiley, 36, member\nof a large American engineering firm and a former Olympic\nequestrian, married Lady Serena L u m 1 e y, 27, youngest\ndaughter of the Earl and Countess of Scarborough.\nMOSCOW (AP)-Ivan Pukho-\nvinkov, farmer on a collective\nfarm in the northern Caucasus,\nwas sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment because an electric\nwire strung around his orchard\nkilled a girl, Selskaya Zhizn\n(Country Life) reports. He put\nthe wire around his little orchard plot to keep people from\nstealing his apples.\nBETTER BUYS AT\n301 Baker St.\ni\nTROUBLE?\nWhen in need of plumbing\nor heating replacement or repairs,\nor o gas fitting job . . .\nFor Prompt,  Efficient Service\nCALL US AT 352-2454\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\n351  Baker St.\nNelson. B.C.\nPhOAe 352-2454\nJ\t\nElectric\nHEAT\nDoes Cost .\nLESS!\nEstimates\nFREE\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nPHONE  352-3175\nNelson, B.C.\nm^mmmmm\nSpend a Warm Winter\nOrder Your\nSTORM\nWINDOWS\nNOW!!\nSAVE  ON   FUEL\nWHEN  THE   EXTREME\nCOLD   WEATHER   COMES!\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nPhone 352-7717\nNelson, B. C.\nall he\nneeds is\na little\n\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0fflieim\n20\nFree\nCanada\nIndoors\n\u2022 Linen Closet\n\u2022 Kitchen  Built-in:.\n\u2022 Sewing Centre\n\u2022 Kitchen  Roll-Out Storage\n\u2022 Home Laundry\n\u2022 BathrOom  Built-in.\n\u2022 Wall Office\n\u2022 Reading Centre\n\u2022 Sportsman Cabinet\n\u2022 Home Maintenance and\nStorage\n\u2022 Game Room Storage\n\u2022 Hobby Wall  Desk\n\u2022 Activity Room Seat\nand Storage\n\u2022 Adjustable Bookcase\n\u2022 Basement Under Stain Storage\n\u2022 Kiddies Play Centre\n\u2022 Children's Easel\n\u2022 Student's Wall Desk\n\u2022 Children's Room Storage Units\n\u2022 Easy-tO-Build Items\nAll it-iViA cin be nUde with Sylv\u00bbi-.y fir Plywood. \u2014 Choose from the lirgist itoek in\nNelsbn ahd District. \u2014 All grades, sizes and thicknesses available at all times.\nFREE CITY DELIVERY\nBurns Lumber Co., L\nPhone 352-6661\nNELSON\n602 Baker St.\n'     in \u25a0\t\n WPUr- \"\"HP\n\t\nLeafs Within Qame of Jets\nNelson Fumbles\nWay Over Trail\nBettors Climb Aboard\nRough Rider Bandwagon\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS straight season, Jckson led the\n,,   .   ,    , j ! league in touchdown passes with\nBettors have climbed aboard i     \".   .\nthe Ottawa bandwagon by es\ntablishing Rough Riders as\nthree-point favorites to whip\nHamilton Tiger-Cats in today's\nopening. game of the Eastern\nFootball   Conference   finals   in\nOttawa. son-s throwing with a good rush\nKickoff time is 1 p.m EST bu( 0Uawa coa(,h Frank c,air\nand the game will be carried by , h|s dub has been ing\nthe CTV network. The two- particular attention tnis week ,\u201e\ngame, total-points sene sends in improving its protection of Jack-\nBy D. S. STEVENSON, Sports Editor\n19 during  the  regular  season ! Nelson Maple Leafs made Saskatchewan Rough-\nand had two more in the sud-1 riders' confusion attack look like a highly organized\nden - death semi-final against system here Friday as they fumbled their way to a\nAlouettes last weekend. 17-5 victory over cellar-dwelling Trail Smoke Eaters be-\nTicats, the defending Eastern ;fore nrjrj fans at the Civic Centre,\nchampions, are reported confi-1           The victoryi COupled with Rossland's 8-4 loss to\ndent  they   can  hamper   Jack-       - \u00bb_.._. _\nThe Riders also have a good j period and the Leafs  led\nDave Thelen, who can rise to\nnew heights in playoffs, and\nhard-running Ron Stewart, who\nmissed the Montreal game with\na leg injury.\nTICATS RESTED\nHamilton coach  Ralph  Sazio\nHamilton Sunday, Nov. 24.\nThis is Riders' first appearance in the Big Four final since 'rushi attack ,ed b fullback |5-2 at the end of the second\n1960-the year they won the,_._.._ V.,\u2014 ...u_ _\u201e ..:__ ..I\nGrey Cup. Coaches Jim Trimble of Montreal Alouettes and\nNobby Wirkowski of Toronto\nArgonauts already are on record with predictions of an Ottawa victory.\nAlmost   perfect   football\nweather   is   forecast   for   th.e j Riders, Ticats finished on top of\ngame.   The  weather   offices   is \\       standings and haven't !spear\"-headed the'Smokie attack\ncalling for a ctoudyday with I ^ finishing  up  the ,\u201e',., \u201e k ,\u201e.\u201e.,.:\u201e \t\nsunny periods. The high temp-   egular  season   agajnst   Mont.\nerature is expected to be 45 de-1 ^ two weeks agQ\ngrees. |   All of his players are ready\nWATCH'PASS I to go although all-star defensive\nHamilton's big chore will be I halfback Garney Henley will be\nto nullify the deep-pass threat playing with a special protec-\nposed by Ottawa^ Russ Jack- j tn,e harness over the rib injury\nKimberley Dynamiters, left the Leafs in third spot, only\none point behind second-place Warriors and two behind league-leading Spokane Jets. A victory over Jets\nin Spokane tonight could give Nelson a share of first\nplace in the Western International Hockey League.\nThe teams were tied 2-2 at the end of the first\nCentreman Howie Hornby, with\ntwo goals and three assists, led\nNelson's disorganized Leafs to\ntlie victory. Defenceman Marsh\nSeveryn, johnny - on - the - spot\ntwice, added two, while Mike\nLaughton, Charlie Burdette and\nhas a rested club ^to throw at j Bobby kromm'managed's'ingles\".\npi^.^   coaci-i   \u00a3ai   Hockley\nson. Named the East's all-star\nquarterback   for   the   second\nTrail to Host\nB.C. Mixed\nCurling 'Spiel\nTRAIL (CP) - The first B. C.\nmixed curling championship will\nbe held here Feb. 24.\nThe champions of the B.C\nand Pacific Coast curling associations will meet to decide the\nprovince's representative to the\nnational championships in Toronto in March.\nThe B.C. championship will be\nheld the day following the two-\nday B. C. association mixed bonspiel.\nSpecial rules govern the competition, each rink must be com-\n\u25a0poWst of members of the same\ndjrlii&.difc' skips and seconds\n..,ijljift^$W>. all entrants must\n\u25a0 be, mHP'aija all must be members of ^recognized curling association.\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Press\nMiami, Fla. - Willie Harris,\n158, Miami, stopped Eddie\nFobbs, 154, Fort Lauderdale, 4.\nWorcester, Mass. \u2014 Kolo\n(Duke) Sabedong, 220, Hawaii,\nand Willie Besmanoff, 210, Milwaukee, drew,  10.\nErie, Pa. \u2014 Hector Dias, 133,\nDominican Republic, and Johnny\nBizza'rro,  133,  Erie,  drew,  10.\nhe received earlier in the year,\nClair has a number of players who'll be playing with bad\nknees, including defensive back\nBob O'Billovich and tackles\nRoger Kramer and Bill Siek-\nierski.\nThe Ottawa coach expects\nquarterback Bernie Faloney to\npose a big threat in the air but\nsaid he's also looking for a\nHamilton ground attack.\nwith a brace, with rookies, Terry\nBrennen, Bob Gruber and Morey\nJohnston adding one each.\nOnly seven penalties, all minors, were handed out during the\ngame by referee Sarg Sammartino. Nelson took five of the two-\nminute calls.\nADAMS A STANDOUT\nAlthough the clubs were tied\n2-2 after the first 20 minutes of\naction, Trail had a definite advantage in the play. The young\nSmokies looked particularly impressive on power plays and\nwhen clearing the puck from\ntheir own zone.\nAt times aurlng the period,\nLeaf goalie Gus Adams was the\nonly defence the club had against\nRiders won't be surprised to | the'Smokfe\" attack\"\" Adam J was\nse?.?.?!_.'\u201e? Z\"\"... -\u00b0.le..U\u2122;'again a standout for Nelson in\nespecially if Faloney can't get\nthe Cats moving.\nEdges Windsor\nIn\nMOSCOW (CP) - Moscow Dy\nnamos edged Windsor Bulldogs\n4-3 Friday in an exhibition hockey game in the Russian capital, the first of 11 the Canadian\nteam will play during a European tour.\nVladimir Yurzinov sparked\nthe Soviet squad with two goals,\nincluding the clincher. Other Dynamo scorers were Vladimir\nDanilov and Val Christoff.\nJack Price, Tom Walker and\nReal Chevrefils scored for\nWindsor. The Bulldogs were\nshaky from the start and were\noutplayed most of the way by the\nRussians. Goalie Wayne Rut-\nledge stopped 34 Russian shots\non the Canadian net.\n\"We played poorly and deserved to lose yet we had enough\nchances to win,\" said playing\ncoach Joe Klukay.\nTENDER, LOVING CARE\nIs What We Give To What We Move.\nYour most  fragile china, precious hi-fi  records,  etc.,\nwill arrive intact!\nOur extra know-how and extra care (the tender, loving\nkind)  safeguard everything we move for you, contributes greatly to your peace of mind. Call for estimate,\nSTAR-MAYFLOWER\nMOVING and STORAGE\nDU     T\\0 7Q1Q       Nelson, B.C.\nrn.   OJZ-\/OIO    Truck Terminus\nManager, WALT PALMER\nthe second period, but he lost\nsome of his sparkle in the final\nframe when he let in two easy\ngoals as Smokies outscored Nelson 3-2.\nAt the other end of the ice,\nSmoke Eaters' young net minder, Don McLeod made some\nspectacular saves on Leaf attackers    and    generally    kept\nSpokane\nRossland*\nNelson*\nKimberley\nTrail\nMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltl\nW  L  T  F  A Pts\n8  3   0   67   43   16\n6  5   1   62  48   15\n8   3   0   64   47   14\n6   5   0   58   54   12\n0 12   1   48 105    1\n'Rossland awarded two points\non protested game with Nelson.\nTonight's   games:   Nelson   in\nSpokane; Kimberley at Trail.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nhead down. He skated off. the\nice after being looked at by\nNelson trainer, Bill Freno. Gare\nalso skated off to the penalty\nbox with a minor penalty for\nchanging.\nNelson's next home game is\nMonday against Rossland War-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1953 \u2014 7|\nLions Eight-Points Favorites\nTo Win Today's Playoff Opener\nREGINA (CP) \u2014British Columbia Lions are eight-point\nfavorites to win the first game\nof the best - of - three Western\nFootball Conference final series\nhere today and prohibitive favorites to take the series but\nthat's not bothering Saskatchewan Roughrider fans.\nFootball fever has firmly\nseized this prairie city of 100,-\n000 people.\nOn radio, television and in the\nriors.\nTrail _ Goal. jjcLeod;  de- newspaper, on coffee row and\nTrails chances for victory in| fence.  Severi FerguS0Ili John.;in   shops   and   offices,   rabid\nI ston, Hamilton; forwards: Fer-! R\u00b0\"Shrider supporters are tell-\ntact.\nThe big difference in the game'\nwas the Leafs ability to finish |\nro, Gruber, Unger, P. Secco,\n,, , i Struthers,   Brennen,   Susheski,\noff scoring plays. i      ..\nBoth Hornby's goals came on; \u201e , y-\npass plays when he got the puck\nright in on goal and made no\nmistake beating McLeod.\nSeveryn's pair came on identical\nplays. The Leaf defenceman followed Hornby, who had the puck,\ninto the Trail zone and banged\nhome the centreman's rebound.\nKromm got one of the best\ngoals of the night when he took\na Doug Kilburn pass, skated\nbehind the Trail defence right\nin on goal, deked McLeod and\nslid the puck along the ice into\ning one another that maybe-\njust maybe\u2014their team could who cheered Riders wildly for\nclaw its way into the Grey Cup 60 solid minutes of football\nfinal. Monday,\nThat hope is fed by the still-\nvivid memory of how the\nRoughriders pulled a stunning\nupset on Calgary Stampeders in\nthe second game here of the\nWestern Conference semi-final\nseries to win the right to meet\nthe Lions in the final.\nToday's game, starting at\n2:30 p.m. CST, will be the last\nin Regina this year and Taylor\nField can be expected to be\njammed to the gunwhales with\na capacity crowd of the fans\nDynamiters Whip\nRossland Warriors\nROSSLAND (Special to Daily, Intyre,  Jones,  Davis,  Rusnell,\nNelson \u2014 Goal: Adams; defence: Carlson, Severyn, Mal-j\nacko, Stewart; forwards, Kilburn, Laughton, Kromm, Gare,\nHornby, Burdette, Romer, Wake-\nlem, Folkstead, Maglio.\nReferee:  Sarge Sammartino;  News)  _ Kimberley Dynamit-iB.   Martin,   Legare,\nlinesmen:  Bernie Loff,  Arnold jers did just that-to the Ross-1 Picco.\nBouchier,\nSherwood. I ',an(] Warriors Friday night when\nSUMMARY ! they belted the home clulb 8-4 in\nFirst   Period   \u2014   1.   Nelson,: WIHL action at Rossland.\nLaughton   (Kilburn)   1:26;   2. i   At tlle end 0f the first period\nTrail, Brennen (Ferro) Sushes- j of the wjde open game, it did not\nthe net.\" ~ i ki) 3;00; 3- Trail> Hockley 'Fer-] seem that way; Kimberley found\nHockley got Smokies' picture1 ro'  Unger)   14;03;   4-  Nelson. i the hole four times and Rossland\ngoal at 8:35 of the last period.i H\u00b0\u2122by <Gare. Burdette) 14:49.'answered three times.\nHe took a pass just outside the1 Penalties:   Gare   6:00;    Sever!   Then it changed.  Kimberley\nLeaf blueline, stepped over the' W:56- i added two more in the second\nline to let go a blast just off j    Second Period \u2014 5. Nelson,' period while the Warriors waited\nthe ice that had Adams fooled] Severyn (Hornby, Kromm) 4:55;: until the third for their fourth\nall the way. 6.   Nelson,   Severyn   (Kromm,! and last. Kimberley beat Mar-\niFAFij ivmnpn Hornby) 13:54; 7. Nelson, Bur-;tin twice in that period.\nT\u201em i\u201e\/\u00ab,\u00ab\u201e. ini,\u201e_H *,,i-_! dette (Malacko, Hornby) 14:34.!   Big guns for he winners were\nTwo Lea s were injured during. \u2022 \u00bb L    Li]1     and Tic Beattie wlth\nthe:game though not badly. Lyle, \u2122\u00a3\" beveryn 2'48' *ergu |two each  John Paolone scored\nFolkestead left with a bruised, son ii-ou- .,\u201e\u201e ,\u201e\u201e t,\u201ec.i\u201e_j\nknee   and   defenceman   Frank     Th rd  Per od  -  8.   Nelson,1\u2122 for Rossland.\nKnee   and   defenceman   Irani. (Kilb      r   ,    , ,.,,.:   Referee Bill Waddell appeared\nCarlson, who was badly cut in1 Kromm iiuiDurn, i-arisoni 4.dz,. \u201e\u201e..-\u201ei  \u201en \u00bb,. \u201eu\\0\nRossland Tuesday, was cut above 9. Trail, Hockley (Ferro, Unger) I     >\u00ab c ntr 1 \"jMe,\nthe left eye. He received three! 8:35; 10. Nelson, Hornby (Gare) |h\u2122dmg_o^y eight penames.\nstitches but is expected to play1 13.06; 11. Trail, Gruber (Hock-\nAs the result of a one-game\nin Spokane tonight.\nTrail's Bob Gruber was decked  Johnston (Hockley, Ferro) 18:20.\nby Ernie Gare, playing his first I Penalties: Burdette, 7:11; Wake-\ngame for  Nelson  this  season, j lem 16:54; Gare 18:00.\nin the third period when he came | McLeod 16  9   13\u201438\ninto the Nelson zone with hisj Adams 8 12   13\u201433\nie\"y;\"severn'3:3.ril Trll | \u2122s\u2122' *? ^SS*^i!\nMcKenney, Duff Trade Rumors\nHighlight Weekend NHL Action\nBy DAVE BETTS | Montreal  Forum  for   a  game I   On the basis of their past rec-\nCanadian Press Staff Writer   against the Canadiens, and last- j ords, McKenney would have to\nRarely does management get j place Boston Bruins play host\na chance to upstage the players | to Detroit Red Wings.  Detroit\nin the National Hockey League\nbut it could happen tonight at\nToronto's Maple Leaf Gardens.\nWhen two tired teams\u2014the\nLeafs and New York Rangers-\nrub elbows for the second time\nin three days, many fans will\nbe wondering less about the outcome than about what their\nbosses are talking nbout backstage.\nTrade rumors flying for the\nlast week focus on Ranger centre   Don  McKenney   and  Leaf  of Imlach.\nleft winger Dick Duff. I \t\nIt's no secret that the New j\nYork front office is willing to\nbarter with McKenney, and\nDuff's name crops up so often\nin trade talk no one would be\nsurprised if he should wind up\nin a Ranger uniform within the\nnext few days.\nLeaf general-manager Punch\nImlach, who says he wants McKenney to bolster his centre\ncorps in the event of Red\nKelly's retirement and Billy\nHarris's return to university,\nmade a point of telling reporters after Thursday night's 5-4\nToronto win in New York that\nhe did not discuss a trade with\nRanger management.\nThis only heightened speculation that a swap is only a matter of time.\nWhile Leafs and Rangers battle it out, league-leading Chicago Black Hawks move into\nthe unfriendly confines of the\nis in fourth spot, three points\nbehind Toronto and Montreal\nand nine behind Chicago.\nSunday all six go at it again,\nwith Toronto at Chicago, Montreal at Boston and Detroit at\nNew York.\nBroadway rumors say a man-\nfor-man trade involving Duff\nand McKenney would not satisfy\nthe Ranger hierarchy. New\nYork wants Duff and as much\nmore as they can squeeze out\nbe rated the better man.\nThe slim 29 - year - old, who\nspent most of his NHL career\nwith Boston before being traded\nfor Dean Prentice last season,\nhad scordd 203 goals and 283\nassists for 486 points up to the\nend of last season. Both he and\nDuff made their NHL debuts in\n1954.\nDuff, 27, in the same period\nhad scored 167 goals and 158\nassists for 325 points. Duff\nplayed 530 games, McKenney\n613.\nSENIOR\nHOCKEY\nMONDAY\n8:00 p.m.\nROSSLAND\nWARRIORS\nvs.\nNELSON\nMAPLE LEAFS\n\/''\u25a0'.?'.',. Tickets\u2014Nelson Civic Centre, 9 to 5  p.m.\nReserve $1.25       Rush: Adults $1.00       Students 500       Children 35*\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE ARENA\ndo without the services of team\ncaptain, Ray Demore.\nWarrior fans took heart briefly\nin the third frame when the\nhome clulb controlled play most\nof the time, but they could not\ncapitalize on it.\nLineups:\nRossland\u2014Goal: Martin; defence: Andrews, Godfrey, S. Gallamore, Paolone; forwards: Mc-\nKlmberley-Goal: Wardle; defence: B. Gallamore, Hooker,\nTouzin, Gibson; forwards: Lilley, Peacosh, McTeer, White,\nPowesha, King, Manchester,\nBeattie, Sauter, Palmer.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141. Rossland, Paolone (Jones, Picco) 7:09; 2. Kimberley, Lilley (Peacosh) 7:18; 3.\nKimberley, Lilley (McTeer)\n8:03; 4. Kimberley, Peaoosh,\n13:43: 5. Rossland, Paolone (Davis, Mclntyre) 14:34; 6. Rossland, Jones (Mclntyre, Andrews)\n16:45; 7. Kimberley, Beattie\n(Sauter) 19:48. Penalties\u2014Manchester, 2:10; B. Gallamore,\n15:35.\nSecond period\u20148. Kimberley,\nPowesha (King, White) 10:41;\n9. Kimberley, King (Hooker,\nGibson) 11:14. Penalties: S. Gallamore, 14:12; S. Gallamore and\nB. Gallamore, 16:22.\nThird period\u201410. Rossland, B.\nMartin (Rusnell, Picco) 9:37; 11.\nKimberley, Beattie, 18:59; 12.\nKimberley, Manchester (Sauter,\nBeattie)   19:06.   Penalties\u2014Gib-\nSaskatchewan has never won\na Grey Cup since being organized in 1910 and this is the first\nyear since 1956 the club has\nmade it to the Western Conference final.\nRoughies have a formidable\nopponent in the Lions, who\nbreezed through this year's regular season with a 12-4 record\nto finish on top of the WFC for\nthe first time since they entered\nthe league in 1954.\nAs Roughriders coach Bob\nShaw says, Lions \"have some\nreal fine receivers and a good\nrunning attack. They'll be very\ntough.\"\nB.C. beat Saskatchewan all\nthree times they met during the\nregular season this year.\nThe Lions aren't taking the\nRoughriders lightly on the basis\nof past performance.\nSays Herb Capozzi, general\nmanager of the B.C. team: \"In\nour two (regular season) games\nagainst the Riders in Taylor\nField we won 16-7 and 8-2. Both\nwere in doubt until the final\nminutes.\nSOLID SUPPORT\n\"If you don't think it's tough\nto play in Taylor Field, just ask\nany coach. I can name you\ncountless teams who would like\nto get the fan support you do\nin Saskatchewan.\"\nLions will have in their back-\nfield explosive running back\nWillie Fleming, fullback Nub\nBeamer, flanker Sonny Homer\nand halfback Ron Morris. At\nquarterback will be Joe Kapp,\nwho has pitched 20 touchdown\npasses this season.\nIn  the   Saskatchewan  back-\nfield it will be quarterback Ron I\nLancaster, who throws passes I\nby the bushel, halfbacks Ed I\nBuchanan and Ray Purdin and|\nlullback George Reed.\nEnd Mack Burton is out fori\nLions and safety man Dale West I\nwon't dress for Roughriders. I\nDefensive tackle Mike Cacic re-[\njoins the Lions after sitting out j\nmost of the season with a kneel\ninjury.\nThe weather forecast fori\ngame time predicts tempera-[\ntures of 35 to 40 degrees, partly!\ncloudy skies, winds of 15 to 20|\nmiles an hour and no snow.\nSecond game in the seriesl\nwill be in Vancouver Wednes-f\nday, Nov. 20, starting at 8 p.m.l\nPST. If a third game is neces-|\nsary it will be In Vancouver\nweek from today at 2 p.m. PST.|\nStrikes and Spares\nFriday Mixed League:\nEagles   3,  Bombers  4;   Pin-\npushers 5, Hopefuls 2; Twisters\n7, O.D.'s 0.\nLadies' high single and aggregate, Joe White of Eagles, 265\nson, 1:17; Hooker, 3:14; B. Gal- and 756. Men's high single and\nlamore, 8:44. aggregate, Rick Barber of the\nSaves: Pinpushers, 330 and 716. Team\nWardle  17 11 11\u201439 high single and aggregate, Pin-\nMartin   12   8   7\u201427 pushers,   119  and  3034.\n$IUfA,'\nAnd\n0oIIl'\nCivic Centre\nArena\nTONIGHT\n7:45 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.\nAdmission\n35*\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\nULI H rnilnlL LlllC Teenagers need privacy. Read any book on teenage psychology.\nParents need privacy, too, as any book on parent psychology will tell you! In a growing number of\nB.C.'s modern homes the answer to the problem is simple: private lines.\nYou have a line. Your teen has a second line. He or she may even be able to contribute the very\nmodest cost from paper-route or baby-sitting income. You each have a separate directory listing.\nCome to think of it, isn't this by far the most sensible solution to the telephone needs of a busy\nmodern family?\nFashion-conscious parents and teens can also choose\nfrom nine lovely decorator colors for their \"private line\"\nphones -including turquoise, camellia pink,\nsunlight yellow and classic ivory.\nGet full details by calling the Telephone Company - TODAYI\nBDTEL \u00a9\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\n241B-2-REX\n \u2014 \u2014\u2014: \u25a0 : ~~~\u2014?~- ~~\u2014: \u2022\n ' \"\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963\nDEATHS\n9:00\n9:15\n9:30\n10:00\n10:30\n11:00\n11:30\n12:00\n12\n3:15\n3:30\n7:30\n00\n00\n9:30\n10:00\n10:30\n10:45\n1:30\n1:45\n2:00\n3:00\n3\n7:45\n00\n3:00\n0:30\n10:00\n10:15\n10:30\n10:45\n11:00\n1:30\n2:30\n4:00\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nRegina\u2014Dan A. Cameron, 83,\nwell - known Regina musician\nand writer for The Leader-Post.\nOttawa\u2014Francis C. C. Lynch,\n78, former head of the National\nMuseum.\nWelwyn, England\u2014Dr. Margaret Murray, 100, Egyptologist\nand student of witchcraft who\ncelebrated her 100th birthday\nlast July 13 with a party and\nby publishing her autobiography\n\u2014My First Hundred Years.\nChicago\u2014Oscar Mclillo, 63,\nformer American baseball\nleague second baseman and\ncoach of the 1938 St. Louis\nBrowns.\nJohannesburg, South Africa-\nHilton Lisle Dryden, the lawyer\nwho handled the defence of\nDavid Pratt, who wounded\nPrime Minister Hendrick F.\nVerwoerd in 1960; from a bullet\nwound.\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Classified\nTELEVISION   FOR  TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n8:45 Sign On\n9:00 Agriculture N.W.\n10:00 Sew With Us\n10:30 The Jetsons *\n11:00 Casper Cartoons *\n11:30 Matty's *\n12:00 Bugs Bunny *\n12:30 Alia Kazam *\n1:00 Flicka '\n1:30 American Bandstand *\n2:30 Western Theatre\n3:30 Telesports Digest\n4:00 Pre-Olympics\n4:30 AFL Highlights \u2022\n5:00 Wide World of Sports *\n6:30 Championship Bowling\n7:30 Hootenanny *\n8:30 Lawrence Welk *\n9:30 Jerry Lewis *\n11:30 Saturday Spectacular\nSUNDAY\nSign On\nSacred Heart\nFisher Family\nWorld of Faith\nInsight\nFaith For Today\nMosaic\nDiscovery *\nNew York at Denver '\nAll Pro Scoreboard *\nDirections 64 '\n4:00 Issues and Answers\n4:30 Sea Hunt *\n5:00 You Asked For It\n5:30 Movie of the Week:\n\"Bright Leaf\"\n7:30 Jaimie McPheters *\n8:30 Arrest and Trial *\n10:00 Laughts For Sale \u2022\n10:30 The Fugitive\n11:30 ABC News Reports\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\nSunrise Semester *\nCaptain Kangaroo *\nAlvin *\nTennessee\/Tuxedo *\nQuick Draw McGraw *\nNCAA Kickoff *\nNCAA Football:\nNotre Dame-Mich. State)\nNCAA Scoreboard *\nSpokane in Action\nSaturday Matinee\nMightv Mouse\nRin Tin Tin *\n4:00 Roy Rogers *\n4:30 Sky King \u2022\n5:00 Wrestling\n6:00 Mr. Ed\n6:30 Starlit Stairway\n7:00 Hennesey\n7:30 Jackie Gleason *\n8:30 Phil Silvers *\n3:00 Defenders *\n10:00 Gunsmoke *\n11:00 II o'Clock News\n11:10 Big 4 Movie\nSUNDAY\nSunday School of the Air\nBob Poole's\nGospel Favorites\nVoice of the Church\nOral Roberts\nDan Smoot\nManion Forum\nPro Football Kickoff '\nBobby Grayson Football\nNFL Football *\n<49ers - N.Y.)\nWSU Football (Stanford) \u2022\nSunday Matinee\nRoller Derby\n5:00 Sunday Sports Special\n5:30 Amateur Hour *\n6:00 20th Century *\n6:30 Navy Log\n7:00 Lassie *\n7:30 Mv Favorite Martian *\n8:00 Ed Sullivan *\n9:00 Judy Garland *\n10:00 Candid Camera *\n10:30 What's My Line *\n11:00 CBS News *\n11:15 Local News\n11:25 Four Most Feature\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 8\nSATURDAY\n8:30 Ruff V Reddy (C) *\n9:00 Hector Heathcote (C) *\n3:30 Fireball XL-5 *\n10:00 Dennis the Menace *\n10:30 Fury *\n11:00 Sergeant Preston *\n11:30 Bullwinkle (C) *\n12:00 Exploring (C) \u2022\n1:00 Spokane Schools\n1:30 Rural Youth on Parade\n2:00 Matinee on Six:\n\"Mark of Zorro\"\n3:30 Sheriff of Cochise\n4:00 Top Star Bowling\n5:00 NFL Hilights *\n5:30 Captain Gallant *\n6:00 NBC News *\n6:15 Inland Empire Farm1\"-\n6:30 Temple Houston\n7:30 The Lieutenant *\n8:30 Joey Bishop (C) *\n9:00 Saturday Night at the\nMovies: \"Untamed\" (C)\n11:13 Saturday News\n11:28 Late Movie:   \"Lives of\na Bengal Lancer\"\nSUNDAY\n10:00 The Christophers\n10:30 The Eternal Light *\n11:00 Clark Gable Theatre:\n'Somewhere I'll Find You'\n1:00 Highway Patrol\n1:30 Silent Service\n2:00 Week's Best Movie:\n\"Jungle Book\"\n4:00 Northwest Wrestling\n5:00 Wild Kingdom (C) *\n5:30 G.E. College Bowl (C) \u2666\n6:00 Meet the Press (C) '\n6:30 The Deputy\n7:00 Bill Dana *\n7:30 Walt Disney (C) \u2022\n8:30 Grindl *\n3:00 Bonanza (C) *\n10:00 Show of the Week *\n\"Miss America . . .\nBehind  the  Scenes\"\n11:00 Sundav News\n11:15 The Tunnel\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9: Trail, Channel 11\nSATURDAY\n12:30 CFL Western Final\n3:00 Wrestling\n4:00 Film\n4:30 Country Time\n5:00 Film\n5:30 NHL Hockey\n7:15 Juliette\n7:45 Let's Talk About It\n8:00 UN Review\nB:15 News\n8:30 The Beverly Hillbillies\n3:00 The Saint\n10:00 Showcase\ni 10:30 Starlight Theatre\n11:00 News\nSUNDAY\n11:00 NFL Football\n1:30 Sports International\n1:55 News\n2:00 An Age for Kings\n3:05 George K. Artur Prize\nFilms\n3:30 A Song For You\n3:45 The Outdoorsman\n4:00 Heritage\n4:30 Country Calendar\n5:00 The Sixties\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSUNDAY\nTest Pattern\nNFL\u2014Green Bay-Chicago\nSports International\nCBC News\nT.B.A.\nSongs For You\nOutdoors Man\nHeritage\nCountry Calendar\nThe Sixties\n5:30 Huckleberry Hound\n6:00 Sport. Weather, News\n6:30 Candid Camera\n7:00 Hazel\n7:30 Flashback\n8:00 Ed Sullivan\n9:00 Show From Two Cities\n10:00 Let's Face It\n11:00 CBC\/BBC News\n11:15 Night Final\nMONDAY\n9:45 Test Pattern\n10:00 Alberta Schools\n10:30 Chez Helene\n10:45 Nursery School\n11:00 Test Pattern\n12:00 Monitor 7\n12:10 Midday Edition\n12:20 Farming Today\n12:30 Playhouse 7:\n'The Great Impersonation'\n2:00 Password\n2:30 Scarlett Hill'\n3:00 Take Thirtv\n3:30 Friendly Giant\n3:45 Mister Rogers\n4:00 This Living World\n4:30 Pot Pourri\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Broken Arrow\n6:00 Sport. Weather, News\n6:30 Windfall\n7:00 The Flintstones\n7:30 Don Messer\n8:00 Garry Moore Show\n9:00 Playdate\n10:00 Inquiry\n10:30 Monday Night Presents\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Night Final\nTRADE BOYCOTT . boycott of South Africa because\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)\u2014Ku- of its racial segregation poli-\nwait has  announced  a  trade' cies.\n5:30 Some of These Days\n6:00 Mr. Ed\n6:30 My Three Sons\n7:00 Hazel\n7:30 Flashback\n8:00 Ed Sullivan\n9:00 A Show From Two Cities\n10:00 Let's Face It\n10:30 Question Mark\n11:00 News\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1963\n6:53-Sign On\n6:00\u2014News and Reports\n6:10-Nelson Till Nina\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:30-News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:30\u2014Birthday Book\n8:31\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:45\u2014Faith of Our Times\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Early Roads and Weather\n9:15\u2014Sports College\n9:30\u2014Western Program\n9:53-R.C.A.F. Report\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News and Early Roads\n10:05\u2014Sing Along\n10:30-Hobby Club\nll:30-Cavalcade\n12:00\u2014 Noon Day Show\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014Old Country Soccer\nScores\n12:30\u2014Noon Day Show\n1:00\u2014Saturday Date\n2:00\u2014Jazz Band Ball\n2:30\u2014News In-a-Minute\n2:31\u2014Saturday Date CKLN\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Saturday Date Continues\n4:00\u2014News\n4:05\u2014Saturday Date\n4:30-Let's Waltz\n4:45-Devitt Drops It\n5:00\u2014Max Ferguson Review\n5:25\u2014News\n5:30\u2014NHL All Star Game\n7:15\u2014The Outdoorsman\n7:30-On the Move\n8:00\u2014Billboard of Hits\n8:30\u2014Dlyan Thomas\n9:15\u2014Billboard of Hits\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Western Program\n10:30\u2014Hoop Dee Doo\nll:00-Dance With Dal\n11:30\u2014Dance to Midnight\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Sign Off\nSUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1963\n43-Sign On\n45\u2014World Church News\n00-B.B.C. News\n15\u2014Neighbourly News\n25\u2014News\n30-B.C. Gardener\n40\u2014British Israel\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Sunday Magazine\n30\u2014Russian Gospel\n00\u2014Local Church Service\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Harbour Lights\n30-Football Fables\n00-Rod and Charles\n30-Carl Tapscott Singers\n2:00\u2014News\n2:30\u2014Sunday Concert\n3:30-Church of the Air\n4:00\u2014Hour of Decision\n4:30\u2014I.Q.\n5:00\u2014Project '64\n6:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Show\n6:30-Hancock's Half Hour\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review and\nOur Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014This Is My Story\n8:00-CBC Sunday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-B.C. News and Weather\n10:15\u2014On Life and Literature\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC  PROGRAMS\nSUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1963\n00\u2014Random Hour\n45\u2014World Church News\n00-B.B.C. News\n15\u2014Neighbourly News\n:30-B.C. Gardener\n: 40\u2014Hidden Pages of the Air\n:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Sunday Magazine\n30-CBC Halifax Strings\n00\u2014B.C. Commentary\n30\u2014Regional Weather\n33\u2014Critically Speaking\n00\u2014Overtures Only\n30\u2014Foothill Fables\n00-Rod and Charles\n30-Carl Tapscott Singers\n00\u2014News\n03-Capital Report\n30\u2014Sunday Concert\n3:30-Church of the Air\n4:00-The Record Shelf\n4:30\u2014I.Q.\n5:00\u2014Project '64\n6:00\u2014Music Diary\n6:30\u2014Hancock's Half Hour\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014On the Move\n8:00-CBC Sunday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Life and Literature\n10:30\u2014The Massey Lecturers\n11:05\u2014Sviatoslav Richter\nRecital\n12:00\u2014News\n12:08\u2014Recorded Music\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1963\n6:10-The Morning Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Pacific Express\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15-Now I Ask You\n10:45\u2014Playroom\n11:00\u2014Off The Record\n11:45\u2014Music on the Heather\n12:00\u2014Don Messer\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25-CBC Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Stories with John Draney\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n2:00-B.C. School Broadcast\n2:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Cornucopia\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Countdown\n4:40\u2014Tempo For Teens\n5:30\u2014Tempo\n6:30\u2014Pat and Gloria\n7:00\u2014News\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Business Barometer\n7:3S\u2014Pacific Startime\n8:00\u2014Assignment\n8:30\u2014Radio International\n9:00\u2014Farm Forum\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Looking Through the\nPapers\n10:30\u2014Continental Holiday\n11:00\u2014Hot Air\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Recorded\" Music\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDOWN\n1. Cloudy\n2. A wing\n3. Circular\nplate\n4. Notions\n5. To take off\nweight\n6. Hindu\nprince's\ntitle\n1. Touch end\nto end\n8. Cover\nwith\njewels\n9. Snow\nvehicles\n12. Mistreat\n16. Venture\n18. Java\ntree\n22. Small,\nsharp\ndagger\n24. Dispatch\n26. Spoken\n28. Rural\narea\n29. Sharp\ntastes\n31. Bride's\nprized\npossession\n33. Ox-cart:\nIndia\ns\nC\nA\nNHrv\n1\nA\ns\nMA\nc\na\nF\n-Hi\nN\n5\n=\nAl\nR\nF\nI\nA\nS\nS\nU\nA\n6E\nA\n3\n__\n1\nL\nA\nT\nE\n\u00a3\n1\nNU\nW\n1\nN\nA\n\u25a0i\n_:\n1\nfl\nUT\ns\nT\nA\nT\nU\n\u2022i\n|\nO\nMb\nfr R\nD\n1\nM\n1\nT\ni\nc\nS\nP\nf\nN\n1\nT\nI\nIS\nK\nc\nA\nP\n|\nV\nA\nV\nO\nO\nSF\n! .\nT\n1\nQ\n1\nJ\n=\n5\nI\nTO\nP\nP\nA\n1\n_\n=\nI\nI\nP\nFP\nF\nO\n_\n3\nF\n5\n1\nA\n1.\nF F\n5\nN\nE\nE\nR\n5\nU\nY\nMN\nYesterday's Answer\n34. Insurgent\n36. Stop\n39. Enclosures\n40. Nobleman\n44. Guided\nACROSS\n1. Lowest\npoint\n6, Queen of\nfairies:\nposs.\n10. Leave off,\nasa\nsyllable\n11. Adam's sol)\n12. Degraded\n13. Immense\n14. Bushel:\nabbr.\n15. Having\na tall\n17. Eskimo\nknife\n19. Wound\nmark\n20. Manuscript:\nabbr.\n21. Weakens\n23. Epochs\n25. Muse of\npoetry\n27. Put out\n30. Knights\n32. Wild ox\n33. Argent:\nsym.\n35. Secular\n37. Demand,\nas payment\n38. Repulsed\n41. No good:\nsi.\n42. Incite\n43. Leaps over\n\u202245. Flexed\n46. Glacial\nridge\n47. Besides\n48. Thin;\npiping\nll-lfo\nDAILY CBYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nI\u00bb    J-ONGFELLOW\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, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nDOOPZR,      AE      RJP      OJKAOP      MP\nEKNOPC      YZKX      WKI,      OKFFKRAKX\nMPEKNP       GRD SXDR AKX. \u2014RWXCD Q Q\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: IN NATURE THERE'S NO BLEMISH BUT THE MIND.\u2014SHAKESPEARE\n(O 1963, Kins Futures Syndicate, Inc.)\n1\n1\n2\n3\n4-\n5\n^\nb\n7\n8\n9\n%\n10\nl\nII\n12\nVA\n6\n14\n%\n15\n\\lo\n17\nIS\n'A\n19\n%\n2o\n11\n22\n^A\n25\n24\n%\n%\n35\n2fc\n^A\n\u25a0XI\n38\n29\n^\n%\n30\n31\nV\/y.\n31\n33\n34\n^A\n35\n3b\n%\n37\n39\n39\n4o\n^1\n4-1\n+2\nl\n43\n44\n45\nt\n4fc\n%\n+7\n\"\/\/I\n48\n%\nClassified\nHELP WANTED\nJOB-TRAINING'----'-\u2022'\nOPPORTUNITIES\nB.C. VOCATIONAL SCHOOL -\nNELSON'-\n(Sponsored by;'-.Urn, Federal-,\nProvincial Government->v '  '\nFree training scheduled to\ncommence January 6, 1964, at\nthe B.C. Vocational School \u2014\nNelson, is offered to suitable\nyoung men in Pre-Apprentice-\nship trade classes leading to Apprenticeship in the following\ntrade:\nMillwright\nPreference is given to physically fit applicants between tha\nages of 16 and 20 years and who\nhave a suitable basic education.\nAll tuition fees and amonthly\nsubsistence allowance are paid\nplus one return transportation to\nNelson from place of residence.\nApply immediately to:\nThe Director of Apprenticeship,\nDepartment of Labour,\n411 Dunsmuir Street,\nVancouver 3, B.C.\n1ST CLASS MECHANIC FOR\nmodern service station and\ngarage. Wage and commission.\nState age and reference. Apply Box 4706 Nelson Daily\nNews.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWOMAN WHO CAN DRIVE . . .\nIf you would enjoy working 3\nor 4 hours a day calling regularly each month on a group of\nStudio Girl cosmetic clients oh\na route to be established ih\nand around Nelson and are\nwilling to make light deliveries, etc., write STUDIO GIRL\nCOSMETICS, DEPT. CD-3N,\n840 LaFletir Ave., Montreal 32.\nRoute will pay up to $5.00 per\nhour.\nOLDER WOMAN REQUIRED\nfor home of working widow,\ntwo children, age 7 and 16.\nLight housekeeping duties in\nexchange for board and room,\nincluding private suite, heated.\nSuite has three rooms and\nbath, modern finish, unfurnished. Permanent position for\nright party. Address all replies to Box 4746, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nDOES AN AVON REPRESENTATIVE CALL ON YOU? We\nmay need someone in your\nneighborhood. No obligation.\nApply to: Mrs. E. C. Hearn,\n15-3270 Laburnum Dr., Trail,\nB.C.\nHOME FOR MOTHER AND\nchildren, no rent, just look after home. Apply Box 4814*M.el-.\nson Daily News. Vy- .-*\u00a3\u2022  :\nROOM AND BOARD1 PLUS \u00a7AI_ \u2022\nary for housekeeper to'live to.*'\nSteady   position:   'Apply' Box\n4738, Nelson Daily News..  \"'\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED STENO. TYP-\ning, shorthand. All office\nduties. Available at once. Box\n4640 Daily News.\nCHESTERFIELD AND CAR-\npeting cleaned expertly in your\nhome. Ph. 352-3728.\nWILL   DO   HOUSEWORK   IN\nyour home. Ph. 352-2661.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '51 Olds., '55 Chev.,\n'55 GMC pickup, '56 Ford convertible, '57 Plymouth hardtop,\n'53 Consul, '53 ZZephyr, Ply-\nmouths, Fords, Chev., Pon-\ntiacs. Good motors, '57 Dodge\nV-8, '56 Ford, '53, Zephyr, '52\nPontiac, '53 Consul\/ SI..Olds,.\npractically new '53 *Fprd.'.JJ.;\n352-5815, Box . 882,424:''ymir\nRoad. -\" 'V'-x*.7:-< '\n\u202256 Plymouth, '56 Hillman.\nhard top, '54 Austin, '56 Ford,\n'52 Austin Station Wagon.\nNorth Shore Service. Phone\n352-2929.\n'63 GALAXY 300. 8,000 MILES.\nSmall down payment and take\nover $85 monthly payments.\nPhone 352-2657.\n'60 CONVERTIBLE - NEW\npaint, new top. Excellent cond.\nPhone 367-3332 Fruitvale.\n1956 PLYMOUTH V-8 AUTOMA-\ntic low mileage, top condition.\nSacrifice $650.00. Ph. 352-2882.\n1951 LAND ROVER. - GOOD\nshape. Apply W. L. McLeod,\nBox 123, Riondel, B.C.\n'55 OLDS, P.B. AND P.S., HYD.\n$700. Ph. 352-7755 after 5 p.m.\n'53  PONTIAC  2-DOOR.  WHAT\noffers. Ph. 352-2924 after 4 p.m.\n'61 ENVOY. LIKE NEW, 1 OW-\nner, custom radio. Ph. 352-6162\nPERSONAL\nUNWANTED HAIR VANISHED\naway with SACA-PELO. SACA-\nPELO is different. It does not\ndissolve-or remove hair from\nthe surface, but penetrates and\nretards growth of UNWANTED HAIR. Lor-Beer Lab. Ltd.,\nSte. 5, 679 Granville St., Vancouver 2, B.C.\nOPENING OF READING\nreadiness kindergarten at 710\nGore St. on Jan. 15. Supervised by a qualified primary\nschool teacher. Phone 332.6934\nfor appointment. L^nlted nutty\nber of pupils accepted. Apt>li-\ncations taken Hiis weel;,\nPERSONAL SUNDfiHSS & SUl\nplies. 601\"- savings. Freq.pri'\nlist  and  sample  on  request'.\nBox 8, Station C, Winnipeg.\ni\n  1 !\t\n^r-rrr-. ; ;\t\n\t\n<P~l'S\u00b0|\n? CLASSIFIED ADS\nperson-to-person want am\nfor quick results!\nMACHINERY\nCHOOSE FROM B.C.'S\nBEST SELECTION OF\nUSED EQUIPMENT\nDB, 1959, w\/high production tilt\ndozer and ripper. Undercarriage\nis generally good. In good condi\ntion throughout. Fair Buy, fob\nCranbrook. FT-7134. $36,000\nD7, 1957, with angledozer and\nwinch. Undercarriage is quite\ngood, balance in very good con\ndition. Fair Buy, fob Cranbrook.\nCF-1U71. $19,500\nTD15, 1960, with angledozer and\nwinch. Running gear repairs\ncompleted. In very good condition. Certified Buy, 30-day warranty, fob Nelson. FT-6900.\n$19,500\nTDC5, 1959, w\/hyd. angledozer\nand winch. In fair to good condition. A good small machine at\na good small price. Fair Buy,\nfob Nelson. FT-7050. $3,750\nHD16, 1956, with angledozer and\nwinch. Undercarriage is quite\ngood, balance is good. Fair Buy,\nfob Cranbrook. FT-6952.    $9,750\nBAKER LULL LOADER, w\/log\nfork, bucket and 4-wheel drive.\nTires 14:00x20 are lair. Machine\nin generally fair condition. Fair\nBuy, fob Cranbrook. CF-11303.\n$3,500\nCHAMPION MOTOR GRADER\nw\/cab, 12' blade. 13:00x24 tires\nare fair to very good. In generally fair condition. Fair Buy,\nfob Cranbrook. FT-6719.     $3,750\nYour Caterpillar Dealer\nFINNING   TRACTOR\nNelson 352-6622\n\"30 Years of Leadership\"\nGROUSER   BARS\nICE  LUGS\nLINCOLN WELDING ROD\nFor Efficient\nTRACTOR WINTERIZING\nAvailable  at\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Co.\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.      Ph. 352-5301\nHART BATTERIES\n6 and   12-Volt  Commercial,\nIndustrial, Mining, etc.\nDry Charged\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST MEXICAN SILVER BRA-\ncelet between Civic and Hall\nSt. Tuesday evening. Ph. 352-\n6190.-\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nCOMMUNITY AUCTION SALES\nASSOC. LTD. - Cranbrook, B.C.\nSales Date\nWed., Nov. 20, 10 a.m. (Mixed)\nList with\nFRANK HILL, Director\nBox 2139, Cranbrook, or\nPhone 4-Y-, Fort Steele\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beei cattle, phone\n352-6874, Nelson and District\nA.I. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician.\nFOR SALE - HORSE AND\nharness. Write Wm. Tymofe-\nvich, Box 454 or Phone 365-5575\nCastlegar, B.C.\nMILKING GOATS FOR SALE.\nCrescent Valley Store.\nROOM AND  BOARD\nROOM   AND   BOARD   AVAIL-\nable. Ph. 352-2657 after lour.\nPREFERABLY TEACHER OR\nstudent. Phone 352-7184.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman. Phone 352-2766.\nAVAILABLE    IMMEDIATELY\nPhone 352-7423.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,  ETC.,  FOR SALE\nLOOKING FOR A REALLY\n\"liveable\" large family home?\nWe have one ol Nelson's loveliest older type for immediate\noccupancy. Easily adaptable to\nduplexing. 3 bedrooms upstairs, oak floors. Extra large\nliving room and nice dining\nroom. Den on main floor with\nprivate bathroom. Newly re\nnovated kitchen complete with\nChef Master In-Wall oven and\nsurface elements. Laundry\nutility room. Bedroom in full\nbasement. Automatic oil heat\nLawn and garden, private\nbackyard patio. Phone Harri\nson 352-3525.\nRANCH. 350 ACRES OF EXCEL\nlent range and hay land. Plenty\nof water. Power and telephone\nBuildings include two good\nhomes, barn, garages, sheds\netc. Everything in good condition. Offers ultimate privacy,\nyet only 7 miles from Nelson\non pavement. W. Kalyniuk Agencies. Phone 352-2425.\nVOCATIONAL SCHOOL AREA.\nAttractive 3 BR stucco home,\nquiet location. Lit, kitchen with\neating area. 1 BR down, 2 BRs\nand bathroom up. Full basement suitable for suite, oil furnace. ONLY $9,500 with $2000\ndown. Robertson, Hilliard, Cat-\ntell Realty, Ph. 352-7252.\nRANCH FO: SALE. 148 ACRES,\n5 cultivated. 2 good houses,\nwater, Iruit trees. Barn and\nanother house in need of repair. Blewett, 49 Creek. Apply\nE. P. Antifaeff, 319 Robson\nSt.. Nelson. Phone 352-5722.\n(Continued next column)\nBUSINESS   8.   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAgencies\nKokanee Detective Agency\n418 Gore St., Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN  LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St.        Phone 352-3231\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 8 a.m. \u2014 9 p.m.\nAcross Lake       Phone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen I\nS23 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355\nAustin \u2022 Morris - MGA - Wolseley\nCars \u2014 Parts \u2014 Service\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE LTD.\nYmir Rd.    Ph. 352-7421    Nelson\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.       Phone 352-6661\nCOLUMBIA   TRADING   CO.\nMl Front St.          Ph   352-5571\nLots of free parking.\t\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling.  Serving Nelson  and  Dist\n1020 Davies St. - Nelson\nCoal and Cartage\nTOWLER FUEL & TRANSFER\nDomestic Coals of All Kinds\nGeneral Cartage\u2014Local Moving\nPh. 352 3031 394 Baker St.\nContractors\nJ. SAWADA\nContractor - General Carpenlery\nCabinet Work\nPhone 352-3432\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB C Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St\nPh   365-5342-Castlegar. B C.\nFurriers\nDEE'S LADIES APPAREL\n535 Baker St.  Phone 352-2955\nRenlrew Furs Agent for Sales \u2022\nRemodelling - Repairs - Storage\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph   352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\nPrinting\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO   ELECTRONIC\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON  EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C.  - Phone 352-5455\nSporting Goods\nFred Whitcley's Sporl Shop\n38 Baker Street   Phone 352-7741\nSteam Baths\nNELSON STEAM BATHS\nExercise Centre - 369 Baker St\nTopsoil\nLurry's Topsoil, Sand _ Gravel\n9th and Davies St   Ph   352-2355\nDays or 352-7576 Evens.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nFAIRVIEW\nCozy 1-bedroom home with\nan additional bedroom in the\nbasement. This lovely little\nhome has a comfortable living\nroom, dining room and large\nkitchen, plus full basement,\nOil heat and 220 $7750\nwiring. Price    . .\nLAKEVIEW CRESCENT\nMULTIPLE LISTING\nBEAUTIFUL 2-bedroom home\non a spacious landscaped lot\nwith outstanding view. This\nlovely home is featured with\nlarge rooms throughout, fireplace in the front room, plaster\nfinish, hardwood floors, full\nbasement with oil heat, and\nmany other special points.\u2014\nCall us today for an appoint-\n\u2122nt- $17,900\nPrice    '\nHOUSTON STREET\nOWNER MUST SELL\nSpacious 4-bedroom home on\nthree nicely landscaped lots.\nThis lovely home has 1120 sq.\nft. of living space on the main\nfloor plus two large bedrooms\nupstairs. The main floor includes a large living room, a\nlarge combined kitchen and\ndining room, bathroom and\ntwo large bedrooms. This is an\nideal family home, easy terms.\nOwner will consider all offers.\nCall us today $] ) QUO\nPrice only\t\nFAIRVIEW\nOlder type 1-bedroom home\nnear Lakeside Park. Has full\nbasement; quiet location;\nheated by gas; nice level lot.\nEasy Terms. $4000\nPrice   \t\nBLEWETT\nBEAUTIFUL 4-B.R. stuccoed\nhome with four acres of beautifully kept grounds. Included\nwith this property is a garage,\nworkshop, chicken coop, tractor shed and many young and\nheavily producing fruit trees.\nThis lovely home has a large\nliving room, spacious kitchen\nand dining area, patio, sleeping porch, full basement, nicely  finished,   and  220  wiring.\n\u2122\u00ab. $16,000\nOnly   '\nNORTH SHORE\nHome with Beach Frontage.\nCozy 2-B.R. home with 4.7\nacres of land, lovely gardened\nfront. This comfortable home\nhas quiet surroundings and includes nice L.R. with fireplace,\ncombined kitchen and nook.\nTwo B.R.s and bath. It is very\neconomically heated by an oil\nfurnace. Added feature of this\nproperty is approximately 75\nfeet of beach $ 10,500\nfrontage. Price .\nFAIRVIEW\nDOUGLAS ROAD\nLovely  view  lot  overlooking\nlake and Fairview. 144 ft on\nDouglas Road. Call us today\nfor further $ I 100\ninformation. Price\nSELLING YOUR HOME?\nList Now With\nLTD.\n\u00ab2 Ward St.      Phone 352-7217\nL'TTI.E OR NO DOWN PAY-\nitient will put you into a 2-bed-\nri-om home, Owner leaving for\not.ier employment. Monthly\npayment $78.70. William Kalyniuk Agencies. Phone 352-2425.\nONE OF NELSON'S FINEST 3-\nbedroom homes in Fairview.\n$3,500 down, balance arranged\nin reasonable monthly payments. Full price $18,500. Ph,\n352-2139.\nMODERN 2 BEDROOM RtlNG-\nalow on 4 lots. Landscaped.\nCentrally located on bus. line.\nFull basement. Gas furnace.\nPhone 352-7607 alter 6 p.m.\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE AT 1105\nSelby St. Apply Box 519, Creston or Ph. 356-2551, Creston.\nSALE    OR     RENT    4-ROOM\nhouse. Ymir. Ph. 3117-9779.\nFOR SALE - ONE BEDROOM\nhouse, Salmo. Phone 365-5638.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nSERVICE STATION\nROGERS PASS HIGHWAY\nImperial Oil Limited invites\nLessee applications for service\nslation at Golden, B.C. Capital\nrequired $6,000.00. Write giving age, education, capital\navailable, and experience in\nmerchandising, management\nand mechanical, to Mr. I). S.\nBradley. 1564 Pandosy Street,\nKelowna. B.C\nTHE CORPORATION OF\nTHE CITY OF NELSON\nNOTICE OF ELECTION\nPUBLIC NOTICE is hereby\ngiven to the electors of the Municipality of the City of Nelson\nthat I require the presence of the\nsaid electors at the City Clerk's\nOffice, City Hall, 502 Vernon St.,\nNelson, B.C., on Monday, the\n25th, day of November, 1963, at\nthe hour ol ten o'clock in the\nforenoon, for the purpose of\nelecting persons to represent\nthem as Mayor, Aldermen for\nthe City of Nelson, and School\nTrustees for the City area of\nNelson School District No. 7.\nThe mode of nomination of\ncandidates shall be as follows:\nCandidates shall be nominated\nin writing by Iwo duly qualified\nelectors of the Municipality. The\nnomination-paper shall be delivered to the Returning Officer\nat any time between the date of\nthis notice and noon of the day of\nnomination. The nomination-\npaper may be in the form prescribed in the \"Municipal Act,\"\nand shall state the name, residence, and occupation of the\nperson nominated in such manner as to sufficiently identify\nsuch candidate. The nominatiqn-\npaepr shall be subscribed to by\nthe candidate.\nIn the event of a poll being\nnecessary, such poll shall be\nopened Tuesday, the 3rd, day\nof December and Wednesday,\nthe 4th, day of December, 1963,\nbetween the hours of 9 o'clock,\nA.M. and 12 o'clock noon in the\nCity Hall for permitting duly\nqualified electors to vote who\nshall sign a statement showing\nthat it is their expectation that\nthey will be absent from the\nMunicipality on the linal day of\nthe poll, namely, Thursday, the\n5th, day of December, 1963, when\ntlie poll shall be opened from 8\no'clock, A.M. to 8 o'clock P.M.\nin St. Saviour's Memorial Hall,\ncorner Ward and Carbonate\nStreets, Nelson, B.C., of which\neach person is hereby required\nto take notice and govern himself accordingly.\nGiven under mv hand at the\nCity Hall, Nelson, B.C., this 15th,\nday of November, 1963.\nC. W. R. HARPER.\nReturning Officer.\nNOTE: Required to be elected:\n1 Mayor\n3 Aldermen\n2 School Trustees (For\" 2 yr.\nterm)\n1 School Trustee  (For 1  yr.\nterm)\nTHE CORPORATION OF\nTHE VILLAGE OF SILVERTON\nNOTICE OF ELECTION\nPublic notice is hereby given\nto the electors of the Municipality of Silverton, that I require\nthe presence of the said electors\nat the Municipal Office on Monday, the twenty-fifth day of\nNovember, 1963, at the hour of\nten o'clock in the forenoon, for\nthe purpose of electing persons\nto represent them as Commissioners (2) for the term Of\ntwo years, and one trustee on\nthe Board ot School Trustees of\nSchool District No. 8 (Slocan)\nfor a term of two years.\nThe mode of nomination of\ncandidates shall, be as follows:\nCandidates shall be nominated\nin writing by two duly qualified\nelectors of the municipality. The\nnomination-paper shall be delivered to the Returning Officer\nat any time between the date of\nthis notice and noon of the day\nof nomination. The nomination-\npaper may be in the form prescribed in the 'Municipal Act' and\nshall state the name, residence,\nand occupation of the person\nnominated in such manner as to\nsufficiently identify such candidate.\nIn the event bf a poll being\nnecessary, such poll will be\nopened at the Municipal Office\non Thursday the fifth day of\nDecember, 1963, between the\nhours of eight o'clock in the forenoon and eight o'clock in the\nafternoon, of which every person\nis. hereby required to take notice\nahd govern himself accordingly.\nCiven under my hand at Silverton, British Columbia, this\nfourteenth day of November,\n1963.\nMRS.  M.   STEELE,\nReturning Officer.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 162)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot 6594,\nKootenay District, save and except thereout that part subdivided by Plan 1416.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 112077-1 to the above\nmentioned lands in the name of\nREGINALD HORACE PROVIS\nand bearing date the 11th of December, 1957 I HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE ol my intention at the\nexpiration of one calendar month\nfrom the first publication hereof\nto Issue Provisional Certificate\nof Title in lieu of such lost Cer-.\ntificate. Any person having any\ninformation with reference to\nsuch Lost Certificate of Title is\nrequested to communicate with\nthe undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C.\nTHIS 31st DAY\nOF OCTOBER. 1963.\nL. A. McPHAIL\nDeouty Registrar\nNp'snn Land Registration\nDistrict.\nDale nf Firsl Publication November 2nd, 1963.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n(Continued!\nAPPLICATION FOR A\nWATER LICENCE\n\"WATER ACT\"\n(Section 6)\nI, Harry Rezansoff of Box 21,\nBrilliant, B.C., hereby apply to\nthe Comptroller of Water Rights\nIor a licence to divert and use\nwater out of Iron Creek which\nflows S.W. and give notice of\nmy application to all persons\naffected.\nThe point of diversion Will be\nlocated at Pt. A. W.R. Map 5284.\nThe quantity of Water lo be\ndiverted is 1000 g.a.d.\nThe purpose for which the\nwater will be used is domestic.\nThe land .on which the water\nwill be used is Lot 16, of S.L. 13\nor Lot 4598, Kootenay District,\nPlan 4882.\nA copy of this application was\nposted at the proposed point of\ndiversion and on the land where\nthe water is to be used on the\n16th day of September, 1963, and\ntwo copies were filed in the office of the Water Recorder at\nNelson, B.C.\nObjections to this application\nmay be filed with the said Water\nRecorder or with the Comptroller of Water Rights at Victoria,\nB.C. within thirty days of the\nfirst date of publication of the\napplication.\nHarry Rezansoff,\nApplicant.\nFirst date of publication\nNovember 9, 1963.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\nPHONE 352-5571\n901  Front  St. Nelson\nHARDBOARD SPECIALS\n4'x8'x1\/i\" Hardboard  1.50\n4'x8'x(4\" Tempered\nHardboard  2.45\n2'x4'Jty\u00ab\" Hardboard  45\nPLYWOOD SPECIALS\n4'x8'x'\/i\" Sanded Fir  5.75\n4'xB'xy.i\" G.I.S. Fir  4.45\n4'x8'x%\" Sanded Fir  4.60\n42\"x84\"x%\" Unsanded  2.07\nIVi\" Aluminum .Self-Storing\nSTORM DOORS from ...35.95\nSTORM WINDOW PLASTIC\n3', 4', 6', 8' widths. Sq. ft. .03\nVERMICULITE INSULATION\nfor ceilings. Bag covers 27 sq.\nft. 2\" thick. Per bag  1.85\nGIRLS - The Ideal Gift for\nHIS Christmas \u2014 Disston saw,\ntape, apron, and pencil. Gift\npackage. Per set  9.55\nNow's the time to make that\nextra table for Christmas. \u2014\nPLYWOOD CUTTINGS\nfrom 8c to 22c per ft.\n18\"x24\"  FORMICA PANELS.\nEach '5\n14\" LEGS. Set of 4 with\nbrackets  2.72\nBids will be received by the\nundersigned up to 5:00 p.m. November 29th, 1963 for the following electrical heating units:\n1 \u2014 6 foot .Model F.C. 2000 W\nElectro-Ray; 1 \u2014 5 foot Model\nF.C. 1500 W Electro-Ray; 1 \u20144\nfoot Model F.C. 1250 W Electro-\nRay; 8 \u2014 7 foot Models F.B.\n20O0 W. B.C. Heating Equipment\nCo.; 4 \u2014 Thermostats.\nThe above units may be seen\nat the School District No. 7 Maintenance Shop on Cottonwood\nStreet. Highest or any bid not\nnecessarily accepted.\nPlease forward tenders to the\nSecretary-Treasurer, School District No. 7 (Nelson), 554 Stanley\nStreet, Nelson, B.C.\nLARGE OFFICE SPACE $75.\nFactory made go carts with\nmotors. Hot drink vending ma\nchine for coffee, soup and hot\nchocolate. For sale or trade on\ncars, \"trucks, boat or trailer,\netc. Apply Box 117, Nelson\nDaily News.\nFREEZER SPECIALS - LEAN\ngrain led pork sides, 32c per\nlb., cut and wrapped 35c per\nlb. Sides of choice grain fed\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c per\nlb. Newdan Farm, Creston.\nPhone 356-9901 or nights 356-\n9769. Free weekly delivery.\nWANTED - SECOND STEW-\nard for Royal Canadian Legion, Nakusp. Starting salary\n$285.00 per month. Applfcations\nto be received by November\n30. Secretary\/Royal Canadian\nLegion, Box 157, Nakusp. B.C.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nI Continued i\nDRY WOOD, $1? PER CORD IN\n2 crd. lots. Single crd. $20.\nBirch $22. Ph. 693, Balfour. P.\nIwanik, Procter, B.C.   \u25a0\nFEED FOR SALE - ORDER\nnow. Grain, hay and straw, delivered. Joe Pogony, Jr., Lister, B.C. Phone 356-2605.\nPORK FOR SALE, Vt OR\nwhole.. 1 heavy sow. Carrots\nand cabbage, 50 lb. lots. Ph.\n352-2355.\nWILL TRADE PLEASANT\nhome in White Rock for home\nin Nelson. Full particulars,\nwrite Box 125.\nYOUNG BEEF - 'A COW 37c\nlb; front half 37c ib.; back half\n40c lb.'Frank Toering, Phone\nBalfour 687.\nRENTALS\n(Continued!\nCOW TO BUTCHER, 25c LB.\nPh. 185 Balfour, J. A. Huiberts,\nR.R. 1.\nGRADE \"A\" BEEF, 100 \u25a0 200\nlbs. at 45c lb., front quarter\n37c lb. Phone 352-6866.\n30\" FINLAY GAS RANGE, FUL-\nly automatic, transistor tape\nrecorder. Phone 352-2537.\n2 PAIRS OF SKIS AND POLES.\n1 pair of boots. Reasonable\nprice. Phone 352-5156.\nLLOYD BABY CARRIAGE\nwith retractable snow runners.\nGood condition. Phone 352-3088.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals.\n339 Baker St. Phone 352-3631.\nBEATTY WRINGER WASHER,\n$30. Phone 352-3655.\nASHLEY HEATER, $75. PHONE\n352-2989.\nSTEEL   FURNACE.   MODERN\nkitchen range $35. Ph. 352-8581.\nOIL  STOVE   -   WILL  HEAT\nfrom 5-6 rooms. Ph. 362-7796.\n8 MM. MOVIE CAMERA. PH.\n352-2398 after 5 p.m.\n50,000   B.T.U.   FLOOR   SPACE\ngas heater. Ph. 352-7346.\nRENTALS\nONE OR TWO-ROOM FURN-\nished apartments in Annable\nBlock, $21 and up. Call 352-7217\n\u2014 Poulin Agencies Ltd., 582\nWard Street.\n1 BEDROOM APT. CLOSE TO\nKootenay Forest Products. $45\nmonth including heat. Ph. 352-\n7252. Robertson, Hilliard, Cat-\ntell.\n4 RM. FLAT AND SEWING\nroom. Will furn. T.V. hook-up\nand phone. North Shore near\nWillowhaven. For couple at\nreasonable rent. Ph. 352-7493.\nCONSTRUCTION WORKERS\nHskpg, aDsUJeeping rm. week-\n, ly, monthly rates. Dishes, linen   supplied,   parking.   Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker St.\nNEW UNFURNISHED ONE\nbedroom apartment, self-contained, central. Phone 352-5426\nweekend and after 6 p.m.\nTHREE BEDROOM HOUSE -\n220 wii'ing, auto, gas heat.\nClose in. Available now. Phone\n352-2520,\nATTRACTIVE UNFURNISHED\n1 bedroom apartment. Close\nin. Heated. Electric range.\nPrivate entrance. Ph. 352-6263.\n4 BDRM. HOME TO RENT Tp\nresponsible party in nice residential district. Ph. 352-3453 or\n352-\"6414.\nCOMFORTABLE 1 BEDRQOM\nhouse, Davies St. Closed in\nporch, basement, oil furnace.\nCarport. Phone 352-2707.\nCAR PARKING SPACE 400 BLK.\nBaker St. $5 mo. Apply Lambert Realty.\nTENDERS WILL BE ACCEP-\nted for the purchase of approximately three hundred\n13001 6 and 12 volt batteries,\nquote price per. battery to R.\nR. Peachey Plumbing, Silver-\nton, B.C.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Sewing machines, vacuum\ncleaners, floor polishers, typewriters. 339 Baker St. Phone\n352-3631.\nGIRL'S BICYCLE, 3 SPEED.\nTourist model. Good cond. $25.\nChild's crib complete, with\nspring mattress. Good cond.\n$15. Phone 352:3327. ;\nWESTINGHOUSE FRIDGE -\nAutomatic defrost, as new.\nAlso older G.E. Model fridge.\nPhone 352-3865 or call at 1523\nSlocan St.\nHINDS OF BEEF 59c LB. FIVE\nyoung beef '48c lb. Five sides\npork 35c Ib. Whitfords Meats,\nCreston, B.C. Phone 356-2556.\n[HAY FOR SALE, TIMOTHY\nand clover. 1st cut $18, 2nd cut,\n$20. F.O.B. Newdan Farm.\nCreston, B.C. Phone 356-9901.\nFOR SALE\u2022- TOT~AIR~ FUR-\nnace and stoker. Apply 706\nStanley St. Phone 352-6871.\n7 ROOM HOUSE, 4 B.R., AUTO-\nmatic heat. 708 Silica St.\nPhone 352-2865.\nFURNISHED HEATED APART-\nment. 817 Silica St. Phone 352-\n6227 after 5.\n1 B.R. SUITE. PRIVATE BATH-\nrm. and gas stove. Ph. 352-3962\nMOD. GROUND FLOOR SUITE\nfor one adult. Box 9470, N.D.N.\nLGE. MODERN APT. UNFURN.\nClose in. Box 30 Daily News.\n1 BDRM. FURN. APT. NEAR\nJr. High School. Ph. 352-6980.\n2 BDRM. HEATED UNFURN.\nSt. Adults. Phone 352-7162.\nHSKP.   ROOMS   AND   SUITE\nfor rent. 523 Vernon.\n3  ROOM   HOUSE.   NEXT   TO\nBlewett Store. Ph. 352-5039.\nLIGHT    HOUSEKEE PING\nroom. Phone 352-2796.\n2 BEDROOM  WINTER HOME\nfor rent. 131 Chatham Street.\nPARTLY FURN. 3 RM. APT.\nPrivate bathroom. Ph. 352-3488\n507 Silica St.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FUR-\nniture, antiques, coins, old\ngold, guns and jewels. Home\nFurniture Exchange. Ph. 352-\n6531. 413 Hall St.\nWANTED GARAGE FOR CAR\nin vicinity 700 block Hoover St.\nWrite Dr. Smart, 708 Hoover\nSt. or phone 352-5133.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" sq. inr- lb. Nelson Daily News.\nRIFLES, SHOTGUNb, PISTOLS.\nModern or antique. Norm's\nSports Shop.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nCHIHUAHUA PUPS, $10.00 TO\n$25.00. Good homes wanted for\nolder dogs. Apply Bird's Ken-\nnels, Blueberry Creek.\nK 9 REG. BOARDING KEN-\nnels, Fruitvale Highway. G. A\nCrawford, prop. Ph. 367-2483.\nlath} JfauiB\nCirculation Dept., Ph.  352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\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\nor the 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  $ 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   Kimberley,   Mrs.   A.   W.\nBrown.\nIn Trail, Mrs. W. E. Spooner:\nCLEAN PRIVATE BEDROOM\nfor gentleman near Legion.\nPh. 352-3644 or 352-5030.\nMODERN 2 BEDROOM APT.\nUnfurn. Suitable for couple.\nPh. 352-6148 mornings.\nSMALL SUITE SUITABLE FOR\none man. 116 Vernon St. Phone\n352-5602.\nLARGE 1 BEDROOM APT.\nFUrn. or unfurn. Heated. H.W.\nsupplied. Ph. 352-5252.\nDUPLEX, 4 ROOMS AND BATH.\nPrivate entrance, gas range,\nheated, close in. Ph. 352-7491.\nHOOVER ST. 2-BDRM. UN-\nfurn. suite. Ph. 352-6871 or call\nat 706 Stanley St.\nLARGE i 1 BEDROOM APT.\nelectric stove supplied. Ph.\n352-7501.\n3 - ROOM APARTMENT, FUR-\nnlshed, heat included. Phone\n352-2107.\nWAREHOUSE RENTAL -\nStore your boat and'trailer.\nPhone Ellison's, 352r3181.\nSMALL, COZY, SfcLF-CONT.\nfurn. suited 1 blk. off Baker,\npriv. entrance. .Ph. 352-2155. __\n2 R. FURN. SUITE, GROUND\nfloor. Ph'. 352-2696--pcall 614\nVictoria St.\nFOR SALE OR RENT \u2014 3 RM.\ncottage, North Shore. Close in.\nPh. 352-3467 after 6 p.m:,:\n2 TO 3 BEDROOM HOUSE, OIL\nfurnace, one block from bus.\nPhone 352-6068 or 352-2517.\nFOR RENT:  HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. $20'mo.\" PIC352-7462.\nFURN.   HSKPG.    RM. APPLY\n140 Baker or ph. 352-3384.\nPrairie News\nAPPOINT MAGISTRATE\nRED DEER (CP) - Appointment of Edward H. Read, longtime barrister and crown prosecutor in Drumheller, as magistrate here beginning in December, was announced by the\nattorney - general's department\nThursday. Deputy Attorney-\nGeneral John Hart also announced establishment of a permanent\ndepartment office here.\nPROVINCE  OUTGUNNED\nSASKATOON (CP)-Irwin Mcintosh of North Battleford, Saskatchewan Tourist Association\npresident, olid the STA annual\nmeeting Thursday the province\nwas \"being outgunned in the big\nleagues\" in attracting tourists.\nGETS JAIL TERM\nBRANDON (CP) - Norman\nEdward Stephen, 21, of Brandon,\nwas sentenced Thursday to one\nyear in jail on a charge of brea-\ning, entering and theft. The case\ninvolved a break-in at a city\nlivestock market canteen and\ntheft of a radio and goods worth\nabout $80.\nWANTS AIR BASE\nEDMONTON (CP)-A. R. Patrick, Minister of Industry and\nDevelopment, said Thursday the\nAlberta government is negotiating with the federal government\nfor purchase of the abandoned\nClaresholm air base near Calgary. He said no decision would\nbe reached until December.\nURGE BETTER ROADS\nSASKATOON (CP)-The Saskatchewan Tourist Association\nThursday urged the provincial\ngovernment to Improve roads to\nprivate resorts ln the province\nand to tell the STA in advance\nof changes in hunting fees which\nmight adversely affect the tourist business;\nSCHOOL FILLED\nEDMONTON (CP)-The Northern Alberta Institute of Technology was forced to turn down\n300 prospective students this fall\nbecause its facilities were filled,\nprincipal W. A. B. Saunders said\nThursday. Current enrolment in\nthe new institute is 1,300 first-\nyear students.\nKILLED ON HIGHWAY\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Nick Sosiu-\nkalo, 76, of St. Boniface was\nkilled Thursday night when hit\nby .a car as. he crossed the\nTrans-Canada highway 10 miles\neast of here. Police said he had\njust left a this.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963^9\nWorld News Briefs\nWINS FILM AWARDS\nOTTAWA (CP) - Two films\nproduced for the department of\nhealth and welfare have been\nawarded Chris awards as outstanding documentaries by the\nInternational Film Festival at\nColumbus, Ohio, the department said Thursday. The film\nThe New Baby, a documentary\non infant care, was produced\nfor the department by Crawley\nFilms of Ottawa. The Long Way\nBack, a film on the work of\nvolunteers in mental hospitals,\nwas produced by the National\nFilm Board.\nFRANCIS LYNCH DIES\nOTTAWA (CP)-Francis C. C.\nLynch, 78, former head of the\nNational Museum, died here\nThursday. Mr. Lynch entered\nthe federal government service\nin 1906 with the old department\nof the interior. He was in\ncharge of the National Museum\nIn 1933 and again from 1936 to\n1946.\nCRASH  KILLS  FOUR\nCOTONOU, Dahomey (Reuters)\u2014Four persons aboard a\nGerman-owned B-26 plane died\nwhen the plane missed the runway at Cotonou Airport and\ncrashed into the sea Thursday\nnight.'\nLONG STRIKE SETTLED\nROME   (AP)   -   Employers\nand   union   representatives   of\n1,000,000  Italian  building  construction workers Thursday set-'\ntied a months-old labor dispute\nthat   sometimes   erupted   into |\nbloody rioting. They .agreed oh\na 10-per-cent boost in Wages audi\na   46-hour   instead \"of !.!48*fiout\nwork week. Wages, vary for different categories of workers,\nGUNMEN  GET $107,000    ..\nCARACAS, Venezuela (API-\nGunmen dressed In -arnfy\" Uniforms staged a $107,0_ft payroll '\nholdup at Venezuela's National I\nAgrarian Institute \"fhursday.\nThe bandits forced- seven employees to undress, then looted\na safe and fled.\nBEACON       J^'\nMOTORS\nLTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nACADIAN - GMC\nUSED CAR LOTS\nAt      . \"\nCASTLEGAR - Ph. .65.8135\nNELSON - Ph. 358-8841\nTlj\n\u25a0*?,'j\n'  I'-tSfc:\n\u25a0tl   '\"*\nNew BISCAYNES\nNew BEL-AIRS\nNew CHEVELLE\n\u2014'63 Chev. Bel-air V8 Automatic\n\u2014'63 Chev. Bel-air 6 Std.\n\u2014'63 Corvair Sedan\n2\u2014'63 Chev. Biscayne Sedam\n\u2014'61  Volkswagen Sedan\n\u2014'61 Corvair Station Wagon\n\u2014'60 Simco Station Wagon\n\u2014'60 Boat and Motor and Trailer\n\u2014'60 Corvair Sedan\n\u2014'60 Vauxhall Station Wagon\n\u2014'60 Chev. Biscayne Sedan\n\u2014'59 Meteor 9-Pass. Station Wagon\n\u2014'59 Chev. Bel-air V8. Automatic\n\u2014'59 Chev. Biscayne 6 cyl. Std.\n'58 Plymouth  Station  Wagon\n\u2014'57 Ford Sedan. 6 cyl. Automatic\n\u2014'57 Chev. Bel-air V8. Automatic\n\u2014'57 Consul Sedan\n\u2014'57 Chevrolet 2-Door\n\u2014'56 Chevrolet Bel-air\n\u2014'56 Chevrolet V8. Automatic\n\u2014'56 Ford Fairlane\n\u2014'56 Ford Panel\n\u2014'56 Chevrolet 2-Door\n\u2014'56 Meteor Sedan\n\u2014'56 Volkswagen\n\u2014'56 Ford H.T. (as is)\n\u2014'56 Chevrolet Sedan\n\u2014'55 Ford Sedan\n\u2014'55 Olds Convertible\n\u2014'55 Dodge Vi-Ton\n\u2014'55 Meteor Sedan\n\u2014'55 Plymouth Sedan\n\u2014'55 Olds Sedan\nOpen 8 fo 6 p.m:\nDAILY\nCASH \u2014 TERMS \u2014 TRADES\nNo Down Payment With\nApproved Credit\nThe Largest Stock of New\nand Used Cars in the Interior at\nREUBEN BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\n<!24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE^\nBCAA RECOMMENDED\n323 Vernon St.        Nelson        Ph. 352-3T21 -c\n - cr=S>\nWI\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nGOOD CLEAN CARS\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE - CADILLAC i_i\u00bbS__?*\nSTARFIRE - CORVAIR \u2022 CHEVY II and.ENVQX L\nOpen Till 8 p.m. For Car Sales Every Day\n .  \u2014\u2014\"\u2014! : \u25a0 \u2014\u2014\t\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., NOV. 16, 1963\nNO ICE CREAM, PLEASE\nBut We Do Have\u2014\nCold Cream ... Moisture Cream ... Foot Cream\nVanishing Cream . . . Lanolized Cream\nPry Skin Cream . . . All-Purpose Cream\nComplexion Cream . . . Hand Cream\nand everything for girls and their complexions\nIn the COSMETIC SECTION\nAt\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error in the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nVANCOUVER  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMIMES\nBeth Cop\nBralorne\nCanam\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold\nCowichan Cop\nCraig,\nDolly Varden\nGiant Mascot\nGranduc\nHighland Bell\nHuestis\nKamloops\nRoot. B. M\nMagnum\nMt. Washington\nOttawa Silver\nPend Oreille\nReeves MacDonald\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Eidge\nSilver Standard\nTorwest\nUtica\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Mines\nOftS.\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCharter\nPeace River Gas\nRoyal Can\nUnited\nVantor\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\nB C Power\n6.55\n4.00\n.10\n.11\n.68\n.96\n17.00\n.56\n.78\n4.20\n3.00\n.28\n.05%\n.2!H4\n.22\n.45\n.25\n3.00\n1.80\n1.35\n2.75\n.05\n.271,4\n.86\n.09\n.35%\n.16\n4.00\n17.25\n1.65\n.49%\n.06 Vi\n1.36\n.09\n2.60\n2.50\n23.00\n24.62%\nB C Telephone\nBurrard Mort\nCanadian Collieries\nCrestbrook\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nHome B\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\nMacM & Powell River\nTrans Mtn\nPIPELINES\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nBANKS\nBk. of Montreal  62.25\nImp. Bk. of C.\nRoyal Bk. of C\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.\nAll Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nDiversified B\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGrouped Income\nIntl Mutual\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual Accum\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada \"C\"\nUnited Ace. Funds\n55.50\n6.00\n9.12%\n1.10\n28.50\n13.75\n6.25\n6.24\n24.75\n14.62%\n27.50\n33.25\n14.75\n64.12%\n63.25      64.00\n72.62%   73.50\n5.07\n7.01\n9.41\n5.56\n7.68\n10.28\n10.63   11.65\n9.27   10.16\n4.66\n4.68\n3.79\n4.60\n7.08\n5.12\n5.12\n4.14\n5.00\n7.70\n12.92   14.05\n7.81\n4.00\n7.62\n5.53\n6.57\n6.48\n8.56\n4.37\n7.98\n6.05\n7.23\n7.08\nFAMOUS SIRE\nAfter finishing an illustrious\nharness   racing   career,   Peter\nVolo sired 377 trotters and 156\npacers.\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAnacon Lead\nAumaque\nAunor\nBarnat\nBibis\nBrunswick\nBuffalo Ank\nCampbell C\nCampbell R L\nCassiar\nChimo\nCoch WiU\nCoin Lake\nCombined Metals\nCons. Discovery\nCons Halliwell\nConwest\nCopper Corp.\nCraig\nD'Aragon\nDeer Horn\nDenison\nEast Sullivan\nFaraday\nFrobex\nGeco\nGiant Yel.\nGunnar Gold\nHeadway\nHollinger\nHudson Bay\nHydra Ex\nJoliet Que.\nKenville\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\nLeitch\nLorado\nMadsen\nMarboy\nMaritime Mining\nMattagami Mines\nMcKenzie\nMining Corp\nMulti Mins.\nMurray\nNew Hosco\nNorgold\nNorlex\nNormetals\nNorth Rankin\nOpemiska\nOrchan\nPick Crow\nPine Point\nPlacer\nPreston\nQuebec Copper\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\n7.10\n.45\n.24\n.06%\n3.45\n.71\n.24\n5.55\n2.34\n3.00\n14.00\n10.75\n.82\n3.95\n.21\n.19\n.80\n.16\n4.25\n.15\n17.75\n.16%\n.57\n10.25\n2.34\n1.01\n.70\n30.37%\n10.37%\n8.25\n.18\n27.75\n57.62%\n.26%\n.23%\n.07\n6.20\n35.50\n7.45\n2.00\n1.69\n2.34\n.14%\n.49\n11.37%\n.30\n19.62%\n.36\n1.13\n1.86\n.04%\n.30\n3.00\n.27\n7.70\n3.00\n.51\n18.50\n27.75\n9.15\n.15\n1.25\n10.75\n.48\n.76\n14.00\n.21\nSherritt Gordon.\nSiscoe -\nSteep Rock\" \"\nSullivan Con\nThomp-Lund\nTribag       \"      --\nUnited Keno -\nViolamac\nWright Hargreaves\nYoung Gold\nOILS\nBanff Oils\nBata\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Delhi\nCdn Highcrest\nPetrol\nPlace\nProv Gas\nSpooner\nStanwell Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nArgus 2nd pfd.\nAtlas St.\nBell Telephone\nB.A. Oil\nB.C. Forest\nCan. Cement\nCan. Packers B\nCanadian Breweries\nCan. Curtis Wright\nCanadian Dredge\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nChem Cell\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Mining & Smelting\nDist. Seagram\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chemical\nDom Textiles\nFalconbridge\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFord U.S.\nFord Can\nGen. Steel Wares\nGoodyear pfd\nHome A\nHusky Oil\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Ace.\nInt. Nickel\nInt Prov Steel & Pipe\nInt Util\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMolson Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nPage Hersey\nMARKET TRENDS\n2.85\n1.80\n\u20224:35-\n1.49\n.50\n2.00\n4.60\n2.40\n.65\n.06%\n1.54\n.03%\n17.62%\n5.10\n.17\n.51\n.43%\n1.55\n.10\n.57\n1.50\n1.36\n.04\n50\n59 Vi\n26%\n52\n37.55\n53%\n27%\n23\n38\n62%\n10V4\n.55\n3.90\n35y4\n13\n8%\n29%\n51%\n16'A\n17\n22\n54%\n18%\n32\n55%\n175\n13\n45%\n13\n6V'\u00bb\n43%\n13%\n23 Vi\n67%\n3.70\n23%\n7\n7%\n15Vs\n28%\n12%\n51\n37V4\n19%\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014tlie stock\nmarket took its sharpest decline\nin more than seven weeks Friday as Wall Street appeared in\na mood to emphasize some of\nttjp negative rather than positive factors in the news.\nReports that President Kennedy has conceded that Congress is unlikely to pass his tax-\ncut legislation in this session\nbrought home to many investors what has been recognized as\na fact - of - life among most\nspokesmen in the financial community.\nThis, together with further reaction to the drop in auto sales\nin early November and to the\ni n ternational difficulties of\nAmerican oil companies, both in\nArgentina and the Arabian area,\nwere cited as reasons for selling.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average fell 7.04 to 740.00. The decline, however, was accompanied by below - average\ntrading.\nVolume totalled 4,820,000\nshares compared with 4,560,000\nThursday.\nOf 1,332 Issues traded, 684 declined and 365 advanced. New\nhighs for the year totalled 27\nand new lows 24.\nAmong distilling stocks Pub-\nlicker Industries made a big\npercentage gain as it advanced\na point to 7% as ninth most active stock.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks fell 2.0 to 278.1. It\nwas the sharpest decline since\nSept. 26 when the average lost\n2.4.\nNine of the 15 most active\nstocks declined, five advanced\nand American Motors was unchanged.\nChrysler was the most active\nstock, sinking 2%  to 86% on\n156,900 shares.\nControl Data \\yas second most\nPower Corp\nRuss. Industries\nShell Oil\nSimpsons A\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\nWalker-Gooderhom\nWeston George\nWoodwards A\n10%\n10%\n16%\n36%\n30%\n22%\n53 %\n20%\n4.80\n58%\n15'\/.\n20%\nactive, up 2Vi at IO8V4 on 141,-\n200 shares.\nRadio Corp. as third most active stock ran into some profit\ntaking as it slid 2% to 95% on\n99,200 shares.\nNext came General Telephone\nand Electronics, up Vi at 29Vi,\nand General Motors off 2%\nat 77%.\nStandard Oil (New Jersey),\noff 1%, was the most heavily\ntraded oil issue. Standard of Indiana lost 2% and Standard of\nCalifornia 1%.\nU.S. Steel, down a point, was\nthe most active of the steel issues.\nAmong Canadian issues International Nickel gained Vi, Dome\nMines % and Distiller Seagrams\n%. Canadian Pacific dropped %,\nMclntyre Porcupine % and\nHudson Bay Mining,Vi.\nLosers outnumbered gainers\nby a substantial margin on the\nAmerican Stock Exchange.\nScurry Rainbow OU added Vi\nand Jupiter Corp. %. Brazilian\nTraction lost Vi and Canadian\nMarconi Vs.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Papers\nwere the only bright spot in a\nlosing market Friday on the\nMontreal and Canadian exchanges.\nThe composite index fell 0.4\nto 125.4\nTrading was active. Industrial volume hit 136,000 shares\nand mines and oils turned over\n498,700 shares.\nIn the paper section, Great\nLakes and Abitibi gained %\neach and B.C. forest, Consolidated, Dominion Tar and Chemical, MacMillan-Bloedel and\nPrice Bros. V. each.\nSenior base metals were\ndown. Hudson Bay lost %, Consolidated Mining % and International Nickel and Noranda Vi\napiece.\nUtilities were down 0.9 at\n121.5. B.C. Telephone fell %,\nCPR %, Bell Telephone %, Calgary Power % and Nova Scotia\nLight, Trans-Canada Pipe Lines\nand Interprovincial Pipe Lines\nVi each.\nOils were also lower. Canadian Petrofina dropped Vi and\nB.A., Imperial and Texaco %\neach.\nIn speculative mines, McKin-\nney  gold  was  active,  turning\nover 197,000 shares and gaining\n1V4 cents. East Ventures\nclimbed 20 cents. Jubilee Iron,\nKiena Gold and Peace River\nwere all down 20 cents.\nForged Money\nFound Sunken\nIn Austria\nVIENNA, Austria (Reuters)-\nA case full of forged British\nbanknotes was raised Thursday\nfrom Lake Toplitz in the Austrian Alps, rumored to be the\nhiding place of Nazi treasure\nand documents.\nAn.Austrian interior ministry\nspokesman said the case, which\nwas sealed and marked A-101,\nlay at a depth of 260 feet and\ncontained notes in the pre-war\ndenomination of \u00a310 each.\nDivers located two more\ncases of, forged British notes\nwhich burst open during their\nlong period underwater.\nThe Nazis forged the bills and\nhoped to distribute them in a\nplan to undermine the stability\nof British currency.\nThe phoney money was the\nlatest find in the government-\nsponsored search to check rumors saying Nazis dumped\ngold, arms and secret documents in the lake in the closing\ndays oi the war.\nBELIEVE-IT-OR-NOT\n28 SHOPPING DAYS\n'TIL CHRISTMAS\nCome ih and choose your gift for him now\nand let us put it aside for you.\nGOWNS\n\u2022 Terry Cloth\n\u2022 Judogi\n\u2022 Check Flannels\nSWEATERS\n\u2022 Laurential  Stripes\n\u2022 Pullovers\nGIFT   ITEMS\n\u2022 Brushes\n\u2022 Pant Hangers\n\u2022 Valets\nSKI   WEAR\n\u2022 Stretch Slacks\n\u2022 Quilted Jackets\nEmory's Ltd\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nLEAVE MOTHER CHURCH\nLIBERTYVILLE, 111. (AP)-\nThe Serbian Orthodox Church of\nCanada and the United States\nbroke away Thursday from\nwhat it termed \"the Communist-controlled mother church\nin Yugoslavia;\" A resolution\nunanimously adopted by 177\ndelegates at a two-day national\nassembly in nearby St. Sava\nMonastery said the declaration\nof freedom applied to 70\nchurches in Canada and the\nUnited States, 15 in Australia,\nfour in Free Europe and one in\nSouth Africa. A spokesman said\nthe church has \"more than\n200,000 members.\"\nClassified Ads Get Results\n\/\nHUNGARY TO\nGET U.S. WHEAT\nWASHINGTON (AP)-An export licence was granted Thursday for the shipment of $8,000,-\n000 worth of U.S. wheat to\nHungary.\nThe licence was the second\napproved for a shipment of\nwheat to Hungary since guidelines for such sales were announced last Friday by the\ncommerce department.\nA commerce department official said that no details about\nthe transaction were available.\nThe previous licence totalled\n$7,600,000 and 100,000 tons of\nwheat. The price included the\ncost of transporting the grain\nto Hungary.\nThe Soviet Union and other\nEastern European Communist\ncountries have indicated they\nwant to buy about 4,000,000\ntons, or 250,000,000 bushels, of\nwheat from the United States.\nThe government has given private traders permission to\nmake the sales, provided they\nmeet certain conditions.\nOne of these is that 50 per\ncent of wheat be carried in U.S.\nvessels if such are available.\nAbout 95 per cent of all persons entering Canada travel by\nautomobile.\nUNITED NATIONS, (API-Reliable sources said Thursday\nLt.-Gen. Oswaldo de Araujo\nMota, chief of staff * of'ntHe;\nBrazilian armed forces, 7<tiak\\.\nbeen named commander of the\nUnited Nations Emergency\nForce which patrols the Israeli-\nUnited Arab Republic border.\nHe succeeds Lt.-Gen. P. S.\nGyani, an Indian who has been\ncommander since December,\n1959. Gyani has been on leave\nIrom his UNEF post to serve\nas head of the UN observation\nmission in Yemen.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nUK GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED        *\/\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed While You Wait\nFREE DELIVERY\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611\nBox 460\nAwide newworld of taste\nfor filter smokers everywhere -\nNew GOLD LEAF King Size\nTo-day's taste \u2022 To-day's tip-\nTo-day's tall size in cigarettes\nA full King Size.\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_1963_11_16","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\/1.0434677","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":"1963-11-16 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":"1963-11-16 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":""}]}