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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":" MBMHBMB\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON\nToronto \u2014\nCalgary \u2014\n' Penticton.-\nVancouver -\nWhitehorse\nSpokane \u2014\n31 37\n35 66\n20 31\n31 41\n\u202234 43\n15 22\n31 33\nMelg0ti 3D\nFORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Cloudy with, a\nfew snow flurries. Little change\nin temperature. Winds light. Low\nand high at Cranbrook 20 and 40,\nCrescent Valley 25 and 40.\nSaturday:  Mainly cloudy.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 63\nNELSON. B. C, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13, 1964\n10 Cents\nNo. 171\n33,500 More Auto\nWorkers Laid Off\nBy CHARLES C. CAIN\nDETROIT (AP)-A layoff of\napproximately 33,500 workers,\neffective tonight was announced\nThursday by the Ford Motor\nCompany as a result of week-\nold strikes at eight factories in\nfive states. \u25a0   \u25a0\nThe layoff will cripple passenger car and truck production of\nthe second largest car producer\nin the U.S. *\nWith 25,500 men already idle\nin the eight plants, Ford's total\nidle will be more than a third\nof its entire hourly paid work\nforce. ,\nLocals of the United Auto\nWorkers union have been on\nstrike at the eight factories\nover unresolved local - agreements to supplement a national\nagreement. \t\nAlmost simultaneously .with\nFord's layoff announcement,\nthe UAW accused the company\nof an \"obstinate attitude\" in top\nlevel negotiations here, on some\nof the strikes.\nKen Bannon, director of the\nunion's Ford~ department, \u25a0 said\nthe company \"stubbornly refuses to agree to terms for\nsome plants that it has agreed\nto for other plants.\"\n\"There is not an issue on the\ntable that is blocking settlement\nat one location that has, not\nbeen agreed to by Ford Motor\nCompany at another location;\"\nBannon said in a statement.\nThere  w a s  no  immediate\nmanagement comment on Ban-\nnon's charge.\n\u2022STRIKES NEEDLESS'\nEarlier Ford termed, all. the\nvarious strikes unnecessary.\nThe UAW ordered its national\nFord bargaining committee'' to\nDetroit next week and asked for\na meeting with the company\nnext Thursday. '-\". .'\nFord's layoff; decision came\nas Ford president Arjay Miller\nsaid in San Diego, Calif., the\nstrikes might force a shutdown\nof all 90 Ford plants'next week.\n\"Our production, js.grinding to\na halt and our entire operation\nwill stop next week-if the strike\ncontinues.\"   .\nFord laid off 500 workers at\nTHERE WAS ROUSING MUSIC when 17 former members of Mrs. T. I. S. Ferguson's boys' choir\nsang under her direction in Vancouver recently at\n:th.'chblif'leader's birthday party. It was quite impromptu, but the young men gave a refreshing performance in honor ol the woman who had instilled\nin them all a love of good music. At leit one of the\nmembers from one of her earliest choirs oi the '30s,\nGary Bowell, spoke on behalf oi the boys, saying\nhow much, the choir had meant to them all.\n\u2014Daily News photos.\nTime for Gov't\nTo Take Chances\nEntire Family\nPledges Eyes\nTHOMASVILLE, Ga. (AP) -\nThe eight members of the\nCharles H, Dewell family of\nThomasville have willed their\neyes to the eye bank operated\nby the Georgia Lions Lighthouse Foundation Incorporated.\nDewell, assistant district\nmanager of the social security\noffice and president of the\nThomasville Lions Club, said he\nand others in the family considered the idea for some time before agreeing to -the, mass\ndonation.\nDewell said his wife and older\nchildren agreed that the plan\nwas a fine idea,\n\"The soul has eyes to see with\nand we won't need these after\nwe die,\" said Janet, 11.\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nHippo, Anyone ?\nNEW YORK (AP) - Anybody want a hippopotamus?\nKinkajou?\nDingo dog;\nLion cub?\nStep right up. The New\nYork City department of parks\nhas nice specimens of these\nand other surplus zoo animals\nwhich will be auctioned on\nDec. 8.\nBetter hurry, though. The\ndepartment said it has already\nreceived several hundred inquiries, including one from a\nfraternity Which wanted a lion\ncub for a mascot.\nThe department gave the\nfraternity the information desired, plus a bit of caution:\n\"May we point out that\nlion cubs have a way of developing into full grown lions.\"\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nittee to Tackle\nHate Propagandists\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii\n11 O'Clock\nGun Proved\nShattering\nESQUIMAU (CP) \u2014 Esquimau's Remembrance Day\nobservance became a shattering experience for at least\nthree householders.\nFollowing local tradition, a\n105-imni. Howitzer -was fired\nat'M a.m. ..\nDeparting from tradition, the\ndetonation shattered at least\nlfi windows in three nearby\nplants in Canton, Ohio, and\nRawsonville, Mich,, Wednesday,\nThe layoffs thus far have been\naimed at reduction of work\nforces in some units. Ford said,\nhowever, that closings of entire\nunits might be necessary by\nthis weekend if no further\nagreements are reached.\nFord, as have General Motors and Chrysler, has reached\nagreement on a national master\ncontract. Its difficulties now are\nwith the local plant matters\nWhich supplement the national\nagreement.-\nOAKVILLE, Ont. (CP)-Ford\nof Canada announced Thursday\n3,000 workers in the company's\npassenger car assembly plant\nwill be laid off Monday as a\nresult of strikes at Ford- plants\nin the United States.\nA company spokesman said\nthe layoffs are necessary because many of the parts used\nin local assembly operations\ncome from the United States\nplants. He said the 3,000 workers will finish work at the conclusion of their shift Friday and\nan additional 125 passenger car\nassembly workers will be laid\noff Tuesday. .\n. The spokesman said the company hopes to continue, truck\noperations, Involving 700 workers through next week.\nAnti-Fume\nDevice Urged\nFor Cars\nVANCOUVER (CP) - J. H.\nSinclair, president of the B.C,\nAir. Pollution Society, suggested\nThursday the provincial,government should pass' legislation\nmaking it compulsory for all\ncars to be equipped with an\n\"anti-fume device.\"\nMr. Sinclair' said exhaust\nfumes of motor vehicles were\nthe biggest contributor to pollution of Vancouver's air.\n\"Industry still helps to pollute\nthe air, but the car is now the\nbiggest hazard;\"'\nArmy ' officials Thursday\nwere-still trying to determine\nwhat went wrong.\nThey suggested atmospheric\nconditions might be to blame\nbut a contributing factor may\nhave been'that this year for\nthe first time the gun was\npointed away from, hot into,\nMemorial Paris.\nAir Army spokesman said\nik. . complaints. hsvet been- received yet from the householders but compensation for the\ndamage would be arranged\nthrough adjusters.      \u25a0 \"\"'\niii imiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiNii 1111111111111\nWith \"Yankee\n60 Home\"\nSASEBO, Japan (AP)-- Sailors, from the U;S. nuclear submarine Seadragon Went ashore!\nin this port Thursday and riot\npolice were on. alert for any\nnew Outbreak by leftists\/\nMeanwhile, the Soviet Union\nsaid the submarine's visit could\naffect relations with Japan\nNo incidents were reported as\nmost of the 108-<man crew went\nsight-seeing. Thursday after the\nsubmarine docked, small bands\nraced through the streets shouting in English Yankee Go Home\nand Go Home, Devil. ;.\nLeftist leaders had promised a\nturnout of upward of 15,000 demonstrators to protest the. visit\nof the Seadragon to Sasebo. But\nonly 2000 showed up.\nThe port is 35 miles south of\nNagasaki, shattered by a U.S.\natomic. bomb near the end of\nthe Second World War.\n-The only skirmish occurred\nwhen police tangled with about1\n200 leftist students who tried to\nstage a sit-down on a four-lane\nroad leading to the U.S. naval\nbase in Sasebo. Police said seven\ndemonstrators suffered minor injuries and 15 .were taken into\ncustody.\nThe third attack on hate literature takes the form of a post\noffice board of review, opening\nisi -judicial hearings here\nNov. 23.\nMr. Justice Dalton Wells of\nthe Ontario Court of Appeals\nwill preside.\nThe board, will hear an appeal from the so-called National\nStates Rights Party of Birmingham, Ala., which was. denied\nthe use of Canadian-mails in\nJuly under an interim order by\nPostmaster-General Jack Nicholson.\nThe board will decide whether\nits hearings will be open to the\npublic and . press. Similar reviews of pornography ahd lottery tickets barred from the\nmails normally are held in private.\nHope To Draft legislation\nTo Foil \"Hate Mongers\"\nBy RONALD LEBEL\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A post office tribunal, a group\nof MPs and a committee oi experts soon will launch independent inquiries into a problem that .has defied .solution\nso far \u2014 how to curtail tha increasing flow oi hate propaganda.\nThe federal government decided on the three-\npronged investigation after the collapse of preliminary\nefforts to prosecute the \"hate-mongers\" on the basis' of\npresent laws or to draft suitable new legislation to stop\nthem.\nThe Commons external affairs committee will meet in\nprivate shortly to plan a series\nof public hearings on the thorny\nproblem of legislating against\norganized bigotry between different ethnic, racial and religious groups.\nThe problem has attracted\nincreasing public attention in\nthe last year with a sharp upsurge in mail distribution of\nanti-Semitic and anti - Negro\npamphlets.\nMost of the. material is believed to originate with extreme\n| right-wing organizations in the\nUnited States which use a few\nanonymous persons as their Canadian agents.\n\"Essentially we're asked to\nlook at a legal problem\u2014how to\nlegislate against bigotry and\nterrorism without infringing on\nthe basic rights of the individual,\" said chairman John R.\nMathieson, Liberal MP for\nLeeds.\nThe committee would not restrict itself to anti-semitism but\nwould seek to expose all forms\nof group hatred.\nThe second inquiry will be undertaken by a small committee\nof legal experts appointed by\nJustice Minister Favreau. The\ncommitte is expected to work\ninformally and recommend new\nlegislation early next year.\nMr. Favreau announced the\nformation of the experts' committee Tuesday and named the\nfirst two members: Saul Hayes\nand Maxwell Cohen, both Montreal lawyers.\nSubstantial Capital\nInvestment Increase Seen\nBy DON HANRIGHT\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Finance Minister Gordon said\nThursday the economic challenges facing Canada require\na willingness on the part oi both government and industry \"to take chances.'\n\"This is not the time for a timid, cautious or fainthearted approach,\" the minister said in a luncheon\nspeech to about 200 Otta-\nJAILED FOR\nLEAVING SCENE\nOF ACCIDENT\nEVERETT, Wash. (AP) -\nWoodrow Robert Hausley, 16, of\nVancouver ma sentenced to. .a\n\u2022year.\u00bb .antaty-jaiMiiursday IP\nter pleading guilty to leaving\nthe scene of an accident.\nJeanette Halverson, 44, of Ta-\ncoma. Wash., and Genevieve\nErickson, 40, of Juneau, Alaska,\nwere killed when their car was\nin a collision Oct. 24, with an\nautomobile driven by Hausley.\nDaniel Walker, 17, a passenger and owner of the car, pleaded not guilty to a similar charge\nand was returned to jail under\n$5000 hail, pending trial Nov. 24.\nThe youths, their parents and\ntheir Everett attorneys were\npresent throughout the proceed-\nwa accountants.\nMr. Gordon said he hopes the\nEconomic Council of Canada in\nits year-end report on economic\nprospects and problems up to\n1970 will be \"brave enough\" to\nindicate in a general way the\nkind of policies it considers\nnecessary.\nMeanwhile, he said, preliminary indications are for a\n\"very substantial\" increase in\nCanadian capital investment in\n1965. This year anticipated Investment was up 16 per cent\nover 1963, largest year-to-year\ngain since 1956.\nMr. Gordon repeated his forecast of a 1964 increase in gross\nnational product of eight per\ncent. He said that after price\nincreases, the real gain would\nbe more than six per cent.\nHe also reiterated his earlier\nstatements that prospects. now\nare for the economic expansion\nto continue \"well into 1965.\" But\nhe told' his audience that he did\nnot want to be more specific\nabout next year.\nFEARS \"MORBID'\nThe minister .said same Cana-\ndians have become \"preoccupied in a morbid kind of fashion\" with economic problems of\nthe country. However, these\nwere no greater and in some\ncases smaller than the problems\nof other nations' and . \"they\nshouldn't frighten us or make\nus timid.\"\nOHASE (CP) - Gordon Shank-\nland, 40, of Magna Bay has been\ncommitted to stand trial on criminal negligence charge in connection with the Oct. 10 traffic\ndeath of Mrs. Lillian Ballendine,\n39. Mrs. Ballendine died after\nthe car in which she was riding\nmissed a curve and hit a power\npole on the shore of Sbuswap\nLake. Chase is 30 miles northeast of Kamloops.\nHe listed three main difficul-\nies:\n1. The large Canadian deficit\nin transactions in goods and\nservices with other countries,\nespecially the United States. It\nwas important to do everything\npossible to narrow this deficit.\n2. Absentee control of some\nkey Canadian industries. Incoming capital was encouraging\nU.S.-controlled companies to export goods to the U.S. in competition with parent firms. This\nwas a problem that \"we have\nto do something about gradually, over a period of years.\"\n3. The need to work always\nfor national unity; Quebec separatism had been exaggerated.\nThe people of Quebec had at\nlast decided to get the kind of\neducation and interests that\nwould allow them to take a bigger part in the' affairs of the\nprovince.\n\"This was long overdue and\nsomething we should be pleased\nabout; not frightened'of,\" Mr.\nGordon said.\nLAB WORK\nTO BE STRESSED\nVICTORIA (CP) - Emphasis\nwill be placed on laboratory\nwork in B.C. high schools to\nhelp extend the scientific boundaries of students knowledge.\nF. J. Cairnie, curriculum consultant to the Department of\nEducation, said a new grade\n11 physics course was introduced\nthis fall and a new grade 12\ncourse will begin next September.\n\"The laboratory approach to\nsecondary school chemistry Is\nexpected to be introduced next\nfall, but it will be at least a\nyear before a new biology course\ncan be started,\" he said.\nPrince Jean Assumes\nThrone of Luxembourg\nLUXEMBOURG (AP)\u2014I\u2014as a connecting link between\nPrince Jean, 43, took over the:bigger powers,\nNEW YORK (CP)-Canadian\ndollar up 1-64 at 93 3-64'. in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n93. Pound sterling down 5-64 at\n$2.78 19-64.\n17Whoopers\nArrive at\nWinter Spot\nWASHINGTON AP - Eight\nadditional whooping cranes, including two young, have arrived\nat their wintering grounds on\nthe Texas Gulf Coast, bringing\nthe total-there to 17, the U.S.\ninterior department announced\nThursday.\nOf the 17 at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, four are\nyoung-of-the-year.\nAnother young whooping\ncrane, rescued by helicopter\nseveral weeks ago in the Canadian nesting grounds, now is recovering at the Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge In Colorado.\nthrone of Luxembourg as grand\nduke Thursday on the abdication of his mother, Grand Duchess Charlotte. He became the\nfirst man to rule this prosperous little constitutional monarchy in 52 years.\n\"The decision of my beloved\nmother,to retire from state affairs after presiding .for' so\nmany years over the country's\nfate, will not remove her, I am\nsure, from the hearts of Lux-\nembourgers,\" he.said.\nJean pledged : (p. seek ..the'\nelimination of \"all that can remain of material and moral\nmisery\" and to pursue the traditional role of His. country\u2014a\nmember of both the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and\nthe European Common Market\nFUND DRIVE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mr. Jus-\ntice Nathan Nemetz has been\nnamed chairman of the universities division of three universities\nfund drive. This division wUl try\nto raise (2,000,000 among persons\nconnected with universities for\nconstruction at B.C.'s three universities. Total for the fund drive\nis $28,000,000.\nGrand Duchess Charlotte, 68,\nhad announced last March that\nVoting Rights\nExtended To\nTerritories\n_ . FROBISHER BAY, N.W.T.\n(CP)\u2014The Northwest Territories\nCouncil agreed Thursday to\nextend the right to vote in territorial elections to all residents\nof the vast northern region.\nThe council, governing body\nof the territories, unanimously\npassed a resolution submitted\nby Frank Vallee of Ottawa ask\ning. the. federal, government to\nset up additional constituencies\nin the territories to enable all\nresidents to vote.\nThe right to vote in territorial\nelections now is held only by\nresidents ln the Mackenzie area,\nat the western end of the terri.\ntories. They elect four members\nto the nine - member council.\nThe other five are appointed by\nthe federal government.\nshe would retire because of age,\nThe rule of Luxembourg's 330,-\n000 people for 45 years, she\nsigned the abdication decree in\npalace ablaze with flowers\nsent by admirers from all.parts\nof the 999-square-mile realm.\nThe new grand duke and his\nwife, Princess Josephine-Charlotte, sister of Belgium's King\nBaudouin, walked on a red carpet from the palace to the\nnearby parliament building for\nthe induction ceremony.\nParliament\nThursday\nBy He- Canadian Press\n. The Commons continued debate on legislation to change electoral riding boundaries in line\n-with the latest census. -\n' Conservatives    supported\nsuggestion to have the Com\nihons speaker name two members for provincial redistribution commissions.'\nH. A. Olson (SC-Medicine Hat)\nindicated his group- would support this only because of the\ngreat need tor action.\nStanley Knowies (NDP-WInni-\npeg North Centre) said appointments by the Speaker would be\npolitical.\nEldon Woolliams (PC-Bow Ri-|\nver) said the suggestion concerning the Speaker was the best\ncompromise to came before the\nHouse.\nWife Sues for\n$50,000 in\nHusband's Death\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP) - The\nwife of a Windsor man who died\na few hours after an explosion\nin the operating room of Grace\nHospital last Nov. 29, is asking\n$50,000 damages in a suit alleging negligence against the governing council of the Salvation\nArmy, Dr. Thomas it. McKenzie,\nDr. J. Winemaker and Dr. J, P.\nBoley.' .       .\nA statement of claim for Mrs.\nEthel Marie O'Connor was filed\nThursday at the Essex County\ncourthouse.\nCountries Meet\nIn Attempt To\nStall Showdown\nUNITED NATIONS . (CP)-\nRepresentatives of Canada,\nJapan and Italy met. with Secretary-General U-Thant Thursday to put forward a suggestion\nthat would avert a preliminary\nshowdown Monday on the United\nNations financial issue.\nThey suggested the postponement, until about Dec! 8, of\nMonday's scheduled pledging;\nconference for technical assistance programs.\nThe United S t a t e s hap\nthreatened to withhold its annual pledge to these voluntary\nprograms if the Russians refuse\nto pay up on overdue peacekeeping assessments.\nA qualified (source said the\nU.S. waS: \"hot unhappy\" about\nthe suggestion that the conference be' put off;\nThat's meeting Thursday with\nCanada's Paul Tremblay, Japan's Akira Matsui and Italy's\nPiero Vinci followed a meeting\nat the Canadian delegation Wednesday at which about a dozen\ndelegates . discus?ed the postponement.\nThe Soviet Union had earlier\ndismissed as \"empty\" an overture from President Johnson to\nresolve the financing deadlock.\nPeron Humored\nOut of Spain\nBy ALFONSO MAURI\nBUENOS AIRES Reuters -\nExtra police-guarded radio stations, newspapers and airports\nThursday night amid rumors\nthat exiled former dictator Jean\nPeron had left Spain to return\nto Argentina.\nInterior Minister Juan Palermo issued - a communique\nafter conferring with Defence\nMinister Leopoldo Suarez saying security: organizations had\n\"taken all necessary steps te\nensure the public peace ... all\nover the. country.\"\ni. In Santiago, Chile Peron'a\nprivate secretary, Juan Manuel\nAlgarve, was reported to have\nbeen told by the interior ministry to leave Chile \"as soon aa\nA similar request was-made\nto Orlando Bertolini, a prominent Peron supporter who arrived in. Chile three days ago\nfrom Buenos Aires.\nSources close to the Chilean\nforeign ministry said Instructions were sent to Chile's representatives in Spain urging\nthem to let Peron know he\nshould call off any attempt te\ntravel to Chile.\nGerman Soldiers\nBlast Path to\nWestern- Freedom\nGOETTINGEN (AP) - Two\nEast German soldiers shot their\nway through the mined border\narea early Thursday and escaped\nto West Germany, police reported.\nThe two uniformed men, a\ncorporal and a private, fired 30\nrounds from a sub-machine-gun\ninto the mined ground to open\na narrow path for their escape.\nTheir volleys set off several\nmines and the two reached West\nGermany safely. \t\nPolice said three other East\nGermans escaped about the\nsame time in the area.\nAnd in This Corner .\u25a0\u00ab ,\nNEWCASTLE, England (AP) \u2014 David Preece, who ordered a\nton of paving stones for his garden, sized up what had been delivered and decided It wasn't enough.    \u25a0<\nHe removed his scales from the bathroom, took them to Ms\ngarage and piece by piece weighed the delivered stones.\n\"It took me 45 minutes to weigh them,\" he said. \"And it was\nJolly hard work, but I proved my point.\"\nPreece said he found the stones were 605 pounds short of a\nton. He telephoned the quarry from which he had ordered the\nstones and told them of the shortage.\n\"They got a shock when I told them I used my bathroom\nscales,\" he said, \"but they sent me another load of stones.\"\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A new Rolls-Royce is being shipped from\nEngland to a Toronto customer who was unsatisfied with his original model.  -\nNine-year-old Gordon Ignatowitz got the four-inch plastic\nmodel of the Rolls for $2 about a year ago and after assembling\nit found the doors didn't open, the windows didn't, work.and the\nchauffeur came unglued and rolled around in the front seat.\nSo he package the model, attached 26 cents postage and sent\nit to the Rolls-Royce factory in England for repair.\" \"\nAnd even though the company didn't make the model; a Rolls\nspokesman said in Crewe Lancashire, that the company has sen'\nanother new Rolls \u2014 unscratched - to Gordon by mail.\nCompany spokesman Dennis Williams said that Rolls \"could\nnot do this for everybody.\"\nIn Toronto, Gordon said:\n\"When I get it back, I won't use it. I'll keep it as a trophy.\nGee, just think where it's been.\"\nmmmmmm\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964\nProvincial Executive Sees\nJaycees as Freedom Force\nNelson Junior Chamber of\nCommerce kicked off its season's\nactivities Thursday night with a\ndinner-meeting and a concentrated plea for new members to\nwork on behalf of the betterment\nof the community while accepting training in business and civic\nleadership.\nGuest speaker, John Ircandia.\nof Trail, provincial Jaycee vice-\npresident, told the gathering,\nwhich included some 15 prospective members, that the Junior\nChamber of Commerce constitutes one of the strongest single\nforces for freedom in the world\ntoday.\nHe pointed out that there are\nover 300,000 Jaycees, active in\n80 countries around the world.\nBritish Columbia accounts for\n1,200 of Canada's total membership of 20,000.\nThe Junior Chamber of Corn-\nNelson Civic Centre\nSchedule\nTODAY\nFriday, Nor. 13, 1964\nARENA\n4:45 p.m.\u2014Figure Skating\n!:0O p.m.\u2014Columbia College\nvs. Jets\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Guys arid Dolls\n\u25a0 Skating\nHAU\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Dance\ne .'\u2022 '\u25a0 Chevelles\nmerce is an organization for\nyoung men between the ages of\n18 and 40. It is dedicated to four\npurposes: (1) Improvement and\ndevelopment of members with\nregard to business advancement\nand civic leadership; (2) Improvement and development of\nthe community.; . (3).Fellowship\nand (4) Canadianism.\nJaycees feel a young man owes\nthe community a. debt to the city\nand nation which provide him\nwith a home and the privilege of\ncitizenship. Through the organization he is given the opportunity\nto channel his. youthful energies\ntoward the creation of a better\ncommunity and a better country.\nThe Nelson branch has felt a\nsharp decline in membership\nduring the past two years, due\nlargely to some of its most prolific workers being transferred out\nof the city.\nIt is currently in the midst of\na gigantic recruiting campaign\nwhich it hopes will result in b\nmembership of 60 active workers. .\nJaycee executives stressed social functions play a large part\nin the group's activities.\nMembership Committee chairman Ernie Mason told the group\nthe Jaycees hope to have an en\nergetic Jaycettes auxiliary,\nmade up of members' wives.\nIn outlining an ambitious pro.\ngram for the forthcoming year,\npast president Peter Relbin said\nthere can be no better way for a\nyoung business man who is new\nto the area to make the acquaintance of persons of similar age\nComplete Shows 7:00-9:05\nf^lamltiomas.na\n\u25a0a most unusual eat...\nthey say rm enchanted, andlAMf\nWatt Disney\nThomasina\nSkMcGOOHAN sjsm HAMPSHIRE\nTECHNICOUH.\nMwiiiMu.ntiMn*. ..\u00bb   .\n\"Navajo Adventure\"\nQuality. - SmpoAhcL\n\u00a7\u00a7j 5\nALL METAL Truck. Bulldozers, Joapi\nBy Hubley \u2014 Structo \u2014 Tonka\nAURORA Read Racing Sett\nGUNS and RIFLES Army, Western\nHO TRAINS Tyeo, Playcraft\nCHEMISTRY and\nMICROSCOPE SETS\nCORGI-lfSNEY Miniature Toys\nFOR SMALL TOTS:\n1 Fliher-Price and Kohner Pull Toys,\nABC Blocks, Child Guidance Toy*\nFOR LITTLE GIRLS:\nTea Sets, Walking Dolls,\nNew \"Penny Brlte\" Dolls\nand\nGAMES:\nHockey, Electric Football\nMifton Bradley, Parker Bros.\nHi-Fi  ond .Stereo Recordings\n4 Baker Si. NELSON, B.C.        Ph. 352-3031\nand interests, than to join the\nranks of the Jaycees.\nActive young men interested\nIn learning the alms and purposes of the Junior Chamber of\nCommerce are being asked to attend a second introductory meet-\nbig, to be held at the Senior\nChamber of Commerce board\nroom Thursday night.\nR. Adderley\nPresident\nOf Boy Scouts\nRobert Adderley was elected\npresident of the Nelson District\nBoy Scouts of Canada at the annual meeting Monday. Mr. Ad\nderley succeeds J. S. Hamilton,\nwho has held the post for the\npast two years.\nNamed to the executive were\nMr. Hamilton, J. L. Smith, A. A.\nTaylor, J. J. McEwen, J. Boates,\nA. Currie, D. Preston, C. Bland,\n6. L. Brodie, J. N. Cornborough,\nE. Owens and E. Hearn.\nHonored guests at the meeting\nincluded Dr. B. A. Resker, regional commissioner, and J. L.\nMiller, regional scout executive.\nHighlight of the meeting was\npresentation of the Learmonth\nShield by District Commissioner\nGordon Fleming to the Nelson\nTroop. The award waa accepted\nhy Scoutmaster Bjorne Thor-\nshaug.\nThe evening concluded with\nthe showing of slides by Scout\nWilliam Christie on his trip to\nthe American International Jamboree at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.\nRegional\nCollege Proposals\nto Labor Council\nFORMER NELSON RESIDENT, George Hamso n, left, was among Cp.\nminco employees who received gold medals signiiying 40 years oi service\nwith the company at a recent dinner ih Trail. Presenting medal is I. A. Thompson, assistant comptroller. Mr. Hamson is branch accountant at Tadanac. He\nbegan his career as a telegrapher with the CPR at Nelson and Vancouver then\nwith Cominco. Transferring to clerk a few years later, he advanced to senior\n> clerk, internal auditor and branch accountant. Married, he has one son and\none daughter. :\nIn the Courts\nPeter M. Popoff of Nelson was\nfined $300 and costs when he\noleaded guilty to impaired driving before Magistrate William\nEvans in City Police Court Thursday.\nA. transient who made his second court appearance in two days\nThursday was given a permanent\naddress for four months by Magistrate Evans. Allen Clim, charged with theft of a power saw\nvalued at over $50, elected to\nstand trial by magistrate, pleaded\nguilty, and was sentenced to\nfour months imprisonment.\nIn city police court, Leonard\nPetersen of Nelson was fined $15\nand costs for failing to stop at\na red light. He pleaded guilty.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\n-   Tonight aid Friday\n7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\n(Also Saturday Matinee)\n''Captain Sinbad\" (Color)\nGuy Williams, Heidi Brueble\nCartoon ind Disney Featurette\nMedical Record\nLibrarian Writes\nJournal Article\nAn article by Sister Mary\nCatherine, director of the School\nfor Medical Record Librarians\nat Notre Dame University of\nNelson, has appeared in the\nSept. 19 edition of the Canadian\nMedical Association Journal.\n\"The Doctor's Paper Work: A\nMedical Record Librarian's\nView\" appeared in answer to a\nhighly popular and humorous article written for the. same publication by Dr. Ian Rose of Kamloops last year. In this he described jocosely the avalanche\nof paper .work under which the\ndoctor is buried, and more or\nless placed the blame on the\nmedical record librarian. In her\nanswer, Sister M..Catherine outlines practical means by which\nthe medical record librarian can\nhelp the doctor.\nHer article has also been reprinted by request. Copies have\nbeen ordered by Dr. W. I. Taylor,\nexecutive director of the Canadian Council on Hospital Accreditation, for distribution to\nCCHA surveyors and for reference, with other copies going to\nhospitals requesting specific information.\nBy The Way\nThirty - six African nations\npow are independent\u2014the last\nbeing Ambia, formerly called\nNorthern Rhodesia \u2014 compared\nwith four in 1945.\nDANCE\n\\aJkL cLalkL\"\\\nThe Winners ol Nelson's Band Competition\nAre Returning\nTONIGHT-9 P.M.\nNelsOn Civic Centre,\nAdmission  $1.00\nowo'iewaomwa'nw\nNelson's tellbe-llke burlgar.\napparently has as many lives\nu his namesake. Local gendarmes are still beating the\nbrush (or the agile \"cat\" who\nprefers skylights to doors In\nquest of his nefarious needs.\n* *  *\nIt seems to us the local businessman who wanted to paint a\ncandy cane effect on a steel \"I\"\nbeam outside his barber shop\nshould have been given the green\nlight by council. As explained\nby the petitioner himself, the\ngaudy stripes (in luminous paint)\nwould serve the dual purpose of\nfunctional advertising as well as\nproviding a visual hazard warning for night motorists.\n* *: *   \u25a0\n. There's a teen-age hot-rodder\nin town who has Baker Street\ncontused with Indianapolis,\nThe stench of burned rubber\nusually begins around 2:30\na.m. You can tool the cops\nonly some of the time, kids.\n* *  *\nPre-Christmas comments by\nthe Dally News Scoop Snoop: \"I\nhope he doesn't give me black\n'ace, I haven't anything to match\n.up.\" I just hate Christmas. Nobody gets me what I want.\"\n\"Shoppin's easy; it's exchanging\nthe stuff after that's hard.\"\n* \u2022 \u2022\nCouncil's recent decision to\nlevy a financial expression of\ngood faith on hit-and-run businessmen has hidden safety factors. Not only will the new edict\nprotect Nelson residents from\ndouble-dealing deadbeats, but it\nwill also save the slippery salesmen a trip to the pokey ..... at\ntaxpayers' expense.\nAALBORG\nAKVAVlf\nTHE\nSUPERB\nAPPETIZER\nServe it straight artd\nice-cold riflht frtnYi the\nrefrigerator . . . with\nsmorgasbord, buffet\nsuppers or'canapes.\nAlso delightful in\ncocktails . . . first\ndistilled in 1846.\nAvailable in B.C.\nliquor Control- Board\nStores.\n_'. Ttiis.(jtvtfiMiflept. .if.. not puiJUshsd pr <ji?p'l*y. <!.. by. tha\nLiquor fcontrdl 6oai;d or by the Go^r'rtment 6f British Columbia.\nCARS COLLIDE\nAn estimated $500 damage was\ncaused to two vehicles in a\ncollision at Hall and Silica Streets\nTuesday night.\nPolice report that a Car driven\nhy Robert Gates of Alberta and\na vehicle driven by Dennis t.\nJensen of Nelson, collided.\nNo one waS injured in the accident and no charges are Contemplated.\nLatest culinary kick - wholewheat doughnuts.\nAccidents will happen, but\nwhen they happen to happen to\nAlberta tourists because of unscrupulous Nelson motorists with\nno sense of property damage responsibilities, then it becomes a\nlibel of character. 'Nuff said.\n\u2666 \u2022 \u00ab\nWho's the lucky social editor\nwho got the bargain of th; week\nwith the purchase of a. noiseless\ntypewriter for the munificent\nsum of $101 And we're not \"ribbon\" you, either.\nA Dally News nod to Nelson\nhockey fans who turned out\n1500 strong Tuesday night to\nset an unprecedented attendance record for November\nhockey games In mid-week.\nGood game, too ... If you discount broken bicuspids and\nstiUetto sticks ...\n*;\u25a0...\u2666\nThe humorous hassle by council over the pros and cons of\nsalvaging the horse trough adjacent to . Nelson's first mayor\nbroke up an otherwise \"dry\"\ncouncil meeting. We especially\nliked Alderman Beresford's suggestion to make a \"wishing well\"\nout of the ancient equestrian\ndrinking fountain. Sounds like a\n\"neigh\" idea.\n* * ' *\nIf the cost of living in Nelson\ngoes any higher, someone bent\nour ear recently, everybody will\nneed a license (rem the Department of Transport to go Shopping. Ahd he was only talking\nabout toothpicks.\nthe highly complex, varied\nand vital (actors of a Regional\nCollege were meticulously outlined by Gordon Campbell,\nspecial consultant to Wait Kootenay College Council, at a special meeting sponsored by the\nNelSon. Trail and District Labor\nCouncil Thursday night at Nelson Central School.\nApproved in principle by plebiscite last December 6 with the\nbacking of six area school districts, at which time a college\ncouncil was formed to research\nthe matter further, the proposed\nproject was carefully detailed\nby Mr, Campbell before an attentive audience of IS,\nDividing the college into eight\ncategories of service, the guest\nspeaker said that Castlegar was\nthe'most likely locale for the\nproposed college and.that this\nhad \"practically been decided\non before the plebiscite vote,\"\n, The other seven points touched\noh by Mr. Campbell included\nneed, courses, authority, cost,\nfacilities, curriculum and staff.\nIn the matter pf need for a\nRegional College, he used statistics with effectiveness oh expanding student: populations in\nUBC, whose academic; {ore j now\nnumbers some 15,000. He pointed\nout that- projected estimates\nseven years\" from now would\nswell that total to 35,000 students\nthroughout the .province requiring higher education.\nCourses that would he offered\nincluded . vocatipnal; tjchnicjl\nfield, mining, ferestryrand \"industrial technology, business\nmanagement and social services. Academic opportunities\nwould encompass humanity, soc-\n| ial life and biological sciences.\n\"We anticipate that the Federal Government will want to\nmake some contribution to the\ntechnical cost of the college,\"\nhe said on the subject of financial outlay, He said that capital\nand operating costs would be\nshared between the federal, provincial and municipal governments, as well as the students,\nthe exact contributing proportion* of which have not been\ndetermined.\nThose attending the meeting\nincluded Jack Munro, vice-president of the Nelson International\nWoodworkers Union; M. A. Olson of Salmo, president of the\nRobson Rovers\nTo See Campus\nThe O. B. Ballard rover crew\nmade up of eight young men\nfrom Robson will tour the campus of Notre Dame University of\nNelson Saturday, Several friends\nwill accompany the rovers. Felix\nMueller, director of development\nat the university, will act as\nguide.\nSuch tours of the campus take\nplace frequently, arranged\nthrough the development office.\nSalmo Chamber of Commerce;\nFelix Mueller, director of development at Notre Dame University; E. D, Baravalle, assistant\npresident of Notre Dame University; Robert Walkley of the B.C.\nForest Service; N. Zangulc special officer of the Nelson National\nEmployment Service; G. Mars-\nden, representing the CPR Machinist Association; G. Sylvester,\nteacher at Notre Dame University: B. K. Ryley of the Nelson\nFire Department; Richard Palmer, Nelson School Board chairman: Dr. N, J. Bedard, and Mr.\nand Mrs. George Turner.\nVICKS\nINHALER\nOpens Stuffy Nose\nFast\n,     Only 49e\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner^ Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613 Nelson, B.C.\nTRIO ARREStfiD\nRICHMOND  (CP) - RCMP\narrested two men and a woman\nWednesday night a Short time\nafter - a Richmond Storekeeper\nreported he wis robbed ot between $300 ahd $466 by i m\u00bbh\ncarrying a revolver. RCMP said\none of the men. answered the\ngeneral description Of a Man\nwho robbed a Vancouver grocery of $45 earlier in the night,\nthe trio WaS driving in a car\nwhen they were Stopped. R<SmP\nsaid a gun ahd quantity Of\nmoney wat recovered.\nmt\nAa extra right head\nPliytex Living Beauty\nRUBBER\nGLOVES\nWith the Purchase\naf One Pair at\n$1.49\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress Of Health\"\nPhone 3524:313\n\u00ab9I Baker St. N.IMn\nDamage Over\n$3501 in\nCollisions\n' tine accident indirectly caused\na second and larger collision on\nHighway No. 8 near Cottonwood\nLake late Monday.\nThe reaction began when a\ncar driven by Larry I* McLaugh-\nIan of Trail left the road and\nlanded in the ditch. A tow truck\noperated by Ronald R. Kosma\nof Nelson was summoned and\nwaa attempting to pull the car\nout of the ditch when a semitrailer truck, proceeding along\nthe highway, unable te atop, collided with the wrecker, pushing\nIt into the ditch also.\nA second wrecker was called\nfrom Nelson to clear the wreckage. Aggregate damage was estimated to be in excess Of $3500.\nPolice state that slippery road\nconditions may have hampered\nthe drivers but investigation is\ncontinuing. \u25a0\u25a0\nCOLOR TV\n352 3355\nVIDEO\nELECTRONICS\nassssii\nHIM'!\nCOMPORT\nIN ALLIUM\n39'', 48\"\n54\" Widths .\nHuge Factory Purchase\n\u2022 405 Coll Msttresi and 405 Coil Boxspring\n810 Ceils In All.\n\u2022 Deep Quilted Design for Top Comfort\nTotal Value $145.00\nSAVE\n$60.50\nBoth for Only\n$84-50\nNo Down Payment\nMACLEOD'S\n321 B\n2\u00a3\nSt.\nNelson        Ph. 3524911\ntiiWlil*!\nPhone 352-3910\n317 Virnon Street\nNelson \u2022\nDally Delivery\nGiant Sin.\nFoil Wrap\nStuart House. 12\"x25\". ....\nGlace Cherry\nRed or Green. 16 os. pkg\nSjtocsmL\nOmo Detergent    AQC\nGiant Sin. .......\u201e_____...__... V #\n29*\n 59e\nLight Walnuts      7Qc\n16 oz. pkg. \u2014    #   #\nFruit Cake Fruit    \u00a3QC\nRobinson's; 16 oz.' pkg. ... tm M\n49\u00b0\n10ib.89e\n59\u00b0\n5 ibs. 55c\n99c\n85e\nCut Mixed Peel\nRobinson's; 16 oz. pkg. \u2014.-.....\u2014\nFlour\nRobin Hood. \t\nYellow Sugar\n5 lbs. poly. :.\nOats\nRobin Hood. \t\nCookies\nBoders Assort. Over 120 Cookies\nAero Wax\n32 oz. size. .\u201e,\u00bb-... ._.\u2014..-\t\nChocolate Drink    AQC\nToddy. 16 oz. tin. ......_. :.    *f \/\nGinger Ale     7 |or Cl\nCanada Dry. Quart Size. .... ej IVI  *fi\nWlnal\nRoasting Chicken\n:#.*\u25a0&. ,.\nFrying Chicken\nCut up in tray. Lb.\t\nSausages\nPork. Lb\t\nPot Roast\nBeef. Lb. \u201e', !,.\t\nGarlic Rings\nRanch Style.\t\nApples\nMcintosh\t\nPotatoes\nU.S. NO. J. ......,,\nCarrots\nLocal\t\nTurnips\n. Lb\t\n -  * for\nfihoduai\n45'\n39*\n45*\n39*\n1.00\n8 ,.89*\n20b,99*\n,...3W29*\nW\u00bb Reserve the Right te Limit Quantities\n Stock Quotations\nThe Daily News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nol an error In the following lists.\nClosing  prices supplied by  Doherty,  Roadhouse A\nMcCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n12.90\n44.00\n10.25\n15.00\n24.50\n44.00\n43.50\n13.00\n4.25\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi 14.87\nAlberta Dist. 3.95\nAlgoma Steel 72.50\nAlta. Gas Trunk 37.00\nAluminum 32.00\nArgus 16,87\nArgus C Pfd 13.62\nBank of Mont. 68.25\nBank of N. Scotia 77.62\nBatlvurst Power 25.37\nBell Telephone 61.50\nB.A. Oil 35.62\nB.C. Forest 32.00\nB.C. Packers A 19.25\nB.C. Telephone 65.00\nCalgary Power 23.62\nCan. & D. Sugar 26.00\nCan. Cement 48.50\nCan. Collieries\nCan. Iron\nCan. Breweries\nCan. Canners\nCan. Industries\nCan. Imp. Bank 67.75\nCan. Pacific Ry. 53.87\nChemcell 18.00\nCol. Cellulose     11.00\nC. Mining & S.\nCons. Paper\nCons. Gas\nCrest. Timber\nDist. Seagrams 66.75\nD. Tar & Chem. 23.50\nDom. Textiles 31.50\nEddy Match Co. 45.00\nEddy Poper 19.00\nFalconbridge 85.25\nFamous Players 23.25\nFanny Farmer 44.50\nFord Motor Co. 62.00\nFord of Canada 180.00\nGoodyear 158.12\nGt. Lakes Power 27.00\nHome Oil A 19.25\nHome Oil B 20.00\nHudson Bay Co 16.50\nIndust. Accept. 25.62\nImperial Oil 57.75\nImp. Tobacco 14.75\nInd. Minerals 10.12\nInland Nat. Gas 9.50\nIntl. Utilities 28.25\nInt. Nickel\nInterprov. Steel\nLaurentide\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferg.\nMacM. Powell R. 36.25\nMolson Brew. A 35.00\nM. Locomotive 18.62\nNoranda\nOgilvie Flour\nPacific Pete\nPower Corp.\nQue. Nat. Gas\nRoyal Bank\nRothmans\nSalada Foods\nShell Oil\nSimpsons\nSoutham '\nSteel of Canada 26.37\nTraders Fin. A 14.25\nTexaco 61.50\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 22.75\nTrans Can. Pipe 25.62\nWalker-Gooder. 35.87\nWestcoast Trans. 16.12\nWeston Geo. A 17.37\nWoodwards A 25.37\nZenith Elect.      4.30\nMINGS AND OILS\nAdvocate 6.50\nAgnico 1.13\nAunor 3.95\nBarnat .78\nBethlehem Cop. 8.20\nBibis .26\nBralorne\nBrunswick .\nCal. & Edmtn\nCampbell Chib\nCan. Delhi\nCampbell R.L.\nCariboo Gold\nCassiar Asb.\nCons. Rambler\n93.50\n4.35\n\u202217.00\n8.75\n29.75\n50.00\n14.75\n12.00\n15.25\n11.25\n78.50\n23.00\n11.75\n20.25\n28.00\n30.00\n5.15\n15.00\n20.25\n4.55\n9.55\n18.50\n.72\n11.75\n2.01\nCentral Del Rio 8.35\nCentral Patricia\nCharter Oil\nChimo\nCheskirk\nCoch. wm.\nCoin Lake\nCons. Halliwell\nCons. Mogul\nConwest   .\nCopper Corp.\nCowichan Cop.\nCraigmont\nDenison\nDiscovery\nDickenson\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nFargo .\nFrobex\nFirst Maritime\nGeco\nGiant Mascot\nGiant Yel.\nGranduc\nGunnar Mines\nHighland BeU\nHollinger \u2014\nHudson Bay Mg 72.25\nHudson Bay Oil 15.62\nHydra Ex .23\nIron Bay\nIso\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\nLeitch\nLittle Long Lac 1.78\nLorado 1.65\nMadsen 1.99\nMalartic .70\nMattagami Lake 21.50\n.21\n.31\n4.10\n5.00\n.57\n.41\n17.75\n16.25\n3.20\n4.95\n1.56\n5.25\n2.82\n.88\n3.50\n39.87\n1.58\n15.50\n6.40\n5.50\n8.00\n31.50\n3.15\n7.95\n40.37\n11.50\n5.95\nMclntyre\nMcKenzie\nMidcon\nNational Pete\nNew Coht. Oils\nNew Hosco\nNorlex\nNormetal\nNorthgate\nOpemiaka\nOrmsby\nOrchan\nPetrol O & G\nPickle Crow\nPlace Gas\nPlacer\nPatino\nPreston\nProvo\n65.25\n.12V,\n.56\n3.70\n.25\n3.30\n.14%\n4.10\n6.30\n8.80\n47.00\n7.10\n.66\n.52\n.57\n49.00\n9.30\n5.95-\n2.29\n15.00\n4.00\n73.00\n37.12\n32.12\n17.00\n13.87\n68.50\n78.00\n25.75\n61.75'\n35.75\n32.50\n65.50\n23.87\n26.25\n49.00\n44.62\n10.37\n15.12\n24.75\n68.00\n54.00\n18.25\n11.25\n44.37\n43.87\n13.25\n4.40\n67.00\n23.62\n32.00\n46.00\n19.87\n85.50\n23.50\n46.00\n62.50\n183.00\n159.00\n27.50\n19.37\n20.25\n16.75\n25.75\n58.00\n14.87\n10.87\n9.62\n28.50\n93.62\n4.40\n17.12\n8.87\n29.87\n35.75\n35.50\n18.75\n50.12 .\n12.12\n15.37\n11.37\n79.00\n23.25\n11.87\n20.37\n28.25\n30.25\n26.50\n14.37\n62.25\n22.87\n26.00\n36.00\n16.25\n17.62\n26.00\n4.35\n6.60\n1.14\n4.00\n.88\n8.25\n.27\n5.25\n15.12\n21.00\n4.65\n9.60\n19.00\n.80\n11.87\n2.04\n8.40\n1.32\n2.03\n1.09\n.0914\n2.72\n.    .22\n.33\n4.15\n5.10\n.58\n.42\n17.87\n16,37\n3.25\n5.05\n1.70\n5.30\n2.94\n.90\n3.55\n40.00\n1.69\n15.07\n6.50\n5.55\n8.15\n32.00\n73.00\n15.75\n3.20\n8.00\n40.50\n11.62\n6.00\n1.80\n1.67\n2.00\n.72\n21.75\n65.75\n.13\n.57\n3.85\n.27\n3.35\n.15\n4.15\n6.35\n8.85\n48.00\n7.35\n.66\n.54\n.58\n50.00\n9.40\n6.05\n2.30\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algom\nSan Antionio\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTemagaml\nTorbrit\nTriad Oil\nTribag\nUnion Oil\nUnited Keno\nUnited Oil\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nWestern Mines\nWright Harg.\nWilroy\n3.75\n10.25\n.41%\n.90\n3.00\n9.95\n.21\n1.30\n5.15\n.77\n2.50\n3.75\n5.60\n1.20\n.63\n1.30\n2.30\n15.50\n9.00\n.75\n1.35\n2.53\n4.75\n.70\n1.55\n3.90\n10.50\n.44\n.92\n3.50\n10.12\n.22\n1.38\n5.20\n.78\n2.55\n3.85\n5.65\n1.25\n.65\n1.38\n2.31\n15.62\n9.15\n.80\n1.37\n2.60\n4.80\nVancouver\nSlocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nGrowers A\nGrowers B\nSun Pub. A\nSun Pub. B\nInt. Brew. B\n5.00\n4.95\n22:50\n22.00\n8.00\nMINES AND OILS\nButtle Lake\nCanam Cop.\nCoast Cop.\nCopper Soo\nCop. Ridge\nCrown Silver\nDolly Varden\nEndako\nHuestis\nLytton\nMt. Washington\nOttawa Silver\n.47 1\n.14\n.32%\n1.22\n.15\n.56\n13.75\n.32\n.22\n1.15\n.19\nPeace River Pete .58\nFUNDS\nAll. Can. Com. 6.30\nAll. Can. Div. 8.47\nAmer. Growth 10.68\nCan. Inv. Fund 4.30\nCom. Int. 10.77\nFirst.Oil & Gas 5.61\nInvestors Growth 8.46\nPend Oreille\nReeves\nSkeena Silver\nTrojan 1\nTorwest\nUtica Mines\n4.05\n.3.00\n.i9\n, .'.12\n1:09\nInv. Mutual\nIntl. Mutual\nLeverage\nDiv. Income\nMutual Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nUnited ACc.\n14.89\n5.13\n9.56\n6:01\n4.89\n8.13\n6.44\n8.45\n5:50\n5.00\n8.25\n.50\n-.-   ..15\n14.00\n.33\n1.25\n.16\n.57\n14.00\n.34\n.24\n1:25\n.20\n.60\n4.30\n3.15\n1.10\n2.28\n6.90\n9.28\n11.67\n4.70\n11.80\n6.13\n9.20\n16.18\n5.58\n10.48\n6.60\n5.33\n8.51\n7.04\n9.23\nFormer Kinnaird\nMan Buried In\nTrail Cemetery\nKINNAIRD \u2014 Funeral service\nwas held last week for Robert\nDutton, 77, a resident of Kinnaird, who died at Castlegar and\nDistrict Hospital.\nHe was bom July 3,1887.\nReverend F. Willey of Castlegar United Church officiated\nat the service which was held\nfrom Trail Funeral Home. Interment was at Mountain View\nCemetery.\nPredeceased by his wife, in\n1956, he is survived by two\ndaughters, Dorothy, Mrs. 0.\nBrommeland of Kinnaird and\nMarian, Mrs. R. Tanner of Trail.\nAlso a son, Reginald,. Prince\nRupert and six grandchildren.\nThree sisters also survive, two\nin Saskatchewan and one ln\nKelowna.\nA harness maker by trade,\nMr. Dutton lived in Saskatchewan until 1947, having emigrated to Prince Albert from his native Scotland in 1903. In 1947 he\ncame to Trail where he was employed as a janitor until his retirement.\nMEDAL WINNERS\nThere are 282 living holders\nof the U.S. Medal of Honor.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964 \u2014 3\nAt Kinnaird\nTrailer Court Proposed, Report\nHeard on Development Policies\nKINNAIRD - Kinnaird commissioners attempted to discourage a proposal for a trailer court\ndesigned to fulfil the needs for\nthe expected influx of people to\ntihs area.\nPromoters of a 40-acre site at\nthe Kinnaird side of the CPR\ncrossing, Max Obal and R. J.\nFenner appeared at the Kinnaird\nCommission meeting Monday in\nthe interests of establishing the\nfirst trailer court in Kinnaird,\nstating that the large scale enterprise would accommodate\nfamilies and give \"adequate\nspace for children to play.\"\nThe establishing of trailer\ncourts in the village was termed\nby Chairman Carl Loeblich to be\na \"dead loss, contributing nothing to the community in taxes,\"\nand contrary to the village bylaw governing trailers.\nThe proposal will, however, be\nconsidered later on the basis of\nsubmissions of a \"concrete plan\nbe available only within a minimum period of four months,\nwhen a complete report would\nbe expected.\nThe first stage of the study\nwill cover general land use within the district; major roads and\nhighways in these areas; general school and park needs, and\nrecommended development policies,\nSpecifically for Kinnaird is the\nworking out of a road pattern,\nMr. Williams said, and the determining of accesses to facilities, as well as the developing\nof the larger parcels of land. He\nsaid that the information from\nthe B.C. Research Council would\nbe \"worthwhile in the control of\nroad standards.\"\nThe second stage of the program will consist of \"more de\ntail once the framework has beset up.\"\nPRINCE RUPERT (CPU.\ninquest has been ordercJi ,ii;'\nthe death of David Blaclsstom\n49, who was crushed recentl;.\nbeneath a number of rolling, lo?\nat  the  nearby Watson  Islanc\npulp plant of the Columbia[Cellulose Company. Blackstone\nwas employed as a member-of\na yard gang unloading the logs.\nLONG SERVICE with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police\nwas recognised with presentation of medals during the official\nInspection of the Nelson detachment by assistant commissioner D. O. Forrest. Receiving long service medals were,\nleft, Cpl. A. J. S. Band, who joined the force in 1943 and\nserved at Brandon, Mlnnedosa, Verdun, Hazelton, Stannous,\nLake Cowichan and Fernie before being transferred to Cas\ntlegar In August of this year. Cpl. B. Fleming, right, served\nwith the provincial police for nine years until this force was\ntaken over by the RCMP in 1950, when Cpl. Fleming was in\nVancouver with the Unlveristy detachment, He has seen service alio at Chilllwack and Trail and has been at the Rossland detachment since September, 1959.\n\u2014RCMP photos by Cpl, G. Sproule.\nHope for Re-Opening\nOf Plant in January\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Resumption\nof lumber production by Crestbrook Timber Ltd. Canal Flat\nplant in early January is felt to\nbe a possibility.\nAn October fire caused the\nplant to close down, with fire\nloss estimated at $125,000.\nReplacements will have metal\nhousing with steel log deck and\nfeed escalator to cut future fire\nrisk. A log barker will be added\nwith the new installations. The\nhead-rig and main unit of the\nplant were destroyed ln the flash\nfire.\nWith Crestbrook plants now\nstretching from Kootenay Lake\nsome 180 miles east through the\nCrowsnest Pass to Fort Macleod,\nas well as from Spillimacheen\n200 miles south to Creston, the\ncompany is making increasing\nuse of railway service in its coordinated production operations.\nLog supply to its sawmiil plants\ncontinues by truck, but a wide\nrail shuttle has developed In its\nplywood division.\nAt present some logs, mostly\nsecond grade spruce,' are. being\nrail-freighted from Prank, Alta.,\n160 miles west to Crestbrook's\nveneer plant at Creston, then\nthe t packaged veneer is rail-\nfreighted 180 miles east to Crest-\nbrook's Fort Macleod Fort Plywood plant, where manufacturing has been on double shifts for\nseveral months to meet its market demands. The plywood plant\nis rated at-consuming 30,000 fbm\nof logs per shift or 60,000 fbm\nper-day at present.\nRival Unions Unite\nIn Contract Talks\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Two traditionally rival waterfront unions\nMonday agreed to help each\nother in a current contract dispute.\nThe local executive of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway,\nTransport and General Workers\n(CLC) agreed to a proposal from\nt h e Seafarers' International\nUnion (Ind.). that each send observers to the other's conciliation board meetings.\nThe proposal from Rod Heine-\nkey, SIU west coast vice-president, was made after both unions\nbroke off separate contract negotiations with the Towboat\nOwners' Association. Both unions\nasked for establishment of conciliation boards.\nJim Thompson, president of\nCBRT's Local 400, said the representatives would be silent observers and one union would not\nIAP Says Not Ashamed of\nSIU Help in Campaign\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nProvince Tuesday quoted unnamed members of the Vancouver Branch of the Seafarers'\nInternational Union as saying\nthey assisted the Liberal Federal\nCommittee in the 1963 federal\nelection.\nThe local SIU members are\nfurther quoted by Vancouver's\nmorning newspaper as saying\nthe SIU supplied a force of 35\nmen to help maintain order at\nVancouver Forum during Prime\nMinister Pearson's tumultuous\nfederal election campaign meeting there April 1, 1963.\nThe newspaper adds:\n\"The 35 man crew, it is\nclaimed, wore Liberal badges\nand assisted city \u25a0 police and\nPacific National Exhibition officials in maintaining order at\nthe meeting which was the\nrowdiest in the entire national\ncampaign.\"\nThe Province quotes SIU members-as saying that Rod Heine-\nkey, the SIU's West Coast vice-\npresident, was present \"and\npersonally struck a man who\ntried to force his way through\nthe southwest door after the hall\nhad been filled.\"\nIt says SIU men here also\nclaimed they \"took an active\nInterest in the campaign conducted in Burrard (constituency)\nby Ron Basford, the present MP.\n\"They say they supplied cars\nand organizing talent and put\nin hundreds of man hours distributing and nailing up posters\"\nMr. Basford, in an interview\nwith The Province, is quoted as\nsaying: \"I am not ashamed that\nthey worked for me. They are\nindividuals Interested in politics\n... I don't think government\nactions show that any deal was\nmade. This government put the\nSIU in trusteeship and charged\nBanks (Hal Banks former SIU\nchief).\"\n\"The people who worked for\nme weren't hoodlums.\"\nnecessarily support the other in\nevejit of a strike.\n\"That is a different argument\nwhich will be faced if it comes\nupjj he said.\nThe CBRT represents about\n375 seamen on the towboats, the\nSIU about half that number.\nThe CBRT is asking a 25 per\ncent increase in. wages of $325\na month, plus other benefits. The\nSIU is asking the same increase\nin wages of $332 a month, and\nadditional benefits.\n. The unions have been at odds\nsince 1960, when the CBRT moved into the. west coast area and\nsupplanted the SIU as bargaining\nagent at a number of companies.\nLast May Heinekey accused\nthe CBRT of being behind an\nattempt to kill him with a shotgun blast through his car. He\nreceived six pellets in his right\nhip.\nThe CBRT denied the charges.\nSANTA BARBARA, Calif.\n(AP)\u2014Paul Muni, 67, retired\nactor who won an Oscar in 1936,\nis under treatment in a hospital\nherefor what is called aserious\nheart condition. Attendants said\nhe entered the hospital' Oct. 30,\nsuffering also from pneumonia,\nbut this was cleared up\t\nFace of Lardeau Country\nChanging With Influx of\nTrailers, New Businesses\nDEVELOPMENT POLICIES\nMeanwhile, a general program\non development policies is under\nstudy by the firm of Rawson and\nWilliams Ltd. This program is\nbeing spearheaded by the B.C.\nHydro and Power Authority to\nassist the two villages of Castlegar and Kinnaird in proper development and expansion.\nBob Williams discussed the\nprogram at the Monday village\nmeeting saying that it would be\nundertaken In two, stages. He\nsaid that temporary housing was\na general problem and that detailed proposals could be expected within two weeks, but that\ntrailer courts would depend on\nthe general policy which would\nLARDEAU \u2014; Progress has\nlaid an increasingly tight grip on\nthe Lardeau country, which is\nchanging rapidly as men, machines and new businesses move\nin. Traffic Increases daily.\nMachinery is starting to arrive for dam construction and\nwork is progressing on the\ncamp-site. Trailer courts are\nbeing rushed at Cooper Creek\nand Meadow Creek. The bulk\nfuel plant at Lardeau is nearing\ncompletion and the railway spur\nhas been re-routed to make\nmore room for the highway and\nmore rail-line. -\nLiving accommodation is at a\npremium, and Mannix construction crews are arriving to prepare living quarters. Large\ntrailers have been brought in and\nloads of lumber are heading up\nthe valley'regularly.\nMeadow Creek cross-roads is\na scene of hustle and bustle. The\nJewett School unit is' nearing\ncompletion. A mercantile store\nis open for business, as its construction continues. Larry\nGreenlaw has cleared a large\narea and is building a gas station and store and another\nservice station is under construction as well as a coffee shop and\npool hall. Nearby, the chapel is\nhearing completion.\nFifteen weeks have passed\nsince work started on rebuilding\nthe Lardeau-Marblehead road\nwith from 50 to 100 men employed, many of them new to the\nwork; and'! it is reported that\nonly one accident has occurred\nrequiring hospital care.\nCORNISH MINING B.C.\nTin mining in Cornwall, a centuries-old industry, was almost\nHalted in the 1890s when large\ndeposits of tin were found in\nAsia and Africa.\nSee Us For\nSILENT, EFFICIENT\nand\nECONOMICAL.\nCONTROLLED HEAT\nFar Every Room\nChhomalox.\n\u00ab\u2022 * \u25a0  la.\n1 \u25a0 * \u25a0     \u25a0 1\nI.    II  II\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nLTD.\nLTD.\nPh. 352-3175 Nelson\nBUYEaHLYl\nBoxed cards,\nj special cards\n.   now on display at...\ny'i'\n\\%ikeman)s\n466 Baker St.        Nelson\nPhone 352-2521\nROAD WORK\nThe road has been widened to\nthe required width. With blasting\nfinished on the bluff at Lardeau,\nthe roadbed has been completed\nto the crushed gravel stage,\nPart of the eight-mile stretch\nhas an oil mix surface on the 24.\nfoot top, and there is a three-\nfoot gravel shoulder. Countless\nloads of fill were hauled to widen\nand raise various spots, some\nover six feet. Drilling, blasting\nand removing rubble, with only\nminor tieups in traffic, called\nfor close planning in all departments.\nWork south of Lardeau will\nproceed all winter. The bluff\nabove Davis Creek, just but of\nLardeau, is being widened and\nother spots are being filled and\nwidened.\nThe gravel crusher has been\nmoved to Mllford Creek after\nstockpiling at Lost Ledge.\nW. S. Walker, projects engineer for B.C. Hydro, spoke to a\nspecial meeting of the Lardeau\nBoard of Trade this month, outlining methods to be used in construction of the Duncan Dam and\ndealing also with other Columbia\nprojects. Mr. Walker was in\ncharge of a similar project in\nBrazil' recently. His wife and\nfamily are expected shortly. One\nson is staying with Mr. and Mrs.\nSteve Sawzuk and attending\nschool in Lardeau.\nPARSLOW'S\nENTERPRISES LTD.\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave.      Ph. 368-5025\nTRAIL, B.C.\nCurriers Insurance\nAnd\nReal Estate Agencies\nI960 LTD.\nAll Classes of\nGeneral Insurance\nTrail, B.C. Ph. 368-3414\nFRIDAY NIGHT\n7:30 p.m. Specials\n\u2022 On Sale Sharp at 7:30 p.m.\n\u2022 Limited Quantities       \u2022 Personal Shopping\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nBox of 51 cards with envelopes.\nReg. 88c \t\nNYLONS\nLadies' 1st Quality Seamless Mesh,\nNylons. Pair  \t\n67*\n29*\nCHILDREN'S POLO PYJAMAS\nCosy and warm, printed flannelette pyjamas .In.\nsizes 3 to 6x. Reg. $1.98. OOrf\n7i30 Special     QO*\nLADIES'FANCY BRIEFS\nBand and Lace Leg. Reg. 39c. ftdf\n7:30 Special ,     -ID* ;\nGREAT WHISKIES\nIN ONE BRAND...\nIt Will Be a\nPleasant,\nComfortable\nChristmas\nAt Your\nHome\nWith\nHMW W.I\nA Heme Heated\n1    With ROCKGAS\nIt a\ni*<\nHAPPY\nHOME\nFREE ESTIMATES\nWe Can Show You\nA Better Deal and\nSave You More\nROCKGAS\nPROPANE LTD.\n610 Railway St. Nelson\nPhone 352-6522\nYears ago Adams distilled 29 great\nwhiskies, each with its own distinctive characteristics, and then aged\nthem in special oak casks. Now,\nAdams has \"married\" these 29 rare,\nwhiskies to create the superb flavour\nof Adams Private Stock. This custom\nblend is presented in its crystal\ndecanter.\nn '\u25a0-\u2022Adams\nPrivate Stock\nPrivate Stock\nAdomS CUSTOM   BLENDED  CANADIAN   RYE   WHISKY\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n.\n Maon iailg Urns\nEstablished April 22. 1902 Nelson, B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Olfice Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment oi Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DA1LV NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDI'l BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS    -\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news published herein.    \t\nFriday, November 13, 1964\nThe Victims Seem To Be Forgotten\nA large part oi society's current    to all these things when he becomes\nconcern over civil rights is a preoccupation with rehabilitating criminals and safeguarding the rights\nof those accused of crimes.\nGeorge B. McClellan, commissioner oi the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, recently questioned this\nattitude and asked about the rights\noi the lawbreakers' victims.\n\"Where are the civil rights of the\nfamily whose breadwinner has been\ncut down by some drunken sot in a\nhigh-powered car?\" asked Commissioner McClellan. \"What system\nexists to provide free legal advice\nto the widow who may have a legitimate civil claim for damages?\n\"Who moves in to rehabilitate\nher \"children, find them jobs, give\nthem career guidance, feed them\nand clothe them? Who, indeed, but\ncold'charity and local welfare or-\nganizdtioris? But the drunk who\ndrove the car, if convicted, is entitled\na ward of the state.\"\nJustice Minister Favreau recently\ntoured Montreal's St. Vincent de Paul\npenitentiary and justifiably expressed dismay at the poor housing provided for some oi the convicts. We\nwonder how the plight of some of\nthe innocent people those convicts\npreyed on would affect the minister.\nWashington State is building a\nlavish new prison on some choice\ncoastal property. Each prisoner will\nhave his own room, complete with\nprivate bath, TV and library privileges and an ocean view. It would\nnot be surprising if the inmates were\nto enjoy a higher standard oi living\nthan most of their victims.\nIn the field of crime and punishment some important values have\nturned upside down. We hope there\nwill be enough McClellans to set\nthem right side up again.,\n\u2014Vancouver Province.\n'OK, Give Me a Home . . .\nFive Buffalo are supposed next   oi the song phrase: \"\nyear to keep sixty acres of grass\n\"cut\" to a Halton County park.\nThey'll save maintenance costs, according to a park official. The idea\nis to turn them into a valley walled\nin on all but one end by high ridges.\nThe open end will be fenced. Whether (my fence will hold even five\nbuffalo if they decide to move along\nwill be one of the more interesting\nquestions to be determined next summer. One of the buffalo is being\ndonated by the big-hearted Toronto\n.oo. It has been hard pressed to\nkeep him captive. Bent and twisted\ntwo-inch steel pipes irom his original enclosure, which buckled under\ntwo days of incessant battering,\nattest to the buffalo's strength and\nblind ferocity.\nN6t\" only. Halton but Peel, York ']\nand adjoining counties may before\n1965 is out learn the real meaning\nwhere the\nbuffalo roam ...\" If the plan goes\nthrough. The wisdom of trying to\ncontain a buffalo herd in a partly-\nurbanized area such as is Halton is\ndebatable,\nThe western movie plots which\nclimax in a buffalo stampede have\na basis in fact. Less than a century\nago in western Canada the Indians\nand their half-brothers the Metis,\nsaved bullets and arrows in their\npursuit of meat and hides by exploiting the buffalo tendency to stampede and once started, to stop far\nnothing. Whole herds were killed by\ndriving them-toward such cliffs as\nthere were near or along the banks\nof the.prairie rivers. Buffalo by the.\nscore would blindly follow their lead\nbull .over the .drop to die in mounds\nat the foot of the cliff. In the early\ndays of Western Canada these natural traps were known as buffalo\nruns.\u2014GueJph Mercury.\nHarold Wilson Gets His Chance\nThe paper-thin majority won by\nHarold Wilson and his Labor Party\nlooks more like an experiment by\nthe British electorate than anything\nelse.\nIn an election lacking clear-cut\nissues, the choice was not so much\nbetween conservatism and socialism as\" Between two team's which\npromised to get the British economy\nmoving at a brisker pace.\nObservers felt the Conservatives\nwould be a safer choice and Labor\nthe riskier bet. But evidently the\nvoters did not think it the time to\nplay sale, and by an extremely small\nmajority decided to give Mr. Wilson\nhis chance.\nThe new government, In effect,\nis o reprobation. If it can give' the\ncountry new stimulus, efficiency and.\ngreater economic growth it can look\nfor wider public support.\nII it fails to do so Mr. Wilson and\nhis supporters will have a short term\nat 10 Downing Street.\nTheir problem is not an easy one.\nIt' is set forth by The Economist,\noi London, in these terms: '.'The truth\nis that prosperous Britain is potentially in a mess all the time because\nIt is not competitive or efficient\nenough; it sells too little and buys\ntoo much . . . what matters to this\nlittle island is the good old-fashioned\nbalance of its trade.\"\nMr. Wilson has committed himself to solve this difficulty. Labor\npromise*-a- technological .revolution,\nmore science-based industries and\nso on.\nWhether he.-delivers the goods\nrests on whether he can overcome\nthe-, crippling\u2014 restrictive\u2014practices\nII\nLetters to the Editor\nLetters lo the Editor on any topic ol genuine Interest\nare welcome U they are brlel, accurate and fair. They may\nbe published over a nom da plume, but the name ol th*\nwriter must be given to the Editor \u25a0\u2022 evidence ol good\nlaith. Anonymous letters go Into Ihe waslcpaper basket.\nTypewritten letter! must be douhle-spaced.\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Under this sort of flying\nreport, we hear all manner of\nrumor:\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nNov. 13, 1964 ,. .\n. The world was coming to\nan end, many people predicted 131 years ago today\n\u2014in 1833\u2014after a shower of\nmeteors invaded the earth's\natmosphere. The spectacle\nof more than 200,000 shooting stars, sighted over the\neastern areas of North\nAmerica, led to the first\nfull-scale scientific investigations of the extra-terres-\ntial phenomenon. A number of religious groups predicted that the meteorltic\nshower was the first effect\nof Armageddon.\n1945\u2014General Charles de\nGaulle was elected interim\npresident of the French government.\n1950 \u2014 A Canadian chartered airliner crashed in the\nFrench Alps, killing all 59\naboard.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today-in\n1914. \u2014 Allied armies retrieved Dixmude in Belgium from German invaders; Russians made progress in East Prussia; Austrian evacuated East Gali-\ncia in the face of a Russian\ndrive; German armies advanced in Poland.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago today\u2014in 1939\u2014German raids\non the Shetland Islands and\nthe east coast of England\nwere repulsed; Finnish delegation left Russia when\ntalks with the Soviets broke\ndown; three Parisians.were\ninjured from shrapnel from\nexploding shells whert German planes were beaten off.\nand defensive habits oi British bade\nunions and prod and encourage industrial and commercial management to the peak oi performance '\nthat Britain's interests require.\nThe Labor Party is considered'\nbetter prepared far this task than.,\nit was in 1945. It is more ready to\ntake on national rather than merely\npcuiisan responsibilities oi a special .\ngroup of the electorate.\nWhile Labor clings to many old\ndoctrinaire slogans and attitudes\nand is encumbered by the deadweight of party hacks given jobs\nto retain party unity, it has convinced the necessary number oi\nBritish voters that it deserves a\nchance to show what it can do.\n\"Ii there is ever going to be a\n\"moment when the Labor Party* can\nbe called upon with any hope,\" says\nThe Economist, \"it is now.\"\n\u2014Vancouver Province.\n\"Rumors\"\n\u2014Centennial committee men\nresigning;\n\u2014Centennial project decided\nupon;\n\u2014Shopping centre assured;\n\u2014Major department store has\ntaken option on land;\n\u2014High-rise apartment \u2014 much\ndata;\n\u2014Mr. Beresford this and Mr,\nB. that;\n\u2014And other such like.\nRumors are always so much\nmore exciting than are authentic\nfacts. They make no claim to\nthe telling of the whole story,\nnor to the truth of any portion\nof it.\nThese rumors are merely the\nhighlights of some stirring current events leaving the imagination to fill in the details.\n\u2014Should we attempt not to\nfill in those details and remove\nall manner of rumor from our\nminds, then concentrate on that\nwhich over the many years to\ncome will prove to b* the most\nlasting and do the greatest good\nfor Nelson?\n\u2014Remember the old adage:\n\"We never made a wrong move\"\n(simply because we never made\na move!).\n\u2014Your move \u2014 now.\n\u2014Would suggest all persons\ninterested in the future of Nel-\nson that they attend the centennial monthly meetings. Regularly consult \"News of the Day.\"\nWalter Davis.\n1133 Front Street.\nP.S.: Rumor the International\nWater Pageant will not operate\n1965. Taint true. \u2014W.\nOverflowing Press Gallery Becomes\nCentre of Controversy for Reporters\nNew York Traffic\nSnarled as Heavy-\nFog Covers City\nNEW YORK (AP)-A thick\nfog snarled land, air and water\ntraffic in the New York metropolitan area early today as it\nswirled over large, areas of New\nYork, New Jersey and Connecticut\nPolice reported several accidents, including the head - on\ncrash of two Long Island Rail\nRoad passenger trains, one\nempty except for its crew.\nNihe:persons were, reported\ninjured,. none badly.\nSURVIVAL TALKS\nKAMLOOPS (CP)-A two-day\nconference, sponsored by the\nCivil Defence Association, opens\nhere Nov. 25. Delegates will\ndiscuss organization and operation of emergency forces in a\nmajor disaster. Provincial and\nfederal civil defence officials\nas' well as officials from voluntary groups . .will attend the\nsessions.\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Parliamentary Press Gallery, its 128\nmembers overflowing space originally designed for 35 in the\nCentre Block of the Parliament\nBuildings, has been asked by\nCommons Speaker Alan Mac-\nnaughton to consider moving its\nmain activity off Parliament\nHill.\nThe issue has created some\nconflict within the Canadian\nParliamentary Press Gallery\nAssociation, made up of the\nnewspaper, magazine, radio\nand TV reporters who report\nnews of Parliament and the\ngovernment on a full - time\nbasis.\nA small gallery committee\nheaded by President Peter\nDempson of the Toronto Telegram has requested a meeting\nwith Prime Minister Pearson to\nask whether more space might\nbe available to the Press Gallery on Parliament Hill. No\ndate has been set for this meeting.\nThe committee was appointed\nat a general meeting of the\nPress Gallery Friday Oct. 30,\nthe second ot two metings to\ndiscuss Mr, Macnaughton's proposal.\nNOW IN CENTRE BLOCK\n.The Press Gallery quarters\nnow are located in the Centre\nBlock off a large second-floor\ncorridor that runs between the\nCommons and Senate chambers: There is a large common\nroom and two small ones, one\nset aside.as a library-lounge.\nThese, quarters have been oc\ncupied by the press since the\ncentre block was reconstructed\nafter the fire of 1917 destroyed\nmost of the original building.\nAt that time there were 30\nPress Gallery members during\nsessions of Parliament and\nabout 12 in off-session periods.\nGallery membership has\nsince mushroomed, particularly\nin the last 10 years with the\naddition of radio and TV reporters. The original corridor\ndesks, filing cabinets and partitions, a situation condemned\nas a fire hazard by the Dominion fire commissioner.\nEven with the corridor filled,\nabout 50 gallery members have\nno desks.\nThere is no rental charge.\nDesks, filing cabinets, office\nsupplies and telephones are\nprovided free. Mr. Macnaugh-\nton estimates the annual cost to\nthe government at about .100,-\n000.\nLast year the government offered to provide larger q- \u2022 r-\nters Ih the newly renovated\nWest Block which is connected\nto the central building by an\nunderground tunnel, The gallery  voted  against   moving\nthere\t\nPROPOSES MOVE\n\u2014Mr:.. - Macnaughton recently\nsuggested to the; gallery that it\nswitch, its main quarters to. the\nNorlite Building, a seven-storey\nstructure the government oWns\non Wellington Street just, across\nfrom the West.Block.\/.\nHe said that the corridor now\nused by the gallery must, be\ncleared; that there is no extra\nspace available in either the\nCentre or West Blocks; and\nthat the Press Gallery cannot\nbe divided between two buildings.\nThe public works department\nwould renovate the Norlite\nBuilding, make all the partitioning required, install a cooling system and provide the essential clerical staff.\nIn return, Press Gallery\nmembers would pay . \"economic\" rents to cover costs, probably $3.25 a year a square foot.\nThe Norlite Building has 40,-\n000 square feet of usable space,\nthe present quarters 5,419\nsquare feet.\nMr.   Macnaughton   has   also\n. proposed that the present Centre Block quarters be turned\ninto a \"hot room\" with common\nfacilities for filing urgent news.\nSome Press Gallery members already occupy private offices in downtown Ottawa for\npermanent desks and files, using the gallery facilities only\nfor fast-breaking news.\nROOM TO EXPAND\nA group of members is hotly\nopposed to moving, however,\narguing it would make working\nIntarnrefina the News\nManned Nuclear Fleet\nAmateur radio clubs are finding more and more common\nground with Civil Defence, and\nmembers- of these- clubs would\nbe invaluable, in emergencies.\n, By BORIS MISKEW\nCanadian   Press   Staff   Writer\nPresident de Gaulle has\nscored a new victory in his battle for Europe\u2014by braking West\nGerman acceleration toward\nthe establishment of a NATO\nmixed-manned nuclear fleet.\n: The French president for\nsome time has fought the\nUnited States - proposed nuclear force for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, fearing\nthat such a force-would .confirm U.S. domination ot Western Europe.\nHis latest battle was won in\nParis where former chancellor\nKonrad Adenauer of West Germany lent his ear to de Gaulle\nearlier in the week.\nAdenauer, himself a staunch\nbacker of the proposed nuclear\nfleet, returned to Bonn apparently under the spell of the\nFrench leader's power of persuasion and met with Chancellor Ludwig Erhard.\nSIGNING IS DELAYED\nThe result: A West German\ndecision to stop pressing for the\nsoonest possible creation of the\nforce which would result in a\nmultilateral nuclear fleet\nThe West German decision\ncame at a time when that country's defence minister, Kai-Uwe\nvon Hassel, was in Washington\ndoing what he could to promote\nthe cause of the nuclear fleet.\nIt also came at a time when\nthe U.S. expressed' willingness\nto delay a little the final signing of the nuclear fleet treaty\u2014\noriginally scheduled: for about\nDec. 1\u2014so Britain's Prime Minister Wilson could discuss the\nmatter with President Johnson\nwhen the two leaders meet in\nWashington Dec. 7-8.\nThe statement Wednesday announcing West Germany's decision to stop pressing for the\ncreation of the fleet emphasized, however, that West Germany continues to be ready to\nsign such a treaty.\nThe creation of the fleet\nwould   permit   West  German\nships to be. armed with nuclear\nweapons although the final decision to use the weapons would\nrest with the U.S. president.\nFrance has argued that the\nestablishment of an eight-power\ngroup to frame the conditions\nof the nuclear force treaty is a\nviolation of,the NATO principle\nof unanimity. The eight countries, all NATO members, are\nthe U.S., West Germany, Britain, Italy, The Netherlands,\n-Belgium, -Greece and Turkey.\nBILATERAL AGREEMENT\nFrench officials have described the proposed treaty as\na bilateral agreement betwen\nBonn and Washington. They regard it as a threat to the independence of Europe because it\nwould make West Germany dependent on the U.S.\nFrance considers the proposed treaty incompatible with\nthe year-old French - German\ntreaty of co-operation and with\nthe building of a United Europe.\nWest Germany on the other\nhand regards force\u2014to consist\ninitially of 25 surface ships\nmanned by international crews\nand carrying Polaris missiles\u2014\nas a further step in integrating\nGerman military forces with\nthe Atlantic Alliance.\nFailure to push the treaty\nthrough, could result in a West\nGerman effort to obtain independent nuclear arms. Creation\nof the force would practically\nresult in a sort of NATO within\nNATO.\nBritain's Labor government\nhas indicated opposition to the\nforce as currently conceived.\nMuch will depend on the outcome of Wilson's talks on the\nsubject in Washington next\nmonth.\nWord of life\nHe that findeth his life shall\nlose it: and he that loseth his\nlife for my sake shall find it.\n-Matthew 10:39.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nDOWN    .\n1. To make\ncomplicated\n2. Talk   '\nnoisily\n3. Turkish\ntiUe\n4. Pert to\nthe poles\n5. Pitcher\n6. W ampura\n7. Fisherman's net\nB. An\nautomobile\npleajure\njaunt\n12. Distant\n13. Fortify\n14. Profit\n16. Russian\nfighter\nplane\n19. Roman\nmoney\n20. The-\nsun.--.\n2.1. Project \t\n23. Tempor-\n.vary -:\nfashion\n24. Part of--\nloco- .\n\"-   motive\n25.'Es\"kimo-\n\u25a0 \u25a0 boat   -.\n26. Little child\n27. Rope with\na running..\n'   knot\nadaa QUBua\nnaai.1 ;j\u2122joo\nanas) Hunan\naciaaa amaa\nHaas    an\nasQiaHH anas\nnaaaa aaaan\nuaai.. namatm\naa    asmm\nHBQUH   C3UIi.Ui)\naaaaa msaa\nsansa HHao\ni33aa3 aaara\nYttterd \u00bbr'r *\u00bb\u2022*\u2022\n28^ Watch\nsecretly\n30. Quantities\n11 33. A small cut\n34. Serf .--\n35. Group of\nthree.\n37. Elevator\n.. e**6 -\nHUBERT\nSaved by the Buzz\nNewest wonder of the electronic\nage is a system called Automatic\nCalling Unit, which will enable computers to dial telephone numbers\nand talk to each other without human help or supervision.\nWhat may save the human rate\nfrom replacement by machines la'\nthe busy signal. Through the year,\nman has become Inured to that and\n.oth.ex_\u00ab\u00a3ectronic frustrations, but\u2014\nwhen a computer phones a friend,\nonly. Jo be thwarted by the busy\nbuzz, chances are-it will blow a fuse\nand call for help. \"\n-.........   \u2014Sherbrooie .Record.\n\"She bought a few things 'on approval' this\n\u25a0\u2014-\"\u25a0\":-      ' iitenwon?'\"\nACROSS\n1. Victorian\n4. Lively\nspirit*\n7. A.catch\nin host\nt. Was in debt\n10. Spirit lamp\n11. Shakespearian\nking\n12. A sanction\n13. Border\n15. Girl's name\n16. Disfigure\n17. Norse god\n18. Get back\n20. Small\nbarracuda\n22. A support\n23. Pro\n24. Billiard\nrods\nIS. Claws\n\u00bb. Part of\n\"to be\"\n\u00bb0. Turf\n31. Spinning\ntoy.\n32. Cut in two\n)5. Helen of\nfamous\nbeauty\nSS. Ends of\nSaturn's\nrings\n87. The\n\u25a0hank:\nan&t.\nSS. Gracious\n30. A hospital\nemployee\n10. Foot-like\norgan\n41. Spawn\noffish - ,- 1Ht\nDAILY CKYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXTDLBAAXR\nIs   LO N OFI LLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this (ample A It used\nfor the three L'\u00bb, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letter*, (pot-\ntrophies, the length (nd formtfion of tht words (rt (II hint*.\nE(ch d(y tht code letters (re different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nWZ  SKA  XliOTXS  EY  KfTA,\nKHPWSMXETZS YEULEUASKHZ\nLHOWLM. \u2014HLW AN\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: THE GREATEST MASTERPIECES WERE ONCE ONLY PIGMENTS ON A PALETTE.\n\u2014HASWNS   .\n\u25a0X US. Kiof rwturu Syndicate, la.\nA\n(%\n%\n1 \u25a0\n1-\n3\nl\n4\nS =\nb\nYa\n1\n'ft\n7\ni\n&..\n.\n1\n%\nIO\n%\nII\n%\n12\n'^A\nii -.\n14-\nIS .\n^A\nIb\n^\n%\n17\nit\n19\nV\/\/l\nZO\nEl\nt\nV\/A\n11\nN\n21\n'A\n'\/\/\nt*.\n1%\n]^\nVt\nn\n23\nIt\ntt\ni\nlo\n%\nV\nIt\n31\ns*\n'^A\nIS\nk\nSt\n1\nV\nV^\n%\nS3\n%\nVi\nfa\n%\n^1\n40\n%\n41\n%\n^\nmore difficult and be a break\nwith tradition that could lead to\nremoval of other long-held gallery privileges on Parliament\nHill such as parking, access to\nCommons lobbies and Use of\nthe private restaurant.\nMembers backing the move\nsay it would remove the stigma\nof \"free-loading\" from reporters, allow them more privacy\nand eliminate serious overcrowding.\nThe Speaker also suggested\nthat the National Press Club,\nnow renting space above a restaurant on Confederation Square\ntwo blocks from Parliament\nHili, could occupy the top floor\nof the Norlite Building.\nOther space in the building\nnot needed by gallery members\nwould be used for members of\nParliament and the parliamentary staff. Biit these offices\nwould move out as the gallery\nexpanded,\nMr. Macnaughton has set a\ntentative deadline of April 1\nfor a decision by the gallery.\nGovernment offices now in the\nNorlite Building are due to\nmove early next summer and\nit could be renovated for the\nPress Gallery by Oct. 1.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS MHO ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1964\nS:58\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014News and Reports\n6:10-Wake Up Time\n6:40-Farm Fare\n6:4S-Chapel In The Sky\n7:00-News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25-Sporis News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\nB: 00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15-Wake Up Time Continues\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary   '\n8:35\u2014Opening Markets\n8:40-Wake Up Time\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Birthday Jackpot\n9 15-The Archer's\n9:30-Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59-Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-What's the Song Contest\n10:15-Music Fill\n10:30\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Morning Melodies\nll:20-Women's World\n11:30\u2014Christmas Cavalcade\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54-Newa\n12:57-Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Stories With John Drainia\nl:15-The Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45-Sacred Heart Program\n2:00-School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014This Is My Story\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Snorts News\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05-The Rolling Home Show\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40-Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n5:55\u2014Spotlight On Sports\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05-CKLN National News\n6:10-CouhtryTlme\n7:00\u2014News and On\t\nParliament Hill\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30-Agenda\n7:45\u2014Nation's Business\n7:55\u2014Music For Listening\n9:00-University of the Air\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\nI0:00-News\n10:15\u2014Chapel In The Sky\n10:30\u2014Ken's Korner\n12:00~News\n12:03\u2014Sign Off\nCBC  PROGRAMS\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1964\n4:30\u2014Musical Program\n6:00-News\nS:10-Nelson Till Nine\n6:12- Weather\n7:00\u2014News\n7:45-Think On These Things\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014Hit Parade Special\n9:59-Tlme Signal\n10:00-Matinee Highlights\n10:3O-Hobby Club\n1:30-65 and Up\n12:0O-Musical Program\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\nU:2S-01d Country\nSoccer Scores\n12:30-Time For French\n12:45-Chansonettes\nl:00-Opera Time\n2:30\u2014Make Mine Music\n3:00\u2014Johnny Dankworth\n3:30\u2014Hermit's Choice\n4:45\u2014Accent On Careers\n5:0O-Now I Ask You\n5:30-Hockey Night In Canada\n7:15\u2014The Outdoorsman\n7:30\u2014On The Move\n8:0O-Max Ferguson Review\n8:30\u2014Performance\n8:40-War and One Woman\n9:10\u2014Performance\nlooo-News\n9:15-The Mood For Love\n10:30\u2014Hoop-De-Doo\n11:00\u2014From the Panorama Root\n11:30\u2014Continental Cabaret\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine\nWeather\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00-News\n1:03\u2014Recorded Music\nTELEV1*\u00ab0N   FOR  TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n8:30 Friday Night\n9:30 12 o'Clock High *\nat the Movies:\n10:30 Farmer's Daughter\n\"Band of Angels\"\n11:00 Nightbeat\n8:30 Addams Family *\n11:15 Bob Young and News \u2022\n9:00 Valentine's Day *\n11:30 The Les Crane Show *\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n7:00 Gomer Pyle-USMC *\n7:30 Rawhide \u2022\n8:30 Friday Premiere Theatre\n10:00 Miss Teenage America'\n11:30 11 o'Clock News\n12:00 Chiller Theatre\nKHQ-TV - Channel S\n7:00 America\n7:30 International Showtime\n8:30 Danny Thomas Special *\n9:30 Jack Benny *\n10:00 Jack Paar (C) '\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Tonight with Carson (C) '\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\n4:00 The Secret Storm\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Thierry la Fronde\n5:30 Music Hop\n6:00 Wrestling\n7:00 The 7 o'Clock Show\n7:30 Time Out For Football\n8:00 Country Hoedown\n8:30 Mr. Broadway\n9:30 Telescope\n10:00 Ben Casey\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n9:00 Test Pattern\n9:15 Santa Claus Parade\n10:00 Sign Off\n11:45 Test Pattern\n1:00 World of SpOrt:\nCFL Western Final\n2:15 Bowling\n3:00 Sign Off\n4:45 Test Pattern\n5:00 Barnstormers\n5:30 Bugs Bunny\nSATURDAY\n6:00 Countrytime ,\n6:30 NH .-Detroit at Montreal\n8:15 Juliette\n8:45 Quebec Scenes\n9:00 Take a Chance\n9:30 Beverly Hillbillies\n10:00 Rogues\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Nite Final\n11:20 Studio 7:\n\"Up Periscope\"\n(Programs subject ta change by stations without notice.)\n Anglican Nun Carries Message in Kootenays\nSisterhood. Offers Answers\nTo Problems Facing Christians\nAlthough a nun is a person\nwho to some extent has left the\nworld, she finds within the-orddr'i\nof a sisterhood the. answer. to\nsome of the most momentous\nproblems facing Christians. \u25a0\nSister' Rosemary 'Anne of the\nOrder of St. John the Divine; who!\nhas been speaking at Anglican\nchurches, in the.Kootenay Diocese\nand conducting retreats, emphasized that, a woman who choses.\nto become a nun must be mentally and physically sound. She belied, the myth of women entering\nthe sisterhood because,of frustrated love affairs, in her forthright,' ' humorous persdnality.\n\"Imagine 50 or 60 disgruntled;\nfrustrated women living together\nin a convent. It would go up with,\nan explosion;\" she remonstrated.\nWe look three times' at the\nworld in which'we live, she said.'\nFirst of-all, it is a world of man-\nmade things; a fascinating world;\nbut one in which much has gone\nwrong and in which man-made\nthings.seem to eclipse the earth,\nwhich belongs to God.\n\"God is the ohly'ohe whb-real-\nly owns anything.\"\nA Sister makes a.vow to God\nof personal poverty. In religious\norders we try to live out a life of\nChristian...Communism, remembering that God... really. \u2022 owns\neverything     \u25a0-.. j?  .\nCOMMUNICATIONS  ....!,-<\nBREAKDOWN\nSecondly; the world ironed and.\n... gTCVT-FR\nROSEMARY ANNE\na grave and great danger is the\nbreakdown of communication\nbetween peoples\/There is hatred\nand. animosity, lack of person to\nperson understanding and love,\nboth of neighbor and enemy. The\nsolution to this is a real giving of\n\"self' ifn communication with\nothers.\n\u25a0A Sister makes a vow of complete chastity,, meaning, she has\n\u2022made the choice to live in giving\nall'.her, love to the Church and\nGod, through Him giving her\nlove- to.,;()tll?rs:..\"and'. making her-\nONLY AT ANDREW'S\nWill you find the most complete assortment of\nMiner rubber footwear \u2014 new knee hi boots,\nreds,, browns, blocks-r\u00b1- Misses', children's side\nbuckle overshoes in .,red, brown, white, ot\neconomy prices. \u2014 Boys' overshoes (just like\ndad's) \u2014 A Wide assortment of snoboots in\nleathers and rubber with shearling lining \u2014\nWomen's cocktail pullon boots in nylon velvet\nwith cuban heels,, walking heels. \u2014 Men's Hush\nPuppy curling or winter boot with shearling\nlining.    .\nirinl\nrew s\nEstablished Since 1902\nQJ noes\nJUST WEAR THEM\nYou'll know why they're called\nJust Fabulous\nHow beautifully sheer \u2014 how wonderfully durable!\nExpect up totwice the wear with these stockings.\nAnd all because Gam?d\nknits them with \"a unique\nyarn-design.. Like the\nname says, Just Fabii-\nlous!\nFluted, tops for extra\n\"give\". Toe and .top run-\nguards. Plainstitch and\nmesh in \"new. fall shades;\nwith. Cameo's exclusive\nFace Powder finish.;$1.5Q\npair.- ~\u201e.. .1\nIannis, lag (famjuiim.\n* iNOORi>oiw,Teo an. imav isra \t\nself free to be a mother to many.\nThirdly, power in the world is\nimportant \u2014 power of politics,\nwealth, influence and popularity. Within limits, this is good,\nsaid the Sister from Ontario. The\nChristian proposes sacrifice as\nan answer, to the power-seeking\nof this generation. All Christians\ndo not do this, thus it is right that\nsome should renounce all, sacrificing herself of her own free will\nto the Order of her choice. Here,\nshe lives the common life, sharing, not choosing, going where\nshe is sent, giving up self-pleasing and self-choosing. She finds\nthe Will of God, which is perfect\nfreedom.\nFor the nun, there has to be a\ndrastic coming loose from what\nmakes life worthwhile, although\nshe receives more in return.\nThe life of the Order is the\nsame life to which all Christians\nare called.\nSister Rosemary Anne said that\nthere are more than 60 religious\norders for women alone in England. In the United States there\nare also quite a large number of\nwomen in Episcopalian Church\nconvents. The only Canadian order in Canada is that of St. John\nthe Divine.\nNatal Notes\nNATAL - William Wilson has\nreturned to Sparwood after visiting in Vancouver and Portland.\nMrs. P. Zeith of Michel spent\na week at Edmonton with her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. John Klassen and\nfamily.\nMr. and Mrs. Silvester Kordi-\nkowski and son, Ronnie of Natal\nhave returned home after visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lindstrom\nand sons of Edmonton.\nThe Catholic Women's League\nplans to have as guest speaker\nat one of its meetings a lawyer,\nto speak on estates and wills,\nCWL members from Creston,\nKimberley, Windermere, Cranbrook and Fernie are expected\nto attend the East Kootenay\nregional conference to be held\nat Natal Sunday,\n9S%%ft&Sg&f&''''\"'     *%\u00bb\" '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964 \u2014 S\nNorth Shore Home of\nWedding Principals\n: MR. ANDiMUSi GEORGE KEITH FREDERIKSEN OF NELSON.\n'-.     \u2022'\u2022';.,;\u2022..-. \u2014Photo by Vogue Studio\nNew Floor, YmIo\nTable Centres\nTopics Wl Meet\nKASLO \u2014 A demonstration of\nthe making ef Christmas table\ncentres such >as novelty candle-\nholders and poinsetBas, was\ngiven by Mrs.Short.at the meet-\nling of the Kaslo Women's Institute held at the Senior Citizens' Club room.\nIt was decided-to .purchase -a\nwreath for Remembrance Day.\nArrangements are being made\nfor construction of a new floor\nin the rest room at the Senior\nCitizens' building, and samples\nof floor tiles were on display.\nRefreshments were served by\nthe hostess, Mrs. Carlson,\nassisted by Mrs. Horner,    i\n(J$mL thsL Jowvl\nPHONE 352-3552.\nNow making their home on the\nNorth Shore, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Keith Frederiksen were\nunited in ;marriage at a wedding\nceremony held at St. Paul's-Trinity Unitedi Church, with ,Rev.\nPeter W. Faris officiating.\nThe bride is the former Marianne Bardenfleth-Hansen, daughter of Mr; and Mrs. Peter E.\nBardenfleth-Hansen of Blewett,\nand the bridegroom is the son\nof Mr. and Mrs. G. V. Frederiksen of the North Shore.\nMrs.-Patricia Halloran Green\nwas organist.\nThe church was decorated with\nwhite gladioli and guest pews\nwere marked with flowers encircled in white satin.\nThe bride, who was given in\nmarriage by her father, chose\nfor her wedding gown a formal-\nlength peau de soie. Lilypoint\nsleeves and bell-shaped skirt\nwere style points. Her scalloped,\nwaist-length veil of nylon tulle\nwas held by a peau de soie flower\nin her. hair. Her only ornament\nwas a single pearl necklace.\n\u25a0 She carried white and yellow\nroses with white stephanotis.\nHer 1 a c a handkerchief was\n\"something old\" and a small,\nwhite Bible \"something borrowed.\"\nA- gold-colored lace frock was\nworn by the bride's matron of\nhonor, her* sister, Mrs. \"Jack\nWyatt of Fort Macleod. Her\nshoes were en tone.\nBridesmaid Miss Phyllis Moore\nMr. and Mrs. Hans Sather, 101 Morgan Street, have\nreturned home from New Westminster after attending the\nfuneral   of.   Mr.   Sather's\nfather.\nRey. and Mrs. CarlJ. Hennig,\n311 Silica Street, and Mrs. Inge-\nborg Moen, 1606 Hall Mines\nRoad, have returned from Vancouver, where they attended the\nLutheran Hour Rally. Mrs. Moen\nparticipated in the Parade of\nNations.\nCliff -Carne and Mrs, Janet\nCoates and Mr. and Mrs. P. W\nBuckley were top:winning pairs\nin this week's match point bridge\nHints\nBy Heloise Cruse\nDear Heloise:\nI always keep a cake rack\non the top of my counter to\nprevent burns and heat spots\non the drainboard.\nThe little space between the\ncake rack and the drainboard\nInstitute Tea\nTo Pay For\nStreet Lights\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 A report on\nthe pre-Christmas basaar, presented at the meeting of the\nEdgewood - Inonoaklin Women's\nInstitute, showeda profit of $100,\nwhich will be used to pay for\nthe community's street lighting.\nNovember 20 was the tentative\ndate chosen for a meeting with\nthe Needles and Fauquier Institutes, to be attended by the\nDistrict president. Mrs. E. J.\nDonselaar, Mrs. J. Brown and\nMrs. R. E, Bateman are the\ncommittee in charge of refreshments.\nA report on the Christmas tree\ncanvass showed a good collection\nwith date for this event set at\nDecember 23. The committee includes Mrs. T. deGans, Mrs. C.\nFlick, Mrs. W. L. Hopp, Mrs.\nH. E. Farrer and Mrs. J. Klein.\nRefreshments were served by\nthe hosteses Mrs. W. L. Ifypp,\nMrs. D. E. deGans and Mrs,\nR. E. Bateman.\nhas prevented'many blisters and\ndamage.\nRacks cost so little compared\nto a new.drain.\n'      ;Pauling\n*\u2022,\u2022\u25a0\nDear Heloise:\nI keep several, clean, empty,\nplastic detergent bottles (to\nwhich I've added a band of\ndecorative plastic tape) for\ncooking uses.\nI fill these bottles with different salad dressings, oil, catsup, etc. I keep them on a\nplastic tray: hear my stove and\nthey are handy when needed \u2014\nand many steps are saved.\nI cook with herbs, many of\nwhich, I dry. myself.- So'.I- fill\nlittle jars, with' the'\u25a0\u2022 herbs' and\nin each I place a little plastic\nmeasuring .spoon of the site\nused' for,, that particular herb.\nIn the.ereganO I have,a one-\nhalf teaspoon; in. the garlic\npowder, one-fourth .teaspoon;, in\nthe dried onion flakes, one- teaspoon. Very handy and no mistakes.\nI have also placed a spoon\nin my baking powder and baking\nsoda \u2014 a one-half teaspoon size.\nLee.Porter\n.\u2022'\u25a0*'-*'\u25a0\nLadies, if you have very small\njars or bottles, try cutting part\nof the handle off the plastic\nspoons so they will fit: inside\nthe jars.- Perfect. ;-.-\nHeloise\n\u25a0\u25a0.:*.*..-.-\u25a0\u25a0\nDear Heloise:-' <\u25a0\nHere is.-one-way I use1 the one-\npound coffee can with the plastic\nUd: ,'..,;\nI keep one of'these cans near\nmy wringer-type washing machine and when a button pops off\nwhile I am washing, I just put\nit into the-can. Also, the children\nand my husband put buttons,\nthat have come off their clothes,\ninto this can.\nWhen mOnding day-rolls around each week, I can easily\nfind almost all of the missing\nbuttons. Usually the very one\n\u2022I am looking for is right on\ntop. . .\nMrs. J. R. Adams\n\u00bb * .\u00bb\n: Try taking a knife and cutting\na\u00bbslit in the top of the-plastic\nlid. I Then you can just drop\nthe buttons in like a piggy bank.\nSaves removing the top each\ntime.\nHeloise\nMany Attend Colorful\nRebekah Ted, Bazaar\nFall flowers were massed in\nI the IOOF Hall for the November\n1 tea of the Nelson Rebekah Lodge.\nCrowds of tea guests filled the\nhall during the afternoon and\nsales were brisk at- the bake,\nwork and novelty and white ele-\nihant tables.\nMrs. A. D. Tulloch, DDP of\nQueen City Lodge, and Mrs. S.\nMagaton, vice-Grand, welcomed\nthe visitors. Presiding at the. tea\n(able were Mrs. F. M. Erskine,\nMrs. F. Nichols, Mrs. Elsie\nChristiansen, Mrs. Ruth Proud-\noot, Mrs. W. Thompson, Mrs. J.\nLudlow, Mrs. Guy and Mrs. E.\nJorgenson.\nMrs. Ella Miller, Mrs. M. K.\nOzelle and Mrs. P. Scott looked\nafter the sale of iap'rons, fancy-\nwork and novelties.Mrs. C. Robertson, Mrs. R; Fletcher, and\nMrs. B. Pickering attended the\nbake table and Mrs.- E. Bbates\nandM*s. F.Perassolookedafter\nthe white, elephant table.\nServiteiirs were Mrs. -James\nBereau, Mrs. N. P. Richardson,\nMrs:.G. R. Pickering, Sirs. I.\nClarkson and Miss A. Johnston.\nThe kitchen committee was comprised of Mrs. A. Currie, Mrs. L.\nVital, Mrs. W. A. Triggs, Mrs.\nE. Bentham.Mrs. L. Bealby .and\nMrs. N. Landis:\nMrs. G. Strong was. cashier.\n\u25a0\u25a0'..'    V ....\nNew in Stock\nA Full Range ef\nRUBBER\nFOOTWEAR\nr\nFor Every\nMember\nef the\nFamily,\n.ek\u00ab*v.a \"*\u2022\u2022*\u00bb\u25a0\u2022 ***** \u2022\ngame, with Mrs. Harold Lakes\nand Mrs. E.E.L. Dewdney tying\nfor second place with Mrs. M.\nSalamon and D. Handle in north\nand' south. In east and west,\nMrs. Jack Kilpartick and Mrs.\nGeorge Gelinas were second\nplace winners, with Mr. and Mrs,\nG. D. G. Barwis third.\n\u2022 * \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. F. Garrett, 76\nVictoria Street, have returned\nhome after visiting the latter's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. D. Landes in Victoria,\nand their son-in-law ahd daughter, Mr. and Mrs. D. Wapple at\nExshaw, Alta.\nEngagement\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Pattinson\nof Wycliffe announced today the\nengagement of their only daughter, Ruth Viola, to Fred Quenton\nMacDonald, son of Mrs. S. MacDonald and the late Quenton\nMacDonald, of Creston. The\nwedding is to take place November 26 at 11:30 a.m., in St.\nMary's Roman Catholic Church,\nCranbrook. Rev. Father Buckley\nofficiating. \u2014266-266\nchose pale blue satin brocade\nwith matching satin shoes and\npale blue headdress. Flower girl\nLisa Wyatt, niece of the bride,\nwas dressed in pale blue nylon\nover satin with bow headdress,\nwith gold shoes.\n. Their flowers were white chrysanthemums.\nMr. Calvin Frederiksen supported his brother as best man,\nand ushers were Mr. Don Jensen\nof Rossland and Mr. Jack Wyatt\nof Fort Macleod.\n, *  *  *\nA reception was held in the\nbanquet room of a downtown\nhotel where the bride's table was\ncentred with a three-tiered wedding cake surrounded by pink,\nwhite and blue chrysanthemums,\nflanked by pink tapers.\nThe cake was made by the\nbride's mother, who wore a\ncoral suit with black accessories\nand white corsage for the occasion. The mother of the bridegroom wore .a coppertone two-\npiece silk suit with brown accessories and yellow and bronze\ncorsage,\nMr. Austin Fraser said Grace.\nMr. Gordon Webb was master of\nceremonies. \u25a0 Telegrams were\nread from Edmonton and Denmark.'\nThe bride changed into a white\ncrepe wool suit with pink accessories for a wedding trip to Radium, Banff, Lake Louise and\nGlacier National Park. She made\nher wedding gown herself, as\nwail . c hot- i\u00bbft\"piling ensemble.\nOut-of-town guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nWyatt and Lisa of Fort Macleod:\nMiss Margaret Clark of Spokane;\nMr. and Mrs. Don Jensen, Mrs.\nD. Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Jensen of Rossland; Mr. and\nMrs. Austin Fraser, Miss Joy\nPollard, Mr. Hans Frederiksen.\nMr. and Mrs. Arnold Fr'ederll-\nsen, Mrs. Agnes Burdick, Mr\nand Mrs. G. E. Brown, all of\nTrail; Mr. Rill Jennejohn. ol\nMoscow, Idaho; Mr. Wayne\nPrice of Pullman, Wash.; Mis'\nDawn Frederiksen of Spokane:\nMr. and Mrs. McBurney of Cranbrook; Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lang,\nAlex and Marsha of Vancouver:\nMr. and Mrs. T. Palmquist of\nSpokane: Mr. E. Frederiksen of\nCastlegar.\nCLIP THIS AD\nIT'S WORTH 50c\nOn Each $5 Purchase at\nthe SKYLARK\nRESTAURANT\nand LOUNGE\nSpokane\nJust Across From the\nRidpath\n\u2022 Pan Fried Chicken\ne Choice Steaks\n\u2022 Lunches and Dinners\nEATON'S\nSpecial\nHearing Aid\nDemonstration  Lmummim\nOn November 14th, 1964, at      H|H\nEaton's Heavy Goods Store in Nelson.\nMr. A. D: Sehwob, hearing aid consultant, will be in attendance to give you.\na free audiometrie test. If you need a hearing aid he will give you advice\non the right kind for you.\nEaton's own \"Viking\" hearing aids have a full range of fittings for all types\nof deafness.\nSee-the new Behind-the-Ear ahd AII-in-the-Ear hearing aids.\nThere is no obligation. If you cannot come to the store, ask for a free home\ndemonstration. You can charge your hearing aid pn your budget account\nwith no down payment.\ns\nCHESTERFIELD\nCLEARANCE\nSALE STARTS TODAY\n1 Only-3 Piece\n<_tn\u00bbi\u00bbas<\u00ab\u00abif>*>i\nJ80\nTRADE\nhiMmmeexaw**\nSECTIONAL\nRich Brown in Color.\nonly $419.9 5\n1 ONLY 2-PIECE\nCHESTERFIELD\n199.50\nTraditional.\nWith\nTrade .\t\n1 ONLY, 2-PIECE\nCHESTERFIELD\nIn Spice.\nRegular 249.95.\nEaton's ipecial..\n169.50\n1 Only \u2014 2-Pee.\nCHESTERFIELD\nTraditional,    in    light        EATON'S\ntoast. 5-inch air foam SPECIAL\ncushion,   spring   front, JJAPA\nmust   be   seen, to   be Sj7 jU\nappreciated. _^_~ ***+ + *-**+\n1 Only \u2014 2-Pee.\nCHESTERFIELD\nTurquoise. 3-seoter,\nair foam tipper\ncushions. With trade\n199.50\n636 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\n<*T. EATON C\u00b0\n\u00bb\u2022      CANADA      >*L\u00bbh\nLIMITED\nPhone\n352-3557\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964\nStampeders Respect Lions'\nDefence as WFC Final Nears\nBy BOB TRIMBEE\nCALGARY (CP) - \"We respect Lions' defence, but it certainly doesn't create any mental block among our players,\"\ncoach Bobby Dobbs said Thursday as he took his Calgary\nStampeders into the first of a\nseries of closed practice sessions in preparation for the\nWestern Football Conference\nfinal.\nEight hundred miles away in\nVancouver coach Dave Skrien\nmoved his club into secret sessions, too.\nLions and Calgary clash Saturday at 2 p.m. MST in McMahon Stadium and a sell-out\ncrowd of more than 21,000 was\nexpected. Tickets for the game,\nto be seen on the CBC's na-\ntkonal network, were sold out\nwithin 48 hours after Calgary\nwon the semi - final series\nagainst Saskatchewan.\nThere was a slight chance of\nsnow for the game, but crews\ncleared about VA inches of snow\nwhich fell overnight with special machines.\nDobbs said his club isn't worried about Lions' strong defen\nsive unit which allowed only\n168 points during the season\nand never once allowed more\nthan two touchdowns in a single\ngame.\n\"We'll just have to work a\nlittle harder,\" said Dobbs.\nSCORING PEAK\nCalgary, which scored a\nleague - leading 352 points during the 1964 season, appeared\nat the peak of its scoring power\ncoming out of its 76-40 two-\ngame total-point semi-final victory against Saskatchewan.\nHowever, some of the lustre\nwas lost when all-star guard\nTony Pajaczkowski came up\nwith an ankle sprain. He was\nordered to use crutches to keep\nhis weight off his right foot.\nWhether he would miss the\nopener was impossible to say.\nTwo years ago when Calgary\nlast reached the finals, a similar injury kept him out for all\nbut a few plays in the final\ngame against Winnipeg.\nOther Stampeders still hurt\nfrom the semi - final include\nhalfback Jim Dillard, who recently returned from a broken\nankle, and tackle Don Luzzi,\nwho missed several games, including the semi-final opener,\nwith an ankle sprain.\nDobbs said Henry Huth, out\nfor several weeks with an\ninjury, would dress for Saturday's game but it was doubtful\nhow much action he will i\n\"Our big job now is to help\nour players recover physically\nfrom the hard semi-final.\"\nLIMITS DUTY\nLions, who have rested since\nclinching first place in the\nleague standings; reported only\ncentre and linebacker Jess Williams under the weather. Unless his condition improved he\nwould see limited duty on third,\ndown punts and field goals.\nDefensive halfback Neal\nBeaumont and quarterback-halfback Steve Shafer, both out with\ninjuries when B.C. closed its\nleague schedule, have since re\nturned.\nSkrien said B.C. was not trying to cook up something unusual to use against Calgary in\ntheir closed practices.\n\"We're just trying to concen-\ntrate on preparing for Stampeders.\"\nRUMS\nNAVY RUM     T PAL,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control' Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nAbove are outstanding West Kootenay athletes\nrecently honoured by local industries of Rosaland,\nTrail, Warfield and Tadanac at a special banquet.\nPictured in first two front rows are Trail Little League\nAll-Stara: Dale Andrews, Ken Milne, Brian Lemoel,\nTerrenes McDougall, David Palmer, John Ircandia,\nRussell Paterson, Bernie Hughes, Ernest Schleppe,\nPat Murray, Donald Mainland, Andrew Bilesky, Allis-\nter McAuley and Gordon Lindsay. Some members\nlisted are not shown in photo. Ladies in the back row\ninclude Dianne Gerace, filth in high jump at Olympics,, is shown at right, while Nancy Greene, Canada's woman ski champion, is at left, Gerry Moro,\ntenth in pole vault at the recently completed Olympic\nGames, is seen standing next to Dianne Gerace.\nBritish Soccer Booms as Club\nPays $186,000 for Two Players\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 It was\nan active week for buyers in\ntop-flight British soccer.\nSunderland, third-last among\nthe 22' clubs ih the English\nLeague's First Division, has\nshelled out \u00a362,000. ($186,000) for\ntwo players from Scotland.   .\nGlasgow Rangers, languishing in eighth place among the\n17 First Division teams in the\nScottish league, entered the\ntransfer market to purchase\nIcelandic inside forward Thor-\nolf Beck from St. Mirren's.\nThe Sunderland club paid a\nScottish First Division club, Hibernian, \u00a336.000 for Irish fullback John Parke. Then Harry\nHood, Clyde's inside forward,\njoined Sunderland at a price of\n\u00a326,000.\nSunderland won promotion\nback to the First Division last\nseason after being relegated in\n1957-58.\nHood, a promising 20-year-old\nwho is equally effective as centre forward, had been sought\nby two other clubs within the\nlast week. First, transfer talks\nwith the Scottish club Celtic\nbroke down, and then Stoke City\nfailed to sign him.\nParke is a member of the\nNorthern Ireland team that\nmeets Switzerland ln a World\nCup qualfying match Saturday,\nChoice of 5 Colorful\nCheck Patterns\nSoft, Wool-Like Shirts\nSpecially Priced To Fit\nYour Christmas Budget\nReg. 6.95 Value!\n\u2022Tailored from brushed rayon imported cloth to look like wool\u2014feel\nlike wool\u2014but wash like cotton.\n\u2022 Tailored with a short point collar\nfor neatness.\n' Full cut for comfort, square tails to\nwear in or out.\n\u2022Choice of checks in red, brown,\nblue, loden, grey and gold.\n\u2022 Sizes S,M,L, XL.\nA man's idea of the perfect Christmas\nis one in which he gets plenty of handsome, new sports shirts to spark his\ncasual wardrobe, Choose from this all-\nstar line-up of real winners in checks\nto suit his taste.\nrr4 r~\\ *\\s r.\nINCORPORATED    ;--\"   MAY   IG\/O\nStarting\nToday\nand\nSaturday\nCheck Thursday's\nPaper for\nBig Savings\nand reports at Sunderland after\nthe game.\nGlasgow Rangers, cock of the\nwalk for so many years in Scottish soccer, signed Beck in an\nattempt to boost the effectiveness of their attack.\nBeck, who cost them in the\nregion of \u00a320,000, is the second\nIcelander to play for Rangers.\nThe other was right \u2022 winger\nAlbert Gudmundson, who appeared with Rangers just after\nthe Second World War and then\njoined Arsenal.\nBeck signed for St. Mirren\nfrom Reyjavik three years ago\nand has made several ppear-\nances for the Iceland international team.\nHull City paid the top price\nof the week Thursday by going\nto \u00a340,000, an English third-division record, for Ken Wag-\nstaff, 21 - year - old Mansfield\nTown centre-forward. Hull beat\na number of English first-division clubs to get Wagstaff, who\nwas the country's leading scorer\nwith 41 goals in the 1962-63 season when Mansfield won promotion to the third division.\nAn in-form Wagstaff should\nhelp Hull make certain of victory over non-leaguers Kidderminster  in  Saturday's first\nround of the Football Association cup.\nIn the English first division,\nj interest will be centred on two\nI clashes: First-place Manchester\nI United at Blackpool, and second-place Chelsea at home to\n\u25a0 Everton.\n| United slammed Borussia\n(Dortmund 6-1 in the Inter-Cities\nI Fairs Cup in West Germany\nI Wednesday but is likely to find\nBlackpool, a tougher proposi.\ntion.\nI Chelsea, a point behind\n(United in the standings, won\nthrough to the quarter-finals of\nthe Football League Wednesday\nby downing Swansea 3-2.\nJuvenile Grid Honors\nMontreal To Play for\nBy JOE DUPUIS\nMONTREAL (CP)-A Montreal team with the unwieldy\nname of Point St, Charles Leo's\nBoys were bound for the west\nThursday to take part in Canada's first playoff for national\njuvenile football honors Sunday\nat Winnipeg,\nThey will met St. Boniface\nNorwood Broncos, Manitoba\nchampions, in the title game.\nAlthough formed only last\nyear, the \"Point,\" as the team\nis called, belongs to an association with an Intriguing history\n\u2014Leo's Boys Sports Association\nIncorporated.\nLeo's began in 1948 as a\nloosely knit group set up to organise boys sports in Point St.\nCharles, a teeming, tenement-\ncongested district of mostly\nworking class families, jammed\nbetween the Lachine Canal and\nthe CNR's waterfront railway\nyards.\nIt was founded by Leo Mell,\na teen-ager, whose death in\nMarch, 1951, of leukemia gave\nthe group a new impetus. His\nbrother Joe Mell, and a friend,\nJules Barriere, shocked by the\ndeath of the boy promoter from\nthe wrong side of the tracks,\nrallied a larger following,\nnamed the organization Leo's\nBoys, and they never looked\nback.\nSUPERVISE 82 TEAMS\nToday, Leo's Boys supervise\n82 teams in five sports,for 1,500\nyoungsters in the district. Joe\nMell is still president and his\nteam of volunteer workers still\nuses a fund - raising program\npainstakingly set up by his\nbrother.\nLast summer, Leo's acquired\nan active ladles auxiliary, and\nthe group has moved into other\nareas of community responsibility, such as organizing Christmas baskets, blood donor clinics, and putting on shows for\nhosoital shut-ins.\nThe juvenile football team\nbrings Leo's colors to national\nattention for the first time.\nCoached by Ken Dixon, a\nmember of the Montreal Lake-\nshore team that won the Canadian   intermediate  football\nWITH  STANE\nAND BESOM\nFollowing are results  of the\ndraws played Thursday at the\nNelson Curling Club:\nL. Rymal 3, A. Waters 12\nF. Graves 10, E. C. Hunt 12\nM. Buerge 8, A. Arcuri 9\nA. Dayman 13 M. Gee 4\nF. Koehle 4, E. Leeming 11,\nATLANTA (AP) - Milwaukee\nBraves have not -given up hopes\nof moving their National League baseball franchise to Atlanta for the 1965 season.\nLadies' Curling\nClub Holds\nCup Competition\nWinner of the Knockout Draw\n\u2014 Mrs. M. Hesse, F. James, C.\nMcAdams, S. Champion.\nPersonnel for rinks in the Col-\nlinson Cup Competition in order\nof skips, thirds, seconds and\nleads.\nG. Buerge, H. MacKensie, O,\nCassan, B. Gray.\nE. Hale, C. Frocklage, V.\nStack, S. Champion.\nK. Killeen, E. Anderson, L.\nMarza, E. Young.\nR. Bicknell, F. James, L. Mik-\nkelson, B. Browne.\nB. Daloise, E. Macintyre, A.\nHeddle, G. Davis.\nI. Eckmier, R. Stacey, P. Gal-\nbraith, C. Jonker.\nN. Benedetti, D. Frederickson,\nD. Clem, L. Maglio.\nM. DeGirolamo, L. Allen, L.\nSamis, F. Barrett.\nE. Little, M. Bousquet, C. McAdams, J. Valentine.\nM, Hesse, M. Shave, D. Else-\nner; T. Car.\nDraw follows:\nFriday, 2 p.m. - Hale vs Killeen; Bicknell vs Little; Benedetti vs Mary DeGirolamo.\nMonday, 2 p.m. \u2014 Daloise vs\nEckmier; Buerge vs M. Hesse.\nchampionship a few years back,\nthe Point relies chiefly on a running game with Its backfield of\nRoss Stanley, Wally Strapps\nand Pete Senlmore.\nIt is a big team, with many\nof their players topping the 200-\npound mark. In fact, quarterback Doug Morrison, a five-\nfoot-seven, 145-pounder, looks a\nlittle small when he sets up in\nthe pocket to throw. He sticks\nto short passes, because as one\nobserver put it, \"he can't see\nfar enough over the heads of\nhis team to throw the long one.\"\nThe Point earned the trip to\nthe national final by beating\nMontreal Pointe Claire Avengers, 1963 Quebec champions,\n11-7 last Sunday.\nThe club won five, lost and\ntied one, in their pre-playoff\ngames this year.\nIts scheduled Thursday night\ndeparture will get the club to\nWinnipeg early Saturday.\nbounties Try\nTo Get Back\nInto Pro Ball\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Directors of the Vancouver Mounties\nbaseball club are preparing a\nticket drive to raise $70,000 and\n,et a team back into professional\nbaseball.\nClub president Nat Bailey announced Wednesday that a business manager to direct the campaign will be hired, probably\nwithin a week, and that a meeting of 2,700 shareholders will be\ncalled soon.\nThe action follows an offer that\nwould allow Mounties back into\nthe Pacific Coast Baseball League, providing Vancouver shows\nit is willing to pay for Triple-A\nball.\nDewey Soriano, league president, told club directors Wednesday that if Mounties can sell\n\",70,000 worth of advance tickets for next season, Vancouver\ncan replace Dallas in the PCL.\nVancouver dropped out of\nTriple-A class ball in 1962 after\nniling up a $35,000 debt and fall-\nins to sign a working agreement\nwith a major league team.\nNow Dallas has told the PCL It\nintends to turn In its franchise\nthis year.\nRossland's Billy\nMartin Leads\nWIHL Scoring\nRossland Warrior's Billy Martin leads the Western International Hockey League scoring\nrace in everything but assists.\nHe has 22 points on 13 goals\nand nine assists.\nTrailing closely behind Martin\nis Nelson's Carl Chwachka with\nId points plus 70 minutes in the\npenalty box, the most of any\nplayer in the league.\nNelson playing-coach Bobby\nKromm leads the WIHL in assists with 14, followed by Spokane's Eddie Dorohoy with 12.\nThe following is a list of the\ntop 10 scorers in the WIHL:\nPlayer G A PPm\nMartin, R   13    9  22    6\nChwachka, N .:.'... 10   9 19 70\nBahr, S     5  13  18    9\nPeacosh, K    7   9  16   8\nLenardon, T    7   9 16   8\nDorohoy, S      4  12  16  30\nKromm, N  2 14 16 20\nLegare, R  4 11 15 10\nSUsheski, R  8 7 15 10\nMorneau, S  8 7 15 35\nA GOOD CATCH by any standard is this 16-\npound Rainbow trout proudly displayed by Nick\nHucal of Blewett. Caught on a ai it-pound teat\nline, it took Mr. Hucal 45 minutes to land the prize\ntrout, above Corra Linn last Saturday.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\ni\nTHIS OMC\nSNOW\nCRUISER\n\"'\"'PIONEER\nSILVER ANNIVERSARY \/TAIIf . \u2022'\"\"\nNOW,,, Canada's, numbar ena thotft \u2022<\"*\nmanulntiutif ulabraili H yaori ef laodir-\n\u25a0hip with en axcltlng conlaif tar YOU1 It's\ntha (not PIONEER Sllvtr Annlwriary Can-\nlaid dtlalli, \u00abniry farm* ond eoninl form\nan ot yaur PIONEER DaoJtr, t* fit In right\naway ... and fill In on th* yn or'i blgfilit\nbdnaniq of wondarful priutl You tan win\n\u00ab llghrwiifihl, go-anywhin OMC Snow\nCruiur, .ehnien or Evlnrudt Oulboord Motor,\nPIONIItt 410 Chain Saw, town loy Lawn\nMawar er ana of % doian othar valuebla\n\u2022ritail ll'i aaiyl It** funl It's tha PIONEER\nUlnar Annlviriory Contaill Ge to III At yaur\nPIONEER Raalar NOWI\nPICK UP YOUR ENTRY\nFORM AT\nCHAIN SAW\nCENTRE\n432 Stanley St.     Nelson\nPhone 352-5225\nDli Irl bulad In Mainland I.e., Natih Vanwuvar\nliland, ond Southern Albarla by\n-irVM Rilehla ltd.\n Ottawa Roughriders Depend\nOn That \"Irishman\" O'Billovich\nOTTAWA (CP)-People striking up a conversation with Bob\nO'Billovich have a standard\nopening:\n\"What part of Ireland are you\nfrom?\"\n\"I guess I've been askod thut\na thousand times,\" says the 23-\nyear-old defensive star of Ottawa Rough Riders.\nHis unusual surname does\nhave a remote Irish connection.\nIt was \"invented\" by an Irish\nimmigration officer who filled\nout the entry papers after Bob's\ngrandparents arrived in the\nUnited States from Yugoslavia.\n\"The family name was Obilo-\nvich originally,\" he said Thursday in an intevview just before\nRiders started a workout for\nSaturday's opening of the Eastern Football Conference two-\ngame total-points final.\n\"When my grandparents got\nto California an Irish immigration officer filled out their papers. For some reason he stuck\nan apostrophe in after the 0\nand added the second L.\n\"They thought it looked okay\nand decided not to complain.\nWe've been spelling it that way\never since.\"\nMOVED TO MONTANA\nThe O'Billovich family later\nmoved to Butte, Mont, and Bob\nattended Montana State University. He learned football there,\ngraduated in 1062 and came to\nOttawa last year- His Rider\nteammates quickly dubbed him\n\"Obie.\"\nThe five-foot-10, 182-pounder\nwas a quarterback at college\nand now backs up Russ Jackson\nat that spot in addition to playing defence.\nBob has had an excellent\nsophomore year, finishing with\nthe best pass-interception record\nin the east. He picked off six\nthrows and returned them for\n183 yards, including two touchdowns runs.\nThe Ottawa defensive squad\nhas a job cut out for it Saturday s t o p p i n g the offensive\npower of Hamilton Tiger-Cats.\nOpening game of the set is at\nLansdowne Park here with the\nwindup at Hamilton the following Saturday. Winner goes into\nthe Grey Cup game at Toronto,\nNov. 28.\nThe game starts at 1 p.m.\nEST here with coverage by the\nCTV   national   television   net\nwork. Ottawa and Calgary, site\nof the western playoff at 4 p.m.\nEST, will be blacked out.\nCoach Frank Clair has put a\nlot of stress on defence during\nthe Rider workouts this week.\n1 He's p a r t i c ularly concerned\n! about stopping halfback Tommy\nGrant, only pass receiver in the\neast to top the 1,000-yard mark\nin the regular season.\nHalfback O'Billovich probably\nwill get an assignment to\nshadow Grant on the theory\nthat a lot of throws are going\nto be coming in Grant's direction and glue-fingered Bob may\nbe able to snag a couple.\nAAU of Canada Urged to\nSupport Medical Plan\nMONTREAL (CP)- The Amateur Athletic TJnion of Canada heard a suggestion Thursday that a standard medical examination form be established\nfor AAU track and field athletes.\nThe suggestion was made by\nB. C. representatives before the\nAAU track and field committee\nas the union opened its 71st annual meeting, a three-day gathering.\nOne of the most important resolutions, not immediattly dealt\nwith, also comes from British\nColumbia. It requests that any\nnational sport within the union\nbe permitted to withdraw as a\nconstituent committee and apply for membership as an affiliated, autonomous association.\nThis in effect would mean that\neach sport under the AAU could\nset up a self-governing body and\ndeal itself with'such things as\nparticipation in international\nmeets and registration of athletes.\nDr. Douglas Clement, president of the B.C. Track and Field\nAssociation, suggested the standardized medical form \"be encouraged and distributed\" on a\nvoluntary basis at the time of\nan athlete's registration.\nCommittee meetings continued late in the day with more\nscheduled for the night.\nThe track and field committee decided not to give its recommendation to a resolution\nthat in future Olympic years all\nathletes who win their event at\nthe national open championship\nand equal or better the Olym-\nnlc standard at the championships, or between Jan. 1 and\nthe date of the championships,\nautomatically qualify for the\nCanadian Olympic team.\nThe committee also decided\nto express no opinion on the\nresolution from the B.C. branch\nregarding   autonomous   operation of the various sports.\nNEED PARENTS' CONSENT\nDuring a brief general meet\ning, Merv Ferguson, also of British Columbia, the AAU president, said parental responsibility for an athlete's participation should govern. Otherwise,\nthe AAU could find itself legally\nresponsible should anything go\nwrong.\nThere was also a recommendation that medical certificates\nbe issued to -women athletes with\nregard to minimum of age of\nthose competing in events of\nmore than 220 yards, except\nrelays.\nFerguson told the general\nmeeting, meanwhile, that plans\nare well in hand and the financial program is ready for signing Nov. 18 to assure the Pan-\nAmerican Games of 1967 for\nWinnipeg.\nThe B.C. branch asked, in a\nbrief, that it be allowed to stage\nthe men's and women's Canadian - national cross-country\nchampionships next year.\nThe Saskatchewan branch ask-\ned that its application be considered to hold the Canadian championships in fencing, gymnastics\nand age-class track and field\nfor 1965.    '\nSaskatchewan also suggested\nthat international game levies\nassessed against the various\nsports be redistributed on an annual basis as a means of more\neffectively financing the national\nwork of the AAU.\nEXPEL MEMBERS\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014The Japanese\nCommunist party said Thursday\nit has expelled 10 party menv\nbers\u2014most of them artists and\nwriters\u2014for publicly criticizing\nthe party.\nONE FOR THE RECORD - - By Alan Mover\nchoose Walker's Special Old. Go6d taste,\ngood looks, and fine quality have made it\nCanada's popular choice in whisky. Next\ntime\u2014make it a point to buy Walker's\nSpecial Old.\nHIRAM WALKER & SONS, LIMITED\nW.LK ENVI.   It .' CANADA\n\u2022 IITUIIM   OF   \u00bbtNI   WHIIKIIf.   101   OVIR   Mt   Hill IN THE  SPARKLING  DECANTER\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ol British Columbia\n.'\nOORP\/S\nM#IS \/9tM\n$e\/tsov\/\nMr\/\/ rtfe\nP\u00a3r*o\/r\n\/rep\ntr\/s\/es,\nTOOK\nOVSR r\/ls\nJU-rm\nso\/it.\nSCORES\n$SA$otlPilJS\nnWoFFS)\nWM Me\n\/\/OT6\/lePH\/&\n4-7!\/ OF THIS\nCMPA\/6ti.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964 \u2014 *\nFormer Boxer-Wrestler Served in\nMany Fields of Athletic Achievement\nFaulkner Brothers Are!\nStill Active in Hockey\nBy DAVE BUTLER { \"We are content to stay in\nHARBOR GRACE, Nfld. (CP) Harbor Grace for the rest of\nWhen a promising young player our lives,\" said Alex. \"Why\nrises quickly through the ranks, shouldn't I like it here. I can\nthen falters near the top, the J make my money (about the\nsense of regret is understand- j 8ame as he would get playing\nable,\nWhen it happens to three\nmembers of the same family,\nit can be a real heart-breaker,\nnot only for the men themselves but for all who took\npride in their.accomplishments.\nGeorge, Alex and Jack Faulkner are brothers who tried and\nfailed to make it in the big\ntime. George and Jack were on\nthe brink of the National\nHockey League pool when their\ncareers began the road back to\nsenior hockey. Alex made it but\nlasted less than two seasons.\nThe consolation is that Conception Bay Ceebees should be\na power in the All-Newfoundland Hockey League when its\nseason opens in January. All\nthree have been hired as play-\ning-coaches, Alex, 27, at right\nwing, Jack, 22, at left wing and\nGeorge, 30, on defence.\nAll three are fairly small but\nthey made up for lack of size\nwith a highly developed spirit\nof aggressiveness.\nGeorge was almost daily copy\nin sports pages of Quebec and\nNewfoundland newspapers during his three seasons with\nShawinigan Falls Cataracts of\nthe Quebec Hockey League. He\nhad been trained in junior\nhockey in his hometown of\nGrand Falls, Nfld., and later\nplayed with Quebec Citadels of\nthe now-defunct Quebec Junior\nHockey League.\nHe says he was ready for a\ncall from the parent Montreal\nCanadiens. But when he was informed the call wasn't coming,\nhe returned home.\nThe next Faulkner to give the\nmajors a try was Alex. In four\nseasons he moved from Newfoundland junior hockey to De-\ntroit Red Wings. He played a\nfull NHL schedule in 1962-63 but\nInjuries kept him from appearing in more than 35 last season.\nThis year he felt fit and ready\nbut Red Wings tabbed him for\nthe minors. Alex decided to\nquit and came home.\nJack was scouted by Detroit\nand placed with Johnston Jets\nOf the U.S. Eastern Amateur\nHockey League last season. He\nscored 71 points and was honing for a chance in the NHL\nthis season.\nRed Wings, with a surfeit Of\nrookies, decided against inviting\nhim up and Sid Abel offered\nJack a chance to move to the\nNew York Rangers system.\nJack asked for a contract as\nassurance he wouldn't die in\nU.S. amateur hockey. It was refused and he too came home.\nDuring a practice session the\nother day, spectators saw a\nlineup that seems likely to burn\nup the Newfoundland league\nthis season.\n\"I have visions of the Herder\nMemorial Trophy sitting in Harbor Grace,\" said George, referring to the trophy that goes\nto the top Newfeundland senier\nclub.\nHarbor Grace has won it only\ntwice since it wis put up in\n193S.\nin the minors) here for half as\nmany games a season and\nhardly any travel.\"\nAlex says the NHL is \"hard\non a little fellow\" but that this\nhad nothing to do with his departure. \"I guess I knew what\nplans Sid had for me, and I\njust couldn't turn this offer\ndown.\"\nBy   WALTER   KREVENCHUK\nWINNIPEG (CP) - \"They\nkept hitting me on the nose,\"\nsaid Jim Trifunov, gently rubbing the prominent protuberance.\nSo he took his nose out of circulation in 1922 and switched\nfrom boxing to wrestling.\nIt was a rewarding decision.\nDuring the next three decades\nthe Yugoslavian - born Trifunov won 10 Canadian amateur championships, competed\nin three Olympics (he won a\nbronze medal in the bantamweight class in 1928), coached\nthe Canadian team in three\nothers and served eight years\nas chairman of the Amateur\nAthletic Union of Canada wrestling committee.\nReminiscing the other day\nabout his first Olympic journey,\nto Paris in 1924, he said:\n\"I should never have gone,\ndidn't   know   anything   about\nwrestling.\"\nHe was in action for three\nminutes, lost his first match\nand was eliminated.\nTrifunov was a little wiser in\n1928 in Amsterdam, except for\nthe \"rolling fall.\" He lost only\none match, to the Finn who won\nthe gold medal, because he inadvertently rolled backwards attempting a double wristlock.\nThe referee later told him you\ncan't roll without both your\nshoulders touching the ground,\nautomatically resulting in a pin\nand defeat.\nGIVEN WATCH\nHis bronze medal earned him\nan ovation and an inscribed\npocket watch when he returned\nhome to Regina, the city in\nwhich his parents had settled\nwhen he was five.\n\"Wrist watches came out the\nnext year and nobody wore\npocket watches any more,\" Trifunov recalls with a smile.\nIn Canada, Jim was well established as one of the best\namateur wrestlers, although he\nconcedes he over-extended him\nself in the 1926 championships\nwhen he entered three divisions. He won the bantam and\nfeatherweight but met his Waterloo in lightweight Jim McKinnon.\nAfter 10 minutes as underdog\n\u2014literally\u2014Trifunov  looked up\nat  the  referee   and  pleaded:\nWhat does a fellow have to do\nfor you to blow a fall?\"\nThe five \u2022 foot \u25a0 five 123 -\npounder also won the British\nEmpire bantam title in 1930.\nAfter competing in the 1932\nOlympics in Los Angeles he retired from championship wrestling. At 28, he says, \"it didn't\nmean much beating a youngster\nand probably meant more to\nthe youngster to lose.\"\nTrifunov, who worked for The\nLeader-Post in Regina, moved\nto Winnipeg in 1936 to join The\nFree Press, where he now is\ncountry circulation manager.\nBECAME MANAGER\nSixteen years later he made\nthe first of three consecutive\nOlympic trips as manager-\ncoach of Canada's wrestling\nteam\u20141952 at Helsinki, 1956 at\nMelbourne and 1960 at Rome.\nHe also managed the 1954 British Empire Games team in\nVancouver.\nOver the years Canada has\nwon just two silver medals and\nfour bronze in the Olympics.\nWhy don't they win more?\n\"It's the age of dedication,\"\nTrifunov says. \"Thirty years\nago you could have won without\nsacrificing anything.\"\nBut to reach gold medal class\nnow athletes have to push\nmuch into their specialty as he\ndid in 1928\u2014\"and then a heck of\na lot more.\"\nHe recalls that he gave up all\nsocial life, played baskebballto\nsharpen reflexes for wrestling,\nand also wrestled at least eight\ntimes a week.\n'You kind of wonder whether\nit's worth all the sacrifice. But\nif you feel you're sacrificing,\ngive up. You've got to love\nwhat you're doing.\"\nWhat is Trifunov doing now?\nThe only wrestler who is a\nmember of Canada's sports hall\nof fame Is teaching wrestling\nto youngsters at Winnipeg's\nCentral YMCA.\nClay-Liston Match\nComplete With Spies\nBOSTON (AP)\u2014The Cassius\nClay-Sonny Listpn heavyweight\ntitle rematch Monday will include sanctioned full-time spies.\nOne representative of the rival\ncamp will be permitted in the\nother man's corner.\nThe announcement came\nThursday frohl Commissioner\nRommy Rawson of the Massachusetts Boxing Commission.\nRawson says the move is intended to prevent a repetition of\nthe Clay camp charge in Miami that Liston had used \"hot\nstuff\" on his gloves that blinded\nhim.\nThe normal procedure is for\na handler to check the taping\nof the hands and the putting on\nof the gloves of the opponent\nbefore the fight, then depart\nfor his own comer.\n\"We will permit a handler to\nstay in the opposing corner to\nobserve,\"  Rawson  said.  \"But\nJump on the\nWhip over the softest snow,\nthe slickest ice...up to 35 mph.\nour state police deputy remains\nin charge. If the appointed observer sees anything he believes\nto be irregular, he's to notify\nthe deputy. The deputy may\nalso act on his own.\"\nDespite the fact the mandatory eight count on a knock*\ndown usually is waived in a title fight, it will remain in effect\nhere due to Massachusetts\nrules.\nThe referee will have the authority to stop the bout at any\ntime at his discretion. There is\nno three-knockdown rule ln the\nstate,\nA round may not be taken\naway from a fighter for a low\nblow in Massachusetts. On the\n10-point-must scoring system he\ncan have points taken away\nfrom him by the officials, however. And if the violation is flagrant enough, the referee can\ndisqualify the fighter.\nBanning Named\nKing of NL\nComeback\nNEW YORK (AP)-Jlm Bun-\nning, the first big league pitcher\nin 42 yeara to pitch a regular-\nseason perfect game, was\nnamed the National League's\ncomeback player of the year\nfor 1964 Thursday in the annual\nAssociated Press poll.\nThe 33-year-old Philadelphia\nright hander polled 49 votes in\nthe balloting by 83 baseball\nwriters. Vernon Law of Pittsburgh was second, with seven\nvotes followed by Larry Jackson of Chicago Cubs with six.\nBinning, who won 13 games\nand lost 13 with Detroit in 1963,\ncompiled a 194 record last season. 'His .704 winning percentage\nwas the fourth highest in the circuit and his total of 219 strikeouts the fifth highest. He also\nhad a 2.63 earned run average,\nthe lowest in his eight yeara in\nthe majors.\nBunning pitched a perfect\ngame against New York Mets\nJune 21, the first such achieve-,\nment since Charley Robertson\nof Chicago White Sox in 1922.\n,.       ...  rrffii\u2014\"\"\u00bbiir--?'..---V-.   -MH\u00ab_>4 !\u2022'\u00ab\nThe Bombardier Ski-Doo now offers the fun of snow travel to everyone\nwho loves the great outdoors. On a Ski-Doo, make daytime safaris over\nthe snowfields \u2014 with a sleigh-load of kids in tow. Go night riding with\na white moon over your shoulder. Race . . . rally .'. . jump . . . climb\nhills! Fresh air by the lungful, healthful exercise, sheer.enjoyment!\nSki-Doo is practical too! You can cruise to your snowed-in cottage, go out\non the lakes where the big fish are, explore and hunt areas not accessible\nin summer. Your track will show you the way back.\nBombardier's many years of experience with snow vehicles since they\ninvented the snowmobile in 1937, provides the Bombardier Ski-Doo with\nthe ideal balance of power and weight. Its patented rubberized track\nexerts only a quarter pound pressure per square inch, floats over the\nsoftest snow, lets you leap from drift to drift. Fun to ride . . . easy to\nrun ... and economical too! The Ski-Doo's rugged motor takes you half\na hundred miles on a single tank of gas\/oil mixture.\nSafe, speedy, sporty, Ski-Doo - sat all three 1965 models soon!\nFOR GOOD TRACTION THERE'S JUST NOTHINJ\nLIKE WINTER TREAD TIRES\nMADE WITH...\n^fHH\nLIKE A FREE RIDE?\nSEE YOUR NEAREST SKI-DOO DEALER!\nSUGGESTED TRAIL\nBenton MacKaye, a New Engender, first proposed the fa-\n-mous wilderness route of hikers\n\u2014the Appalachian Trail \u2014 in\n1921.\n. f\nHomelite Sales & Service Ltd.\n432 Stanley St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-5225\n'WINTERTREAD\nRUBBER\nMORE\nTRACTION\nON ALL 4 WHEELS\nfor WINTER\nSAFETY\n7:50x14,,\n6:70x15\n$1 .195\n13\nEACH     |  ^EXCH.\nPAY DAY TERMS\nNEW WHEELS\nFor Most Canadian Cars\n$0.88\n8\nFROM\nOffer Good 8 Days Only until Nov. 21\nALGARS\nTIRE\nSERVICE\nAND RETREADING LTD.\n520 Lake St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPh. 352-3656\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964\nCOST\n\u25a0..-...-\u00bb\u00bb. ,*, #-        ...,.,. ...w_r\u00bb^,\u201e\u00abr...\"\u00abl  -..   11 |i^wpMi\u2122ep\u00bb^|M|pippTi   i  \u25a0 >iw   i\"n \u25a0\u00ab\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\nvlifti?i}irlniU aJJu\nTRIED\nPROV\u00a3M\nBIRTHS\nWAPPLE - To Mr. and Mrs.\nD. Wapple of Exshaw, Alta.,\nannounce the arrival of their\nchosen son, Robert Wayne\/September 28. Mrs. Wappie is the\nformer Shirley Garrett of Nelson.\nHAGAN - To Mr. and Mrs.\nBrian Hagan at Royal Alexander\nHospital, Edmonton, a daughter\ndn Nov. 10th.\nSABISTON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nPeter Sabiston, R.R. No. 1, Nelson at K.L.G.H. a.son on Nov.\nUth.\nMcINNES \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Mclnnes, 1209 Front St.,\nNelson at K.L.G.H. a son on\nNov. 11th.\nHELP WANTED\nYOUNG MEN OP ACTION BE-\ntween 18 and 40 years of age,\nhelp us, help you. The Junior\nChamber of Commerce is the\nonly voluntary organization\nthat offers its members a\nTraining for Leadership Program with all its activities designed to give you all the opportunities to develop yourself\nin Business; Social, Civil and,\nif inclined, Political Fields.\nThe benefits gained from\nmembership in the Jaycees\nare the most valuable assets\nany young man can own. Join\nnow. Phone 3524973 after 6\np.m. or contact any Jaycee\nmember for information.\nMembership Chairman.\n-264-269\nMUSICIANS WANTED\nWoodwind, brass and percussion instrumentalists required by the R.C.M.P. Concert Band. Single, at least\n5'9\", age 18 to 29, grade eleven\neducation. Write The Commissioner, R.C.M.P. Ottawa.\n-265-267\nWANTED - SALESMAN TO\nhandle complete line of calendars, advertising specialties\nand business gifts. Highest\nCommission paid. Full or part\ntime. Apply Box 294, Nelson\nDaily News. \u2014266-268\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY,\nHeel Boom and 4 logging\ntrucks to move approx. 1V4\nMillion Board Feet of Timber.\n15 mile haul. Apply Pacific\nLogging Co. Ltd. Passmore,\nB.C. Ph. 226-7211.     -263-268\nIMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT\nfor male or female bookkeeper\nand typist. Also general office\nroutine. State age, education,\nand experience. Box 291, Nelson Daily News,       \u2014262-267\nHEAVY DUTY MECHANIC TO\ntake charge of shop. Apply Bill\nMacKay. Phone 426-2265,\nCrestbrook Timber Ltd., Box\n460, Cranbrook, B.C. \u2014256-267\nEXPERT STENOGRAPHERS\nand typists wanted for part\ntime secretarial service. Reply\nBox 292, Nelson Daily News.\n-263-268\nEXPERIENCED PLUMBER. -\nApply Smith's Plumbing and\nHeating, Castlegar. Phone\n365-7531. -264-266\nWOMAN WANTED TO LOOK\nafter 2 boys, from 3 p.m. to 5\np.m. week days. Ph. 352-2862\nafter 6 p.m. \u2014265-tfn\nORCHESTRA FOR NEW\nYear's Dance. Phone Ymir\n357-9523. -265-270\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nB.C. HYDRO & POWER AUTH-\nority requires Clerk-Stenographers for Nakusp and Castlegar. Qualifications: Full high\nschool plus proficiency in shorthand and typing. Experience\nin general office routines and\naudograph operation. Salary\nRange: $286.00 to $349.00 per\nmonth. Please apply in writing\noutlining in detail education,\nqualifications,-age experience,\netc. to: Head Office Personnel\nDepartment, B.C. Hydro &\nPower Authority, 970 Buh-ard\nStreet, Vancouver 1, B.C.\n-266-267\nFEMALE HELP WANTED,\nnot afraid of work. Apply in\nperson, Empire Cleaners, 321\nBaker St. \u2014264-tfn\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWELDER,: GAS & ELECTRIC,\navailable now, for anywhere in\nNelson area. Ph. 352-7620.\n-266-271\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nG. Stenberg. Ph. 352-6892.\n-259-284\nPROPERTY WANTED\nACREAGES PURCHASED -\nOld farms, mining claims,\nbush lots, remote properties\nwanted. Send exact location\nand price to D. F. Mullin, Box\n156, Toronto 5, Ontario.\n-262-tfn\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city anil\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write Wm. Kaiyniuk\nAgencies, Nelson. Ph. 352-2425.\n-231-tfn\nWANTED - LAKEFRONT\nacreage, 10 acres up. Prefer\nboat access only. All cash for\nsuitable property. S. Anderson. 100 N. Fletcher St., Chilli-\nwack. B.C. \u2014220-Un\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nREMEMBER\nAll Our Listings Are Inspected\nand Appraised at\nFAIR MARKET VALUE\nOBSERVATORY ST. LOTS\nIf you are interested in suitable\nlot on which to build a modern\ndweliing, see this location with\n100 foot frontage  . $4400\nor buy half at $2300.\n5-BEDROOM HOUSE\nON 5 ACRES\n2-storey family home on highway 6 miles south of Nelson.\nThis property is ideal for family wishingcountry living with\nlevel pasture area. $5500\nFull price  t>vwv\n$3360 down payment, balance\n$48.25 per mo. incl, 6% int.\nNEW DWELLING -\nMULTIPLE LISTING\nNorth.Shore, 17-Mile. 'A acre\nland in garden. Bungalow\nstyle; 2 bedrooms, living room\nwith fireplace. Electric heat.\nWorkshop-guest house also on\nproperty. $6900\nFull price  v^v-w\nDown payment $1500, bal. 6%%\n1507 VANCOUVER ST.\nMULTIPLE LISTING\nThree bedroom dwelling on lot\nwith 75' frontage, garden, fruit\ntrees, dwelling has one bedroom and bathroom down and\ntwo bedrooms up. Immediate\nPricePanCy: $6900\nWith$iooo''down.\n900 BLK. WEST INNES\nMULTIPLE LISTING\nView location with app. 100'\nfrontage, bungalow style dwg,\nfive rooms, basement, modern\noil furnace. Wired for range\nand dryer. Garden, 471 On\ntout trees. Price . *' ' U\nWith $1000 down.\nNEAR LAKE - BALFOUR\n120 sq. ft., level property, in\ngarden, lawns, fruit trees;\nonly 150 feet from lovely\nsandy beach. Five-room bungalow style with large back\nporch-laundry, fireplace, carport, concrete       $9500\n' With $1500 down.\nLAKE FRONTAGE,\nNORTH SHORE\nOver 250 feet fairly level with\nlovely sandy beach at 11-Mile,\nExtends from main highway\nto lake; cleared, Also Vi acre\nwith 3-room cot- % I 1 QfiO\ntage, alitor *\"\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\"\nTerms.\nFAMILY HOME - 6-MILE\nLevel land 90'xl60' just off\nmain highway. 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms (2 down), double plumbing. Full basement, concrete\nfoundation and floor, gas furnace, garage in basement,\nspace for rum- $|],900\npus room   : v   >\u00bbvw\nOnly $2000 Down.\nMODERN DWELLING,\n6-MILE\n4 acres of level land with modern 7-room, 4-bedroom dwelling; level Iand on highway.\nFull. basement, oil furnace,\nrumpus room. Lawns, garden\nad?virfCub-$\u00ab4,900\nWith $2000 down.\nT. D. Roslimg\n& Son Ltd.\n568 Ward St.    Phone 352-3581\nResidence, Phone 352-2698\nCLEAN, COSY & CUTE 2 BR.\ncottage on level landscaped\nlot in Fairview; LR, with picture windowjkitchen with eating area. Basement; gas furnace. $7700.00 ($1500. down.)\nRobertson, Hilliard, Ph. 352-\n7252. \u2014263-H\n25 ACRES, 2 MODERN HOMES,\nauto, heat, garage, workshop\nand barn on Duncan Flats,\nnear Trail. Good spot tor horses. Apply Box 324, Trail or\nphone 364-1683 after 5 p.m. or\nanytime weekends.    \u2014236-tfn\nSACRIFICE 30.6 ACRE FARM,\n5 room house, out bldgs,,\npower and water, fruit. Price\n$3700.00. Apply J. Hecker,\nPassmore. Ph. 226-7456.\n-266-tfn\n5 ROOMED STUCCO HOUSE,\nFor Sale. Semi-furnished, full\nbasement, 220 wiring, 4 lots, in\nYmir, B.C., 2 garages. Phone\n357-9353 Mrs. A, Schneider.\n-264-269\nFOR SALE, 2 BIG LOTS ON\nYmir Road, No. 14; 3 B.R.\nhouse on one lot, part basement. Very suitable for store\nsite. Inquire at 14 Ymir Rd.\n-219-tfn\nRETAIL BUILDING. PRIME\nlocation on Baker . St. Only\n$7350 down and $221.31 per\nmonth including interest.\nM.L.S. Wm. Kaiyniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-2425.      -250-tfn\nFOR SALE - 5 ROOM FUR-\nnished house on 3 corner lots,\nYmir, B.C. Phone 357-9641 or\nwrite Box 203, Salmo, B.C,\n-262-tfn\nFOR SALE, 3 BEDROOM HOME\nlocated at Thrums on 7.6 acres\nof land. Good barn. V.L.A.\napproved. Write C. S. Demas,\nBox 2, Thrums, B.C. -263-268\n(Continued next column)\nPROPERTY,   HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n3-4 B.R. Family Home. Close\nfcice        HM0O-\n3-4 B.R. rebuilt home. Custom\nplanned kit. plus utility room.\n2 bathrooms. Near all schools.\n$\u20223,500\n$2500 down\n4 B.R. Golf Course area. Lot\nsize 383.6x333. hot water heat:\nPr.ce :.. :.*MW\n3 B.R. Quality Home outside\ncity. Lovely yard area, swim\n\u00a3&  *\u00ab5,600\nONLY $1500 DOWN\n2 B.R. custom built, aluminum\nsiding. Just outside city. Oversize lot. Garage and chicken\n|\u00b0\u00b0p- $8900\nBal. $69 per mo.\nCompact 2 B.R. Uphill, Close to\nS&. -.: $850\u00b0\n3 B.R. Close In. Gas furnace,\nclean and ready for immediate\npcr\u2122epancy'        $8000\nCompact 2 B.R. with custom\ncabinet kit. Full basement,\ngas furnace. $6200\nIncludes gas range, elec. ref.\nauto, washer. $50 per mo.\nWHY RENT?\n1 B.R., walking distance, gas\nSce; ; $5500\n\u25a0   TENTH ST.\nModern well planned 3 B.R.\nElect, heat, extra sleeping 1st\nfloor, rec. $18,600\nroom. F.P   v  **,vw\nTENTH ST.\nLarger 3 B.R., living room,\nfireplace, fuel, rec room 1st\nfloor.   Double  plumbing, etc.\n$21,600\nTENANTS MAKE PAYMENTS\nNorth  Shore  Duplex. 2 B.R.\nk?tcs.pGal,ey...  314,500\n$3000 down.\nWe have many more listings in\nall parts of city.\nMember of K.M.L.S.\nSee Us For Rentals\nPHONE 352-6144\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 352-5633\nGordon Burgess \u2014 352-6887\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES LTD.\nREAL ESTATE - INSURANCE\n554 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED - 1 BDRM, HOUSE\nto rent on purchase basis, preferably on 1 acre of land,\nWynndel-Creston district. P.O.\nBox 445, Kinnaird.     \u2014265-270\nFOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE\nBox 223, Nelson News.\n-176-tfn\n3 BEDROOM HOME, MODERN,\non Third St. $15,000. - $4000\ndown. Ph. 3524912.      -115-h\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 162)\nIN THE MATTER OF That part\nof Lot 9757, Kootenay District,\nwhich lies South of the production Easterly of the Southerly\nboundary of Lot 9521, save and\nexcept thereout Parcel \"A\"\n(D.D. 17682-1) of the said\nLot 9757.\nProof having been filed In my\noffice of the loss of Certificate\nof Title No. 106956-1 to the above\nmentioned lands in the name of\nWILLIAM GEORGE POLONI-\nKOFF and bearing date the 15th\nOf August, 19561 HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE of 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\nCertificate. Any person having\nany information with reference\nto such lost Certificate of Title\nis requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.     i\nDATED at Nelson; B.C., this\n20th day of October, 1964.\n. L. A. McPHAIL,\nDeputy Registrar,\nNelson Land Registration\nDistrict,\nDate of first publication:\nOctober 23, 1964.\n-249-h\nROOM  AND BOARD\nCLEAN,     PRIVATE    BDRM.\n,  for gentleman. Near Legion.\n$25. Ph. 352-5030 or 352-3644.\n-201-tfn\nROOM   AND   BOARD   FOR\nyoung man. Ph. 352-2870.\n-264-tfn\nROOM  AND  BOARD  AVAIL-\nable. Phone 352-7423. -265-267\nROOM   AND  BOARD,   MALE\nstudent. Ph. 352-2994, -266-268\nWANTED TO RENT\n3 BDRM. HOUSE. ROSEMONT\nvicinity. Reply to Box 295,\nNelson Daily News.   \u2014266-267\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCUSTOM-BUILT\nSeveral New Models\nIN STOCK NOW\nLarge Selection of\nUsed Logging and\nGravel Trucks\nSPECIAL\n1960 Dodge Tandem, 416 Engine, 34,000 lbs., bogies, A-l\n$7500\nPHONE 372-3388\nINTERIOR\nSALES\nServing the Kootenays\n2017 East Trans-Canada Hgwy.\nKAMLOOPS, B.C.\n-238-h\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking: '53 Studebaker, '55-\n\"56 Chev., '53 Ford Pickup, '55\nand '56 Fords, '55-'56-'57 Dodge\nand Plymouth, % ton Chev.\ntruck; Good motors, '56 Chev.,\n'55-'53 Consul, '56 Dodge, '53\nA40. Ph. 352-5815, Box 382, 24\nYmir Rd. -221-tfn\n\u202257 2-TONE FORD FAIRLANE\n500, 4 Dr. Sedan. Automatic,\nV-8, radio, W\/S washers,\nchrome wheel disks. 6 W\/W\ntires \u2014 4 summer, 2 winter\ntreads, all good. Completely\nwinterized. 309-6th St, Phone\n352-6946. -265-267\n1961 TRIUMPH CONVERTIBLE,\n'56 Hillman hardtop, 1959 Plymouth Belvedere, 1\u2014 1960\nRenault. North Shore Service.\nPh. 352-2929. -188-tfn\nFORCED TO SELL - 1958\nDodge, 2 door H.T., p.m., automatic, radio, front and rear\nspeakers, good mech. condition. A real bargain at $750.\nPh. 352-2401. -262-267\nWANTED '55 TO '57 H. T.\nFord Co. or Chev. V-8, stan.\ntrans, preferred. Apply Box\n293, Nelson Daily News.\n-263-268\nFORCED TO SELL '62 PON-\ntiac. P.S. and R. and H\u201e V-8,\nauto., seat belts. Phone J. Ellis, 352-2107 nights and weekends. \u2014255-268\n1961 LAND ROVER IN A-l CON-\ndition. Model 109, canopy, warren hubs. Phone 368-9979 or C.\nPicone, 1488 2nd Avenue, Trail,\nB.C. -255-tfn\n1962 VALIANT, V-200, 4 DOOR\nSedan. Big motor, 16,000 miles,\nlike new. Ph. 352-5078.\n-264-269\n1955 FORD RANCHWAGON,\nlow pay out or $40 a month to\nresponsible party., Ph. 94G,\nNakusp. -266-271\n1961 PONTIAC, STANDARD \u00ab\nsedan, excellent shape, must\nsell. Ph. 365-5379 Kinnaird\nafter 6.   . -266-277\nEARLY MODEL FORD TRUCK\nwith camper. Two 750 x 14\nwinter tires. Ph. 352-2747.\n-264-269\nFOR SALE, 1963 FALCON FU-\ntura, V-8, stnd., low mileage,\nradio, winter tires. Phone\n-265-270\n1965 F85 OLDSMOBILE, 4 DOOR\nSedan. Ph. 3524626 days or\n352-3619 evenings.       -261-266\nFOR SALE - '55 G.M.C. Mi-\nton. Good shape. Contact Alex\nZarchukoff, Salmo.   \u2014260-265\nMUST GO, 1952 AUSTIN. GOOD\nwinter tires. $60, Ph. 352-6973.\n'55 LANDROVER, 4 WHEEL\ndrive, in good condition, Phone\n365-5772. -264-272\n'55 FORD V8 STANDARD. BEST\noffer accepted. Can be seen at\nWillow Point Store.   -266-267\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURN1-\nture, antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and jewels. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531.\n413 HaU St., Nelson. B.C.\n-98-tl\nWANTED, HOME FOR CROSS\ncollie setter dog, owner moving to Toronto. Whiteley,\nRemac, B.C. \u2014263-268\nWANTED - USED ELECTRIC\nmotors. Coleman Electric, 502\nFront St., Nelson, Ph. 352-3175.\n-227-tfn\nWANTED, HOME FOR CROSS\ncollie setter dog, owner moving   to   Toronto.   Whiteley,\nRemac, B.C. \u2014263-268\nWANTED TO BUY LARGE\nbird cage. Apply Box 290 Nelson Daily News.       \u2014262-tfn\nWANTED - SET   OF   DUAL\ntruck chains, Ph. 352-7683.\n-264-269\nII .llllllllllllllll .llllllllllllllllllll\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nIIHIIII\"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII llll\nTRAILERS\nMOBILE HOMES\nBEFORE YOU BUY\nBE SURE\nSee the Large Selection of\nNew and Used Mobile\nHomes on Display at Cranbrook Trailer Sales.\n-  NEW UNITS\n1\u201456x12 2-B.R. Safeway\n1\u201456x10 3-B.R. Safeway\n1\u201452x10 3-B.R. Safeway\n1-52x10 2-B.R. Safeway\nUSED UNITS\n1\u201453x10 3-B.R. Buckingham\n1\u201442x10 3-B.R. Husky\n1\u201441x8 2-B.R. Marathon\n1-41x8 2-B.R. Kit\n1-36x8 2-B.R. Shult\n1-36x8 2-B.R. Flamingo\n1-30x8 1-B.R. Kit\n1\u201422x8 1-B.R. McGinnis\n1\u201417 ft. Self-contained TeePee\n(New)\n1\u201415 Ft. Tear Drop\n1\u20141959 Volkswagen\n1\u20141959 Meteor. Mechanic's Spc.\nSee Your Authorized\nSafeway Dealer\nServing the East and West Kootenays for top trade-in allowances,\nfiarts and accessories. Safe, ratable, fully insured towing anywhere.\nCranbrook Trailer Sales\nBox 2217 Ph. 426-4935\nWALT HILL, Manager\n57x10' 3 B.R. $7365\n. .   In Modern Decor\nCompletely furnished and set up.\nWHY PAY MORE\nThe '64 Fleetwood has all the\nquality features. 1-pce. galvanized roof, baked enamel chip-\nproof finish on aluminum sides..\nTruss engineered channel frame,\n60,000 BTU furnace, dble. fibre-\nglass insulation, frost free storm\nwindows for all windows. Nationally known, serviced and guaranteed appliances.\n17 floor plans to choose from.\n1, 2 or 3 bedrooms.\nBest bank financing possible.\nKingsway Trailer Wholesale\n5438 Imperial HE 44741\nDay or Night -\n-192-tfn\nMACHINERY\nICE LUGS\nFor Safety First\nWe Stock Precut\n3 and 4 Inch Grouser\nWeldon Lug\nDO IT NOW\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\n-263-268\nLA. UNIVERSAL\nCUTTING TORCH\nUse With Oxygen and Propane,\nNatural Gas or Acetylene.\n$59.95 - Tips $5.85.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\n\u2014266-266\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Hoi\nland New and Used Farm\nEquipment Parts, Sales and\nService. Phone 356-2254, Creston. B.u -110-tfn\nFOR SALE: FOUR WHEEL\ndrive Ford truck with snow\nblower attachment, reconditioned, second-hand. Please\ncontact Harry Hewat, Slocan\nCity,  B.C. \u2014266-267\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM  SUPPLIES\nFOR SALE; BEAUTIFUL\nthree year old sorrel gelding\nbroken to ride, gentle but spirited or will trade for milk cow\nor beef. Ph. 367-9962 after 5\np.m. -266-271\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874, Nelson and District\nA.1, Centre, 709 Third St., Nel-\n' son. J. De Jong. Technician,\n-tfn\nCATTLE AUCTION SALES. -\nMixed, Nov. 25. Director Frank\nHill, Box 2139, Cranbrook, B.C.\nor phone 4-Y Fort Steele.\n-194-276\n2 COWS, ONE 4 YRS. OLD,\none 8 yrs. old. Both due to\nfreshen in April. Mike A.\nRebalkin, Appledale, B.C.\n-265-270\n1 YEAR OLD CHICKENS 80c\na piece Or 32c a lb., dressed.\nGlendale Farm. Ph. 357-9734.\nSalmo. -184-tln\nIV, YEAR OLD CHICKENS 50c\neach. Also cattle for beef. Ph.\n359-7425 Bill Ziben, Shoreacres.\n-266-268\n1 WELSH 4 YR. OLD STALLION\nD. Hale, R.R. No, 1, Nelson.\n-262-267\nFOR SALE, 14 HERFORD\nHeifer. Calves $985. P. Kleine,\nPh. 226-7244. \u2014266-268\nFOR SALE - WORK HORSE.\nPhone 226-7428. \u2014262-261\nK\nmm\nwarn\nmm\n FOR' .ALf\nMISCELLANEOUS\nI FM3M),pANE\ni    FOR STORM WINDOWS\nCrystal Clear and Semi-Rigid.\nNELSON FARMERS  SUPPLY\n124 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5379\n-* *\u2022\u2022\u00bb>* 0*r-*a--am +\u25a0\u2022\u2014*\u2022*\n-266-h\nBOLLAWAY BED, LIKE NEW;\n12 volt heavy duty battery,\ngood  cond.;   10   ft.   ladder;\n; spade, shove), dandelion rake,\nS'Ub axe, 2 saw horses. One\noodyear Double-eagle 8.50 by\nj 14 W.W. used tire, good condition. Inclining exercise board,\n; adjustable height stand. Ph.\n3S2-9939. \u2014265-267\n18\" HOMELITE POWER SAW\n$90.00; .300 Remington semi-\n1 automatic rifle $70,00,12 gauge\nbolt action $20,00, Browning\nsemi-automatic pistol. Apply\nJ. Hecker, Passmore. Phone\n226-7456. -266-tfn\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals. 339\nBaker St. Ph. 352-3631.\n-263-268\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nONE BEDROOM SUITE ^\nFridge, Ashley heater, Oil\nheater, one wood and coal\nstove end 2 cords of dry\nwood, Sam Chernenkoff, R.R.\n2, Nelson. Ph, 352-6059.\nr-263-268\nVERY REASONABLE, REZ-\nnor 150,000 BTU furnace\nequipped for use with Propane\nGas or Natural Gas, Ph, 352-\n3718 or write Box 34, Nelson,\nB.C. .-266-tfn\nSID .S OF GRAIN FED BEEF\n47c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 29c; aides of pork, cut\nand wrapped, 33c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston Ph. a@6-Bfloi or\n858-9769,. \u2014171-tfri\nFOR   THE   BEST   IN   USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, re\nfrigerators,.television, etc eon<\ntact Nelson Electric Co  Ltd\n574 Baker St.. Nelson. B.C..\n-27-tfn\nYOUNG BEEF FOR SALE,\nWould like some customers for\nfresh eggs. Delivery on Fridays in Nelson. Ph. 229-4035\nafter 5. -264-266\nMORE THAN YOU\nBARGAINED FOR...\n\u2666   \u2666   \u2666   \u2666\nNew \u2666\nTRIUMPH 1200\nMore Value: Lowest priced 4-passenger ear.\nMore Horsepower: Top Speed Over 80\nMere Economy: Up to 40 miles per gallon.\nMore Luxury: Walnut dash, bucket Beats.\nMore Convenience: Adjustable steering column.\nMore Readability. . ,   $!OOC\nAtamiiycar. Only r177J\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\nPhon* 352-2929\nJust Across the Bridge\nNelion, B.C.\n3S\nFOR  SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\n,3 PIECE SET OF PISHES,\nFarm Yard Pat. 22 ct. gold\ntrimmed, Ph, 352-6127.\n-266-271\nPIANO AND ELECTRIC STOVE\nGood cond. Ph, 352-3107.\n-265-270\nSTOKER, $45, INCLUDES\nthermostat, connections, Ph.\n352-2897, -293-26!\nCHOICE BEEF - SIDE 100-300\nlbs. 43C lb, 200-275 lbs. 370\nlb, Ph, 352-6886.       -269-291\nDRY FIR AND TAMARAC. Z\nStove length. Ph. 382-5485.\n-247-271\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n. (Studebaker-Lark)\n111 Baker St.      Phone 332-3231\n\u2014tin\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen!\nS23 Nelson Ave.   Phone 352-5385\n-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\nMl Baker St.     Phone 852-3135\n\u2014tin\nftURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n(02 Baker St.      Phohe 352-6661\n\u2014tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO\nMl Front St. Ph  352-5571\nLets of free parking.      .\n-ttn\n\u25a0\u25a0;itwii,y \u25a0!.- \u25a0     i     --\u25a0 ==\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MEftMET\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nelson and Dist\n1020 Davies St. - Nelson\n\u2014tin\nContractors\nLazlo Husiak, General Masonry\nStone \u2022 Brick \u2022 Cement \u2022 Stucco\nPlastering\n1823 F41U St. W. 852-7692\n-239-tfn\nART RAVESTEIN\nRenovations, cement wm*\nand General Car*er|tr\u00bb\nPhone 859-7433\n-t to\nFlying School\n85. 't approved Flying School.\n'Air Charter Service.\nSingle or multi-engine aircraft.\n\u25a0      WANETA AIRWAYS\nPhone 365-7444 or 365.871\n;. Castlegar. B.C_jmw\nGarages\ntipper F\u00bbirvi*\u00bb Motors Ltd.\nCot 7th at Davies  Ph 352-252$\nTransistoriMd Ignition\n\u2014tfn\nHealth Foods\n\u25a0\".'   Vitad*\u00bb for- Nutrition,\nVITALITY HEALTH FOODS\nI 564 Ward _!).       Nelson, B.C.\nMonumental\nStones\nSee NELSON FLOWERS LTD.\nPhone for private Interview.\n-230-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING <\n4(0 ward St.      Nelson. B.C\n-   Phone 352-7821.\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents - Important\nPapers.\n-tfn\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 952-3551\n-tfn\nRadio & TV Service\nRadio - TV \u2022 Transistor - Service\nCOLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE\nLTD.\n458 Ward St.      PhOOe 352-5581\n  .-218-tfn\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phohe 852-3385\n-tfn\nRefrigeration.\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C.    Phone S52-S45t\n\u2022  -186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street  Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sind and Gravel\nPh. 332-2355 Days \u2022 352-7576 eves\n-US\n22:\nWelding & Iron\nWorks\n\"ATOM-LOCK - Haetltii cold,\nweld of. Cast Iron Diesel cylinder beads, blocks, etc.\nQuick service by Specialist oi\nSo years experience in Europe\nCraftsmanship Guaranteed.\nKOOTENAY WELDING &\nCASTING REPAIRS\nm Columbia Ave., castlegar\nPhone 365-5351\n\u2022 -239-282\n300 FT. W GOOD PLASTIC\nPipe at 18c ft, Fred McCauley,\nTaghum, -202-267\nCHILD'S SLEIGH, BIRD CAGE\non stand, elec, range, Bendlx\nwasher. Ph. 352-7526. -264-366\nDOUBLE   BED   WITH   BOX\nspring and mattress and a\ncrib, Ph. 352-2160.     -266-267\nCOAL AND WOOD STOVE, OIL\nheater, Ph. 352-2861.   -235-tfn\nHOHNER ALTO MELODICA, -\nPh. 352-6127. -266-271\nRENTALS\nFIRST 6 WEEKS FOR 1\nmonth's rent. Unfurnished, 3\nbedroom apt, Mi blk, off Baker\nSt. Immediate occupancy, $70\nmo. Wm. Kaiyniuk Agencies.\nPh. 352.2425. -250-tfn\nPRIVATE, MODERN, LARGE 2\nbdrm. suite. Convertible to\nliving and office space. Ph.\n352-3401 or call at Nelson\nGrocery, 338 Baker St.\n-265-tfn\nFOUR.RO;OM.FURNISHED\nself-contained suite, private entrance, fridge, gas, H.W. and\nrange. Available Nov. 18th.\n857.50 month.  Apply 852-6927\nBus. Hrs. -265-tfn\nNEWLY DEGOBATED 2 OR 8\nroom suite\/ Furnished or unfurnished, T.V, connection provided, ph. 352-8712 days, 352-\n3439 evens. -286-271\nFOR RENT OR SALE - 2\nBdrm older house, uphill, convenient location, economical\ngas heat. Ph. 352-5246.\n-266-277\nONE OR TWO- ROOM FURN-\nished ante, in Annable Block\n(21 and up. Call 352-7217. Pou-\nlin Agencies Ltd., 582 Ward St.\n-258-283\nSMALL   FURNISHED   CABIN\nat 7 Mile, (35 per month.\nPh. 352-3719, -266-267\nSee Us\nFIRST\nfor\n\u2022 GOOP\n\u2022 CLEAN\nUSED\nGARS\nTRADE\nNOW!\nMOTOR-IN\nLTD.\n213 Baker St.     Nelson\nPh. 332-3231\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nH8KPG AND SLEEPING RM\nweekly, monthly rates Dishes,\nUnen supplied, perking, Allan\nRooms, 171 Baker St,\n. -mm\ni Continued neat column i\nRENTALS\n3  HQ0M  SELF - CONTAINED\napt. Private entrance, heated,\npartly furnished. Ph. 352-0511.\n-264-tfn\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS  -\nFurn. er unfurn. Ph 352-6721\n-65-tfn\nRENTALS\nFOR- SALE OR -RENT - 2\nbdrm. house with 2 room suite,\nwith bath. Ph. 352-6903..\n'..258-tfn\nROOM FURN. SUITE, HEAT\ned, suitable for one. Ph. 332'\n5252. -257-tfn\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\niinii.nM.,m..L.ii.,.\nTEST DRIVE\nNew BISCAYNES - New BEL-AIRS- CHEVY VAN.- New IMPALAS\nNew Vi-TONS - New OLDSMOBfLES - N.w CORVAIRS\nNew CHEVY lis -New CHEVELLES\n1963 CHEVROLET HALF-TONS. EQUipPEP WITH TEEPEE CAMPER\nCADILLAC, F-85 CUTLAS (CHEVY II .AND\"CHEVELLE: SUPER SPORTS)\nDI IV    A    r A D     N0 D0WN PAYMENT \u2014\nBUT    A   V.AK   SET EXTRA CASH FOR CHRISTMAS\ni\nNew Cars on Display on Both Lots\nCAR LOT No. 1\nVernon Street\nOpposite Our Garage\nPHONE 352-3121\n'48 Dynamic 88 Sedan\n2\u2014'63 Chevrolet Sedans\n'57 Pontiae 4-Door HT\n'59 Chevrolet Panel\n'61 Zephyr Convertible\n'59 Chevrolet Panel\n'64 Corvair Van\n'64 Chevrolet Van\n, '55 Plymouth Sedan\n'58 Chevrolet Sedan\n'62 Chevrolet Sedan\n'63 Corvair Sedan\n'59 Oldsmobile Sedan\n'64 Mercury Camper\nEconoline\n'58 Chevrolet Sedan\n'65 Tee Pee Camper\n'60 Pontiae Sedan\n'59 Austin A-95\n'65 Jetitar Oldsmobile Sdn.\n'62 Chevy II\n'59 Chevrolet Impela\nConvertible\n'57 Chevrolet 2-Deor\n'57 Chevrolet Sedan\n'59 Chevrolet Sedan\nMan. Others to Choose From\nCAR LOT No. 2\nBaker Street\nOpposite Peeblei Motor Motel\nSalesman in Attendance\nPHONE 352-3233\n'56 Buick Ht\n'57 Meteor 2-Door\n'60 Ford Sedan\n'58 Plymouth 4-Dr- HT\n'59 Dodge Sedan\n'56 Dodge Custom Royal\n'56 Dodge\n'56 Chevrolet 2-Deor\n'58 Plymouth St. Wagon\n'58 Pontiac Sedan   -,..:\n'57 Oldsmobile HT\n\"54 Ford Sedan 7\n2\u2014'64 Corvalri (New)\n-\u25a0'55 Zephyr 6   ...\n'54 Pontiac Sedan\n'   '65 Chevrolet 4x4 J-Ton\n'58 Standard     *'!'*\u2022\n'56 Buick Sedan\nSEIBERLIIMG\nPerformance Rated\nCASH      TERMS      TRADES\nThe Largest Stock of New and Used Cart in tha Interior at\u2014\nREUBEN BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\n24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE - BCAA RECOMMENDED\n323 Vernon Street NELSON Phone 352-3121\nftUCVftOLET - OLDSMOBILE - CADILLAC - F-85 STARFIRE\nCORVAIR - CHEVY n-CHEVELLE - ENVOY     .\nOPEN TILL ( P.M. FOR CAR SALES EVERY DAY\nSB\nBeacon Better Buys\n1962 Chevrolet Sedan V-8 Standard\n1962 Pontlao Laurentlan. V(, Automatic, Two-Tone.\n19(2 Ford Fairlane. V8, Standard Transmission.\n1960 Consul 4-Door Sedan. Two-fOne.\n1(58 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan. (, Autematle, Twe-teae.\n1(58 Austin 4-Door Sedan. Lew Mileage.\n1(58 Meteor 4-Door Station Wafoi. (.dyllale r.\n1958 Oldimnblle 2-DoOr Hardtop. V(, Automatic.\n1(57 Chev. Station wagon. 6-cylinder.\n1(63 vanguard station wagon. (-Cylinder.\nM60 Envoy 4-Door Sedan. 4-Cyll\u00bbder, Standard.\n1(60 Simca 4.Door Sedan. Lew.Price.\n1(98 Vauxhall 4-Door Sedan. White\n1957 Ford Station Wagon\nMANY OTHER OLDER MODELS T6 CHOOSE FROM\n1M1 Rambler Sedan .    V\n1(58 Consul Sedan\n1(57 Chevrolet. ( Cyl., Sedan Delivery.\n1(57 Plymouth 4-Doon very Clean.\n1(17 Pontiae 4-Oeer Sedan. (-Cylinder, Standard Trans.\n1(56 Land\/Rover 4*4, Short W.B.\n195( Chevrolet. V8, Automatic.\nKM Meteor Rideau.\n1(5( Buick Sedan.: \u2022\u2022- \u25a0---\nKM Mercury H-to\u00ab. Uag Box, i^Cyl.\ni(5( Fard Fairlane M>o*r Hardtop, v..:\nKM Plymouth 2-Door Sedan. (-Cylinder, Standard Trana.\nKMAuttla 4-Door Sedan. Light BlnV.-='\n1(55 Dodge Sedan. (-Cylinder, Standard.\nK5S Plymouth 2-DOer Sedan. 6-Cyllnder, Standard.   --\n1(55 Dodge 1-Ton FlatDecTi On Dual. ;> \u25a0; \u25a0\u25a0'-... ,\nKM Pontiae 2-Door Sedan, 6-Cyltader,' Standard.\nBIO DISCOUNT'ON NO-TRADE DEALS._J_...\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC\u2022\u2014 BUICK - VAUXHALL\u2022 \u2014 ACADIAN :\nSMC DEALERS \u25a0 \u2022, ,-'\n701 Baker St. Phone 3S26641 - \u25a0-\nRENTALS\nSELF,CO,T.    BED-SITTING\nroom, cooking facilities; Avail.\nDec. 1st. Ph. 352-3652 after 4.\n-265-270\n1 BDRM, FURN. HEATED APT.\nApply 1010 Latimer St.\n-249-tfn\n3   BEDROOM   HOUSE   FOR\nrent, Ph. 352-2661.      -258-tfn\n2  BDRM,  APT., HEATED.  -\nAdults. Ph, 362-3020.   -260-tfn\nClassified Ads Get Results\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 13,1964 \u2014 9\nMORTGAGES\nMONEY FOR YOU\nIf you own property \u2014 and If\nyou need money to buy - build-\nremodel or for refinancing or\nconsolidation we can help. We\nloan in all areas. Write soon\noutlining requirements. A representative will be in your\narea shortly;\nALBERTA MORTGAGE\nEXCHANGE LTD.\nSte. 115, ?46 Second Avenue\nKamloops, B.C.\n\u2022   -261-h\nLOST.ANC|3Wl,ND\nANJ.ON;E .KNOVflNSr\" THp\nwhereabouts or.- hading, taken\n- in right after 'flaijciw^'en, JL\nginger and white Wtteii, please\nPh. 352-3481, . ,.-264-266\nDEEP MOUNTAIN ...:\nResearch scientists have discovered a 14,000-foot mountain\nrising ..to 3,800-feet'\"..be)ow the\nsurface i of the sei Jout h of\nWake Island ln the Pacific.   ,\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\nPhone 352-5355 Collect\n323 Nelion Ave.\n1(68 VOLKSWAGEN 1500 SEDAN. 9(00 Mile*. White.\n2\u20141063 RAMBLER CLASSIC SEDANS, 6-Cyl,\nPhone 352-2713\n722 Baker St.\n(2195\n8495\n1962 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE: Like new.      ...  .\"\"-1495\n1961 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE. .... .  ..;.., ;     1295\n1960 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE                                   _    1150\n1959 OLDSMOBILE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Premium, :  -w.. 1995\n1959 FORD GALAXIE. V8, Auto., Radio, P.S., P.B  \u2122 i........ 1895\n1959 KARMANN GH1A                              .... ,  1495\nMM HILLMAN SEDAN. Real good.           , i -  795\n1959 Renault sedan .....:\u2122_\u2122...\u2122.^ - .\u2122- \u2014mo\n1958 VOLKSWAGEN. Good      995\n1957 VOLKSWAGEN.       ..;\u201e\u201e.,.._... . =as ::. ,:  \u25a0 575\n1957 HILLMAN SEDAN  . \u201e__;.:;     \"\u00abB0\n1957 FORD. Automatic. 8-cyL   .,....,., , . &>':i;|itf\n1(56 FORD. New motor.\n1955 CHEVROLET. V8, Bel-Air, Standard Shift.\n1955 FORD V8\t\n1(55 DODGE    \t\n1955 DODGE. \u25a0   \u25a0\n1955  PLYMOUTH \t\n1955  ZEPHYR.\n1954 CHEVROLET SEDAN\t\n1953 PONTIAC  \t\n1953 MERCURY V8. Automatic. .\t\n1(53 FORD 2-DOOR     .. ..,;._\u00a3>\n1953 PONTIAC SEDAN. Grey, a steal. ...\n1953 FORD SEDAN DELIVERY       \t\n1950 CHEVROLET SEDAN. Real Good.\nKM PONTIAC\t\n'W5\n-625\n695\n \u2014\u2022 jm\n,;\u201e\u201e\u25a0 r, 595\n . (495\n   550\n \\  295\n ' 395\n , . .(25 '\n.i_~L 4(5\n.'i:.Z;\">3?5-\n... , ib\n WIS'J. :\nSTATION WAGON and PICKUP SPECIALS\n... mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm^mmm^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm. ...\n19(4 VOLKSWAGEN 1500 WAGON. Was (3075. .'. .....I NOW (MBS-\n1M1 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, Like New _J_.....u...... ... . ;,',\n19M THAMES STATION WAGON. Was 350.' .:.--..\".\"  \u25a0-' ,v,   Htm \u25a0. ftt,\n1956 FORD PICKUP. New motor, brakes, steering. :'. - __..* .:.::..  NOW'  J50\nIMS METEOR STATION WAGON..Was 795, :L..L ,.!-_.-.. ,NOW\n19M FORD PICKUP. AutomaUc.Waa 695       __^-;.   NOW\n1M0 RAMBLER STATION WAGON. Waa. 1895.;  jLLLiifi   NOW\u00b0~l(M\nWe Hove Lota of New VOLKSWAGENS ond RAMBLERS    .:\nWe Need Your Good Clean, Used Cor     '      aaiiisaaa\nMEL BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\nFORD\nPh. 352-7202\u2014608 Vernon St.     ^ Car Lot: Vemon ft Hendryx Jp27511\n'6| FORDS ON DISP^Y  \u25a0\"\nxv tit i     .\u25a0 \u2022>\u25a0> 'hi-in\u00bb^mf-ii*~i*r>c~^'\nCheck these used cars I\n1964 GALAXIE CONVERTIBLE\n.064 FAIRLANE SPORTS COUPE\n1964 GALAXIE 500 SEDAN\n1963 GALAXIE 500 2-DR; HDTP,\n1963 GALAXIE 4-DR. SEDAN\n1963 FAIRLANE 500 4-DR. SEDAN\n1963 CHEVROLET 4-DR. SEDAN\n1961 FORD STATION WAGON\n1961 METEOR 4-DR. SEDAN\n1961 FORD 4-DR. SEDAN\n1960 CHEVROLET BELAIR\/'\n1960 AUSTIN GYPSY 4-Wh. Dr.\n1959 FORD STATION WAGON\n1958 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n1958 CADILLAC ELDORADO HT.\n1958 METEOR 4-DR. SEDAN\nl'**m*   \u2022%   mmt\nRed Hot Bargains\n4-1957 Ford Sedans\n3-1957 Ford Station Wagons\n2-1957 Plymouth Sedans '\n1 -1957 Mercury  Turnpike   Cruiser\n1-1957 Mercury 2-Door Hardtop\t\n1-1957 Pontiac Hardtop\n1 -1957 Buick Sedan\n4-1956 Ford Sedans'\n1-1956 Chevrolet Station Wagon\n1 -1956 Pontiac Sedan\n3-1955 Ford Sedans\n\u25a0'.'~ 03JWM\ns\n\u25a0.i-\u00bbsv<:.\n,#i\nTHESE UNITS MUST BE SOLD\nNO REASONABLE OFFER WILL BE REFUSED!\nUl\nA\nMEL BUERG!\nNELSON, B.C.\n U--+JUUUU\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAYTNOV. 13,1964\nHelp ... Help ... . Help\nYes \u2014 You can get help from the many fine\npharmacy items at Mann's.\nWake-Up Pills Ayrtons Indigestion\nGin Pills Tabs\nFletcher's Sore Mouth. Sucoryl\nMedicine Calmex Tabs\nCress Corn Salve Dodds Pills\nMurine for the Eyes     Lypsil\nAnd a Store Full of Everyday Items\nFor Your Shopping Ease.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nQuebec, France Launch\nNew Cultural Program\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Premier\nJean Lesage of Quebec announced Thursday that President\nde Gaulle has agreed to a considerable increase in cultural exchanges between Quebec and\nFrance.\nLesage, talking to reporters\nshortly after seeing de Gaulle,\nalso reported that Andre Mal-\nraux, French cultural affairs\nminister, is expected to visit\nQuebec next month.\nFollowing his remarks to reporters Lesage left for Montreal by plane. He had been\ntouring Europe for three weeks.\n\"During my talk with Gen.\nde Gaulle,\" Lesage said, \"we\nagreed-on-a new program\u2014a\ngood deal more considerable\nthan at present existing \u2014 including exchanges of students,\ntechnicians and teachers.\"\nLesage announced that Paul\nGuerin-Lajoie,  Quebec  cultural\naffairs minister, will fly to Paris during the next three weeks\nto make filial arrangements for\nthe new program with French\nEducation Minister Christian\nFouchet.\nLesage, who met French Premier Georges Pompidou earlier\nthis week, announced Wednesday that France had granted\nspecial non-diplomatic status to\nthe Quebec government's general delegation here.\nIn an interview with the newspaper Le Monde Lesage is\nquoted as saying Quebec would\nnot break away from English-\nspeaking Canada.\n\"But, we wish to live in a\ncountry Where bilingualism is\ntruly respected,\" he said.\nBUENOS AIRES (AP)-John\nde Dios Filiberto, 79, world\nfamous tango composer, died in\nArgentina's capital Wednesday.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket made healthy gains during moderately \u2022 heavy trading\nThursday.\nThe TSE composite index attained a record high of 157.71\nwith a .20 gain.\nHusky Oil starred with a last-\nminute burst of trading and a\ngain of 1% to 1H4 after touching\na high of 11%.\nDomtar, B.C. Forest Products\nand Canada Steamship each advanced Vt to 23V4, Wi and 35.\nGreat Lakes Paper and Inter-\nprovincial Pipe each, added Vt\nto 29\u00abi and 97\u00ab. CPR rose %\nto 54 and BA Oil and Alberta\nGas Trunk A % each to 35%\nand 37%.\nAluminium gained Vt to 32.i.\nIn the senior metals list, Inco\nand Cominco each gained % to\n93% and 44, while Geco tacked\non % to 40%. Hudson Bay\ndropped % to 72%.\nGold trading saw Dome fall\n% td 34% and Cochenour Wil-\nlans 50 cents to $2.70.\nIn strong and steady senior\nwestern oils trading, Calgary\nand Edmonton jumped 1% to\n20 and Dome % to a high of\n18%. Central-Del Rio was ahead\n20 cents to $8.30 and Home A\nand B Vi each to 19% and 20.\nOn index, industrials rose .67\nto 168.85, base metals .25 to\n73.03 and western oils 2.76 to\n95.95. Golds fell 1.11 to 154.25\nand volume Thursday was 3,-\n944,000 shares compared with\n3,406,000 shares traded Wednesday\nMONTREAL (CP) - Papers\ngained a point and a half to\nlead stocks fractionally higher\nin moderate trade Thursday on\nthe Montreal and Canadian\nStock Exchanges.\nIndustrial volume was 286,500\nshares and mines and oils 862,-\n700 shares.\nComposite was up 0.6 at 159.5\non index as advances outnumbered declines 109 to 69.\nNew From FRIGIDAIRE for '65\nJEMCTIQN WASHERS\nWHC-W\n\u25a0pwWaiW',\nJETS AWAY LINT AND SCUM\nPowerful jet currents continuously jet away lint and\nscum as they rise to the surface \u2014 no more lint traps.\nJust really clean wash I\nNEW JET SPIN IS FASTEST, DRIEST\nOne of the 4 spin speeds you can select in the model\nshown here spins your wash drier than any home\nwasher you can buy \u2014 so dry many things are just\ndamp enough for ironing straight from the washer. This\nnew Jet Action washer brings your wash to -an ultrahigh speed jet spin, even buiky towels and sheets come\nout light and dry.\nBEST FRIGIDAIRE WASHER WARRANTY EVER\nThe Jet Action Washer comes with the strongest washer\nwarranty ever offered by Frigidaire. A one-year Warranty for repair of any defect without charge, plus a\nfour-year Protection Plan or furnishing replacement for\nany defective part in the transmission, drive motor and\nlarge capacity water pump.\nDESIGNED JET SIMPLE\nFOR TOP\nDEPENDABILITY\nThe Jet Action Washer has\na patented jet-simple mechanism designed to give you\nnew dependability. It contains many less parts! No\ndrive gears to wear out, no\npulleys to jam, not even a\nbelt to break or adjust. The\nFrigidaire Jet Action Washer, at your Frigidaire\ndealer now in beautiful\nmodern styling. Be first to\nsee and own onel\nDomtar gained % to 23%\nFraser % to 33 and; Great Lakes\n% to 29%; Prk*..Bro_:declined\n% to 48 and Conolidated % to\n43%. .-\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0>,:*.;    ,:.\nChem'cell, Imperial. Tobacco\nand Moore Corp.'..'gained Vi\neach to 18%, 17% and 59%.::-:\nBell Telephone and B.C., Tele=\nphone dropped % each, to 61%\nand 65%. CPR picked up. -to\n54.\nNEW YORK (AP)^-The stock\nmarket rebound continued\nThursday but was losing its\nsnap late in the day.\nAt the end of the first- hour;\nthe Dow Jones industrial average showed a gain of 2.34.but\nby the close held an advance\nof only 1.03. at 874.62;.   .\u2022\nThe Associated7 Press average\nof  60  stocks  advanced  .5  to\n3218. . ;\u2022;.\nThe star of the session was\nWoolworth, which spurted 2%\nto 31% on 116,600; shares.\n\u25a0-. U.S. Steel, Bethlehem and Republic Steel all closed unchanged; after abandoning early\ngains. General Motors and Ford\ntook small losses: Chrysler held\na gain ot Vt.\nAmong Canadian issues\nAluminihm Ltd. was up %, Canadian Pacific a point, Distillers Seagrams Vt, International\nNickel;j% and Walker Gooder-\nham %..Dome Mines fell %,\nMclntyre Porcupine Vt.\nOn the American Stock Exchange Canadian Marconi was\nup %, Scurry Rainbow Oil %,\nBrazilian Traction, Fargo Oil\nand Jupiter Corp. were down %.\nNews of the Bay\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold lace type; larger' type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy tor this column accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nin next day's publication.\nRotary Luncheon Friday 12:15\np.m. Hume Silver Room. \u201432-h\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT\n-32-h\nChristmas cards and napkins.\nBLAKEMAN'S\n-266-266\nMinor Hockey Meeting\nSunday, November 15,\n7:30 p.m. at Civic Centre\n\"Dickies\" black and white fits\nall sizes  at TOT  'N*. TEEN.\nGOLF CLUB MEMBERS\nMembers are asked to remove\ngolf equipment from Clubhouse\nby November 15.   ;      -265-266\nDrive with confidence.\nPhone 352-5252, Sterling Hotel\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\n-70-il\nOfficial opening of Kiwanis\nSenior Citizen's Villa, Nov. 14th,\n3 p.m. Open House \u2014 Everybody\nWelcome. -263-266\nFor girls, new styles in coats,\ndresses, jackets at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-266-tfn\nRemember Legion Tea & Bazaar\nSat. Nov. 14th 2-5. Door Prize\n35c admission.\n-266-267\nTurkey Shoot in Ymir\n10 A.M. Sunday, Nov. 22nd.\n\"\u25a0?.\"\"  Refreshments.\nRENWICK'S PORTRAITS\nPhone 352-5454 Now for\nChristmas Portraits\n-\u2022\u2022'\u25a0\u2022;.   -264-288\nGood selection of jackets for\nboys and girls sizes up to. 14 at\nTOT  'N\"  TEEN\n\u2014266-266\nOfficial opening of Kiwanis\nSenior Citizen's VUla, Nov. 14th,\n3 p.m. Open House \u2014 Everybody\nWelcome. \u2014263-266\nST. ANDREW'S WILLOW PT.\nBazaar Nov. 25, 2:30 p.m.\nChurch HaU - Tea 35c\n-266-h\nSt. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral\nTea and Bazaar, Nov. 14 will\nbe held in the Memorial Hall\n2-5 P.M. Tickets 35c. -266-266\nOfficial opening ol Kiwanis\nSenior Citizen's VUla, Nov. 14th,\n3 p.m. Open House \u2014 Everybody\nWelcome. \u2014263-266\nWasher\n$\n50\nMatching Dryer\n$1 OT\"\n299\nSTERLING\nHOM\namffsra!\nYour gifts packed and fancy\nwrapped for mailing.\nShop at BLAKEMAN'S\n-266-266\nLadies' dresses, new Christ-\nmasy styles. Regular sizes 10-\n52, all half sizes at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n' .      -266-tfn\nJust received!; Smart new fireplace screens in brass and cop-\nper finish. Tool-sets to match,\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nBALFOUR BEACH INN\nDining Room Open Saturday,\n6-8 p.m. Sunday, 5 - 7 p.m.\nONLY. Dinner Parties by Reservation, Phone 229-4235.    -261-h\nStylish New Dresses for girls,\nsmartly tappered pants for boys.\nYou pay no more for styles at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-232-tfn\nSUTHERLAND RENTS\nFor those pre-Christmas projects. Sanders; i floor and belt.\nSaws; band, skill, saber, radial\narm. Whatever you may need.\nPh. 352-3919. -266-267\nREMEMBER\nSat. Nov. 21st. at St. Paul's\nTrinity United Church \u2014 the old\nreliable mincemeat and good\nhome baking will be sold from\n2-5 P.M. -266-266\nFALL  SALE\nUp to 50% off. Toys, candies,\ngifts,  foliage plants,  dried\narrangements.\nNELSON FLOWERS LTD.\n533 Baker St.\n-266-273\nTo all Intermediate and Advance Bridge Players. PracUce\nMonday Nights. Hume Hotel. No\ncharge for remainder of November. Starting December 6th' the\ncharge will be 50c each. \u2014266-266\nNew England Blaze Kills\nSeven While 60 Escaoe\nBy ARSENE DAVIGNON\nHOLYOKE, Mass. (API-\nSeven persons \u2014five of them\nchildren\u2014died when a general\nalarm midnight blaze, believed\nset, destroyed a five-storey tenement.\nOfficials said the fire, which\napparently started on wooden\nrear porches, was the worst in\nthe history of this industrial city\nlocated in Massachusetts' Connecticut Valley.\nFour of the victims were\nmembers of one famUy. The\nother three dead were two\nsmall'brothers and a little.girl\nfrom .a third family.\nFive persons were taken to\nhospital. Some 50 to 60 persons\neither fled the building or were\nrescued down ladders. None of\nthe five injured was reported on\nthe danger list.\nFire Chief William W. Ma-\nhoney said the fast-spreading\nfire \"definitely was set.\" A volunteer rescue worker quoted a\nfirst floor tenant as saying he\nheard what he thinks was an\nintruder in the cellar of the\nbuilding shortly before the fire\nwas discovered.\nThere was confusion as to the\nnumber of victims untU six\nhours after the blaze was\nbrought under control in Holy-\noke's The Flats section. Fire\nofficials said at 8 a.m., however, that all known occupants\nhad been accounted for.\nRESCUED CHILDREN\nAnother volunteer workers, 19-\nyear-old Ronald N. Langlqis,\nsaid he was able to get into the\nburning building three times\nand rescue six or seven children. But, he said, on his fourth\ntrip flames began circling behind him and he had to dash\nfrom an upper floor despite the\nscreams of children.\nThe victims were:\nMrs. Anita Dupont, 52; her\ndaughter, 'Pauline, about 20;\nPauline's sons, Maurice, 3, and\nRonald, 2; 'Leo Roberge,. 10;\nLeo's brother, Edward R, Jr.,\n7, and Mary Anne Pronoyost, 9.\n-Ronald's body was not recovered untU hours affef'the'fire\nwas out.\nThe ijoberge boys' parents\nand a brother and sister were\namong the injured taken to\nHolyoke  Hospital;  Edward  R.\nYour\nHoroscope\n..........\nBy Frances Drake \\..\u00bbm*...m,\nNELSON\nBOY\nSCOUTS\nBOTTLE DRIVE\nSaturday Nov. 14\nStarts 9 A.M,\nWill pick up all bottles,\nclean rags and flower pots\nCARD OF THANKS\nOur sincere thanks to all our\nfriends in Kaslo, Ainsworth and\ndistrict for making our 25th\nWedding Anniversary such an\nenjoyable Occasion.\n. Mabel & Sparky Nordquist\n-266-266\nCARD OF THANKS\nSincere thanks to all our\nfriends and neighbors for their\nmany, acts of kindness and expressions of sympathy during\nour recent bereavement.   .\nThe Butler Family\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is according\nto the stars.\nFor Saturday, November 14,1964\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 Don't become tense or\nfretful because of past errors or\nmisunderstandings. Alter what\nyou should, then look up and\nFORWARD,\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Many smaU things may be\neasier to do than one big one\nnow. Whatever your obligations,\ntackle them with the will to win.\nAnd remember, there is more\nthan one way to try.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 You are just about left on your\nown now to decide on the means\nto gain benefits, how to parley\nefforts to get the most with the\nleast expenditure. Deliberation\nand conclusions must be accur-\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 If a thing has changed for\n\"the worse\", drop it; accept\nequally quickly something which\nwill be an improvement. The\npoint is: you MUST be decisive;\ndon't just sit on the sidelines.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 If adaptability, imagination\nand energies are wisely directed,\nyou and others whom you influence will draw readily on success patterns. This is no day for\ndawdling.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Grievances? Talk\nthem over sensibly, not heatedly,\nsince angry words can widen the\nbreach. If you avoid extremes,\nyou can have a satisfactory day. I\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER]\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Take a look and\nsee if you are going downhill in\nany matter through carelessness, not noting as you go along...\nDon't be fooled by flattery. Face\nFACTS!\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio)\u2014 Review the week's\nstanding, Can you note better\nmethods for the one ahead? Usually the Scorpion is progressive\nall along the line. When it's rest\ntime-DO!\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Ease a\ndriving pace, accelerate a sluggish one. Stay in the sure, logical route .of steady accomplishment \u2014 with even disposition.\nYou can impress others with\nyour poise.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Adapting yourself to circumstances \u2014 even\nunusual ones \u2014 may enable you\nto benefit in a very heart-warming way. Make decisions with the\nfuture in mind.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Before you finish this day, check whether you\nhave completed items that must\nbe done, or have skipped details,\noverlooked important observations. Tune inI\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 If you missed the\nmark somewhere, go over causes and effects. A change in methods and reasoning may be necessary. A new day for achievement in a new Way is before you.\nClimb with steady step UP \u2022\nWard.\nYOU BORN TODAY are endowed with great physical virility, and mental vigor, too. You\nmay,often surprise yourself, aa\nwell as others, at the power\nthrusts of which you are capable.\nA stalwart soul, you can also be\nadamant. In  emergencies  you\nRoberge Sr., about 50; his wife,\nNorris, 43; their daughter,\nBarbara, 16; their son, Gerald,\n3, and Gerald Pronovost, 5,\nbrother of Mary Anne,\nVolunteer rescue worker Robert C. Brooks, 21, of South Had-\nley Falls said he went to the\nscene when he got out of work\nat a nearby factory shortly\nafter 11 p.m.\n\"I was,talking later to this-\nfirst floor tenant,\" Brooks said,\n\"and he said he was puttering\naround down in the cellar just\nbefore the fire when he heard\nsomebody else. He said he\ncalled to him and the other guy\nsaid, 'To hell with it' and rah\nout the cellar door.\"\nThe victims apparently were\ntrapped on the upper floors\nwhen flames spread inside from\nthe rear porches and raced up\nstairways.\nYIYELLA\nand \u2022\nLANEROSS)\nSHIRTS\nby ARROW\n\u2022 SHADOW CHECKS\n\u2022 DARK CHECKS\n\u2022 TARTANS\n$1395-$1595\nChoose yours now and\nlet us hold it for you till\nChristmas.\nEM\u00b0FS\nTHE\nLTD.\nMAN'S  STORE\nThousands Caught in\nFlood-Stricken Area\nSAIGON (AP) - Communist\nanti-aircraft fire and heavy rain\nhampered efforts Thursday to assist thousands caught in central\nViet Nam's major flood disaster.\n\"Neither the weather nor the\nViet Cong promise much in the\nway of a letup,\" said an American Spokesman.\nMore than 1,000 persons have\nbeen reported drowned in flood\nwaters that have surged\nthrough 10 provinces.\nMany were caught in flood\nwaters that burst out of the\nmountains in Guang tin province.\nOther deaths were reported\nin coastal Binh Dinh province.\nA team of U.S. logistic and\nmedical experts was sent to the\ncentral region Thursday.\nDividends\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nAbitibi Power and Paper Co.\nLtd., common 14 cents, pfd.\n28Vs cents, Jan. 1, 1965, record\nDec. 1.\nAlmlnex Ltd. five cents, Dec.\n31, Dec. 1.\nBrack Mills Ltd., Class A 30\ncents plus $1.20 in arrears, Dec.\n15, record Nov, 20.\nDominion Steel and Coal Co.\nLtd, 10 cents, Feb. 2, 1965, record Jan. 11, 1965.\nGordon Mackay and Stores\nLtd., Class A 12U cents, Class\nB 12V4 cents, Dec, 15, record\nDec. 1.\nNoranda Mines Ltd., 35 cents\nplus 10 cents extra, Dec. 14,\nrecord Nov. 20.\nHugh Russel and Sons Ltd.,\nClass A 15 cents, Dec. 15, record\nNov. 18.\nMDs IN NORWAY\nWith a total of 4,492 doctors\nin Norway, there is one MD for\nact swiftly and accurately.-Be'every  812  inhabitants  of  the\ncertain all you espouse is sound. | country.\nWest of Saigon, Communist\nguerrillas smashed a government infantry column on its\nway to-a hamlet under attack,\nkilling 26 of the government\ntroops and wounding 33.\nThe Vietnamese news agency\npublished a message of support\nfrom President Johnson to Premier Tran Van Huong, who took\nover the government two weeks\nago.\n\"You may be certain,\" the\npresident said, \"that you have\nthe firm moral and material\nsupport of the United States in\nyour defence of the freedom\nand independence of the republic of Viet Nam.\"\nBut despite support from the\narmed forces and the United\nStates, Huong's position appeared shaky. Students were\nstiU talking of demonstrations\nagainst his government if he\ndoes hot order a cabinet reshuffle by Friday, and Buddhist\nleaders said their attitude toward the government was one\nof \"wait and see.\"\nHove the Job-Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\nW       LIMITED        '\nPhone 3S2-331S   '\nMASTER  PLllMBtP\nREXALL\nSUPER PLENAMlNS\nLiquid Vitamins\n9 Vitamins \u2014 B-12\nPlus Minerals\n$3.98-$6.98\nSold Only at\nCITY DRUG\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nBox 480 Phone 352-3611\nPrinted SaUcloth Cafe Curtains\nin white kitchen prints $2.95\nand $3.95 set.- I\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n\u2014266-267 !\n$4270 MISSING\nFROM CREDIT\nUNION OFFICE\nVICTORIA (CP. \u2014 Police are\ninvestigating the- theft of $4270.\nfrom the ..safe of a credit1 union's-'\noffice in downtown Victoria.\nPolice satti Tuesday the-theft\nfrom the BiC. Central Credit\nUnion office apparently '\u2022\u2022 took\nplace during the weekend but\nthat: there was no sign of the\nsafe having been forced. '\u2022\u25a0-?\nMissing from the Blanshard\nStreet office were 20 $100 bills,\n100 20s and a quantity of smaller,\nbills.\nPolice said they are satisfied\nthe safe was- properly locked\nwhen the office closed Saturday.\nMrs. Mabel Rye, the credit\nunion's office manager, said only\nunion employees have legal\nknowledge of the combination\nthat opens the safe.\nB.C. Central Credit Union is a\nclearing house \u25a0\u2022 and \"mother\"\ncredit union to smaller units\nthroughout the province.\nMrs. Rye said the loss, first\ndiscovered Monday, was fully\ncovered by insurance.\nRemember when\nBonded Stock\nkcame in that plain\nold bottle?^\nWell It doesn't\nanymore.\nWe've designed a\nnew bottle for our\nwhisky.\nAnd a new label.\nWe age Bonded\nStock a little longer\nnow as well. To\nmake every drop\njust that little\nmore mellow.\nWe've done\neverything we can.\nTry a bottle of\nBonded Stock soon.\nThe rest is up to you.\nGooderham's have been distiUtnt fine whiskiessince 1S32\n\u25a0ntlt not published or displwtd by thi UquwControl Board\norojitfnGownme nt of Bntaji Colo. m.\n'I\nGames\nMonopoly\t\nClue    .:!\t\nScrabble :_,__..__\nPassword   \u201e_.._\nCheckers \u2014_\t\nRing Toil\t\nK+mmnamm*-*******^*\nfool Sets-$2.49\nTea Sets\nFrom 990 to $2.98\nDoll Buggy\nFrom \".25\nBring your Christmas list and your Christmas spirit\ndown to our toyland. Do your gift-shopping ......\nhave a good time, too!\nGUNS\nFrom 88* to M.98\nJIG SAW PUZZLES\n40***2.98\nPAINT BY NUMBERS\nFrom Op*\nDOLLS\nfrom\n9<X-$6.98\nTINKERTOY\n!i from\n%    *1.20 - *4.69\nTri-Ang HO Scale Model Electric Traini and Acceisoriei\nTRAIN SETS...from $21.95\nWood. Vallance Hardware\nPhone 352-7221\n(1963)  Limited\nWHOLESALE \u2022 RETAIL\nNelion, B.C.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1964_11_13","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\/1.0435364","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 Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.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":"1964-11-13 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":"1964-11-13 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":""}]}