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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":" \u2022   e\\^\/i     \u2022.\n0\\x laila ^\u00ab>0\n1867 U1967\nPublished at i\\e^   \u00b0o^<> arnment, financial trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nFORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny, winds light. Low\nand high at Cranbrook 35 and 70x Nelson area 38 and 75. Thursday outlook:\nMostly sunny, little change in temperature.\nVol. 66\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA \u2014 WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967\n10 Cento\nNo.   121\nTribute Paid Bennett\nAs Peace Dam Dedicated\nBy TOM CARNEY\nHUDSON'S HOPE, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014 A beaming Premier W. A. C.\nBennett watched Tuesday as\nthe completed Portage Mountain dam was officially named\nthe W. A. C. Bennett Dam.\nThe giant earth-filled dam\u2014\n600 feet high, half-a-mile wide\nand more than a mile long\u2014is\nthe heart of the $721,000,000\nPeace River Hydro project.\nIn dedicating the dam before\na crowd of about 2,000 near this\nisolated interior community,\nLt.-Gov. George Pearkes said\nthe new name of the dam is a\n\"tribute to Premier William\nAndrew Cecil Bennett whose\nvision and confidence in the\nfuture of British Columbia\ninspired the success of this\ngreat project. . . .\"\nThe dedication ceremonies\nunder warm, sunny skies\nmarked completion of the $73,-\n200,000 dam, which will form a\n640-square-mile lake extending\nmore than 225 miles back along\nthe Peace River and its tributaries.\nThe first power from the\nPeace project will be delivered\nto the Vancouver market in\nOctober, 1968.\nThe Social Credit premier\nclimbed aboard a 35-ton dump\ntruck and placed the last load\nof fill into the dam, located\namid the rolling hills and plateaus of the Rocky Mountain\ntrench some 500 miles northeast\nof Vancouver.\nIt was the last of 100,000,000\ntons of gravel, sand and rock\nstripped from a nearby mountainside to form the dam.\nBeneath the dam a cavern\nhas been carved out of bedrock\nto house the world's largest\nunderground powerhouse. The\nfirst three of 10 giant turbines,\nPurge Under Way\nOf Mao Opponents\nFrom AP-Renters\nTOKYO (CPI - Four\n\"counter \u2022 revolutionary\" opponents of Mao Tse-tung were\nexecuted in Peking Tuesday for\nburglary and murder, Radio\nPeking announced.\nThe official Chinese-language\nbroadcast, monitored here, said\nthe four dissidents of the cultural revolution of Mao, Communist party chairman, were executed after the Peking munici-\np a 1 revolutionary committee\nheld a rally \"to resolutely sup-\npress counter-revolutionary\nactivities.\"\nNone of the four was identified.\nThe broadcast added that an\nadditional \"criminal\" was sentenced to death with a two-year\npostponement of execution during which time he will serve at\nhard labor to rectify his conduct.\nIt added that one \"special\nagent of the enemy\" was sentenced to life imprisonment and j\na   \"counter-revolutionary\"   element  was  given  a  10-year\nprison sentence.\nREPORTED EXECUTED\nThe four were the second\ngroup reported to have been\nexecuted by Maoists for alleged\ncounter-revolutionary conduct.\nTwo sympathizers of President Liu Shao-chi, Mao's principal foe in the power struggle\nsweeping mainland China, were\nexecuted before applauding\nthousands Aug. 28, according to\na Shanghai radio report.\nThey were said to be two of\neight tried before more than\n10,000 persons in Shanghai, China's biggest city.\nDetails of the sentences were\ngiven to the rally by Huang\nCho-Chen, Peking deputy political commissar, the radio said.\nObservers in Hong Kong said\nthe harsh sentences were\nintended to serve as a warning\nto the public that any further\nlawlessness would not be tolerated.\neach with a capacity equal to\n310,000 horsepower, now are\nbeing installed.\nThe Peace project will generate 2,300,000 kilowatts, about\ntwo-thirds the current generating capacity of all British\nColumbia plants.\nAmong the officials at Tuesday's   ceremony  were  visitors\nfrom Montreal, New York and\nLondon.\nThe lieutenant-governor\nunveiled a 12-foot-high monument in the shape of a gateway\nleading to the dam. On one side\nof the monument is an 11,000-\nyear-old mammoth tusk which\nwas found in the area during\nconstruction work.\nGuns Cease Firing\nOn Tibet Sky Border\nNEW DELHI (Reuters)-ln-\ndia and China stopped shooting\nat each other across the Tibet-\nSikkim border Tuesday, bringing to an end the most serious\nclash along the Himalayan border in the last five years.\nThe Indian defence ministry\nsaid the guns stopped shortly\nafter India proposed a formal\nceasefire in a note delivered to\nthe Chinese embassy here.\nThe note also suggested that\nthe sector commanders of the\ntwo countries meet immediately after the ceasefire at the\n15,000-foot high Nathu Pass.\nIt drew the attention of the\nChinese government to what it\ndescribed as the \"tense situation\" at the pass where sporadic firing has been going on\nsince early Monday.\nBoth sides blamed the other\nfor the outbreak of the fighting.\nIndia's   Himalayan   border   is\n2,000 miles long.\nINDIANS KILLED\nA New Delhi defence ministry\nspokesman said several Indian\ntroops were killed and a num:\nber wounded. But details of\ncasualties were not given.\nChina said 36 of its troops\nwere killed or wounded.\nThe defence ministry said\nTuesday's firing was on a\nsmaller scale than Monday's\nwhen machine-guns, mortars\nand artillery were used.\nThousands of Indian troops\nare stationed in Sikkim to\nguard  a  vital  section  of  the\nWoman Gets Jail Term\nFor Torture Operations\nNEWARK (AP) - Monique\nVon Cleef was sentenced to 18\nmonths in penitentiary Tuesday\non charges of running what was\ndescribed by authorities as a\n\"house of torture.\"\nHowever, Judge Leon Kapp\nordered that the 42-year-old former model be confined for only\nfour months and serve probation for the remainder of the\nsentence. She was also fined\n$1,000.\nIn sentencing Miss Von Cleef,\nthe judge said to her; \"You\n... are a cruel, calculating\nwoman. You were engaged in a\nsordid business. . . . You solicited sick people who cannot\nrelate in a norma! manner sexually.\"\nHer co - defendant, James\nAlbert Beard, 38, was given a\nsuspended six-month sentence\nand placed on probation for 18\nmonths. He also was fined $500.\nThe two were sentenced on\ntwo counts of conspiring to\ncommit lewdness and maintaining a building for lewdness and\nassignation. Counts of allowing\nsuch use of their house and possession   of   obscene   material\nwith intent to show it were suspended.\nWILL APPEAL\nTheir lawyer, Harry Durkin,\nsaid he wouid appeal.\nBeard and Miss Von Cleef\nwere convicted in June. The\njury, which deliberated for\nabout 2% hours before returning the verdict, was told by\nJudge Kapp that \"this case was\nimportant, not only to the\ndefendants, but to our society\nand way of life as a civilized\nnation.\"\nBeard and the platinum\nblonde were arrested Dec. 21,\n1965, during a raid on their\nhouse in a residential section of\nNewark.\nTwo carloads of torture\nTREMOR CRACKS WALLS\nBLINDA, Algeria (AP)-The\nwalls of several houses were\ncracked early Monday by earth\ntremors felt within a radius of\n12 miles.\ndevices\u2014whips, chains and leg\nirons\u2014boxes o f pornography\nand files with names of more\nthan 1,500 clients were confiscated in the raid. Much of this\nwas introduced as evidence in\nthe trial.\nWoodworkers' Rejection\nPoses Potential Disaster\"\nIndustry Spokesman\nCriticizes Moore\nHimalayan front where the\nChinese Army would only have\nto penetrate 34 miles to link up\nwith East Pakistan and cut off\nAssam state from the rest of\nIndia.\nThe last serious border incident between India and China\nwas reported in December,\n1965, when 30 Chinese soldiers\nwere killed in a clash with an\nIndian patrol near Sesi Pass in\nnorthern Sikkim.\nCIL Income\nTo Show Cut\nMONTREAL (CP) - Net\nincome for Canadian Industries\nLtd. will be \"considerably\nbelow expectations\" for 1967,\nsaid company president Leonard Hynes.\nHe said the reduced earnings\nhave been caused by a current\nstrike at 10 of the company's\nplants and adverse market conditions.\nIn the first half of 1967 CIL\nreported net income of $5,-\n266,000 or 53 cents a share,\ncompared with 16,566,000 or 66\ncents a share for the same\nperiod in 1966.\nAPPROACH OF FALL EMPTIES NELSON'S PARKS\nOregon Man\nKiwanis Head\nPENTICTON (CP) - C. J.\nHansen of North Salem, Ore.,\nTuesday was elected 1968 Governor of the Pacific Northwest\nDistrict of Kiwanis International.\nHe was elected Lieutenant-\nGovernor in  1962.  In 1964 and\nStanfield Seeks Seat\nOnce Held by Brother\nHALIFAX    (CP)\nRobert |   He said that on the advice of\nhis colleagues in the government, he had recommended to\nLt.-Gov. H. P. MacKeen that\nFinance Minister G. I, Smith be\nappointed premier until a new\nleader   of   the   provincial   PC\nStanfield,  new  national  leader\nof the Progressive Conservative\nparty,  said  Tuesday  night  he\nwill seek election to Parliament\nin  the  Nova  Scotia  riding  of\nColchester-Hants.\nMr. Stanfield, who will resign party is chosen\nas Nova Scotia premier today, |   Mr. smith is the senior minis.\nsaid in a statement: | ter in the government. Seniority\n\"I will be pleased indeed to j is determined by the order in\nseek election in Colchester- which ministers were sworn in\n1965 he served as District Chair-1 Hants if I receive the nomina- as members of the executive\nman of Circle Kiwanis Clubs, j tion as Progressive Conserva- j council.\nBorn in Chicago, he was educa- tive candidate in that federal\nted in Portland. .constituency.\"\nWave Young of Coos Bay, j The seat| heW for two terms\nOre., was chosen Governor-elect, in the 1940s by the prenlie,-'s\nfor 1969 and Eugene, Ore., wasj ,ate   bloibn.t   Frank   stanfield.\nselected the site for the 1968\nPacific Northwest District convention.\nU.S. Bombers Hit\nNew Haiphong Targets\nSAIGON (AP) - U.S. planes\nhave hit four hitherto\nuntouched major targets in Haiphong in the closest strike yet\nto the centre of North Vietnam's important port, the U.S.\ncommand here reported Tuesday.\nPilots said they wrought\nheavy damage.\nThis was part of a relentless\nair assault designed to tighten\na noose around ports and sup-\nU.S. raid on the port of Cam\nPha to the northeast.\nU.S. Navy planes flew within\nfour-fifths of a mile of Haiphong's centre and bombed a\nmain highway bridge. Within\ntwo miles of the heart of the\nport, other navy planes struck\na railway bridge, a mile-long\nrail yard and a large warehouse area of 13 buildings.\nFlying through intense antiaircraft fire, the pilots said\nthey laid  their bombs on the\nply lines that feed Hanoi's econ- j two bridges and caused heavy\nomy and support North Viet- j damage to the rail yard and the\nnam. Haiphong was hammered warehouse area. No planes were\nMonday, a day after the first I reported lost.\nnow is held for the Conservatives by Cyril Kennedy.\nMr. Kennedy has offered to\nresign the seat and Mr. Stanfield Tuesday night accepted\nthe \"generous offer ... to permit me to enter the House of\nCommons.\"\nAfter Mr. Kennedy formally\nresigns, it will be up to Prime\nMinister Pearson to name the\ndate for the byeiection in the\nriding.\nBoth the Liberals and the\nNDP have indicated they will\nnot contest the byeiection, thus\ngiving Mr. Stanfield a clear\nroute to the Commons.\nFrank Stanfield was elected in\nColchester - Hants as Conservative in the general elections of\n1945 and 1949.\nEarlier Tuesday, Mr. Stanfield announced he will step\ndown as premier and resign as\na member of the provincial legislature today.\n\"Mr. Smith was sworn in\nnext after me and his choice is\nin accordance with precedent.\n\"This is not intended in any\nway to influence the choice of a\nthe\nnew  provincial  leader by\nparty,\" Mr. Stanfield said.\nThe premier said he will submit his resignation as provincial PC leader to Maurice\nFlemming, president of the\nprovincial association, and that\nhe will recommend to Mr.\nFlemming that a convention to\nchoose a new leader be held as\nsoon as is feasible.\nMr. Stanfield was chosen as\nnational leader of the party on\nthe fifth ballot Saturday at the\nnational convention in Toronto.\n\"While my new responsibilities are national in scope, I\nhope I will be able to be helpful\nin Nova Scotia,\" he said in a\nstatement.\nLiberals Take\nSecond Looks\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Conservatives' choice of Robert\nStanfield as party leader is\nalready having a profound\nimpact on the Liberals.\nIt has even raised the possibility, Liberal sources said\nTuesday, that Prime Minister\nPearson might have to fight\nanother election campaign.\nThe Nova Scotia premier's\nvictory at Toronto Saturday is\nbelieved to have badly hurt the\nLiberal leadership chances of\nHealth Minister MacEachen,\nalso a Nova Scotian. Ten of the\n12 federal ridings in Nova Scotia are already Conservative.\nScore 50 Points on Immigration Test and You're In\nBy DENNIS ORCHARD\nOTTAWA (CP)-Score 50 on\nthe immigration test and you\ncan came to Canada.\nFor people who want into the\ncountry, but don't have a relative here to sponsor them, that\nis the message of Canada's new\nimmigration regulations.\nThe new rules, announced\nTuesday and effective Oct. 1.\neliminate outright discrimination against Asian and African\ncountries and broaden the relationships that qualify for sponsorship.\nBut the most important\nchange is the introduction of an\nobjective test with an elaborate\npoint count for the unsponsored\nor \"independent\" applicant.\nIt  is designed to replace  a\nnarrow, rule-of-thumb procedure with a broad and flexible\nsystem  applying  fairly  in  all\nareas of the world.\nSKILL IMPORTANT\nBut getting a pass mark of 50\nfrom the 100 available points\nwill be impossible for the uneducated and unskilled person.\nThe test will work like this:\nAn applicant's education is\nworth one point per successful\nschool year, and he gets 10\npoints if he is under 35 years of\nage. It is worth 10 more to have\na job lined up in Canada, and\nanother 10 if he speaks both\nFrench and English fluently.\nHis skill, and the demand in\nCanada for it, are crucial factors that combine to make up a\npossible 30 points or  \"assess\nment units\" in the parlance of\nthe regulations.\nUp to 15 points are also\nawarded on thepersonal\nassessment of the immigration\nofficer, and having a non-sponsoring relative in Canada is\nworth five.\nAll told, the test provides 100\npossible points and the passing\nmark  is 50  for  most unsponsored applicants.\nTEST MAY BE IGNORED\nAn immigration officer can\nset aside the pass mark if he is\nenthusiastic about the chances\nfor an applicant to adjust\ndespite an apparent failure in\nthe test. But the offer must put\nhis reasons in writing and win\napproval of a superior officer.\nImmigration    Minister   Mar-\nchand signalled the more liberal immigration policy in a\nwhite paper last year, but until\nTuesday it wasn't clear how the\nbroad new standards would be\ntranslated into regulations.\nMr. Marchand told a press\nconference the new rules will\nattach more weight to the\nrights of family relationship\nand tie immigration flows to\nthe needs of the economy.\nA time of unemployment and\nlow demand for skills will have\nthe effect of making it more\ndifficult for prospective immigrants to score well on the test.\nThe opposite will be true when\nthe economy is active and\nindustry is short of labor.\nThe regulations set up three\ncategories   of   immigrant-spon\nsored, nominated and independent. The first two represent a\nnew distinction between\ndependents and non-dependents.\nDependents for immigration\npurposes will be defined as husband or wife; fiance or fiancee:\nunmarried sons or daughters\nunder 21; parents or grandparents over 60; and orphaned\nbrothers, sisters, nephews,\nnieces or grandchildren under\n18.\nThese sponsored dependents\nmay come into Canada if they\nmeet the simple tests of good\nhealth and good character.\nNominated relatives, non-dependents who can nevertheless\nexpect some assistance from\ntheir nominator in adjusting to\nCanadian   life,   would   be\nrequired to score only 20 to 35\npoints, depending on their relationship and age.\nNominees may include sons\nand daughters over 21, married\nsons and daughters under 21,\nbrothers or sisters, parents or\ngrandparents under 60,\nnephews, nieces, uncles, aunts\nand grandchildren.\nAn important effect of the\nregulations is to remove a\nclause that now denies sponsorship rights for relatives in most\ncountries of Asia and Africa.\nBut Mr. Marchand said the\neffect of the rules under current economic conditions is not\nlikely to push annual immigration figures to more than 220,-\n000, an increase of about 20,000\nfrom 1966.\nMr. Pearson likely will meet\nMr. Stanfield here next week to\ndiscuss not only the latter's\nentry into the Commons but\nparliamentary business for the\nnew session opening Sept. 25.\nThe two may be able to\nincrease parliamentary efficiency and speed up parliamentary\nreform as Mr. Pearson and\nJohn Diefenbaker were never\nable to do.\nOPTIMISM REPORTED\nMr. Pearson, long an advocate of reform, is said to feel\nhe can make progress in this\nfield with Mr. Stanfield.\nBut Liberals will be more\nconcerned to see how Mr. Stanfield makes out in Parliament.\nIf he is an immediate success,\nthe Liberals will be giving\nimmediate attention to the\nproblem of whom to put against\nhim in the next election.\nOne authoritative source said\nthat only Mr. Pearson himself\nmight be capable of this task\nHowever he is 70 and has not\nshown any particular desire to\ngo through another general\nelection campaign.\nIf Mr. Stanfield did not make\nthe grade quickly in Parliament\nand was consequently not considered a real threat by the\nLiberals, Mr. Pearson might\ncall for a leadership convention\nto find his successor.\nThe Liberals appear much\nimpressed by the fact that the\nConservatives rejected the old\nhands\u2014six former cabinet ministers were in the race\u2014and\npicked a fresh face in Mr. Stanfield.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Union rejection of the industrial inquiry commission report into the Interior\nlumber dispute makes the economic situation for area\nlumber operators potentially disastrous, a spokesman\nsaid Tuesday.\nR. A. Mahoney, a spokesman\nfor the northern interior lumbermen's association, said if\nthe union membership rejects\nthe report and supports union\nleaders, \"a strike is inevitable\nin the interior operations.\"\nThe report, issued Monday by\nMr. Justice F. Craig Munroe of\nthe B.C. Supreme Court, recommended a 44-cent hourly wage\nboost on a current base rate\nof $2.26 for Interior lumber\nworkers.\nBut the report was rejected\nby leaders of the International\nWoodworkers of America because it fell six cents short of\ngranting parity with coastal\nwoodworkers, the key issue in\nthe dispute.\nMr. Mahoney said that the\nnorthern operators were giving\nserious consideration to the report when it was rejected \"out\nof hand\" by IWA leaders.\nThe 8,000 Interior woodworkers began balloting on the report Tuesday after union leaders recommended it not be accepted immediately after it was\nhanded down.\nThe union also received permission from the provincial government to hold a strike vote.\nMr. Mahoney was critical of\nthe attitude of IWA president\nJack Moore in requesting the\nstrike vote.\n\"Mr. Moore has publicly\nstated that in seeking a strike\nvote he is paving the way for\nmore realistic bargaining,\" he\nsaid.\n\"The union has not bargained\nat all during three months of\nnegotiations and it should be\nclearly understood that the operators are not prepared to\nbargain on this award in any\nway.\"\nHe said the 44-cent an hour\nwage boost recommendation\n\"will result in many interior operations being forced out of\nbusiness.\"\nEmployers in the southern\nInterior had offered 26 cents an\nhour in a two-year contract and\nnorthern employers had offered\n20 cents an hour over the same\nperiod.\nHorace Simpson of Kelowna,\nchairman of the southern employers' negotiating committee,\nsaid he is amazed that the union rejected the report.\nHe said that the recommendation was \"extremely generous\"\nand that it will push wages to\nthe upper limit of the industry's\nfinancial capacity.\nMr. Justice Munroe said that\nhe could not grant parity for\nInterior woodworkers with their\ncoast counterparts because of\n\"markedly different\" economic\nconditions in the interior.\nThe union also sought future\nraises won by Coastal woodworkers in addition to parity.\nInterior IWA contracts with\nthe lumber operators expired\nSept. 1.\nCanada, U.S. Study\nWheat Price Sag\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Trade\nMinister Robert Winters of Canada and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman Tuesday\ndiscussed the sag in world\nwheat prices and \"agreed to\ncontinue policies designed to\nstrengthen\" them.\nThat means trying to market in an orderly way,\" Winters\ntold a press conference following a two-hour meeting with\nFreeman and advisers for both\ncountries.\nWinters returned immediately\nto Ottawa.\nHe said he and Freeman\nshared concern that some\ngrades of wheat now are selling\nbelow the minimum price range\nset out in the new cereals\nagreement replacing the international   wheat   agreement.   It\ntakes effect next July 1, but in\nthe interim the new range was\ngenerally to have been in force.\nBumper crops around the\nworld, as well as an anticipated\nrecord yield in the U.S. this\nyear of 1,500,000,000 bushels,\nare credited for the below-minimum prices.\nBuyers anticipate that perhaps this is not the time to\nplace new orders,\" Winters\nsaid. \"There's a natural tendency to look around for the best\nbargain.\n\"But these same importers\nalso agreed to the new price\nranges.\"\nThe new agreement, which\nresults from the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs\nnegotiations at Geneva, also\nwas discussed by Winters with\nother U.S. officials.\nShots Again Traded\nAcross Suez Canal\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nEgyptian and Israeli forces\nfired at each other across the\nSuez Canal again Tuesday\nbefore United Nations truce\nobservers obtained a ceasefire.\nThe Egyptians said their guns\nchased off two Israeli planes,\nknocked out five tanks and\nblew up an ammunition dump.\nBoth sides admitted the\nshooting near El Qantara. 25\nmiles south of Port Said, but\ngave different accounts of how\nit started. Cairo radio said two\nIsraeli Mirage jets invaded\nEgyptian air space and were\ndriven away by anti-aircraft\nfire. Israel said one of its\nplanes was shot at as it flew\nover  Israeli-occupied  territory.\nIn other Middle Eastern\ndevelopments, Secretary-General U Thant said at the United\nNations that Israel had made\nclear it would pursue steps to\nannex the Jordanian sector of\nJerusalem   despite   two  formal\ndemands by the UN General\nAssembly that it not do so.\nIsraeli soldiers seized the sector, the Old City, in the Arab-\nIsraeli war in June.\nThant was reporting on a\ntwo-week visit to Jerusalem by\nSwiss diplomat Ernesto A.\nThalmann, his personal envoy.\nIsrael's Interior Ministry\nannounced that 6,500 Arab refugees omitted from the repatriation across the Jordan River\nlast month may begin crossing\nto the Israeli-held west bank\nSunday. They are the last of i\n20,500 Arabs Israel is permitting to return to the homes thev\nfled during the war.\nMPtRATI\nNELSON  \t\n6\u00b0   42\n_\nToronto   \t\n6.    38\n_\nCalgary    \t\n6'     -\n02\nPenticton   \t\n7:    ,1\n_\nVancouver \t\n65   47\n\u201e_\nWhitehorse   \t\n49   42\n.01\nSpokane\t\n67   26\n.15\n 2 \u2014 r^E^SON TJAILY NEWS, WED. SEPT. 13, 1967\nFel I Street Paving\nApproved by Council\nPaving of the 1300 block .of ^nay Regional District and city\ncouncil to discuss ambulance\nservices was arranged for Thursday night at the council chambers.\nAn opinion from the city solicitor on the personal and public\nliabilities involved in sending\nthe Nelson Fire Department rescue vehicle and fire equipment\noutside the city limits was requested.\nWorks Program\nSlowing Down\nFell Street has been approved\nfor this year. The Works, Utilities and Services committee ot\nNelson City Council approved\nthe project     at its last meeting.\nOn a motion by Aid. Fritz\nFarenholtz, seconded by Aid.\nKennedy F~acchina. council\nagreed to the excavation, base\npreparation. curbing and paving,\nexcluding the water connection,\nol the 130O   -block of Fell Street\nCosts, of ' the project will be\ncharged to tire city's contingency\nfund pending adjustment of the\n1967 budget    in October.\nOther items approved by the\ncommittee \"and council were:\nThe relocation of the Houston [ Nelson public works program\nMemorial \" directly behind the! proceeded at a slower rate of\npresent Gyro Park sign, close progress during August than in\nto Ihe main\" entrance ol the: previous months,\npark. A site . plan was.ordered, This was because on ,verage\nprepared to. show the exact lo-nearly one-third of the full com-\ncal'on- ; - I plement of 44 men were absent\nThe 30-foot. street connecting I for vacation,  leave of absence\nWard and Josephine Streets was! or sickness,\nnamed Little   Street. The neces-    The sewer   construction pro\nsary bylaw      was  ordered pre- gram continued with the Instil-\nPared- latlon of 325 feet of storm sewer\nA report on the assessment In the 500 block Kootenay Street;\nlimitation inequities in Ihe city construction of 590 feet of storm\nwas ordered prepared by the I sewer in 500 and 600 blocks Sec-\nassessment commissioner fori ond Street: and 250 feet of storm\nconsideration    by city council.   ! sewer in 400 block Davies Street.\nA meeting of representatives! The street construction paving\nof Ihe Hospited.  Central Koot-1 program   continued   with  corn-\nMrs. Ethel S. Walt was named\nto fill the unexpired term vacancy on the city's Library\nBoard.\nA tender from the city's Public Works Department In the\namount of $1929 for labor costs\nln the redecking of the Latimer\nStreet bridge was accepted. It\nwas the only tender received.\nThe amount will be charged to\ncontingencies.\nLAST\n\"IMES rONIQHT \u2014 Shows ot 7:00 \u2022 9:05\n\"TOBRUK\"\nRock Hudson, George Peppord\nTechnicolor\npletion of excavation and base\npreparation In 600, 700 and 800\nblocks Gore Street, and work is\nproceeding in 900 block Gore\nStreet, where storm sewers and\nsub-surface drainage Is being installed.\nCurbing construction on these\nfour blocks will be carried out\nwithin the next few weeks, but\npaving of them will probably\nhave to wait until next year.\nThe construction of a bin-type\nretaining wall at Lakeview Crescent is one of the projects hoped\nto be carried out ln the near\nfuture.\nCENTENNIAL PLAYERS COMPANY\nScene from Knavery of Scapin.\nComplete Plans\nFor Music Test\nCentennial Players\nSet For Notre Dame\nRegistrations\nUnderway\nWith registrations still coming\nin at Selkirk College, Castlegar,\nthe complement of students looks\nlikely to lop the 600 mark. The\nfinal enrollment figures will be\nknown Monday.\nDuring the last academic year\n485 students were enrolled at the\ncollege.  The large  Increase In\nthat number this term and the\nintroduction   of   a   number   of\nadditional  courses,   mainly   for\nof l'Ecole du Centre Dramatlque I the  second year students,  ha?\nde l'Est in Strasbourg, France j necessitated    an    Increase    in\nwho  has  come  to   Canada   to faculty of about 20.\ndirect the company here, were    Faculty appointments, now altar registered with a possibility j contemporary  Montreal writer. I held  in Vancouver,  Saskatoon, most   complete,   numbered   45.\nof one more. Both one-act plays run an hour Toronto. Montreal and Halifax.   I last night.\t\nFirst, second and third place,each and contrast ln theme as\ntrophies will be presented along j well as in language.\nThe Centennial Players Company, a universities' Centennial\ntheatre project is part of the \u25a0\nuniversities' Centennial program j\nYoung dramatic talent from\nuniversities across Canada will\npresent two one-act plays in\nNelson.\nBrought here under the auspices of Notre Dame University\nof Nelson the Centennial Players\nCompany will present two plays.\nThe Knavery of Scapin,, a light\nFrench comedy by Mbliere and\nArnold Had Two Wives, a satire\nNelson's third annual  Battle\nof the Bands for the B.C. Cup\nj for Music Is slated for Nelson I on modern academic life,\nsoon. Five American entries and j   The   latter,   a   tragi-comedy\nfive  Canadian groups have  so was  written   by  Avlva   Ravel\ned by two students of the National Theatre School who are\nalso supervising construction of\nsets.\nMore than 300 students were\nauditioned by Julien Forcier,\nprogram administrator, at 30\nuniversities from coast to coast.\nFinal auditions of 180 students\nby Mr. Pierre Lefevre, director\nIndustrial Commission\nForeseen This Year\nAn industrial commission may\nbe set up in Nelson before the\nend of the year. The aim of the\ncommission would be to encourage industry to the area.\nAldermen Kennedy Facchina\nand Henry Stevenson, together\nwith City administrator Reeve\nHarper and Chamber of Commerce industrial committee\nchairman, Don Champion recently went on fact-finding trips\nto Kelowna, Penticton and Sum\nmerland, where similar groups\nare already functioning.\nTheir report and recommendations based on their findings\nIs now being prepared and\nshould be put before City Council by the end of October.\nIndustry would be encouraged\nto the area by promoting the\nTwo Receive\nFines of $50\nTwo Nelson men were fined $50\neach in City Court when they\nwere found guilty of molesting\npeople on the street.\nThey were Antonia Arabia and\nJerry Cordone. Both pleaded not\nguilty.\nEvidence was given that they\nwere \"curb crawling\" in a car\ntrying to pick up young girls.\nIn addition to the fines they\nwere ordered to pay costs of $22.\nDriving contrary to restrictions\napplicable to his licence (that he\nshould have worn glasses) cost\nRobert Walinskl, Nelson a fine of\n$28.\nFor   being   Intoxicated   In\npublic place Paul Kolban, Nelson\nwas ordered to pay $25.\nSpeeding fine of $25, with\nendorsement of licence was Imposed on Jerry W. Westervelt,\nNelson.\nmum - w^w-m-mm\\mm-mBiWR\nmtaSkn - ~-^\u00a3--K!i8oia&Tife\nTOMORROW\nIVIC\nwith cash prizes as well as trophies for the best drummer, the\nbest vocalist, the best wind instrument, the best bass guitar,\nthe best lead guitar, the best\norgan, the best rhythm guitar,\nbest individual showman, best\nsportsmanship, most versatile\ngroup, most promising group,\nmost continuity in a group, most\noriginality and best group showmanship.\nBuzz Buchanan, promoter of\nthe band battle, said he Is expecting a bit of all types of teen\nmusic:   rock and roll,  rhythm j College,\nand blues, soul, psychedelic and tinue until  September\nmore.\nJudges for the two-day competition are four impartial people with substantial music backgrounds: Yvonne and Bob Rose,\nDon Stewart and master of ceremonies and judge Paul Haines.\nand is sponsored by a Centennial\nCommission grant of $50,000 to\nthe  Association of Universities\nand   Colleges   of   Canada,   of\nwhich Notre Dame is a member.\nThe Canadian  group, 30 stu-\n| dents including 24 actors and six\nstage    attendants,   started   rehearsals  August 7 at the new\nCentennial Theatre at Bishop's\nLennoxville   and   con-\nRegional Board Opposes\nGarbage Disposal Sites\nOpposition has been raised to\ntwo proposals by the Central\nKgotenay Regional District\nBoard for garbage disposal sites.\nThe site requested for garbage\n10. Sets i disposal in the Castlegar area\nand costumes have been design- could not be made available to\nthe Board, they were told.\nTraffic Control\nA letter from G. M. Dol concerning the proposed garbage\nsite for the village of Slocan was\nplaced before the Board.\nIt was pointed out by Mr.\nSwanson of the area, that Mr.\nDoi was very much concerned\nwith the location of the garbage\nsite, and before it came into use.\nLEARN\nWaltz\nFox    Trot\nJitte rbug\nTO\nDANCE\n(And Have Fun While Learning)\n10 Week Course\nSTARTING FRI., OCT. 13th, 8:30 P.M.\nBy Mr. ond Mrs.\nJ.  G. (Jimmy and Fran) Jamei\nNELSON'S LEADING DANCE\n. TEAM -\nEnroll Now As Class\nLimited to 16 Couples.\nPhone 352-5274\n\u2014mmmfx> \u25a0 a timm*m-\\m*\nPilot Hill\nDeath Cause\n\"Unknown\"\nTRAIL \u2014 A coroner's Jury\nTuesday ruled that water\nbomber pilot Den Hill, 45, of\nWhite Rock, B.C., died accidentally Aug. 8 when bis plane\ncrashed In the Kelly Creek\narea on a firefightlng mission.\nThe jury was not able to\nestablish  the exact cause  of\nThe Recreation and Conservation Water Branch had advised I a further examination should be\nAt. f\u00bb -l    r\\t\/ \"'bem 'hat the utilization of these carried out by the Regional Dis-\nUetS   COUnCll   UK   mi:*  for   garbage   facilitiesi trict Staff.\ncould affect the water  in  the!    It was also felt that this issue\narea concerned. ; should be reviewed by the De-\nBoard chairman G. S. Rust' partment ol Health,\ntold the meeting that the matter | The Board Instructed the ad-\nwas being given further study\nby Dr. Schmitt, West Kootenay\nMedical Health Officer. Mr.\nRust said immediately he received a report from Dr.\nSchmitt he would take further\nTraffic control received Ihe\nattention of Nelson City Council\nat ils meeting Monday night.\nUnanimous approval to the Installation of parking and stopping restrictions signs in the\narea of 607 and 619 Front Street,\nrestrictions to be in effect between eight a.m. and six p.m.\ndaily. Costs of the signs and in<,\nstallations  to be born  by the ac\"\u00b0n-  ;, ,_,..,,\nOK Tire Store ^* chairman  Indicated  that\nApproval for the erection oftf8 ,e\" lhe Boar4 mi*ht be able\nno parking signs at the access J'\" \"cure *ome portion of the\nministration to investigate the\nmatter fully and report to the\nnext regular meeting of the\nExecutive Committee who, in\nturn, would make their recommendations to the Board.\nA referendum is to be held\nSept. 30th to obtain the opinion\nof property-owners in the Browse\narea with regard to establishing\na fire service and garbage\nservice.\nJohn M. Mlntak, assessor-\nbuilding inspector for the Regional District has been appointed\nreturning officer.\nTrustees Facing\nHeavy Agenda\nfacilities which Nelson and ils\nsurrounding district has to offer,\nparticularly in the way of living\nand education standards, and\nthe abundance of water, an important consideration In the set-\nting up of most industries.\nFringe areas of Nelson would\nbe the most likely sites for industrial development, with the\ncity remaining purely as a residential and commercial centre.\nNelson Not Paying,\nRegional Board Told\nNotice has been served on the\nCentral Kootenay Regional District that the City of Nelson will\npay nolhlng toward the cost of a\ngeneral plan as proposed by the\nregional district's executive\ncommittee.\nCity Council, Monday night,\napproved a resolution by Its\nWorks and Services Committee\n\"That the Regional District of\nCentral Kootenay be advised that\nthe City of Nelson will not accept\nany assessment whatsoever for\nany portion\" of the proposed\ngeneral plan.\nCouncil's action came on a\nmotion by Aid. Kennedy Facchina and seconded by Aid.\nTerry Wayling.\nMayor Louis Magllo, earlier\nhad said that the regional district was exceeding its authority\nby undertaking projects affecting\nany municipality or unorganized\narea within Its boundaries without first obtaining specific requests from the area or municipality involved.\nMr. Magllo discounted the\nvalue of any planning done for\nthe City of Nelson by the\nRegional District in view of the\nfact that the city maintains Its\nown planning department.\nCouncil further moved that\nthe regional district be advised\nthat \"all measures within the\ncity's power are being taken to\nensure that sewage treatment\nwill be Implemented by the city\nat the earliest possible time.\"\nMr. Magllo earlier, had commented on the regional district\nentry into the city's sewage\nproblems, and reiterated that the\nregional board was exceeding Its\naulhority by acting without a\nspecific request from the city.\nHousing Problem\nSaid Not Serious\nAlthough there is a housing\nproblem for students of the\nBritish Columbia Vocational\nSchool and Kootenay School of\nArt in Nelson, it is not an overly-\nserious one at present, according to statements from both administration and student government at the school.\nAllen Jemson, prime minister\nof the Student Parliament, said\nTuesday that while there Is a\ndefinite shortage of boarding\nplaces, transportation from most\nareas of the city was readily\navailable on the bus routes and,\nIn most cases, prices were\nreasonable.\nHe also commended students'\nlandlords for the fine job they\nare doing of providing true\n\"homes\" for the students.\n\"It Is the next class coming,'\nMr.   Jemson   said,   \"that  will\nhave the greatest difficulty as\nmost of the better places are\nnow taken and many which will\nbe vacated soon are already\nspoken for.\"\nHe asked householders ln Nelson who are looking for boarders\nto leave their name and adress\nat the administration office of\nthe school.\nO. H. Timmins, vice-principal\nof the school, said that If there\nwas a serious housing shortage,\nhe certainly was not aware of\nit.\nHe said that his office had had\nsome Inquiries and requests for\nhelp but this, he added, U a\nnormal situation.\n\"The big problem with most\nstudents is money,\" he said,\npainting out that many students\narrive at the school with is\nlittle as (50 and no provision for\ngetting more.\nWithhold Action\nOn Festival Grant\nto the rear of the property at\n705 Seventh Street was granted\nCouncil also agreed to the widen\narea for garbage disposal purposes,\ndeath. The aircraft was owned! >\u00bb\u00ab,\u2022' the. \"i\"\u2122*'\"cl\" f*^\nby Skyways Air Service, of | ,S,X* an,dt S\"e\"\\Slr\"ls \u2122,t\nAbbotsford '\u00b0   lden the 70\u00b0 D 0CK of Seventl1\nStreet on the west side to per\nThe Federal Transport Department is still Investigating\nthe crash.\nMADE LONG MARCH\nCanada's North West Mounted Police staged a 1,000-mile\nmarch along the U.S. border in\nVICTORIA (CP) - A slate of\n70 resolutions to be debated at\nthe annual convention of the B.C.\nSchool Trustees' Association In\nVancouver next month shows\nincreasing concern with modernizing Ihe province's education\nsystem.\nSchool    design,   methods   ol\nBOWLERS\nALL LEAGUES START THIS WEEK\n=      -Bowlers Needed To' Till    -.\"\nMonday, 9 p.m.\u2014Mixed League\nTuesday, 9 p.m.\u2014Ladies' League\nWednesday,9p.m.\u2014Mixed League\nFriday, 7 p.m.\u2014Mixed League\nFriday, 9 p,iti.\u2014Mixed League\nShfft   workers who would like to start\nSunday evening mixed league contact\nNelson Bowladrome\n  Phone 352-2115\nApplication\nTabled\nAn application to purchase a\ncity-owned lot on Observatory\nStreet was tabled by Nelson\nCity Council Monday night pending a recommendation from the\ncity's advisory planning commission.\nRobert and Ruth Phillips had\napplied to the city to purchase\nthe lot immediately adjacent to\ntheir own property.\n\"We are the only property\nowners affected by this lot,\"\ntheir letter stated, \"and we need\nit for our use and to clean it\nup.\"\nThey offered to pay the assessed value of the property plus ten\nper cent.\nmit alternate parking in front' 1874 In a show of force against \u25a0 coping with handicapped chil-\nof properties at 701, 703 and 705 the outlaws of the American dren, educational television,\nSeventh. .West. computer training, report card\nBroken Windows\nRoot of Complaint\nSUMMER\nCANDIES\nJellies and\nWafers\n250\/\n70 OFF\nWhile They Ust.\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\nC39 Baker St. Nelson\n-   Phone 352-2.11.1\nBroken windows were the subject of a complaint to Nelson\nCity Council Monday night.\nGordon Webb of 411 Fourth\nStreet complained in a letter\nthat foul balls emanating from\nQueen Elizabeth Park had resulted in four broken windows\nin his liorrie in the past five\nyears. .-..-,-\n\"Having had to replace four\nbroken windows in five years,\nplus the vexation of a living\nroom littered with glass,\" Mr.\nWebb said, \"I would recommend\nan extension being added to the\nexisting backstop.\" | _        ...     ,    ,\nAid. Terry Wayling supported i FOI*    WOl\"KShOp\nMr. Webb. He said that the exist-1\nIng backstop was not sufficient j    City planner G. A. Bulling will\nlo prevent foul balls from hitting   attend a planning workshop atj0\nIhe houses. \u25a0   . .     j Creston Sept. 29 ond 30 sponsor-1 vlnclni\nMr. Webb noled that because] ed   jointly   by   thi\nplate there are at least five\nhouses within range of foul balls\ndriven out of the park.\nHe said that his prime Interest\nin complaining to council was\nthe potential danger to spectators and homeowners alike.\nCouncil referred the recommendation to recreation director\nCharles Bell, for a report and\nrecommendations at the next\ncouncil meeting.\nButling Slated\nreform and curriculum revision\nare all subjects of motions that\nwill be debated by trustees of\n83 school districts at the Oct. 3 \u2022 8\nconference.\nEducation finance and teacher\nsalary negotiations are expected\nto dominate the convention, however.\nOne resolution argues that all\nschool money should come from\ngeneral revenue of the province.\nTwo others repeat demands for\nzonal bargaining, a measure\nconsistently fought by the B.C.\nTeachers' Federation.\nThe BCSTA executive will pro\npose province \u2022 wide bargaining\nwith regional adjustments in\nteacher-trustee contracts.\nAnd a resolution sponsored by\nthe Kamloops School Board calls\nfor a royal commission\nprovincial \u2022 municipal relations\nwith special emphasis on educa\nlinn finance.\nThc executive will also present\nresolution   urging   thc   pro-\n._. education department to\nCommunity | eslnb|jsh a smaller pupil-teacher\nof the placement of the home   Planning Association of Canada, |ra||0 jn |nc jnoB-(50 school year\nB.C. division, the University of | Th(, m()tion calJs for ratloB '\u201e,.\nBritish Columbia and the B.C. ,\u201ew \u2022 ^ ,\u201e\u201e\u201e,\u201e j,,,,, ,,,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\nDepartment  of   Municipal   Af-|by lm ^ department pres-\nUnder di.Cus.lon at the work- j \"gft,allow8 on\u00ab teachM \u00bb'r M\nshop will be\u25a0 such Subjects as,pT\"\u25a0 .,,\u201e,,\u201e .... , ..\nPlanning In Ihe Modern Com- L fom-ention delegates also will\nmunity, Regional Planning ,\u201ed be Mked to vote on in executive\nR61e of ihe Advisory WejMl\u00ab| | r*\u00aboluHon ttftjj^btt^tMtji\nCommission.\nThe two-day program will get\nunderway wilh an address on\nPlanning In the Modern Com-\n\u2022I munlly followed by speakers\nand discussions on lhe other\nsubjects on the Saturday.\nStfVddqhL\nDRIVE-IN\nLast Time Tonight\n\"CAST A GIANT\nSHADOW\"\nAdult Entertainment\nKirk Douglas, Slttta lirrgcr\n(Colouri\nShowtime:   il p '\ners from becoming members of\nschool boards.\nAt present, teachers cannot\nbecome trustees In the districts\nin which they leach, but they can\nseek election to school boards in\nother districts    f\nThe executive feels that teachers are contributing members to\nan organization representing\ntheir financial interests In all\nschool districts. This creates a\ndivided allegiance which could\nlead to a conflict of Interest if a\nteacher also served as a trustee.\nKootenay,\nColumbia\nRunoff Up\nAugust 1967 was the hottest\nand one of the driest Augusts on\nrecord, according to a recent\nreport from the Department of\nEnergy, Mines and Resources,\nInland Waters Branch.\nRecords taken at BIrchbank\nfor the Columbia River and\nColumbia River Basin show the\nrunoff for August 1087 to be\n113,000 cubic feet per second,\n121 per cent increase over the\naverage of 93,700 for the previous\n52 years.\nThe maximum dally runoff\nrate, 154,000 cubic feet per\nsecond, fell far short of the\nrecord 199,000 set in 1920.\nThe minimum daily runoff recorded at the station this year,\n70,800 cubic feet per second, was\nsubstantially above the 1957 all-\ntime minimum of 54,100 cubic\nfeet per second.\nDrainage in the Upper Kootenay Basin was up, too, according\nto figures taken by the department at Wardner. A. 113 per cent\nIncrease above the average 6480\ncubic feet per second was\nregistered making the 1967 August average 7320.\nThe 1920 record runoff of\n14,400 cubic feet per second was\nagain substantially above this\nyear's August high of 10,600\ncubic feet per second. As In the\nColumbia bnsln,; the minimum\ndoily runoff, 4770, was above the\nminimum recorded runoff, 3300\nin 1036.\nAction on a request from the\nrecently re-activated Nelson Music Festival Association for a\n$700 grant was held up by Nelson City Council Monday night\npending a recommendation from\nthe finance committee.\nMrs. Edna Whlteley. association secretary, in a letter to\ncouncil, noted that council, In\nthe past, had financially supported the association with a\ngrant.\n\"It is with this in mind we\napproach council for a grant of\n$700,\" she wrote.\nThe money, she said, would\nbe used to help defray such costs\nas hall rental and other expenses.\n\"You will recall,\" she said,\n\"the successful festivals held In\nNelson in the past and It ll\nthrough these events that young\nmusicians can get some measure\nof satisfaction as to progress\nIhey are making.\"\nMrs. Whlteley noted that plans\nare already underway to hold\nthe first music festival In the\ncity since 1962 In the spring of\nnext year.\nShe said Tuesday that definite\ndates could not be established\nuntil such time as the associa-'\nHon makes final arrangements\nfor adjudicators, but she said\nthat present plans call for a\nthree-day festival open to all\nwith classes for adult bands,\nchoral groups Including church\nchoirs, piano, vocal solos, and\nelocution.\nNelson Student Wins\nCancer Society Bursary\nA student at Notre Dame\nUniversity, Richard Donald\nBeauchamp of 909 Ninth Street,\nNelson, has been awarded the\nCanadian Cancer Society's 1967\nbursary.\nAnnouncing this, J. M. Morley,\npresident, Nelson Unit, C.C.S.,\n\" \u00ab*\nsays bursaries In the amount of\n$500 for university students taking pre-medical requirements\nare provided by the Society for\nthe four universities ln British\nColumbia.\nRichard Beauchamp completed\nhis university entrance at L. V.\nRogers Secondary School, Nelson\nin June 1984.\nSince that time he has been\nattending Notre Dame University\nand completed pre-medlcal requirements for registering at the\nFaculty of Medicine, The University of British Columbia, this\nmonth.\nThe Nelson unit of the society\nis an agency of the Community\nChest. All monies are earmarked\nfor cancer research.\n2ND DEBUT\nDouble strength with\nCEF-12M Plus Snd Debut\nSkin Cleaner,\n$7.75 value now only\n\u20226.00\nMayo  Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward\nPh. 352-2613   _ Nelson\n\"AIR  CONDITIONED\"\n\" P,\t\n HOXANNE MARK, 10, of Lakeview Crescent, poses with Daily News\nadvertising manager Peter Reibin and her new bicycle. Roxanne was one\nof the Iwo national winners in the Elmer Summer Safety Contest sponsored\njointly by the National Safety Council and this newspaper. It is her first\nbicycle.\nRegional District\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 13, 1967 \u2014 3\nPress For Ambulance Service\nRegional District\nWants Plans Submitted\nCentral Kootenay Regional District Board is to ask all municipalities and other organized\ngroups to submit any plans that\nthey have contemplated in the\npast relative to the Regional\nDistrict.\nThis is to be done in order to\nmake it possible for the firm of\nRawson and Wiles, consultants\nfor the general plan of the\nRegional District, to give them\nrecognition in recommending an\noverall plan for the Regional\nDistrict.\nLome Zinio mentioned that\nalthough Castlegar would gladly\nco-operate in such an undertaking he felt that some thought\nor consideration should be given\nto the fact that  many  of the\nplans that communities had,\nwere obtained at a cost to the\nmunicipalities. Therefore, some\nconsideration should be made in\nthe future for such plans being\ndeveloped by the Regional District itself and not at the expense\nof the municipalities.\nBoard chairman, G. S. Rust\nadvised that the principal reason\nbehind the request, which originated from the firm of consultants, was that they were anxious\nthat the Regional District establish a comprehensive library so\nthat all plans for the area would\nbe known and also could be\nutilized from time to time to\nplan for the future of the area.\nUpon the recommendation of\nthe   Executive   Committee,   no\nCreston Telephone\nNumbers To Change\nNatal\nAchieve 80,000 Hours\nAccident Free at Crow\nNATAL \u2014 Achieving their target of 80,000 working man-hours\nwithout a compensable accident\nbrought the Natal sawmill crew\nof Crows Nest Industries a real\ntreat recently, a steak dinner\nwith all the trimmings.\nThe affair was held in the\nMichel Hotel dining room with\nthe dinner, including the steaks,\nprepared by chef Mrs. Thoma-\nsina Lyne of Michel. The chef's\nefforts drew a round of applause\nfrom the lumbermen present.\nThe company's appreciation for\nthe safety work record was expressed by safety director Paul\nKusnir, who said that when the\ntarget of 80,000 man-hours was\nset, many said it was impossible.\n\"Well, you've done it,\" he\nsaid, \"and it can be done again.\nIt is our intention to have more\nof these contests and dinners.\"\nThe sawmill crew was in competition with the Crows Nest Industries planermill crew and\nbush crews. Ed Bakken, sawmill\nofficial, spoke briefly, pointing\nout that without full co-operation from the men, such a record\nwouid not have been possible.\n\"If we continue to have this\ncooperation, we will have a record which will be recognized by\nthe industry.\" Mr. Bakken held\nup one hand, minus a portion of\na finger to stress the point that\na moment's carelessness can\ncost a man dearly.\nRussell Cornish, sawmill foreman, also had a few words to\nsay, paying complete credit to\nthe men who had supported the\nsafety drive 100 per cent. I feel\na little guilty when someone\npoints out that I am performing\nan unsafe act, and I suppose the\nother fellows do, too. But I hope\nthey all keep on pointing out any\nunsafe practices. \"It's for our\nown good.\"\nSawmill official Ed Bakken\nwas backed up by Crows Nest\nIndustries safety director Paul\nI Kusnir when he said the forest\ngroup's safety record had im-\nj proved 300 per cent since last\nI year.\nPrefixes of all telephone numbers in the Creston exchange\nwere changed from \"356\" to\n428\" at midnight Saturday.\nB.C. Tel District Manager, D.\nA. Smith of Cranbrook, said that\nthe conversion went smoothly\nand climaxed almost a year of\npreparation and planning.\nHe said the effect of the conversion is two-fold, first, all\nlong distance services formerly\nprovided from Nelson, will now\nbe directed to B.C. Tel headquarters in Cranbrook. Secondly,\nCreston customers now will be\nrequired to dial all seven digits\nto reach another party in the\nexchange.\nMr. Smith said that although\nthe change has been advertised\nquite extensively, a lot of people\nare still trying to complete calls\nby dialing only the last four\ndigits of the desired number, and\npayment will be made to Rawson\nand Wiles until October 31st,\nwhich will be 50 per cent of the\ncontract price, and the final\npayment on receipt of the report\ncovering 1967.\nVictoria May Permit\nExclusion of Area \"\\\"\nA positive request is to be made by the Central Kootenay Regional Dis\ntrict Board for the provision of an ambulance service for the municipalities of\nCastlegar and Kinnaird and electoral area 'I' (Robson and Blueberry Creek).\nA recent referendum in area 'J' achieved a 60 per cent majority approval\nand\nIrs.\nliss\nMr.\nN.\nrry\nnne\nike\nof the proposed service, but\narea T turned it down.\nAs a result of discussions\nheld with Provincial Government in Victoria, the Board\nwas advised that consideration\nwould possibly be given to\namending the Letters Patent for\nelectoral area 'J', providing\nthat assurance could be given\nby the Board that the cost to\nproperty-owners    ol    area    'J'\nNatal\nBoard Completes Plans\nFor Pickuo of Students\nNATAL \u2014 The District School\nBoard has set up a schedule to\ncarry out its plan to transport\nsecondary students from Michel,\nNatal and Sparwood to Fernie\nand at the same time transport\nelementary students from Michel-Natal to Sparwood.\nSeven big buses, two of which\nwill be leased, will be used to\nconvey the students to their respective classrooms each day\nand maintenance supervisor Robert Craig has worked out an\ninterlocking  schedule to  allow I bus will pick up more elemen-\nmovement of students to be ac\ncomplished efficiently and with\nout undue loss of time.\nFirst bus to take the road will\nbe a 55-passenger vehicle driven\nby Ronnie Kozler, which is scheduled to leave Crows Nest at\n7:30 a.m. daily. Thirty minutes\nlater, the bus will dislodge 20\nsecondary students at Michel-\nNatal School where they will\nboard the Fernie-bound bus,\ndriven by Mike Pisoni. Kozler's\nDepartment of Lands, Forests,\nand Water Resources\nFOREST SERVICE, NELSON\nApplications from  Qualified  Licensed  Scalers  are '\nivited for the following positions:\u2014\nEIGHT-SCALER:\nFor the Department of Lands,, Forests and Water\nResources, Forest Service. Nelson, at Coldstream,\nBeaton, Shelter Bay, Vipond. Oatscott and Deer Park.\nGoldstream is on the Columbia River, about 50 miles\nnorth of Revelstoke, the other locations are at various\npoints on the shores of the Arrow Lakes.\nTIES:\nTo carry out duties at a Weight Scale Station which\nwill include the weighing of truck-loads of timber,\nscaling or assisting in the scaling of sample loads of\nlogs, compilation, record-keeping, and other duties\nas may be assigned by the Forest Officer in charge.\n.'ALARY RANGE:\n$19.77 to $22.53 per eight-hour day. Salary to be paid\nwill be commensurate with certain standards ol\nexperience and responsibility. Normal fringe benefits\nsuch as holiday leave, sick leave, and retirement\nfund are offered.\nPREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS:\nMinimum age 21; a minimum of three years industrial,\nscaling experience as a licensed scaler; minimum\ngrade 10 education; holder of a valid driver's licence;\nmature attitude, and indicated ability to adjust to\nvarying work loads; integrity and tact in meeting\nwith officials of the forest industry and the general\npublic.\nApplication forms may be obtained from the office of\nthe District Forester or local Ranger Stations and should\nbe submitted to the District Forester, Nelson, as soon as\npossible.\nJ. R. JOHNSTON,\nDistrict Forester.\ntary students before arriving at\nSparwood.\nMr. Pisoni will pick up more\nstudents at Michel-Natal School\nand the former police station,\nbringing his complement to 45\nfor the trip to Fernie.\nThe vehicle driven by John\nHeitman will also pick up students destined for Fernie and his\n55-passenger bus leaves the Kootenay Hotel at 8:22. Meanwhile\nanother bus will also be picking\nup students in Sparwood for the\ntrip lo Fernie, with around 45\nsludents as the likely number.\nA fourth bus, driven by George\nFedorak, will rendezvous with\nthe Elk Valley bus driven by\nAlex Wasnock to pick up 19 secondary students before it also\nleaves for Fernie, picking up 22\nadditional students on the way.\nHosmer students and those\ncloser to Fernie will be picked\nup by a 67-passenger bus driven\nbv Wally Runions of Fernie. At\nIhe present time, it appears that\nabout 258 students will be conveyed daily between Fernie and\nthe centres lo the east. Buses\nwill also be in operation between\nJaffray and Fernie and other\nSouth Country points.\nare getting nowhere. Two men\nwere on duty in the Creston\nOffice all day Sunday watching\nfor people dialing incorrectly and\ninforming them of the change.\nA twist of fate actually brought\nthe long distance portion of the\nequipment into operation a week\nearly when a forest fire just\nnorth of Midge Creek destroyed\nall the communications facilities\nadjacent to the C.P.R. tracks,\nFast work by telephone crews\nfrom both Creston and Cranbrook\nenabled restoration of service\nthrough to the Cranbrook operating centre within three hours.\nMr. Smith said that the change\nwill greatly increase the reli\nability of long distance service\nto the Creston area, however, he\nrestated that all seven digits\nmust be dialed on local calls.\nOver 2600 phones in the Creston\narea are affected by the change.\nInvermere . . .\nLocal Sheep\nWin at Coast\nINVERMERE - Annis Suffolk\nsheep, which gained top honors\nat the fall circuit in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan, repeated their\nsuccess at the Pacific National\nExhibition in Vancouver.\nAnnis 56W won the ewe with\nlambs class and Annis 24Y the\newe lamb class. Annis 24Y scored again by winning the reserve\nchampion ewe honor. I    Miss Jean Thomson. PHN, for-\nAnnis 9X topped the shearling I rnerly of 100-Mile House, has\nlamb class and Annis 54X came I arrived to take her position in\nfourth in the same class. Annis charge of the Invermere office I\n79Y came fifth in the ram lamb i 0f the East Kootenay Health :\nclass. 1 Unit.\nSecond place was taken-byj \u2022 Miss \u25a0 Thomson is a graduate!\nAnnis sheep in the group of: 0f Royal Alexandra Hospital at\nfour animals bred and owned Edmonton. She took her public j\nby the exhibitor. I health training at the University !\nThe   Annis   exhibits   scored j \u201e[ British Columbia,\nagain in the market wool com-1 ,\t\nInvermere . . .\nNurses Assume\nLocal Posting\npetition   coming   third   in   one\nclass and fifth in a second.\nAnnis sheep started the season\nby winning honours at the Calgary Stampede, and continued\ntheir success at Edmonton,\nLethbridge, Red Deer, and Saskatoon.\nMOSCOW (API - A leading\nSoviet space expert. Dr. Alexander I. Lebedinsky, 54, has\ndied suddenly, it was\nannounced Tuesday. He participated in Soviet moon probe programs.\nwould not exceed the one-half:\nmill which was indicated in the\nreferendum ballot.\nA resolution that the Board\n\"request of the Lieutenant-Governor in Council to amend Letters Patent to permit the provision of ambulance service\nwithin electoral area 'J' of the\nRegional District of Central\nKootenay at a cost not to ex-|\nceed one-half mill\" was unanimously passed.\nDuring the discussion preceding the vote, it was indicated\nlhat it should be possible to negotiate for a suitable ambulance\nservice within the framework\nof the amount of revenue that\nwould be derived from one-half\nmill.\nRiondel . . .\nDriver Hurt\nWhen Car Rolls\nDavid Dortman, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Dortman of Riondel,\nrolled his car over a bank on\nthe Riondel Road on Friday,\nSeptember 8th, about 2:15 p.m.\nDavid was taken to Creston\nHospital suffering multiple cuts\nand bruises. He was released\nfrom hospital on Sunday.\nThe ambulance service will include the municipa'ities of Castlegar and Kinnaird as well as\nelectoral area 'J'.\nft was also indicated in the\ndiscussions tiiat there was ft\nstrong possibility that property-\nowners residing in the Robson\narea of electoral area T would\npetition to have their area included  in the service.\nMembers of the Board were\nadvised by chairman G. S. Rust,\nthat, as and when such an application was made, it wouid\nhave to be dealt with on a separate basis.\nIs it that\nnagging\nbackache1\nagain?\nIf it's backache that's\nbothering you, it could be\ndue to urinary irritation\nand bladder discomfort. If\nso, Dodd's Kidney Pills\ncan help bring you relief.\nDodd's Pills stimulate the\nkidneys to help relieve the\ncondition causing the\nbackache. Then you feel\nbetter and rest better.\nYou can depend on Dodd's\nKidney Pills. New large\nlize saves money.\nK\nNew Denver . . .\nTwelve Sentenced\nAt Local Court\nNEW DENVER \u2014 A total of i in   a  licensed  premises  while\n12   people   were   sentenced   in | under age.\nmagistrate's court in New Den-1    Two juveniles were  charged\nver during the past week. I and both fined $25, one for pos-\nFour  juveniles,   all   charged! sessing liquor and another for\nwith two charges of car theft.   dl'm\"g wlth\u00b0ut insurance.\nreceived one year's probation\neach with certain restrictions\nto abide by. All four youths were\nfrom New Denver.\nTwo New Denver men were\ngiven $150 fines with 30-day jail\noptions on two separate charges.\nBruno Mociak was charged with\nsupplying liquor to minors and\nClaude Orson Dewey was charged with driving while his licence\nwas under suspension.\nNick Berukoff of Hills was\nfined $50 for consuming liquor\nBill Stoochoff of Winlaw paid\na voluntary $15 fine for driving\nwith no muffler.\nBACK   IN   SERVICE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The g\n3,100 \u2022 ton coastal passenger\nvessel Northland Prince returned to service Tuesday after\na $50,000 repair job to its bow\nthat was damaged Aug. 30 in\na collision in heavy fog with the\nAlaska Steamship Line train\nferry Alaska, near Alert Bay.\nCastlegar Ferry\nTraffic Is Down\nTwo Injured\nAs Car Rolls\nSALMO \u2014 Two persons were\ninjured, one seriously, Monday\nwhen their car went out of control and rolled over into a ditch\nat the height of a rainstorm\non Highway 3 east of here.\nTaken to the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital were Mrs. James Was-\nsilaskus of Tucson, Arizona, with\nsevere facial cuts, and her husband, driver of the vehicle, with\nminor injuries.\nPolice said the accident occurred when the east-bound car\nwent out of control on the highway near the Salmon River\nbridge and crashed into a deep\nditch.\nAugust traffic on Castlegar\nFerry was down considerably\nfrom the same month last year\naccording to R. E. McKeown.\ndistricl superintendent of B.C.\nDepartment of Highways.\nThe decline in traffic is attributed to opening of the new\nBrilliant Bridge.\nOnly 52,288 automobiles and\ndrivers made use of the service\nlast month, compared to 75,319\nin August, I960.\nRound trips were down to 3.588\nfrom last year's 5,241.\nPassengers, not including driv\nB.C. Briefs\nELECTION FORECAST\nSALMON ARM (CPl-How-\nard Johnston, MP for Okanagan\nRevelstoke, has forecast a fed-\nera! election within the next 10\nmonths. He made the prediction\nafter completing an organizational and familiarization trip\nthrough the East Kootenay riding which will be joined with\nOkanagan - Revelstoke in the\nnext election.\nCONCERT SCHEDULED\nVICTORIA (CPi - The New\nYork Philharmoni Vchestra,\nunder   the   baton Leonard\nBernstein,   will   p'       \u25a0jvening\nconcerts here Sep uid 21,\nthe  B..  Centennia liittee,\nwhich is predentin event,\nannounced Tuesday\nyears\ners  dropped  from  last\n107,057 total to 68.804.\nTrucks, all types, totalled\n13,033 this year compared to\n19,308 last year and semi-trailers\ndropped to 597 from 1,784.\nMotor buses were down from\n486 to 292 while motorcycles from\n392 to 306.\nNo livestock was carried in\nAugust of either year.\nCranbrook .. .\nMusic Festival\nBeing Revived\nCRANBROOK (Staff) - The\nEast Kootenay Music Festival\nis to be revived in the early\nspring of 1968.\nCranbrook and district schools,\ndrama groups, district chorai\ngroups, church choirs, bands,\nsquare dance club and all those\ninterested in music competition\nwill be invited to participate.\nThe Fraternal Order of Eagles\nAerie and Ladies' Auxiliary\nhave accepted challenge of sponsorship.\nA member of the Canadian\nAdjudicators' Association of Musicians, Gordon Clements, vice-\nprincipal at Mount Baker Secondary School, will act in an advisory capacity and spearhead\nthe undertaking with committees working under his supervision.\nLOTS OF PLACES TO GO\nAND LOTS OF THINGS TO SEE\nIt's       *\nHoliday\nTime I\nV-*\nEnjoy Your Holidays But Don't Miss\nImportant \"Local\" News Items\n'<X\u00a3&~f--**\nUSE THE\niln\nif\nof\nom\nps,\nthe\nley\n;n-\nied\nick\nful\ndy\net-\nu\nHOLIDAY PACK\na\nHave the Nelson Daily News saved for you by your Carrier Boy \u2014 ask him to save your\npaper till you come back, giving, him the date of your return. He will deliver the back copies along\nwith the current issue on the date specified.\nour carrier boys are anxious to give\nthis special service to their customers\n352-3552 CTpKnHe'M 352-3552\n  2U\t\n \u2022Dfalantt Sailg Nrms\nEst a Id I ished April 22, 1S02 Nelson. B C.\nPudi ished ny the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED. 266 Baker Street,\nNelsun   British Columbia mornings except Sundays and holidays   in the centre\nof    the Kootenays, with the largest dady circulation in the Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail   Post Office Department. Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash\nME2V1BER OF IHE CANADIAN PRESS. IHE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER\nPUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION AND THE AUDIT Bl'REAl OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThe   Canadian Press is exclusively entitled lo the use foi republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters in this paper\nand also the local news published herein\nTwin to the Kennedy Round\nThe success ol the Kennedy Round of tariff reductions will vastly redxj.cre the barriers to trade in the Western world. But the agreement\nreached, by the Group of 10 is eaually important: it will provide the\nincreased credit lo pay for the trade. Between them the two may ensuie\nthe prosperity ol Ihe Western World  for the foreseeable  future.\nInternational trade is financed on the basis of internationally\nrecognized reserve currencies: gold, United States dollars and British\nsterling-. The growth ol world trade means that greater reserves will\nbe necessary; but certain of the internationol traders, and principally\nFrance, were unwilling to leave this growth to the U.S. dollar-printing\npresses. For one thing, this enabled the United States to maintain a\ndeficit in international payments not open to countries which did not\noriginate; one of Ihe international currencies (and thereby, in the French\nview, increased U.S. holdings abroad and prompted inflation in Europe).\nFor another, it gave the United States too much control over the degree\nof international liquidity. For another it put the security of the dollar\nIn some risk: could the United States forever run the balance of payments   deficit thai provided the reserve dollars?\nThe Group ol 10 is composed of the 10 strongest Western industrial nations: Belgium, Britain, Canada, France, West Germany, Italy,\nJapan, S-weden, the Netherlands, and the United States, Under their agreement a new form ol international reserve would be created. Each of\nthe lOS member nations of the International Monetary Fund would\nbe allocated a portion ol the new reserves in accordance with their\nquota in the existing fund. The size of these reserves and their rate of\ngrowth -will be determined later, but Group of 10 thinking is that lor\nthe first five-year agreement it should be SI billion a year, or an addition of     1.5 per cent a year to liquidity.\nThese new reserves could then be drawn upon by member nations in periods ol difiiculty. What was finally compromised between\nWashincjton and Paris was how these drawings should be repaid. Washington -wanted no repayment, Paris wanted lull repayment. The compromise will call lor repayment of special drawing rights used in excess of 70 per cenl of a country's allocation, the use to be averaged\nover fi-ve years. If, for example, a country were allocated S10 million\nof special drawing righls, and made an average use of 80 per cent of them\nby tran si ferring S8 million of its rights to other countries, taking back\ndollars or other convertible currencies, it would be required to buy back\nwith convertible currencies, SI million of its special drawing rights to\nbring  its    average use down to 70 per cent.\nThe plan will not come into effect automatically. It will be a\ncontingency plan lo be brought into operation with the specific approval\nof IMF members. The director-general of the IMF would decide when the\nworld trade picture was bad enough to justify release of the new asset, and\n85^per cent of IMF voting power would then have to approve it. This was\na further concession to France. The European Common Market holds 17\nper cent of IMF voting power and could veto activation of the plan; but\nFrance    -would have to persuade its five partners to join in the veto.\nThe new reserve will be almost, but not quite, as good as gold.\nGold will remain negotiable in any amount, but no government will be\nrequired to accept payment ol special drawing rights from other countries\nin excess   of twice its own allocation.\nThe plan will now go to the September 25 conference of the IMF\nin Rio de Janeiro, where it is virtually certain of approval. It will then\nhave to go for ratification to the legislative bodies of the member countries. It    could be 1969 belore the plan is ready to go into  operation.\nWhat it amounts to is lhat the Western traders have determined\nthat their prosperity is interdependent, and that therefore the means of\npromoting trade among themselves must be interdependent. Increase in\ninternational liquidity will be brought to a degree under international\ncontrol. JK bulwark will be set against recession. The plan is more liberil\nthan France wanted, less liberal than the United States wanted; but it\ncould be altered in the new agreement that follows the initial five-year\nWal period.\nCanada's quota in the IMF, which will determine its drawing righls\nin the new plan, is 5740-million, compared with $5160-million for the\nUnited States, and an IMF total of 520,971.2-million. Thus Canada would\nbe a major beneficiary under the plan. But the real benefit is immeasurable: a new dimension of stability will be added to Western trade and\nprosperit-y.\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nH oop on the Way Back?\nThis extraordinary summer will\nbe remembered lor a variety of\nthings, including a record dry spell\nin Ihe Pacific Northwest and a record\nflood in F\" air banks, Alaska, which is\nalr-o in the Pacilic NorthweEt. Also,\nII may t>e remembered lor the revival of    the hula hoop.\n\"We may sell more lhan we did\nIn 1958,\" says the general manager\nol the company thai sold some 20\nmillion oi the hoops in 1958, the\nyear the craze hit ils zenith. His\nIdles   have    been  better  this   year\nin Miuii'i than  thev were th\u00b0 first\nroand.\nThe revival is already apparent\nhere. The hoops' new colors are psychedelic to attract what the manufacturers call \"a brand new generation\", beyond that that became bored\nwith the first hoops.\nThere is a risk, however, in this\nprogression through the generations.\nThe hula hoop generation of 1958\nis already at the age when a hula\nhoon may be almost as danaerous\nas LSD.\n\"' Who! ever hapoened lo the Skate\nboards'     Oreqonian\nMarijuana OK\nPsssst! I\"\nJunior Red Cross Grows Up\nOTTAWA (CPl-The Junior\nRed Cross has grown up.\nTired of sharing an image\nwith the 1.000,000 grade\nschool members, teen-agers\nhave formed their own 250.-\n000-member group called the\nRed Cross Youth.\nAt Rendezvous 67, their\nrecent conference at Carleton\nUniversity here, about 300\nCanadian members met with\n90 young delegates from 46\ncountries.\n\"The main objective was\ninternational understanding:\nwe were disappointed that\nChina and Russia didn't send\ndelegates,\" says Diane Gudgeon, 20. one of 46 Canadian\nyoung people who helped\norganize the nine-day conference.\n\"Some of the delegates are\nlooking for concrete solutions\nto their country's problems.\nFor instance there's a 16-\nyear-old   girl  from   Pakistan\nwho's been working in famine\nareas.\n\"But there are some people\nwho have no experience of\nthis kind of thing. They're\ntrying to find out what the\nproblems are.\n\"They have to do this.\nThere are so many people\nthat just aren't with it that\nmillions of people are starving to death.\"\nDiane, a brown-haired,\ngreen-eyed   native   of  Winni-\nRemarks About Offsprings\nBy HAL BOYLE\nNEW YORK (AP>-Re-\nmarks by and about their offspring thai modern parents\nget tired of hearing:\n\"Nobody is going to tell me\nwhat to do.\"\n\"Ellen's parents gave her a\nphone of her own for her\nbirthday. Why can't I have\none. too? After all, I'm 13.\"\n\"Shall 1 show Daddy my\nreport card now, Mama, or\nwait until after he has had a\ncouple of martinis?\"\n\"What did you do at tl-e\noffice today. Pops0 At school\nwe cut up a frog\u2014or shouldn't\nI talk about that at the dinner table?\"\n\"Don't even bother to take\noff your coat. dear. We're\ngoing out to dinner. I don't\ncare where, just so it is out.\nThe kids have given, me so\nmuch trouble today that i! I\ndon't gel out of here I'll lose\nmy mind.\"\n\"One minute you tell me to\nact grown up, and the next\nminute you treat me like I\n.was still a child.\"\nAmateur radio operators in\nthe Kootenays arc working toward the setting up of relny\nstations for better reception.\n\"Jack's Dad bought him a\nmotorcycle lor his birthday.\nWhy can't 1 have one?\"\n\"I don't see why it's so\nimportant whether I get good\ngrades in school or not.\nEverybody thought Winston\nChurchill was a dumb bunny\nwhen he was my age, but\nlook where he got.\"\n\"If it's all the same to you,\ndo you mind if I just don't go\nto college?\"\n\"I used to want to marry a\nrich man, Daddy, but now\nI've decided I'd rather marry\na beatnik and live in a pad in\nGreenwich Village. It sounds\nlike more fun.\"\n\"Just because I'm your\ndaughter, Mother, do you feel\nobliged to treat me like I was\na prisoner?\"\n\"I'll have to hang up now,\nBruce. Daddy says he wants\nto use the phone, and you\nknow how selfish parents are\n\u2014always thinking about\nthemselves. So why don't vou\ncall me back in five minutes?\"\n\"If Daddy stays home from\nthe office when he has a\nhangover, why can't i stay\nhome from school when I\ndon't feel so hot either?\"\n\"Why do grownups always:\nthink they know it all?\"\n\"I'm not going tn do the\ndishes. Mother, unless you\nmake that idiot brother of\nmine help me. I'm not goini*\nto be the only slave aruiind\nhere.\"\n\"We'll have to stay home\nJim.   I   called   that   leen-ase\nbabysitter we had last week,\nand she said she'd rather be\nsold into white slavery than\nsit with our kids again.\"\n\"Gee, Dad. you and Mom\nkeep telling us you remember\nwhat it's like to be young, but\nyou don't really remember at\n\"'', do you\u2014honest?\"\nHUBERT\nOil Industry\nHOUSTON, Tex. (API-The\nU.S. petroleum industry is\nspending millions of dollars\nannually to get rid of salt\nwater.\nSome of the water is being\nused lo help prolong the lives of\noil wells that need a bit of artificial assistance to remain productive.\nSafe disposition of salt water\nproduced with oil has been a\nproblem ever since the industry\nwas born in 1859 in Pennsylvania. Current water conservation\nprograms have added emphasis\nto the projects.\nThe magnitude of the problem was outlined recently by\nthe Texas Mid-Continent Oil\nand Gas Association as President John's water pollution control advisory hoard made a\nfour-day tour of the state.\nThe board was told that, on\nthe average, about 2H barrels\nof salt water are produced for\nevery barrel of oil.\n\"This adds up to an average\nof 7.500.000 barrels of salt water\nbrought to the surface daily,\"\nsaid Ray H. Horton. chairman\nof the association's air and\nwater   conservation   committee\n\"We estimate the industry in\nTexas is spending between\n$30,000,000 and \u00bb40,000.001) a\nyear to dispose of salt water.\"\npeg, is a University of Manitoba graduate who plans to\nbecome a social worker.\nShe says emphatically that\nyoung people have a central\nrole to play in solving major\nworld problems such as famine and overpopulation.\n\"One thing we can do is\nmake people aware that the\nproblems exist. We can simply do publicity.\n\"And the Red Cross Y'outh\nis planning to send teams\nabroad to live and work wilh\npeople. We want to help them\nhelp themselves, sort of working from the inside of the\nproblem out.\"\nThe program will begin in\n1968. probably in Jamaica.\nThrough meeting young\npeople from abroad at the\nconference. Diane has decided that teen-agers every-\nwhere have a greater sense\nof responsibility than their\nparents did.\n\"I think we're faced wilh\nmore problems than our parents were, and we get more\ninformation about trouble\nspots than they did.\n\"We have to be concerned.\nThe problems are so large\nunless we do something about\nthem we won't be able to survive.\"\nCRITICIZES HIPPIES\nThat's her main objection\nto hippies\u2014\"they're not doing\nanything.\"\n\"Their main idea seems to\nbe love, but I don't think very\nmany of them are sincore.\nIt's a fad with the ones I've\nseen. They just seem to enjoy\nwandering   around   barefoot.\"\nThe businesslike young people at Rendezvous 67 also did\nsome barefoot wandering in\nthe summer heat of the\nCarleton campus. After the\nmeeting ended, they scheduled visits to Expo, historic\nSt. Lawrence Seaway sites,\nToronto and Niagara Falls.\nThe foreign delegates spent\ntwo weeks before the meeting\nvisiting in Canadian homes\nacross the country.\n\"I think we have achieved\ninternational understanding,\"\nDiane says of the meetings.\n\"On the practical level, we're\nreally becoming aware of the\nneed lor youth service programs. And every time we\ndiscuss a problem, everyone\nkeens coming back to the fact\nthat education must be given\nto more people.\"\nWATERLOO, Ont. (CP'-Dr.\nEarle Blrney, an admirer of the\nhippies, says he thinks marijuana is not a dangerous drug.\n\"Nobody has ever proven to\nme thai it is physically harmful\nor addictive,\" says the 64-year-\nold poet, centennial writer in\nresidence at the University of\nWaterloo for the next academic\nyear.\n\"Actually, Ihe use of marijuana ls much safer and better\nthan the use of alcohol.\n\"Present laws cannot control\nthe use of marijuana. It is\nimpossible to control a weed\nwhich grows in some form Over\nhalf the world's surface. Marijuana will always be available\nno matter what measures society takes.\"\nSociety, because of its preventive laws, had created the\ndanger that marijuana smokers\ncould turn into hard-core drug\naddicts.\n\"To get marijuana you have\nto go to an illegal source. And\nthe dope peddler isn't really\ninterested In selling marijuana\n\u2014there's not muc|j money In it.\nWhat he really wants to get a\nperson hooked on is heroin.\"\nThe Alberta-born professor\nand poet, who taught for almost\n20 years at Ihe University of\nBritish Columbia, says he feels\nthe danger could be eliminated\nby having the government set\nTod\nay in\nHistoi\ny\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSept. 13, 1967 . . .\nThe Canadian Corps was\nestablished 57 years ago\u2014in\n1915\u2014when the 2nd Canadian Division arrived at the\nfront in France. A British\ngeneral was appointed commander and Brig. Arthur\nCurrie was promoted gen-\neral-in-command ol the 1st\nDivision Two years later\nhe became the first non-\nregular officer tb command\nthe corps. Because he\nrefused the command of the\ndivision to Sir Sam Hughes'\nson, Currie was hounded by\ncreditors in Canada and his\ncharacter attacked after\nthe war But under his leadership Ihe Canadian Corps\npreserved ils identity and\nbecame   one   of. the   most\nfeared attack forces of the\nFirst World War.\n1759-Gen. Wolfe was\nkilled in battle on the\nPlains of Abraham.\n1943 - Chiang    Kai-Shek\nwas \"elected\" president of\nthe Chinese Republic.\nFirst World Wu\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1917\u2014Russia proclaimed a\nrepublic. British planes conducted a naval air raid on\nthe German airfield at Zee-\nbrugge.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago\ntroops, supported by light\nnaval forces and RAF air-\ncraft, made a raid on\nTnbiuk. RAF and RCAF\nplanes made a heavy attack\non Bremen and lost 19\nplanes.\nup marijuana boards of control\nsimilar to liquor control boards\nwhere people could buy th'i\nweed legally from the government\nDr. Blrney, winner of twl\nGovernor-General's Awards foi\nliterature, admits that his sol\nthinks he's \"a rather dangerous\nold man.\"\nBut he laughingly dlsmlsscl\nhis son's judgment by explain,\ning lhat \"unfortunately, I think\nmy son Is rather square.\"\nDr. Blrney Is uncertain about\npsychedelic drugs or the alii-\ntude society should adopt\ntowards their use.\n\"If I was going to go on an\nLSD trip, I would want someone tb watch me, but not a doctor. Most doctors need soma\nform of treatment more lhan\ntheir patients.\"\nFaced with what he calls a\n\"lousy society,\" Dr. Birnoy\nsays it is understandable that\nmany kids take the \"emotionally constructive step\" of drop\nping out of school and society.\n\"I admire and envy most of\nthe hippies. There are always\nsome who are stupid but they\nwould be stupid whether Ihey\nwere hip or not.\n\"But generally the Intellectually and creative-minded hippie is fulfilling himself more\nthan the square-type individ\ntill,\"\nStory of Conflict\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nHugh MacLennan's new\nnovel, The Return of the\nSphinx iMacmillan), is a\nsiory about conflict between\ngenerations\u2014between young\nrevolutionary Quebecois seeking instant independence and\ntheir elders who advise\npatience.\nSet in Montreal, where\nMacLennan teaches English\nliterature three days a week\nat McGill University, thc\nstory also looks to Ottawa\nwhere there is another kind\nof conflict, helween men sensitive to Quebec's feelings\nand petty politicians who\nbelieve the so-called Quebec\nproblem will go away if\nignored.\nAlan Ainslie, idealist,\npatriot and intellectual, is a\ncabinet minister in conflict\nwith his intense son Daniel.\nAinslie strives with\npatience and understanding\nagainst unthinking opposition\nin the capital to give French-\nspeaking Quebec what it\ndemands\u2014 protection of its\nown culture, language and\nway of life. But he is too slow\nfor son Daniel and his rebellious friends for whom nothing less than a free, independent Quebec will do.\nAinslie knows this would\nmean Ihe breakup of the Canada he loves so intensly and\nwhich he is trying to hold\ntogether.\nThe novel also has a love\naffair between A i n s 1 i e 's\ndaughter and his Second\nWorld War comrade, \"Uncle\"\nGabriel.\nMacLennan, 60, is a native\nof Glace Bay, N.S., who has\nwon the Governor-General's\nAward five times. He has\nreached the point in literature\nwhere his books sell on the\nstrength of his name alone. In\nThe Return of the Sphinx he\nmaintains the standard that\nhas earned him his reputa\ntion.\nDesmond Bagley's- adventure-story reputation is also\nmaintained with Landslide\n(Collins), a new thriller.\nIt's set in British Columbia\nwhere Bagley's hero undertakes to find out why every\ntrace of the family that\nonce ruled a town has been\nobliterated. Bagley lives in\nDevonshire,    England,\nwhere he sails, reads and\nloafs.\nCanada, as it is known\ntoday, would not exist had it\nnot been for the role played\nby the Iroquois in the American Revolution and the War\nof 1812, Dr. G. Elmore Rea-\nman argues in The Trail of\nIhe Iroquois Indians (Peter\nMartin Associates).\nThe 138-p age book Is\npacked with lttle-known facts\nabout the Iroquois, fearsome\nwarriors who fought with the\nBritish against the French\nand who played a prominent\npart in repelling invaders\nfrom the United States.\nIt deals with the tragic\naspects of (he Iroquois history as well, notably their subsequent relations with Ihe\nCanadian government.\nThe Trail of the Iroquois\nIndians is a follow-up to Dr.\nReaman's The Trail ot the\nBlack Walnut which traced\nthe migrations ol Pennsylvania Dutch settlers into western Ontario, and The Trail of\nthe Huguenots, the story of\nthe Protestants expelled from\nFrance.\nWorld Briefs\nNARCOTICS RAID\nMONTREAL (CP (-Eight\nAmericans and a Canadian\nhave been arrested and\ncharged with illegal possession\nof narcotics, police said Monday. Three of the suspects are\nwomen. All nine were arrested\nin weekend raids by a combined force of the RCMP and\npolice from three suburban\nmunicipalities.\n2ND PLANE HIJACKED\nBARRANQUILLA (AP) - A\nColombian DC-3 airliner, second one to be hijacked to Cuba\nin five weeks, returned to Bar-\nranquilla Sunday after 13 passengers and four members of\nthe crew spent the night as\nguests of Cuba. Colombian\nauthorities said three Cuban\nbrothers hijacked the plane Saturday.\nWords of Life\nFor God shall bring every\nwork into judgement, with every\nsecret thing, whether it be good,\nor whether it be evil. Eccles-\niastrs 12:14.\nTRUDY\n\"Believe me, Mr. Frambly, when thc doctor says he'\u00bb\nwell enough, he'll be in to work.\"\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 13, 1967 \u2014 3\nSwetlikoe'Catenacci Wedding\nRites Conducted at Cathedral\nCENTENNIAL BALL PREVIEW. Excitement over the coming\nNelson Centennial Ball is rising as Nelson and district residents\nprepare their costumes. These costumes are worn by, standing,\nMrs. Don Champion, Mike Maglio, Rab Douglas, Mrs. David Fair-\nbank, Mrs. T. Wayling, John Stanger; seated, Mrs. Thomas West\nand Mrs. Robert Harshaw. This is one of a series ol pictures that\nare lo be shown on a Spokane television evening newscast Saturday, Sunday or Monday.\u2014Photo by Helmuth.\nA wedding trip to the Okanagan and Vancouver followed the\nnuptial ceremony that joined\nBernadine Rose Catenacci and\nFred Gerald Swetlikoe in holy\nmatrimony.\nRt. Rev. J. F. Monaghan conducted the service at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate where\npink and white gladioli made a\ncharming background for the\noccasion.\nThe brides parents are Mr.\nand Mrs. Sam Catenacci and the\ngroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Swetlikoe Sr.\nMrs. Beverly Lanigan played\nthe wedding music as the bride\nentered the church on the arm\nj of her father. Her bouffant gown\n1 of silk organza was styled with a\n| scoop neckline, lily point sleeves\nand the skirt was caught up in\nfront with an organza rose. The\n, bodice was lifted and a cathedral\ntrain fell gracefully from a bow\nat the shoulders. Alencon lace\nenhanced the gown and train.\nHer scalloped shoulder length\nveil of four tiers of silk illusion,\nmisted from a dainty crown of\npearls. Her bouquet was a cascade of red roses. She followed\nbridal tradition with a bracelet\nborrowed from her grandmother,\na blue garter and for something\nnew she wore the groom's gift of\na cultured pearl necklace.\nAs maid of honor, the bride's\nsister, Miss Jo Catenacci was\ngowned in a pink floor-length\ndress of crepe with lace bodice,\nscoop neckline and three-quarter\nlength sleeves. Her headdress\nwas a crown of pink rosettes and\nbrief veil en lone and her shoes\nand gloves were white. Pink and\nFormer Nelsonites Here\nRenewing Acquaintances\nResident in Nelson from 1918\nto 1941, Mrs. Carl Larson is here\nwith her daughter, Miss Marie\nLarson, renewing old acquaintances.\nlate Carl Larson, was in busi-1 from the CPR steamers and\nness with his father, Alfred,! trains and also did the laundry\noperating the Kootenay Steam; for the hospital before one was\nLaundry at 711 Baker Street j installed in that building. John\nfrom 1906 to 1940. ft was the  Thorn did the dry-cleaning for\nMrs. Larson went to St. Jo-; only laundry in town, except for j the establishment,\nseph's School, was married here: one or two small Chinese estab- j \"We've had a wonderful time\nand both her children were born | lishments, and required a staff; on tnis vjsi( \u2022< Mrs Lars0n said,\nhere. Her son Arthur died two of about 40. The laundry served; \u2022\u25a0people in a little place are so\nyears ago. many of the West Kootenay cen- j fl.iendlv   and   tn       can>t   do\nMrs.  Larsons   husband,   theltres  and  handled the laundry^ pnougi, for yoUi\" she added, saying they'd been out to luncheons\nand dinners every day since they\nI arrived.\n|    They enjoyed  drives  around;\nHi\nmts\nr*rom\nlieloise\nHELOISE  CRUSE\nDEAR HELOISE:\nThe best way to clean fingers marks fom white plaster walls (especially around\nthe telephone) is to keep a\nbottle of liquid white shoe\npolish  handy.\nWhen the spots appear, just\nuse the sponge inside the bottle of polish to wipe the soil\naway. This is guaranteed to\n\u25a0ave you a few paint jobs!\nPatricia  Harris\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nWell, well. It works.\nI did, find that the polish\nwas better if diluted with water, or If you put It on a\ndamp sponge and rub away.\nSure covers up those marks.\nHelolse\nDEAR HELOISE:\nThis ls for mothers with\ncurious toddlers who love\nopening kitchen cabinet doors.\nTry using metal shower\nturtain hooks linked together.\nThey work fine where two\ndoors meet, and can be opened and closed easily by an\nadult, but not by a toddler.\nJean Corducci\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00ab\nDEAR HELOISE:\nI just can't let you go\nthrough life thinking that a\npiece of cellophane tape is the\neasiest way to sort g-iduated\nbeads.\nTry opening up a large magazine (or catalogue) that will\nlie flat when open. Then use\nthe valley at the binding to\nsort and rearrange into gradated order. Sure beats using\ntape 'cause you don't have\nto stick and unstick 'em.\nA Friend\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nYou're right, Friend, this\nls another good way. Thanks.\nJust 10 the beads don't roll\nout the \"valley\" and yon have\nto start all over again!\nHelolse\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDEAR HELOISE:\nMy husband simply loves\npotatoes in the half-shell with\n\u2022heese on top, which we all\nknow is a great deal of\ntrouble to fix.\nNow I have found an easier\nway to do this.\nI whip leftover mashed or\ncubed potatoes with butter,\nmilk and salt, put the mixture in a small buttered al\numinum pie pan and sprinkle\nit with any kind of cheese\n(pimiento is a favorite). Bake\nuntil the cheese is melted and\nthe potatoes are steaming and\ntop with a sprig of parsley.\nThis is fabulous for using up\nleftover potatoes if you're\ntired of potato cakes.\nVicki\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nDEAR HELOISE:\nI put a square of nylon net\nin the bottom of a flower pot\nand weight it down with the\ncustomary broken pot pieces\nor rocks.\nWhen covered with potting\nsoil, it prevents undue leakage of soil.\nNaomi   Carlyon\nNelson and were amazed at the j gown of white peau de soie, the\nchanges in the past 20 years i bodice of Alencon lace trimmed\nsince they last visited. Notre' with seed pearls. The train, fal-\nDame University, (he B.C. Voca^ i ling from her waist was inset\nfional .School and the new hos-i with matching Alencon lace. She\npital all came in for words of j wore a pearl bracelet, gift from\npraise from the former Nelson-, the groom,\nNelson, Edmonton Families\nJoined at Potapoff-Fedun Rites\nTrinity United Church, Ed-[ gary; Air. Waren Ward, of Gel-, For their wedding trip to Jas-\nmonton, Alberta was the scene den, B.C., and Mr. Allen Waha-I per, Banff, Interior of B.C. and\nof a pretty afternoon wedding luk of Hillcresl. Alberta. Ushers Victoria, the bride changed to\nwhen Rev. W. D. Race conduc- were Mr. Ed. Fedun, Edmonton,! an emerald green brocade\nted the marriage ceremony uni- brother of Ihe bride and Mr.l sleeveless sheath with a match-\nting Victoria Ann, daughter of Lloyd Filimek of Blairmore,! ing coat and white accessories.\nMr. and Mrs. Michael Fedun of  cousin of the groom. j    Mr.   and  Mrs.  Potapoff  are\nAndrew, Alberta and Gerald The dinner reception was held I making their home in Vancouver\nWilliam, son of Mr. and Mrs. at the Andrew Communily Hall i where the groom is employed\nWilliam Potapoff of R.R. 1,| where about BSO guests enjoyed by B.C. Hydro of Surveying and\nNelson.\nPlaying the traditional wedding music at the double ring\nceremony was organist Mrs. McCready.\nThe bride, given in marriage\nby her father, wore an empire\nwhite carnations comprised her\ncascade bouquet. Similarly attired were bridesmaids, Miss\nFran Catenacci, the bride's sister, and Miss Marg Jmaeff.\nAttending his brother as\ngroomsman was Mr. Jim Swetlikoe, while Mr. Allen Swetlikoe,\nthe groom's cousin and Mr. Jack\nCatenacci, the bride's brother,\nushered.\nWhile the couple signed the\nmarriage register Mr. Melvin\nMaglio sang \"On This Day, 0\nBeautiful Mother.\"\nThe bride's mother, clad in a\nblue lace suit with white accessories and the groom's\nmother wearing a pink dress\nwith hat and gloves en tone,\nassisted in receiving the guests.\nBoth mothers wore white carnation corsages.\nThe three-tiered bridal cake,\nembedded in tulle scattered with\npink roses was set on a lace\ntablecloth. It was topped by a\nminiature bride and groom in a\nwhite heart trimmed with pink\nroses. Bouquets of pink and\nwhite mums also graced the\nbride's table.\nMr. Marshall Severyn was\nmaster of ceremonies and read\ntelegrams of congratulation from\nMr. and Mrs. Mort Johnson of\nRossland, Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nBaturin of Fort William and Mr.\nand Mrs. John Swetlikoe of\nSurrey. Miss Florence Maglio\nwas in charge of the guest book.\nFor travelling the bride chose\na coral suit set off by white\naccessories and a white orchid\ncorsage completed her ensemble.\nShe presented her bridal bouquet\nto her grandmother.\nOn their return the couple are\nmaking their home at 911 Stanley\nStreet.\nOut-of-town guests included the\ngroom's brother Jim, from\nMontreal, Miss Marg Jmaeff,\nCalgary: Mr. Allen Swetlikoe,\nVancouver: Mr. and Mrs. Bernie\nWard. Kimberley; Mr. and Mrs.\nRon DeJong, Rossland: Mr. and\nMrs. N. Jmaeff, Cranbrook; Mr.\nand Mrs. Peter Swetlikoe, Penticton; Mrs. Ann Odeau and\nValerie. Castlegar: Mr. and Mrs.\nTony Cassidy, Penticton; Mr.\nand Mrs. John Voykin, Castlegar; Mr. and Mrs. W. Swetlikoe,\nPenticton; Mr. and Mrs. Archie\nPrice. Grindley, Calif.; Mr. and\nMrs. P. Baturin, Winnipeg; Mrs.\nM. Fierro, Vancouver; Miss\nElaine Saliken, Creston: Mr.\nGary Bain. Cranbrook; Mrs. N.\nNelson, Procter; Mr. Harry\nVerigen, Calgary; Miss Louanne\nThompson, Calgary: Mr. Mike\nVerigin, and Mr. Steve Gabor.\nCastlegar.\nfull course dinner and dancing! Engineering Dept. and the bride\nfollowed. | is teaching.\nite.\nWhen here the Larsons lived\nat the corner of Cedar and Carbonate Streets and made a visit\nthere \"to see the old home.\"\nThey will be returning on the\nweekend to Vancouver, where\nthey have made their home for\nIhe past 15 years and where Miss\nLarson works as a receptionist\nat the Vancouver Hotel.\nThe bride was attended by\nMrs. Marion Tymchyshyn, maid\nof honour, Edmonton and bridesmaids were: Miss Evelyn Potapoff of Vancouver, sister of Ihe\ngroom: Miss Euginia Fedun, sister of lhe bride: Miss Olga\nSaley and Miss Diana Ferguson\nof Edmonton.\nBest men attending the groom\nwere Mr.  Grant Oatway, Cal-\nAh\nout\nThe\nlown\nPHONE  352-3552\nI Results of Kokanee Bridge I Nicholson, 99; Mrs. Eric Thast\nClub play at their regular Mon-! and Mrs. P. W. Buckley, 98'i;\nday night game with eight tables I Mr. and Mrs. G. D. G. Barwis.\nj in play: i 87',4.\n|    Green section, Mitchell move- j    Mrs.   Tommie   Godfrey   and\n1 ment. north-south \u2014 Mrs. Jack Mrs. Ilsa Williams have returned\nDEAR  HELOISE:\nI use to ruin more pairs of\nstockings when I washed them\nthan when I wore them.\nBut I found that by putting\nthem in the toe of my daughter's   heavy   white   socks,   I:\u2014   i\ncould Just throw them Into the | Kilpatrick and Mrs. R. Collinson,! from a motor trip to Banff and\nmachine   and   even \"\"\" \"\nwashing\ninto the dryer.\nThey come out clean, with\nno snags or runs and the\nbathroom isn't cluttered up\nwith dripping hose. In fact, I\nnow have one of her odd socks\nset aside just for this use.\nRita Merlis\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nDEAR HELOISE:\nHere is an answer to \"Dirty\nGold\" who wanted to know\na way to clean gold of any\ntype.\nI work in the Restoration\nLaboratory of the Georgia\nHistorical Commission and\nthis ls the best way we have\nfound.\nGold m its pure form does\nnot tarnish, but often we find\narticles of gold alloyed with\ncopper and silver, both which\ntarnish.\nThe main form of discoloration on gold, however, is\ncaused by an accumulation of\ndust and soot.\nThe simplest and most effective way of cleaning gold\nis to wash It thoroughly with\ndiluted household ammonia\nand water, rinse well, dry,\nand polish It with a soft cloth.\nThis method solves nearly\nall \"dirty gold\" problems.\nDennis  Walters\n100;   Mrs.   Barbara  Lakes  and\nMrs. R. H. Bradley, 90; Mr. and\nMrs. Roy Evans, 87>,4.\nEast-west\u2014D. Randle and L.\n\u00abD 1967, Kins Fettaeea ByndiMt., Inc.)\nSilverton\nBride-Elect\nShowered\nSILVERTON - The Silverton\nMunicipal Hall was the scene of\na surprise shower recently in\nhonor of Miss Linda Hambly\nwhich saw approximately 50\nguests in attendance.\nAt the bride's head table were\nMiss Hambly, along wilh her\nmother, Mrs. Sue Hambly, and\nthe bridegroom's mother, Mrs.\nLaktin of Hills.\nThe bride's cake was made by\nMrs. Daisy Welch and was beautifully decorated by Mrs. Barbara Fryters. Hostesses for the\nevening were Sylvia Wilkowski,\nRandy Harding. Penny Nelson,\nIlona Elsmore and Sherry Beri-\nsoft.\nAssisting in the kitchen were\nMrs. A. Wilkowski, Mrs. A.\nWright. Mrs. S. Berisoff and\nMrs. I. Elsmore.\nMany lovely gifts were received by the bride and the lovely\ncorsages were made by Mrs. E.\nMills.\nJasper via Rogers Pass and the\nFraser Canyon.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Hanic. their\ndaughter Louise, and her friend,\nMaeve Koe, have returned from\na two-week vacation in Montreal.\nThey travelled by air and report\na wonderful time, especially at\nExpo '67.\nWORLD BRIEFS\nPICKS WRONG RELIC\nROME I AP)\u2014Marina Cashini\nthought the object she had dug\nout of the sand at the Tiber\nRiver's mouth was a 2.000-\nyear-old relic. She slashed with\na knife at the sediment encrusting it. then used a hammer and\nchisel. What emerged was a\nI Second World War artillery\nI shell. Police said Miss Cashini\nwas lucky her blows didn't set\nit off.\nGETS AWARD\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Dr. D. H.\nCopp, head of the physiology\ndepartment at the University of\nBritish Columbia, will receive a\n$5,000 Gairdner award for his\nwork in leading to the discovery\nof a new hormone, thyrocalcito-\nnin, that may have a theraputic\nvalue in bone diseases.\nMR. AND MRS. F. G. SWETLIKOE\n\u2014Photo by Renwick Studio.\nNew Home Recipe\nReducing Plan\nR% simple how quickly one\nmay lose pounds of unsightly fat\nright in your own home. Make\nthis home recipe yourself. It's\neasy, no trouble at all and costs\nlittle. Just go to your drug store\nand ask for four ounces of Naran\nConcentrate. Pour this into a\npint bottle and add enough\ngrapefruit juice to fill the bottle.\nTake two tablespoons full a day\nas needed and follow the Naran\nPlan.\nIf your first purchase does not\n\u25a0how you a simple easy way to\nlose bulky fat and help regain\nslender more graceful curves; if\nreducible pounds and inches of\nexcess fat don't disappear from\nneck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips,\ncalves and ankles just return the\nempty bottle for your money\nback. Follow this easy way endorsed by many who have tried\nthis plan and help bring back\nalluring curves and graceful\nslenderness. Note how quickly\nbloat disappears\u2014how much better you feel. More alive, youthiW\nappearing and activa      advt.\nWhen did Niagara\ncome into the picture?\nMr. and Mrs. G. W. Potapoff\nBluebell Mis?\nHonored\nRIONDEL\u2014The Bluebell Recreation Hall was the scene ol a\npretty shower for bride-elect\nMichelle Charest.\nCorsages were presented to\nthe honored guests, who were\nseated at the head table.\nStreamers matched the sweet-\npeas and gladioli, and silver\nhearts and white wedding bells\ndecorated the wall.\nMrs. Bill Morris welcomed the\nguests. Games were enjoyed and\nwinners were Mrs. Sally Nelson,\nMrs. Bud Fichten and Mrs. Peter Scott. Pianist was Mrs.\nGeorge Page.\nThe many lovely gifts were\nhidden under a realistic switchboard, complete with flashing\nlight and headphone I Michelle is\nemployed by the B.C. Telephone\nCompany!. She was assisted in\nopening the gifts by the bridal\nguests.\nWIlCI eOWliere to start? Moving? Start by\nfinding MOVERS fast in the YELLOW PAGES. Where\nyour fingers do the walking.\n#\n*\nh**\nThe house needed painting. The foyer, new\nwallpaper. And the livingroom sofa,\nre-upholstering. But Bill and Alice were short\nof money. Enter: Niagara. Bill saw the manager\nol the nearest Niagara office about a Home\nRedecorating Loan. The manager was very\nunderstanding. And helpful. In no time a loan\nand easy repayment terms were arranged. You\ncan Imagine how excited Alice was when BUI\ncame home with the money to redecorate\nthe house.\nWhen you need extra money for any good\nreason, you can expect the same courteous,\nquick service at any one of 300 Niagara offices.\nNIAGARA FINANCE\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nMember of the @ Group of Companies\n560 BAKER ST.    PH. 352-7232\nNIAGARA\nLOANS -\n^\n 6 _ WFISnM nAILY Ni:WS. WED.. SEPT. 13. 10*7\nI\nilllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nJunior Hockey\nLEAFS ORGANIZING\nFOR COMING SEASON\nNelson Junior Maple Leafs tonight begin\nplans lor the 1967-'68 hockey season, whether thsy\nplay as Junior \"A\" or \"B\".\nThe Junior club is holding its first meeting tonight at 7:30 in the Civic Centre green room to elect\na new executive and organize plans lor the coming season. All interested persons are invited to attend the meeting.\nThe Leafs were one of many clubs excluded\nfrom the B.C. Junior \"A\" Hockey League formed\nthis summer with teams from the coast and the\nOkanagan. Trail Junior Smoke Eeaters still entertain thoughts of playing Junior \"A\" this season.\nThe Nelson club has indicated they will play\nthis season, be it \"A\" or \"B\" and It will mosl likely\nbe in the lower category,\nPeter Bruce was elected president ol the West\nKootenay Junior Hockey League.  Mike Robertson\nwas named secretary and Keith Clayton treasurer,\nAll three are from Trail.\nIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiinii lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllli\nSPIayers7 Association\nWithdraws Charge\nTo Fill Owen's Spot\nMcQuaid, McDonnell Returning\nLeafs Sign Rookie Right - Winger\n' NEW YORK 'A P >-T h e\nMajor League Baseball flayers' Association agreed Tuesday after two days of meetings\nwith Commissioner William D.\nEckert to drop the unfair labor\npractices charges it has filed\nagainst Charles 0. Finley,\nowner of Kansas City Athletics.\nEckert presided over two\ndays of unprecedented meetings\nin which baseball sought to end\nthe feud between the players,\nand their owner before it\nreached   the    National   Labor\nRelations Board.\nThe parties met for two hours\nMonday and eight more Tuesday before announcing a settlement.\nIn a prepared statement,\nEckert said that the association, represented by its director, Marvin Miller, had agreed\nto withdraw the charges after\nFinley agreed that it would not\ninterfere with the rights of his\nplayers to air any grievances\nthey might have In an orderly\nmanner.\nGerry Sillers, 22-year-old right-winger from Saskatoon, Is welcomed\nto Nelson by Maple Leafs' manager Gus Adams. Sillers played two years\nwith Fort Wayne Komets and Nelson playing-coach Frank Arnett looks\nto the newcomer to fill the gap left by Murray Owens. The bandage on\nSillers' hand is a result of a bruise suffered on the way to Nelson.\nNelson Miple Letts took the\nfirst step towards defence of\ntheir B.C, \u2022 Alberts champion'\nship with fhe signing nf new\ncorner Gerry Sillers.\nSillers, 22-year-old from Saskatoon. Saskatchewan, Is the man\nLeaf coach Frank Arnett has\nselected to fill th* right-wing\nspot left vacant by the departure\nof Murray Owen. The 5'8\", 170-\npound  Sillers   drew   words  of\npraise   from   Arnett   Tuesday\nnight.\n\"I think he nil] make the\npeople   of   Nelson . . . forget\n\u2022bout Murray,\" Arnett told the\nNews.   \"Although   I   haven't\nseen him play, from what I\nhear, he demands respect, He\nshould   give   the   fans   some\nexciting moments this year\nall the boys will give them\nexciting moments.\"\nSillers played his Junior hockey with  Saskatoon  Blades  of\nthe Saskatchewan Junior Hockey\nLeague \u2014 seeing   action   with\nCorky Agar, now a sophomore\nwith Nelson \u2014 being named to\nthe loops all-star team.\nHe displayed his wares last\nwinter for Fort Wayne Komets,\nrunners-up in the International\nHockey League. It was his second season with the club, scoring\n16 goals and adding some 35\nassists.\nSillers Is attending Notre Dame\nUniversity, in first year.\nLeafs' manager Gus Adams\nsaid the club was \"very happy\"\ntn obtain the services of the\nsolidly built right-winger, and\nsaid the club expects to make\nfurther   announcements   about\nreturnees throughout the week.\nAt the same time, Adams\nHaled that both Gary McQuaid\nand  Billy McDonnell will be\nback with the elub this year,\nContrary tn a release from the\neamp  of  Ihe   Canadian  National   Hockey   Team   In   Ottawa   stating   that   McQuaid\nwould be with the Nats and\nthat arrangements were being\nmade to keep McDonnell also,\n\"They   both   attended   the\ncamp     and     were     offered\nchancel,\" Adams stated, \"But\nwe   phoned   them   both   this\nweek and they'll be back.\"\nMcQuaid,   the   red - headed,\nhard-skating, determined centre,\nman turned winger, is expected\nto arrive Saturday. McDonnell,\nthe   WIHL's   Rookle-of-the-Year\nlast year \u2014 he was second In the\ngoaltendlng competition behind\nteammates Don Holmes with a\nhighly   respectable   3.16   goals-\nagalnst average \u2014 Is attending\ntraining  camp  of  Philadelphia\nFlyers of  the  NHL   expansion\nleague.\nHe ls to arrive in Nelson no\nlater than September 20.\nArnett, all \u2022 star defenceman\nwith the Nelson club also, said\nhe \"thinks the league's stronger\nthis year. This is better fnr the\nteam that represents the league\nIn the playoffs.\"\n? For  What \\\nry   It's   Worth ?\nJOHN KOROBANIK\nDAILY NIWI SPORTS EDITOR\nCanadian Football League fans finally saw a\nfootball game.\nThe first one this season.\nIt took two teams ol Roughriders to provide the\nCFL's first real exhibition of the game as it should be\nplayed. When the gun ended the Sunday contest In\nRegina, defending champion Saskatchewan established\nthemselves as the club to beat again this year, In a\nrematch of last year's Grey Cup clash, the Roughies\noutscored Ottawa's Rough RiderB 32-23 ln by far the\nmost exciting and entertaining game of the season.\nUnfortunately, we won't see another such game until\nGrey Cup date.\nThat's the next time the two\nRoughriders meet head-on, There\nIsn't another club In the CFL\nwhich can generate the excitement that fans demand the way\nthese two clubs do.\nWHY? Actually the answer Is\nsimple.\nAnd It Isn't because the two\nclubs have the top offensive\nunits In the country and the\nmatching defence to go with It.\nCalgary Stampeders have probably the fastest backfield In\nthe league and the finest upcoming quarterback In Canada,\nBut they're a standard play-\nby-the-book team.\nThe quarterback la all the\ndifference. Ron Lancaster of\nSaskatchewan and Russ Jackson\nof Ottawa are Canada's two top\nquarterbacks \u2014 NOT excluding\nKenny Ploen either.\nGive them the Toronto Argos\noffensive unit. In fact, let's go\nLeafs Pressure Forces...\n...Four Players To Return\nall the way and give them the\nB.C. Lions offense. It doesn't\nmatter much.\nLancaster and .lirkmn\nwould still generate the of-\nfenie to winning trends because they're not \"play-by-\nIhr-bnok\" lenders. They\ngamble consistently and believe In variety. And variety\nIs the spice of football as well\nat Ufe.\nAnother Kansas City In Making?\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe week-old revolt of four\nmembers of Toronto Maple\nLeafs appears to have ended\nwith reports that all-star\ndefenceman Tim Horton will be\nin harness today.\nHe's a day late tn escape the\n$500 fine threatened by manager-coach Punch lmlach, but\nwon't be hit by any of the $25-\na-day fines lmlach threatened\nfor further absence or by the\nsuspension the coach was\nsuggesting Tuesday.\nTeam captain Bob Pulford,\nalso president of the National\nHockey League Players' Association, capitulated Tuesday,\nthe deadline for late arrivals\nimposed by lmlach.\nBrian Conacher and Mike\nWalton gave in to the pressure\nexerted by the Leafs Monday.\nThe four had stated they\nwould not report to the club's\nPeterborough. Ont., training\ncamp until they had reached\nagreement on contract terms\nwith the Leafs, but none of the\nfour has yet signed.\nTROUBLE  ELSEWHERE\nMeanwhile, several other\nclubs were also being hit by\nholdouts from veteran performers.\nNorm Ullman. Detroit Red\nWings' leading scorer last season, has refused to attend prac-\nice at Detroit Olympia until his\ncontract is signed, and goal-\ntender Denis Dejordy has not\nreported to the Chicago camp\nof the league champion Black\nHawks.\nGoaltender Charlie Hodge is\nconsidered a holdout by California Seals, who are training at\nPort Huron. Mich., and Earl;\nIngarfield and Al MacNeil are j\nreported to be seeking more|\nmoney before joining Pitts- \\\nburgh Penguins when they open\ncamp at Brantford today.\nEd Van Impe and Joe Watson\nhave not reported to the Quebec\n! City training camp of Philadelphia Flyers.\ni HULL GRANTED LEAVE\n| Scoring ace Bobby Hull has\nnot reported to the Chicago\ncamp, but coach Billy Reay\nsaid he has granted his left\ni winger special permission to\nI arrive a few days late.\n; St. Louis Blues are training\nj at home, Boston Bruins at Lon-\n! don. Ont, New York Rangers\nj at Kitchener, Los Angeles\n[Kings at Guelph and Minnesota\nNorth Stars at Haliburton Sat-'\nurday and resume in Kingston\n.Sept. 18 to Oct. 6.\n; Montreal Canadiens open\ntraining sessions at Montreal\nFnrum Friday.\nLos Angeles may be the first'\nclub to use a Japanese player j\nin the NHL.\nPLAYED IN OLYMPICS\nY a s u s h i n Tanaka, former\nJapanese Olympic team member, is working out with the\nKings in Guelph.\nGeneral manager Larry\nRegan said the forward's rushes are as good as many in the\nNHL.  but  his   checking   needs i body and he'i always In posl-i\nwork. tion around the net.\"\n\"He hasn't hit anybody, butj   Regan said Tanaka will need;\nthat aspect of the game is all s e a s o n i n g  in   the  Eastern\nnew to him,\" Regan said.\n\"Offensively, however, he's had\nmore scoring chances than any-\nLeague before he is able to\nmove Into the American League\nand possibly the NHL.\nStamps Win 20-13\nOttawa's Riders\nAre Smarting\nIntrepid\nBy a Mile\nWho says 'Calona'Red\nis the favourite Red?\nYear after year, you've kept Calona Red Dry and\nCalona Royal Red the best-selling wines in B.C.\nWhy settle for anything less?\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Calgary\n5tampeders pulled oft two tine\nsecond-half touchdowns Tuesday night as they came from\nbehind to defeat Ottawa Rough-\nriders 20-13 In a Canadian\nFootball League Interlocking\ngame.\nTerry Evanshen made a brilliant running catch of a 23-yard\ntouchdown pass from Peter\nLiske in the third quarter and\nBob Paremore scored in the\nfourth on a 68-yard pass-and-\nrun play.\nThe win moved Stampeders\ninto a first-place tie with Saskatchewan Roughriders in the\nWestern Football Conference.\nOttawa remained in second\nplace in the East, two points\nbehind Hamilton Tiger-Cats.\nCalgary led 3-0 after the first\nquarter and trailed 10-3 at half-\ntime. Evanshen's last-play touchdown tied the game at 13-13 at\nthe end of the third quarter.\nBili Goods converted both\nCalgary touchdowns and kicked\na 34-yard field goal before 19,-\n886 fans. Jim Furlcng kicked a\nGrtotta\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nNEWPORT, R.I.   <CP)  -\nIntrepid,   the   sloop   American\nyachtsmen   are  predicting  will\nkeep the fabled America's Cup\nln U.S. possession, sailed to a\ndecisive victory over Australian\nchallenger  Dame  Pattie Tuesday in the first race of the classic's best-of-seven series.\nIntrepid,   skippered   by  Emil\nLiske improved his passing game !'Bus' Mosbacher. won the six-\nin  the  second   half,   in  which ,eS  ra\u00ab  \u00b0ver  \u00ab  24.3-nautical-\nStampeders started scoring when\nFurlong's 54-yard punt was conceded for a single by Don\nGilbert.\nOttawa gave up the safety\ntouch at 12:50 after twice being\npenalized after Bob O'Billovich\nintercepted a Liske pats at the\nOttawa five-yard line and fell\nforward to the eight.\nLiske sent a 15-yard pass to\nEvanshen on the next-to-last play\nof the third quarter and then\nsent a 23-yard throw which\nEvanshen grabbed with a running catch over the shoulder of\nDon Sutherin.\nRough Riders replied with\nRacine's second field goal at 2:40\nof the final quarter. Jackson set\nup the score with a 57-yard pass\nto Margene Adkins, who was\nbrought down on the Calgary 37.\nStampeders wrapped up the\ngame less than a minute later\nwhen Paremore scored, limping\ninto the end zone after pulling a\nhamstring on his only pass\nreception of the night.\nmile course by about one mile.\nBuilt especially to repel the\nchallenge of the Australian contender, she had a winning margin of five minutes and 58 seconds.\nIntrepld'i time was three\nhours, 55 minutes, three sec\nonds, compared with Dame\nPattie's 4:01.01.\nThis is the 20th challenge hy\n12-metre yachts\u2014Ihe second by\nAustralia\u2014for the cup the\nUnited Slates has never lost in\n116 years.\nThe heavily-favored American yacht piled up a lead of one\nminute, 50 seconds on the first\nleg as Mosbacher out-man-\noeuvred his old rival, Australian helmsman Alexander\n(Jock) Sturrock, and then kept\nadding to her margin in stiff\nwinds and choppy waves In\nRhode Island Sound.\nJapan's feudal system ended\nIn 1868 when the Meijl Restoration developed a national state\ncentred on the emperor.\nNELSON BOOSTER CLUB\nSTARTS BIG SEASON\nB.C. - Alberta champions the\npair of athletic scholarships at\nNDU. The team has 12 players\nattending the university on\nathletic scholarships.\nsingle   and   Stampeders   were\ngiven   a   safety  touch   by   Bill mil ] 11111 ] 11 r C1111 1111111111111 r 11111II \u2022 111 \u2022 111 \u2022 111 i Mil llll IIX\nCline of Ottawa.\nBo Scott took a 21-yard pass\nfrom Russ Jackson for Ottawa's only touchdown. Moe\nRacine converted and kicked\ntwo field goals, one of 13 yards\nand Ihe other of 42 yards.\nBefore the game. Stampeders\nwere presented with the 1967\nSalad Bowl for pre-season play.\nThey had a 4-0 win-loss record\nin exhibition play and defeated\nOttawa twice.\nGoods opened scoring at 7:10\nof the first, quarter on a 34-yard\nfield goal as Jackson kept Calgary off balance. Jackson came\non with a strong showing late in\nthe quarter.\nA brilliant 51-yard pass from'\nJackson tn Whit Tucker set up\nthe touchdown by Scott. Riders\nmoved to Calgary's 21 and Scolt\nbeat defender John Williams to\nscore at 2:06 of the second.\nThen Rough Riders came In\nfrom their 42 against a strong\nwind, with Jackson himself running three times. Jackson threw\nincomplete twice and Racine\nkicked his 13-yard field goal.\nCalgary    quarlcrback     Peter\nThe largest living land carnivore is the Alaskan brown bear\nwhich may weigh up to 1,600\npounds.\nNelson Maple Leafs will\nagain have that driving support behind them this year.\nThat \"driving support\" is, of\ncourse, the Nelson Maple\nLeafs Booster Club. The club\nMonday night held Its opening\nmeeting to organize plans for\nthe coming season and elect a\nnew executive.\nGeorge Zabawa was reelected president for a second\nterm and Louise Ball was\nagain named secretary. Judy\nHorswell was elected treasurer\nwhile Mike Horswell assumes\nthe post of vice-president.\nA good turnout\u2014with several\nnew members evident \u2014 attended Ihe meeting and agreed\nto start almost immediately\nwith a $1,000 draw.\nThe draw's proceeds will go\ntowards the club's sponsorships of two full scholarships\ntotalling $2,500 for the senior\nhockey club at Notre Dame\nUniversity. The Booster Club LOUISE BALL\neach year gives the defending . . . Secretary\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIli\nRON LANCASTER\n. . . Exciting\nThat's why B.C. has so many\ngames in Empire Stadium \u2014\nthey don't have an imaginative\nleader. On a second and short\nyardage situation they run the\nball on a sweep or up the middle.\nOn second and long they try\na pass or a pitch-out. Seldom\ndo they alter their plan of action.\nSince Jim Champion Is a man\nmainly Interested in the defensive aspect of the game, one can\nonly look to the Lions for another group of \"headhunters.\"\nWHERE IS IMAGINATION?\nWilh the CFL season approaching the half-way mark,\nit is extremely obvious that only\nif there is a repeat of Eastern\nand Western champions, will w*\nhave a Grey Cup game that will\nbe worth watching \u2014 not just\nfor the sake of watching.\nWhat has happened to the\nfake kick? Edmonton Eskimos\nused It Saturday night against\nB.C. \u2014 successfully for a first\ndown. It was one of the most\nexciting moments of the game.\nAnd why aren't the teams\ngoing for the long bomb anymore? Canadian teams use the\nlong pass attempt about once\na game. This, despite the complete demoralizing effect of a\nsuccessful long touchdown play.\nQuarterbacks, it seems, don't\nbelieve in running unless their\nlife depends on it anymore. Sure,\nthey're not out there to get\nhurt, but It won't hurt to run\nwith the ball forward once or\ntwice a game. What difference\ndoes it make if you get hit by\na 280 pound linesman behind the\nl.ine of scrimmage or by a 200-\n230 pound linebacker after a\ngain.\nCanadian football, from what\nI've seen of It on the field and\non the idiot-box isn't getting\nany better,\nCoaches are too interested In\nputting their best men on defence. The weak clubs \u2014 and\nfive of the nine are weak \u2014\nthrow their top men On the defence \u2014 If we stop their offence\nmaybe our offence will score a\nfew points and we won't be too\nembarassed by the outcome.\nWhen will the coaches remember \u2014 the best defence Is a\ngood offence?\nWhen they do the CFL will\nhave taken a major step back\ntowards stardom.\nBeliveau\nInks Pact\nMONTREAL (CP) - Jean\nBeliveau signed his contract\nTuesday with Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey\nLeague, leaving only three players on the club unsigned.\nBeliveau, entering his 15th\nseason with Canadiens, ls the\nleague's third-highest, career\ngoal-scorer behind Gordie Howe\nof Detroit Red Wings and Maurice (Rocket) Richard of the\nCanadiens.\nThe three remaining players\nunsigned for the coming season\nare Bryan Watson, Dick Duff\nand Danny GranL\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 13, 1967 \u2014 7\nLADIES' WEAR\nCotton Full Slips\nA Tex-smooth fabric of 65% Fortrel and\n35% cotton. Pressed to stay smooth. Reg.\n3.29. Sizes 32,36,42. $ -)\nSpecial   *\u00bb\nCotton Half Slips\n65% Fortrel and 35% cotton. Shadow panel In front. Average and short lengths.\nSizes: S, M, L. Cn\nSpecial       **\u2022\nRayon Briefs\nPastel shades. Elastic leg. Stock up at\nthis low price. Sizes: 3        \u00a71\nS, M, L. Special  3 for * I\nFancy Briefs\nFashion spring colors in nylon with elastic leg. Sizes: S, M, L. f Jl\nSpecial    *\u2022 for * \u25a0\nArnel Full Slips\nLace trim on bodice snd hem- Shadow\npanel in front. White and pastel Qj\nshades. Sizes 32-40. Special         *.\nNylon Baby Dolls\nDainty lace trim nylon tricot baby dolls.\nSizes: S, M, L. C^\nSpecial     T*\u2022\nWaltz Gowns\nNylon tricot gowns trimmed attractively\nwith embroidery. Colors: pink and C^\nblue. Sizes: S, M, L. Special      **\u2022\nPanties\nFlare leg pantie of good quality long\nwearing rayon. Sizes >% $1\nS, M, L, OS. Special  at. for * '\nPodded Bras\nFlattering lined bras for extra shaping\nin white and pastels. Cl\nSizes 32-38. Special  * '\nGirdles\nAssortment of pantie girdles and girdles\nspecially designed for control without\nbinding. Sizes S, M, L, OS. C^\nSpecial  V-m\nFlannellette Pyjamas\nTailored style pyjamas of soft cozy flannelette. Piping trim. C^\nSizes 34-40. Special T\u00ab\"\nFlannellette Gowns\nWaltz length and full length gowns with\nPeter Pan collar a piping trim. Assorted\nprints in pink, blue, maize. C^\nSizes S, M, L. Special   \"**\u2022\nSlacks\nMedium check Houndstooth slacks for\ncasual wear. Assorted colors. Ja\nSizes 10-18. Special       \u2022\nPerma-press Blouses\nLong sleeve tailored shirts in solid and\nfloral pattern. Needs no ironing,    CO\nSizes 32-38 Special      *^\nOversize Blouses\nTailored long sleeve blouses in plain\nshades and floral patterns. Assortment\nof colors. Sizes   0-44. Cn\nSpecial  **\u2022\nPullovers\nFine knit acrylic pullovers to wear with\nmany seperates. Crew neck with short\nsleeves, zipper at back of neckline.  \u00a3a\nSizes 34-40. Special  *~\nSquall Jackets\nLadies' hooded parkas, water repellent\nnylon. Two pockets, front zipper, tie\nstrings. Aqua, pink, yellow, white, black,\norange. Sizes: S, M, L. C 3\nSpecial    * 3\nBlouses\nPerma-Press blouses with short slaves.\nAssorted colored print. Sizes: Cn\n10-18 and 40. Special      **-\nAcrylic Shells\nLoose knit backed by matching net. Double knit design at armhole and neckline.\nBack zipper. Assorted colors. Cn\nS, M, L. Special    **\nPant Suits\nBroken sizes in floral prints. Jackets Sre\nlined and have matching skirts or slacks.\nReg. to 7.00. Cn\nSpecial      ~\nSHOES\nGo-Go Boots\nGrowing Girls' GO Go Boots. Leather\nsuede or plastic. Mostly whites. Size\nrange 6-9, but no one line $1\ncomplete       '\nMen's Slippers\nHandy fold up styled slippers. Just right\nfortravel or back-to-school. Black, tan\nand brown. Jl\nS., M., L       I\nBoys' Shoes\nFad type boots for growing boys. Black\nleather uppers and composition      C \u00a3\nsoles. Broken size range T~\nMen's Casuals\nComfortable leather or nylon upper.\nThick rubber 6010s (Or extra wear. Black,\nbrown or grey. KA\nBroken size range T \"\nRunners\nFor active youngsters. Little gent's hoot\nstyle runners. Black with white       Ci\nfoxing. Size 6-10       '\nWomen's Shoes\nA variety of styles and colors In woman's\ncasual or dress shoes. Leather, suedes,\nand patent. No one line. QA\ncomplete.   *\nONE DAY ONLY of Outstanding Storewide Values!\nPersona\/ Shopping Only - Sorry No   Phone, Mail or C.O.D. Orders\nGIRLS AND BOYS 4-6x\nTerry Briefs\nCotton terry briefs for girls. Buy several\nat this great saving. n       Cl\nSizes 2-6. Special     3 for *'\nGirls' Cotton Briefs\nSubs of reg. 39c \u2022 69c cotton and Interlock\nbrief in plain and floral styles. Some with\neyelet trim. 3        Cl\nSizes: 2-6x. Special        3  (or *'\nPerma-press Blouses\nLittle or no ironing. Machine washable.\nShort sleeve. Plain or print. Sizes Cl\n4-6X. Special  * '\nCardigans\nGlitter Cashmilcn cardigans. Ideal for\nback to school. Sizes 4-6x. Cn\nReg. 3.98. Special   * *\u25a0\nSquall Jackets\nBoys' or girls' nylon squall jackets. Full\nzipper front, attached hood, pocket on\nsleeve. Colors: red, blue, maize. Sizes:\n3-ex. n     ca\nSpecial     *a for  T^\nCotton Pyjamas\nGood quality cotton pyjamas made in\nCanada. Sizes: 4-6x. n       J3\nReg. 2.29. Special  *\u25a0 for *3\nSlims\nAssortment of corduroy and never press\nKoratron slims with boxer waist. Sizes\n4-7. Reg. to 4.98. n CC\nSpecial   *\u2022  for *3\nBaby Dolls\nQuality woven cotton in gay floral print.\nSizes 3-6X. n        Cl\nSpecial   *\u2022 for T'\nBoys' Jeans\nSmall boys jeans of navy denim and\ncolored scrub denim. Boxer waist and\nslim western styling. n        C 3\nSizes 4-6X. Special   **   for *3\nBoys' Corduroy Pants\nGood quality corduroy boxer style longs.\nZipper fly, 2 pockets. Colors navy, charcoal, brown. Sizes 3-6X. Cl\nSpecial   * \u25a0\nBoys' Drill Boxer Pants\nBoys' drill boxer pant with two pockets\nand zip fly. Colours: navy, brown, beige,\ngreen. Sizes: 3-6x. Cl\nSpecial    * \u25a0\nBoys' Pyjamas\nAssorted printed cotton pyjamas. Boxer\nstyle waistline. Sizes 4-6x. n C 3\nReg. 2.29. Special   +\u2022 for *3\nBoys' T-Shirts\nAssorted colors and stripes with plain\ncontrasting collars. n        j3\nSizes 4-6X. Special   *-  for *3\nGIRLS 7-14\nCotton Briefs\nSubs of Reg. 39c-69c cotton and interlock\nbriefs in plain and floral n       Cl\nstyles. Sizes 8-14. Special 3 for * \u2022\nGirls' Baby Dolls and PJ.\nQuality woven cotton baby dolls, pyjamas, dorm set in gal floral print Sizes:\nB-14. Reg. 2.29. n        $3\nSpecial       ^ for *3\nSquall Jackets\nNylOn squall jackets in plain and paisley\npatterns. Full zipper front and 2 slash\npockets. Colons: blue, pink, orange.\nSizes: 7-14. Cn\nSpecial  _    \"**\u2022\nShells\nLace-knit shells of acrylic yarns. Fully\nfashioned, zipper at back of neck. White\nand colors. Sizes: 7-14. Cn\nSpecial     *\u00bb\nSport Shirts\nPolyester and cotton sport shirts with\nshort sleeves. Spring fashion colors. Cl\nSizes 7-14. Special          * I\nPoor Boy Pullovers\nFull turtle-neck pullOver with zipper at\nneckline. Machine washable. Assortment\nOf colors. Sizes 8-14. Cn\nSpecial **\u2022\nFlette Dorm Set\nCozy flannelette dOrrri Sets with lace trim.\nSizes 8-14. $\u2022}\nSpecial  **\u25a0\nINFANTS AND\nTODDLERS\nFlannelette Diapers\nSoft flannelette diapers.       n       CC\n1 doz. in pkg. Special  *\u25a0 for *3\nCar Seats\nCar seats with plastic covered foam seat,\nsteering wheel with beeper and safaety\nstrap. Reg. 7.98. CC\nSpecial    T J\nReceiving Blanket\nSnuggles soft cotton baby blankets. Wash\nand wear well. Nic\u00ab gifts.    3       C n\nSpecial   3   for \"*\u2022\nCorduroy Crawlers\nFine  pinwale  corduroy  crawlers.  Low\npriced, easy-change domed crotch. Blue,\npink, turg. Sizes 12-24 months.        Cl\nSpecial       *\u2022\nINFANTS\nAND TODDLERS\nInfant Dresses, Diaper Sets\nMany styles to choose from. n       C 3\nLovely pastel colors. Special Am for * 3\nInfants' Cardigans\nFully fashioned cardigans in white, blue\nand pink. 5?\n12, 18, 24 months.       **\u2022\nToddler] T-Shirts\nShort sleeve T-shirt in assorted novelty\nprints and patterned fronts. Crew neck\nand button shoulder. Cl\nSizes l-3x. Special   * I\nToddlers' Cotton Pyjamas\nBoys' and girls' first qualitp pyjamas.\nAssorted colors. Sizes 2-3x.   n       C 3\nReg. 1.98. Special\nMEN'S  WEAR\nMen's Corduroy Shirt\nMen's long sleeve, high fashion, button\ndown corduroy shirts. High shades of\nspruce, antelope, gold and mallard. Sizes\nS, M, L. Introductory offer. CC\nSpecial     *3\nMen's Dress Shirts\nMen's quality long sleeve white dress\nshirts.  Fused  collar.  Convertible  cuff.\nSizes 1414 to 17. n Cc\nSpecial   Am   for \"3\nMen's Turtle-Neck Shirts\nHigh  fashion  long  sleeve  turtle   neck\nshirts by Canadian maker. First quality.\nSungold, powder, and white. Cn\nSizes S, M. L. Special       *\u2022\u2022\nMen's Pyjomas\nMen's cotton broadcloth and cotton flannelette pyjamas. Stripes and paisley's.\nSizes A to E. C3\nSpecial        3\nMen's Dress Socks\nMen's budget priced dress socks for the\nthrifty shopper. Subs of Reg. 1.00 and\n1.25 lines. Sized and stretch, n Cl\nSpecial          \u25a0> for *l\nMen's Double Seat Shorts\nComfortable 100% combed cotton double\nseat briefs. Quality elastic waist. Sizes:\nS, M only. Cl\nPkg of 2. Special      * I\nMen's White T-Shirts\nMade of the finest combed cotton by a top\nmanufacturer. Taped seams for lasting\nfit, non-sag neckband. Subs of a regular\n1.75 line. Very minor flaws, Cl\nSizes S, M, L. Special     * '\nMen's Sweatshirts\nMen's long sleeve crew neck sweatshirts.\nIdeal for gymnastics. White and some\nother  colors.  Subs of 2.98  line.  Sizes\nS, M, L. n J3\nSpecial   A  for *3\nMen's Handkerchiefs\nWhite cotton, hemstitched ... 5 handkerchiefs to a package. Cl\nSpecial, pkg.                       * \u00ab\nWORK  CLOTHES\nMen's Work Socks\nMen's 21i lb. wool and nylon blend work\nsocks. Standard size. 3        C1\nSpecial      3 prs. * I\nMen's Drill Work Clothes\nSanforized rugged work clothes for hard\nworking men. Reinforced at points of\nstrain. Colors: Suntan, green, charcoal.\nPant Sizes 30-44. n CQ\nSpecial    *\u25a0   for**'\nShirt Sizes 14V4 - 17V4. n %\"J\nSpecial     Am   for * I\nMen's Flannel Shirts\nWarm durable cotton flannel work and\ncasual shirts in a variety of colors and\nchecks. Sizes 15 to 17.       n Cr\nSpecial . A  for * 3\nMen's Work Gloves\nMOO's canvass-back kangaroo tan work\ngloves. One size. n        C1\nSpecial\nBOYS' WEAR\nBoys' Undershorts\nFine combed cotton shorts for boys. Taped seams . . . quality elastic. Sizes:\nS. M, L. 3 Cl\nSpecial          -* for T \u25a0\nBoys' Quality Dress Sacks\nBoys' better quality dress socks. Built to\nwear longer. Subs of n C1\n98c sock. Special      -(\u2022 prs. * \"\nBoys' Long Sleeve Sport Shirts\nBoys'  long  sleeve  cotton  fancy  sport\nshirts by Canadian Maker. Button down\ncollar. Tapered, mostly     n        C 3\nsmall sizes. Special  Am  for *3\nBoys' Shirts\nBoys' short sleeve cotton poplin and\ncotton knit shirt. Broken 5 \u00a31\nsizes.. Must go. Special 3 for * '\nBoys' Flannel Shirts\nSave on these budget priced boys' 100*\nwashable cotton flannel sport slvrts.\nSizes 8 to 16. Cl\nSpecial     * I\nBoys' Flannel Pyjamas\nWarm, washable flannel pyjamas in a\nvariety of fancy patterns. Cn\nSizes 8 to 16. Special                * A.\nHOUSEWARES\nGo-Go Dolls I Price\nAssortment of 2 styles of Go-Go dolls.\nIdeal gift items for any girl. C n\nReg. 3.98 **\u2022\nPlastic Tumbler Set\nSet of 8 plastic tumblers. Assorted colors.\nIdeal for milk or pop.        n        Cl\nSets\nTeflon Bake Ware\nTeflon coated. Ready mix square cake-\npan. Slice size loaf pan for meat loafs.\nFruit cakes, etc. Round 9\" Teflon C n\ncakepan. Reg. 2.79. Each  T*\u25a0\nMuffin Tins\nAluminum and Ecoloy muffin tin. 8\ncup size. 3        Cn\nSpecial\nJuice Set\n7-piece Soreno design juice set including\n1 pitcher and C3\n6 glasses       3\nBig Lightbulb Saving!\nYou save more on Dollar Days ... Canadian made light bulbs in <\u2022        Cl\nI or 100 watts. Special.\nGlasses\nPlain milk glasses. 9 oz. ideal for after\nschool snacks.                 IA        Cl\nPriced at     'v for * I\nSets of Fridge Containers\nSet of 10 fridge containers made of heavy\nplastic, with cover IA        Cl\nAssorted colors    ' \" for * I\nJuice Decanter\nDurable plastic juice decanter. Ideal for\nmeasuring or storing 3 C1\n     3 for *l\njuices etc.\nBathtub Mat\nSize 16 x 28\" bath mat. Protection for\nyoung and old alike. Over 800 suction\ncups grip tub bottom. Cl\nReg. 3.49   T*\"\nKitchen Items\nSink Mat: IMS x 123i.\nReg. 1.59. Special, each ....\nStove Mat: VA x 18\".\nReg. 1.39. Special, each\t\nSink Mat: 12\u00ab x 16\".\nReg. 1.98. Special, each\t\nStove Mat: 15V4 x 17\".\nReg. 1.69. Special, each\t\nStove Mat: VA x 19\".\nReg. 2.49. Special, each\t\nStove Mat: Vh x 10\".\nReg. 1.49 Special, each\t\nStove Mat: 133,i x 19>A\".\nReg. 3.69. Special, each\t\n$1\n$1\n$1\n$2\n$1\n53\nMixing Bowl Set\n4-pce. heat resistant, rainbow color bowl\nset. 1 only each 6 in, 7, 8, 9 inch bowls. 4\ndifferent colors. C A\nReg. 4.98. Each  :    *\u2122\nTurntable\nSpace-master. The modern spacesaver\nfor your cabinets and on your C1\nshelves. Each .     . .        '\n3$ Quart Mixing Bowl\nLarge white Fire-King mixing bowl. C1\n3ls quart size. Special     * '\nTV Troy\nAnother handy household addition . ..\nwoodgrain and harlequin patterns. Cl\nSpecial   ...   *'\nWindow Cleaners\nSponge window cleaners with Cl\nhandy 3-foot handle. Special * *\nHandsome Wastepaper Basket\nAttractive embossed metal wastepaper\nbaskets. 12 quart tapered, oval. Brass\nor copper. J        J 3\n$1\nSpecial\nCast Iron Skillet\nReady to use cast iron tV\nskillet. Preseasoned. Special .\nReady-Mix Cake Pan\nPerfect for storing leftovers, or pot luck\nsocials . . . surehold handles. Cl\nSpecial         \u2022\nBath Mats\nGreater tub safety for the whole family.\nSize 14Vj\" x 23\". Reg. 1.49. Cl\nSpecial         * *\nGlass Planters\n4\" x4%\" footed glass planter wilh antique\ngold vintage design. C1\nEach     * I\nVases\nr.'i inch antique gold, vintage design\nflared vase. Ideal gift Item. Cl\nEach    * I\nCandy Spice Jars\n6 Oz. glass jars with lid. Clear glass type.\nCan be used for spices A Cl\nor candy. \"for * I\nOven Mitts\nSilicone, gold or silver.\nPair\nPatio Push Broom\nStiff bristle.\nEach      \t\n$1\n$1\nHOUSEWARES\nTV Snack Set\n8-pce serva-snack set. 4 serving trays, 4\ncups. With attractive design. C 3\nReg. 4.98. Now    *3\nIroning Board Pod and\nCover Set\nMakes Ironing so much easier . . . fits\nall standard 54\" ironing boards. Cl\nReg. 1.49. Special    * \u25a0\nChip and Dip Set\n3-pce decorated chip and dip set. Attractive Soreno design. Ideal for party use.\nReg. 4.49. C 3\nEach    * 3\nAluminum French Fryer\nQuick heat aluminum . . . rustproof,\nseamless. Wire basket included.      Cl\nSpecial   * I\nCorning Saucepans\nAssortment of Coming saucepans with\nlids: 32 oz. \u00a7A\nSaucepan  \u2122\n48 oz. CC\nSaucepan - _  m\n56 oz. JC\nSaucepan _    \u2022\u00bb\n64 oz. $\u00a3\nSauce Maker  \u00bb\u00bb\nBuffet Jl\nHandles   T \u25a0\nCorning Saucepan C^\nHandle     * *\u2022\nBuffet Server\nMetal Buffet Server with wooden handles\nand candles. Ideal for serving hot C J\nCorning Casseroles. Reg. 4.98      \u00ab\nTurn Tables\nCool Susan Turn Tables. 13\" diameter,\n%\" high. Spins storage contents right to\nyour finger tips. <E 7\nReg. 2.69  \"**\u2022\nPIECE GOODS\nPillow Coses\nService weight bleached white pillow\ncases. Cello wrapped. Cl\nSpecial, pair       \u25a0\nFoam Chip Pillows\nBleached white cotton cover pillows.\nIdeal decorator forms or for sleep.- Cl\ning. Each          '\nDish Cloths\nMesh dish cloths, check design.  Blue,\ngreen, yellow or \/C$1\nred  O  for *\u25a0\nEmbroidered Pillow Cases\nAttractively designed cases, cutwork or\nembroidered. Soft pastel tone C J\nstitching. Boxed. Pair    **\u25a0\nPillow Savers\nJust the ideal case to protect your pillows.\nWhite only with zippered ends. C1\nPair   *'\nDrapery\n36\" drapery in assorted patterns C1\nand colors. Yard         \u2022\nLinen Napkins\nPure Irish linen napkins. 18\" x 18\". Assorted paster A         Jl\ncolors  \"for  T'\nDrapery Squares\nGenerous size samples in florals, plains,\nmodern and Cl\nconventional designs  * '\nBath Towels\nThick terry bath towels, large assortment\nof colors in plains Cl\nand pattern        '\nHand Towels\nSomething special in hand towels. Jac-\nquards, florals and solid colors. Pleasing\nrange of \u2022} $1\ncolors     ** for  T \u25a0\nFace Cloths\nGood weight Terry towelling. Jaeguar\nstripes or solid colors. c Cl\nSpecial    3  for TI\nBroadcloth\nFine quality Broadcloth. Wide range\npastel colors, also black and dark green.\n45\" wide. -y $1\nSpecial     *<yds. T'\nLinen Tea Towels\nPure   linen   towels,   extra   large size.\nMulti check \u2022% C1\ndesign  \u2014' for \" '\nSugar Bogs\nBleached sugar sacks. Washed and laundered, ready for use. 3 C1\nSpcial    3  for * I\n36\" Prints\nAssortment includes cotton prints, printed krinkle cottons and decorator prints.\n1 $1\nPrice   Aa yds. T \u25a0\n36\"Printed Flannelette\nIn a wide assortment of patterns and colors, j Cl\nPrice       Am yds. T \u25a0\nNOTIONS\nHandbags\nAssortment of Fall and Summer style\nhandbags. Buy now at this low, low price.\nLess than Cl\nHalf Price. Each  * \u25a0\nCrest Toothpaste\nFamily size toothpaste with Cl\nFlouristan. Each  * '\nShaving Cream\nGillette foamy shaving cream. Cl\nRegular or Menthol  * \u2022\nLadies' Swim Caps\nAssortment of half price swim caps. Assorted colors and styles to choose C J\nirom. Reg. 3.98 ***\nQuick Home Permanent\nBuilt-in shampoo pre-mixed neutralizer.\n4 oz. wave lotion, 3% neutralizer. 80\nend papers.\nReg. 1.49\t\nHair Color Lotion\nLoving Care hair lotion. Washes away\nonly the grey. Asst. colors  J        C 3\n$1\nto choose from.\nSilk and Silver Hair Coloring\nWashes silvery beauty into grey     Cl\nhair. Reg. 1.95  * I\nMohair Yarn Stole Kit\nThe Brush-up stole. Can be made of this\nBernat Mohair-spun yarn. CO\nReg. price 11.98. Now  *0\nSequin Shell Kit\nBernat Sequin Shell Kit. Just slip the\nstrings of sequins on the yarn then &\"J\nknit. Kit Reg. 10.98. Now  * '\nBaycrest Nylons\nDeluxe   seamless   sheer nylons. Impeccable fit. Wrinkle free. Assorted colors.\nSizes: m to 11.\nPair \u201e\t\n$1\nFilm\nBlack and white film, 620 and 127 for\nSummer photo fun. *t       C1\n  a- for * I\nSpecial\nFlosh Cubes\nFor use with black and white and daylight type color film. Cul\nfit most type cameras. .\nlight type color film. Cubes   3       Ci\n35mm Film\nKodachrome 35 mm film for color slides.\nDaylight of blue flash. &A\nSpecial, each *t\nMisses', Ladies' Anklets\n100% stretch anklets . . . nylon, flat knit,\nturn down cuff. Sizes 9 to   f        Cl\n11. White. Special.\nHalf Price\u2014Summer Jewellery.\nAssortment of bracelets, earrings, necklaces, etc., in plastic and metal.\n2 for*!   to *l   Each\nGlove and Scarve Set\nAssorted colors and styles to choose from.\nFall and Summer styles. &\u2022+\nSpecial, per set *A\nCameo Super Support Nylons\nAvailable in 2 colors and all sizes. tA\nReg. 5.98. Special, pr *TT\nStretch Top Nylons\nSeamless micro mesh nylons. 15 denier\nsheer. Sizes from 8 to 11. 3 C |\nAssorted colors   3  for * I\nColorful Headsquares\nRayon and georgette headsquares, scallop edge. 27x27. \u2022% Cl\nSpecial      Am (or * I\nSudden Beauty Hair Spray\nJust arrived \u2014a new shipment of this\npopular hair spray. Jumbo size. Cl\nRegular 1.49. Special   * I\nHelene Curtis Hair Spray\nLarge size at a low price . . . lovely to\nuse. Save up to $1. C |\nSpecial _    \u25bc I\nBan Deodorant\nRoll-on. Helps check perspiration, stops\nodour for 24 hours. (1\nVA oz. Each    \u25bc I\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 13, 1967\nYour Individual Horoscope\nLook in the section in which, what your outlook is, according\nyour birthday comes and find'to the stars.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAVLIGHT SAVING TIME\n1390 ON THE DIAL 96 MC CABLE FM\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER  13,  1967\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014The A.M. Show\n6:30\u2014News\n6:33\u2014Morning Show\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Sports\n7:10-Chapel in the Sky\n7:30-Musie\n7:45\u2014Sports\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports\n8:15\u2014Music\n8:30\u2014News\n8:40\u2014Music\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Bill Good Sports\n9:15\u2014Russ Thompson Show\n9:55\u2014Stocks\n9:59-DOOTS\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Bulletin Board\n10:10\u2014Coffee Time\n10:55\u2014Assignment\n10:45\u2014Sports\n10:48\u2014Coffee Time\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Happy Time\n11:15\u2014Woman's World\n11:20\u2014Happy Time\n11:55\u2014Preview Commentary\n12:00\u2014Summer Sounds\n12:30\u2014News\n12:40-Sports\n12:45\u2014Music\n12:55\u2014News and Stocks\n1:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Music\n2:15\u2014The Concorde\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014Summer Sounds\n3:30\u2014Good 'n Country\n4:00\u2014News\n4.03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Hii Parade\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports\n5:10\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30-News\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Closing Markets\n6:15-Back to the Bible\n6:45-Sacred Heart\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Summer Sounds\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014Between   Ourselves\n9:00\u2014News\n9:03\u2014Midweek Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Centennial Diary\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Sports\n11:10\u2014Night Theme\n12:00\u2014News\nCBC PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967\n6:00-The AM   Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9 on\u2014News Hiir   KfiNiri'\n9:15\u2014 Russ Thompson Show\n9:55\u2014Assignment\n3 59-DUOTS\n10:00\u2014News\n10:03\u2014Concert Hour\n10:55\u2014Assignment\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Expodition\n!l:40\u2014The Archers\n11:55\u2014Assignment\n12:00\u2014Along the Way\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\n12:30\u2014B C   Farm Broadcast\n12:48\u2014Marine Weather\n12:51\u201451st North\n1:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n145\u2014Program Resume\n2 00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Folksound International\n2:30\u2014Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03\u2014T-Can. Matinee\n3:30-Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n* mi -News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Round Up\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports\n5:15\u2014Tempo\n5 30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Tempo\n5:56\u2014Stock Market\n6:00-The World at 6\n6:30\u2014Tempo\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Centennial Diary\n7:30\u2014CBC Halifax Orch.\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014Between Ourselves\n9:00\u2014News\n9:03\u2014Midweek Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10 30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n11 00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Music of Schubert\nVI (HI\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After Hours\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1967\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Music\n: 45\u2014Morning Devotional\n: 55\u2014Music and News Show\n:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n:00\u2014News  and  Report\n: 15\u2014Russ Thompson Show\n:55\u2014Assignment\n;59-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014News\n:03\u2014The Concert Hour\n: 55\u2014Assignment\n: 00\u2014News\n:03\u2014Expodition\n: 40\u2014The  Archers\n11:55\u2014Assignment\n12:00\u2014Along the Way\n12:15\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C.  Farm Broadcast\n12:48\u2014Marine Weather\nl:00-Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014 Assignment\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Star Show\n2:30-Matinee With\nPat Patterson\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03\u2014Matinee With\nPat Patterson\n3:30-Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports Desk\n5:10\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:15\u2014Tempo\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Tempo\n6:00\u2014World at Six\n6:30\u2014Sights and Sounds\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Tempo\n7:30\u2014Soundings\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014CBC Centenary Concerts\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Anthology\n11:00\u2014News\nll:03-Hot Air\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After \u2022 Hours\nTELEVISION   FOR  TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n-Live Program (Cl\u2014Color Program\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n7:30\u2014 Legend of Custer*\n8:30\u2014Second Hundred\nYears* IC)\n'Cl     I   9:00\u2014Wednesday Night Movie\n\"The D.I.\"\nl!:0O-Nightbeat (C)\n1 11:30\u2014Joey Bishop* (C>\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n6:30\u2014Leave II to Beaver\n7:00\u2014Truth or\nConsequences 'Cl\n7:30\u2014Lost in Space* iCl\n8:30\u2014Beverly Hillbillies* (Cl\n9:00\u2014Green Acres* (C)\n9:30\u2014Wednesday Premiere\nTheatre\n11:00-11 o'clock News (C)\n11:30\u2014Big Four Movie\nKIIO-TV - Channel 6\nFor   Thursday,   Sept.   14.1967\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Airies) \u2014 Planetary influences\nindicate some pressure in business matters, but remain steadfast and hopeful. You CAN make\nsome advancement. Your personal affairs promise to be interesting.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\nBreak your day down to the\ndefinite essentials and earmark\nactivities to be eliminated.\nAvoid untoward action, impatience,   hasty judgements.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini!\nConsider activities of the past\nfew days. Have you acted too\nhastily in some matters? Have\nyou turned over ALL the stones\nfor hidden treasures? You can\nretrace some steps profitably\nnow.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\nYou have access to more lhan\none route. If (lie going is 'rough'\non one, take another. And dig\ndeep for valuable findings!\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 I Leo)\nReturn a compliment, a favor\n\u2014 especially in barren areas.\nYou can inspire new hope in\nothers, lead them to brighter\npaths.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgoi \u2014 Compensation for\npast efforts in the offing. Be\npatient, and don't become overanxious. Do not become a loser\nthrough disenchantment with\n\"things as they are.\"\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Librai \u2014 Meet, discuss and\nwork out with others the very\nbest avenue possible to give all\ntheir due \u2014 and some choice\n\"extras\", besides.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpioi \u2014 \"Retreat\" is a\nword which is not usually found\nin your vocabulary, but it could\nbe used strategically, now, to\nre-eitforce strength, improve tactics.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 2t iSaggitariii5) \u2014 Don't\nfind mystery where there is\nnone, and don't fear the outcomes of enterprises which you\nhave not given a fair chance lo\nprove themselves. A better day\nthan you may think at first.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Influences\nurge steadiness, a calm demeanor, waiting until the time\nis ripe for certain moves which\nshould NOT be taken yet.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 If you began\nthe week with system and knew\nwhat you were about, you can\nstep up tempo now. But DO\nwatch for small pitfalls that\nmake big traps.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Your talents will be\ncalled upon a-plenty now. In\nfact, you may be busily active\nboth day and night, so try to\nsqueeze in a few moments of\nrest now and then. Thus you\ncan meet the pace and be up\nthere with the best of them.\nYOU BORN TODAY are unusually versatile, can handle\nany number of occupations.\nThus you may not decide upon\nyour life's calling with your\nfirst position.  Also,  it is pos\nsible for you lo hold one Job,\npursue a lucrative avocation,\nand still have time for \"extras\"\nwhich others seem never able\nlo fit into their schedules. Don't\npush yourself or your associates\ntoo hard, however, or anxiety\ncould erupt on all sides. TakP\ntime to enjoy the \"little things\"\nin life.\nTlwtfartagL by*\nLatvia, ti)hssdsjL\nBoost in Imports\nOf U.S. Goods Seen\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nWASHINGTON (CP '-Record\nimports of American goods by\nCanada this year are forecast\nin the commerce department's\nforeign-trade journal.\nIt also sees even greater\nCanadian dependence on the\nU.S. market as a result of Ihe\nKennedy round of tariff negotiations at Geneva earlier this\nyear.\nThe publication International\nCommerce says record Canadian purchases here last year\nof $6,100,000,000 in Canadian\ndollars may swell by 10 to 12\nper cent this year.\nFor the first six months,\nCanadian purchases have been\n15 per-cent higher than a year\nago.\nThis is despite reduced economic activity in both Canada\nand the U.S.\n\"The Kennedy round of ,ego-\ntiations may have a profound if\ngradual effect on Canadian\ntrade and production,\" says the\nmagazine. It cites two special\nfeatures il says are of special\nimportance: \"The concentration   of   concessions   on   gonds\nwithin the U.S.-Canada trade\npattern and the preponderance\nof concessions in the U.S. industrial manufacturing sector.\"\nII says Canada's total trade\ninvolved in the negotiations was\n$5,500,000,000 in Canadian funds\nand that $4,000,000,000 of-this is\nwith the U.S.\nThe European Common Market, hy contrast, it is noted,\naccounts for only $160,000,000 in\nthe same Canadian area.\n\"The effect on patterns of\ntrade should be a reinforcement\non the already-strong U.S.-Can-\nada trade ties.\"\nThe report also notes that\ntrade and investment interest\nby other foreign countries in\nCanada is climbing rapidly and\n\"will reach an all-time high in\n1967.\"\nCanada's chronic deficit in its\nall of it due to its accounts with\nthe U.S.\u2014are forecast at $750,-\n000,000 compared with just\nunder $1,000,000,000 last year.\nThe reckoning is based on\nhigher Canadian sales abroad\nso far and earnings from Expo\n67, with most of the foreign\nspending frnm Americans.\nPICK-UP FUN\nUse spare minutes to crochet\nan heirloom cloth in time foi\nholiday dinners.\nSnowf lake-light I These lac;\nmedallions are the nicest kind\nof pick-up crochet. Join into\nscarf, spread, cloth. Pattern 900\neasy directions.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coin'\nmo stamps, please) for each pal\ntern lo Laura Wheeler, care ol\nNDN Needlecraft Dept., 60 From\nSt. W.. Toronto, Ont. Print plain\nly PATTERN NUMBER, youl\nNAME and ADDRESS.\nSend for Big, Big 1968 Needle\ncraft Catalogue \u2014 hundreds oi\nknit, crochet fashions, embroid\ncry, quilts, afghans, gifts, toys\nPlus 6 free patterns printed in\nside. 50c.\nBook of  prize  AFGHANS.   1?\ncomplete patterns. (Wc\nMuseum Quilt Book 2 \u2014 patterns\nfor 12 quilts. 60c\nBargain! Quilt Book 1 \u2014 16 com\nplete patterns. 60c\nBook 3  \u2014  Quilts  for Today's-\nLiving. New, exciting collection\n15 complete patterns. 60c\nDaily Crossword\n7:00-Death Valley Davs (C)\n7:30\u2014The Virginian* (C)\n9:00-Kraft Music Holl* <C)\n| 10:00\u2014Run for Your Life* (C)\n11:00\u2014News and Weather (C)\n1 11:30\u2014Tonight With Carson* 'Cl\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nCastlegar, Channel 3; Cranbrook, Channel 10\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Date\n12:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n12:45\u2014Guiding Light\n1:00\u2014Luncheon Date\n1:30\u2014As the World Turns\n2:00-By Invitation\n2:30-TBA\n3:(I0-Take Thirty\n3:30-Edge of Night\n4:00\u2014Communicate\n4:,'10\u2014Barney Roomer\n5:00\u2014Mark of Zorro\n5:30\u2014Canada Outdoors\n6:00\u2014News\n6:15\u2014British Calendar\n6:30\u2014Studio Pacific\n7:00-Quiet Nights\n7:30\u2014Mothcrs-in-Law\n8:00\u2014Mission Impossible\n9:00\u2014Twenty Million Questions\n9:30\u2014Fall of Berlin\n10:30\u2014Fialka Mime Company\n11:00\u2014News\n11:19\u2014Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Date \u2014 I\n12:30\u2014Luncheon Date With\nSeven \u2014 Weather,\nSports, News\n1:00\u2014Scan\n2:00-Ed Allen\n2:30\u2014Donna Reed Show\n3:00-Take Thirty\n8:30-Edge of Night (C)\n4:00\u2014Communicate (C)\n4:30\u2014Barney Boomer\n5:00\u2014Tarzan\nTHURSDAY\n5:30\u2014Round Up \u2014 Weather,\nSports, News\n6:30\u2014Dean Martin\n7:30\u2014Accidental Family (C)\n8:00\u2014Hogan's Heroes (C)\n8:30\u2014Telescope (C)\n0:00\u2014Man From UNCLE (C)\n10:00\u2014Perry Mason\n11:00\u2014CBC News\n11:20\u2014Info\n11:30\u2014Freak Out: \"Phantom of\nthe Rue Morgue\"\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Ecclesiastical\nsurplice\n6. Goad\n10. Egg-\nshaped\n11. Cavity\n12. French\nnovelist\n13. Dwarf\n14. Voided\nescutcheon\n15. Subtle\nemanations\n16. Music\nnote\n17. Close\nnoisily\n19. Newspaperman\n22. Chokes\n26. Undershot\nwaterwheel\n27. Reigning\nbeauty\n28. Allowance\nfor waste\n29. Incoherent\nuproar\n30. Work hard\n32. Chinese\nriver\n33. Men of\nlearning\n30. Final\n38. Across\n39. Chinese\nlaborer\n41. Solitary\n42. Musical\ninstrument\n43. Was in\ndebt\n44. Fat\nDOWN\n1. Hall\n2. Elliptical\n3. Melody\n4. Muscular\ntwitch\n5. Beverage\n6. What\nRand's\nAtlas did\n7. Teem\n8. Forearm\nbone\n9. Soaks\nflax\n12. Instigate\n15. Indefinite\narticle\n17. Large\nsnake\n18. Land\nmeasure\n20. Ange:\n21. Giggled\n23. Entire\n21. Glazed,\nnearly\ntransparent\npaper\n25. Hebrew\n27. Bengal\nquince\n29. Twice:\nprefix\n31. Mouth\n33, Aria\n34. Affirm\nlie\n'\nT|S\n\u25a0\n1\nR\nr\nF-\" 11\ni\n11\nI\n\u25a0\nph\nA\nM\nA\nT\n\u2022,\n'.'\nA\nu\ni\nM\n!\nA\n1\nA\n.Vi F-\nt\n1\ni\n.\nK\n1\ni    '.\n1\n1\nA\n|)\n-r\nV\nI:\nU\n\u25a0\n1\n,'!\/.\n'-\u25a0\nr\n1\nY\nf\nMlSMT\n'\nV\n1-\nI\n1 !'.'\n\u25a0 i\n\u25a0\u2022'\nA\n1\n1\nm\n'\u25a0\nIA\n\u25a0:. m\na\nV\nA\nV\n:.\ni\n\u25a0EIL\nBIAMA\nH\n\u25a0\nc\n1:\n\u25a0 sIUoIVS\n!\nE\nu\nYrsterdty'i Aniwer\n35. Dancer\nKelly\n36. Theater\nseat\n37. Exclamation\n39. Cry of\na dove\n40. Sphere\nV\n1\n1\n3\n4\nS\nVa\n6\n7\n8\n9\nV\n10\n%\nII\n12\n%\nIi\n14\n%\nV\/,\n15\n16\n%\n%\nn\n18\n\/\/\/\nVa\nAAt\n\/Ai\n19\n20\n21\n%\n21\n23\n24\nis\n2b\nV\/t\n27\n28\n%\n29\n%\n%\n%\n36\n31\n%\n%\n32\nii\n34\nIS\nV\/t\nYa\n3b\n37\n38\n1\nJ9\n40\n01\n\\t\n42.\n%\n43\n%\n44\n%\nq-n\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTK \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXB\nls    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter Blmply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophles, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBJWJY     WFP     OKFZFK     BVF     DLCW\nSZ     YFQOSBJQW     BS     BVF     NSJQBFK-\nBAG,     QFL     SZ     C J N F K B R.\u2014T F Z Z F K-\nQ S P\nYesterday's Cryptoquoto: I BELIEVE IN DEMOCRACY BECAUSE IT RELEASES THE ENERGY OF EVERY HUMAN\nBEING.\u2014WOODROW WILSON\n(O 1967, King Featurea Syndics!*, Inc.!\n(Djisal. lip. LViik\nVncuuDtt WUvdin.\nPrinted Patten\n9229\nSIZES 10-\u00bb\nA ZIPPY DRESS\nA zippy dress to dash here and\nIhere is just what you ordered\nand we deliver in time for fall.\nPrincess lines come daringly\nclose, hul never touch the body\nanywhere.\nPrinted Pattern 9229: Misses'\nsizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Sire\n14 lakes VA yards 45-inch.\nFIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins\n'no slamps, please) for each\npattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS and STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend order to MARIAN MAP\nTIN, NDN Pattern Dept., 60\nFront Street West, Toronto, Onl\nPLAN YOUR NEW FAL1\nWARDROBE, send now for ou)\nnew Fall-Winter Patern Cata\nlogue. 100 fresh, exciting shape.-\nin all sizes. Get one pattern free\n- clip coupon in Catalogue. Send\n50c now.\n ma\n<&\u00a3*?\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 13, 1967 \u2014 9\nFRENO - To Mr. and Mrs.\nLome Freno, Creek Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept. 11, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\u2014MALE\nScalers\nRequired at Celgar\nWoods Division,\nNakusp, B.C. IWA Rates.\nApply In writing,\nPersonnel Department,\nBox  1,000 Nakusp\nOr Ph. 265-3612\n-212-H\nDISSATISFIED WITH YOUR\npresent position? Are you at\na crossroad? Are you limited\nto advancement and earnings?\nDo you know that one of the\nhighest paid occupations Is in\nthe field of selling? To the\nright man we offer excellent\ntheory and field training courses, beginning with servicing\nexisting accounts. Enjoyable\nworking conditions, medical\nand group Insurance benefits,\ntop earnings and excellent opportunities for advancement.\nFor further information, contact:. Region Manager, No. 4 \u2014\n10128 - 108 Street, Edmonton,\nAlberta. -212-h\nWANTED: HOUSEKEEPER TO\nlook after woman from 8 a.m.\nto 5 p.m. Phone 352-5602.\n-209-tfn\nWANTED: EXPERIENCED\nwaitress. Apply Hume Hotel,\nNelson. -213-215\nEXPERIENCED WAITRESS\nwanted. Phone 352-3453 or 352-\n6414. -21)9-214\nBABYSITTER FOR WEEK-\nends. Phone 352-6018. \u2014214-215\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSTUDENT REQUIRES PART-\ntime job after school and on\nweekends. Has experience in\nhousekeeping, babysitting and\nas a waitress. Ph. 352-5826.\n-209-214\nGIRL FRIDAY: BABYSITTING,\ndriving, light jobs, etc ; general office work. Write \"Girl\nFriday\", Box 195, Nelson Daily\nNews. -213-215\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE  HOMES\nSAFEWAY\nWILL BABYSIT IN MY HOME,\nNorth Shore, V, mile from the\nbridge. Phone 352-2583.\n -214-217\nNEW CANADIAN, MACHINIST,\nconstruction, carpenter, handyman, requires work. Phone\n352-3348. -213-218\nCHIMNEY SWEEP REQUIRED\nimmediately by the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital, New Denver, B.C., to clean one small\nchimney and one large 18\"\nchimney and furnace. \u2014212-214\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nWILL BABYSIT IN MY HOME.\nWeekdays preferred, Phone\n352-3228. -  213-215\nBRITISH   CARPET   AND   UP-\nholstery cleaning. Up to 20\nOff.   Phone   352-5909.   -209-234\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR\n- Gus Stenberg, ph. 352-6892.\n-193-218\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nRUSSIAN SPINNING WHEEL;\nalso old dolls with china heads.\nPhone 352-2674, or write Box\n196, Nelson Dally News.\n-213-218\nOLDER  MODEL 1  OR  2-TON\ntruck with flat deck. Reasonable condition. Phone 825-4482.\n-213-215\nSERVICE STATION BUSINESS,\nstock and equipment for sale.\nLocation on busy thoroughfare.\nFor particulars phone evenings\n428-2726, or write Box 64,\nWynndel, B.C. -213-218\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over ond Over\nWANTED - SIDE - CAR FOR\nHarley 74. Must be In good\nshape. Phone 352-2454.-210-215\nLOST   AND   FOUND\nLOST - A BRIDLE IN A CAR\nhitchhiking   from    Harrop\nWould   party   who   phoned\nplease phone again, 352-6284.\n-212-214\nBUSINESS  & PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAuctioneers\nKOOTENAY   AUCTION8\nBox 263        Nelson        352-601b\n-207-tfn\nAutomobile Dealers\nB&LS'   MOTOR-IN  LTD.\n(Dalsun Sales)\n213 Baker St.    Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nSHIELDS PONTIAC-BUICK Ltd.\nComplete Automobile Service\n701 Baker St.      Phone 352-5505\n-10-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE\nBUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything In waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.     Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS\nBUILDING MATERIALS LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone afia-KfiHl\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n609 Ward St.       Phone 352-1)571\nI Block South of Woolworth's\n-tin\nContractors\nLaszlo llns\/.ik, General Masonry\nStone - Brick   Cement   Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St         Phone 852-7682\n -230-tfn\nFor Bulldozing, Call\nKEN  LIPSACK\nPhone 226-7444 or 226-7202\nMornings to 10 a.m.\nEvenings after 6 p.m\n -182-217\nPAYLESS CONSTRUCTION\nBuildings, big or small.\nRemodelling, Painting Concrete,\nRoofing, Chimney Recapping.\nPhOOe 352-5763.\n\u2014204-tfn\nDress   Making\nNelson Dressmaking\ntti Vernon St.       Ph   352-7524\nGarages\nUpper   Fairview   Molars  Ltd\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph  352-252}\nTransistorized Ignition\n, -tin\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL  ENGRAVING\n266 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-3552\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\n-tfn\nPlumbing & Heating\nJ. O. RIESTERER\nPlumbing and Heating\nPh. 352-5110      210 Robson St.\n-26-tfD\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters    Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\n-lll-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\nZenith    Electrohnme T V\nSales and Service\n394 Baker St Ph   352-3355\n-180-tfn\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Sorvlee\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\n80S Anderson St.     Ph   352-5455\n-MOtln\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley'i Sport Shop\n488 Baker St      Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nl.arrv's Topsoil, Snml nnd Grovel\nPh   352-2355 Days. 352-7576 oves\n-tfn\nVacuum  Cleaners\nELECTROLUX Soles & Service\n71) innes St       Ph 352-7341\n-77 tfn\nVeterinarian\nDon't   forget  the   Kootenay\nAnimal Clinic, Creston, lor all\nyour   Veterinary   needs    Open\ndaily from 9 \u2022 5. Ph   356-2822.\n-201-tfn\nHERE!\nThe  12x64 Manor\nBy SAFEWAY\nEngineered elegance features\nseparate utility room, fireplace, w\/w carpeting, dining\nroom, Tappen electric range\nwith eye level oven, and a host\nof other exciting features too\nnumerous to mention.\nWE WANT EVERYONE\nto see this ultra modern\n\"Easy to Relocate Home\"\non display at\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS LTD.\nBox 1458 Phone 365-5047\nCASTLEGAR\nWalt and Val Hill\nJohnny and Nan Ruud\n\u2014209-tfn\nFor Better\nand\nUSED\nMOBILE\nHOMES\nSee\nUnited  Trailer\n405 Cranbrook St.\nCranbrook. B.C.\nPh. 426-5295 Res. 426-4973\n-195-tfn\nFOR SALE BY OWNER. 1985\n10'x55' Kit Sierra 3-bdrm.:\nfully furnished. Phone Duncan\nLake, 371. -213-218\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFALL CLEARANCE\n1967 Evinrude Outboards\nAnd All Aluminum Boats\n20%   OFF\n16 Ft. FlbreglnsBed Cabin\nCruiser With Flying Bridge\n45 H.P. Mercury and Trailer\nComplete.\n$695.00\nMARKIN\nEQUIPMENT LTD.\n377 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 352-5226\n-212-216\n1 16' HEWESCRAFT. 1 80-H.P.\nJohnson, 1967 demonstrator,\n$1995; 1 1967 Trail Blazer, 700-\nIb. boal trailer, $159; 1 1067\nTrail Blazer 1000-lb. trailer,\n$189; 1 15' Hewescrafl, 33-h.p.\nJohnson, $1450; 112' gloss boal\n$165. \u2014 Jorgenson's Marina,\nNorth Shore. -214-217\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nGOOD\nUSED FURNITURE\n5 Piece Dinette\nSiute  $49.00\n5 Piece Dinette\nSuite    $59.00\nOdd    Dressers   With   and\nWithout Mirrors\n$10.00 - $15.00\n4 Only Single Beds.\nComplete With Mattresses\n$16.50 - $39.00\n1  Four-Hole Gas\nStove  With   Oven   $60.00\nHollywood Beds, Electric\nStoves, Wringer Washers\nAnd Fridges, etc.\nApply at\nMAC'S HOME\nFURNISHINGS\n461 Josephine St.\n(Next to Carmichael's\nPaint Store)\n-214-h\nFor Fall pest control, moucide,\nrat and mice killer, and traps,\nliquid ant killer, earwig bait,\nSee\nELLISON'S\nWholesale - Retail\n523 Front St.        Ph. 352-3181\n-214-h\nELLISON'S\nWholesale - Retail\n523 Front St. Ph. 352-3181\n-214-h\nB 4 K DOG CRUMBLES\n20 lbs. $2.59\nComplete and ready to serve.\nCan be fed dry or with water\nor milk. This is a High Quality\nDog Food at a Sensible Price\nNELSON FARMERS' SUPPLY\n524 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5375\nCANNING TOMATOES for\nsale, $2.00 per box; CORN, 50c\ndoz. Apply COLCHESTER\nRANCH, Grand Forks, B.C.,\nli mile past Grand Forks\nSawmill.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nI Continued i\nTWO ELECTRIC GAS PUMPS.\nGood cond. Box 44, Nelson.\n-209-214\nFRIDGE,   $60;   WRINGER\nwasher, $25. Phone 352-2459.\n-213-218\nUSED 24-1N 4-BURNER ELEC-\ntrie ranges - Call Coleman\nElectric, 352-3175       -lll-tfn\n8   BASS   ACCORDIAN,   LIKE\nnew. Ph. 352-6992 alter 6 p.m.\n-213-215\nCHROME   SET,   CRIB,   HIGH-\nchair, buggy. Phone 825-4482.\n-212-214\nTWO ELECTRIC GAS PUMPS,\ngood condition. Box 44, Nelson.\n-214-219\nCREAM SEPARATOR, 4-GAL.\ncapacity, also power saw. \u2014\nPhone 352-2866. -20B-219\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,  ETC.,  FOR   SALE\nFORMER DENTAL OFFICE\nfor rent (less equipment). \u2014\nVery good location. Also 3-\nroom office space across hall\nfrom dental office. Reasonable\nrents. Write Polly Sapriken,\nR.R. 2, Nelson, phone 352-6193.\n-214-216\n2 ROOMS, FURN.,  SUITABLE\nfor working girl. Ph. 352-2696.\n\u2014208-tfn\nSLEEPING ACCOMMODATION\navailable; kitchen privileges;\nclose lo bus route. Female preferred. Phone 352-3228.\n-213-218\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS AND\nsuites, dishes, linen supplied;\nparking  171 Baker St. -35-tfh\nMARIANNE Ap\"a\u00a5tMENTs7^\nAttractive suites   Ph  352-3217.\n-144-tfn\nAVAIL. OCT. 1: PLEASANT 1-\nbclrm. furn. house near Baker\nSt. Adults only. Phone 352-5215\nmornings, or 352-2155.\u2014211-tfn\nBEFORE YOU SELL OR LIST\nyour Nelson or North Shore\ndwelling, Inquire about our\nservices. We buy tor cash, sell,\ntrade and appraise at fair\nmarket value. Also we have\nmortgage facilities lo help you\nget all or most part cash. \u2014\nT. D. Rosling & Son Ltd., 568\nWard St., phone 352-3581. Real\nEstate Is our only business.\n\u2014214-225\nDELUXE 4-BEDROO.M HOME,\ncentrally located. 2 bathrooms,\nbuilt-in stove. Phone 352-5030\nor 352-2041. -214-tfn\nIN ROSSLAND \u2014 3-BEDROOM\nhouse. Very reasonable. Write\nCedarco, Rossland, B.C.\n     -209-214\nROOMS FOR RENT BY DAY\nweek or month at the Royal\nCanadian Legion. Nelson.\n-158-tfn\nNORTH SHORE MOTEL OPEN\nfor winter rentals. Ph. 352-7722.\n\u2014207-tfn\nSMALL    FURN.    AfR    COND.\nsuite. Ph. 352-2015 or 352-2407.\n-208-tfn\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED, BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Nelson. Ph 352-2425.\n-231-tfn\nWANTED: 2 OR 3-BEDROOM\nhouse In or out of city limits.\nPhone 352-7084. -208-214\nIN SLOCAN PARK, 3 BDRM.\nhome. Carport and garage, full\nbasement, beautifully landscaped. Good location, close to\nschool and stores, must be\nseen to he appreciated. Phone\n226-7272. \u2014207-218\nTOMATOES FOR SALE -\nPhone 359-7760. \u2014210-215\nTEISCO AMP. EXCEL. COND.\nPhone 352-3709. \u2014212-217\nSTOKER, FULLY AUTOMATIC\n\u2014 Phone 352-5696.      -213-218\nTELESCOPE    FOR    SALE  \u2014\nPhone 352-3477. -214-216\nBABY CARRIAGE AND CRIB.\nPhone 825-9995. -214-216\nCHOICE CHRISTINA LAKE\nproperty. 15 rains, from water.\n4 acre parcels. Will sell one\nparcel separately or four together Water main on property. Phone 442-8877, Grand\nForks. \u2014205-230\nIF THE PAYMENTS ON THE\nhouse you sold don't come In\nfast enough to meet your need,\nwe could buy the balance\nfrom you. We pay In cash.\nBox 374, Trail. B.C.    \u2014115-tfn\nFURN. IISKP. RMS. KIT. AND\nbath. $45.00. On Baker St.\nPhone 352-7774. -212-217\n2   SLEEPING   ROOMS,   SUIT-\nable for students. Ph. 352-3347.\n-214-216\nOFFICE   SPACE   AVAILABLE\n(or rent. W Kalyniuk Agencies\n-206-tfn\niContinued Next Column)\nSTAMPS STOLEN\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Theft\nof stamps valued at $4,000 from\nthe collection of Dr. M. R.\nKlemln has been reported to\npolice. The doctor said that only\nexpensive stamps were taken\nand less expensive stamps left\nbehind.\nUSED LINCOLN WELDER\n200   amp   Continental   Liquid\nCooled Portable Welder mounted   on   wheels   with   trailer\nhitch, $475.00.\nSTEVENSON\nMACHINERY LTD.\n510 Latimer St.     Ph. 352-3561\n-214-214\n1958 INTERNATIONAL DUMP\ntruck, 1958 Massey-Ferguson\ntractor and backhoe; also miscellaneous parts Ph Castlegar\n365-5917 or 365-3158.     -161-tfn\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey Ferguson, New Holland new and used farm equipment. Parts, sales and service\nPhone 356-2254. Creston, BC\n-233-tfn\nSEEK IDENTITY\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Police\nare seeking the identity of a\nwoman, aged about 70, whose\nbody was found floating in the\nwater near Sasamat Sunday. A\nresident told police he saw the\nwoman sitting on the beach\nshortly before her body was discovered in the water.\nHARD TO BOIL\nOstrich eggs often reach from\nsix to seven inches in length\nand from four to six inches in\ndiameter and require about 40\nminutes to boil.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nWRECKING '57 RAMBLER, '53\nChev Pickup. '56-'59 FordB,\n'55-'61 Chavs, '60 Chev Pickup, '56-'58 Ford Station Wagon.\n'87 Volkswagen, '59-'60 Renault. '56-'57 Bulck, '55-'56 Plymouth. '60 1HC 4x4. Good\nmotors: '56 Chev. 265 V8, 'SB'S? V8 automatic Rambler\n'57 Ford V8f and 6 cylinders.\nCottonwood Wrecking Service,\nBox 382. Nelson, Ph. 352-5815\n-140-tfn\nFREE INSPECTION DO YOU\nrequire a business location\nwith 120 feet on highway and\nnear Baker St.? Call William\nKalyniuk Agencies Ltd., phone\n362-2425. -285-tfn\nBUSINESS. 30-FT.. ON BAKER\nSt.: building 2-storey frame.\nAll this for under $25,000 \u2014\nPlease contact Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies Ltd. Ph. 352-2425.\n\u201497-tfn '\nMUST SELL! '63 AUSTIN\nHealey Sprite, 40,000 miles,\nnew Michelin tires, new trans.,\nradio, hard top conv. Good\npaint, motor etc. Cris Green,\nCrawford Bay, B.C. Phone\n227-9209, -212-214\nFOR SALE OR TRADE - 1955\nInternational '5-Ton, flat deck:\n1955 Chev. Mi-Ton Pickup; 1957\nMeteor 6 Ranchwagon. Apply\nQuality Produce, 79 Gov't Rd.,\nNelson, B.C. -213-218\nBY OWNER: 3-BDRM. BUNGA-\nlow,   Lakeside  property.   Hot\nwater heating; full basement.\n102 Belinsen St. Ph. 352-3388.\n\u2014213-218 I\nFor commercial or business\ndevelopment, corner property\n100 ft. Front St. Call 352-7565.\n \u2014212-214\n2-BDRM. HOME ON 7 ACRES\nat Longbeach. Access to beach\nPhone 352-5215 mornings or\n352-2155 after 3 p.m. \u2014194-tfn\n3-BDRM. HOUSE IN SALMO,\nnear High School. Double lot.\n$4500. Contact 357-9328.\n\u2014214-219\n1960 PONTIAC PARISSIENNE\n2 dr. convert. New roof. Newly\npainted. Motor, auto, trans,\nfront end rebuilt. New rubber.\n$1,200.00 or nearest offer. Ph.\n357-9451. -212-217\n'65 OLDSMOBILE DYNAMIC 88,\n2 dr. H.T. 425 auto. P.S. and\nP.B. and many more Olds-\nmobile luxury options. 28,000\nmiles. Ph. 367-7206.      -207-218\nFOR SALE-1S62 VAUXHALL 4-\ndoor sedan Good running order, good rubber. Clean Inside\nand out   Phone 352-3553.\n-145-tln\nCHOICE VIEW LOCATION   - |\n75 ft. frontage on upper side\nof View St.   Phone 352-7435.\n\u2014209-214\nOWNER TRANSFERRED:\n\u2014  must sell 2-bdrm.   home.\nPhone 352-3033. \u2014211-216\n.46 ACRE BULLDOZED VIEW\nlot. Ridgewood Road. Phone\n352-2433. \u2014214-239\nSALMO PROPERTY FOR SALE\n\u2014 Phone 368-8051.       \u2014210-221\nWANTED TO RENT\n-208-219\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF\n58c. cut and wrapped Sides\nof grain-led pork. 36c, cut and\nwrapped. 39c Home cured\nHams and Bacon Delivery\nweekly to Nelson. Castlegar.\nTrail and Salmo Newdan\nFarms. Creston, B.C Ph 358-\n9901 -98-tln\nTHREE SINGLE AXLE DUMP\ntrucks; one single axle dump\ntrailer. Phone 352-6044.\n-210-215\n'53 AM PONTIAC 2-DR. H.T. -\nRadio, new tires, good running\norder. $125. Phone 825-4627.\n-213-214\n3-BEDROOM HOME URGENT-\nly required by recently transferred federal government employee. Fairview area preferred. Please ask for Al. Saviskoff at 352-3155 between 8\nam. and 4:30 p.m., or 352-3185\nafter 5 p.m. \u2014213-218\nWe Can\nSAVE\nYou money on Plumbing\nFREE\nPlan and layout service\nPlastic and copper in stock\nat our Nelson store\nSimpsons-Sears -tl-tfn\n17' BOAT WITH CABIN, 25-H.P.\nelectric start motor, controls\nand trailer, $600. Phone 352-\n7132 after 3 p.m.      -214-216\nWANTED TO RENT - BOXT-\nhdu6e near Nelson, preferrably\nwith hoist, for 19' boat, Phone\n352-6946. -213-215\n10' PLYWOOD CARTOP BOAT\n$85. No. 5, Shady Lane Cabins.\n-210-215\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM   AND   BOARD   AVAIL-\nable fnr 2 girls. Ph. 352-5203.\n-213-217\nHUG IN ELECTRIC CASH REG-\nister. 4 totals; good working\ncondition. New $1250. Sale\nprice, $640. Apply Marshall's\nHilltop Grocery, R.R. 1, Na-\nkusp. B.C. \u2014214-h\ntop  quTlTty  CHOICE\nyoung   beef.   Order   now   for\nyour  freezer.   Side,   cut   and\nwrapped, 56c lb. Ph. 352-0866.\n -208-233\nSLIGHTLY USED, ONLY FEW\nmonths old, French provincial\nfurniture for sale. Must go.\nCall after 5:30 p.m. at 352-3328.\n-213-215\nMOTORCYCLE FOR SALE 1964\nBMW 600 cc. Good cond. Must\nsell. Can be seen at Markin\nEquipment. -210-217\n3-BDRM. HOUSE, BY OCT.  1;\nturn,   or  unfurn,   in   Nelson\narea.   Phone  352-3841   before\n5 p.m. or 352-6364 after  5.\n\u2014209-214\n1955   AUSTIN   A-50  SEDAN  -\nGood condition.  Ph. 352-5443.\n-214-216\nPLASTIC PIPE - LOWEST\nPrices Mac's Welding and\nEqiupment Co Ltd . 514 Railway Street. Nelson. B.C.\n-149-tfn\nDRY   CLEAR   CHICKEN   MA-\nnuro. 50c per sack or 65c delivered.   Ph.   229-4665   evens.\n-212-217\niContinued Nett Column)\nGOOD '57 METEOR SEDAN. -\nV8, auto., P.S.. P.B. $276.00.\nPhone 352-6463. -214-216\n'49 AUSTIN PICKUP, $30- '67\nFord station wagon, $200. \u2014\nPhone 825-4482. -213-215\nr54 PONTIAC 4 DR. GOOD\nrunning order. Best offer accepted.  Ph. 352-2510. -212-214\n1964 CORVAllYcONVERTIBLE.\nAutomatic, radio. Phono 359-\n7792 after 6 p.m.       -210-215\n1959 AUSTIN GYPSY. 4-WHEEL\ndrive.  Phone 352-2571.\n-211-tfn\n1967 NORTON ATLAS MOTOR-\nblke. 750 cc   Phone 223-8224.\n-211-216\n1857 CHEV. V8, IN GOOD CON-\nditlon. Phone 352-7686.\u2014211-216\nPERSONAL\nA A   MEETS 8 P.M   FRIDAY.\nSelkirk Health Unit   Information, phone 352-3458   Box 465\n-144-tfn\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\nGARAGE CLOSE TO 500 BLK.\nof Carbonate St. Ph. 352-7991\nbefore 8 a.m. or after 5 p.m.\n-214-215\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR SALE-QUALITY CHIN-\nchlllas from ribbon-winning\nstock. Apply Norman Chapde-\nlalne. Box 192, Waneta Road,\nTrail, B.C., phone 368-9281.\n-209-214\nA R T I F IC1AL BREEDING -\nDairy and beef cattle. Phone\n352-6874. J. DeJong, Nelson.\n-202-tfn\nCHESTNUT QUARTER HORSE\nmare, 8 yrs. old. Phone 355-\n.2286, Slocan, B.C.      -213-215\n352-3552\nJLPA41JU\nTHE RIGHT THING TO DO!\nIF YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL!\nThe capabilities of Want Ads are\nalmost limitless. You can buy (or\nsell) big things like houses or 10-ton\ntrucks or even mountains, if you\nwish. And, just as easily, you'll find\nbuyers for more modest sized items\nlike jewelery or roller skates or baby\nbuggies. One thing that isn't big is\n\u2022 \u25a0\nthe cost of a Nelson Daily News\nWant Advertisement.\nDIAL 352-3552\nNiHsmt lath} $>wa\nit Happened in Canada\nFOR SALE-1 COW, 2nd \u20acALF,\ngood milker. Ph. 365-5533.\n-208-217\nAIRCRAFT  FOR  SALE\nPIPER PA-22 TRl-PACER. LOW\ntime, excellent condition. Good\npanel ARC 300 Nav'Comm.\nradio. $5000, less $500 without\nradio. Ph. 352-2521 or 352-2342.\n -209-214\nPIPER PA-18-A, 135 HP Super Cub 100 hours ita.-t major $5500 Phone\" 352 3175- Nelson. Trades accepted     180-tfn\nCANARD\noP\nC- SHARP\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., SEPT. 13, 1967\nOur\nSCHOOL SUPPLIES\nInclude\nMATH SETS\nSET SQUARES\nCOMPASSES\nFRENCH CURVE SETS\nSLIDE RULES\n18 INCH RULERS -\nENGINEERS RULERS\nCheck Al\nMAMN\nDRUGS LTD.\nDANCE REGISTRATION\nNELSON DANCE  THEATRE\n3 Y'ears and Up\n\"Classes commence Sat., Sept. 16.\nPHONE   352-7435\n-212-216\nSOCCER STANDINGS\nLONDON   iCPi\u2014Old   Country.     r    -      Division IV\nsoccer leaders after Saturday's L,...,.\nmatches: (Chesterfield\nSouthend\nAldershot\nLincoln\nCrewe Alex\nF APt Hartlepools\n5  1  1  14    3 11 Brentford\n5  1   1  15  1111 Halifax\n0 2 13  11 10 Newport\n1 2  15    8 9 Wrexham\n4  1 2 13   8 9 Swansea\n1   2   12    8   9 Luton T.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nW T L\nLiverpool\nTottenham\nSheffield W\nNott. F    \u25a0\nMan.  City\nArsenal   .\nSunderland\nEverton\nSouthampton\nStoke\nMan. United\n3 2 2 11\n3 1 3 11\n3 1 3\n2 3 2\n2  3   1\n1 0  11\n1 0   10\n2 0 12\n1 1    9\n2 1  10\n2 1    4\n5   0   2     9\n2   2 16\n2 2 19\n2  2 18\n2   2 17\n2   2 16\n17  14\n8    7\nDivision II\nQueens PR\nBlackburn\nBlackpool\nCrystal P\nBirmingham\nBolton\nIpswich\nPortsmouth\nDerby\nCardiff City\n1 14\n1 9\n1 10\n1 14\n0 15\n1 14\n10\n4 11\n3 11\n5 10\n4 9\n2 0\n0 2\n3 1\nDivision III\nPeterborough\nReading\nTorquay\nWalsall\nBournemouth\nSwindon\nColchester   U\nWorld Briefs\nTHOMSON IN CHAIR\nTOKYO i Reuters)\u2014Lord\nThomson. Canadian-born British newspaper magnate, will be\nchairman of a forum on tourism and the press here Oct. 6-7.\nit was announced Monday.\nBULLETS 'CHASE' BOY\nTORONTO   iCPi-A   Toronto\npoliceman will have to explain\nto  his  superiors W'hy he fired\ntwo warning shots in a suburban  park  here  Saturday while\n9 chasing  a  12-year-old boy sus-\n8 pected  of vandalism.  The boy\n7 has been charged with juvenile\n7 delinquency   by   causing   mali-\n7 cious damage to the roof of a\n6 changing   room   at   a   public\n6 swimming poool.\nNews of the Day\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nin next day's publication.\nRATES: 35c line, 45c line bold (ace type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nEAGLES MEET TONIGHT\n8 P.M.\n-72-h\nDual  Controls.  Phone  352-5252.\nNELSON  DRIVING  SCHOOL\n-158-h\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL - 8\nP.M.\n-30-h\nSenior hockey tickets at Cutler's\nNews.  30%   off.\n3 payments, 22 games. $27.00\n-209-229\nCWL  Bake  Sale   Saturdav.\nSept.  16. at Sterling Home\nFurnishers.\n-214-h\n- Patients Jo. Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have the\nDaily News sent to them every\nmofBing at 45 \"cents per week\nPhone 352-3552. Circulation De-\npartment^ Daily News.       -30-h\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nClosing prices supplied by\nDoherty, Roadhouse & McCuaig Bros., Trait and Nelson, B.C.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi 9:12\nAsbestos 24.75\nAlgoma Steel 24.25\nAlta Gas Trunk 37.00\nAluminum\nArgus\n  ; Argus C Pfd\nNelson Chamber of Commerce I Bank of Mont\ngoodwill  reception   and   dinner ] Bank of N.S\nwith New Westminster Chamber.\nPeebles'. 6:15 p.m. Friday, Sept.\n15. Ladies welcome. $4.00 each.\n-214-h\nRubbermaid Slide-Out Drawers\nSpecials\n9\"-$2.98    14\"-?3.98    16\"\u2014$4.50\nVegetable  Drawers,   $4.95\nStorage Turntable, $1.98\nWOOD VALLANCE HDWE.\n-214-214\n28.75\n14.75\n9.75\n13.12\n14.87\n47.12\n37.00\n20.75\n20.00\n64.00\n16.12\n25.50\nNaugahyde, 54\" wide; brown,\nbeige, tangerine, blue, at 2.95 vd\nSTERLING FURNISHERS'\n-213-214\nJensen will be doing grave\ncovers and markers in Russian\ncemeteries, Kootenav district. \u2014\nPhone Wishloff, 365-7087.\n-214-h\nFall Sale\nOutboards \u2022 Boats - Motorcycles\nMotorcycle Centre\n902 Front St. Nelson. B.C.\n-210-221\nCould YOU Help?\nBrownies, 7-10 yrs. Guides 11-14\nyrs.. Rangers 15-18 yrs.\nLeaders required for Nelson\narea. Fall training sessions for\npersons interested at Nelson\nScout Hall Thursday, Sept. 14,\n3-5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m., Friday.\n9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., by diplomaed prov. trainers. For further\ninformation, phone  352-6379.\n.    . -214-214\nBell Telephone\nB.A. Oil\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A\nBC. Telephone\nBurns & Co.\nCalgary Power\nCan.   &D. Sugar 23.50\nCan. Cement      39.00\nCan. Iron 22.50\nCdn.  Breweries   8.12\nCdn. Canners 12.25\nI Curtiss Wright     1.60\nCan. Industries 16.50\nI Can. Imp. Bank 14.00\n[ Cdn. Pacific Ry. 62.12\nChemcell\nClairtone\nCol. Cellulose\nCominco\nCons. Paper\nCons. Paper Wts\n10.62\n7.87\n4.05\n29.25\n34.12\n5.95\nPIANO LESSONS\nStudio now open. Ph. 352-5909.\nStudents are requested to confirm their time. Mrs. Ann Boswell. 609 9th St., phone 352-5909.\n-214-214\nH. W. HERRIDGE\n\"THE MEMBER FOR\nKOOTENAY WEST\"\nCBC-TV   SHOW   SEPT.   14TH.,\n6:30 P.M.\n-214-215\nCrestbrook Tbr     7.00\nDist. Seagrams   38.50\nDome Pete 61.12\nDom. Bridge       17.25\nCARD OF THANKS | Dom. Foundries 23.75\nIn grateful appreciation of the Dom. Stroes        17 62\nwords of sympathy and acts of I D  Tar   Chem    13 25\nkindness   of   many   wonderful | Dom. Textiles     24.50\nfriends in the loss of our mother! Eddv Match Co.   30.00\nand grandmother.  Mrs.   H.  E.  Eddy Paper 16 25\nDoelle. - The Mcintosh family.; Falconbridge       88.00\nThe Lynch (anuly.   Famous Plavers 36.00\n\u2014214-2141 Fanny Farmer    43.00\nr-,\u00bbr.\u201e..  .\u201e\u2122\u201e\u201e ' Ford Motor Co. 55 00\nfflr2RAL NOTICE Ford of Canada mm\nSBtTNEY-At Riverview Hos-  Gen. Steel Wares 7.50\npital, Essondale, B.C.. Sept. 10.  Goodvear 206 00\nVera, aged 65. Funeral services Greyhound Lines 13.75\nto leave Passmore Community Gt. Lakes Power 21.00\nHall at 2 p.m. Wednesday. Sept.  Home Oil A    '   20.87\n13.   Interment   Perrys   Siding, Home Oil B        22.00\nCemetery. Trail - Castlegar' Fu- Hudson Bay Co. 18.75\nneral Homes in care of arrange-. Husky Oil\nments. I Husky Oil Wts\nIndustrial\nDOLLAR UP i Imperial Oil\nNEW Y'ORK iCP) \u2014 Canadian   Imp. tobacco\ndollar  up   1-16  at   92   63-64   in\n  I terms of U.S. funds. Week ago\nCENTENNIAL PLAYERS       92 55.64. Pound sterling unchang-\nA Canadian Universities Theatre J ed at g2 13.32\nproject, present 2_one-act plays: |\t\n19.00\n10.00\n22.50\n65.75\n14.50\n15.87\n'Arnold Had Two Wives\"\n\"Les Fourberies de Scapin\"\nSunday. Sept. 17, 8:15 p.m.,\nCivic Theatre.\nAdults $1.25   Students 75c\n-209-h\nMONTREAL (CP)-U.S. dollar in terms of Canadian funds\nwas down 1-16 at $1.07 9-16.\nPound sterling was down 4 at\n$2,994.\nfijujyinjt}. -Ssdiinq. -cfknibtj^.\nMail Your Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nn\nPLEASE NOTE:\nThe actual number of lines any given\nad will occupy when published depends\nupon the number of words used arid the\nlength ol the words.\nIt is possible therefore that an ad with\na substantial percentage of lengthy words\nin comparison to short ones, will, when\npublished, occupy a greater number of\nlines than indicated on the form above.\nThe form itself is only intended to be\nused as an indicator of the approximate\nprobable cost of any given ad.\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND  LINE\nTHIRD  LINE\nFOURTH   LINE\nFIFTH   LINE\nSIXTH  LINE\nSEVENTH   LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\nPut one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word)\nPut address or phone number in the ad.\nBox number eount as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE APPROXIMATE COST,\nUSE THIS TABLE:\nPer\nLine:\n1   Insertion\t\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n     .23\n     .40\n     .51\n     72\n 2.34\nNon-Consecutive   Insertions   25c   a   Line   Per Time.\n\u2022 Minimum Charge Is Two Lines.\n\u2022 Add 15e for Box Number.\n\u2022 Take Advantage of the low 6-times rate\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nYOUR  NAME\nADDRESS  \t\nNo. of days ad to run ,\nBill Me _\nPayment Enclosed \t\nMaon SatUj T$ms\nClassified Advertising Department\nBox 700\nNelson, B.C.\nluff. Minerals\nInl. Nat. Gas pfd 17.75\nInland Nat. Gas 11.00\nIntl. Utilities       38.12\nInt. Nickel 108.25\nInterprov. Pipe   21.62\nInter. Pipe Wts 10.75\nInterprov. Steel\nJefferson Lake\nLaurentlde\nLoeb\nLoblaw B\nMagna Electric\nMassey Ferg.\nManagement\nMolson Brew A\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nN. & Cent Gas\nPacific Pete\nPrice Bros\nPower Corp.\nQue. Nat. Gas\nRank Org.\nRoyal Bank\nRapid Grip\nRapid Grip A\nRothmans  -\nShell Oi!\nShell Oil Wts.\nShoppers City\nSimpsons\nSlater Steel\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada\nToronto Dom.\nTexaco\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 19.75\nTrans Can Pipe 31.50\nT. Can. Pipe Wts. 8.65\nUnion Carbide    20.25\nUnion Gas of C. 15.37\nWalker-Gooder.    36.75\nWestcoast Trans. 27.25\nWeston Geo. A   18.50\nWoodwards A     16.25\nZenith Elect.        2.15\nMINES AND OILS\nAdvocate 2.35\nAetna Inv. .55\nAgnico 1.29\nAnglo Amer. Moly .34\n3.8\n48.25\n4.50\n14.00\n7.62\n16.50\n21.12\n2.25\n22.25\n15.00\n33.12\n54.37\n12.75\n17.12\n11.87\n10.50\n10.50\n6.62\n16.62\n5.75\n8.00\n28.75\n30.00\n12.50\n4.30\n34.75\n11.00\n48 00\n22.87\n13.75\n32.00\nAtlantic Coast\nAunor\nBarnat\nBethlehem Cop.\nBanff Oil\nBralorne\nBrunswick\n.72\n2.36\n.34\n6.10\n15.75\n1.54\n5.80\nCdn. Export Gas   4.85\nCdn. Gridoil\nCdn. Homestead\nCampbell Chib\nCampbell  R.L\nCan. Delhi\nCassiar Asb.\nCentral Del Rio\nCentral Patricia\nChimo\nCoch. Will\nCons. Halhwell\nCons. Rambler\nConwest\nCopperman\nCopper Corp.\nCraigmont\nDenison\nDickenson\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nFirst Maritimes\nFargo\nFrobex\nGt. Plains Dev.\nGiant Mascot\nGiant Vel.\nGranduc\nGunnar Mines\nHastings\nHighland Bell\nHollinger\nHudson Bay Mg. 62.00\nHudson Bay Oil  37.50\nHydra Ex .18\nIron Bay 3.75\n'so 1.36\nJaye Explorations .19\n6.35\n4.10\n7.25\n19.00\n2.30\n16.25\n23.50\n1.21\n.90\n.30\n.65\n1.24\n5.80\n.28\n.60\n11.62\n28.75\n2.98\n1.40\n5.30\n1.66\n4.80\n4.15\n16.12\n1.22\n7.85\n5.55\n1.95\n1.50\n12.75\n27.00\nKerr Addison\nKey. Anacon\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\nLeitch\nLittle Long Lac\nLorado\n14.12\n.77\n32.00\n10.75\n8.75\n1.75\n.85\n9.25\n25.00\n24.75\n37.75\n29.00\n15.75\n9.81\n13.25\n15.00\n47.25\n37.25\n21.25\n23.50\n65.00\n16.50\n25.75\n24.00\n39.75\n22.62\n8.25\n12.50\n1.65\n17.25\n14.25\n62.25\n11.00\n8.00\n4.15\n29.00\n34.37\n6.10\n7.25\n38.75\n61.75\n17.50\n23.87\n17.75\n13.37\n25.00\n30.50\n16.50\n88.75\n36.87\n49.00\n59.00\n167.00\n7.87\n210.00\n13.87\n21.12\n21.00\n22.12\n19.00\n19.25\n10.25\n22.75\n65.87\n14.62\n16.12\n18.05\n11.25\n38.25\n108.75\n21.75\n10.87\n3.90\n48.75\n4.60\n14.12\n7.75\n16.87\n21.25\n2.50\n22.75\n15.50\n33.25\n54.50\n13.00\n17.37\n12.00\n10.62\n10.75\n6.75\n16.87\n6.00\n9.25\n29.12\n30.25\n12.62\n4.45\n35.00\n11.37\n48.25\n23.00\n14.12\n32.37\n20.00\n31.75\n8.75\n20.50\n15.50\n37.12\n27.75\n13.62\n17.00\n2.20\n2.40\n.59\n1.30\n.344\n.79\n2.39\n.35\n6.15\n16.25\n1.60\n5.95\n4.90\n7.00\n4.25\n7.30\n19.87\n2.85\n16.50\n23.75\n1.25\n.91\n.89\n.67\n1.28\n5.85\n.29\n.63\n11.75\n29.12\n3.00\n1.50\n5.95\n1.70\n4.90\n4.25\n16.37\n1.24\n8.00\n5.60\n2.00\n\u2022 1.59\n13.00\n27.50\n63.50\n37.62\n.20\n3.85\n1.39\n.20\n14.25\n.89\n33.00\n11.00\n8.95\n1.76\n.90\nMadsen 1.60\nMalartic .55\nMattagami Lake 13.87\nMidcon\nMclntyre\nMcWaters\nNogul\nNational Pete\nNew Conex\nNew Hosco\n.44\n79.00\n48.00\n4.10\n2.75\n5.75\n1.84\nNew Que. Raglan 4.1\nNorgold Mines\nNorlex\nNormetal\nNorth Can. Oil\nNorthgate\nOpemiska\nOrchan\nPermo Gas\nPetrol O & G\nPickle Crow\n.0B4\n.184\n3.80\n5.60\n8.00\n9.75\n2.58\n.30\n.62\n.26\nPCE Explorations 1.80\nPine Point\nPlace Gas\nPlacer\nPatino\nPreston\nQuebec Lithium\nQue. Manitou\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRanger Oil\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algom\nRoman Corp.\nSan Antonio\nSarimco\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTorbrit\nTriad Oil\nTribag\nUnion Oil\nUnited Buff Add\nUnited Canso\nUnited Keno\nUpperCanada\n51.50\n3.25\n34.75\n9.50\n21.00\n1.77\n.22\n7.40\n.54\n4.10\n1.30\n1.55\n33.62\n26.00\n.22\n-.194\n4.60\n.73\n3.60\n6.65\n3.65\n4.85\n.56\n2.10\n1.12\n44.50\n.54\n3.50\n5.65\n1.32\nWest Beaver Ldg .09\nWestern Mines 2.55\nWright Harg.\nWilroy\nZuiapa\n1.00\n.91\n.18\n1.65\n.60\n14.12\n.46\n80 00\n51.00\n4.15\n2.98\n5.85\n1.90\n4.85\n.094\n.19\n3.85\n5.65\n8.10\n10.00\n2.60\n32\n.66\n.28\n1.82\n52.00\n3.35\n35.25\n9.75\n21.37\n1.85\n.224\n7.45\n.59\n4.20\n132\n2.00\n33.87\n26.50\n.23\n.20\n4.65\n.80\n5.80\n6.70\n3.75\n4.90\n.60\n2.15\n1.19\n45 00\n.55\n3.60\n5.85\n1.36\n.094\n2.72\n1.40\n.98\n.20\nMARKET TRENDS\nVancouver\nSfocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBurrard Mort.      3.25\nGrowers A 3.00\nGrowers B 2.50\nOkan. Helicopters 3.40\nSun Pub. A 30.00\nInt. Brew. B\nPacific Western 11.25\nMONES AND OILS\nAce Mining\nAnok\nArctic Mining\nArlington Silver\nBethex\nBlue Star Mines\nBrenda\nBuchanan Mines\nButtle Lk Mines\nCascade Moly\nCoast Copper\nCons. Skeena\nCons. Standard\nCont. Potash\nCopper Soo\nCrown Silver\nCroyden\nDolly Varden\nDundee\nDynasty\nEarlcrest\nEndako\nFuturity Oils\nPlains Pete\nGalaxy\nGem Ex.\nGranisle\nHomestake Silver\nJericho\nJersey Cons.\nKamloops Copper\nLondon Pride\nLornex\nLytton Minerals\nMadrona\nMagnum\nMcKinney Cont.\nMt. Washington\nNew Cronin\nNew Imperial\nNorth. Ventures\nPatricia Silver\nPyramid\nRod. Yellowknife\nRolling Hills\nQuatsino\nSilver Ridge\nSlocan Ottawa\nTay River Mines\nTorwest\nTrojan\nVan. Metal3\nVananda Expl.\nUtica Mines\nWestern Ex\nFUNDS\nAll. Can. Com.\nAll. Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCollect.  Mutual\nCommon. Int.\nDiv. inc. A.\nDiv. Inc. B\nGroup Income\nGrow. Equity\nInv. Int. Mutual\nInv. Growth\nInv. Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual  Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual Growth\nMutual Inc.\nProvident\nTrans Can. Spec.\nUnited Ace.\n.31\n.27\n1.66\n.35\n.45\n.10\n7.00\n.204\n1.32\n1.30\n.55\n.08\n.16\n.12\n.084\n.40\n.57\n.15\n7.70\n.16\n11.25\n.37\n.47\n.26\n.134\n6.20\n.25\n.094\n.31\n.11%\n.12\n6.70\n.68\n.46\n.56\n.234\n.16\n.15\n3.15\n.124\n.27\n3.45\n.37\n.29\n.18\n.13\n.23\n.23\n.40\n.36\n.29\n.13\n4.00\n7.95\n9.83\n6.85\n4.19\n6.83\n10.97\n1.51\n5.16\n4.16\n6.47\n7.55\n10.38\n5.36\n11.76\n5.58\n8.55\n6.13\n6.38\n6.70\n3.60\n11.16\n3.60\n2.75\n3.65\n31.00\n9.75\n12.00\n.32\n.30\n1.68\n.36\n.50\n.11\n7.10\n.21\n1.35\n8.25\n.58\n.09\n.17\n.134\n.09\n.41\n.53\n.16\n7.75\n.17\n11.50\n.39\n.48\n.264\n14\n6.40\n.27\n.10\n.34\n.12\n.13\n6.75\n.69\n.49\n.57\n.17\n.16\n3.25\n.13\n.29\n3.60\n.38\n.30\n.19\n.16\n.24\n.25\n.43\n.38\n.30\n.14\n4.05\n.39\n8.69\n10.74\n7.49\n4.59\n7.42\n1?02\n1.66\n5.68\n4.55\n7.07\n8.21\n1129\n5.83\n12.89\n6.10\n8.93\n. 6.70\n6,98\n7.29\n12.20\nTOLL MAY REACH 500\nNEW DELHI (APi-Uttar\nPradesh state's health minister\ni said Tuesday the death toll in\nthe c o 11 a p s e of Nanaksakar\nDam Friday may reach 5U0. ile\nestimated damage to crops and\npioperty at 100,000,000 rupees\n'$13,000,000).\nTORONTO (CP>\u2014Base metal\nissues made small gains in\nmoderate trading Tuesday\nwhile other major sections\nmoved lower on the Toronto\nStock Exchange.\nCPR lost 44 to 62%. Canadian Pacific Investments, a\nannounced Monday it plans to\nmake a public offering of\nbetween $75,000,000 and $100,\n000,000 in convertible preferred\nshares.\nCIL was down 1 to 17. Bell\nTelephone 4 to 47% and Du\nPont 4 to 28'!.\nClairtone rose 1 to 8. Frank\nH, Sobey, president of Industrial Estates Ltd.. the Nova\nScotia government's industrial\npromotion agency, said Monday\nthat tEL may provide additional capital for Clairtone. Clairtone reported a profit loss for\nthe first six months of 1967.\nChrysler Corp. was up 1 to\n554. Chrysler Corp. of the\nUnited States has announced\nprices for 1968-model cars will\nbe raised by about $133 from\n1967 prices.\nIn base metals, Denison rose\nVa to 794, Pine Point 4 to 52\nand Roman Corp., a holding\ncompany for Denison. % to\n26%.\nAmong western oils. Great\nCanadian Oil Sands was down\nto 14%. Central-Del Rio.\nwhich is 49.9-per-cent controlled\nby Canadian Pacific Investments, lost % to 234.\nOn index, industrials were off\n.54 to 168.10, golds .43 to 154.92\nand western oils .84 to 198.79.\nBase metals rose .04 to 103.85.\nVolume was 4.130.000 shares\ncompared with 4,030,000 traded\nMonday.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Utica\nled the mining issues on the\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nTuesday, a day of moderate\ntrading and rising prices.\nUtica traded 245,550 shares to\nclose at $4.05, up .30. In other\nmining issues, Chataway Explorations rose .20 to .60 on a volume of 229,200 shares, and Merritt Copper traded 82,900 shares\nto close at .37, up .044.\nLeading oil trader was Plains\nPetroleums on a volume of 21,'\n000 shares closing up .01 at .47\nBata Resources fell .04 to .76 on\na volume of 18.134 shares.\nWestern Pacific Products was\nthe leading industrial trader\nwith a volume of 5900 shares but\nclosed unchanged at $7.\nIn other industrials. Pacific\nWestern Airlines climbed .50 to\n$11.87 on a volume of 5450 shares\nand Okanagan Helicopters rose\n.05 to $3.50 on a volume of 2900\nshares.\nAverages: Industrials, 162.80,\nup .51; western mines, 178.11,\nup .53; and pipelines, 146.97,\nup .91.\nVolume was 1,598,458.\nMONTREAL (CP) - CPR\ntumbled 44 points to 624 and\nled the list of most active\nindustrials by trading 13.987\nshares on the Montreal Stock\nExchange Tuesday.\nDenison Mines matched the\nloss with a three point jump to\n78% in moderate trading.\nLosses outnumbered gains\n67-58 on the Montreal market\nand 41-31 on the Canadian Stock\nExchange.\nOne analyst said the tumble\nCPR's common stock price\nwas caused by Canadian Pacific Investments announcement\nO f a $75,000,0OO-$10O,O0O,O0O\noffering of convertible preferred shares.\nHe said many investors feel\nthat the CPI portfolio has provided the most attractive feature of CPR's common stock,\nand is now available alone.\nHe said the current heavy\nselling pressure is being caused\nby investors switching their\nfunds from CPR common to\nCPI preferred.\nCIL SLIDES\nElsewhere on the market,\nCIL slid 14 points following a\ncompany announcement that\nearnings would be substantially\nlower this year.\nIn the senior mining sector.\nInternational Nickel advanced\n14 points to 1084, and Falconbridge % to 89.\nAmong speculative mines and\noils on the Canadian market,\nUnited Asbestos dropped 40\ncents to $6.60, and Alscope slid\n20 cents to $2.00. Consolidated\nQuebec S m e 11 i n s advanced\nseven cents to $2,71 on a volume of 46.240 shares.\nIndustrial volume was 232,000\nand mines and oils traded !,-\n042.060.\nOn index, banks advanced .69\nto 132.80, and industrials were\nunchanged at 170.17. Utilities\nslid 2.25 to 142.73. papers .23 to\n106.74, and the composite index\n.37 to 161.24.\nNEW YORK <AP)-The stock\nmarket Tuesday carved out a\nmoderate gain in a mild recov- j\nery from four straight sessions\nj of irregularity.\nVolume was 9.940.000 shares\ncompared with 9,150,000 Monday.\nThe Dow Jones industrial\naverage produced a small gain\nof 2.13 at 911.75\u2014considerably\nbelow the Aug. 9 peak of 926.72,\nStrength in Chrysler was one\nof the most significant facets of\nthe day's performance. Chrysler rose 1% to 524 as seventh\nmost active stock. It was\nhelped by news of its price\nincreases on the 1968 model line\nwhich will go on sale this week.\nFord advanced 1% to 50%\nHope that settlement of the\nFord strike may be within sight\nwas raised by news that the\ncompany will resume negotiations with the United Auto\nWorkers union Friday after a\nnine-day recess.\nAP AVERAGE UP\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose .8 to 336.2,\nwith industrials up 2.1, rails off\n.2 and utilities up .2.\nTenneco was the most active\nstock,   rising   114   to   314\n139,300 shares.\nGeneral Motors trimmed\nearly gain and closed with an\nadvance of %. American\nMotors dropped %.\nThe New York Stock\nExchange index rose 25 cents to\n$52.84.\nStandard and Poor's 500-stock\nindex rose .45 to 94.99.\nAmong Canadian stocks\nMclntyre Porcupine gained VA,\nAlcan and Massey-Ferguson 4\nCanadian Pacific declined 1%\nDome Mines %. International\nNickel Vi, Distillers Seagrams\n4.\nGENERALLY HIGHER\nPrices were generally higher\non the American exchange. Volume was 5,190,000 shares compared with 4,660,000 Monday.\nThe exchange's index rose 13\ncents to $21.78.\nAmong Canadian stocks,\nPreston rose 4, Canadian Javelin 4. Jupter Corp. lost %,\nScurry-Rainbow Oil 4, Brazilian Light and Power, Canadian\nMarconi and Fargo Oil H.\nWhat stocks did:\nTuea.\nAdvances 716\nDeclines 513\nUnchanged 236\nTotal 1.465\nMon.\n604\n1,481\nMining\nIndustry\nWorried\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Mining\nAssociation of Canada says\nimplementation of the recommendations of the Carter royal\ncommission on taxation would\nhave serious consequences for\nthe mining industry.\nfn a brief presented to\nFinance Minister Sharp, the\nassociation said the industry\nproduces $4,000,000,000 of new\nwealth each year and is responsible for 28 per cent of Canada's commodity exports.\n'Adoption of the commission's proposals would do very\ngreat damage to future prospects and progress of ihe mining industry and thereby to the\neconomy generally,\" the brief\nsaid.\nThe commission based its\nrecommendations for the\nremoval of the existing tax\nstructure as it affects the milling industry on the suggestion\nthat new mine exemption,\ndepletion allowances and prospectors' exemption represent\noutright concessions and have\nno justification on equitable\ngrounds, it said. The commission also believes that the\npresent provisions, as incentives, are inefficient and little\neconomic benefit accrues from\nthem.\n\"The commission is badly\nmistaken on each of these\npoints, and it seriously\nunderrates the impact of its\nproposals.\n\"In particular we are convinced that the economic theroy\non which the commission has\nrelied is inappropriate to the\nactual circumstances faced in\nour economy and is completely\nunreliable as a basis for predicting the probable effect of its\nproposals.\"\nThe association says that if\nthe Carter recommendations\nare adopted the incentive to\nexplore for minerals will be\neliminated, the level of exploration for hew mineral deposits\nwill decline and property examination work will drop.\n\"... The prospect would be\nfor an accelerating decline in\nmineral production in Canada\nas existing reserves are\nexhausted and not replaced.\"\nThe brief said exemption and\ndepletion allowances are necessary for the industry because of\nits high-risk nature and the\nhigh costs of exploration.\nWOMAN GETS TOP POST\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014 Therese\nBaron of Montreal has been\nappointed associate deputy-minister of education in Quebec.\nShe is the first woman to be\nappointed to such a high post in\nihe Quebec civil service. She\nholds a bachelor of arts degree\nand a diploma in literature\nfrom the University of Montreal.\nWarm Up to\nFall in a\nSWEATER\n\u2022 NORDIC PULLOVERS\nand CARDIGANS\n\u2022 BULKY PULLOVERS\n\u2022 ALPACA KNITS\n\u2022 DOUBLE KNITS\nOur Shelves Are Full of the\nSmartest Looking Sweater!\nWe've Had in Years. Come In\nand Look Them Over.\nEMORY'Q\nLTD.     ^\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Grain\nquotes Tuesday (basis Lake-\nhead):\nHigh\nFlax\nOct      351%\nDec     3544\nMay     362%\nJly      359%\nRapeseed\nNov     240\nJan     2364\nMar     2374\nMay     \u2014\nOats\nDec      94%\nMay      934\nBarley\nOct      129%\nDec      127%\nMay     1274\nRye\nOct      1254\nDec     127%\nMay     1344\nJly       -\nLow Close\n345% 347\n348% 3504-%\n357% 359\n3564 359\n237% 237%\n2344 2354\n2354 235%\n- 2364\n94%\n934\n129\n126%\n126\n125%\n1274\n1334\n94%\n93%\n129%\n127%\n1274\n12!%\n1274\n133%\n- 134%\nNet Earnings\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nCanadian Breweries Ltd.,\nthree months ended July 31:\n1967, $4,552,000, 18 Cent* a\nshare; 1966, $3,660,000, 14 cents.\nHudson Bay Co., six months\nended July 31: 1967, $3,615,000,\n27 cents a share; 1966, $4,-\n407,000, 32 cents.\nD. A. Stuart OB Co. LUL,\nyear ended May 31: 1967.\n$571,821, $5.01 a share; 1966.\n$618,019, $5.42.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nCassiar Asbestos, 10 cents,\nplus 5 cents extra, Oct. 27, record Oct. 6.\nHudson's Bay Co., 27 cents,\nOct. 24, record Oct. 2.\nMonarch Fine Food, 124\ncents, Oct. 1, record Sept. 20.\nB.C.  Briefs\nBODY FOUND\nNORTH VANCOUVER (CPl-\nThe body of dentist Dr. Gordon\nWilliam Stewart, 38, of 100 Mile\nHouse was found Sunday near\nthe Lynn Canyon suspension\nbridge. Police said the doctor\nwas reported missing Saturday\nby some friends with whom he\nwas staying.\nNO   BLAME\nLYTTON (CP) - A coroner's\nreport Sunday said that the four\npersons killed July 21 when their\ncar plunged off the Lytton cable\nferry died of drowning by misadventure. Killed were Raymond Mason, 53, of Chilliwack,\nMrs. Angela Oates, 58, James\nAdams, 72, and his wife Harriet.\n68, all of the West Lytton Indian\nReserve.\nWAGES BIGGEST COST\nVANCOUVER (CP) -The\nUniversity of British Columbia\nhas a gross income of $55,400,000\nand gross expenditures of $49,-\n300,000 in the fiscal year ending\nMarch 31, the university reported Monday. Biggest expense\nwas $16,000,000 in wages paid to\nfaculty members and administrative staff.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nW GRAVEC\n'        LIMITED        mt\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nREXALL\nARAL ANTISEPTIC\nBLUE MOUTH WASH\nAND GARGLE\nLong acting Breath and\nMouth Refresher.\n69*\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\n456 Baker St.      Ph. 352-3611\nBox 460, Nelson, B-C.\nkm\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_1967_09_13","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0440236","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; Nelson","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. 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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":""}]}