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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":" TEMPERATURES\nNELSON  46 53 .19\nToronto  27 58   \t\nCalgary   40 65 \u2014\nPenticton   54 57 tr.\nVancouver   40 52 .28\nWhitehorse  3 19 .04\nSpokane  45 53 .02\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the Kooienay-Columbia ared\nFORECAST\nKOOTENAY: A few showers.\nWinds light. Low and high at\nCranbrook and Crescent Valley\n40 and 48.\nVol. 63\nNELSON, B, C\u201e CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 2, 1964\n10 Cents\nNo. 162\nALL POLLS POINT TO JOHNSON\nWITH WINTER FAST APPROACHING ..\u201e\nthought it a good idea to have a last glimpse of sum-\nmer. In clearing out old Daily News files we came\nacross this Tlirtiir\u00a9 w)iir-V\u00bb WA (llAHnM nr\\a *.t IUh Im,k\nuwuo\u00b0 '\"10 y\u00ab*imo whu.ii wo inuugm one oi ine loveliest scenes of a Nelson summer. Don't you agree?\nGuerrillas Leave Four\nDead, 31 Wounded In\nAttack on U.S. Base\n27 Aircraft Damaged or\nDestroyed in Midnight Foray\nBIEN HOA, Viet Nam (AP) \u2014 A Communist guerrilla mortar unit slipped away apparently unscathed\nSunday with one of the Viet Cong's biggest psychological\nvictories of the Vietnamese war \u2014 the pounding of a score\nof U.S. Air Force B-57 jet bombers sent here after the Gulf\nof Tonkin crisis.\nOfficials tightened security around other U.S. air\nbases.\nThe attack, described by one\nAmerican as \"Hallowe'en in\nhell with all witches flying,\"\nkilled four Americans and\nwounded 31. Two Vietnamese\nwere killed and five wounded.\nThree battalions of Vietnamese marines and army troops\nset out at dawn in pursuit of ln South Viet Nam, said 27 aircraft in all were destroyed or\ndamaged in the 30-minute, post\nmidnight attack.\nWestmoreland said that, of\n20 B-57s parked on the field,\nfive were destroyed \u2014 two of\nthem reduced to ashes. Eight\nwere heavily damaged and the\nremaining seven slightly damaged.\nThree Vietnamese fighter-\nbombers were heavily damaged\nand a fourth' crashed on takeoff during the attack. Officials\nsaid this was not due to the\nmortar  fire.  The Vietnamese\nThe day's death toll brought\nto 219 the number of Americans killed in combat since the\nUnited States stepped up military help to South Viet Nam in\nDecember 1961.\nGen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. military commander\nthe Viet Cong guerrillas but\nmade no contact and found no\nevidence they suffered major\ncasualties, if any at all, in a\ncounterattack from the air in\npredawn darkness.\nThe air base, 15 miles from\nSaigon, is surrounded by thick\njungle.\nA fifth American was killed\na few hours after the attack in\nanother mortar assault about\nfive miles north of the air base.\nBut U.S. and Vietnamese officials doubted this attack was\ncarried out by the same, force\nthat pummelled the air base.\nPRANK COST\n$200,000\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Damage to\nfour Regina businesses is estimated at almost $200,000 as a result of what police say may\nhave been intended as a Hallowe'en \"prank.\"\nThe business, located on the\nground 'floor of the Somerset\nBlock, 11th Avenue and Smith\nStreet, were flooded by water\nwhen two sinks in a second-\nfloor bathroom were plugged and\nthe four taps left running Saturday night.\nFlooded were the House of\nLiving, a furniture store; Cas-\nkie's Furs; a washer service\noutlet and Riley's Reproductions,\na firm that specializes in reproducing drawings and maps.\nChris Siller, vice-president of\nthe furniture store, was quoted\nby police as estimating damage\nat $75,000. Robert L. Caskie estimated damage in his furniture\nstore at $100,000,\npilot escaped.\nFour air-sea rescue helicopters were heavily damaged.\nOfficials said the Viet Cong\nlobbed about 100 shells into the\nair base with deadily aim, for\nthe shots landed in tight patterns around the jet bombers.\nThe Reds also aimed for\nbuildings housing U.S. personnel. Seven buildings were destroyed and 11 were damaged.\nU.S. officials ordered security\ntightened around other air installations in South Viet Nam,\nThey expressed fears of similar attacks at Da Nang air\nbase, 380 miles northeast of\nSaigon, and at Saigon airport.\nDa Nang. is reported even\nmore vulnerable than Blen Hoa.\nBased at Da Nang are U.S. Air\nForce F-100 and F-102 jet fighters in addition to other types\nof combat craft.\nAt Saigon airport there are\n10 F-102s, six RF-101 jet reconnaissance planes and other U.S.\nAir Force and army planes, including hundreds of helicopters\nand utility aircraft.\nMother ol 13\nTo Lay Wreath\nOTTAWA CP - A Windsor,\nOntario mother of 13 will place\na remembrance wreath on behalf of all Canadian motherhood at the national centopath\non Remembrance Day.\nMrs. Homer Rivait, who lost\nthree sons in the Second World\nWar, will place her wreath following Governor-General Vanier\nat the national remembrance\nceremony.\nMrs. Rivait's three sons all\nserved with the Essex Scottish\nRegiment. Privates Leon and\nAlphonse Rivait were killed at\nDieppe in 1942, Private Lawrence Rivait was killed in North\nWest Europe' in 1944.\nTwo other sons, Raymond and\nEdward, served during the Second World War. Raymond spent\nthree years in a German prisoner-of-war camp.\nMr. and Mrs. Rivait will celebrate their 49th wedding anniversary in May. They have 10\nsurviving children, 58 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren,\nNationalization\nOf Steel\nExpected First\nBj, TRASERWIGHTON\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Harold Wilson is likely\nto stake his majority in the new\nParliament on an early bid to\npush through nationalization of\nthe British Steel Industry, political sources said Sunday,\nWilson would have to force the\nhighly controversial measure\nthrough Parliament sustained only by his party's over-all majority of five House of Commons\nseats.\nThe Liberal party, while prepared to support Labor on some\nmeasures, will flatly oppose the\nsteel nationalization measure.\nThe Liberals hold nine seats in\nthe House of Commons,\nBut the sources said this will\nnot deter Wilson from spotlighting Labor's pledge on steel nationalization in the speech from\nthe throne in the House of Lords\nTuesday opening the new Parliament.;\nWilson is said to be strongly\nimpressed by the guidance of his\npredecessor, Earl Attlee, who, as\na Labor prime minister in the\n1950-51 \"stalemate\" Parliament,\nkept his party in power despite\nceaseless opposition attack with\na majority of only seven seats.\nAttlee's advice to the new Labor party leader after last\nmonth's general election was to\nmove boldly and swiftly on the\nmost controversial aspects of his I\nprogram.\n28 Perish\nIn Floods\nTunisian Army\nBattles Nature\nAfter Rains\nTUNIS (AP) \u2014 Rampaging\nirivers flooded vast areas of\nTunisia Sunday killing at least\n28 persons and isolating President Habib Boutuiba in the\nsouthern oasis of Gafsa.\nUnits of the 20,000-man Tunisian army were thrown into the\nbattle against surging waters.\nHelicopters flew mercy missions to towns and villages cut\noff from the rest of the country,\nBourguiba, bedridden in Gafsa\non a speech-making tour of the\nTunisian south,' found the roads\nflooded by the rivers after three\ndays of torrential rains.\nThe president is suffering\nfrom nasal infection and is not\nexpected to leave Gafsa until\nlater this week.\nThe rain generally subsided\nin the afternoon but swollen\nrivers continued spilling over\ntheir banks, smashing fragile\ndwellings and killing men and\nanimals.\nAuthorities feared that the\nnumber of victims may reach\nseveral score.\nThe disaster struck as government officials toured the\ncountry, urging people to vote\nin next Sunday's parliamentary\nand presidential elections. Although there is only one list of\ncandidates, the vote is supposed\nto show popular approval of the\ngovernment's . policy of \"progressive socialism.\"\nPairtlJffilrr\nUnconquered\nMawenzi Peak\nNAIROBI (AP) - The sheer\neast face of Mawenzi,. 16,890-\nfoot twin peak of Mount Kilimanjaro, has been conquered\nfor the' first time by two Royal\nAir Force climbers.\nFlt.-Lt. John Edwards, 30, and\nCpl. William Thomson, 28, de*\ncrlbed their feat after returning to this Kenya capital from\nTanganyika this weekend.\nThe east face of Mawenzi is\na tangle of lava rocks, gulleys\nand ice cliffs. An almost ver<\ntlcal 5,000-foot rock face has to\nbe'scaled to reach the top.\nEleven years ago an East\nAfrican Airways plane plowed\ninto the towering cliffs at 15,000\nfeet, killing all 18 aboard. Until\nnow the scene of the tragedy\nnever been reached. Edwards and Thomson discovered\nthe wreckage 20 feet below the\ncrest of a ridge on the way to\nthe summit.\nScattered over the mountainside were skeletons, debris of\nrotting handbags, shoes, clothing and twisted metal,\nEdwards told reporters they\nused a double rope for the ascent, with about 100 feet between them. In i many places\nthey faced sheer drops of 2,000\nand 3,000 feet,\n18 Killed\nIn Train\nCollision\n\u2022 BERLIN (AP) - At least 18\npersons were killed and more\nthan 100 Injured in a train collision in Communist East Germany Sunday night, the official\nEast German news agency\nADN reported.\nADN said the collision occurred when the engine of a freight\ntrain overran a stop signal and\ncrashed into the Berlin-Rostock\nexpress near the small town of\nLanghagen.\nSome of 100 injured were in\nserious condition, ADN said,\nRostock, destination of the express, is East Germany's biggest port on the Baltic sea. A\nferry links it with Fedser, Denmark. ,\nNone Shows Lead\nFor Goldwater\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A nationwide survey of presidential polls ln the United States, local, state and national, shows them pointing unanimously to a victory for\nPresident Johnson In Tuesday's election.\nThe figures indicated that Johnson's percentage of\nthe popular vote may approximate the record highs set\nin this century.\nAssociated Press bureaus throughout the U.S. reported latest figures in surveys taken in their areas.\nSome were for cities, some for countries, and some statewide.\nThree Arrested\nIn Jewel Theft\nNEW YORK (AP) - Three\nmen have been arrested and\ncharged in Thursday's startling\njewel theft from the famed New\nYork Museum of Natural History.\nA fourth man also was booked\nalthough not on a charge directly related to the theft,\nThe FBI said Sunday the jewels have not yet been recovered,\nAssistant Chief Inspector Joseph L. Ooyle of the New York\npolice department described the\nthieves aa professionals.\nInitial speculation was that the\ntheft of the 22 gems from New\nYork's fashed Museum of Natural History Thuwday night- was\nthe work of amateurs.,\" .\nThe gems are formally.valued\nat $900,000 but several,' such as\nthe world's largest star sapphire,\nthe renowned Star of India, and\nstar miby described as the\nmost perfect In the world, are\nregarded as priceless.\nNone of those listed\u2014including a survey taken in Arizona,\nSenator Barry Goldwater's\nhome state \u2014 showed the Republican candidate leading.\nGoldwater has consistently\nscoffed at the polls. He said\nFriday night: \"I've had a feeling for the last two or three\nweeks that we're going to win\nthis thing. I know the polls\ndon't agree with me, but they\nnever have.\"\nRecord highs in the presidential elections of this century\nwere:\nFranklin D. Roosevelt\/Democrat, 60.8 per cent of the popular vote in 1936.\nWarren G. Harding, Republican, 60,4, in 1920.\nDwight D. Elsenhower, Republican, 57.4 in 1956.\nA semi-final poll by George\nGallup, director of the American Institute of Public Opinion,\ngave Johnson 64 per cent and\ndescribed this as an \"unprecedented lead.\"\nThe most recent nationwide\nfigures by pollster Louis Harris gave Johnson 60 per cent\nand Goldwater 34 per cent, With\n6 per cent undecided.\"\u25a0\nMAN TUMBLES\nINTO VOLCANO\nFORT MORESBY, Hew 'Siii-\nnea (AP) \u2014 A 24-year-old Ausr\ntralian stood on the rim of an\nactive volcano Sunday to photograph the smoke-belching crater\n\u2014 ahd fell 200 feet to his death\ninside it.\nWorld News Briefly\nMOSCOW AP-\u2014 Russia's new\nrulers Sunday reaffirmed their\nsupport of the key tenets of former Premier Khrushchev's position in the Kremlin's dispute\nwith China.\nFor the first time since\nKhrushchev's r ouster, the Soviet\nCommunist party organ Pravda\nattached \"chauvinism and petty\nbourgeois adventurism . . .opportunism and dogmatic or revisionist distortion of theory\" \u2014\nall epithets hurled at Peking\nleaders at the height of the\nSino-Soviet dispute.\nOTTAWA CP - Russia has\napparently dropped its objections to the Canada-sponsored\nmeeting on United Nations\npeacekeeping operations which\nopens here today.\nHowever, diplomatic sources\nsaid Sunday, this does not indicate any softening of the hard\nSoviet attitude on non-payment\nof its assessed share of UN\npeacekeeping costs in the Middle East and The Congo.\nBERLIN AP - Well informed\nsources said Sunday the West\nBerlin government has threatened to jail anyone who helps\nrefugees flee from Communist\nEast Germany while the wall\nis open for West Berliners to\nvisit relatives in the east.\nThe informants said the West\nBerlin police are also under orders not to publicize any escapes or other incidents at the\nwall during this period.\nPHOENIX, Ariz. AP - Senator Barry Goldwater is. conceding five states in his quest for\nthe White House, but he figures\nthe Republican ticket stands a\nchance in all the rest.\nWASHINGTON AP -. President Johnson sought means Sunday to tighten U.S. defences\nagainst mortar attacks such as\nraked an air base in South Viet\nNam earlier in the day. He ordered the jet bombers destroyed in the strike replaced\nimmediately.\nIn another national survey,\nthe \"popcorn poll\" showed\nJohnson leading Goldwater by\n78 to 22 per cent. In this poll,\npopcorn purchasers in movie\ntheatres and supermarkets\nname their preference for president. In 1948, when virtually all\nthe polls were wrong, the \"popcorn poll\" showed Harry S Truman the winner.\nPollster Samuel Lubell, summarizing his nationwide findings, said last week \"next Tuesday's voting should bring landslide victory for president Johnson.\"\nIn the state and local polls\nreported by AP bureaus, John-\nsort's highs were in New York\nand in one Iowa poll.\nThe New York Daily News\nstraw b a 11 o t for Saturday\nshowed Johnson with 75.3 per\ncent of the straws.\nAstronaut\nKilled\nT-38 Jet Crashes\nOn Takeoff,\nFreeman Dies\nHOUSTON AP - Capt. Theodore C. Freeman, a U.S. astronaut, was killed Saturday when\nhis T-38 jet plane crashed on\ntakeoff.\nConfirmation of the death waa\nmade by Donald K. Slayton, coordinator of astronaut affairs at\nthe manned spacecraft centre\nhere.\nThe crash occurred at Ellington Air Force Base, about midway between downtown Houston\nand the space centre installation.\nFreeman, 34, a native of Hav-\nerford, Pa., was among the\nthird group of 14 astronauts\nselected Oct. 18,1963, and began\nhis training at this space centre Feb. 1,\nHe had been an air force test\npilot.\nShortly after the .crash in an\nopen field, Slayton appeared at\nthe nearby Freeman home and\nnotified the widow,' the former\nFaith Dudley Clark of Orange,\nConn., officially of the death.\nThe Freemans have one\ndaughter, Faith Huntington\nFreeman, 10.\nDrawn Out Flag\nDebate Protested\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A' Progressive Conservative and a New\nDemocratic Party' member of\nthe Commons Saturday denounced the idea ot any protracted new.flag debate in Parliament.\nGordon Fairweather, Conservative MP for Royal, called the\nidea \"Intolerable\" in the face of\nreports that party leader John\nDiefenbaker Ib considering delaying a vote on acceptance of\nthe report of the Commons flag\ndesign committee.\nAndrew Brewin (NDP \u2014 Toronto Greenwood) said a filibuster would endanger Confederation. Both spoke at a Univer-\n. of Toronto student-sponsored conference on the question of whether political parties\nfoster or impede Canadian national unity.\nMr. Brewin said a current issue affecting national unity is\nthe flag dispute, and he had\nseen reports that Mr. Diefenbaker intends td continue a\n\"filibuster\" on the flag vote\nand also on granting supply to\nthe government.\n'If this is true,\" he said, \"I\ncan't imagine a course of action better calculated to wreck\nnational unity.\n\"Further, it is hard to imagine any course of action better designed to bring-Parlia-\nment into complete and utter\ndisrepute.\"\nIf the \"filibuster\" should lead\nto an election, there would be\nan even greater danger to Confederation.\nNo one could doubt that an\nelection on the flag issue would\narouse anti -French and anti-\nEnglish sentiments and'would\ngravely endanger goodwill between the two language groups\nthat was essential to unity.\nAll possible, pressure must be\nput on the Progressive Conservative leader, Mr. Brewin said,\nso that the party claiming to\nhave made the major contribution to forming Confederation\nshould not contribute to wrecking it.\nMr. Fairweather, who was\nnot in Parliament for the new\neruption of the flag issue last\nWeeks said he feels \"very\nstrongly that no flag design is\nmore important than the institution of Parliament,\"\n\"Renewal of a prolonged flag\ndebate or, God forbid, an election on the issue Would be intolerable and Indeed a tragic\nthing for the country,\" the New\nBrunswick MP said.\n40 Families\nLeft Homeless\nBy Tornado\nCROTONE, Italy (AP) - A\ntornado, the second in two days\nin southern'Italy, lashed across\nCalabria Sunday tearing down\ntrees, whole rows of telegraph\npoles, and ripping the roofs off\nscores of houses.        '\nFirst reports from villages inland from this city on the Ionian coast said at least 40 families were left homeless an-'\nsome persons were injured.\nRaces To Watch in U&\nWASHINGTON (CP) - The\nspotlight is on the presidential\nrace in Tuesday's U.S. election,\nbut across the country there\nare a number of key contests\nfor governor, and senator... In\nmany cases,, they are inter-\nwined with the presidential\nrace. In brief, they are:\nArkansas.\nGovernor Orval Faubus\nseeks an unprecedented sixth\nstraight two-year term. Win-\nthrop Rockefeller, brother of\nNew York's Governor Nelson A.\nRockefeller, Is making a determined bid to become his\nadopted state's first Republican\ngovernor in a century.\nRockefeller has accused Faubus of building a vast political\nmachine with state jobholders,\nand criticized his handling of\nillegal gambling operations in\nthe Hot.Springs resort area.\nFaubus has accused Rockefeller\nof being a racial integration-\nist. A rejuvenated Republican\norganization and a sharp increase in the number of Negro\nvoters could be the keys in this\nrace.\nCalifornia\nSenator Pierre Salinger, a\nDemocrat, has been campaigning feverrishly for the Senate\nseat to which he was appointed\nthis summer after the death of\nDemocrat Clair Engle. Republican nominee George Murphy,\nonce a stage and screen song-\nand-dance star, has been going\nat a more leisurely pace and is\nreported to have cut sharply\ninto Salinger's early lead.\nSalinger, onetime White\nHouse press secretary, has emphasized his association with\nthe late president John F. Kennedy. Murphy, while agreeing\nwith most of the views of the\nRepublican presidential nominee, Barry Goldwater, has declined to endorse him. Both\ncandidates are plagued by some\ninfighting in their own parties.\nIllinois\nGovernor Otto Kener, a Democrat, seeks a second term.\nCharles H. Percy, fresh from a\nsuccessful business career, has\nbeen campaigning since July\n1963. A victory could push him\ninto the future Republican presidential picture. Percy has endorsed and campaigned for\nGoldwater.\nMichigan -;,'\nRepublican Governor1 George\nRomney is shooting for a second term on the claim that his\nadministration helped improve\nthe state's economy and financial picture. Representative\nNell SUebler, the state's Demo\ncratic congressman \u2022 at \u2022 large,\ncontends the improved economy\nis due to a.better national economy.\nEven though Romney has\npointedly refused to endorse\nGoldwater, Staebler has tried to\nlink the governor and the presidential nominee. Key to the\nrace could be whether many of\nthose who vote for President\nJohnson\u2014who is favored to win\nin Michigan \u2014 will switch to\nRomney for governor.\nNew York\nVote \u2022 switching also is expected to be a factor in New\nYork's Senate' election between\nRepublican incumbent Kenneth\nB. Keating and former attorney-general Robert F. Kennedy,\nbrother of the late president.\nKennedy has drawn large and\nKen emotional crowds since\nplunging into the campaign in\na state which he hasn't lived\nin since childhood. Keating has\nbeen hammering on this \"carpetbagger\" issue.\nSome  Democrats  have  said\nthey'll vote for Keating because\nof his liberal record and refusal\nto endorse Senator Goldwater.\nOhio\nRepresentative Robert Taft\nJr.; is challenging Democratic\nSenator Stephen' M. Young's\nbid for a second term at the\nage of 75. Taft, 47-year-old son\nof the late Senator Taft, is\nmaking his move after one term\nas congressman - at \u25a0 large and\nseveral years in the Ohio legislature. A victory could well\nlaunch him on a later try for\nthe presidential nomination\nwhich eluded his father.\nYoung, a staunch supporter of\nthe Kennedy-Johnson administration, has sought votes by\nseeking to link Taft with Gold-\nwater. Taft has endorsed the\nRepublican nominee and campaigned for him, but has pointed\nto differences on issues, notably\ncivil rights.\nOklahoma\nThis is the first big game for\nBud Wilkinson since he quit a\nsuccessful career as football\ncoach to plunge into Republican politics. The Republican\nSenate nominee is battling\nyoung state Senator Fred Har-\nrls for the two remaining years\nof the term of the late Democratic Senator Robert S. Kerr.\nEach man strongly supports\nhis party's presidential nominee.\nPennsylvania\nGoldwater appears to be the\nmajor issue in the Senate race\nbetween incumbent Republican\nHugh Scott and Miss Genevieve\nBlatt, three - time Democratic\nstate secretary for internal affairs.\nScott backed Pennsylvani;\nGovernor William W. Scrantc\nin his belated bid for the Re\npublican presidential nomina\ntion. He has reluctantly endorsed Goldwater, but points to\nmany differences between\nthem. Miss Blatt Is criticizing\nScott's endorsement in hopes\nthat a predicted Johnson victory\nwill make her the third woman\nin the Senate.\nTexas\nSenator Ralph Yarborough, a\nliberal Democrat, faces opposition from a hard-campaigning\nRepublican George Bush.\nBut a onetime foe, Johnson, has\nsolidly endorsed his homestate\nsenator. Bush, a Dallas oilman\nmaking his first race, is the son\nof former senator Prescott Bush\nof Connecticut. He is a. strong\nsupporter of Goldwater.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964\nStreet Corners\nBy The Informer\nBy chance, last week I happened in the vicinity of one of our\n(eats of learning. To my surprise a group of students were\ndiscussing (and in heated terms)\na recent column on bad cycling\nhfcbits. You should have heard\nsome of the arguments in favor\nof our comments. I was disillusioned when my supporters jumped into their cars and drove off.\n-;\u25a0-*-: #   *\nWith the upsurge in the arts\nfield, it seems peculiar that some\nenterprising citizens have not\nthought of inviting area groups\nto Nelson. I am thinking particularly of-our adjacent theatre\nand music groups. Maybe the\nNelson Little Theatre Association\ncould sponsor the upcoming Crucible production which is a cooperative effort by Kootenay\ndrama, clubs. Nelson does not\nhave a theatre of performing\narts heritage. We should start\ngetting one for future generations. We have the means; we\nhave the opportunity, and we\nhave the willingness. All that is\nneeded is same action.\n\u2022-.- \u2022 \u25a0-.\nA good example- of co-operation was seen in the recent show\nat a downtown hotel. Groups\ncontributing to the success of\nthe show were the B.C. Vocational School, Kootenay School\nof Fine Art, the university, L. V.\nRogers High School students,\n. local businessmen and countless\nothers. This is the kind of spirit\nthat the arts need.\nDowntown parking, at any\ntimei is fast becoming for many\nmotorists an impossibility. Existing meter spots are crammed\nfull from morn' till night. Motorists must be utterly depressed\nNelion Civic Centre\nSchedule\nTODAY\nMonday, Nov. 2, 1964\nARENA\n9:00-11:00-Shinny   Hockey\n3:45-4:55\u2014Figure   Skating\n5:00- 7:00-Minor Hockey\n9:00 Juveniles\nRECREATION HALL\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Playschool\n7:00- 9:0O-rMen's Recreation Night\nnot being able to find a suitable\nspot to park after many minutes of fruitless searching. What\nis the answer?\n\u2022  * *\nMy third Item in Tuesday's column regarding the large chunk\nof stone neglected to point out\nthat it is situated on the west\nside of the Latimer Street\nbridge. Talking of the Latimer\nbridge, Tuesday morning saw\nfive cars attempting to cross the\nbridge. They had a hard time\nmaking it. As I have said before\nwe need a large supply of sand\nadjacent to the bridge.\n220 Delegates\nAttend Meet\n'\"Here are many causes for\nthe world being divided\", said\nA. M. Didur, representative of\nthe Watch Tower Bible and Tract\nSociety, to an audience of 370 at\nthe Civic Centre Sunday afternoon.\nSpeaking on the subject, \"Our\nDivided World\u2014 Is it Here to\nStay?\" he further stated, \"Although the divided world appears to be permanent, it is not\nhere to stay because God has\nproposed the uniting of mankind\nin our day.\"\nThe 220 delegates to the three-\nday convention were an hand\nFriday evening to hear Mr. Didur welcome the delegates and\noutline the assembly theme,\n\"Speak the Word of God With\nBoldness.\" '\nSaturday afternoon five new\nmembers were ordained, bringing the total number of ordained\nministers in the Kootenay west\narea to 209. Mel Dunlop of the\nNelson congregation handled the\nbaptismal arrangements.\nMany attended the showing of\na two-hour color film, \"Proclaiming 'Everlasting Good\nNews' Around the World\" Saturday evening when 302 saw scenes\nfrom a world tour of assemblies\nattended by over 580,000 persons\nin 1963.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Tuesday\n7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\nAdult Entertainment\nUNDER THE YUM YUM TRE7\nJack Lemmon, Carol Lynley\nNEWS and CARTOON\nTONIGHT- TUES. \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00 \u25a0 9:10\nNOW A LOST WOfllO BECOMES A NEW WORLD OF ADVENTUREI\nMMRSfflCOMW.-.\nyuLBRynnER\nSHIRlEyAlUlERELQ\n\\t\u00a3\t\nHinisnr\nuwShs\nmx*mma\nSTARTS WEDNESDAY AT 8:00 P.M.\nKICHAHD\n0TOOLE\n_l   \u2022-.. imLiiniiiomiyjoi\nBECKET\n* Umaemmuemmiua.\n. j plural iumou wto.\nROIOTIU\u00a3!giWAI!DANHALTjfe'AN-iNCX_ii\nSawlog Production\nContinues Big Gains\nNelson Forest District sawlog\nproduction was again up from\nlast year in October, Increasing\nby more than five million feet\nboard measure to bring the\nyear's total scale for the 10-\nmonth period to 697,362,793 fbm.\nThe October output was 105,-\n401,054 fbm, compared to 99,905,-\nSki Team\nTopic In\nLecture Series\n\"The Notre Dame Experiment: Education Plus Competition\" will be the topic Wednesday night when the Canadian national ski team is discussed in\nthe Contemporary '65 lecture\nseries on the Notre Dame Uni\nverslty of Nelson campus.\nSpeakers will be Dave Jacobs,\nhead coach of the national ski\nteam and part time mathematics\ninstructor at the university, and\nJohn Piatt of Trail, vlce-chalr\nman of the International competition committee for the Cana-\ndian Amateur Ski Association\nwhich sponsors the experiment\nThe two speakers will discuss\nthe training program which began on Kokanee Glacier near\nNelson, in August and is now\ncontinuing as 16 skiers attend\nNDU, the B. C. Vocational\nSchool, and L. V. Rogers senior\nsecondary school. What the\ntraining includes, where the\nskiers will race, why Nelson\nwas chosen for the experiment,\nand how team members are selected from across Canada will\nbe explained.\nMr. Jacobs, a native of Montreal, was Canadian downhill\nchampion in 1957, and was a\nleading member of the Canadian\nFIS team in 1950. In 1963 he was\nselected best Canadian in the\nIPSRA professional racing circuit. A senior in the Canadian\nSki Instructors Alliance, he la a\nmerrtber of the technical committee and an examiner for the\nCSIA. Designer and builder of\nthe $760,000 Talisman ski resort\nin Kimberley, Ont., he is also\ntechnical skiing consultant for\nthe National Film Board of Canada.\nHe graduated from St. Lawrence University, Canton, New\nYork, with a BSc in mathematics, and spent three years in engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.\nSupplementing the program\nwill be a color film, \"Ski Total,\"\nsponsored by the French government for the French \u00a7kl Federation. It shows the national ski\nteam of France in action in the\nAlps.\n721 fbm in October, 1963. Big.\ngest gains were in cedar and\nhemlock. The total for the year\nto date climbed nearly 50,000,ooo\nfeet to 697,362,793 fbm.\nThe figures in detail:\nSawlogs:        1963 1964\nFir 23,026,619      22,451,200\nCedar 8,599,575 14,121,162\nSpruce 29,059,123 22,499,758\nLdgp. Pine 3,363,300 3,363,128\nHemlock 10,333,370 20,421,305\nBalsam 3,643,574 2,448,857\nWhite Pine 2,631,781 2,424,597\nYel. Pine 1,088,041 844,525\nLarch 11,169,201 10,732,395\nRejects 7,073,670 6,094,908\nBirch 7,495 -\nCottonwood     9,972 9,229\nTotals             \t\nfor mo.    99,905,721    103,401,054\nTotals to date\nfor year: 647,438,303    697,362,793\nMINOR PRODUCTS\nPoles, Piles\ndin. ft.) 186,534 297,945\nMine Timb. 18,013 227,131\nMine Props\n(COrds) 12 -\nCordwood 72 7\nFence Posts\n(Cords) 092 751\nHallowe'en\nQuiet Affair\nIn Kootenays\nHallowe'en has come and gone\nwith comparative quietness in\nthe Kootenays with no major\nacts of vandalism reported.\nSome pre-hallowe'en exercises\ncost two Cranbrook men $200\neach when they appeared in\nCranbrook police court charged\nwith possession of stolen goods.\nPolice stated that George\nStirby and Henry Urstein were\ncharged in Cranbrook after they\nremoved some lettering from\nthe Royal Canadian Legion\nbuilding.\nNelson RCMP are still investigating minor vandalism that\noccured near Procter. Several\nroad signs were removed and\nleft lying on the roadside and\ngates Were also removed from\nseveral residences in the area.\nSimilar incidents were also reported in Crescent Valley along\nwith reports of a couple of roadblocks being set up by pranksters.\nOnly one minor accident was\nreported ln (he area over the\nweekend. An unidentified Jaffray\nman was taken to hospital after\nhis car left Highway No. 3 near\nGalloway in East Kootenay.\nThe accident occured late Saturday night and Fernie RCMP\nare still investigating the mishap.\nSix of 14 Fire\nAlarms\nRescue (alls\nThere are men for whom the\nbell tolls often, and they belong\nto the Nelson Fire Department.\nAny doubt of this will be dispelled by a check of the report\nfor September, which lists 14\nalarms, six of which were rescue\ncalls.\nAlthough no property damage\nwas Incurred during the month,\nreported Fire Chief E. S.\nOwens, the low fire incidence\nrate \"is directly attributed to\nour continued fire education and\nprevention activities.\"\nA total of 63 property inspections were conducted, the chief's\nreport continued, with various\nviolations and hazards corrected\nor removed. In addition, fire\nalarm tests were conducted in\nall schools, theatres and hotels,\n\"Much time has been devoted\nto all schools to ensure proper\ndrills and procedures.\" The first\nessential in the event of a fire\nin a school, said Chief Owens, is\nthe controlled and systematic\nevacuation of students.\nVarious youth organizations\nand school children have been\nconducted on fire station tours,\nand four general fire practices\nwere held during the month to\nimprove the efficiency of new\nand old members of the department.\nSome of the alarm causes listed in the report include: overheated wall switch, children playing with matches, heart seizure,\nthroat obstruction, heart attack,\nepileptic seizure, diabetic coma,\noverflowing gas tank, overheated tar pot, children tampering\nwith alarm box, fire in mattress\nand ignited garbage behind hotel.\nNative of Trail Appointed\nForest Information Officer\nOTTAWA - The federal De-\npartment of Forestry has announced the appointment of W.\nA. (Bill) Edwards, 46, as regional information officer for British\nColumbia, to facilitate the dissemination of information on the\ndepartment's forest research\nprograms conducted within the\nprovince.\nA native of Trail, B.C., Mr,\nEdwards will be located in Victoria, and will later be working\nfrom the department's new Forest Research Laboratory and\nRegional Headquarters, due to\nopen within the next few months.\nThe new laboratory, which\nwill provide expanded and improved facilities for continuing\ninvestigations on a wide range\nof forestry and forest protection\nproblems, is the latest step in\nthe development of federal research in British Columbia, to\nkeep pace with the dynamic\ngrowth of the province's forest\nindustries.\nThe department also operates\na forest products laboratory ln\nVancouver, and is responsible\nfor the federal administration\nof the Federal-Provin*ial Forestry Agreements which have\nplayed a significant role in the\ndevelopment of sustained-yield\nforestry in British Columbia.\nMr.. Edwards, whose principal\nfunction will be to intensify the\nflow of information to all groups\nand agencies interested in the\nprogress and results of forest\nresearch, comes to the federal\nDepartment of Forestry from\nthe British Columbia Forest\nService with which he served\nfor more than three years as\npublic information officer for\nthe Prince George Forest District.\nMr.. Edwards has broad experience in the newspaper and\nwriting fields, and in broadcast-\nSlave Auction Halted\nAs Roadway Cleared\nThe Notre Dame University\nstudent-sponsored \"Slave Auction\" came to a sudden and unexpected stop Saturday afternoon\nwhen city police officers ordered\nthe scholars to vacate a blocked-\noff section of roadway near the\nbus depot.\nThe students had gained permission from City Council to use\nthe roadway for their auction.\nHowever, the permit expired at\n2 p.m. Saturday while students\n20 Members\nIn New\nKootenay Board\nThe recently-formed Kootenay\nReal Estate Board multiple list-\ning service of Nelson, serving\nthe Kootenays, has processed 91\nlistings, resulting in seven sales\nsince its formation in Creston.\nOf these, 22 were commercial,\n18 rural and 51 residential. The\nmembership of the board stands\nat 20 with representation ln\nGrand Forks, Trail, Castlegar,\nNelson, Creston, Cranbrook,\nMarysville, KhMberley and Invermere. Sales staff totals 45.\nThe new method of real estate\nmerchandising is designed along\nthe lines of a similar board in the\nOkanagan, where after six years\nsales have climbed from $2,000,-\n000 to $15,000,000.\nThe Board recently decided to\nsupply the Department of Imml?\ngratlon with commercial and\nrural listings in order to givC\nthe service world-wide Coverage to help satisfy enquiries\nfrom overseas regarding business opportunities in this Part of\nCanada.\nJ. C. INK\nPROMOTED\nIN ST. JOHN\ntrail \u2014 Joseph Charles ink\nof Trail is one of several Canadians honored by promotions in\nthe Most Venerable Order of the\nHospital of St. John of Jerusalem. He has been advised by\nthe priory secretary that he has\nbeen promoted to an officer\nbrother.\nMr. Ink is honorary vice-chairman of the Trail branch Of St.\nJohn Ambulance and has served\n10 years as honorary secretary-\ntreasurer.\nIn 1959 he was admitted as a\nserving brother in the Order Of\nSt. John.\nBorn in Nelson, Mr. Ink is a\ngraduate of the University of\nB.C. and is supervisor of safety\nand hygiene for the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company.\nHe has been active in community\naffairs for many years, particularly in the local safety council\nin which he is chairman Of the\nindustrial section.\nOn the job, his drive and influence is responsible for the safety campaigns that have given\nCominco one of the best safety\nrecords in the industry.\nMr. Ink is married and has\ntwo sons, Howard and Norman,\nboth \"employed with Cominco.\nAlways there\nwith ready cash...\nFor Home Decorating\nor an^ good reason.\n#6022 to #5,00022\nNIAGARA   FINANCE   COMPANY LIMITED\n240 Branch** fromCowt to Coaat\nNelson Branch Conveniently Located at\n-HMMaUi-Sfc-\u25a0\u2022*,._       \u2014  Phone 352-7232\nYour Doctor's\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed\nPromptly\nWhile Yeu Wait\ner by Delivery\n.PSK ALL 6AV HbAV\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\nYour Fortress ol Health'\nPhon* HUMS13\n\u25a0 .   ,-,i\u201e,r St Vpls.tr\nB.C. Highlights\nCAR DEMOLISHED\nNANAIMO (Cf) - Richard\nWilliam Hilton of Victoria was\ninjured and his car almost demolished in a car crash near\nthe Nanaimo airport at Cassidy\nThursday' night. He is in Ladysmith hospital but his injuries\nare not considered serious\nRCMP reported. His car spun\nout ef control and into a ditch.\nCOUNTERFEIT TWENTIES\nNANAIMO (W - Counterfeit $20 bills continue to Show\nup in Nanaimo, RCMP reported\nFriday. A phoney $20 bill was\ntaken in good faith tt a government office In the court house\nand police believe a local \"passer\"- is responsible. Police\nwarned $11 business establishments to be on the lockout for\nthe counterfeits.\nAuthor Sees\n\"Drunkard\"\nThe author attended Nelson\nLittle Theatre's presentation ot\n'The Drunkard\" and stated he\nwas extremely pleased with the\ncompany's effort,\nRaymond Hull of Vancouver,\nCanadan author, playwright and\nlecturer, came to Nelson to attend the Nelson premiere of the\nplay, which had not been done\nin the round before, and expressed delight with the Showing.\nMr. Hull has three road companies of The Drunkard on t6ur\nin Canada and the United\nStates. HO Offered Nelson the\npremiere of the sequel, \"The\nSon of the Drunkard,\" which the\nLittle Theatre expects to present early next year.\nAbout 280 persons saw The\nDrunkard which ended Saturday night.\nW. A. EDWARDS\ning..His press experience includes reporting for the Ottawa\nCitizen, features and photos for\nintended to remain there until\n3 p.m.\nThe order by police officers to\nmake the roadway accessible to\nmotor vehicles halted the auction\nafter two days of operation.\nStudents . estimate that over\n$600 was collected during the\ntwo days, but exact totals will\nnot be available for a couple of\nweeks. The money raised is\nbeing used towards improving\nfacilities at the library..\nAmong the many jobs performed by the scholars was two nights\nof baby sitting by one girl for\nwhich the employer donated $30.\nSeveral university professors\nwho had volunteered their services, were also hired to give\nprivate tutoring lessons at prices\nranging upwards of $60.\nA hootenany and dance concluded the fund raising activities\nWith some 300 persons attending.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nNational League\nChicago 1 Toronto 5\nBoston 2 Montreal 6\nAmerican League\nQuebec 6 Cleveland 2\nRochester 4 Pittsburgh 3\nBuffalo 5 Hershey 3\nSpringfield 6 Providence 5\nWestern League\nLos Angeles 3 San Francisco 1\nPortland 4 Victoria 3\nInternational League\nPort Huron 7 Dayton 3\nToledo 4 Muskegon 2\nFort Wayne 6 DCs Moines 0\nEastern League\nClinton 8 New York 0\nJohnstown 3 New Haven 2\nGreensboro 8 Jacksonville 2\nLong Island 7 New Jersey 2\nNashville 6 Knoxville 1\nCentral League\nSt. Paul 5 Memphis 3\nTulsa 5 Minneapolis' 3\nSt. Louis 5 Omaha 3\nthe Toronto Globe and Mail, and\nthe Family Herald, and. cameraman and correspondent for CBC-\nTV News and Time weekly newsmagazine. As a broadcaster and\nprogram producer he worked\nwith CBC-TV in Vancouver both\non staff and as a free-lance contract artist.\nHe attended school at Powell\nRiver, and in 1959 graduated in\njournalism and sociology from\nCarleton University, Ottawa,\nwhere he received a Faculty\nClub Award and the gold medal\nln journalism, After graduation,\nhe took part in archaeological\nsurvey and digging in southern\nMexico, He also conducted surveys and applied anthropological\nprojects among several Eskimo\ngroups In the Canadian Arctic,\nas a northern service officer for\nDepartment of Northern Affairs\nfairs and with National Resour\nces.\nBefore World War II, he served with the Royal Horse Guards\nof the Regular British Army,\nand returned to British Columbia as a captain after aervice\nwith the occupation troops in\nthe Free Territory of Trieste.\nHis war service Included five\nyears in India and Burma with\nthe Royal Indian Navy, He also\nhas been a member of the Governor-General's Foot Guards,\nand the Royal Canadian Dragoons.\n29-Pounder\nCaught By\nNelson Angler\n\"I'd like to have him stuffed,\nbut I think I'll eat him,\" said\nBill Galllcano, 303 Observatory\nStreet, who came up with 29\npounds worth of fish story Sunday morning while plug-casting\nnear the Duncan damsite.\nThe 37-lnch-long Dolly Varden\ntrout took half an hour to land\non a spinning reel using 12-test\nline, he said, \"I knew he was\nbig by the feel of him,\" he\nadded, \"but I couldn't believe\nIt when I saw him.\" The fish's\ngirth later broke the tape at 24\nInches.\nAttracted by his yells of victory, a friend, Wayne Black-\nwell, came to the rescue with\na net to write finis to the fishy\nfellow. Just to make sure they\nweren't dreaming, they got the\nprize weighed In at Kaslo,\nTRAVEL ADVISOR\nSKI TEAM\nMEMBER\nWINS AWARD\nA member of the Canadian\nnational ski team now training\nat .Notre Dame University of\nNelson, Gerry Rlnaidi Of Kimtar.\nley has been awarded a $500\nscholarship by the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company\nof Canada Ltd.\nA freshman in the department\nOf commerce, he is the son of\nMr. and Mrs. B. V. Rinaldi of\nKimberley, and is a graduate of\nSelkirk senior secondary School.\nWinner of the scholarship must\nbe a Kootenay resident who is a\nmember of the national ski\ntearn continuing his or tier- education while undertaking training with the team in Nelson.\nSelection is wade by the international competition committee\nof the Canadian Amateur Ski\nAssociation.\nWITH  STANE\nAND BESOM\nDraws for week ending Saturday Nov. 7:\nTuesday, 8 p.m.: L. Bicknell\nvs J. BraybrOok; F. Graves vs\nM. Gee; E. C. Hunt vs J. Harvey; B. Winlaw vs Benedetti;\nM. Buerge vs F. Bousquet. 9\np.m.: B. Lewis vs J. Lusk; F.\nK. Koehle vs R. W. Koehle; J,\nLeeming vs E. Leeming; G.\nBarefoot vs D. Cathcart; A. Reid\nvs J. Sutherland.\nWednesday, 7 p.m. L. J.\nMaurer v* L. Maglio; fi. Masbn\nvs A. Reid; F. Bousquet vs J.\nBray brook; J. Thorn vs T. LeWIS;\nR. HesSe vs F. Koehle. 9 p.m.\nft. Cathcart vs M. Buerge; A.\nWaters vs J. Thorn; A. Dayman\nVS F. Graves; B. Leeming vS\nJ. Bailey; L- Rymal vs J. Lusk.\nThursday, 7 p.m.: M. Gee vs\nJ. Harvey; L. Bicknell vs G.\nBarefoot: H. Miller Vs J. Suther\nland: E. C. Hunt vs W. Duckworth; J. Leeming vS ft. W\nKoehle.\nJohn Fisher\nUndergoes Tests\nOTTAWA (CP) - John Fisher,\nhead   of   Canada's   Centennial\nCommision. was reported in\nSatisfactory condition at Ottawa\nGeneral Hospital Sunday after\nbeing admitted Friday for teats\nand observation.\n. Mr,. Fisher, .50, .wag reported\nsuffering from chest pains and\n\"severe fatigue,\" although details would nbt be known until\nlater today (Monday) when tests\nresults are available. ''' \";\nCUT YOUR FUEL COSTS\nwith\nmbassador Tj\nCOAL\nOWLER\nYorke Edwards\nTo Be Speaker\nYorke Edwards of Victoria,\nprovincial naturalist, will lecture\nthe Nelson Naturalist Club tonight. The group meets at Notre\nDame University.\nMr. Edwards, who was a\nspeaker at the provincial museum Seminar in Nelson this\nyear, will show color pictures\nand speak on exploring of highlands and islands in the heart\nof British Columbia. He is perhaps best known for his work\non nature houses in provincial\nparks. Residents as well as club\nmembers attend the reason's\nlectures.\nD. Cameron\nLaid at Rest\nFuneral services for a 77-year-\nold Balfour oldtimer were held\nat the Thompson Funeral Home\nSaturday,\nDonald Cameron, who was\nborn in Pershire, Scotland, died\nin hospital at Nelson October\n27.\nFrank Pearce officiated at the\nservices. Paibearers were A. L,\nMaynard, W.'L, Maynard, J.\nHouston, D. McKinnon, J. Mc-\nHouston, D. McKinnon, J. Erickson and H. Stevens.\nInterment followed at the Bal-\nfor cemetery.\nTV SERVICE\n352-3355\nVIDEO\nELECTRONICS\nPROMPT, COURTEOUS\nand COMPLETE\nDRUG STORE\nSERVICE\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2611        Nelson, B.C.\nJIM VIPOND says:\nWouldn't you like to get away\nfrom some of the winter for\na couple of weeks? Now is\nthe time to be thinking about;\nit and making your reservations. You can have two\nweeks at Grand Cayman for\n$330 including your return air\nfare from Vancouver (double\noccupancy at the hotel), or\nvisit at Hawaii at the new\nlow rates; or how about a\nfreighter cruise from Vancouver to the Caribbean or\nan east coast port, take your\nauto along and drive home.\nThere are many opportunities\nfor a winter vacation. Let us\nshow you how your 'sun-\nbreak can be a fun-break.'\nVIPOND\nFor TRAVEL\nNelson \u2014 Trail\nYour PLEASURE Is Our\nBUSINESS\nTHE\nThe Board of School Trustees\nof\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO.\n(Castlegar)\nCordially Extends an Invitation to Attend the\nOfficial Opening of the\nKinnaird Junior Secondary School\nby the\nHonourable L. R. Peterson\n, -, Minister of Education\nAt Eight O'Clock on\nTiles.,November 3,1964\n Cominco\n44 Gold\nTo Honor\nMedalists\nTRAIL \u2014 The Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company\nwill salute 44 \"gold medalist\"\nemployees here Thursday when\nthey celebrate their 40th year\nof service with Cominco.\nA traditional Gold Medal Dinner will mark the occasion at\nwhich each of the guests will receive a personally engraved\ngold medal mounted on a lucite\nbase. Each will also receive his\nchoice of a gold watch, a 35 mm.\ncamera, or a silver cigaret\ncase.\nThree posthumous awards will\nbe made.\nThe 1964 gold medalists include 23 from Trail, 11 from\nKimberley, five from Rossland,\nfive from Castlegar-Kinnaird,\nand three from other districts.\nThey bring to 221 the number\nof employees who have attained\n40 years of service with Cominco since 1952. Of these, 107\nare still working, 94 have retired on pension, and 20 have\ndied.\nGreatest number of long-service medals hove been awarded\nto employees in the company's\nengineering and metalurgical\ndivisions, each with 65, followed\nby the mines division with 51,\nand the chemical and fertilizer\ndivision with 23.\nCreston Planning\nCommittees Get\nUnder Way\n: CRESTON - A. W. Dickinson,\nnewly appointed president of the\nCreston and District Planning\nCommlsson, chaired the first\nmeeting of the organization with\nall but three of the 12 representatives present,.\nCommittees were appointed to\ndeal with utilities, planning, government and projections starting\nat Hester's corner west to the\nlower road, due south to the Goat\nRiver bridge, east to Littlejohn's\ncorner and a wide sweeping\ncircle back to the point of origin,\nCommittee members include:\nplanning \u2014 A Davis, R. L. Morrison, Bob Johnson; utilities \u2014\nR. Currie, A. Heffel, Art Sut-\ncliffe; government \u2014 S. White,\nP. Faynor, F. Fisher; projections \u2014 D. A, Mars. Secretary\nto the board will be Mrs. Violet\nScott.\npresentation of the 1964\nmedals will be made to each\nemployee by his division manager. Chairman of the proceedings will be G. S. Ortner.man-\nager of the personnel division.\nJ. H. Salter, assistant general\nmanager of Cominco, will be\npresent. Greetings from the\ncompany's head office at Montreal will be offered, by A. 0.\nWolff, vice-president, research\nand development.\nFollowing are the 1964 medalists, listed by their divisions:\nMetallurgical Division \u2014 Trail:\nR. R. McNaughton; Pietro Ber-\nnava; E. C. Frederikson; Giovanni Manarin; R. J. Port-\nman (Retired); T. A. Rice; T;\nJ. Sadler and Luigi Tognotti.\nChemicals and Fertilizers Division \u2014 Trail: James Atwell;\nRobert Byers; J. G. Barnes;\nL. T. Negus; John Shaw; J. B.\nShearer; Robert Tweed and D.\nW. Wilson.\nEngineering Division \u2014 Trail:\nH. R. Adie; J. D, Askew; J. L.\nAyre; F. Babuin (Retired).; R.\nKinnaird Well\nGuarantees\nPure Water\nKINNAIRD - KInnalrd's new\npermanent well received its major testing for capacity Thursday. A project of the B.C. Hydro\nAuthority, the weir has been established to ensure safe drinking water during and following\nconstruction of the High Arrow\ndam.\nThis first alternate water supply has been found to be \"normal.\"\nGeologists on the site told the\nKinnaird Village Chairman Carl\nLoeblich this week that this permanent well has received a number of tests and purity is a guarantee.\nMr. Loeblich has ventured a\ncomparison as to the degree of\nhardness of the drinking water\nand considers it to be a little less\nthan three times as hard as river\nwater and \"slightly softer\" than\nCastlegar water.\nMr. Loeblich \"hoped\" that the\ndispersal of the new water supply could claim village mains\nbefore the New Year.\nW. Carter; P. A. Creech; W.\nJ. Evans; H. J. Frederikson\n(Retired); A. T. Gill; D. W.\nMawdsley; A. Murray (Retired); T. Reid; A. C. Ridgers;\nC. Strachan and J. D. Wick.\nMines Division \u2014 Kimberley:\nC. D. Backstrom; W. A. Bailey\n(Retired); D. S. Campbell; L.\nW. Eckford; J. H. O. Fontaine;\nJ. J. McKay; H. M. Paterson\n(Retired); H. J. Rayner; J. S.\nRiddell (Retired); R. J. Ter-\nhune; W. A. Thompson and F.\nWasiiciw.\nComptroller's Division\u2014Trail:\nG. Hamson.\nPosthumous Awards: M. C.\nMarsters; J. E. E. Owens and\nE. Welsh.\nPrize Presentations\nEnd Kaslo Golf Year\nKASLO \u2014 Seventy-five members and guests of the Kaslo\nGolf and Country Club brought\nthe season officially to a close\nlast week, with a dinner at the\nCommunity Hall, followed by\ndancing.\nOriental dishes were served,\nprepared by Mrs. K. Kamegaya,\nwho donated the money for her\nwork towards the purchase of\na new sterilizer for the Victorian\nHospital. This gesture prompted\nthose present to match the donation through a collection.\nHighlight of the evening was\nthe presentation of prizes and\ntrophies.\nLib Surina received a special\ntrophy, a mounted golf ball\nwith which she made a hole-in-\none.\nOther awards were as follows:\n.\u25a0WmMWHIlHllMI\u00abIIMWHmilWMIl\u00bb\nI\nI Your Individual j\n<\nHoroscope\nMtiiM.il By Frances Drake t\u00bb\u00ab.\u00ab..\u00ab\u00ab\u00bbi\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Tuesday, November 3, 1964\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 Get an early start and\nuse the most efficient methods in\nyour work. Skip the non-essentials and pay special attention to\nthe small details which put the\nfinishing touches to success.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Planetary influences are restrictive in some matters, friendly to others. Feel your way prudently, but not fearfully. Avoid\nthe useless; there is much good\nabout. Friendly aspects for a\nfriendly you.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Similar to Taurus today, but\nyou may have to concentrate on\na breakthrough in proceedings\nthat have bogged down \u2014 with\ngood judgment, of course, and\ncareful coordination.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Do not be discouraged if progress seems slow. You ARE\nachieving and attaining, even\nthough you may not realize it.\nStress your qualities of leadership.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\nMatch play \u2014 Elsie Bavington\nand G. Higashi; Runners-up \u2014\nLib Surina and L,  Garland.\nMedal Play \u2014 Wanda Johnson and G. Nelson; Runners-\nup, Joan McPherson and Frank\nCarney.\nTwo-ball Foursome \u2014 Cay\nTyers and G. Higashi; Consolation, Joan McPherson and G.\nCarney.\nKinnaird Firm Low Bidder\nOn Nakusp Hydro Building\nA Kinnaird contractor, Guy\nGuido, has submitted low bid of\n$56,148 for a contract to erect a\nnew B.C. Hydro office building\nat Nakusp.\nThe 112' x 33' single-storey\nbuilding on the southwest corner\nof Columbia Avenue and Francis Street will house district office personnel under manager\nW. A. (Bill) Harrison, and also\nB.C. Hydro information and re-\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0IIIIIIIIIBII^IIIIOBIHIIIIIIIP^l.o.ridlbaarillllHDllllDIIIIII\nJOD.aofcV-BOODBiBP.'P'.oaigiaiiiQoooioBiBiiooi riiumii\n5 MKUKS ...... n WBTBN MSB-\nThis\nWhisky\nKeeps\nIts\nFlavour\nIf you like a rye whisky\nthat keeps all of its full-\nbodied flavour right to\nthe bottom of the glass,\nthen GOLD STRIPE is\nyour kind of rye. There's\nnothing bland or weak\nabout GOLD STRIPE.\nWhether you like it on\nthe rocks, with water,\nsoda or with ginger ale,\nGOLD STRIPE delivers\na really satisfying rye\nwhisky flavour, ounce\nafter ounce.\nNext time, ask for GOLD\nSTRIPE, We make it the\nway you like it.\nAdams\nGOLD STRIPE\nAlso enjoy ADAMS ANTIQUE, ADAMS PRIVATE STOCK, ADAMS SILVER FIZZ GIN\n\u2014 Look for a new method or\nmanner in which to approach\nroutine chores. Surprise yourself\nwith added vigor and eagerness\nto achieve: results will also surprise.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 If another person\nseems mild of manner, do not\ntake this to mean uncertainty.\nHe may know considerable, be\nvery able. Assume that others\nhave know-how; many will.\nJudge and talk sagaciously.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Mixed planetary\ninfluences. Where you discover\nan opportunity, grasp it; where\nyou find an obstacle,' skirt it\npromptly. But do not side-step\nresponsibility.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 A helping hand\nproffered? If it will really be\nhelpful, accept readily, with\nsmiles. Where you must go it\nalone, it could be a blessing in\ndisguise. Mixed day.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Put all\nthe enthusiasm you can muster\ninto activities, There are fine\nchances for advancement now.\nYou should do exceptionally well\nin projects that call for clever\norganization.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 You can win\nin a canter or In a walk \u2014 IF\nyou have matters and methods\nselected astutely and If you begin and continue your program\nwith consistency, enterprise,\nsmart management.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Sudden, unexpected action, abrupt endings,\nunconventional action could get\nyou in difficulties, and disturb\nthe smooth running of success\nyou could easily have now. Be\nalert.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Handle tasks with\nconsideration of all involved, but\nchoose them with firmness.\nHowever, avoid austerity and\ncoldness. Also shun malcontents,\ndisbelief.\nYOU BORN TODAY are governed by a Sign of action, of desire for personal and general\nattainment. Your mind is capable of big things, so do not let\nit dwell on petty matters, skepticism. You make friends quickly. You rarely let opportunity\nslip through your fingers. Shun\nrash acts, sharp speech; develop\nyour bright mind. Birthdate of:\nWm. Cullen Bryant, poet, editor.\nlocation personnel related to the\nArrjw Dam project.\noH8r bids were: Fame Brick\nConstruction Co. Ltd., Trail,\n$59,980; Gustavas Construction\nLtd., Vernon, $62,278; Creighton\nConstruction Co. Ltd., Kinnaird,\n$64,370; Bird Construction Co.\nLtd., Kamloops, $65,960; E.\nBrandt Construction, Vernon,\n$66,000 ;and Walter Cabott Construction Co. Ltd., New Westminster, $67,800.\nA contract will be awarded after Hydro engineers have studied\nthe bids. Construction of the\nbuilding is expected to be completed next spring.\nThe building will contain general and individual offices and\ngarage, warehouse and workshop space.\nThe exterior of the structure\nwill be of concrete blocks, with\nan overhang section of the roof\nfinished in cedar. A planter will\nextend 41 feet along the front of\nthe building.\nEX \u2022 CORRESPONDENT DIES\nBOISE, Idaho (AP) - Lloyd\nLehrbas, OS, of Washington,\nD.C., former Associated Press\nforeign correspondent and aide\nto Gen. Douglas Macarthur,\ndied Friday. He had been in\nhospital since Oct. 26 for treatment of a pulmonary ailment.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964 \u2014 3\n90 Animals Killed\nOn Park Highways\nNinety moose, sheep, deer and\nelk have been killed by vehicles\ntravellnig highways in Banff,\nJasper, Yoho and Kootenay National Parks this summer and\nfall, the National Parks Branch\nreports.\nDurin gthe past month alone,\n18 elk were killed on the 28 miles\nof T r a n s-Canada Highway\nthrough Yoho National Park.\nAssociated with this is the damage to vehicles and the ever-present possibility of injury to passengers, the branch points out.\nDuring the fall and early winter months, the risk of vehicle-\nanimal collisions on national\npark highways increases due to:\nGreater concentration of larger animals in valley bottoms \u2014\nwhere highways are located \u2014\nas they move down from higher\nelevations for the winter.\nAnimals which have been in\nremote areas during the summer being unaccustomed to vehicular traffic are easily panicked into crossing the highway in\nfront of oncoming vehicles.\nLonger hours of darkness and\nresulting greater periods of limited visibility \u2014 animals are particularly    unpredictable    when\ncaught in the glare of oncoming\nheadlights.\nSnow storms which also affect\nvisibility and create highway\nconditions which make it difficult to maneouver and stop vehicles.\nMany of the animals have a\nfeeding cycle which spans the\nperiods of dusk and dawn. Durinr\nthese times of particularly poo1\nvisibility, they emerge from the.\nforest shelter to travel and fee\nalong the open areas adjacent t\nhighways. The risk of accident\nincreases accordingly. In the interest of public safety and pre\ntection of park wildlife, the National Parks Branch is making a\nplea to motorists to observe the\nfollowing driving habits when\ntravelling park highways:\nSlow down at night; be prepared to stop when there are animals on or beside the road; approach curves cautiously \u2014 animals may be on the road ahead;\nwhen approaching animals on\nthe road at night, flick your\nlights from bright to dim repeatedly \u2014 this seems to break the\nspell caused by oncoming headlights; drive carefully and practice good conservation while at\nthe wheel of your car.\nTHIS ADVI atUIMINT IJ NOt PUBLISHED 01 DOHA IB SYIHIUOUOS CONTROL BOARD 01 THI OOVHNMMT Of HITOH COLUMBIA\nArchitect Looks\nOver Library\nSituation\nCRANBROOK \u2014 In connection\nwith the possibility of a new library building for the centennial\nyear. Cranbrook public Library\nBoard noted at its last meeting\nthat a coast architect visited the\ncity recently.\nCranbrook Public Library\nboard chairman John Connolly\nreported to the board meeting\nthat architect Peter Smith of\nVancouver had made a volunteer visit to the city. He has had\nexperience in library construction in lower mainland area, and\nis currently architect for similar\nprojects in West Kootenay. He\nmade some suggestions to the\nboard concerning a new building\nin the event the plan got Centennial Committee approval.\nAt the board meeting, the suggestion the library be located in\nthe vicinity of the proposed shopping plaza on Baker Street met\nwith general approval, providing\nit was housed in an adequate\nbuilding.\nAt cruising speed, jet airliner\npassengers travel more than t,\nmile within the time they have\nbreathed in and out twice.\n.5%\non your savings\nbuy Canada Savings Bonds\nCSB164 pay 4%% for each of the first two years; 5% for each of the next five years;\n5%%for each of the remaining three years\u2014an average yield when held to maturity of 5% ayear\n \"Wm Sa% %us   Fluoridation Has Become\nWorld-Wide Controversy\nEstablished April 22, 1902 -   Nelson, B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n: .266 Bakei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except.\n.'Sundays and holidays in the centre ol the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa,\n'\u2022\u2022 \u25a0\u00ab and for Payment ol Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBEROF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT 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.\n< Monday. November 2, 1964  \u25a0\nTime To Act on Prevention\nOf Swimming Pool Accidents\nThe mtirky depths of Ainsworth\nHot Springs pool was narrowly\nthwarted in its attempt to claim yet\nanother victim last week, when a\n10-year old Warfield boy was jerked from.death's doors thanks to the\nvigilance of a Catholic priest and\nthe first-aid training of a passerby.\nThe lad, one of 14 who were enjoying an excursion under the supervision of Rev. T. Hassett of Warfield,\napparently ventured beyond his\ndenpth and sank to the bottom, unconscious.\nFather Hassett,-taking a regular\ncount of his charges, noticed one was\nmissing and plunged into the muggy\nmineral water, where he located the\nfallen swimmer on the floor of the\npool.\nAided by a Creston man, who\nhappened to be at the scene, he administered mouth to mouth resuscitation and the boy's life was saved.\nHe was treated by the Kaslo fire\ndepartment inhalator and rushed\nto hospital where he remained for\ntwo days.\nHad the boy died, he would have\nbecome'the fifth to succumb in the\npool in slightly more than a decade,\"\nLast July, a nine-year-old Nelson\nboy drowned at Ainsworth. Reports\nindicated he lay at the bottom of the\npool for upwards of half an hour before being discovered.\nOnly a year ago an 11-year-old\nswimmer fell prey to the tepid waters. In 1957 an eight-year-old drowned in the mountain pool. Four years\nearlier a Riondel miner suffered a\nwatery death.\nCountless others have, undoubtedly, narrowly escaped a similar\nfate.\nThe statistics speak for themselves.\nWhen a swimmer sinks below the\nsurface, the cloudy water prevents\nothers in the pool from seeing him.\nThe problem has reached a point\nwhere the question is no longer,\n\"Will there be another drowning at\nAinsworth,\"' but rather, \"Who will\nbe the next to drown and when will\nthe tragedy occur?\"\nII individual swimming pool operators refuse to accept responsibility for insuring the safety of their\nclients, then surely it is time for the\nprovincial government to Intervene.\nLegislation should be passed compelling pool operators to hire competent lifeguards if their pools fail to\n\u2022Conform with certain safety stan-\ndards;.\n. But more to the point, it is time\nfor Ainsworth to accept the moral responsibility of preventing the unnecessary deaths of young swimmers.\nThe pool should voluntarily hire lifeguards for the protection of those using its facilities.\nBy Reuters News Agency\nA world wide controversy is\nraging over the fluoridation of\npublic water supplies.\nWestern and Communist nations alike nave established\ncommissions to investigate the\narguments for and against the\nartificial treatment of water\nwith fluoride.\nOne medical expert who opposes the idea says that fluoridation could lead to a human\nrace of \"dwarfs or giants.\"\nAnother says that it could lead\nto cancer or \"the birth of a\nmonster.\"\nYet most of the investigating\nbodies have approved fluoridation. They have found that if\nfluoride is not taken in excessive quantities, it helps to prevent, tooth decay.\nWest German scientist Hein-\nrich Hornung, who claims to\nhave blazed the trail for fluoridation in Europe, says: \"Only\nthe ignorant oppose fluoridation.\"\nYet in his own country, only\none town, Kassel, uses fluoride\nin the water. Most West German scientists cannot agree on\nthe issue. \u2022\nFrance turns its back completely on fluoridation. French\nhealth experts say that there is\ninsufficient proof that it is completely harmless.\nThere also has been no fluoridation of public water supplies\nin Italy.\nIn Canada, the federal government has indicated its approval of fluoridation after 16\nyears of research. About 20 per\ncent of the Canadian population\nnow drinks fluoridated water.\nMany Russian experts favor\na small amount of fluoride in -\ndrinking water. But in Moscow\nitself the experts are making\nRepe\natriation\nThe surprising ease with which    government has yielded some pretty\nfederal -and provincial .leaders\nagreed on a formula for repatriation of the Canadian, constitution\ngives rise to some justifiable misgivings.\nAll the evidence up to now has\nbeen that the provinces, and Quebec in particular, have insisted on\nsome up-grading of provincial'authority and some down-grading\" of\nfederal authority as a condition to\nagreement. The formula on which\nagreement .has been reached .does,\nseem to indicate that the federal\nimportant ground to the provinces.\nSections covering federal and pro-\n.vincial... powers of constitutional\namendment are to be deleted at provincial behest, Where this leaves\nfederal authority has yet to be explained.\n'.'\" \"Priiife Minister Pearson pursues\nthe laudable objective of attempting\nto create and solidify an improved\n.brand' of national unity. The question must be; how big a price in terms\n\"Ofrlest.-centralized national authority\nis he willing to pay? Furthermore,\n\"V -   \"C-i-\u00bb,1        J is the kind of co-operative federal-\nI OUlVg ^SSn-eaaS -j-jsm $ 'taiks about the real way to\nOntario Liberal leader \"Andrew national unity? It strikes a good\nThompson has taken university stu- many people as being the definition\ndents to task for hiding In their Ivory oia rather weak and flabby system\ntowers and slamming politicians as' of statehood,\nan inferior breed.; He told students Fortunately, the proposed formula\nthat it is their duty wheh'theygrcrd- for repatriation of the constitution\nuate to take a hard look at politics *U1 be debated openly in the House\nand politician*;' \u25a0*\" .  -.' :=---\u25a0\u2022-\nMr.. Thompson is right ih one\nrespect. University students are inclined to rib and ridicule politicians.\nIn Britain, for example, it is worth\na political-leader's clean white shirt\nto make a Speech at a university.\nEven prime ministers have been\negged on with real eggs by rambunctious, students.\nSad to say, Mr. Thompson wastes\"\nof Commons,- If:it represents undue\ntransfer of national authority to provincial authority its adoption must\nbe resisted by all the strength the\nopposition can command.\n-Canada.-as-a collection of provinces going their own several ways\nwill not last as a nation, no matter\nwhat pretence there is of lip service\nto a central government which exists\nmerely to run a post office and a\nhis time preaching maturity- to-Mhese- defence department,\ncollege lads and lasses. For cen- What Canada needs now more\nturies, the brightest adolescent minds than anything else is leadership in\nof all lands have been noted for their Ottawa strong enough to pilot this\nlove affair with iconoclasm. Pompos- nation through the rough currents\nity has always been a favorite-tar; - of separatist provincialism through\nget of the average student, which which'it is now passing. Not only\nexplains why most politieiaas-dieed\u2014Quebec, but various of the other\non-the-campus sorties. provinces as well, will seize any\nThe young will .grow. old..an.d.._qpportunily offered by Ottawa to\nthat perhaps is a pity. The day al-   enlarge their own spheres of author-\nways cwnes;When the smooth-cheeked 20-year-old student turns into a\nhardened man of affairs who views\nthe world' and its politicians with\ncynicism.\nBefore he's 21, though, Mr,\nThompson, the student is an idealist, and he always was and we hope\nalways will be. fts actually jhinks..\npolitics would be better off with\nbetter politicians. What he should do\nis keep thinking that way when he\ngrawa_up.\u2014.Hamson Spectator.........\ns\nplans to reduce the natural fluoride content because it is too\nhigh.\nSoviet medical men have recommended fluoridation plants\nfor Leningrad and the Volga\ncities of Gorki and Zelenodolsk\nafter a detailed study of the\nwater supplies in these areas.\nChina is conducting further\nstudies of the question because\nof. t h e international controversy.\n.In the . United States, 2,504\ncommunities, embracing a population of 45,000,000, drink fluoridated water. Of the 12\nlargest American cities, only\nNew York and Los AngelCS are\nholdouts.\nThe British government generally supplies fluoridation but\nhas left it to individual communities to make a choice.\nBoth the British Medical Association and the Dental Association support fluoridation.\nThe British Dental Association has distributed thousands\nof advertising stickers bearing\nthe slogan: \"Fluoride in water\nhalves tooth decay in children.\"\nFIRST IN BRITAIN\nAs the debate continued, Reuters correspondents in world\ncentres made the following reports:\nLondon\u2014In June, Birmingham became Britain's first\ntown to put fluoride in its\nwater. The head of the British\nAnti - fluoridation League described Birmingham's action as\n\"total i t a r i a n, absurd and\nshameful. . . .\"\nParis\u2014Two French hygiene\nexperts, Rene Truhaut and\nLouis Truffert, said in a report\nthat the best way to combat\ndental decay by fluoridation is\nto take fluoridated pills on a\ndoctor's prescription. They said\nthis method would \"not expose\nthe whole population to doses\nol fluoride far above the indispensable optimum.\"\nStockholm \u2014 Swedish health\nauthorities favor fluoridation.\nThe government Iras approved\nlegislation enabling communities to take such action if they\nwish, but few have done so.\nCopenhagen \u2014 Public opposition forced the government to\nabandon fluoridation legislation,\nbut since January fluoride\ntoothpastes have been permitted.\nBonn\u2014No government action\nhas been taken because of disagreement among scientists.\nLagos\u2014The Nigerian government is still working on a proposal to introduce fluoridation\nin areas where there is no natural fluoride in the water supplies.\nJohannesburg\u2014A South African government commission is\nstudying the question. Dental\nauthority Jan Staz told the\ncommission that a man would\nhave to drink two baths full of\nfluoridated water a day to be\nharmed.\nTokyo \u2014 The Japanese welfare ministry has asked leading\nscientists to investigate fluoridation. Opponents say that Japanese foodstuffs already contain sufficient fluoride.\nSydney\u2014A leading Australian\ndental authority says Sydney's\nplan to build a giant fluoridation plant to serve 2,500,000\npersons will reduce tooth decay\nin the region by 60 per cent.\nWellington - Five New Zealand cities with a total population of 200,000 now are drinking fluoridated water, and another four towns with 200,000\nmore people are preparing to\ninstall fluoridation plants.\nGoldwater Offers Voters\n\"A Choice, Not an Echo\"\nBy ARCH MacKENZlE\nWASHINGTON (CPI-Barry\nGoldwater promised American\nvoters \"a choice\u2014not an echo\"\nin the presidential campaign.\nThe Arizona senator followed\nthrough on his promise and in\nso doing wrenched the Republican party.from its socket.\nWhether he can \"win Nov. 3\nhas been in doubt from the\nstart \u2014 when his. efficient machine swamped moderate Republicans at the San Francisco\nnominating convention.  ....   .\nThat victory left a heavy residue of discord within the party\nand polarized the right wing of\nAmerican politics as never before in this century.\nThe discord was not surprising in view of \"Goldwater's re-\nWord of Life\nFor what is a man profited, if\nhe. shall, gain the whole world,\nand lose his own soul? Or what\nshall a man give in exchange\nfor his soul? Matthew 16:26.   .\ncord as a man whose political\nunorthodoxy ranges from candidly expressed doubts about\nhis own capacity to serve as\npresident to. steely statements,\nen how he would seek to roll\nback the borders of communism.\nGAVE NO'INDICATION\nThere was Mt'much in Barry\nMorris Goldwater's   early   re-\nMunicipal Planning- in \u2022 Civil\nDefence is being accented at the\nmoment and it is expected all\nmunicipalities in the Nelson\nZone will have plans completed\nbefore the end of the year. Rossland, New Denverr Silverton',\nGolden and Invermere have already filed theirs and the Zone\nPlan first filed in 1962 has been\ncompletely revised. ' \"\ncord to indicate he would one\nday seek the presidency.\nNow 55, he was born New\n. Year's. Day in 1909 at Phoenix,\nAriz., of a Jewish father and\nan Episcopalian mother. His\ngrandfather, one of a family of\n22 in Poland, was a pioneer\nbusinessman in the territory\nand an uncle was a pioneer\npolitician.    .   .\nFrom his mother, Goldwater\npicked up some of the unbending sense of patriotism which\nlaces all his speeches and colors' his view' of international\ncoifiniunism\" as   a   uniformly\nHUBERT\nity-at national expense. -\nEvery sensible Canadian wants\nto see the national constitution where\nit belongs, in Ottawa. But until it\ncan be placed there without endangering the supremacy of Parliament,\nit is better to leave it where it is a\nlittle longer. It really doesn't matter\nwhere it is as long as it serves the\npurpose ior which it was designed,\nto be a workable instrument of\nhealthy Canadian nationhood.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0      \u00bb-\u20acerigOTy-HeraJd.\nblack and evil bloc. He has\nsaid he would like to lob a nuclear missile into the Kremlin's\nmen's room.\nFrom his father's side, he inherited a fierce loyalty to principles and perhaps his tendency\nto comment unequivocally and\nfrankly on issues which, under\nreappraisal, he sometimes\nviews differently.\nGoldwater, who has a brother\nand a sister, attended a military college briefly and then\nleft university after a year in\n1929 when his father died.\nIn 1934 he married, Margaret\n(Peggy) Johnson of Muncie,\nInd. They have two sons and\ntwo daughters.\nHEADS COMPANY\nBy 1937, Goldwater was president of the family department\nstore operation.\nIn 1952, after intensive persuasion by friends and after\nonly limited experience as a\ncity councillor, Goldwater successfully ran for the U.S. Senate.\n\"He does everything the hard\nway,\" a friend once commented. \"In baseball, he even\nbatted cross-handed.\"\nGoldwater launched his attack on \"me too\" Republicans\nin 1957 when he criticized the\nRepublican administration of\nPresident Eisenhower. In 1960,\nhe made a token bid for the\npresidential nomination as a\nconservative.\nBut he struck hard at the goal\nthereafter, criticizing a team that\nattracted the support of such\ngroups as the John Birchers\nand the Klu Klux Klan.\nToday, Goldwater is accused\nof being a captive of the right.\nBut   as   a   campaigner   he\nstrikes a remarkably attractive\nfigure with a following he has\nfashioned in his own right.\nHAS CHARM\nHe stands six feet and weighs\nabout 195 pounds. He is as\nbronzed as would be expected\nof an ardent outdoorsman. With\nhis grey, wavy hair, his bright\nblue eyes behind horn-rimmed\nglasses and an infectious white-\ntoothed charm, he goes over\nwell.\nHis informality and geniality\nconflict with the whip cracks\nin his speeches at alleged immorality in high places or the\nimpending socialism he professes to see taking over the\nU.S.\nMany of his views en military matters reflect - his long\nair force association, in which\nbe has jet pilot's papers and a\nreserve major-general's title.\n\u2122\t\nwma.'\n*\n\u25a0           rV\\*\n.        \\ '  *\nH''\/K          .<r&? .. ,\n\u2022 \"\u2022'\u2022     ,   *   J-\nMmm,\n_*,....\u25a0.                                                 '.\"v;:v' 'JmW                     W^S^\nmm.   -  (MBb\u00ab._i\n-      1^     \"B         \\W\n>Jm\\      ms*^ Jm          m -\nlli!\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0>.'\nFIVE BUND BROTHERS NOW SEE\u2014The five Rotolo brothers, all born blind, marvel at the\nwonder of light In a hospital examining rocm In Caltanissetta, Italy, after operations restored their sight From left; Calogero, 4; Carmelo, 13; Glocchlno, 11; Giuseppe, 9; Paolo,\n15. The surgery .removed film formed by congenital cataracts. (Cabteplioto\/\nInterpreting the News\nWilson's First Crisis\nBy CAROL KENNEDY\nThe retreat by Rhodesian\nPremier Ian Smith in the face\nof Britain's ultimatum following his threat to seize independence for.his self-governing col-\nonly will be widely regarded as\na triumph for British Prime\nMinister Harold Wilson in his\nfirst big overseas crisis.\nIt was a critical test of wills\nin a potentially-dangerous situation and Wilson appears to have\ncome out on top by applying\nshock therapy tactics rather\nthan conventional diplomacy.\nThe Wilson government had\nserved notice seizing independence unilaterally would be regarded as treason.\nSir Hugh Foot, the Wilson\ngovernment's representative at\nthe United Nations, recently\nwarned against the possibility\nof race tensions in Southern\nAfrica exploding into a \"color\nwar.\" Rebelling by white-ruled\nRhodesia  would  likely  put  a\nspark to the tinderbox of black\nnationalist passions\u2014if not in\nRhodesia itself, where the nationalist leaders are in detention, almost certainly in the\nneighboring black-ruled states\nof Zambia and Malawi.\nFrom Smith's choice of words\nin his retreat\u2014that the Wilson\nultimatum had \"upset everything\"\u2014it is possible to deduce\nthat he was in fact planning to\nresort to unilateral action. He\nnow says the Nov. 5 referendum\nis not to be regarded as a mandate for unilateral independence, but he did not make this\nclear before.\nWhat made Smith pull back\nfrom the brink? Almost certainly, the threat of an economic freeze and the conviction\na Labor government in Britain\nwas far less likely to yield\nground than a Tory administration.\nThe anti-Smith Rhodesia Herald   of  Salisbury  editorialized\nFishmongers Commission\nArtist To Paint Queen\n(Cl Kint Future Smdicatc. Inc. 1564. Wo,U rifhu tmireA\n\"After-looking over the school-cafeteria menu for\n\"this wee's,\" I've decided to\" put \"in for'a. transfer.'\nBOUND FOR SOUTH\nA number of bird species in\nOntario spend the winters in\nArgentina or Brazil and return\nto the same nests in summer.\ni\nTORONTO (CP) - The Worshipful Company of Fishmongers commissioned Pietro Anni-\ngoni to paint the Queen's portrait and, thinking he was being hired by a group of fish-\npeddlers, the Italian artist almost turned down an assignment that has since made him\na favorite portraitist of the\nRoyal Family.\nAnnigoni told about it while\nvisiting the Ontario College of\nAbbey Houses\nMemories of\nKing Arthur\nGLASTONBURY, \u2022 E n g land\n(CP) \u2014 Crumbling stone walls\nprobe the English sky and\nmark the spot where some men\nsay Christ walked.\nThe ruined abbey here harbors other exciting traditions.\nKing Arthur and Queen Guinevere are said to be buried under the carpet of grass that\nnow grows around pillars of\nwhat was a vast cathedral.\nThere is little doubt that\nGlastonbury is the oldest religious foundation in Britain.\nArcheological evidence i n d i-\ncates the presence more than\n2,000 years ago of a Celtic\npagan temple.\nThe Somerset town's early\nhistory is an irresolvable mixture of legend and fact.. It\nstarts with Joseph of Arima-\nthea, believed to have been the\nVirgin Mary's uncle. He was a\nmerchant bearing tin from Britain to Phoenicia.\nSeveral independent south\nEngland oral tales agree in\nsaying that when Jesus of Nazareth was a young boy, before\nhe proclaimed himself the Son\nof God and began his ministry,\nhe came to Britain with Joseph\nand' stayed briefly at Glastonbury. \u2022\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\nIt was the same Joseph who,\nyears later, received Christ's\nbody from the Grucifixion Cross\nand buried it in a sepulchre.\nThen, forced out of Palestine,\nJoseph returned to Glastonbury\nand began preaching Christianity in the year 60.\nHe arrived at Weary-All Hill,\none Of several that make up\nthe tongue of land that projects\ninto the marshes here. He\ndrove his staff into the ground\nand local inhabitants still say it\ngrew into a thorn tree that\nblossoms twice a year, at\nChristmas and Easter.\nArt in Toronto where art students watch for an hour each\nday as he works on a portrait\nof Col. Eric Phillips.\nAnnigoni explained that his\nmeagre English didn't include\nthe word fishmonger. A friend\nsaid it meant fish-peddler. Figuring a peddler wanted him to\ncopy a photograph of the\nQueen, he was about to decline\nwhen he learned that the company is a venerable London\ntrade guild.\nSince then he has done portraits of the Queen, Prince\nPhilip, Princess Margaret and\nthe Queen Mother, although not\nwithout unhappy incident.\nThe artist was painting the\nDuchess of Devonshire in his\nLondon studio and also painting the Queen at Buckingham\nPalace. The duchess asked if\nthe Queen posed well. Yes,\nAnnigoni replied.\nDoes she speak? the duchess\nasked; Perhaps too much, Annigoni replied.\nThe duchess said she would\npass the word along to the\nQueen and did so despite Ann-\nigoni's protests.\nAt the next sitting the Queen\ndidn't say a word. Nor did she\nspeak for the next four sittings.\n\"It was getting not nice,\"\nAnnigoni says. Finally, though\netiquette demands that royalty\ninitiate conversation, he decided to break the ice.\n\"I started to talk\u2014about the\nweather.\"\nHe said the Queen thawed,\nand eventually allowed him an\nunprecedented 16 sittings instead of the usual four.\n\"She is very nice, very simple,\" Annigoni says. \"But she\nis not an easy subject to paint.\nHer face is so changeable. For\nHer Majesty, 16 sittings were\nquite a lot, but not for me. I\nwas very nervous.\"\nThe Fishmongers liked the\nformal portrait of the Queen in\nher robes of Sovereign of the\nMost Noble Order of the Garter, and a year later commissioned a companion portrait of\nPrince Philip.\nWhen Annigoni returns to\nLondon in November he expects\nto put the finishing touches on\nhis second portrait of Philip.\nBegun two years ago, it will go\ninto the Royal Family's private collection.\nHe has. also completed, in\nhis native Florence, a fresco\nfor the Church of San Lorenzo,\nthe first new work admitted to\nthe churchi n three centuries.\n\"Tory suaveness\" was notably\nmissing from Wilson's warning.\nThis was the \"blunt voice of the\nBritish middle classes\" and\n\"the time for wriggling is\nover.\"\nThe first reaction of most\nwhite Rhodesian citizens\nseemed angry and even more\ndefiant at \"British interference,\" but the Rhodesian business community, led by big\nBritish and international companies, appears to have influenced Smith to moderation,\nMining companies such as\nthe Anglo-American Corporation and Rhodesian Selection\nTrust have an interest in Zambia and elsewhere in Africa and\nwould obviously try to prevent\na showdown.\nSUICIDE MONTH\nAll through October\u2014known\nin Rhodesia as \"suicide month\"\nbecause the oppressive heat\npreceding the rains frays the\nnerves-defiant Rhodesians appeared to be itching to emulate\nPremier Verwoerd's South African republic, unpopular with\nworld opinion but nevertheless\nenjoying a galloping prosperity,\nBy a coincidence, cooler\ncounsels prevailed just as the\nrains broke over Rhodesia's\nparched plateau. Although Rhodesia probably could get along\nin alliance with South Africa\nand Portugal in the event of\nstiff British sanctions, about 50\nper cent of Rhodesia's exports\nare taken by Britain and one-\nthird of her all-important tobacco crop.\nThe colony was formerly\nknown as Southern Rhodesia,\nIts official name became Rhodesia when neighboring Northern Rhodesia became Zambia\nrecently on independence front\nBritain.\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nNov. 2, 1964 . . .\nPittsburgh, Pa., radio station KDKA opened a new\nera in radio communications when it broadcast the\nelection returns of the Harding-Cox presidential contest,\n44 years ago tonight \u2014 in\n1920. The event was an experiment and was carried\nonly a few days after KDKA\nwas granted the first radio\nstation licence in the U.S.\n1941 - U.S. President\nHarry Truman was elected\nto his first full term in i\nsurprise victory over Republican candidate Thomas\nDewey.\n1950 \u2014 Author and playwright George Bernard\nShaw died at 94.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1914\u2014Russia and Serbia declared war on Turkey; Germans made the first naval\nraid on the English coast,\nnear Yarmouth; German\narmies captured Messines\nin Belgium; Russian and\nTurkish armies met near\nTrebizond.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ego today - In 1939 - the U.S.\nHouse cf Representatives repealed the U.S. embargo on\narms shipments to belligerent countries; German long-\nrange guns shelled French\ntowns and villages on the\nWestern Front: thousands of\nSlovaks rioted in protest\nagainst Hungarian, acquisition of Slovak territory as\nthe result of the Munich -\nagreement.\n Hints From Heloise\nBy Heloise Cruse\nDear Heloise:  -\nI've learned, after a year and\na half, to sit back and enjoy my\nvery active son. I only hope my\nmistakes in furnishing our home\nmight be spared other young\ncouples.\nForget about those exquisite\nand elegant pieces of furniture\n\u2014 stick to formica tables and\npole lamps where possible.\nUse stack tables or TV trays\nfor entertaining. That coffee\ntable is a menace.\nTry out cafe curtains or apron\nlength curtains instead of antique satin wall-to-wall draperies.\nGet slip covers for chairs and\ncouch theday you find out you're\npregnant...\nMove precious books and ornaments up high. Better to be\nable to enjoy them there than\nnot at all.\nPut safety plugs in all outlets\nand use locks or straps to,keep\nall cabinets off-limits for. busy\nlittle fingers.\nBy-pass those luxurious rugs\nand carpets, especially velveteens . . . babies do have accidents!!   ;  ,\nPut guards on windows.\nServe the child food in plastic\ncups and dishes.\nWhen a child learns to climb\nthe stairs, take the time and patience to teach him how to Climb\nbackdown.-   \t\nPurchase lightweight washable\nUse window shades instead of\nVenetian blinds \u2014 they are less\nexpensive, much easier on your\nfingers when it's-time to clean,\nless dangerous for little lingers,\nand no cords are left dangling to\nchoke innocent babies.\nHeloise, I am not only a new\nmother, but I also work in a\nchildren's emergency room in a\nhospital and these suggestions\ncome from many other mothers,\nas well as yours truly.\nLet's face facts \u2014 a happy\nhome makes a happy child.\nFrom a Heloise-Hinted Home-\nmaker,\nNancy McGovern\n\u2022  *  \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nAfter I launder my cafe curtains, I pin a lining of plastic on\nthe wrong side of them as far\nas my kitchen window opens.\nI use tiny safety pins and pin\nthe sheer type large plastic bags\n(which my husband's shirts\ncome back from the laundry in)\njust to fit.\nThis lining is quite invisible\nand protects the curtain from\nsoil, rubbing against the screen,\nand certainly saves doing the\ncurtains up so often.\nAn ytime I have a cantaloupe\nor honey dew melon to put in the\nrefrigerator, I put it inside a\nplastic bag and seal it tight wth\na rubber band.\nThis way the odor does not\npermeate the refrigerator and\nour melons are cold when we are\nready to eat them.\nDora Drain\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nDear Dora:\nPinning plastic on the back of\ncurtains is a fantabulous idea!\n\u2666 * *\nDear Heloise:\nI found that my baby's plastic\ncrib mattress was very hot for\nhim In the summer and very\ncold in the winter. Putting quilt\npads underneath the sheet only\nmade ridges on his little face,\nI discovered that by putting\none of my receiving blankets un\nder the sheet, at the top of his\ncrib where he slept, worked\nbeautifully. It also helps to absorb more when he drools at\nnight, thus not leaving a wet ring\non the sheet. The blankets wash\nand dry easily, too.\nBetty Richardson\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964 \u2014 S\nExpert Offers Tips on Party Plans\nTORONTO (GP)-K you want\nyour guests to be comfortable\nat a party, you should allow\nabout five square feet of space\nfor each of them.\nDraw up a guest list with an\neye to mixing and matching\npeople carefully to make certain they will have something\nto say to one another.\nThe type of party you give\nwill depend on the type of\nguests you are-asking, and that\nwill determine the costs.\nClaire Dreier, specialist in\nwedding planning, says there\nare books on entertaining that\ncan help you plan and predict\nAinsworth\nAINSWORTH - Mrs. 0.\nNordquist was hostess to the\nChurch Aid members for their\nOctober meeting. . .\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Anderson\nhad as their recent visitors Mrs.\nS. Kettlewell. of Nelson, Mr. and\nMrs. GharlesEdgarof Chilli wack\nand Ken Hoside of Davenport,\nWash.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Hale of Salmo spent the weekend at Ainsworth.\ncosts   if   you   are   preparing\neverything yourself.\nFor instance, she says, a good\nreference will tell you that two\nslices of bread make four party\nsandwiches, and that people eat\nabout 3Mi sandwiches each.\nBE AT YOUR PARTY\nEven if you must make a\ncheck list, Miss Dreier says,\n'get organized so that you have\nabsolutely everything done \u2014\nsandwiches made, ash trays\nand coasters around. The successful hostess is not one who\nhas to keep running to the\nkitchen.\"\nPartly to keep people moving\naround, not standing still in\ntheir five-foot space, put the\nbar, if there is one, in the farthest spot from the door Do\nnot put all of your food on one\ntable. Scatter p 1 a t e s of it\naround the room.\n\"If you are serving a buffet\ndinner, arrange your furniture\naround the room so people can\nsit in groups.\n\"Serve both tea and coffee,\nand if you are saving space,\nyou can serve it from the kitchen. Bring it in on small trays,\nand have someone help you by\nserving the cream and sugar.\nUse lump sugar at a party.\n\"Serve hot things hot and cold\nthings cold and have plenty of\nice for beverages. And make\nsure you. have enough\u2014do not\nrun out of supplies.\n\"If you have a specialty in\nfood, always serve it. If you\nare trying something new, try\nit on yourself the first time,\nnever on guests. Do not apologize for what you serve. After\nall, you chose it.\"\nIf you see someone sitting\nalone, you can help him and\nhelp your party by putting him\nto work. Ask him to pass sandwiches, empty ash trays, serve\n.coffee.\nAs hostess, you should find\ntime to spend a relaxed few\nminutes with every one of your\nguests.\nIf you are giving a big party,\nintroduce the first few arrivals\nto one another, and after that\nintroduce newcomers only to\nthe few nearest people. Big\nparty or small, you must be\navailable to greet all of your\nguests.\nMiss Dreier suggested that\nbecause of the current elegance\nof fashions and of hostess\nstyles, a glamorous party might\nbe fun. Your women guests\nwould enjoy having an excuse\nto wear their latest.\nWomenPast21\nWITH BLADDER IRRITATION\nAfter 21 twice as many women as men\nare made miserable by common urinary\nIrritation caused by a germ, Escherichia\nColt. To quickly combat the secondary\naches, muscular pains and disturbed sleep -\ncaused by Kidney and Bladder irritations,\ntry taking 2 little OYSTEX tablets v Rh\na glass of water 3 times daily for a\ndays. CYSTEX Is a cleaning urinary an\nseptic, also an analgesic pain reliever f\nRheumatism. Sciatica Pains, Headr.\nBackache, and muscular pains. '.    -\nOYSTEX from druggist. Feel better fa:. .\nYoung African Men\nBy Emancipated Miss\nNAIROBI (AP)-The modem\nAfrican girl who has changed\nher loin cloth for stretch pants\nand high heels is under fire in\nSAFEWA1\nSaves You More!\nSafeway Superb\nBeef Round Steak\nCanada Choice\nib. 69\nAll-Purpose Flour\nHarvest Blossom, 1st: Grade\n25fc*1;59\nPink Salmon\nSea Trader, fancy; 7} oz.\n3<o 89c\nSeedless Raisins\nGlenview.\n4 H> pkg- 99c\nBleach\nWhite Magic, plastic container; 64 oz.\n39'\nNo. 1 Quality\nBananas\nPlump, firm, ripe.\n3 ii\u00bb 49c\nPrices Effective Mon., Tues., Wed.\nNovember 2, 3, 4.\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\ni\u00bb SAFEWAY\nCANADA     IAMWAY     IIMITID\nKenya for aping the modes and\nmorals of the West.\nAn African student recently\nreturned here from Europe\nsparked the battle of the sexes\nwith an indignant letter to the\npress. He accused the girls of\nbeing \"merely gimmicks of\nWestern civilization\" and\ncharged they were more interested in money than happy\nmarriage.\n\"They measure love in terms\nof envelopes full of pink, blue\nor green notes,\" George Mukudi\nprotested. \"This cheap approach has led many African\nyoung men to forget about marriage,\" he warned, advising the\ngirls to \"readjust their attitudes\nin line with life's realities.\"\nEqually indignant was the\nletter of Zacharias Chesonl:\n\"These girls not only imitate\nWestern civilization but even\ntry to put on western flesh and\nhair, the beautiful African natural hair is burnt to change it\nfrom kinky to straight. Some\nuse so much make-up and lipstick that instead of looking like\nhuman beings they look like\nmodels.\"\nBut male students returning\nto Kenya should not expect African women to measure up to\nthe   sophisticated  white  girls\nthey left behind in Europe or\nAmerica, said Zacharias.\n\"We must .lower our standards.\" We should help these\npoor African girls who have become gimmicks,of Western civilization to become the ideal\nAfrican girls we 'waht.\n\"6t course, this calls for\ngreat sacrifice on the. part of\nAfrican men, but we have to do\nit to achieve the type of society\nwe want:\"'\n- The girls, .however, have their\ndefenders.        -       '\n\"There are loose girls: everywhere, regardless . of color or\nrace,\" w r ote Tlman: Njugi.\n\"These attacks-on: African girls\nare giving' the'world the' wrong\nimpression;^ They are an unpardonable insult- 'to their modesty.\"   .:   '.\u2022    '\u25a0\u25a0;\nAnother reader pointed out\nthat ; white'. woman spend considerable sums ihaving their\nhair waved, spend' hours in the\nsun acquiring a'nice dark color\nand \u25a0 \"have ' reached the advanced stage of social evolution\nwhere, high .fashion dictates\nthey must expose their bosoms\nto the world in the topless\ndress.\"\n\"Their African counterparts,\"\nhe noted, \"Ore. evolving in exactly the opposite way;\"\nM313 ft.    m^^ImH\nSIZES CHANEL\nM-18        adaoted by ABESCHUm\nFROM CHANEL'S NEWEST COLLECTION SHOWN JUST\nWEEKS AGO comes this elegant 3-pc. suit superbly adapted by\nAbe Schrader. Note the newest \"Chanelisms\" \u2014 Slightly longer,\nstraighter jacket that fits easily, moves beautifully with the\nbody. Note the traditional details \u2014 disciplined cuffs with button trim, overblouse in the same fabric as collar and cuffs.\nNote too the way jacket seams flow into the line of the inverted\nskirt pleats. Choose wool and silk, double-knit wools; rich satins\nfor evening.\nPrinted Pattern M313 is available in Misses' Sizes 10,12,14,\n16 and 18. Size 16 suit requires 3% yards 54-inch; blouse, jacket\nfacings require 1% yards 39-inch.\nSend ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern M313 to N.D Pattern Dept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto, Ont. Please print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE NUMBER\nand SIZE,\nANNOUNCING THE PREMIERE EDITION OF OUR COU-.\nTURE PATTERN COLLECTION - 57 of the world's most\nbeautiful designer originals plus 50c FREE COUPON to apply\nto any One Dollar pattern. Send 50c right now for Couture Collection 10.\n. , V '.:\n476 Baker St.\nSWEET   16\nFASHION     STORES\nNelson, B.C.\nCLEARANCE FLOOR\nNOW OPEN\nWith Wonderful Specials in Fashion Wear!\nHere's your chance to buy lovely, lively\nSWEET 16\nfashions at a fraction of their worth.\nWinter Coots. . . Dresses . . . Sportswear\nLingerie and Accessories... gathered from our\nmany stores... are all here and priced to clear.\nSportswear\nBLOUSES\nRegularly priced to $2.98.\nTake them away!\t\n99'\nSLIMS\nChoose from wools, corduroys, leopards, suedines. Sizes 10\nto 18 in assorted colors. M QQ\nRegular to $6.98. \u201e!_.._ ,     l*_r>7\nSWEATERS\nClearance of better sweaters that-are slightly soiled. These\nare all wools in pullovers, cardigans and novelty, styles.\nRegularly priced.\nto $6.98. ..._\t\n3e99 and 4.99\nJACKETS\nBroken sizes, and colors in blazer styles, chanels, beatle\njackets. In plain wools, plaids and tweeds. $Q AA\nRegular to $19.98. -\u201e\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   ',, ;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014,.\u25a0    O\u00bb\\J\\J\nWESKITS\nVelvet and tweeds in broken sizes\nRegular to $14.98.\nOut they go at only- _____r___\nassorted colors.\n_*4.00\nSUEDE SETS\nSuede slims and pop tops. Tops have ^-sleeves with,knit\ntrim. Assorted sizes and colors, M AA\nRegular to $10.98 '. \u201e.. __..   TVUU\nBAN-LON SWEATERS\nAssorted colors and sizes in pullovers and\ncardigans. Regular to $5.98. ....\t\n1.99\nDRESSES\nBroken sizes, odds and ends gathered from all our stores.\nRegularly priced to $19.98. $| QQ\nOut they go at only \u25a0__. , , .\u201e,,,;,,: \u2022..\u201e:....\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 YC*<f\nDRESSES\nTerrifically attractive styles in assorted knits, soft wool\nsouffles and tweeds. Choose from flattering sheath and\nshifts in autumn's newest shades. Belt interest is. big this\nyear. .. and this group has exciting belt interest. : . low\nback belts, hip belts, and more. You'iimply must dome\nin and see them. Petite sizes 5 to 15. . \" '$1\nMissy and Junior;sizes TO to 18. \u201eU__.\nWINTER COATS WHk\nA special selection of broken lines and sizes. Manufactur-\nsr's samples, etc., gathered tb clear at a ridiculously low\nprice, Poodles ,tweeds and velours are included in a range\nof sizes. Specially priced $(\u25a0 $| C\n  ^    J and   YJ\n10,99\nat only\n1.99.\nNYLON SUPS\nAssorted styles... some colors. These are regularly priced\nat $3.98. Lace and applique \" $^ QQ\ntrims,! included.    \u25a0,' \u25a0 ,.,,,.'. JLteifiF\nV&.SLIPS\nNylon with sateen and banlon lace trim.\nBlack, .white, pink and blue. -Regular $2.98.\nFLANNEL PYJAMAS\nButcher Boy and tailored styles. Assorted $*i ^Q\ncolors and size's,'UL a\\mea\\mW\nCOTTON SLEEPWEAR\nAssorted styles and colors.\nRegular to $3.98. ,,,.. .-.\nDUSTERS\nCordana dusters in, assorted plains and\nprints. Regular to $8.98. ....,.,.\n1.49\n\u20223.99\nHOUSECOATS\nLovely; lively styles from stocks regularly priced to $14.98\nThese are slightly soiled and some are slight irregulars...\nall are a fantastic iff AQ\ntoy ot just \" \u00a9\u2022\u2022f.r\nLOUNGE PYJAMAS\nAssorted styles and colors .\nsome are sljght irregulars\nbargains. Regularly priced\nto $14.98\t\nsome are slightly soiled . .\n, . all are truly outstanding\n>4.49\nPANTIES\nElastic and banded leg styles.\nAssorted colors. , \u201e\nHOSE\nFirst quality Seamless-\nMesh Nylons.  ._ \t\n3 fc.1.00\n9 pair   I*Jm7r\nACCESSORIES\nLimited Quantities To  Clear\nHANDBAGS.\nRegular to $3.98. _\nSCARVES AND GLOVES.\nTo clear.  .,,.\t\nEVENING BAGS.\nRegular to $8.98.\n1.49\n_ 49*\n'2.49\nShop Cash-Free and Care-Free\n\"Charge It!\"       No Down Payment       Months to Pay\nSWEET    16\nFASHION   STORES\nNELSON, B.C.\n-8;\n < \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964\nMaple Leafs Humiliate Tribe 11-5\nBruins Post Initial NHL Win;\n3 Teams Tied for Loop Lead\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nBoston Bruins finally got into\nthe National Hockey League win\ncolumn Sunday night with a 5-2\nvictory over Chicago Black\nHawks. Elsewhere around the\nNHL circuit, Detroit Red Wings\ndefeated Toronto Maple Leafs\n4-2 and New York Rangers defeated Montreal Canadiens 3-1.\nFor Bruins, it was the first\nwin in 10 starts this season. Detroit's win enabled Wings to\nkeep pace with the Leafs and\nthe Canadiens at the top of the\nstandings.\nVeteran Johnny Bucyk and\nrookie Ron Schock counted for\nBruins in the first period of\ntheir game in Boston. The Bruins then gave goalie Eddie\nJohnson excellent support\nthrough the scoreless second period.\nAb McDonald, acquired by\nthe Bruins in an off-season\ntrade with Chicago, and Orland\nKurtenbach, carried the Boston\nlead to 4-0 in the third before\nBobby Hull finally broke\nthrough. He had been thwarted\nSix times in the first period\nalone.\nWith two minutes remaining\nIn the game, Bobby Leiler\nmade it 5-1 for Boston and John\nMcKenzie of Chicago closed out\nscoring for the night with only\n10 seconds remaining.\nThe defeat was the third\nStraight for Chicago which has\nwon only one of its last six\ngames.\nIt was veteran forward Ca-\nmille Henry, with two goals,\nwho spared the Rangers to the\nwin over Montreal in New\nYork. His first came at 8:19 of\nthe opening period 36 seconds\nafter Phil Goyette had tied the\nscore 1-1.\nTremblay had put Montreal\nahead on a power-play goal at\n3:19 and Goyette's rebound of\nRed Seiling's slap shot tied it.\nHenry then tipped in Rod Gilbert's shot to put New York\nahead. He beat Canadian goalie\nCharlie Hodge again on another\npower play at 16:07 of the second period. Selling assisted.\nIt was New York's third victory of the season against three\nlosses and three ties, and\nmoved Rangers into fourth\nplace, two points ahead of Chicago.\nAt Detroit, Gordie Howe\nsparked the Wing attack in the\nfirst period when he scored the\n626th goal of his NHL career,\nThe average life span of the\nJapanese has increased by one\nyear in the last year, men living to 67.2 years and women\nto 72.3 years.\ntying the mark set by Maurice\n(Rocket) Richard for the most\ngoals in regular season and\nplayoff action.\nPit Martin, Larry Jeffrey and\nBruce MacGregor scored the\nother Detroit goals while Red\nKelly and Frank Mahovllch tallied for the Leafs.\nThe game featured a rousing\nreunion between oldtimers Ted\nLindsay of Detroit and Dickie\nMoore of Toronto, both coming\nout of retirement this year.\nThey touched off a first-period\nfight also involving Leafs' Ron\n[Stewart  and  Doug Barkley of\nDetroit.\nLindsay drew two minors and\na misconduct and Moore a minor and a misconduct. Moore\nand Lindsay went at each other\nagain after the first skirmish\nwas finished. Moore was given\nanother 10-minute misconduct\nin the third period when he\nstepped in front of Detroit defenceman Bill Gadsby during .a\nLeaf power play. The misconduct was tagged on to an interference minor when he objected to the ruling.\nHornby's Return Inspires\n\"Kromm's Kids\" in Rout\nRobinson, Sutherin\nTops in CFL Scoring\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS i Don Sutherin, Hamilton Ti-\nLarry Robinson, defens- ger-Cat placekicking specialist,\niv halfback with Calgary Stam- finished atop the Eastern Foot-\npeders, took the Western Foot- ball Conference scoring race\nball Conference scoring title with 94 points, 26 points ahead\nafter weekend action which left of second-place Moe Racine of\nhim   with   a   25-point   cushion | Ottawa Rough Riders.\nBy PAT McMAHON\nDaily News Sports Editor\nVeteran centre, Howie Hornby made an auspicious\nreturn to the Nelson Maple Leaf roster here Saturday\nnight, scoring two goals and assisting on two others as\nthe hometown leafs annihilated Rossland Warriors 11-5\nbefore a Hallowe'en crowd of 546 fans.\nThe Leafs led 2-0 at the end of the first period, 6-0\nafter the second frame and built up a 9-0 lead before four\nminutes had elapsed in the third,\nThen the Nelson defence, which lo that point had\nturned in its finest display of the season, began to get complacent and Rossland struck for five goals, equalling the\nMaple Leafs'  third  period\nBrown Reaches\nover his nearest rival.\nRobinson, with 106 points,\nequalled a league record with\n22 field goals and added 31 converts and nine singles during\nthe 16-game season.\nPeter Kempf, British Columbia Lions' kicking specialist,\ntook  second  place  with 81\nI Sutherin kicked two converts,\ntwo singles and one field goal\nin Hamilton's 21-14 victory over\nMontreal Alouettes in Montreal\nSunday. The Tiger-Cat safety\nman finished with 34 converts,\n15 field goals and 15 singles in\nthe season's play.\nRacine, Ottawa's placekicker,\nMilestone\nooints. He added eight points had 32 converts, 11 field goals\nSunday as Lions defeated Win-1 and three singles for a total of\nnipeg Blue Bombers 26-8 in the 58 points. He had five converts\nfinal league game of the sea- and a single in Ottawa's 36-0\nson. A teammate, rookie Bob!drubbing of Toronto Argonauts\nSwift, added a touchdown to! in Toronto Saturday,\ngive him 66 points and a share Dick Shatto of Toronto, last\nof third place with flanker Hugh; year's scoring leader with 81\nCampbell of Saskatchewan j points, settled for third place\nRoughriders. Campbell notched .with 11 touchdowns for 66\nhis 11th touchdown of the sea-'points.\nson Saturday as Roughriders | Dave Thelen of Ottawa had 60\ndowned Edmonton Eskimos 26- points for fourth place while\n20. i teammate   Ron   Stewart   was\nSaskatchewan fullback George alone in fifth spot with 48.\nReed vaulted back into the top j   The leaders:\n10 scorers as he counted three I\ntouchdowns \u2014 18 points \u2014 and Sutherin, H\nended in a 60-point, three-way I Racine, O\ntie for fourth place. I Shatto, T\nReed, B.C. halfback Willie, Thelen, O\nFleming, and Calgary fullback [Stewart, C\nLovell Coleman each scored lO.Watkins, O\ntouchdowns during the season.\nThe Leaders\nTD C FG S Pts.\n0 31 22 9 106\n0 32 15\n11 0 0\n11 0 0\n10 0 0\n10 0 0\n10   0   0\nGrant, H\nFaloney, H\nPatterson, H\nTDC FGS Pts\n0 34.15 15 94\n0 32 11 3 68\n11 0 0 0 66\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n10   0\n8   0\nRobinson,  C\nKempf,  B.C.\nCampbell,  S\nSwift,  B.C.\nFleming,   B.C.\nColeman, C\nReed, S\nMitchell. E\nBuchanan, S\nTaylor, C\n0 22   3\n0 60\n0 48\n0 42\n0 42\n1 37\n1 32\n4 81\n0 66\n0 66\n0 60 Montreal\n0 60 Detroit\n0 60 Toronto\n0   17 10 10 57 New York\n9  0  0  0 54 Chicago\n0  0  0 54! Boston\nNHL STANDINGS\nWLTF A P\n4 1 3 26 16 11\n5 2 1 20 14 11\n4 2 3 30 23 11\n3 3 3 20 19 9\n3 4 1 24 25 7\n181 15\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nCleveland's Jimmy Brown became the first man in U.S. football to surpass 10,000 yards\nrushing Sunday as the Browns\nopened up a two-game lead in\nthe Eastern Conference of the\nNational Football League.\nThe Browns defeated Pittsburgh 30-17 while the New York\nGiants drubbed second - place\nSt. Louis 34-17. It was only the\nGiants', second victory in eight\ngames. The loss brought the\nCardinals' mark to 4-3-1 while\nthe Browns now are 6-1-1.\nIn the Western Conference,\nthe first-place Baltimore Colts\nmaintained their 1%-game lead\nwith a 37-7 romp over San\nFrancisco. Detroit took over\nsole possession of second, whipping Los Angeles 37-17.\nIn other games, Green Bay\nmauled Minnesota 42-13, Dallas\ndowned Chicago 24-10 and\nWashington beat Philadelphia\n21-10.\nAmerican Football League action saw Buffalo knock off Houston 24-10, Kansas City outlast\nDenver 49-39 and San Diego defeat Oakland 31-17. New York\nthumped Boston 35-14 Saturday\nnight.\nBrown, needing 14 yards to\nreach 10,000, easily made the\nmilestone, gaining 149 yards on\n23 carries. Lou Groza and Ernie\nGreen handled the snoring for\nCleveland. Groza. kicked field\n.\" oals of 36, 22 and 16 yards and\nGreen ran for seven and 13-\nyard touchdowns.\nthird\noutput\nThe win gives Nelson nine\npoints for a third place tie with\nKimberley Dynamiters, two\npoints back of the Warriors and\nfour behind league leading Spokane Jets. Spokane stretched\ntheir lead Saturday night with a\n7-5 victory over the Dynamiters\nin Spokane. Leafs have two\ngames in hand.\nMurray Owens and Mike\nLaughton matched Hornby's two-\ngoal contribution. Dave Stewart,\nMiles Desharnais, Carl Chwachka, Bill Steinke and Larry Roberge notched singles. Playing,\ncoach Bobby Kromm picked up\nfour assists.\nIvan Shusheski scored twice\n.'or Rossland. Alec Reid, Billy\nI \/lartin and Lynn Bentley, son of\n! former National Hockey League\n13reat, Max Bentley, were the\nj iher Warrior marksmen.\nPOWERPLAY GOALS\nHornby accounted for both\nNelson's first period goals on\npower play attacks.\nHe banged home Laughton's rebound at the 8:09 mark while\nliossland was two men short.\nLess than two minutes later, he\nfinished oft a perfect three-way\nrelay from Malacko and Kromm\nafter the Leafs controlled play\nfor close to a full minute with a\nscintillating display of passing.\nThe second period was only\nSree minutes old when Steinkle\nintercepted a Warrior pass at the\nblue line and fed it ahead to\nOwens. The diminutive centre\nfrom Kamloops streaked down\nthe right wing boards, took a\nstride on Syd Gallamore at\ncentre ice and, using Hornby for\na decoy, swooped in on goal,\nbeating Seth Martin cleanly with\na backhand to the corner.\nStewart, Steinkie and Chwachka slammed home goals within\nshort order and the Leafs retired to the dressing room with a\n6-0 cushion and a shutout going\nfor veteran netminder, Gus Adams who was replacing the injured Jim Letcher.\nMAINTAINED PRESSURE\nAs the third period got under\nway, Nelson maintained the pressure on Martin who at times\nmust have felt like an abandoned orphan, as his defence col\nlapsed allowing Maple Leaf forwards to pour in on him almost\nat will.\nDesharnais boosted the score\nto 7-0 with a shot from slightly\nbehind the goal which bounced in\noff the Rossland netminder's\nleg.\nOwens made a fantastic play,\nraising the puck past Martin\nwith only onue hand on his stick\nwhile sprawling on the ice, having been pulled down from behind by Bud Andrews.\nHornby was robbed by Martin,\nbut the puck came out to Laughton who outmanoeuvred a defender and blasted home a shot\nfrom in front of the net to stretch\nthe count to 9-0 before the Warriors got on the scoreboard.\nAlec Reid scored the first of\nfour Rossland counters which\ncame before Nelson was able to\nmuster a reply. He banged home\na rebound from a skirmish in\nfront of the net.\nBilly Martin, shadowed to perfection by Chwachka to that\npoint, took advantage of a Nel-\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWIHL\nStandings\nGUS ADAMS\n. Fine Performance\nGolden Gaels\nGoing Great Guns\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nQueen's University Golden\nGaels Saturday stretched their\nunbeaten string to 11 games\nover two seasons in the Senior\nIntercollegiate Football League.\nTheir latest victim was a 20-0\ntriumph over McGill University\nRedmen in Montreal, a win that\nerased any title hopes the Red-\nmen might have had.\nSpokane\nRossland\nNELSON\nKimberley\nTrail\nT P\n1 13\n1 11\n1 9\n1 9\n0 4\nIII)\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nion defensive lapse to finish off\na fine passing play with Ed Legare and Gerry Godfrey.\nBentley scored a fine goal as\nhe pranced and danced through\nthe entire Nelson team to beat\nAdams with a vicious drive at\nthe 8:14 mark.\nSusheski scored the first df\ntwo goals five minutes later to\nbring the count closer to respectability.\nBut Laughton fired his second\ngoal of the game and Roberge\npushed his own rebound past\nMartin to insure there was no\ndoubt as to the Leafs' supremacy that night.\nShusheski beat Adarfie at the\n18:04 mark to finish Off the scoring.\nSaves:\nMartin    10   16  18-44\nAdams    4   \u00ab 13\u201427\nSPOKANE \u2022 KIMBERLEY\nSPOKANE (CP) - Led by\ntwo goal performances of Char-\nHe Goodwin and Joe Morneau,\nSpokane Jets skated to a 7-5 victory over Kimberley Dynamiters,\nhere Saturday.\nTom Hodges, DCrCk GibSOn\nand Buddy Bodman were the\nother JCt Scorers.  .\nKen  McTeer  with two, Vera\nWiidman,   Dick   Vincent   and\nChuck Passmore were the Kimberley scorers.\nICE CHIPS\nMaple Leafs have a new defenceman prospect in town. He\nis \"Buck\" Crawford, a V 1\" 2l0-\npounder, recently cut by the\nSeattle Totems. Kromm intends\nto take a good look at the highly\ntouted newcomer and indicated\nhe might give him a starting assignment in Wednesday's, encounter with Rossland at Civic\nCentre . . . Until mid-way in the\nthird period, the Maple Leaf defensive unit played by far its\nbest game of the season. Dave\nStewart and Frank Carlson enjoyed a particularly good night,\n... Gus Adams had to be extremely sharp late in the first\nperiod when Ivan Shusheski and\nBud Andrews tested him with labeled drives ... The Warriors\nhave come up with a couple Of\ngood ones in John Wyatt and\nLynn Bentley. Defence is the big\nproblem in the Warrior camp.\nAndrews appears to be the best\nmember of the Warrior rearguard brigade by a country mile.\nFor Rossland, it was the third\ngame in as many days. They'll\nbring a rested crew for a return\nvisit Wednesday night.\nNelson travels to Trail for the\nfirst time this year, Thursday\nnight. Dual wins could give\n\"Kromm's Kids\" a share of the\nWIHL lead with one quarter of\nthe schedule played.\nI\nNicklaus Wins\nAussie Tournament\nSYDNEY, Australia CP -\nJack Nicklaus, of Columbus,\nOhio, won the Australian Open\ngolf championship in an 18-hole\nplayoff with Australian Bruce\nDevlin Sunday.\nNicklaus shot a 67 and Devlin a 70 on the par 72 Lakes\nCourse. They had tied at 287\nSaturday after the scheduled\nfour rounds of the tournament.\nNicklaus blrdied three of the\nlast nine holes Saturday and\nshot a five-under-par 67 to tie\nDevlin, who shot 71-71 on his\nlast two rounds.\nTed Ball of Australia matched\nNicklaus' 67 on the final round\nand just missed an eagle putt\nat the 18th, taking third place\nat 288.\nThe Australian Open is \"worth\n\u00a33,000 Australian and Nicklaus\ncollected \u00a3750 $1,750.\nDevlin, who won the open in\n1960, received $785.\nTiger Cats Finish\nOn Winning Note\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe surging Hamilton Tiger-\nCats closed out their regular\nEastern Football Conference season Sunday with a\n21-14 rout of the Montreal Alouettes.\nThe contest between the Eastern Conference champion Cats\nand third-place Montreal had no\neffect on standings. The Ticats\nhave a 10-3-1 record while the\nAlouettes had six wins and\neight losses.\nIn Saturday's action the Ottawa Rough Riders rebounded\nfrom three  straight losses to\nFOOTBALL\nSCORES\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nEastern Conference\nOttawa 36 Toronto 0\nWestern Conference\nEdmonton 20 askatchewan 26\nAmerican League\nNew York 35 Boston 14\nUnited League\nQuebec 34 Toledo 14\nCharleston 28 Wheeling 23\nGrand Rapids 56 Jollet 21\nSenior Intercollegiate\nQueen's 20 McGill 0\nToronto 27 Western 42.\nWestern Intercollegiate\nSaskatchewan 13 Alberta Cal 23\nManitoba 6 Alberta (Edm) 16\nOntario Intercollegiate\nCarleton 40 Ottawa 30\nGuelph 19 McMaster 42\nEastern Canada Junior\nWindsor 26 Montreal 34\n(Montreal wins sudden-death\nfinal)\nAtlantic Conference\nStadacona 46 Mount Allison 1\nSt. Mary's 49 U.N.B. 0\nSt. F.X. 35 St. Dunstan's 7\nDalhousie 32 Acadia 13\nNational League\nCleveland 50 Pittsburgh 17\nDallas 24 Chicago 10\nGreen Bay 42 Minnesota 13\nLos Angeles 17 Detroit 37\nSt. Louis 17 New York 34\nSan Francisco 7 Baltimore 37\nWashington 21 Philadelphia 10\nEastern   Conference\nHamilton 21 Montreal 14\nWestern Conference\nWinnipeg 8 B.C. 26\nAmerican League\nKansas City 49 Denver 39\nSan Diego 31 Oakland 17\nHouston 10 Buffalo 24\nWestern Canada Junior\nEdmonton 47 Regina 8\nManitoba Senior\nSt. Vital 37 St. James 22\n'Bast-three semi-final tied 1-1)\nswamp the Toronto Argonauts\n36-0.\nThe 16,146 Montreal fans saw\nquarterback Bernie Faloney\nthrow touchdown passes to\nTommy Grant and Willie Be-\nthea as Hamilton assumed an\nearly lead and never trailed.\nDon Sutherin kicked two converts, a 44-yard field goal, two\nsingles and the Ticat defence\nadded two-point safety touch.\nJerry Fields and Vernon Cole\nscored Montreal's two touchdowns and Willie Lambert converted both.\nIn Toronto, before 17,701\nfreezing fans, Dave Thelen, the\nRider fullback who has not\nbeen enjoying one of his better\nyears, bulled his way for three\ntouchdowns, including a 76-\nyard pass-and-run play from\nquarterback RUss Jackson.\nWhit Tucker and Ron Stewart\nran for the other Rider touchdowns. Racine converted all\nfive and added a single on an\nattempted 32 \u2022 yard field goal\nthat went wide.\nThe victory did little in the\nstandings since Ottawa had already sewed up second place\nbehind the Tiger-Cats and the\nArgos were once again relegated to last in the four-team\nloop.\nGAVE THEM CONFIDENCE\nThe outcome, however, did\nserve to provide the rejuvenated Riders with some much-\nneeded confidence amid rumored dissesion among the\nplayers and reported dissatisfaction among Ottawa brass\nand Coach Frank Clair.\nThe Riders never looked\nmore ferocious and their enthu-\nsiam, coupled with Argo's\nfrustration, brought. tempers to\na breaking point early in the\nthird quarter.\nStewart, on one of Ottawa's\nrazzle-dazzle pass plays, was\nobviously caught for a big loss\nbut the little Ottawa halfback\nmanaged to get a partially\nblocked pass away.\nAlthough the play had been\nruled an incomplete pass, players from both sides continued\nto jostle each other in an attempt to recover it along the\nOttawa sidelines.\nThen, when several punches\nwere thrown, the Ottawa bench\ncleared. When play was resumed, referee Harry Ross had\nejected Jim Leo and Ron\nBrewer of the Argos and Ottawa's Billy Joe Booth from the\ngame for their part in the melee.\nwhy not drink something\nyou'll reajjy like?\nRUM\nThe light, smooth flavour\nof Maraca Rum tells you it is one of\nthe world's extra fine rums.\nSun-mellow, distinctively dry, Maraca\nis setting the fashion in rum drinks.\nYou'll enjoy Maraca\u2014it's light\nand smooth as tropical rhythm.\nTry it tonight.\nMA-RA-CA\ntha musical\ninstrument\nof tropical\nrhythm\nExotic net-covered bottle\nmarks this extra-fine rum\nmi..*\u00bb,\u00bb.._,_i. not. rtlithrtardltpj^hytht i. ,u\u00bb,\u00a3<,\u201e\u201e\u201e, ,aw\u201eM6twmtM\u201e ,,,,\u201e\u25a0 e .^\n\"\u00abwwnu\n Lions Clinch Conference Title\nBy DENNIS ORCHARD\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014British\nColumbia Lipns nailed down\nfirst place in the last game of\nthe Western Football Conference Sunday, with a 26-8 victory over Winnipeg Blue Bombers before 29,614 fans.\nIt is their second conference\ntitle in a row and means 14\ndays of rest and a bye into the\nconference finals while Calgary\nStampeders and Saskatchewan\nRoughriders fight for the other\nberth.\nBombers finished last. The\ngame was their 12th consecutive loss.\nLions finished the schedule\nwith 25 points on 11 victories,\nthree ties and two losses. It was\njust one point better than the\nStampeders, whose victory over\nLions last Wednesday \u2014 their\n13th in 16 games\u2014gave them\ntemporary possession of first\nplace.\nB.C. has decided to play the\nfirst game of the finals at either\nCalgary Or Regina Nov. 14, returning to Vancouver for the\nsecond and, if necessary, third\ngames of the best-of-thrce series.\nLions put Sunday's game\naway in two minutes of the second quarter when quarterback\nJoe Kapp threw a pass of 35\nyards to Willie Fleming setting\nup a nine-yard touchdown run\nby Bob Swift, and another pass\nto end Mack Burton that went\n65 yards for a second touchdown.\nB.C. got a third touchdown on\nthe first series of the second\nhalf when rookie Lou Holland\nran the left end to score from\nthe 37-yard-line. The rest of the\nB.C. points were scored by\nkicker Peter Kempf, on two\nfield goals set up by pass inter-\nj ceptions and penalties.\nj Winnipeg took a brief 7-3 lead\nearly in the second quarter\nI when quarterback Kenny Ploen\nI escaped a ferocious pass rush\n| and caught end Noel Dunford\nwith a pass on the sidelines.\nDunford danced the rest of the\nway for a 37-yard touchdown\nplay converted by Bob Reed. A\nthird-quarter punt by Bomber\nWayne Dennis was conceded for\na single.\nBombers were able to com\nplete short passes against the\nB.C. defence, but it didn't get\nthem first downs. Ploen was\n| intercepted once in the first half\nand Hal Ledyard, his replace-\n! ment, suffered three more in\nthe second half.\nj Apart from the three plays\n.that broke up the game, Lions\n'had more than enough to ban-\nNELSCN DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964 \u2014 7\nFinal Standings\ndie with the Bomber defensive | Norm Rauhaus in pursuit. Bur-' passing. B.C. rushed for only I gained 60 yards rushing and 127\nline   and   Kapp  was   dumped ton changed course twice in the j 105 yards and picked up 19 first I passing for nine first downs.\noften and hard. | last 10 yards and Rauhaus fell downs. j   The game's leading  ground- j B.C.\nOn  Burton's  decisive  touch- j  a'*\ndown, the big end beat defender    Three more receptions  gave\nBill Miller to the ball, then ran | Burton a total of 100 yards of\nKapp was eight for 20 on his gainers was Swift with 82 yards Calgary\npassing, compared with 10 for in 16 carries, Kapp's personal Sask.\n16 by Ploen and only one for | rushing record  showed  a net Edmonton\n33 yards to the end zone with Lions'  total  170 yards  gained seven   by   Ledyard.   Winnipeg loss of 23 yards.\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nWestern Conference\nW L T   F AptlOttawa\n11 2 3 328168 25\n12 4 0 352 249 24\n'9 7 0 330 28218\n412 0 222 458 8\n1 14  1 270 397 3\nEastern Conference\n1 Winnipeg\nHam\nMontreal\nToronto\nW L T   F A pt\n8 5 1 313 228 17\n10 3 132920121\nt 8 019226412\n410 0 243 332 8\nQuebec Aces\nWin Tenth Straight\nQUEBEC (CP) - Quebec\nAces, paced by Wayne Hicks'\ntwo goals, zipped to their 10th\nstraight victory Saturday night,\ndefeating Cleveland Barons 6-2\nin an American Hockey League\nfixture.\n... But They'll Need\nTheir Two Weeks' Rest\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia Lions showed Sunday\nthey badly need the 14 days rest\nthey'll have before playing a\nthree-game final for a Grey Cup\nberth in the Canadian Football\nLeague.\nThere was none of the usual\nwild shouting or horseplay in\nthe Lions dressing room at Empire Stadium after the team\ndefeated Winnipeg Blue Bombers\n26-8 in the final western conference game of the regular season.\nThey were too tuckered out.\nThe win gave them first place\nIn the league standings and a\nbye into the western conference\nfinals. Saskatchewan and Calgary must fight it out in a two-\ngame total point series for the\nright to meet Lions.\nOffensive coach Frank Johnston summed it up when he\nsaid: \"seven games in 28 days\n\u2014 this is quite a ball club to\ncome up with this big one.\"\nHe had praise for players like\nJessie Williams, who dressed\nfor the last three games with\ndoctors telling him he should\nbe in hospital for surgery on\nbadly damaged cartilage.\nCoach Dave Skrien said a\npreliminary check indicated no\nnew severe injuries came out of\nthe Winnipeg game, but he said\nWilliams is a question mark.\n\"We'll have to see what the\ndoctors say now,\" Skrien said.\nEnd Mack Burton, who made\na great come-back after badly\ndamaging an achilles tenden\nsaid it will take until next\nseason for him to return to\nfull speed.\n\"I've got to depend more on\ndeception than speed,\" he said.\nBurton used guile to ohake off\nNorm Rauhaus and score B.C.'s\nsecond touchdown of the game\non a 65-yard aerial from Joe\nKapp. Rauhaus had the angle on\nBurton near the 10-yard line\nbut a big hip-twisting fake left\nthe Winnipeg defensive halfback groping.\nLions only after-game display\nof spirit came when they gave\nSkrien  three  cheers.\nLancaster's Return Sparks\nRoughies to 26-20 Victory\nBy RON MacDONALD\nREGINA (CP) - Ron Lancaster returned to the helm\nSaturday night and guided Saskatchewan Roughriders to a\n26-20 victory over Edmonton\nEskimos as both clubs ran out\ntheir 1964 regular Western Football Conference season.\nLancaster deftly blended\npasses to flanker Hugh Campbell and the power running of\nfullback George Reed and halfback Ed Buchanan, to bring\nRiders the victory.\nHe has been out ot action\nsince he suffered a rib injury\nOct. 6 in an interlocking Canadian Football League game at\nOttawa.\nA crowd of 10,300 turned out\nin 30-degree temperatures to\nsee the game and brought the\nclub's 1964 season attendance to\n127,800, far above the old mark\nof 111,550 set last year.\nReed came up with a three-\ntouchdown performance in\nRiders final tune up for the\nWFC two-game total-point semifinal, which opens in Regina\nnext Saturday. They were his\neighth, ninth and 10th of the\nleason.\nCampbell got his nth touchdown of the season, all on\npasses, when he combined with\nLancaster on a 27-yard scoring\nplay In the final quarter.\nTackle Reg Whitehouse con-\nverted two of the touchdowns\nas Riders broke loose from a\nscoreless deadlock and took a\n12-4 halftime margin and led\n19-14 at three-quarter time.\nHalfback Bill Tobin and quarterback Bill Redell each got\ntouchdowns for Eskimos. Centre Bill Mitchell got a convert,\na single and two field goals.\nHowever, the biggest mark\nfor Eskimos was Tommy Joe\nCoffey's success in bettering the\nleague record for yards gained\non pats receptions.\nCoffey caught four passes for\n30 yards to bring his yardage\ntotal to 1,144 and surpass a record of 1,126 yards set by end\nErnie Pitts of Winnipeg in 1959.\nThe four receptions increased\nCoffey's season record to 81.\nThe old mark of 74 was established last year by flanker\nBobby Taylor of.Calgary.\n<fl\nBuchanan, top rusher In the\ngame with 143 y a r d s, boosted\nhis season's total to 1,390-70\nyards better than Cookie Gilchrist's old Roughrider club\nseason rushing record.\nCampbell caught six passes\nfor 134 yards and boosted his\nseason yardage gained on\npasses to 1,000.\nTobin led Eskimos With 139\nyards rushing.\nSaskatchewan had 21 first\ndowns on 233 yards rushing and\n113 passing. Redell completed\nnine of 16 passes.\nFighting Irish\nBack on Top\nBy THE A8S0CIAT&9 PRESS\nIt's been a long time coming,\nbut Notre Dame Is back in a\nfamiliar role\u2014in the forefront\nof the fight for college football\nhonors.\nAny ideas that the Fighting\nIrish might be no more than a\nteam of early season wonders\nwere erased Saturday when\nthey crushed Navy and quarter,\nback Roger Staubach 40-0 at\nPhiladelphia for their sixth\nstraight victory.\nSecond ranked in The Associated Press poll a week ago, the\nIrish threatened to take over\nthe No. 1 spot from Ohio State,\nwhich had to stop a two-point\nconversion bid in the final seconds for a narrow 21-19 triumph\nover Iowa.\nAlthough it was a form week,\nnone of the top-ranking elevens\nwas able to match Notre\nDame's show of speed and\npower against an opponent\nrated good enough to win.\nAlabama, No. 3, won its seventh straight by beating Mississippi State 23-6 and fourth-\nranked Arkansas scored No. ;\nby shutting out Texas A and M\n17-0. Nebraska, No. 5, remained\nunbeaten and untied in seven\ngames by edging Missouri 9-0\nand Texas, No. 6, the defending\nnational champion, squeaked\npast Southern Methodist 7-0.\nThe only casualty in the Top\nTen was Oregon, which lost Its\nfirst game of the season to\nStanford 10 \u2022 8. Oregon was\nranked No. 7.\n100 FREE COUPONS\nfrom MARK TEN, the\ngifted cigarette that\noffers you so much\nmore\nsuperior quality cigarette    famous brand-name gifts     exciting bonus dividend\nonson Jjtt Kodak\nSchick LAWH-BO)\nESTCLOX Tex-mai\nADY BUXTON Q \/II\nBULOVA SCHICK\nPARKER  \/IL\u20acX \/8BB\nGENERAL^ ELECTRIC 4\nHOOVER PARKER TeX\nWSmiti BSSBK .(&) <f>\nS&\u00a3*6\u00ab\u00ab* SONY LAWN\nMark Ten is pledged to bring you the finest quality\ncigarette in Canada. No compromise is made. Mark\nTen cigarettes uphold the highest standards of the\nindustry-from tobacco to paper; from filter to protective packaging. The greatest care has been taken\nto assure that every Mark Ten you smoke comes to\nyou in the freshest, most enjoyable form. For a remarkably smooth smoke, enjoy Mark Ten with its\nunique combination of 10 superior Virginia tobaccos.\nYou can choose from renowned nationally advertised\nproducts for your Mark Ten gifts. Famous brand-\nnames like these are to be found only in the very\nfinest shops, stores and the Mark Ten Gift Catalogue.\nAnd you select your gifts from a wide range that includes hundreds of gift suggestions. Begin to save\nfor the Mark Ten Gifts of your choice. Each Mark Ten\ngift is personally selected for your Gift Catalogue by\nMarie Tenant, Mark Ten's exclusive gift consultant.\nCut out and save this valuable bonus dividend. It\nhas the full value of 100 Mark Ten coupons when\naccompanied by 250 standard Mark Ten coupons.\n(If you save mora than one special bonus dividend,\neach will be honoured if accompanied by 250 stand*\nard Mark Ten coupons.) This offer is good until\nDecember 31,1965. Write for your free Mark Ten.\nGift Catalogue. Requests should be addressed to:\nMark Ten, P.O. Box 190, Snowdon, Montreal 29, Que.\nFILTER TIP \u2022 PLAIN \u2022AND NOW, MENTHOL\nStandard Mark Ten Coupons come in values of 1 and 10.\n *Wtm\nmamwm\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964\ntiGN Of THE TIMES?-Not really, lust an unfinished sign In\nSIGNMad2on1TI\u00a35,Vn the Madison Farmers elevator.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1964\n:59-Sign On\n:00\u2014News and Reports\n: 10-Wake Up Time\n;40\u2014Farm Fare\n45-Chapel in the Sky\nOO-News\n05-Wake Up Time\n25\u2014Sports News\n: 30\u2014News\n:35-Wake Up Time\n:00\u2014News\n; 10\u2014Sports News\n:15 Wake Up Time\n:30-Preview Commentary\n: 35\u2014Opening Markets\n:40\u2014Wake Up Time\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Birthday Jackpot\n15\u2014The Archers\n30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Musicale\n: 10\u2014What's the Song Contest\n: 15\u2014Music\n: 00\u2014News\n05\u2014Christmas Cavalcade\n:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\nlS-Sports News\n31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n54\u2014News\n57\u2014Noon Markets\n00\u2014Sing Along\n:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30-News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Court of Opinion\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Sports Report\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n4:30-Countdown\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014The Rolling Home Show\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40\u2014Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n5:55\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Country time\n7:09-News and on\nParliament Hill\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Music For Listening\n9:00\u2014National Farm Forum\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-B.C. News and Weather\n10:15-Chapel In The Sky\n10:30\u2014Continental Holiday\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Ken's Korner\n12:00-News\n12:03\u2014Sign Off\nCBC  PROGRAMS\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1964\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014The Morning Program\n1:35 Max Ferguson Show\n1:00\u2014News and Report\n1:10\u2014Interlude\n1:15\u2014The Archers\n1:30\u2014Pacific Express\n):59-D.O.O.T.S.\n):00-Morning Visit\n1:15\u2014To Market With Music\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n1:00\u2014Off the Record\n!:0O Maurice Pearson Show\n!: 15\u2014News\n!:25\u2014Bill Good Sports News\n1:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n!: 55\u2014Five to One\nl:0O-Curio Shop\nl:15-Whafs On Tapp\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30-News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Tempo\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10 Tempo\u2014Part Two\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00-U.S. Election\n7:0O\u2014News (and)\nOn Parliament Hill\n7:20\u2014Speakinu  Personallv\nr\n11:00 Symphony Hall\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Recorded Musle\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\n6:30 Huckleberry Hound\n7:00 Wyatt Earp\n7:30 Voyage to the Bottom\nof the Sea\" *\n8:30 No Time For Sergeants '\n9:00 Wendy and Me *\n9:30 Bing Crosby Show *\n10:00 Ben Casey \u2022\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Bob Young and News '\n11:30 Compton White for\nCongress\n11:35 Late Show\n\"The Marrying Kind\"\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n7:00 Small World Adventure\n7:30 To Tell the Truth \u2022\n8:00 Lt. Gov. Goodlive (Rep)\n8:30 Gov. Rosellini (Demo)\n9:00 The Lucy Show *\u25a0\n9:30 Goldwater for Pres. \u2022\n10:00 Slattery's People *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 Big 4 Movie\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\n7:00 Best of Groucho\n7:30 90 Bristol Court *\n9:00 Dan Evans for Governor\n9:30 John Mattmiller for\nCongress (Idaho)\n10:00 Pre-Electlon Special *\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Coneressman White\n11:35 Tonight with Carson \u2022 (C)\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 The Secret Storm\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 The World of Nature\n5:30 Music Hop\n6:00 Lucy\n6:25 Home Edition\n7:00 7 o'clock Show\n7:30 Don Messer's Jubilee\n8:00 Show of the Week\n9:00 Danger Man\n10:00 Other Voices\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nTUESDAY\n7:45 Test Pattern\n4:00 Secret Storm\n8:00 U of A Math\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n8:30 Sign Off\n5:00 Mr. JP Patches\n9:45 Test Pattern\n5:30 Music Hop\n10:00 Canadian Schools\n6:00 Sports, Weather, News\n10:30 Across Canada\n6:30 My Favorite Martian *\n11:00 Friendly Giant\n7:00 Farming Today *\n11:15 Chez Helene\n7:30 Let's Sing Out *\n11:30 Butternut Square\n(* May be pre-empted by\n11:50 CBC News\nU.S. Elections)\n12:00 Farm Highlights\n8:00 U.S. Presidential\n12:15 Midday Report\nElections\n12:30 Tugboat Annie \u2014\n9:00 CBC News\n\"Indelicate Delinquent\"\n9:15 U.S. Elections\n1:00 Trailmaster \u2014\n10:00 CBC News\n\"Jean Lebec Story\"\n10:05 U.S. Elections\n2:00 Lawman\n11:00 CBC News\n\"Shadow Witness\"\n11:05 U.S. Elections\n2:30 Prairie Profiles\n11:50 CBC News\n3:00 As The World Turns\nSign off after election coverage\n3:30 Take Thirty\n\"Gift of Tongues\" Seen\nAs New Life for Religion\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP) - \"The\nwords I uttered were above and\nbeyond my own intelligence.\n\"It happened three years ago.\nI had been praying for the experience.\n\"One day, here in my living\nroom, I was kneeling in prayer.\nSuddenly I had a feeling of\ngreat and uninhibited joy.\n\"I began to praise God in\nEnglish, then changed to another language. It was a beautiful experience.\"\nThe speaker is Vivian BrUner\nof Dallas. She is a Baptist. She\ntakes part in one of the most\ncontroversial activities in Christianity today: Glossolalia.\nGlossolalia means \"gift of\ntongues,\" which Webster's\nThird New International dictionary defines as: \"Ecstatic\nspeech that is usually unintelligible to hearers and is uttered\nin worship services of various\ncontemporary religious groups\nlaying great stress on religious\nand emotional fervor.\"\nProponents see it as a religious prairie fire sweeping the\ngrass roots of American religion. They say they hope it will\nbreathe new life and vitality\ninto what they call \"The cold\nand sterile\" church.\nIt. is related in the New Testament in the Book of Acts, Chapter 2, when the Apostles gathered at Jerusalem 50 days after\nEaster:\n\"And when the day of Pentecost was fully gone, they were\nall with one accord in one\nplace.\n\"And suddenly there came a\nsound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled\nall the house where they were\nsitting.\n\"And there appeared unto\nthem cloven tongues like as of\nfire, and it sat upon each of\nthem.\n\"And they were all filled with\nthe Holy Ghost, and began to\nspeak with other tongues, as the\nSpirit gave them utterance.\"\nSpeaking with tongues has\nbeen a characteristic of the\nPentecostal movement since it\nsprang up shortly after 1900.\nMembers of the movement\nbelieve the blessings of the\nHoly Spirit permit them to\nspeak in tongues, heal and have\nvisions.\nIn the last five years, the\npractice appeared in some Baptist; Presbyterian and Episcopal churches.\nSome ministers of non-Pentecostal churches who have practised and condoned speaking in\ntongues have resigned under\nfire from congregation members.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nArsenal 3 Everton 1\nAston Villa 2 Fulham 0\nBlackburn 3 Birmingham 1\nWanted Dead or Alive,\nMalawi Minister Safe\nBLANTYRE, Malawi (Reuters)\u2014Three former Malawi ministers, including education minister Henry Chipembere, have\nslipped across the border and\nwere reported to have reached\nthe Tanzania republic, Radio\nMalaivi reported Saturday.\nThree days ago Malawi Prime\nMinister Dr. Hastings Banda\nsaid he ordered a full - scale\nsearch for Chipembere, 34, adding: \"I want him brought back,\nalive if possible ... but if not\n. . . in any other way.\"\nChipembere disappeared after\nbeing placed under restriction\nearlier this month.\nOne of Dr. Banda's chief critics, he resigned from the cabinet last month in sympathy\nAT LAST\nWRIGLEY'S\nSPEARMINT\n13 IN THE\nM00E.RN\nwith five other ministers who\nwere either dismissed or re-\nsigned.\nMalawai, formerly Nyasaland,\nbecame independent of Britain\nin July.\nSEEN IN TANGANYIKA\nAccording to Saturday's radio\nbroadcast the three men crossed\nthe border into Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) some\ntwo miles away from the Fort\nHill customs post, which is 50\nmiles from Tunduma, a Zambia-Tanzania customs post. The\nradio said the three men were\nreported to have been seen in\nTanganyika.\nIn the cabinet shakeup early\nin September, Chirwa was dismissed as minister of justice\nand attorney-general, and Chis-\niza, home affairs minister re-\nAnother dismissed minister,\nKanyama Chiume (foreign affairs), arrived in Dar-es-Sa-\nlaam, Tanganyika, early this\nmonth.\nDr. Banda has accused the ex-\nministers of .plotting against\nhim, and said they tried to use\nwitchcraft to get rid of him.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1 Metal\ncontainers\n5. Mongrels\n9. S-shaped\nmolding\n10. On top\n11. Test\n12. Fanatical\n14.Guldo's note\n15. Ostrichlike bird\n17. Metallic\nrock\n18. Cry, as\na cat\n20. Native of\nSparta\n23. Mohammedan call\nto prayer\n25, Secret agent\n28. Military\ntitle: abbr.\n27. Small,\npointed\nbeards\n30, Metric\nmeasure\n82.\t\nJohnson\nS3. Not firm\n86. Sculptors'\nwork\nbenches\nSB. Swiss\ncanton\n40. First\nwoman\n41. One and one\n43. Conjunction\n44. Dwelt\n47. Ascend\n49. Roman\nemperor\n60. A fruit-\nfilled\npastry\n51. Scottish-\nGaelic\ni, Vt. Weaver's\ninstrument\nDOWN\n1. Spanish\nconqueror\nof Mexico\n2. Past\n3. Glacial\nsnow\n4. Appears\n5. Vehicle\n6. Skin\ndisease:\nPeru\n7. Mechanical\nman\nS.Coll\n11. Cougar\n13. A bump\nmark\n16. A\nparvenu\n19. Osculate,\naa\ntall\n21. Simian\n22. Cereal\ngrains\n24. Corner\n28. Peer\nGynt'a\nmother\n29. French\ncoin\n30. Adam's son\n31.A gorge\n34. Hoary\n35. Pneumatic\ntube\npiiuMa MHEiia\n[uranii arans\naraarn  E1HH  HB\nraara hebei so\nbsbhheih uraia\nasm raramis\njhhhb amr-rasa\nansa hbh\narara anraraaQE\nam marara siran\nsaaa uiaiss\nS\u00bb\u00bbnnlty'i Ainru\n37. Not at\nanytime\n38.Httshar .\n42. Spoken\n45. Bitter\nvetch\n46. Female\ndeer\n48. Anger\n%\n1\nz\ni\n4-\n^\n5\nV\n7\n6\n^\nty<\n\u2022>\n'^\nIO\n'fa\nII\n%\n12.\nis\"\n14\n%\n15\nIb\nt\n%\n17\nIS\n1.\nV\/\/l\n\u00a30\n21\nft-\n\u00bb\n24\n%\n25\n^1\nV.\nV\/\/l\n%\na\n16\na\nV\/\/l\n%\n30\nV\n%\nU\n'^\n\u00bb\n34\n35\nib\n17\n5\u00bb\n%\na\n40\n%\n'^A\n41\n42\n%\n4}\n44\n45\n4I>\nl\n47\n49\nl\n49\nl\nSO\n1\n%\nSI\n%\nit\n%\nll-l\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXB\nla LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la used\nfor the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter*, apos-\ntrophiea, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters axe different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBP1JAU      XK      M      CWTJMKHAU      XR\nGMIRUKK      EPXFP      RLRU      QHB\nOMIGUR      VRLE. \u2014FMYWXBB\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: WE LIE LOUDEST WHEN WE\nLIE TO OURSELVES.\u2014HOFFER\n(C U64. Kins Feature* Sywllcato, lac)\nBlackpool 1 West Ham 1\nChelsea 0 Burnley 1\nLeeds 4 Sheffield U 1\nLeicester 4 Tottenham 2\nLiverpool 0 Man United 2\nSheffield W 1 West Brom 1\nSunderland 2 Stoke City 2\nWolverhampton 1 Notts F 1\nDivision n\nCharlton 3 Coventry 0\nCrystal P 1 Northampton 1\nDerby 3 Plymouth 2\nLeyton Or 1 Huddersfield 0\nMan City 2 Chardiff 0\nNorwich 1 Newcastle 1\nPortsmouth 1 Preston 0\nRotherham 2 Middlesbrough t\nSwansea 2 Bolton 0\nSwindon 3 Ipswich 1\nDivision HI\nBournemouth 0 Watford 0\nBrentford 2 Southend 1\nBristol R 1 Barnsley 0\nColcester 2 Reading 2\nExeter 0 Walsall 1\nGrimsby 3 Hull City 0\nLuton 0 Bristol C 0\nMansfield 3 Gillingham 1\nOldham 2 Scunthorpe 1\nPeterborough 0 Workington 4\nPort Vale 1 Shrewsbury 1\nDivision IV\nAldershot 0 Brighton 2\nBradford 3 Lincoln 1\nChesterfield 2 Barrow A\nDoncaster 2 Oxford 2\nHalifax 1 Rochdale 2\nNewport 2 Millwall 2\nNotts C 1 Hartlepools 0\nSouthport 0 York City 1\nWrexham 4 Stockport 1\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nAberdeen 2 Falkirk 1\nCeltic 2 Airdrleonians 1\nDundee 0 Kilmarnock 1\nDunfermline 2 Partick 0\nHearts 4 Morton 1\nMotherwell 0 Hibernian 2\nRangers 6 Clyde 1\nSt. Mirren 0 Dundee 2\nThd Lanark 0 St. Johnstone 1\nDivision II\nAlbion 4 Brechin 2\nArbroath 2 Queen of S *.\nAyr U 0 Raith 4\nEast Fife 2 Queens Pk 1\nE Stirling 2 Berwick 1\nMontrose 0 Hamilton 1\nStenhousemulr 3 Cowdenbeath \u25a0\u25a0\nStirling 2 Alloa 1\nStranraer 4 Forfar 4\nIRISH LEAGUE\nCity Cop   ..._\nArds 1 Derry City 2\nCliftonville 2 Ballymena T\nColeraine 1 Portadown 2\nGlenavon 1 Bangor 1\nGlentoran 4 Crusaders 0\nLinfield 2 Distillery 6\nSenator Sics FBI\nOn Poison Penners\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Senator Pierre Salinger (Dem.-\nCalif.) says he has turned over\nto the FBI anonymous chain letters which call his mother a\nCommunist.\n\"I have asked the FBI to\nexert every possible effort to\ndiscover the source of these despicable mailings, which are\nclearly in violation both of federal law and of decent campaign practices,\" Salinger said\nin a statement Friday night,\nEarlier in the day, Salinger\nlodged a protest with the state\nand national Fair Campaign\nPractices Committee, charging\n\"anonymous hate sheets\"\nagainst him and his parents\nwere distributed through the\nheadquarters of George Murphy\nSalinger's Republican opponent.\nSalinger said literature distributed through Murphy headquarters in Los Angeles declared that his mother and\nfather were \"active socialists in\nFrance.\"\nA spokesman for the Murphy\nheadquarters in Los Angeles\nsaid:\n\"We, the Murphy headquarters, notified the press four days\nago that this literature had been\nfound in one of our headquarters. At that time we repudiated it and denied vehemently\nthat we had anything to do with\nit, had seen it or, much less.\nauthorized it.\"\nRead the Classified Dally\n [\u25a0;. ,;$:j daily n&v< 5, mcn\u201e nov. 2, 1964 \u2014 9\nfih&m\n352 3552\nBIRTHS\nBUERGE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nMelton Buerge, Box 634, Kaslo,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, on Oct. so, a son.\nHENDY \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nWayne Hendy, Cranbrook, formerly of Nelson, on Oct, 30,\na ion.\nHELP WANTED\nPARTSMAN - EXPERIENCED\nautomotive partsman required\nI by expanding G.M. Dealership\ni In Calgary. Top working conditions, all fringe benefits, plus\noutstanding opportunity tor aggressive man. Apply to Parts\n! Manager: \u2014 Stampede Motors\n| Ltd. - 1449-17th Avenue S.W.\nI Calgary,  Alberta \u2014 Phone:\n'  224-8921. -257-259\nHEAVY DUTY MECHANIC TO\ntake charge of shop. Apply Bill\nMac.ay. Phone 426-2265,\nCrestbrook Timber Ltd., Box\n460, Cranbrook, B.C. -256-207\nEXPERIENCED BUTCHER\nand meat cutter wanted. Newdan Farm, Creston. Ph, 356-\n9901. 252-tfn\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nMIDDLE AGED HOUSEKEEP-\ner for an elderly couple, to\nlive in. Ph. Castlegar 365-7116.\n-257-262\nSEAMSTRESS, WITH SOME\nknowledge of tailoring, Apply\nin person to Jonella Cleaners,\nI 617 Victoria St.       -252-263\nROOM  AND BOARD\nCLEAN,     PRIVATE    BDRM.\n, for gentleman. Near Legion\n125. Ph. 352-5030 or 352-3644.\n-201-tfn\n1 OR 2 STUDENTS OR YOUNG\nworking gentleman, Ph, 352-\n7620. -252-257\nROOM AND BOARD. PHONE\n352-2766 after 5 p.m.  -249-tfn\nTRAILERS\nMOBILE HOMES\n57x10' 3 B.R. $7365\nIn 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 4-0741\nDay or Night\n-192-ttn\nTO CLEAR: ONE ONLY 1984 17\nft Tee-Pee self-contained, fully\nequipped, Reg. Price $2534.\nGoing at (2095. Don't pass this\none up \u2014 if you are looking for\na good buy on a travel trailer.\n1 \u2014 1959 Volkswagen Deluxe,\nheater, radio, new rubber, A\nnice clean car at only $795.\nCRANBROOK TRAILER\nSALES, Your Authorized\nSAFEWAY MOBILE HOME\nDEALER for the East and\nWest Kootenays. Fernie Road,\nin Cranbrook, Ph. 426-4935, Box\n2217. Walt Hill, Mgr. - Where\nMobile Homes Are Our Business Not a Side Line.\n' -252-tfn\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nWANTED r- MANAGER FOR\na profitable downtown health\nstore. Will sell equipment and\nstock at cost. Ph. 352-6144 for\nprice and terms. McHardy\nAgency Ltd. -255-257\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA bandy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n313 Baker SL      Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\n319 Nelson Ave.   Phone 352-5359\n-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baiter SL     Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker SL     Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO\nMl Front St. fh. 352-5571\nLots of free parking.\n-tfn\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional  Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nelson end Dist.\n1920 Davies St. - Nelson\n-tfn\nContractors\nLaslO Huszsk, General Masonry\nStone - Brick \u2022 Cement \u2022 Stucco\nPlastering\n. 1323 Falls St.        Pn. 352-7692\n'    .    -239-tfn\nART BAVESTEIN\nRenovations, Cement Work\nand General Carpentry\nPhona 352-7433\n-tfn\nFamily\nFinancial Advisors\nFINANCIAL ADVICE, DEBt\nCONTkOL\nFred C. Merrlman\n360 Baker St, - Ph.jiMgtt\nphone or write for confidential\nday or evening appointment.\n-236-261\nHealth Food\nHealth Thru Nutrition\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE\n924 Davies St.\n-233-258\nMonumental\nStones\n.Bronze and Granite\nK  D  REGS\nPh. 3524727    310-507 Baker St.\n-197-tfn\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: 'S3 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, Ph.\n352-5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir Rd.\n-221-tfn\n1958 CHEV. 2-DOOR 6 CYL.\nstandard. Radio, winter tires,\nnew paint. Will take in trade\nas part payment, FM radio or\ncombination, Also new steel\nseptic tank, $10 off reg, price.\nPh. 352-6111 or 352-5633 or 352-\n2042. 253-258\n1959 V.W. PASSENGER, PART-\nly wrecked, running gear in\ngood condition. Ph. 352-5346\nfrom 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m,\nevery day except Sat. afternoon and Sunday. Ask for\n\"Denis.\" -256-257\nFOR SALE: 3-TON TRUCK\nwith freezer van. Can be\nbought as unit or separate.\nContact A. L. La Freniere,\nKimberley. Phone 426.397.\n-256-258\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nBUILDERS' SPECIALS\n4x8x% Hardboard 2nds. Ea, 1.69\n4x8xV< Hardboard 2nds. Ea. 2.45\n4x8xV\u00ab PV Woodgrain V-grooved\n2nds. Each  4.29\nElm-Magnolia, Teak and\nChestnut\n4x8x3-16 Pegboard. 1\"\ncentres  3.65\n4x8x% Sanded Fir Plywood\nEach     8.95\nVi Sanded Cuttings. 12\" Wide.\nPer sq. ft. .11\nV4 Sanded Cuttings. 12\" Wide.\nPer sq, ft 16\nVt Sanded Cuttings.\nPer sq. ft 22\nMAHOGANY DOORS\n2 ft. x 6 ft, 6 in 6.45\n2 ft. 6 in. x 6 ft. 6 in 7.10\n2 ft. 8 in. X 8 ft. 8 in 7.65\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\n901 Front St.       Nelson, B.C.\n-253-258\nPOISE CAT LITTER\nCat Box sanitary. Prevents odors, can be used for\ngarbage cans, prevents barbe\ncue grease fires, absorbs and\ncleans grease and oil.\nNELSON FARMERS SUPPLY\n524 Railway St.        Ph. 352-537i\n-257-1\n1963 4-WHEEL DRIVE SCOUT.\nLow mileage, hubs and full\ncab, excellent condition. Can\nbe seen at Kline's Motors. Ph.\n352-7238, Nelson.        -254-259\nSee NELSON FLOWERS LTD.\nPhOne for private interview.\n-230-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n480 Ward St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-7521.\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents - important\nPapers.\n-tfn\n3=\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3553\n-tfn\nRadio & TV Service\nRadio -TV \u2022 Transistor \u2022 Service\nCOLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE\nLtD,\n458 Ward St.    Phone 352-5581\n-218-tfn\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St - Phone 352-3355\n-tfn\n==;\nRefrigeration\nFlying School\nGov't approved Flying School.\nAir Charter Service.\nSingle or multi-engine aircraft.\n' * WANETA  AIRWAYS\nPhOne 385-7444 6r 3*8-4*71\n,    .C\"tlegM'iC^26,\nTgfflBg\nGarages\n' Upper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies  Ph 352-2521\n' Transistorized Unities\n-.ta\nHealth Foods\nVitades for Nutrition.\nVITALITY HEALTH COODS\n5S4 Ward St,,\nNelson, B.C.\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelSon, B.C.      PhOne 352-5456\n-186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred White ley's Sport Shop\n4*3 Baker Street Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry'* Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh 333-3339 Days \u2022 352-7976 eves.\n-ta\nxpBsmmv%mmnw&i\nWelding &\nWorks\nron\nATOM-LOCK t- Heatless cdd-\nweld of Cast Iron Diesel cylinder heads, blanks, etc.\nQuick service by Specialist of\n30 years experience in Europe.\nCraftsmanship Guaranteed.\nKOOTENAY WELDING ft\nCasting repairs\n121 Columbia Ave., Castlegar\nPhone 365-5351\n-239-282\nFORCED TO SELL '62 PON-\ntlac. P.S. and R- and H., V-8,\nauto., seat belts. Phone J. Ellis, 352-2107 nights and weekends. -255-266\n'46 Q.M.C. 3-TON WITH 10-TON\nhoist on flat deck and logging\nbunks for $300. Phone 359-7558.\nF. Popoff, Slocan Park.\n-254-259\nFOR SALE: 1963 ACADIAN 4-\ndoor, 6 cyl.   Top   Condition.\nOwner leaving Canada. Phone\n296 or write Box 399, Nakusp.\n-254-262\n1961 LAND ROVER IN A-l CON-\ndition. Model 100, canopy, warren hubs. Phone 368-9979 or C.\nPlcope, 1488 2nd Avenue, Trail,\nB.C. -255-tfn\n1055 HILLMAN 4-DR. EXCEL-\nle'nt shape, winterized, licensed, ready-to-go. $400. PhOne\n352-3263 or see Garth Lipsack\nat Wait's. -265-260\n'55 FORD, '53 PLYMOUTH, '56\nHillman hardtop, 1959 Plymouth Belvedere, 1\u20141958 Chev.\nSedan, '61 Prinz. North Shore\nService. Ph. 352-2929. -188-tfn\n'57 MERCURY 2-DOOR H.T.-\nGood shape; full power; reaS,\npriced. Ph. 352-6766 after 5.\n-253-258\n959 MORRIS TRAVELLER\nStation Wagon, like new inside\nand Out, Ph. 305-7982 after.5\no'clock. ' \u25a0 \" \u2014255-260\n60 IMPALA, AUTO. V8, 4:\ndoor H.T., 4 brand new tires,\nradio. $2800. Ph, 226-7547.\n\"-256-261\n1953 ZEPHYft, GOOD' CONDI-\ntion, winterized; licensed, ready-to-go. $275. Call 352-2383 af-\nter 6 p.m. \u2014254259\nUSED AND SLIGHTLY DAM-\naged, automatic wood-coal\nheaters of several makes, at\ndrastically reduced prices, Ph,\n228-7221. Texaco Station, Valley Comfort Ltd,, Appledale.\n-239-tfn\nPUBUC NOTICES\nTIMBER SALE X84919\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 11:00\na.m. on the 20th day of November, 1964, for the purchase of\nLicence X84919, to Cut 173,000\ncubic feet of Spruce, Balsam,\nHemlock, Larch, Cedar, Lodgepole Pine, other species on an\narea situated Eagle Creek, Kootenay District.\nThree (3) years will be allowed for removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the\nEdgewood P.W.C., which is fully\ncommitted, this sale will be\nawarded under the provisions of\nsection 17 (la) of the Forest\nAct, which gives the timber-sale\napplicant certain privileges,\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or the Forest\nRanger, Edgewood, B.C.\n-257-257\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 29c; sides of pork, cut\nand wrapped, 33c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston. Ph. 356-9901 or\n-171-tfn\nTIMBER  SALE X91817\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 10:30 a.m.\n(local time) on Monday, November 16th, 1964, in the office\nof the Forest Ranger, Edgewood,\nB.C. the Licence X91817, to cut\n34,000 cubic feet of Cedar (dead)\nsawlogs on an area situated\nnear Keefer Lake, Kootenay\nDistrict.\nThree (3) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to\nbe opened at the hour of auction\nand treated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the District Forester Nelson, B.C.; or the Forest\nRanger, Edgewood, B.C.\n-257-257\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - STORE SPACE\nin Nelson Lumber Co. Marshall Wells building Fruitvale.\nArea 3500 feet with 70 feet\nfrontage, all glass. Ideal for\nsuper market which is badly\nneeded ln this town. Heavy\n. wiring for freezers, etc, Ample\nparking. Nelson Lumber Co.\nLtd,, Fruitvale, B.C. Phone\n367-7344. -248-265\nCOMFORTABLE 2 BDRM.\nhome at R.R. No. 1,. six mile,\nfurnished or unfurnished. For\nfurther information call Poulin\nAgencies Ltd. 352-7217.\n.  -257-262\nFIRST. 8 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\nHSKPG, AND SLEEPING RM.\nweekly, monthly rates.. Dishes,\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker St,\n-27-tfn\nSEMI-FURNISHED SUITE, IN-\ndudes stove, fridge, Heated,\nsuit female. Ph. 352-7195.\n-241-tfn\nLARGE 2 ROOM FURNISHED\napt:, heated, close to Baker St.\nPh. 352-6162 or 352-6411.\n-246-257\nRENTALS\nROOM  SUITE,   FURN.   507\nSilica St. Fh. 352-3488.-252-257\n2-ROOM SUITE, SUITABLE\nfor a couple or 2 girls. 116\nVernon Street. Ph. 352-5602.\n-254-tfn\nFOR RENT WITH OPTION TO\nbuy, 5 room house. Fairview.\nPh. 352-5048. -252-257\nNEW   2-B.R.   HOUSE.   OCCU-\npancy Nov. 1st. Ph. 352-5915,\n\u2014253-264\nTRAILER SPACE FOR RENT-\nKencourt Motel. Ph. 352-2821\n\u2014253-258\n2 ROOM FURN. SUITE, HEAT-\ned, suitable for one. Ph. 352\n5252. -257-tin\nFOR  RENT - HOUSEKEEP-\ning rm\u201e close in: Ph. 352-7462.\n-176-tfn\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nVIEW LOCATION, ONLY $1500.\ndown, two bedroom home, efficient kitchen and snack bar.\nTile bathroom with shower\ndoor. Full basement with new\ngas furnace and gas H. water.\nWired for W.-D. Upper and\nlower sun deck. 60' x 120'\nfully landscaped lot. Selling\nprice Is $8500. Ph. 352-6144\nMcHardy Agency  Ltd.\n-255-257\nJUST OUTSIDE THE CITY\nlimits. Low taxes. Two bedroom aluminum siding, appurtenances, low cost heating,\nwell planned L.R. and Kit. and\nDin. area. Wired for W.-D.\nOversized lot 205' x 120'. Blacktop driveway, storage shed\nand chicken coop. Selling price\nis $9500., only $1500. down. Ph.\n352-6144 McHardy Agency Ltd,\n-255-257\nFAIRVIEW, LARGE 2 STOREY\n3 bedroom house that needs\nthe attention of a handyman.\nSituated on 75'x 120' level lot,\nlandscaped. Several fruit trees\nand garden space, occupancy\nwithin 30 days. $1000 down and\n$65 per month including 6%\ninterest. Full space $6500. Wm.\nKaiyniuk Agencies., Phone\n35*2425. -250-tfn\n1 BDRM. FURN. HEATED APT.\nApply 1019 Latimer St,\n-249-tfn\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS   -\nFurn. or unfurn. Ph. 352-6721.\n' -85-tfn\nSELF  CONTAINED  3  ROOM\nsuite. Ph. 352-7139 after 6 p.m.\n-209-tfn\nFURN. HSKP. RM. APPLY 140\nBaker St. or Ph. 352-3384.\n' -227-tfn\nFOR THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd,,\n374 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n-27-tfn\n1956 TRUCK WITH CAMPER;\n300-amp. welder: 2 corner lots\noutside village limits, 4 blocks\nfrom elementary school. Apply\nW. Panagapka, Box 197, Salmo.\n-253-258\nMACHINERY\nGood Used Late Model\nCHAIN\nSAWS\nREDUCED\nTO SELL\nWASHER AND DRYER IN\ngood condition. Must be seen\nto be appreciated. T, Eaton Co.\nCanada Ltd., Nelson, B.C.\nI -254-259\nLARGE LOGGING HORSE AND\nCorvan 4-sided planer complete wth heads and belts. Ph.\n362-5936 or write Box 16, Rossland. -252-257\nFOR SALE - GOOD QUALITY\nalfalfa and timothy hay, delivered. JOe Pogany, Jnr\u201e\nLister, B.C. Ph. 356-2605.\n-233-h\nSinger sewing machine\nCo. Sewing machines, vacuum\ncleaners, floor polishers, typewriters, 339 Baker St. Phone\n352-3631. -257-262\nPLAYER PIANO FOR SALE\nwith rolls: Good condition.\nMrs. A. Guenard, Burton,' B.C.\nPhone 1-X. -254-257\nCHOICE BEEF - SIDE 100-200\nlbs. 45c lb. 200-273 lbs. 37c lb.\nPh. 352-6066. -233-258\nLARGE ALUMINUM BIRD-\nCagO. Like new. Ph. 352-6273\nbetween 10 and 12.    -256-261\nOIL COOK StOVfc IN GOOD\ncondition with attachments.\nPhonO 352-3913. -255-257\n1963 CORVAIR MONZA. BIG\nengine, 4-speed, W.W.,. radio,\netc.. Good cond. $2195. Finance\narranged. Ph. 352-2379.-253.258\nCOMPLETE!' CAR MOTOR, 1968\nChev V8; Standard trans; Write\nFrank Lunzi. Lardeau,\n'-.-    .,252-257\n1054 FORD, V8, MON, NfiW\npaint, good conditio)).. 1056\nPbnti'aC..Ph. Sj&Ott 1 JriSH-iBr\n1057 CHEV. BED.; V-8, STAN-\n' dard. Offers: N.D.U.; Rm, 703.\n.        -256-201\niOSfi Mfireoft, $1,000 or near-\ne6t offer. Ph. 352-7619. after 5.\n-267-450\n}932   GMC   Vi\nShore' Motel.\nPh.\nNORTH\n35*7722.\n-237-262\n1957 FORD, 4, DOOR,'IN GOOD\n. shape Ph. 352-5815.    \u2014237-tfn\n1954 CADILLAC. B.\nford. Ph. 229-4677.\nTOta\u00a3\n-239-262\nIS NEW, OIL' ItANGE AND\nelec. rangCtte. 103 High St.,\nNelson. F. W. (Sill.    -256-258\nCOAL AND WOOD FURNACE;\nskates, Size 13, 4. Ph. 352-2689.\nI . -256-267\nLOADER\" AND TRUCKS FOR\nhire. Also till and soil for sale.\nPhOne 361-6044,. -263-258\nDRY FIR AND TAMARAC. -\nStove length. Ph. 352-5465.\n-247-272\nCOAL AND WOOD STOVE, OIL\nheater. Ph. 352-2861.  -235-tfn\nPROPERTY WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city,and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write wm. Kaiyniuk\nAgencies, Nelson. Ph. 352-2426.\n-231-tfn\nWANTED - LAKEFRONT\nacreage, 10 aores up Prefer\nboat access only All cash for\nsuitable property $. Anderson. 100 n Fletcher St. (%m\nwack. B.C.  J -220-tfn\nNEW SAW GUARANTEE\n\u2014 We Make Trades \u2014\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n314 Railway SL    Ph. 352-5301\n-256-261\nWELDING GOGGLES\nCup Type, Cyclops, Conver\nGoggle, Dust and Grinding\nFace Shields, Dust Mask\nRespirators.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd\nPhOne 352-3561\nNICE 3 ROOM FURNISHED\nsuite, gas heat, fridge, 3 piece\nbath, close in, $35 per month.\nPhone 352-3331 after 3.-255-260\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED\napartment $35 per month. Ph.\n352-2696 or call at 614 Victoria\nStreet. ,< .- \u2014255-tfn\n(Continued next column)\n2 ROOM FURN.   APT.,   PRI-\nvate. Ph. 352-2684.     \u2014236-tfn\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNewspaper\nAdvertising\nPays Over and Over\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nLARGE FARM AND MACHIN-\nery situated on No. 3 highway\nbetween Fruitvale and Salmo;\nat present under hay, but suitable for dairy or horse ranch.\nWill consider .terms and for\nfurther particulars, write Box\n284, Nelson Dally News.\n- :   \u20142S3-258\n25 ACRES, 2 MODERN HOMES,\nauto, heat, garage, workshop\nand barn on Duncan Flats,\nnear Trail. Good spot ior horses. Apply Box 324, Trail or\nphone 364-1883 after 5 p.m, or\nanytime weekends.    \u2014236-tfn\nSMALL 2, BR COTTAGE ON\nbeautiful level lot in Fairview.\nL.R. has picture window. Base,\nment; gas furnace. $1600.\ndown. $7,700.00 Robertson,\nHilliard, Ph. 352-7252. -257-H\nPROPERTY,   HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC, FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE, 2 BIG LOTS ON\nVmir Roa.d, No. 14; 3 B.R.\nhouse on one. lot, part base-\nment. Very suitable lor store\nsite. Inquire at 14 Yipir.Rd,\n^219-tfn\nFOR SALE OR TRADE: 8\nacres orchard at Creston and\nirrigation. Ph. Nelson 352-7141\nor write Box 285, Nelson Daily\nNews. \u2014253-258\nSACRIFICE, 30.6 ACRE FARM,\n5 room house, out bldgs,, power\nand water, full price $3700.00.\nApply J. Hecker, Passmore.\nPh. 226-7456. 4-246-257\nFOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE\nBox 223, Nelson News\n.......    \u2014176-tfn\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM  SUPPLIES\nCATTLE.AUCTION-SALES. -\nMixed, NOv. 25. Director Frank\nHill, Box 2139, Cranbrook, B.C.\nor phone 4-Y Fort ^Steele.\n.:. \"\u25a0   \u25a0 v , fija-194-tfn\nKOH ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef, cattle; phone\n332-6874. Nolsoo\".-elH!> District\nA.l. Centra, ;n& miMst, Nelson. J pe Jong.:Tgai||cian\n\u25a0*&&,   -\u00abn\nI YEAR OLD CHICKENS 80c\na piece or 32c a lb., dressed.\nOlendale .Farm.-Eh 357-9734,\nSalmo,' >-lH4tlr|\n2 PURE BRED JERSEY COWS\nfor Sale. Ph. 352-8197. -255-21)0\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST:. CIGARETTE LIGHTER,\nvicinity of Ward and Vernon\nSt.; finder please return to\nCP, Telegraphs, 460 Baker St.\nv-.:-.;-256-238\nFOUND: ONE 10 BY 20 TIRE\nand rim, WES written on rim.\nPhone 7-B Gray (Jteelt.\n'\u25a0\u25a0.:> .*-254-259\nRETAIL BUILDING. PRIME\nlocation on Baker St. Only\n$7350 down and $221.31 per\nmonth including Interest.\nM.L.S. Wm. Kalynltik Agencies. Ph. 332-2425.       -250-tfn\n(Continued next columpi\nLOST - WATCH, 23 JEWEL\nBulova, between Vernon and\nBaker St., at about lSaff, Mon.\nReward. Ph. 352;S8B\u00a3252-257\n\" ; '\u2022'  .*<' .* .:\t\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiintii .iniim\nNewspaper A<Jy* .rising\n..'\u25a0 Pay* dvtr.-'eWZQbet'\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiii\n\u2014257-257\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Hoi\nland New and Used Farm\nEquipment, Parts, Sales and\nService. Phone 356-2254, Creston. B.c. . -UO-tfn\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURN1-\nture, antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and jewels. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531\n413 Hall St., Nelson, B.C.\n-98-tf\nWANTED - CANOPY TOP FOR\n1964 Ford Mi-Ton Pickup, long\nwide box. W, B. Montgomery,\nc\/o Can. fix., Salmo; B.C.\n252-257\nWANTED - USED ELECTRIC\nmotors. Coleman Electric, 802\nFront St., Nelson, Ph. 35.-3)75.\n\u2022.      ^.\"27-tfn\nUSED    AIR   COMPRESSOR,\nfire proof safe, 2 used gas\npumps. Apply Sox 281, Kimberley, B.C. \u2022 -256-258\nPAIR OF WOMEN'S SKATES,\nsize 8% or 0. Ph. 332-2069.\n252-257\nBEES\nPETS,  CANARIES.\nFOR SALE: GERMAN SHEP-\nherd crossed with black Lab.\npups, $5.00. Ph. 352-6536.\n'    -252-257\nWANTEttV. 1 SIAMESS! Kitten: roply Hot 271, Trail, fi.C.\n.   .-253-258\nPhone 362-9532 ior Classified\"\n\"MME   \u25a0 $m&^        - ;:2;_:,:\n-Your-Classified Want-Ad. on-This Handy:\nORDER'FORM\n\u25a0\n,\n...   \\   '\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD UNI\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH UNI\nPut one werd in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word)\nPut Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\nBox Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News) ,\nTO CALCULATE RATES, USE THIS TABLE:\nMinimum charge Is two linn\nPer Line:\n1 Insertion \u25a0_ '\n2 Consecutive Insertion*\t\n3 Consecutive Insertions    \u25a0 \u25a0\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions __\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20* a Una Par\n$ .20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\nTima.\na Add 13* far Box Number\na Takt advantage of th* low the tint* rat*\nYou Reach Over 36.000 Readers With Your Nelson; Daily News Classified^!\nYOUR' NAME \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u201e'        No. of Days Ad it To Run^i. 1\nADDRESS\nBin m* \"-,:;;\nPdyment Enclosed ,\nl1'.'.. vj'\nO\nJtomt lathj _fout0\nlassified Advertising Department, Nelson,- ^ifct\n 10 _ NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., NOV. 2, 1964\nMANN\nD\nR\nU\nS\nLtd.\nPRESCRIPTION\nSERVICE\nNew Friends, Old Enemies,\nNew Break-Up Threatens\nBy CARL HARTMAN\nBONN (AP)-Relations stand\nat a low point between the governments of France and West\nGermany, new friends and old\nenemies.\nThe main troubles:\n1. Chancellor Erhard's support of the United States on\nquestions of nuclear arms and\non trade matters.\n2. President de Gaulle's newest flirtation with Moscow.\nChances for improvement:\n1. An offer due this week\nfrom Chancellor Erhard on a\nnew organization for European\npolitical unity, plus some new\nproposals on trade. De Gaulle\nis not likely to find that -these\ngo far enough in giving France\nNews 0\/ the Day\nRATES: 30e line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. for insertion\nin next day's publication.\nOPEN  TODAY  ALL  DAY\nROSE'S DELICATESSEN\n-222-H\nRebekahs, 8 p.m., Tuesday,\nNov. 3.' Please attend.\n\u2014257-257\nDuplicate Bridge.\nMonday nights. Hume Hotel.\n\u2014257-257\nGET THE HABIT  I   I\nTry HOBBY SHOP First.\n-225-H\nFOR WINTER BOAT STORAGE\nCair Ellison's 352-3181\nI  ~ \" -254-265\nKnitting yarns for every purpose\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n.-226-tfn\n50\" unbleached heavy bark cloth\nat $1.29 yd.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-257-258\nGRACEANNA BEAUTY BAR\nNew Location, 259 Baker St.\nSame Phone \u2014 352-5733\ni   ... -221-h\nBINGO MONDAY 8 P.M.\nUKRAINIAN   CATH.   PARISH\nHALL, 1209 Hall Mines Road.\n-122-h\nDrive with confidence.\nPhone 352-5252, Sterling Hotel\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\n- ,V -70-h\nNAVY LEAGUE OF CANADA\nSea Cadets, Wrenneties and\nNavy League Cadets will parade\nat 1900 hours out side the ship,\nGray Building, on Monday Nov.\n2.. Uniforms will not be worn,\ni -257-257\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\nWindow glass in all common\nsizes and we cut to your\nmeasurements.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n-257-257\nAnnual General Meeting.\nST. JOHN AMBULANCE\nASSOCIATION\nwill be held on\nTues., Nov. 3, 1964, 7:30 p.m.\nBlue Room Civic Centre.\n-257-257\nCARD OF THANKS\nThcfanuly of the late Mathilda\nJane Bibomer wishes to sincerely thank everyone who has\nhelped in any. way during this\npast week by'their many acts\nof kindness and expressions of\nsympathy. Special thanks to Drs.\nJohnson and Hall, the staff of\nthe Castlegar and District Hospital, the Rev. T. Wilding, Archdeacon B. A. Resker, D.D., and\nthe Castlegar Funeral Home.\nP.  T.  Bloomer\nA.  C.  Bloomer\nM. M. West\nL.  E. Craft\n-257-257\nSTUDENTS DIE IN CRASH\nWICHITA, Kan. (AP)-Seyen\nhigh school students, all 15\nyears \u2022 old, died in a smash of\ntwo\/cars east of Wichita Friday\nnight. The dead were all in one\ncar, which had only one survivor. vVhb .was injured. Two.per-\nsons'to the other car also suffered injuries. .:.'.\"\na bigger chance to sell its farm\nproducts in Germany.\n2. A visit next week to de\nGaulle by his old friend, ex-\nchancellor Adenauer. This may\nnot mean much, since Erhard\nand Adenauer disagree on relations with France. Adenauer\nwould like to see them a lot\ncloser, as they were when he\nwas chancellor.\n3. Anything the newly elected\nU.S. president can do to get\nFrance and West Germany pulling smoothly with the United\nStates and Britain.\nIt was less than two years ago\nthat Adenauer and de Gaulle\nsigned a treaty of special friendship between their two countries, which had fought three\nmajor wars against one another\nin less than a century.\nAdenauer, then 87 years old,\nand de Gaulle, then 72, had\nthese wars much on their\nminds. Adenauer considered it\nhis life's crowning work to have\ndone something to make it less\nlikely that there would be another.\nWithin a year, however, Adenauer was succeeded by Erhard, 21 years younger. Erhard\ntends to be much influenced on\ninternational affairs by Foreign\nMinister Gerhard Schroeder,\nwho is younger still. Erhard and\nSchroeder do not see the old\nFranco-German conflict as the\ncentral point in history but give\nmore importance to the bigger\npicture.\nIn the year Erhard has been\nchancellor, differences with de\nGaulle have widened.\nThe trade in food products has\nbeen at the bottom of much bitterness. De Gaulle wants a big.\nger share of the market in West\nGermany for French farm exports, especially grain. The\nWest Germans feel an obligation to let the United States and\nother overseas exporters keep\nthe share of the market they\nwon during the days of the Marshall plan, when the food was a\ngift.\nBesides, a change now would\ninvolve cutting the West German grain price, a move Erhard finds politically impossible\nto make until after next year's\nelection.\nDe Gaulle now is threatening\nto pull out of the Common Market, the most ambitious step\ntaken so far toward a United\nStates of Europe, unless he gets\nsatisfaction on farm policy.\nDe Gaulle has also been an-\ngered, apparently, by the unex.\npected prospect that Britain's\nnew Labor government will go\ninto an Atlantic nuclear force\nwith the United States and West\nGermany.\nHe has long opposed such a\nforce and sought with little sue-\ncess to get West German support for his own \"force de\nfrappe\" instead.\nDuring the weekend there has\nbeen talk of France pulling out\nof the Atlantic pact, too.\nThe latest blow to French-\nWest German relations is the\nnew French trade agreement\nwith Moscow, giving the Soviet\nUnion up to seven years to pay\nfor major purchases like entire\nchemical plants.\nThe West German government and the United States oppose credits to the Soviet Union for a longer term than five\nyears. The argument is that\nsuch credits turn into a kind of\ndevelopment aid, and they see\nno reason for giving outright aid\nto .Communist countries..\t\nBesides, West German businessmen would have been glad\nto build those plants in the Soviet Union themselves.\nThe West German government is always worried about\nany approach to the Soviet Union by de Gaulle. He has come\nout in the past in favor of leaving the Communist countries in\npossession of the territorial\ngains they made in the Second\nWorld War at Germany's expense\u2014another concession Erhard cannot afford to make for\nfear of angering voters at home.\nNo Deferment of\nGuiana Elections\nLONDON (API-British Guiana's left \u2022 wing premier, Dr.\nCheddi Jagan, has returned\nhome, disappointed at being\nturned down by Britain's new\nLabor government on two major requests.\nJagan argued for deferment\nof a Dec. 7 election in British\nGuiana and for early independence.\nSenior officials said early Independence for the colony, on\nthe northeast coast of South\nAmerica, was ruled out in deference to U.S. wishes. The development came after high level\nBritish-American exchanges on\nhow to check the spread of Castroism in the Western Hemisphere.\nInformants say U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk told Foreign\nMinister Patrick Gordon Walker\nIn Washington last week that\nAmerica would resist and resent the rise: of British Guiana\nas an independent, Castro-type\nstate,     .v..:...\nThe Dec. 1 elections, arranged\nlast year by the Conservative\ngovernment on a system of\nproportional representation, presumably will weaken Jagan's\nposition,\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON (Reuters) - Results ' of Rugby Union matches\nplayed Saturday in the United\nKingdom:\nCounty Championship\nCheshire 12 Durham. 16\nNorthumberland 3 Cumberland\n8\nClub Matches\nLondon Irish 3 London Scottish\n. 15\nLondon Welsh 9 Loughborough\nColleges 19     \u2022\nMetropolitan  Police; 43  Alder-\nshot Services 0 -\nOld Merchant Taylors 6 Bedford 32\nRichmond 16 Rosslyn Park 3\nStrea'tham 19 Birmingham 6\nAberavon 16 Wasps 11\nAbertillery 3 Moseley 8\nBirkenhead Park 13 Esher 12\nBridgend 6 Cardiff 6\nBridgwater and Albion 22 Bath\n14\nCamborne 11 Penzance and\nNewlyn 15\nCheltenham 8 Harlequins 22\nClifton 0 Exeter 22\nCoventry 41 Blackheath 12\nDevonport Services 23 Old Can-\nleighans 9\nFylde 27 Percy Park 3\nGlamorgan Wanderers 3 Newbridge 10\nHarrogate 0 Notts 6\nInstonians 0 Glasgow HSFP 5\nLeicester 19 Nuneaton 5\nLiverpool 20 Halifax 6\nLlanelly 9 Newport 16\nMaesteg 6 Ebbw Vale 14\nNew Brighton 5 Rugby 22\nNorthampton 9 Cambridge University 0\nNorth of Ireland 6 Sale 9\nOxford University 12 Gloucester 13\nPenarth 3 Weston-Super-Mare 3\nPlymouth Albion 11 Bristol 3\nTaunton 14 Redruth 11\nTorquay 11 Saracens 11\nUnited Services Portsmouth   i\nOld Millhillians 11\nUnited Services Chatham 0\nCivil Service 13\nWaterloo 18 Manchester 12\nEdinburgh University 8 Hillhead\nHSFP 3\nHeriots FP 22 Selkirk 0\nWatsonians 27 Royal HSFP 11\n*  *  *\nLONDON (Reuters) - Re3\nsuits of Rugby League matches\nplayed Saturday in the United\nKingdom:\nYorkshire Cup Final\nLeeds 2 Wakefield Trinity 18\nLeague Matches\nBarrow 15 Drewsbury 14\nBatley 9 Halifax 15\nBradford Northern 10 Whitehaven 26\nCastleford t Hull 4\nHull Kingston Rovers 23 High-\nley 7\nRochdale Hornets 9 Widnes 19\nSalford 7 Blackpool Borough '\nSt. Helens 22 Oldham 6\nWigan 18 Featherstone Rovers S\nWorkington Town 34 Hunslet 12\nCANADA'S FAIR\nPavilions, buildings and the\nstaging of exhibits by participants at the 1967 world exposition ih Canada will cost $300,-\n000,000.\nSix prof it-making machines from B.C. TEL that \"talk business\"\nday and night\nThese modern pieces of equipment are typical of the many profit-making\nservices now provided to businesses by B.C. Tel. Designed to meet the\nchanging needs of progressive businesses, they can carry a multitude of\ninformation from hand-written messages and photographs to data and\nmachine language of every kind.\nA particularly useftil feature is their ability to transmit information to\nunattended receivers. They speed your vital information to offices and other\nparts of tha country, not only by day but also during the after-hour period\nwatte you sleep. Thus, the information is available for immediate action\nft\u00bb (Mowing morning. Literally, these B.C. Tel communication machines\n'oik taeiiMK Uy tad sight.\n\"jV *Mtm. mp\u2014i (!) can Bash 15,000 word message coast to coast in five\ntEbtutei lUt. TnUtype (2) speeds printed messages, reports and orders over\nprivate Un k between two offices or many offices. It is also useful for preparing orders on printed forms.\nWith TWX (3) you can \"dial-'n-type\" private communications to over\n60,000 other Canadian ahd U.S. businesses at speeds of 100 words a\nminute. The data set (4) enables you to transmit business machine language from many sources, punch cards, paper tape or magnetic tape all over\nconventional telephone circuits at modest rates.\nFacsimile equipment (5) allows you to reproduce anything on paper\nacross any distance, including messages, forms, diagrams and drawing up\nto 14 x 8'\/4 inches. The Electrowriter\u00ae (6) actually lets you \"write by\nphone\": messages, formulas, sketches, musical notations, etc, appear on\nthe paper of the receiving instrument at the same instant as you write or\ndraw them on the transmitting instrument \u2014 again, across any distance.\nDesigned to save your time and increase your communication efficiency,\nthese services can make a big difference to your profit picture. Moreover,\nthey cost considerably less than many people imagine. Call our Marketing\n& Sales Department today and have an experienced Data Communications\nConsultant suggest how we may help you with your operation.\nSMTFl\u00ae\nIn Nelson, Please Dial 352-3541\nWORLDWIDE IFIWIONE CONNECTIONS \u25a0 INTERNATIONAL TWX AND TELETYPE SERVICE \u25a0 RADIOTELEPHONES \u25a0 CLOSED CIRCUIT TV \u25a0 INTERCOM AND PAGING SYSTEMS\n&ECTR0WHIUSS \u25a0 PATAPHONES \u25a0 ANSWERING AND ALARM UNITS \u25a0 OVER 300 OTHER COMMUNICATION AIDS FOR MODERN HOMES AND BUSINESS\nm\nFinance Most Profitable,\nTelephones Close Second\nBy DON HANRIGHT\nOTTAWA (CP) - The most\nprofitable business field in Canada appears to be finance, insurance and real estate.\nProfessionals in this field\nwere the top money - earners\nlisted in 1962 personal income\ntax figures published by the\nrevenue department several\nweeks ago.\nThe department now has issued corporation tax statistics\nfor 1962, showing balance sheets\nfor about 113,600 corporations\ngrouped into 11 industrial divi-\nons.\nThe finance, insurance and\nreal estate division led all otn-\nwith before - ta x profits\nequalling 13.8 per cent of revenues; The profits were 1.24 per\ncent of total assets.\nWithin the division were\nprofit-to-revenue percentages Of\n21 per cent for investment and\nnolaing companies, 18 for trust\nand mortgage companies, 12.1\nfor stock and bond dealers, and\n20 per cent for loan and \"other\nfinance\" companies.\nBy comparison profits were\nabout six per cent of revenues\nfor all manufacturers, 1.7 per\ncent in the wholesale division,\n2.8 for retailers, 1.57 for all construction industries, 3.9 for service industries and one per cent\nfor agricultural corporations.\nLIST OTHER LEADERS\n. The other leading division\nwas transportation, storage,\ncommunication and other utility\ncompanies with profits equalling\n10. per cent of revenues and 3.9\nper cent of assets.\nInside that division was one\nof the most profitable of all\nbusinesses\u2014the telephone companies with profits of 24 cents\nfor every dollar of revenue and\n6.4 Cents for every dollar in assets.\nProfits for electric power\ncompanies were 22 per cent of\nrevenues and 5.5 per cent of\njap Ports Okay\nU.S. Nuclear Subs\nTOKYO, (Reuters)\u2014Japan in.\nformed the United States Saturday it is ready to admit American nuclear-powered submarines into Sasebo in southern Japan and Yokosuka near Tokyo,\nthe foreign ministry said.\nAmerican nuclear - powered\nsubmarines would be able to\ncall at the two ports on 24\nhours' notice, a spokesman for\nthe ministry said.\nJapan conducted prior investigations at the ports into natural radioactivity and possible\nradioactive contamination from\nthe recent Chinese nuclear\nbomb test\nFigures for gas distribution companies were 7.2 and\n2.3 respectively.\nProfit - to - revenue percentages for some of the manufacturers:\nAlcoholic beverages 15.6; tobacco and tobacco products 6.5;\ntextiles 5.15; clothing 2.1; pulp\nand paper mills 14; publishing\nand printing 7.7; motor vehicles\n9.5; vehicle parts and accessories 9.7; pharmaceuticals E\nsoaps and toilet preparations\n8.4.\nComparative figures for some\nretailers:\nFood stores 2.7; departmental\nand variety stores 3.3; service\nstations, auto accessories and\ntires 2.3; vehicle repairs 1.17\nhardware 1.35; drug stores 3.36\nNo Special Treatment\nFor Separatists - Wagner\nMONTREAL (CP) - Claude\nWagner was jeered at and\nbooed by demonstrators during\na speech in which he laid down\nthe law to separatists Friday\nnight, less than six hours after\nhe was appointed Quebec attorney-general.\nAt one point in his address to\nla Chambre de Commerce des\nJeunes du District de Montreal\n(Montreal District Junior\nChamber of Commerce), he\nwas stopped for more than\nthree minutes by the uproar.\nThree separate times, large\nsections of the audience of more\nthan 400 roared \"Quebec\" when\nhe mentioned the word Canada.\nThere were about 25 Montreal\npolicemen in the downtown\nhotel during Mr. Wagner's\nspeech, but there were no incidents and the meeting calmed\ndown after a group of some\n40 demonstrators \u2014 apparently\nmostly students\u2014left the hall\nIn his first speech as attorney-general, Mr. Wagner called\non separatist sympathizers to\nrespect the law or suffer the\nconsequences.\n\"To the supporters of separatism generating illegalities, sedition and violence, I say 'you\nwill respect the law, you will\nrespect the municipal regulations of towns where you militate.\n1 'If you do not, you will be\ntreated as are all violators of\nCanada's penal laws or municipal or provincial regulations.\nThere will be no special legislation or regulations for you.'\"\nPREPARE FOR ELECTION'\nMr. Wagner called on sincere\nand serious separatists to \"organize, express your ideas on\nthe public platform, prepare for\nthe next election and go to the\npeople democratically to find\nout what they think of you and\nyour ideas.\"\nHe said people are still wondering, \"after four years of\nphilosophic and pseudo-intellectual dissertations,\" what are the\nFord Motor Seeks\nFavor With UAWU\nDETROIT (AP) - Crippled\nGeneral Motors and the Ford\nMotor Company, under threat\nof strike, stayed at their tasks\nSaturday of trying to clean up\nlocal-level disputes with the\nUnited Auto Workers Union.\nGM remained far off its normal car production rates because of local strikes continuing since agreement on a national contract early this month,\nSettlements recently reduced\nto 15 the number of outstanding\nunsettled disputes at GM.\nOne Ford settlement left the\ntotal of Ford local disputes at\n21.\nThe UAW has set a Nov. 6\ndeadline for strikes at Ford\nplants lacking settlements by\nthat date, Ford and the UAW\nhave agreed on a national contract. Local agreements supplement the national agreements.\nThe latest settlement\u2014at the\nBuick \u2022 Oldsmobile \u2022 Pontiac\nplant at Doraville, Ga., was expected to be ratified in a vote\nSaturday of 3,500 members of\nLocal 10 UAW affiliate near Atlanta.\npositive achievements of separatism itself because I do not\nbelieve we can expect from it a\nconstructive solution to the\nproblems now facing Quebec\nand Canada.\n\"I prefer the exalting task of\nparticipating in the dialogue between Canadians on the future\nof our country ... at a moment\nwhen the other regions of the\ncountry are beginning to under,\nstand the particular place of\nQuebec in the Canadian Confederation.\"\nMr. Wagner, 39, was sworn in\ni attorney-general in Quebec\nCity, a few minutes after Rene\nHamel announced his resignation from the post.\nMr. Hamel, 54, is retiring\nfrom politics after a colorful 20-\nyear career. He had previously\nresigned as Liberal member of\nthe legislature for St. Maurice.\nIt was expected he will be ap-\nWORK\nSOCKS\nGUARANTEED\nAGAINST\nSHRINKAGE\nThese new Dyldnized\nWool Work Socks will\nnot shrink out of fit.\nIn 3 or 4 Ib. weights.\nEMORY'S\nTHE  MAN'S  STORE\nEast Germans Tighten\nBerlin Wall Security\nBERLIN (AP)-East German\nauthorities strengthened security along the Berlin wall Saturday, guarding against attempts\nby East Berliners to escape in\nthe confusion of the authorized\nvisiting period for West Berliners. \u2022\nFive gaps have been opened\ntemporarily in the wall for the\n14-day period during which West\nBerliners have been authorized\nto visit relatives in the Communist-ruled part of the city.\nWithin three hours after the\nentry gates were opened Saturday, about 40,000 persons were\nchecked through by Red border\nguards. It was the second day\nof the visiting period, which extends until Nov. 12.\nAt the Sandkrug Bridge checkpoint, used both by pedestrians\nand motorists, a heavy East\nGerman army truck was posted\nnext to the gap in the wall, its\nengine running.\nThe truck apparently is to be\ndriven into the gap in case of\nan escape attempt by car.\nSandkrug checkpoint is where\nlast year a busload of refugees\ntried to crash through only to\nbe stopped by heavy machine-\ngun fire. At least It persons\nwere wounded and unconfirmed\nreports said there were several\ndeaths,\nThe Communists were issuing wall passes under a recently-signed West Berlin-East\nGerman   agreement,    allowing\nholiday   The   other   two\nscheduled for next year.\nFour holes in the wall are for\nthose on foot or in cars. A fifth\npoint was Friedrich strasse station for those using the elevated\nrailroad.\nFriday, 21,200 West Berliners\nvisited East Berlin and more\nthan half used the elevated,\nwhich the Reds control under a\nfour - power agreement, even\nover West Berlin portions.\npointed a justice of Quebec Superior  Court  for  St.  Maurice I four visiting periods in the next\ndistrict. The appointment would 112 months. A second period will\nbe announced in Ottawa.\nIndonesia Said\nTo Have Built\nInvasion Base\nKUALA LUMPUR (Reuters.\nIndonesia has set up a forward\ninvasion base against Malaysia\non the island of Bengkalis off\neastern Sumatra, the Malaysian\narmy claimed Saturday.\nAn army spokesman said the\nswampy island, about 20 miles\nacross the Straits of Malacca,\nwas used as a springboard by\na 52-man Indonesian force that\nlanded in the Merllmau area of\nsouthwest Malaya Thursday.\nThe Indonesians were trapped\nin a mangrove swamp near the\nmouth of the Kesang River and\nput out of action by Malaysian\nfield police and Australian\ntroops.\nAll but two of the Indonesians\nwere captured, but no casualties\nwere reported on either side.\nLONDON (AP)-Queen Elizabeth Friday opened  the  new\nWomen's   Royal  Army   Corps\nat Guildford, the first designed\ncover the Christmas-New Year for women in the British army.\nBirth Control Teachings\nSubject of Vatican Debate\nBy BENNET M. BOLTON\nVATICAN CITY (AP) - The\nentire centuries - old Roman\nCatholic teaching on marital sex\nand birth control was under\nchallenge Saturday in the wake\nof ardent Vatican ecumenical\ncouncil debate.\nFor two days prelates argued\nabout where the church properly stands or should stand in\nthe field of marital morality.\nThe subject is part of a major\ncouncil schema on modern\nworld problems.\nSources said they expected\nthat the insistence of progressive prelates on a broad rethinking of the past church position about the limits of sexual\nlove within marriage would prevail in the long run over conservative arguments that no alteration can be allowed.\nTheologians and other experts marked the speeches of\nBernard Jan Cardinal Alfrink of\nHolland and Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal as the\nmost significant by far.\nCardinal Alfrink said \"among\nmany married couples, men of\nscience and theologians an honest doubt is being raised about\n\u2014at the least\u2014the arguments\nused to demonstrate that in any\nconflicts in conjugal life the\nonly solution is periodic or permanent abstinence.\"\nConservative prelates have\nbeen seeing the traditional Catholic teaching against any artificial interference with natural\nintercourse as the final permanent answer. They have also insisted on procreation and education as the chief purpose of\nmarriage, with the act of physical love between man and wife\npurely secondary.\nCardinal Leger said the divine\nbasiB   for   conjugal   love  was\nequally as valid as the divine\nbasis for procreation.\nHave the Job Dona Right'\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u2122      LIMITED        *V\nPhone 352-3315\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHILIPS\nPHILISHAVE\nThe Cordleu Shaver\nIn a Neat Zipper Case\n19.98\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611\nBox 4(1\"\nFor the warmest feeling\nLet STANDARD HEATING OIL chase away the chills, Here's\nmodern oil heat at Its best,...refined to surround you with cleats\nsafe, dependable warmth In any weather. Call today for prompt\nservice and the carefree comfort of an uninterrupted supply.\nFor any Standard OH product, call\nClaude W. Hooker\nNelson, B.C.\n95 Government Road\nPHONE 352-2157\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_02","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\/1.0435401","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":"1964-11-02 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":"1964-11-02 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":""}]}