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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":" OU-SM      !\n0tl 1\n1867 U1967\n.......\n'O'Q IBAfiCCKVA\n\u2022J.S 3M0H 6921\n\u2022an vavNvo\nrlson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the   Kootenay-Cotumhia area\nFORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny and warm Light\n\u00abmds. Low and high at Cranbrook 45\nand 85, Nelson area 55 and 90\nVol.  66\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 28, 1967\n10 Cants\nNo. 108\nKidnappings,\nSlayings\nRock Sardinia\nBy JAMES M. LONG\nROME (AP) \u2014 Bandit-ridden central Sardinia is gripped by fear following\nIts blackest week of ransom kidnappings  and vengeance slayings this year.\nIn a mounting wave of outlawry since Aug. 19, a wealthy Nuoro businessman and the son of a noted Nuoro oculist have been kidnapped.\nA prominent Cagliari racing enthusiast, a head of the Mercedes auto agency for Sardinia, has been shot dead.\nAnother prominent industrialist staggered home exhausted after paying a\nwhittled-down ransom of  10,000,000 lire  about S16.000.\n10 Nations Draft New Monetary\nSystem To Increase World Trade\nThe   crime    wave    was   the\ndefiant   response   of   Sardinian Itl,e Fiat automobile agency for\nbanditry  to  a   massive  crack-1 Niic.ro.  reported  to police  that\ndown   by  4,000   national   police Ifoul' masked men spirited him\nand army troops ordered by the\ngovernment here to stamp out\ncrime on the island after last\nyear's bloodiest record in two\ndecades\nON WAY TO RECORD\nThree  of   the   island's   most\naway from his seaside summer\nvilla.\nThey  demanded  $320,000,  the\nhighest   ransom  demand   in\nnoted Nuro oculist, from his\nvilla al Aritzo.\nTheir ransom demand has not\nyet been disclosed.\nThursday night Gianni Pic-\ncaiu, 36, racing enthusiast who\nhas   the   Mercedes   automobile\nheard from Baghino or the kidnappers since.\nThat same day Nuoro Indus-\nwanted bandits have been killed , ,rialist Giuseppe Catte   bearded\n\u2122u.g.U.n\"gh'.S, \"'.'.'LL0!106:, F!\u201e'e t ^d  haggard   after   11   days   a\n*; prisoner of kidnappers, hitched\nrecent years. Nothing has been agency [or Sardinia, was killed\nby a shotgun blast Irom shrubbery in [ront of his door as he\nreturned to his home in Caglia\nothers, with rewards of 10.\n000,000 lire each on their heads\nhave been captured. But 1967\nwas well on its way to surpass\nthe 1966 record of 41 slain and\n10 major kidnappings.\nLast   Sunday   the   family   oi\nAurelio   Baghino.   63,   who  has\na ride home [rom the bleak hill\ncountry.   Kidnappers   had\nri. Police said there was no\nsign of robbery. They theorized\nit was a vengeance killing.\nThe   week's   abductions\nbrought  the  number of  major\ndemanded   SB0.000   but   finally j ransom kidnappings in Sardinia\nsettled for $16,000. since February to seven. One of\nOn  Tuesday   k i d n a p p e r s j the  seven,  and  two  shepherds\nabducted Gianni  Caocci,  young suspected   of   informing   police,\nlaw   graduate   and   son   o[   a i were slain.\nFour Years In Making,\nPlan Goes to Gov'ts\nFor Final Approval\nBy fOHN LeBM.MC\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 With Canada playing a key role, Ihe top 10 industrial nations of the non-Communist world agreed Saturday night to a reformed system of\ncredit aimed al boosting international  trade.\nThe compromise plan was hummered out in 9' z hours of horse-trading among\nfinance ministers of the \"group of 10,\" who climaxed four years of discussions by\nironing out final differences and reaching unanimous agreement.\nThe new scheme \u2014 when finally approved by the International Monetary\nFund and the parliaments of all Ihe nations involved \u2014 will provide a new credit\nfacility linked to the IMF reserves. Il will be a contingency plan, going into effect\nwhen the IMF decides that one or another country needs more financing for its international   trade.\nTo Make or To Purchase\nMissiles, China Problem\nBy ALAN THOMAS\nHONG KONG (Reuterst-A\nmajor split over guided missile\ndevelopment in China was indicated in reports from Peking\nSunday, less than three months\nafter the country exploded its\nfirst hydrogen bomb.\nRadio Peking said President\nLiu Shao-chi and his supporters\ncalled for reliance on Russia\nfor missiles and even suggested\nthat these be bought from capitalist countries, in opposition to\nIhe development-at-home policy\nof Communist party Chairman\nMao Tse-tung\nMeanwhile, a Hong Kong\nnewspaper reported rival Red\nGuard [actions had resumed\ngun fights in the South China\ncity of Canton last week after\ntheir leaders failed to settle\ndifferences during talks in\nPeking.\nCommenting on the missile\nsquabble, Ihe radio said top\narmy men and leading officials\nof China's defence ministry had\nI met to denounce the \"slavism\" or 1971 and that this could be\n1 policy advocated by Liu and his operational by 1972. The corn-\nsupporters in defence policy mjttee   report]   wWch   (ollmved\nI A United States congressional [ China's first successful hydro-\ncommittee on atomic energy! gen bomb explosion June 17,\npredicted Aug. 2 that China will j said an H-bomb warhead for\nhave   developed   an   interconti- such  missiles  could be  in\nI nental ballistic  missile by 1970' Chinese bands by 1970.\nFinance Minister\nSharp said after the session\nthat for Canada the decision is\n\"one of the most important\ndevelopments that could possibly take place for a country\ngreatly dependent on foreign\ntrade as we are.\"\n\"II some system like this had\nnot been worked out.\" he\nadded. \"I am satisfied that\nworld trade could be greatly\nhampered by shortage of\nreserves.\"\nMitchell' \"\"5 mee\"n\u00a7 ant' \"le amount\nthat might be added to world\ncredit facilities remains unknown until after the plan has\ngone (urther along the line\ntowards   ratification.   The   first\nTwo Skydivers\nDie. 15 Missino\nRCMP Patrols\nTo Be Out\nIn Full  Force\nVANCOUVER <CP) - The\nRoyal Canadian Mutinied Police\nannounced they will crack down\non traffic violators during the\nlong Labor Day weekend.\nln a prepared statement, assistant commissioner G. R. En-\ngel said lhat RCMP patrol cars,\nboth marked and unmarked, and\nsided by radar installations, will\nbe reinforced in all parts of the\nprovince\n\"Strict enforcement will be\nthe order cf the day lor the\nreckless and llagrant violator\not traffic laws. for. in view n[\nIhe growing annual loll of death\nand injury, this is the only\naction some drivers appear to\nunderstand.\" he said.\nHURON, Ohio 'APi-Fifteen\nof 19 sky divers who parachuted through an overcast were\nmissing Sunday after plunging\ninto Lake Erie. Two were\nrecovered safely and two were\nknown dead.\nThe sky divers missed their\ntarget by about 10 miles.\nThey bucked a strong wind as\nthey jumped 20.000 feet from a\nB-25. But the U.S. Coast Guard\nsaid it was not known if the\nwind carried them over the\nlake or if the plane was off\ncourse.\nThere were 21 persons aboard\nthe plane that left Ortner Air\nService Field near Wakeman.\nabout 10 miles south ol Ihe\nlake.\nAfter 19 had jumped, the\nplane made a second pass and;\ntwo others jumped. They landed safely at Ortner Field, t\ntarget area.\nAuthorities refused to identify\nthe pilot of the plane.\nThe bodies were identified as\nDorsie Kitchen Jr., 33, and\nMrs. Patricia Lownsbury. 26.\nboth ot Akron.\nThe coast guard prepared [or\nan all-night search (or the missing 15. An extensive air and\nsurface rescue effort was\nlaunched\nUnconfirmed reports said\nsome of the divers' chutes did\nnot open.\nCANADA HELPS OUT\nThe Canadian delegation\nheaded by Sharp helped bring\nabout one of the major compro-!\nraises that resulted in final\nagreement late Saturday.\nUntil this final meeting, there\nhad been disagreement over the i\nway   countries   might   use   the\nnew   credit   facility.   Some, I\nincluding    Canada,    wanted    ilj\n\"harmonized\"\u2014to have  it used\nat the same rate as a country's\nown   reserves.   Others   wanted\neach country to be able to draw\na   specific   percentage   of   the\nIMF's total allocation to under\nthe new system.\nBaby Dies as\nPotatoes Bum\nROCKFORD, III. (API-\nSmoke from potatoes left\ncooking on a stove killed\n11-month-old Lisa\nMcNaughton early Saturday.\nHer parents, Mr. and\nMrs. James McNaughton,\nwere preparing food when,\npolice said, McNaughton\ncut his h a n d. Mrs.\nMcNaughton ti ok him to\nhospital they added, leaving\nthe potatoes on the stove.\nWhen they returned, the\nhouse was filled with\nsmoke.\nMcNaughton tried unsuccessfully to revive the child\nwith mouth-to-mouth resuscitation\nmove now will be to place it\nbefore the governors of the IMF\nat Rio de Janeiro in the last\nweek of September.\nAfter lhat, it will have to go\nbefore the legislative bodies of\nthe countries involved. The process could take until 1969 before\nthe plan is in operation.\nU.S Treasury Secretary\nHenry Fowler said Sunday the\nplan could spell larger prosperity for rich as well as poor countries. He said the \"odds are\nheavily in favor of it being\naccepted at Rio.\"\nA second major compromise\nmade Saturday was to let\nFrance have its way on what\nproportion of the International\nMonetary Fund voting power\nwould be necessary to activate [\nthe contingency plan once it\nhad been set up.\nThe other countries agreed\nthat 85 per cent of IMF voting\npower would be needed. Since\nFrance and the other countries\nof the European Common Market have 17 per cent, this would\nPLANE AND FANCY\u2014The Experimental Aircraft Association is holding a fly-in\nat Rockford, 111., airport and two of the conversation pieces are a \"pusher type\"\nplane (top) and a kind of \"bat-plane\" (bottom). Pilot and builder Carl Unger\nsits at the controls of his open frame two-seater. Chris Tangya looks over ttM\nDyke Delta JD-2, the bat-plane.\n322 Still Burning\nForest Fire Costs Seven\nTimes as High as 1966\nI JOAO PESSOA. Brazil (Reu- together.\nCanada sidetracked its own Iters I \u2014 Quintuplets were bornj Agreement on this point\ninclination and made the final to a farmer's wife near here j represented a concession by the\nmotion to set up a package deal Mast week, but died within 24 | United States, which makes the\nof the two types, but with the hours, it was learned Saturday, largest contribution to the fund,\nsecond   one   predominant.   Thus:Four boys and a girl were born  Other counlries engaged in the\nVANCOUVER (CP! \u2014 The\nBritish Columbia Forest Service\nreported 322 fires burning Sunday night as the province con-\ngive them a veto of all voted tjnued to smoulder under hot,\ncloudless skies over the weekend.\nover a five-year period a coun\ntry   would  lie  able   to   use  an\naverage 70 per cenf would he a\nceiling.\nNo allocations  were  fixed  al\nnearby Campina Grande | final discussions\u2014in addition to\nThe largest weighed only two j Canada and France\u2014were Brit-\npounds, two ounces. Their lain, Japan, Sweden, Italy, Bel-\nmother. Maria Luis dos Santos. | gium. Holland and West Ger-\n25, was doing well. many.\nThe 2,704 forest fires reported\nthis year have sent fire protection costs soaring to more than\n$3,500,000, nearly seven times\nthe amount spent during the\nsame period last year.\nThe  high  fire hazard,  which\nGuerrillas Taking\nBeating in Rhodesia\nFiremen  Found\nDead in  Tent\nMANIWAKI. Que. fCP> -\nFour Montreal firemen on a\nramping trip in La Verendrye\nprovincial park 150 miles north\nof here were found dead in\ntheir tent Saturday by the\nfather cf one of the men.\nThe dead: Pierre Desstirault,\n3fl. -lean Lambert, 26. Andre\nCharbonneau 30. and Roger\nRanger, 45.\nAn inquest found the deaths\naccidental\nManiwaki is 70 miles north of\nOttawa.\nThe men were fmind in their\ntent nn Kabonga River Provincial Police said a charcoal-\nnnrnme stove was set up inside\nthe tent and the men apparently died of asphyxiation.\nSALISBURY <R eut er M -j\nRhodesian tribesmen aided sol- J\ndiers scouring bush country\nSunday tor Negro nationalist\nguerrillas after fierce fighting1\nnear Victoria Falls, it was offi-:\ncialy reported here\nA government statement said'\nconstant harrying by Rhodesian,\npolice, troops and aircraft is\nputting heavy pressure nn the\nguerrillas, forcing some of\nthem to abandon equipment.\nIt said local tribesmen aided\nthe hunt by reporting the pros-'\nence of strangers to soldiers..\nRoadblocks were set up in the\narea near the junction of the'\nRhodesia. Zambia. Botswana:\nand Southwest Africa frontiers, i\nThe guerrillas, reported on|\ntheir way to South Africa from\nZambia, lost 24 dead in recent\nHghting, according to official\nfigures issued here. Security\nforces suffered six dead and 12\nwounded\nFhe guerrillas were captured\nFriday in addition to 26 taken\nprisoner earlier, the government statement said. More\narrests were made Saturday\nnight, it added\nSecurity men said most of the\nguerrillas were South Africans,\nwere well armed and some had\nbeen trained in Communist\ncountries.\nThe government statement\nsaid some of the guerrillas\nwere running short of food and\nwater\u2014a major hazard at a\ntime when drought has made vegetation sparse and water holes\nlow, if not dry,\nSome sources here claimed\nthat as many as 2,000 trained\nmen wailed in camps in Zambia to cross into Rhodesia and\nthen try to move south to the\nTransvaal in South Africa.\nCong Attacks Kill Civilians;\nBelieved Polling Warning\nSAIGON   iAP)-Viet   Congjplanes over North Vietnam Sat-[TERRORISTS STRIKE\nguerrillas launched deadly mor-; urday. bringing the number \"I     [n addition. Viet Cong terror-\ntar attacks up and down South!U.S.  aircrafl lost last week to jsts struck a handful of militia menl Hill\nFinnish PM\nVisits Canada\nOTTAWA iCP>-Rafael Paa-\nsio, prime minister of Finland,\nbrought the greetings of his\ncountry, celebrating its 50th\nyear of independence, to Prime\nMinister Pearson as he was\nwelcomed   Sunday   on   Palila\nlias forced recreational closures\nof the Kamloops, Vancouver and\nNelson forest districts, is expected to continue as no break\nin the dry weather is foreseen\nuntil mid-September.\nHeavy fines are being levied\nagainst persons found violating\nthe closures. Last week one man\nwas fined $150 and another $200\nfor being in the closed Nelson\nforest district. The maximum\nfine is $300.\nA 25,000 - acre blaze near\nMagna Bay, 180 miles northeast\nof Vancouver, was being fought\nby 500 men but winds and fresh\noutbreaks away from the main\nfire were causing trouble.\nHardest hit were the Nelson\nand Kamloops districts which so\nfar this year have reported 1,771\nfires.   The   Vancouver   district\nhas  had  372   and  the  Print*\nGeorge district 368.\nThe only part of the province\nto escape extensive fire damage\nis the cool, moist Prince Rupert\ndistrict with only 193 fires to\ndate.\nVietnam between midnight and: 15\u2014equalling Ihe worst week ol.posts on the main roads con-! Mr. and Mrs. Paasio were\ndawn Sunday, killing or wound- the air war. in August, 19B6. inecling Saigon and the delta greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Pear-\ning more than 300 persons. | Twenty-two airmen were listed city of My Tho Three outposts I son and External Affairs Minis-\nmost of them civilians | as missing and   an   infantry  position  were]ter Martin as guns fired a 19-\nOne attack blasted a Viet- The new losses brought to 662 overrun with the loss of Hi gun salute and the white and\nnamese capital in the Mekong the number of U.S. planes dead. 30 wounded and 30 weap- blue flag of Finland was broken\nDelta. downed   in   the   air   raids   on 0ns lost. At dawn the Viet Cong\nOfficials   in   Saigon   said   the.North Vietnam. faded    back    into   the   paddy\nattacks   were   the   start   of   a     Military   headquarters   said, fields.\nCommunist   campaign   to   show the enemy mortar attacks were'   The   bloodiest   mortar   attack\nSouth   Vietnamese   that   forces aimed at Can Tho, a city in the]was at Can j^0 me biggest citv\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON     81 48 tr.\nToronto  73 65 .37\nCalgary   83 57 \u2014\nPenticton    88 53 1 \u2014\nVancouver  81 58 \u2014\nWhitehorse ...           64 38 \u2014\nSpokane                     83 64 _\nEdmonton Man\nKinsmen Head\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 Arthur\nJones of Edmonton was elected\nnational president of the Association of Kinsmen Clubs at\nthe final session of the association's 47th annual convention\nSaturday.\nThe convention, attended by\n700 Kinsmen and their wives,\npassed several resolutions. Ont\ncalls for a program to estabish\na greater awareness of Cana-\ndianism throughout Canada.\nOther officers elected were:\nHarry Moll, Montreal, vice\npresident; Bill Bradshaw, Edmonton, co-ordmator; T. Leonard, Edmonton, secretary.\nHal Taggert of London, Ont.,\nis past president.\nsouth of Saigon and headquarters\nout under a cloudy sky.\ngmr. and Mrs, Paasio arrived\nin Ottawa by train after flying\nto Montreal from Finland Saturday.\nToday   Mr    Paasio  will  hold\nArab Nations Split\nOver Oil Embargo\nallied   with   Saigon   could   not Mekong Delta:  an  airfield and\nprovide   full   security   for   next j military   camp   in   the   central fVi r- \"hVrth lhe\"u S andSouth Viet\" Ita,ks    with    Canadian    govern\nSunday's    presidential    election!highlands and on seven posts in nam(,s(J   military   commands in ment officials antl visit a snop\nll')e jipiij, Iping centre in the capital. Later\nthey   will   return   to   Montreal\nOfficials said 46 South Vietna- where Mr\nin the draft agenda, the sources\nsaid, are:\n1.   That   Arab   states   unite\ntheir efforts for the removal of\nfor voters to go lo the polls.      I the country Ithey   will   return   to   Montreal I \u2122^H\u00b0\\indM\"rilohi\"nn\u00b0n \"dx\"!8\"  consequences  of  Israeli\nIn   other   developments,   the;   It has been months since the!    Officials said 46 South Vietna- where Mr. Paasio is to preside rjoi\u201et ctraft agenda (or the Arab aggression in the m'''' a r y'\nU.S.   command   announced   the Communists have made such a j mese were killed and 222 wound-1 at   Finland's   national   day   at \u201e,mmit      \u201e\u201e\u201e,;\u201e\u201e      i^oinnino political and economic fields.\nand that  it  may be dangerous,the sensitive northern parts of\nthe country\nthe!   It has been months since the\nBy JOHN TALBOT\nKHARTOUM, Sudan (Reu-!\nters'\u2014The 13-nation conference\nof Arab foreign ministers!\nagreed Sunday night on a six-\nloss   of   two   more   American I co-ordinated effort.\ned al Can Tho in jusl 10 minutes, i Expo Tuesday.\nBeatles' Manager Epstein Dies at 32\nsummit      meeting      beginning\nTuesday,  but  clashed over\nwhether    to   continue    an    oil\nembargo   against   Britain   and f\nthe United States.\nLONDON (CP)-Erian\nEpstein, the show-business genius who rocketed the Beatles\nfrom an obscure Liverpool jazz\nclub to stardom, was found\ndead in bed Sunday. Epstein\nwas 32 and unmarried.\nPolice, who were called to his\nhouse in London's exclusive\nBelgravia area, did not give the\ncause of death\nWord was rushed to his mil-\n11 o n a i r e proteges, in Wales\nbeing initiated into the mysteries of transcendental meditation\nA  friend of  Epstein  said he\nbases on Arab territory and\nthe co-ordination of Arab international, diplomatic and politi-\nConference sources said Iraq cal policies,\nand Syria urged the Arab SAUDI ARABIA OPPOSED\nnations to maintain the embar- Saudi Arabia led the opposi-\nknew Ihe Beatles manager had ling Epstein tlieir manager with: Cilia Black, the F our most,1 ishi. who nine years ago set up'go against the two Western tion to the continuation of the\nbeen unwell for some months.'a 24-per-cent share of any earn- Gerry and the Pacemakers.; t h e International Meditation powers who, they claim, helped oil embargo, describing it as\nbut did not know the cause of tags. I Billy Kramer and the Dakotas.  Society with the aim of teach- Israel in the Middle East war ineffective, the sources said.\n2.  A long-term  plan  for the\nliquidation of all foreign militar-\nBut Saudi Arabia. Libya and\nirevenue this  would  entail,\nsources said.\nof\nthe\ndeath. The  first   year  was  said   to I Being   part   of   his   entourage!ing the  secret of inner happi-, in June\nHe   said:    \"There   were   no have  showed  a  loss.   At   least! became Ihe symbol of success ness\nuntoward    circumstances   asso-'one   record    company    turned in the pop music world. j    McCartney. Lennon and Har- K\nciated with il.\" them down, saying their sound;    Meanwhile in Bangor. Wales.; rison had received wide public- \u201e,.:'\"'   ,Tre\u00abe     the   loss\nEpstein    first   heard   of   Ihe -later internationally known as the Beatles made news of their ity a few weeks ago when they\nBeatles in 1962 when they were j the   Mersey   beat\u2014would    not own during the weekend when ! admitted having taken LSD.\nplaying   in   a   Liverpool   cellar sell ithey  settled  in  for  a  five-day     Said McCartney Saturday:\nand he was working as a record Tens of millions of records j think-in under the guidance of a \"We don't need it any more 0ne of the main recommen- Britain and the U.S. has been\nsalesman in one of his fathers and several years later both he I Himalayan mystic. Maharishi \u2014we think we're finding other dations of the six-point agenda jn force since June. The\nchain of furniture stores and   Ihe   Beatles\u2014Ringo   Starr. Mahesh Yogi, j ways of getting there.\" '\u00bb   for   tightening   of   the   Arabisources   saj(|   svrja   demanded\nSo many people asked for! George Harrison. John Lennon j McCartney announced Satur-I \"There\" is complete spiritual'economic boycott of nations that the foreign ministers adopt\nrecords by the teen-age group1 and Paul McCartney\u2014were mil- day that he had given up nar- fulfilment. The Beatles found supporting Israel Oil is not definite resolutions on the ques-\nthat he went to the club, and j honaires cotics in favor of the deep med- j drugs gave only a partial, tem- j mentioned specifically tlon   (,ut (aj|e(j to [jnd genera[\nthey drew up a contract mak-!   Epstein   also   has   managed i itation advocated by the Mahar   porary fulfilment. '   Other mam recommendations  support.\nSaudi Arabia also objected to\nwithdrawing Arab funds from\nBritish and American banks\nand had reservations about a\nproposed Arab fighting fund,\nsources said.\nThe   ban   on   oil   exports   to\nt\n \u00abn\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS. MON., AUG. 28, 1967\nDistricts S\non Ambulance Vote\nDr. Bach Assists In\nWorkshop Sessions\nBOSWELL (Staff) - Dr. Marcus Bach, who has a summer\nhome on Kootenay Lake in the\nBoswell area, recently returned\nLongtime Trail\nResident Dies\nStefan (Steve! Turcak of Sas-\nllegar and a longtime former\nresident of Trail, died in the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital, Saturday, aged 70 years. He\nwas born in Potyel, Czechoslovakia, on July 13, 1897 and emigrated from the old country in\n1924 to live at Trail.\nHe was employed as a section\nhand with the CPR for a short\nlime before entering Ihe employ\nof Cominco al Trail. He worked\nin several different capacities\nthere until becoming a carpenter\nin the shipping department, preparing and loading cars. He\nretired in 1962.\nHe resided in Trail from his\narrival in Canada until moving\nto Kinnaird in 1956 and later\nmoved to Castlegar in 1962,\nwhere he has made his home\nsince. \u25a0\nBesides his wife the former\nMrs. Anna Furiak, nee Mikus,\nwhom he married in Trail in\n1956. he is survived hy one stepdaughter: Mrs. Mary Kubinec\nof Fort William, Ont.; a stepson: John Vlcak of Kamloops:\none sister: Mrs. G. C. (Julia)\nCaskey. of Trail; and one\nbrother: -Peter in Czechoslovakia: two sons: Mike and Joe\npredeceased him.\nfrom a ten-day stay m Pawling.\nNew York.\nHe was one of the leaders in\na new project called Spiritual\nTherapy Workshops, which\nbrings together leaders in the\nfield of religion, medicine, nonmedical skills, art and science.\nThe meetings were held at\nHoliday Hills, a lake resort. Two\nhundred delegates from the New\nYork Metropolitan District attended the sessions which were\nsponsored by Unity of New\nYork.\nDr. Bach is director of Ihe\nFoundation for Spiritual Understanding with headquarlers in\nPalos Verdes, California, and\ndevoted many years to research\nin various parts of the world.\nFour of Dr. Bach's fifteen\nbooks were written at his cabin\non Kootenay Lake, and his latest,\n\"The Magic of Living,\" is scheduled for winter publication by\nDoubleday and Co. of New York.\nMUST WATCH MORE\nLUSAKA, Zambia (AP>-\nMore than half the 105 pupils\nwho started the present term at\na new African girls' high school\nhad to drop out because they\nwere pregnant, Education Minister John Mwanakatwe reported in an appeal to parents to\nwatch their daughters more\ncarefully. \"\nMike Koochin\nPasses at ((\nA 66-year-old Winlaw man,\nMike Koochin, died in the Kootenay Lake General Hospital last\nweek, after a long illness.\nBorn in Saskatchewan in December, 1900. he moved to B.C.\nand Brilliant when he was 12\nyears old.\nIn 1940, he went to live at Perrys Siding.\nA member of the Union of the\nSpiritual Community of Christ,\nhe is survived by his wife Mabel,\nthree daughters, Mrs. John (Elizabeth) Stoopnikoff of Shore-\nacres. Mrs. Mike (Lucy) Lebe-\ndow, Brilliant. Mrs. Peter (Helen I Popoff, Winlaw, three sons.\nMike of Robson and William and\nJohn of Perrys Siding.\nMr. Koochin is also survived\nby 21 grandchildren, one great\ngrandchild, two sisters and one\nbrother.\nPollution Move Welcomed, But\nLack of Gov't Aid Disappointing\nProvincial government's announcement ol a new nolicy\naimed at clamping down on\nwater pollution has been received wilh mixed feelings by\nthe many municipal leaders in\nthe province.\nWhile Ihey arc all happy lo\nsee pollution control legislation outlined, they are dismayed thai the provincial government will not help pay for better facilities that will be required.\nMunicipal Affairs Minister\nCampbell said the legislature will\nbe asked at the next session lo\nempower the Pollution Control\nBoard to set new minimum stan\ndards of sewage treatment and I\nto order B.C.'s 138 municipalities to meet them.\nMr. Campbell said the province\nwill not contribute anything to\nthe cost of projects undertaken\nby the municipalities, and it is\nthis which has caused many municipal heads to express disappointment.\nNelson is one of Ihe 40-odd municipalities with no treatment facilities  at which    the    government's    policy    is   principally j 0f legislation for which we have\naimed, been asking, although Ihe refusal\nNelson mayor Louis MaglioV to help financially is disappoint-\ncomment on the announcement' ing. But I don't think il will be\nwas: \"If the government is too difficult for the city to raise\nwilling (o issue   these   orders, the necessary money. The only\nMayors Expect Two Centres\nSet Up Own Service\nThe possibility of a joint ambulance  service  being  set  up  in  the  Castlegar and Kinnaird areas in Ihe near future remains clouded in uncertainty.\nthen they should be prepared | difficulty we have Is the acquir-  ' This is the situation after a vote was taken on the proposal Saturday in the\nlo assist municipalities finan- j ing of the land to put this thing'rural areas 'I' and 'I' in Ihe Central Kootenay Regional District,\ndally in  launching  treatment: on. The land is now owned by the \u2022 In area 'J', where 43 voles were cast, 31 people were in favor of setting up\nprojects.\" j CPR and negotiations have been I the service, and only  12 against.\nMr. Maglio said he was unable|started with them.\" gut in area T, where 112 voted, 81  were against the scheme, as opposed to\nto comment further on Ihe matter until  the  Pollution  Control i\nBoard order had been officially\nreceived.\nLAND PROBLEM\nMickey McEwen, president of\nNelson area Pollution Control!\ncommittee, said, however, \"We\nare very pleased. This is the sort\nMr. McEwen added: \"As lar      ,     28 who signified their approval., wilh three votes spoiled,\nas the committee i. concerned Voting in area T took place at Shoreacres,   Thrums   and   Robson,   while   ln\nwe have col what we have been ,T, ,,     v      , .,    .\na.kingfor.   It   Ii   something \u00b0rea, '  it was at Blueberry\nwhich has got lo be done and\nthe quicker we can get on with\nil the better.\"\nConcern has been shown in\nseveral municipalities over the\nfinancial implications of the order, and it is generally hoped the\nPollution Control Board in making their requests, will have taken economic factors into consideration.\nCreek and Robson.\nThe twin towns of Castlegar\nForest Fire Crisis Eases\nFirefighters Battle   Blaze Near Tye\nted that the people of area T\nhad seen fit to vote againsl a\nservice which was designed to\nprovide protection for the people.\n\"I   can't   understand   their\nreasoning.   Their   decision\nthrows lite whole thing in the\nair   again.   We   in   Kinnaird\nrealize  the  value  of  such  a\nservice, anil if we have to, we\nwill make sure (he ambulance\ndoesn't leave our Boundary.\"\nUnder  a  tentative  proposal,\ncost of the ambulance service\nending Friday were $1,021,200.\nA total of $3,591,600 has been\nspent fighting the 2,704 fires reported since the fire season started May 1. Last year the cost was\n$550,000 for 1,066 fires over the\nsame period.\nNelson  forest districts share\nThe Kootenay fire crisis eased j pared for the forest service pre-\nslightly Sunday as temperatures! diets.\ntumbled and light rain dampen- It forecasts hot dry weather\ned parts of the tinder dry for- for at least another three weeks,\nests. No major change is expected\nBut the fire threat is by no until the second week in Septem-\nmeans over, Forest Service of-j ber says the forecast,\nficials stressed \u2014 and hot dry,   And   although   high humidity\ndays are still forecast. and low temperatures at night I of the total bill is second largest\nHowever, there was plenty of have helped in fighting the pro-1   It stood at $1,119,400 Friday\nbright news for weary officials vince's 322 fires, the fire hazard\nWho  have  been  directing  fire in many parts of B.C. remains'I J C       PirOTinntorc'     MnnQC\nfighting operations from Nelson, extreme. !*\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb'     IIICIiyiNCla       I lUfJCS\nheadquarters of the 30,000 square The recreational closures of\nmile Nelson Forest District.     ' the forests will remain in force.\nToday,   men   and  equipment! the forest service says,\nwill be brought down from the |   Because of the order, hunting By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |   The favorable weather caused\nTo date, there have been 814 fires in the district. Last year the\ncorresponding figure was 357\nwhich cost $39,000 to fight.\nThe only part of the province\nnot reporting extreme conditions\nare the Prince George and\nPrince Rupert districts where\nrain and cooler wealher are predicted.\nand disappointment at the result of the poll in area 'I',\nhave already Castlegar Mayor Bob Mad-\nagreed in principle to the pro- docks said: I frankly believe\nposal of an ambulance service the ambulance service should be\npaid for out of their own mill P\u00abt of the B.C. Health Insui-\nrate and that of the residents ance Service coverage. But in\nof areas T and 'J'. ! lhe ahscnce of ,1,'s '\u00ab* of,sel-\nNow the position is wide open ' vice   the  regional  approach   is\nagain. The next step will be for, the most intelligent,\nthe Regional District Board to      \"I   am   very  glad  that   area\ndiscuss the situation as it now  'J' supported Ihe proposal, but I\nstands when they meet next.      j can't think what motivated the\nIndications are that with both people of area T to turn it\nmunicipalities and one electoral' down. 1 imagine the municipal!- would be $14,360. Castlegar\ndistrict in favor, plans will go ties of Castlegar and Kinnaird Funeral Home would operate the\nahead to install Ihe ambulance , will move quickly to establish ambulance at a cost ol $4800\nservice  for their  benefit. ' an ambulance service.\" | each   year.   Other   expenditure\nThe mayors of Both Castlegar      Kinnaird   Mayor   Carl   Loeb-; would boost the price ol the ser-\nand Kinnaird expressed surprise | lich said he was very disappoin- '< vice to $16,360,\t\nILS. Dam Developments\nHeaded by New Chief\nClimb as Weather Cools\nblackened slopes of Mount Sen-! season dates in the southern por-\ntinel near Castlegar, where over j tion of the province will probab-\nWidely scattered rain and the\narrival of \"somewhat favorable\nj the forest service to cancel its\n1 previously broadcast Red Alert,\n6,000 acres of timberland were,iy be set   back   said   forestry j i\"\"v\u00b0' \"'   S\"\"'C\"\"\u00bbL wvu\u2122n\u00abia  warning  to the  11   nations\nrazed by fire. | spokesman in Victoria. weather\"   in  the  northwestern forests  in the northern region\nHe   said   there are numerous' u-s-  raised tlle hopes of thou- that   fire   danger   would   be\n\"The Sent fire is almost his-,\ntory,\" said Nelson District As- scason opening dates [or a vari. I sands of weary firefighters Sun- extreme.\nThey called him\nsaddle-bum...\ndesert rat...\npistolero...\nbut where would\nthey have been\nwithout Chuka\non that bloody\nsummer's day.\nPARAMOUNT\nROD\nTAYLOR\nERNEST\nB0RGNINE\nJOHN\nMILLS\nsistant  Fire  Protection  Officer I etyVf 'girMtovtHoui \"sectors k\\**>,   \"'S\",'   as   ^   continued 1\nO. J. Kettleson, Sunday night,   L\u00bb        ,       but ,h , \u201e    their battle against more than a     At '\u00ab* a \u2122\u2122c     Sun\nslro'nc unround fb ff^i i\" effect because of the closures, | d^\" uncon.rolled forest fires. gU Jgf\u00ab \u201e\u2122\u2122e\u00b0 \"\u00bb\n\u00bbnd lid Mr KrfilMrM 'vje Friday, a second B.C. man Previously forecast lightning tana. Washington and British\nwas fined for entering a closed storms apparently did not hit | Columbia, but the forecast for\nforest area. the region as hard as expected,! today was for cooler tempera-\nRobert Leader of Natal was; though   rain   fell  at  scattered' tures as a weak front passed\nhave got her well tied up.\"\nThe fire flared out of control\nl!uard\u00bb\"roun^ said  lhe U'S'  weatner i eastward.  After that, however\ncourt for fishing in the Nelson I bureau. j the five-day forecast called for\nP^.TR0Ln uLE,F,T     .i.    ,.      .. torest distrid- Regional   co-ordinator   J.   C.! temperatures five to 10 degrees\nMen will.be left on the charred     During   iast   week, 274 fires . Robertson   of   the   U.S.   forest \u25a0above n0>'\u21221-\nis were reported and 306 extinguish- s e r v i c e 's northern division' It was lightning that set off\ned, leaving 322 still burning ear- headquarters in Missoula, Mont., I the epidemic ot blazes In the\nly today. said none of the showers fell In I tinder-dry   forests   two   weeks\nFire fighting costs for the week I the areas of the major fires.       I ago.\ntoo TAYLOR   -J\u00bbCK JASON   cordon DOUGLAS\nTONIGHT-TUES., Complete Shows 7:00-9.00\nrum\nptiilil\niium\nand make sure the fire doesn't\ncome to life again.\nFire crews in other parts of\nthe forest district also reported\nextinguishing  other  fires.\n\"We lost a few more fires\ntoday,\" said Mr. Kettleson. Sunday.\nBut thick choking smoke\nblinded and hindered firefighters\nbattling a raging forest (ire at\nlonely Shaw Creek near Tye on\nthe west side of Kootenay Lake\nFriday, smoke from the blaze\nblended with smoke from giant\nfires which are still raging out\nof control in Northern Idaho.\nWhile the  situation  at Shaw\nColonel Richard E. McConnell\nhas arrived in Seattle and will\nassume the post of Seattle District Engineer, Army Corps of\nEngineers, on September 2nd.\nColonel Charles C. llolbrook, present District Engineer, will depart that date for his new assignment as Engineer for the U.S.\nmillion acre feet of usable flood, ing and disseminating flood plain\ncontrol storage to protect down- i information.\nstream areas from frequent\nflooding while providing power\nand a large recreational reservoir.\nHelping to plan for the area's\nwater resources needs of the fu-\nMilitary   Assistance  Command, iture nas b\u2122 ar> important part\nThailand. '\u00b0t Colonel Ilolbrook's Seattle as\nsignment. In a study which began in 1064 the Seattle District is\ncooperating with some 30 other\nState and Federal Agencies  to\nIn addition lo this large program of civil works projects, Colonel llolbrook has been responsible for Army and Air Force\nmilitary construction projects in\nthe four northwest states.\nColonel McConnell served in\nVietnam Ihe past year as Commander of the 150th Engineering\nGroup (Construction), He was\nborn in Cllffslde Park, New Jersey and commissioned in the Army Corps of Engineers in 1945 after graduation from the United\nStates Military Academy at West\nPoint. He holds a masters degree\nin Engineering Management\nfrom New York University and\ndetermine the water resources\nneeds of the Puget Sound area\nuntil the year 2000 and beyond.\nThis is known as the Puget Sound\nand Adjacent Waters Study. The\nDistrict is also contributing to\nthe Columbia - North Pacific\nStudy, a comprehensive resour-\nILS. Takes Tip\nFrom Kootenay\nSix Mobile Classrooms\nResult of \"Project 100\"\nCreston area was reported under j of Bri|ish Columbia School Stu-\ncontrol. denls \"Project 100\".\nThe more than week long efforts of firefighters tackling a\nblare at Char Creek beside the\nSalmo-Creston skyway, finally\npaid off.\nNORTH OF GOLDEN\nIn the East Kootenay. though,\nfires continued to blare north\nof Golden.\nThe   travelling   classrooms,\nplet'on by 1973 \u2014   will   provide\nflood  control,  power and other\nTwo of a possible total of at   equipped   with   every   type   of     It Is planned to send the first      b]l(, honefits to   the   pacific\nleast six mobile classrooms are| modern   aid   to  education   are' mobile unit completed on a tour|Northwest\nnow being fitled out at Burnaby   made possible by donations from   to  show as many  students  as I\nlooked grim, another fire in the   Vocational  School,  as a  result: schools in all parts of the pro-   possible how their  funds  hove tlBBY START\nvlnce. I been invested in education be-i    Most notable of lhe construc-\nThe project was launched in: fore the vehicle Is shipped! tion starts in this period is the\nMarch of this year, and already aboard a bauxite ore carrier I Lihhv Dam Project on the Koote-\nmore than enough has been col-   from  Kitimat. ! nai River in   Northwest    Mon-\nlect\u00bb:l to equip two vans at a Information bulletins and pes- tana. II will provide almost 5-\ncost of about $15,000 each. The; ters will be supplied to schools\nfirst two will go to Guyana and for the renewed campaign.\nTanzania, and others will bei Chairman for \"Project 100\"\nsent to India. Pakistan, Zambia is Charles G. Archibald. The\nand Hong Kong when funds per-; mobile classroom concept was\nmit. ! recommended by a special slu-\n\"There is more than $40,000 dent  research group of Secon-\non hand now.\" L. J. Wallace,  dary  and  University  students,\nBOISE, Idaho (API-In hope!\nof Increasing the size of its trout\nand kokanee, the Idaho Fish and\nGame Department is borrowing\nnn idea from its Canadian counterpart and planting shrimp in\nees study   which   encompasses Itile*Me's. \"'\"u! la,kes' \u201e\na master s degree in Interna Hon-, most \u201e, tho p*^,   Norlnw'cs,  ,\u201e     The shrimp, technically mysis\naddition many smaller congres-! ?hnmp,' f\" 'nirnduced in Koo-\nsionallv  authorized  studies and lcnay   'ake m nn\"sh, Colum'\"3\n.projects   have been undertaken  several years ago. and since then\nColonel llolbrook has served as ! during this period. , fllhslantlal increases in trout and\nDistrict Engineer in Seattle since ' NFW s\u00bbBVIril, I **\u25a0\"\" have hccn attnbut\u00ab1 t3\nAugust  1064. During the period     ,. JfJS \u201e,,.,, the shrimp,\nthe   annual   construction place-!    '\" ^*'^\" far a new ,    About   1.000 000  of  the   fresh\nmeats doubled and   Water   Re- \"\u00b0\u00b0dw\u201eP'a \"    \u2122nafifmen!  \u25a0*\u25a0 waler shnmp are being collected\nsources Planning tripled. !'\" Z,\"^^ ? \"r   ^ '\" K\u00b0\"'CnaV '\"* nW f\u00b0r Shipi\n...    \u201e,.      , \u201e            ,. era1' stale and   loeal   Govern- ment   to   Idaho.   Ihe  Fish   and\nSome 360-m n dn lars worth mental agencies in making deci- Game Department said here Sun-\nof construction was started dur- sions on the \u201e,ide l|se of f|nod .,\ning the period. These civil works nlains  This servi\u2122      nan \u201er \u201e     *,   \u25a0     ,  \u25a0       ... ..\n                           \"\u25a0 service \u2014 part of a     Mysis shrimp dwell near the\nprogram   initiated bottom of deep   lakes   during\nal Relations from George Wash\nington University, Washington\nD.C.\nprojects -\nall scheduled for com-! nation-w'de\nby the President _ is designed daylight and migrate to the sur~-\nto accelerate efforts for gather- face at night.\nConstantino\nWelcomed\nTORONTO   'CP>-King   Con-\nstantine   received   an   initially\nAt Sullivan Creek a team of; warm welcome from represent-\nbulldozers     pushed     its   way atives of Toronto's 40.000-mem-\nthrough forest to meet up with ber Greek community Saturday\n$420 Damace\nAs Cars Collide\nMrs. DoeSIe Hies\nS^dc1\n!en!v ot Mcme\nfirefighters battling a large fire j but  missed  the  cool  one  that i reports. \"A concentrated drive1 as  chairman,  as a Centennial\nNo one was hurt when two ve-\n. hides collided at the intersection\ngeneral chairman of the British   with  Gerald N. Savory of the] 0f Mil] on,i pa,^ sireols in Nel-\nColumbia Ceniennisl Committee j University of British Columbia! son Saturday nighl\nrt&z&iw\n*     * \u2666\n'mump\nBUSINESS CARDS    \u2022    OFFICE   FORMS,\nBROCHURES   \u2022   COMPLETE  FACILITIES\nATTRACTIVE PRICES\nNelson Daily News\nPrinting Dint.\nPhone  352 3552\nWHEN IT IS\nIMPORTANT  TO\nBE CORRECT . . .\nWhen    it    rr -I,,;   ffj\ninvitations,  on-\nnouncements and\notner social stationery,  come to us tor\ncounsel that refle'ts\nour up fc dote know\nledg? of what is\nSIGHT.\nthere. i a w a i t e d  him  at  the   main\nThe outlook is still gloomy, a' entrance of the airport,\nlong range weather forecast pre-;    About 100 persons cheered the\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^' king and Queen Anne-Marie as\n| they left the private plane that\narrived   at   Toronto's   Interna-\nj tional  Airport  from  New  York\nat  9:40 p.m. an  hour and 23\n! minutes lste because of radar\n! trouble and heavy air traffic.\nAbout the same number demonstrated   at   the   main   gate\nagainst the king's support of a\n: military coup earlier this year\nin Greece.\nThe      demonstrators      had\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN \u2014Trail, B.C.\nMonday and Tuesday\n\"THE    LOST    COMMAND\"\nAnthnnv Quinn\n'SHORTS i\nShow   Time  8:35\nwill start wilh the opening ofj project\nschool, and it is hoped lo col-|\nlect more than $100,000 when the\ncampaign   ends   December   31,\n1967.\"\nLATEST AIDS\nThe mobile education resource\ncentres are equipped with the\nlatest audiovisual teaching aids,\nMrs. Flynn\nFuneral He!d\nPolice said that about $420\ndamage was done to the vehicles\nof Dean Lee Jorgenson of Nelson\nand John Edward Stoochnoff of\nCastlegar .\n.lorgerson.   who   was driving\nwest on Mill,   while   Stoochnoff\n.   was proceeding smith on Park,\nA funeral service for the late has heen char,cd by pol|ce wit\u201e\n,ncludrngpro]edo;rfor\"mo.;bn  Sed  Thursday T'Thompsl \\^Zl\\, ^ '\u00b0 \"\" Vehide \u00b0\"\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed  While\nYou Woit\nPROMPT SERVICE\nII ft Ynur Privilege to Choose\nYour Pharmacist.\nCHOOSE\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON  PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your portress of Health\"\nPhnnr 1114111\nS33 Baker SI.. Nrlsrin\npictures, slides and film strips.   Funeral Home\nscience kits, books on Canada\nand  British Columbia, and instruction in athletics.\nIn addition, the British Colum-\nplanned lo follow the royal, J\"a s,\"lrJents \"I\" \u00abUPPI>' a fund\nmotorcade 20 miles into the city: fnr 'he individual countries to\nto the hotel where Ihe king is Pur(*ase books, films and nth-\nstaying during his nine-day   lc,lc equipment especially suited\nStohliqhL\nDRIVE-IN\nMonday, Tuttday\nand Wednesday\n\"THE GLASS\nBOTTOM  BOAT\"\nDor's Day, Rod Taylor\nIs This the Girl Next Door?\nShow Time 8:30\nNone Hurt\n'o their needs\nSchools taking part will receive a certificate honouring\n\"This salute to youth In developing sister Commonwealth na- ..\ntwns . through these mobile 11-| Collision\ncentres the students of British\nColumbia are expressing their\nawareness of the Importance of\neducation in the modern world.\"\nPLAQUES REMINDERS\n\"Project 100' plaques will be\nmounted in each vehicle, as a\nreminder of Brilish Columbia's\nthe right.\nOfficiating clergyman was the The acc'd6n' occurred at an\nRev. J. Rse Allan, and the uncontrolled intersection,\nsinging of the hymns \"Nearer.\nMy God, to Thee\" and \"Abide\nWith Me,\" were accompanied\nat the organ hy Mrs. E. A.\nHircock.\nThe service was followed by\ncremation\nCASTLEGAR - No injuries\nwere reported, when two vehicles collided at the intersection of Second Street and the\ndriveway to Castleaird Plaza,\nSaturday.\nPolice said that the two cars\ninterest in the well-being of less: were being driven by Jussi Tuk-\nfavoured Commonwealth nat-; aimaki of Kityiaird and Gary\nions. Sewart Brookfcj.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDOELLE - Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Marguerite Shlrlelgh\nGaveney Doelle, will be held at\nIhe Church of The Redeemer,\nWednesday at 11 a.m. The Rev.\nWilliam Edington and the Venerable Archdeacon B. A. Resker\nwill officiate and Interment will\nlake place in Nelson Memorial\nPark. Thompson Funeral Service.\nMrs. Marguerite Soir'cigh Ga-1 tosh and David   and   Donalda\nveney   Doelle.  of    507    Fourth', Lynch.\nStreet, Nelson d'ed suddenly at\nher h\"tne on Sunday afternoon,\naged 75.\nHorn in Madison, Wisconsin in\n1B01. she was the daughter of\nJudge and Mrs. John C. Gaveney. She was married to Henry\nE. Doelle at Arcadia, Wisconsin\nin 1918.\nHer husband was a mining engineer ond ol various times they\nlived In California, Nevada, Arizona, Missouri and Illinois before\nmoving to South Porcupine, near\nTimmms. Ontario In 1925. From\nthere thev moved to Anyox. B.C !\nin 1920 where they remained un-\ntil 1933. In 1934 they moved to|\nSheep Creek, living there until\n1951, when they moved to Nelson,\nMr. Decile was well known in\nB.C. mining circles and at one\ntime was managing director and\nvice-president of the Sheep Creek\nGold Mines. He predeceased his\nwife in July 1962.\nMrs. Docile was a member of\nthe Order of the Eastern Slar.\nformerly a member of the\nDaughters of the American Revolution and a past president of.\nboth the Hume School PTA and\nthe Hospital Women's Auxiliary.\nShe was also a member of Ro-1\ntary - Annes.\nShe is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Shirlcigh Lynch of\nPortland. Oregon and Mrs. J. S.\n(Dorothyi Mcintosh of Vancouver. There are four grandchildren. Douglas and Judith Mcln-\nE. DOELLE\nNOXZEMA\nSPRAY DEODORANT\nlc SALE\n2 for $1.26\nMayo\nPharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner linker and Word\nPh.  352-2613 Nelson\n\"AIR   CONDITIONED\"\n Cranbrook\nFire Caused $6,000\nDamage to Sawmill\nCRANBROOK - Damage to\nCrestbrook Forest Industries'\nCranbrook plant from the spectacular fire Monday, is estimated\nat about $6,000, but could have\nrun into millions on a reverse\nwind.\nIts start was in a stockpile of\ncedar logs at the north limit of\nthe sawmill yard, and the strong\nsouth wind carried it over the\nfence and a mile and a half\nthrough grass and second growth\nbush, on the west side of the\nairport landing strip.\nNorth limit of the spread was\na short distance uphill from the\ndrive-in theatre, about a quarter-mile from the Kimberley\nhighway.\nB.C. Forest Service has not yet\nassessed the forest damage, con-\nfined to second growth ponder-\nosa pine and privately owned\nChristmas tree stands.\nCrestbrook crews were required in the 15 hour fight, and hauled 15,000 gallons of water that\nnight to cool off smouldering\nstumps to prevent revival of fire\nthe following day in a period of\nhigh hazard.\nThe company also reports its\nCreston plant fully operating\nagain after interruption there,\nduring the mid-August forest\nfires in that area.\nAt the Skookumchuck pulpmill\nconstruction site employee listing\nis around 200 men, and steel\nwork is progressing on basic\nbuildings for the first phase of\nthe plant \u2014 due to be in operation and producing 400 tons of\npulp daily by November, 1968.\nPetition Council . . .\nFamilies Claim\nRoad Used As\nNakuso\nDrag Strip\nNAKUSP (Staff) - A petition\nbearing the signatures of 22 families in Canyon Road has been\nlodged with council.\nResidents are asking for gravel\nsidewalks or shoulders along the\nroad for protection of pedestrians. They also want repair work\nto be done on the road before a\nserious accident is caused.\nSigns restricting speeds to 30\nmph had been placed in the area,\nbut speedsters continued to use\nRossland . . .\nSprinklers\nRestricted\nROSSLAND (Staff) - Due to\na drop in the water level, council\nhas been forced to further restrict sprinkling regulations.\nSprinkling will be permitted on\neven numbered days only, between the hours of 8 a.m. to 11\na.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.\nGUERRILLAS   CLAIM   SUCCESS\nDAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania\n(AP)\u2014Three Portuguese planes\nwere destroyed on the ground\nin a mortar attack on an airfield at Mueda, Mozambique,\nby guerrillas of the Mozambique Liberation Front, says a\nfront communique issued here\nSunday. Many Portuguese soldiers were killed in the attack\nearly this month, it added.\nthe road as a drag strip, claim\nthe residents.\nThe petition was sent out to the\nNew Denver office of the Department of Highways for further action.\nCouncil sent a letter to B.C.\nHydro's flowage engineer Brant\nHoward, expressing concern at\nthe grade of Ihe road to the bottom of the Nakusp garbage dump\nwhich made it unsatisfactory for\npublic use.\nAnyone wishing to build a\nwooden septic tank with an expected lifetime of five to seven\nyears will be permitted to do so,\nif they promise to hook up to the\nvillage sewers when in operation,\ncouncil was advised by the\nhealth inspector from the Selkirk\nHealth Unit in Nelson.\nAn application by council to get\na Special Use Permit for the land\nof the proposed airport facility,\nhas been changed to an application to lease the land and this\nhas been forwarded to the Lands\nDepartment.\nCouncil has turned down an of\nfer by Uldis Bokis to sell the dry\nkiln at the Maiden Creek Lumber Co. site to council for $2,000.\nThey had an estimate for moving\non file for $3,000 and decided the\ncosts of building a foundation\nand floor plus the expenses of\nmoving and purchasing were too\nhigh.\nMilitia Starts\nTraining\nTRAIL \u2014 Major L. Smitten.\nCommanding Officer of 44th\nField Squadron, Royal Canadian\nEngineers (Militia*, announced\nWednesday that the Squadron\nwill begin its 1967-68 training\nseason with the first parade for\nthe Nelson Troop being called at\nthe Nelson Armory at 1930 hours,\nTuesday, 5 Sept., and, for the\nTrail Troop, at the Trail Armory\nat 1930 hours Wednesday, 6 Sept.\n1967. Training Lectures will begin one week later. All ranks are\nrequired to report in Field Summer Uniform.\nNEL5QN DAILY NEWS, MON,, AUfi. 28, 1967 \u2014 3\nBoswell Centennial\nDay Successful\nBOSWELL  'Staff) \u2014 Centcn- on;  2, John Jafieson; 3, Ernie\nThe old stern wheeler Moyie reclines in\nquiet dignity at Kaslo on a hot summer day. So far\nthis year, more than 4,000 visitors have toured the\nfascinating museum in the former lake steamer. Their\nadmission fee is vital to its upkeep. The Moyie receives no outside financial help for its preservation.\nCurator and custodian, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Green report that the ship is in \"excellent condition\".\nSAM STEELE DAYS MAY HAVE\nOUTGROWN ITS JAYCEE FOUNDERS\nCRANBROOK - A preliminary look at the recent 10-day\nthird annual Sam Steele Days\nAugust program, was taken by\nits sponsoring Junior Chamber\nof Commerce Thursday at a dinner meeting.\nFinancial deficit is anticipated\nwhen reports on the various\nevents are compiled for the September 14 Jaycee meeting, although the spectacular program\nhad enormous attendance.\nGeneral feeling was that the\nevent has outgrown management\nof this relatively small organization.\nJaycee program chairman Hi-\nroki Nakahara was highly commended for his services.\nConsideration may be given toward establishing the celebration\nin future on a broader basis of\norganizations support.\nThe Jaycees have accepted as\nsistance and local sponsorship I when it sets up with equipment\nresponsibilities for the second and mechanical staff at the\nyear of the annual voluntary Mo- Arena parking lot early in Oc-\ntor Vehicle Inspection Unit visit,' tober.\nnial day celebrations were highly successful, with a good crowd\nat the picnic and a record attendance at the dance in the\nevening.\nChildren were particularly well\ncatered for wilh organized races\nand free tickets for pop and ice\ncream. In addition, each child received a centennial crest.\nThere were three contests for\nolder children and adults. In a\ncompetition in which couples had\nto throw raw eggs back and forth\nwithout breaking them, first\nprize went to Penny Wilson and\nCarrie Weir. Second was Deanie\nJohnson and N. E. Bainbridge,\nand third Kay Domoney and Eric\nBainbridge.\nIn the nail hammering. Eric\nSandeman was lirst, followed by\nBob Kuyton and Stanley Hewitt;\nand winners in the needle and\nthread contest were Mrs. Bea\nBainbridge and Lyle Domoney.\nThe presentation of medallions,\nby Frank Cummings to pioneers\nMrs. Margaret Rochon, of Sanca\nand Mrs. Marian Embell, of Boswell, followed. Gifts were also\ngiven to the two oldest guests,\nMrs. F. Richardson of Boswell,\nand Jim Smith of Robson.\nWinners in the swimming races which were held next were;\nUnder 12's, 1, Billy Wright; 2,\nDarlene Karpowich; 3, Greg Kar-\npowich and Donald Hewitt. Girls\n13-16; 1, Rosa Anne Hewitt: 2,\nJune Saucy; 3, Linda Pelle. Boys\n13-16. 1, John Jafieson; 2, John\nDixon; 3, Ernie Bohnke. Over 16\n'open> 1, Greg Kolyneciek; 2,\nJohn Jamieson: 3. John Dixon.\nSkiing. 12 and under, 1, Jeff\nJamieson; 2, Greg Karpowich: 3,\nDarlene Karpowich and Jeri Ann\nDixon. Mixed 13-16. 1. John Dix-\nBohnke.\nOpen slalom, 1, Bill Hokum; 2,\nJohn Dixon; 3, Shannon Rose.\nMusic for the dance in the evening was supplied by the De-\nwalds, and the hall had been decorated in the centennial color\ntheme of red and white. Several\nladies were dressed in styles of\nyesteryear.\nFirst prize in the raffle went\nto Steve Ceh, of Crawford Bay.\nSecond prize, a picture painted\nhy Canon Greer was won by Ray\nDortman of Riondel, while Daida\nJohnson held the winning ticket\nfor the hair dryer.\nRossland\nEurope\nRecalled\nROSSLAND (Staff! - a talk\non the recent trip to Europe\nwhich he and his wife made, was\ngiven to Rotary Club by E. V.\nMcGauley, recently.\nAn interesting selection of slides helped to illustrate the talk.\nThe trip included a week in\nLondon and a 3200-mile bus journey from Holland which took\nthem through East and West\nGermany and Poland before visiting a number of cities in Russia.\nAt Leningrad they took a ship\nto Helsinki, then spent a day at\nCopenhagen before returning to\nLondon.\nMADRtD (AP)\u2014A man was\ngored to death and four others\nwere injured Sunday during the\ntraditional \"running of the\nbulls\" preceding the bullfights\nat San Sebastian de los Reyes,\n10 miles north of this Spanish\ncapital. The event is part of the\ntown's annual fiesta.\nB.C. Founders . . .\nCranbrook's Former Owner Missed\nGold But Found Other Riches\nSTRATFORD CONSTRUCTION\nLTD.\n444 Dunsmuir St.        Vancouver,B.C.\nTELEPHONE 688-2575\n202\nREQUESTS BIDS\nFrom all Sub-Trades for\nKaslo Elementary School, Kaslo\n, B.C.\nBritish Columbia proved to be\nthe land of plenty for John Galbraith, even though the gold that\ndrew him here escaped his\nsearch.\nHe found instead that his gold\npans were excellent for baking\nbread before the coals of an open\nfire. He was able to fill his larder with trout, deer, mountain\ngoat, wild sheep, bear, buffalo,\nin supplying the miners and in\ntime he came to own all the land\nwhere Cranbrook now stands.\nJohn Galbraith was born in\nNorthern Ireland in 1829 or 1830.\nHe was a clergyman's son and\nno doubt led the kind ol quiet life\nthat made him ache for adventure.\nIn 1858 he went to California on\nthe trail of the forty-niners and\nducks and geese. He found riches I he travelled through all the min-\nNOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 8\n(SLOCAN)\nThe preliminary list of electors of the Rural\nArea of School District No. 8 (Slocan) has been\ncompiled and is now vailable for examination\nat:\nBulletin Board\nPost Office\nPost Office\nPost Office\nPost Office\nPost Office\nPost Office\nPost Office\nSchool Board Office\nNew Denver\nSilverton\nSlocan\nWinlaw\nPassmore\nCrescent Volley\nSouth Slocan\nSlocan  Park\nSlocan\nThe onus is on the resident to insure that\nhis or her name appears on this list and for\nthis reason there are provisions in the Public\nSchools Act for names to be added to the list\nof electors prior to 5:00 p.m. August 31, 1967.\nThere ore further provisions enabling resident-electors and tenant-electors to have their\nnames added to the list of electors.\nWe urge all residents in School District\nNo. 8 (Slocan) to examine the preliminary list\nof electors to ensure that their name is correctly\nentered therein.\nThe final list of electors will be posted by\nSeptember 10, 1967, in the above named locations, after which date corrections to the list\nof electors must be made only by a properly\nconstituted Court of Revision.\nH. R. Mills,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nSchool Districl No. 8 ISIoran)\nARDA Team Surveys\nNakusp Area\nNAKUSP IStaffi - As a further step in their efforts to develop a ski area near the Nakusp\nHot Springs, interested local parties have been advised to prepare\na detailed brief to support the\nvillage's request for ARDA help\nI in getting a feasibility study.\nThis suggestion came from J.\nVickars, one of the ARDA study\ngroup in Nakusp.\nHe said the team was not there\nlo do a specific study for Nakusp\nHot Springs development, but\nwere surveying the entire rural\narea of the province as part of a\nprogram to update the department figures.\nInformation as to the reasons\nfor a need, description of the\narea, proximity of population\ncentres, road traffic patterns\nl now and projected), support data for location, scope of development, snow coditions, parking\nfacilities, etc., will be prepared\nto accompany the application for\na feasibility study.\nARDA in B.C. has never before\nentered into the social aspects of\ndevelopment of rural areas, although this has been done in\nother provinces. An appropriation has been made which terminates in 1970.\nIt is hoped that an application\nby Nakusp at this early stage ol\nthe program may help the cause.\nConsultant Claims . . .\nFluoride Would\nSolve Problem\nROSSLAND i Staff i \u2014   Coun- need of dental care \u2014 he pointed\ncil's concern over the need for\nmore dentists in the city, has\nevoked a reply from Dr. A. S.\nRichardson. Regional Dental\nConsultant, to the effect that\nprevention is heller than cure.\nAgreeing that Rossland does\nhave a dental health problem \u2014\n80 per cent ol the children are in\ning areas of Idaho and Montana\nas well. He worked both at mining and packing but interested\nhimself also in local government.\nHe organized the first territorial\nhouse of representatives at\nLewislon, Idaho.\nHe was planning to move to\nthe southern states when he saw\nsamples of gold taken on Wild\nHorse Creek in British possessions to the north. He headoH\nfor the new gold rush but arrived too late to cash in on the gold.\nBut in a land so rich in other\nresources he resolved to turn to\ntrade.\nout that use of available prevent\nive procedure could reduce the\namount of tooth decay by 80 per\ncent.\nHe suggested that council endorse fluoridation of the city's\nwater supply, saying it had been\nproved that the use of fluoride j Srew\nreduces tooth decay 65 per cent.! slotk\nJOHN GALBRAITH\nHe settled at a point near the\njunction of Wild Horse Creek\nand Ihe Kootenay River in 1865\nand soon was operating a store\nand pack trains and a ferry\nacross the Kootenay that brought\nall Ihe miners to his door.\nThis was ihe settlement of Gal-\nbraith's Ferry which later became Fort Steele, the site of the\nfirsl North West Mounted Police\nbarracks in British Columbia.\nThe pioneer community is now\nrestored as an historic park.\nJohns brothers James and Robert soon came from Ireland to\njoin him and the family interests\no include ranching and\nraising.\nis tasteless. 100 per cent safe and !    In later years John moved to\nU.S. STOPS STILLS costs only 15 to 20 cents per per-1 Parson's Bridge and then to Vic-\nCHARLOTTE.    N.C.    <AP)\u2014 | son per year. \u25a0 toria. leaving Robert to manage\nThe U.S. alcohol and tobacco' A tolal of 3,500 North American i the estate that included the pretax office says it destroyed 714 eilies now enjoy the preventive j sent site of Cranbrook.\nwhisky stills in North Carolina. benefits of fluoridation, said Ihe\nduring the last fiscal year. II' doctor, who complimented Ross-\nsaid the stills could have pro-' land council for recognizing the\nduced 9.000.000 gallons of whis-j dental problem and their \" illing-\nky | ness to take action\nJohn died at Victoria when he\nwas 58 in 1R87 but his reputation\nas a good businessman, fair in\nall his dealings, lives on through-\nout the Kootenays.\nLOTS OF PLACES TO GO\nAND LOTS OF THINGS TO SEE\nIt's\nHoliday\nTime I\nEnjoy Your Holidays But Don't Miss\nImportant \"Local\" News Items\nUSE THE\n\\\\\nHOLIDAY PACK\n\/\/\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 dote specified.\nOUR CARRIER BOYS ARE ANXIOUS TO GIVE\nTHIS SPECIAL SERVICE TO THEIR CUSTOMERS\n352-3552\nCONTACT HIM\nOR PHONE\n352-3552\n\u00bb\n Editorial Pa^Se\nFrontier Town to Modern City, Calgary Never Walks\nMonday, August 28, 1967\nEstablished April 22, 1902 Nelson. B  C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED, 268 Baker Street,\nNelson. British Columbia  mornings except Sundays and holidays, in the centre\nof the Kiiotenays, with the largest daily circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail   Post Office Department. Ottawa,\nand for Payment ot Postage in Cash\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS, THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER\nPUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION AND THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThe Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to 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.\nQuebec and Pensions\n. Premier Daniel Johnson oi Quebec is playing fast and loose\nwith the facts when he implies that Prime Minister Pearson is attempting\nto rule, on whether or not Quebec can institute its own old age pension.\nAll that Mr. Pearson has done is to advise the Quebec government lhat Ottawa is not agreeable to surrendering any of its current responsibilities  for provision of  old age  pensions to all  Canadians.\nThe prime minister's letter to Mr. Johnson was in response to\na Quebec demand that Ottawa hand over to the province the responsibility of paying the $75 a month old age pension to its citizens.\nMr. Pearson's position is perfectly valid. As his letter noted,\nthe present Quebec government has indicated that it wants to assume\nthe whole of the personal income tax field in that province as well as\nold age pensions, family allowances and all other social security payments for which Ottawa is now responsible.\nThe Quebec demand with regard to pensions represented one\nmore step in that province's unacceptable drive for separate.privi-\nleged status within Confederation. Mr. Pearson's rejection of it represents a federal awareness of its fiscal responsibilieies to all of Canada.\nTo grant any province the type of fiscal autonomy demanded by\nQuebec could have grievous effects on the nation's economic system. \"Such action,\" writes Mr. Pearson, \"would greatly reduce and\nperhaps destroy the ability of Parliament to redistribute incomes in this\nway between Canadians of different incomes . . Since the federal government has a responsibility for the welfare of Canadian citizens in\nall the provinces, including the province of Quebec, it is not prepared\nto abandon the arrangements that Parliament has established to bring\nabout a fairer distribution of incomes in Canada.\" Mr. Pearson's position is sound.\nPremier Johnson appears to be frying to distort this fair and\nmoderate reply in an apparent effort to stir up resentment in Quebec\nagainst Ottawa. He has implied that Mr. Pearson is denying Quebec\nthe authority to set up its own pension syBlem. In actual fact, however,\nthe prime minister took pains to acknowledge Quebec's right to distribute pensions in addition to those provided by Ottawa. Either Premier\nJohnson didn't take the trouble to read Mr. Pearson's letter fully, or\nelse he is misrepresenting the actual federal position on this matter.\n\u2014 Calgary Herald\nA Punitive Measure\nMany will be inclined fo applaud the new \"get tough\" welfare policy overwhelmingly passed\nby the House ol Representatives.\nThe new approach to public assistance is designed to get welfare\nrecipients off the rolls and make\nthem self-supporting. Few will quarrel with the goal. But many have\nserious doubts as lo whether this\napproach \"to it will work.\nThe administration, many governors, and specialists in welfare,\nrace relations, and urban problems\nhave voiced the conviction that this\n\"hard line\" approach will actually\ncause more problems than it will\nsolve, thai it will add to slum unrest and encourage the frustrations which could lead to more\nserious rioting in American cities.\nMany also believe the bill is faulty\nbecause based on a number of\nmisconceptions regarding persons\nnow receiving  public  assistance.\nHep. Wilbur D. Mill (D) of Arkansas, said, \"We intend to be rough\nin this bill ... but we are not inhuman.\" Critics, however, view the\nleaislation as punitive and oppressive and claim it will not accomplish its objectives but will lead to\nhardship and harrassment.\nThe bill is meant to force welfare mothers to \"qet out of the\nhouse.\" Tremendous pressure is nut\non unwed mothers and their out-of-\nschool children over 16 to eiter\nstate-established work training pro-\nrjro\"-\" and li Int\"1 iobs n'fe'ed them\nU.     \u25a0'.\u201e   \u2022t-te\u00ab,   ThP'r  nrnrtH^'  r-bHrlren\nwili hi placed in day care centers.\nSome children will be put in foster\ncare homes.\nThe number of illegitimate children eligible for welfare will be\nfrozen at their ratio to all children\nin the stale as of last January.\nStates can withhold cash payments\nto families when authorities decide\nIhey are misusing the money. They\nwill make \"protective\" payments instead. Stales are encouraged to\noffer birth control advice to unwed\nmothers and to establish paternity\nand require deserting fathers to\nsupport their offspring.\nWhile one or another of these,\nand other provisions of the bill may\nprove helpful, the over-all effect\ncould well lead to a further breakdown ol the home with the mother\nforcibly separated from the care\nof her children; mothers \u2014 many of\nthem Negro \u2014 being forced into a\nkind of compulsory servitude; a\ngrowing burden on Ihe states lo care\nfor children from broken homes\nwith likely harrying by state authorities to keep Ihe welfare rolls down:\na iurther loss oi dignity on the part\nof recipients; and new opportunities\nfor mistreatment of Ihe political powerless in society. Furthermore, according to some estimates, the cost\nof the program would actualW exceed savings by as much as 5-1.\nThe House, under a no-amendment procedure, adopted these welfare i-hanaes as part of a laraer Po-\ncH Ro-urity bill. The Senate should\nsufrpr-t the measure to the cloees*\nscniMnv and work to frame a more\nb'\"napn rnooRiire and one more\nlikely In rr\u00abrilpvo  iti pViiprl;\"\u00abq,\n\u2014Christian Science Manila\/\nBy DENNIS BELL\nCALGARY (CPl-Robert\nChambers Edwards, peppery\neditor of Ihe Calgary Eye\nOpener, once described this\ncity as \"picturesquely situated within easy reach of Ihe\nbrewery . . . and revolving in\neccentric orbits around a couple of dozen bars thai close\npromptly at 11:30, right or\nwrong.\"\nEye Opener Bob, one of the\ngiants of Canadian journalism, printed his sardonic\nreflections on the city's merits 50 years ago when Calgary\nwas an unruly bump on the\nCPR line lo the coast, ln\nthose days 'lie city had about\n45,000 inhabitants\u2014and some\nof the most magnificent\nwatering holes in the West.\nEdwards would doubtless\nbe delighted to know that today the city has two breweries, revolves in eccentric orbits around the internationally - known Calgary Stampede and has 65 bars and\nbeer parlors that close\npromptly at 11:30, right or\nwrong.\nln the 20 years Edwards\nedited the Eye Opener\u2014from\n1902 to 1922\u2014two years before\nhis death\u2014he chronicled Calgary's evolution from frontier\ntown to modern metropolis.\nHis newspaper was supposed\nto be a weekly but appeared\nirregularly, at the whim of its\neditor.\nBOOSTER FOR WEST\nHe was never too fond of\nCalgary's geographic 1 o c a-\ntion, its haphazard weather\nor its inept politicians and\nland speculators. But he was\nfascinated by its ordinary\npeople\u2014the frontier settlers,\nthe sodbusters. cowpokes and\nEnglish \"remittance men\"\nwho ensured the early city's\nrole in Canadian history.\nThe Eye Opener editor\nextolled the virtues of western life. Edwards Impressed\nupon an entire generation\nthat the spirit of the city, its\nunique, ambitious drive, was\nworth preserving and nurturing.\nThe city hasn't let him\ndown. Calgary offers the closest thing to genuine western\nhospitality of any city in the\nworld outside of Texas\u2014and\nyou'll get a stiff argument\nabout the relative merits of\nDallas and Houston from\nalmost any Calgarian.\nCalgary has never walked.\nIt galloped full tilt into the\nsecond quarter of the century\nriding fhe crest of the Alberta\noil boom wilh the same optimistic outlook that brought\nthe first settlers we6t.\nClose to 350 oil companies\nbig and small now make their\nheadquarters here. The\nTurner Valley strike in 1914\nand the oil find at Leduc in\n1947 brought in waves of\nAmericans and today more\nthan 30,000 of Calgary's 330,-\n575 inhabitants are from\nsouth of the border.\nDOES THE IMPOSSIBLE\nIt's a city that takes pride\nin doing the impossible, poking fun at sacred cows and\nblowing established procedures apart at the seams.\nCalgarians thought nothing of\nbuilding a first-class university on bald prairie. From a\nstanding start in the late\n1950s, the University of Calgary now beasts an enrolment of more than 6,500 students.\nThe city's latest pride and\njoy is the 600-foot Husky\nTower, which will feature a\nrevolving restaurant over-\nlooking the city when completed early in 1968.\nThe tower, located in the\nheart of the downtown area,\nliterally shot into existence.\nWorkmen had the 500-foot\nconcrete tower section poured\nand set in an unhelieveable 24\ndays.\nThat's   the   way   they   do\nthings here\u2014the way they've\ndone them since the 1860s.\nThe cily is almost larger than\nlite\u2014too big, too fast to be\nbelieved.\nJust about every Calgarian\nis mildly irreverent, an attitude that is reflected in the\ncity's business life, its topsy-\nturvey politics and its explosive community development.\nII is hard to believe\napproaching the city from the\nair that Calgary is less than\n100 years old\u2014a baby in the\nworld community and barely\nout of adolescence even In\ncomparison with other major\nCanadian cities.\nLong loops of new residential housing spiral southwest\nfrom the confluence of the\nBow and Elbow Rivers that\nrange out of the Rocky Mountains. 90 miles to the west.\nThe southeast section is\ndominated b y stockyards,\nlight industry, railway marshalling yards and refineries.\nThis section was hard hit by\nindustrial sprawl in the postwar boom and city officials\nhave been trying to restore\norderly development ln recent\nyears.\nHAS ITS SKYSCRAPERS\nThe downtown area is nes-\n.fled in a crook of the Bow.\nTwenty-storey buildings nose\nup from the river valley, the\nskyline changing on an\nalmost day-to-day basis as\nnewcomers vie for a place in\nthe foothills sunshine.\nThis is the area where anything goes.\nThere's a big blue and\nwhite hotel down by the river\nthat looks for all the world\nlike a gargantuan thermos\njug, replete with a rooftop\nrestaurant that could just as\neasily be a coffee cup.\nThe city hall resembles\nweird architectural Siamese\ntwins, half weather-beaten\nsandstone, half ultra-modern\nstructural steel and prefabricated concrete.\nThe two halves achieve an\nincongruous blend and in\nmany ways symbolize lhe collision of 20th century technology with western heritage\nand traditions.\nThe Husky Tower promises\nto dominate all. Seattle beat\nCalgary to the punch with its\nSpace Needle in 1962, but the\ntower will be just different\nenough that no one will\naccuse the city lathers of\narchitectural plagiarism.\n\"If we could get. it to lean a\nlittle we'd draw off all the\nItalian tourist traffic,\" joked\na leading Calgary architect.\nOn the north side of the\nriver, neat tree-lined residential streets occupy the bulk of\nthe space. Subdivisions are\nalso making steady progress\nup the grassy foothills slopes.\nThe farther north one gets,\nthe more modern the houses,\nreflecting the city's age like\nrings on a redwood tree.\nThe University of Calgary\nand McMahon Stadium, home\nof the Calgary Stampeders of\nthe Canadian Football\nLeague, highlight the northwest corner.\nSTART WAS STAKY\nNot bad for a city that got\noff lo a shaky start in 1875.\nThat was Ihe year that\nColonel .!ame6 Maclcod\narrived from Toronto with 216\nscarlet-coated members of F\nTroop of the North West\nMounted Police. Nobody was\noptimistic about the future of\nthe area in those days, but\nCol, Macleod went ahead and\nbuilt a fort despite the pessimists.\nBands of fierce Sarcee.\nStony. Blackfoot, Piegan and\nCree Indians predominated,\nlighting among themselves\nfor hunting rights to the\ndiminishing buffalo herds.\nSam Livingstone had built a\nshack and a vegetable garden\nin what now is southwest Calgary   and   his   only   white\nHUBERT\nWHAT A WASTE\nOF GOOP\nrVtowey.'\nV\/WAT HAPPEWEP ?\nI WAS JUST REAPING\nWHERE A WCMAW\nLEFT $ 300,000TO\nneighbors were buffalo hunters, whisky traders and the\noccasional bushwhacker.\nThe city came within a\nhair's breadth of being\nnamed B r i\u00bb e b o i s after a\nsomewhat immodest NWMP\ninspector. Col. Macleod 6aved\nthe city from that fate when\nhe submitted the name \"Cal-\ngarry,\" Gaelic for \"clear running water,\" to authorities in\nOllawa.\nInspector Blisebois lost out.\nbul Ottawa dropped the extra\nr somewhere in the administrative shuffle\nIn 1883 the Canadian Pacific Railway crept into Calgary, heralding the first big\nboom the fledgling cily experienced. The CPR staked out\na townsite and lots that now\nsell for $200,000 and $300,000\nwere going tor $300 and $400.\nWhat now Is the downtown\narea was little more than a\nramshackle collection of clapboard houses, grimy store\nfronts and lent saloons.\nPRINTED IN TENT\nCalgary's first newspaper,\nThe Herald, was launched\nwith a little Washington hand\npress by A. M. Armour and\nT. B. Braden from a tent on\nthe banks of the Bow River.\nThe Herald relied on a single\nnewsboy to get the paper to\nits subscribers\u2014it now has\nmore than 1.300 newsboys.\nThe city's second daily, The\nAlbertan, was founded in\n1900. By 1854 the population had grown to 506 hardy\ncitizens. A pioneer noted 16\nlog shacks, nine Indian teepees, the fort and the first\nhotel, Ihe Calgary House.\nThe building boom went\ninto full swing later in the\nyear as settlers began arriving from the east in increasing numbers. Calgary was\nincorporated as a town Nov.\n17, 1884 and George Murdoch\nwas elected its first mayor.\nThe following June, the Riel\nrebellion was occupying the\nattention of the nation. Chief\nCrowfoot, leader of the powerful Blackfoot Confederacy,\nwas reported sympathetic to\nRiel's cause and the call went\nout to Ottawa for troopB.\nCalgarians were astonished\nwhen a battalion of French\nCanadian soldiers, hardly any\nof whom could speak English,\narrived to defend the town\nfrom attack.\nChief Crowfoot stayed out\nof the conflict and most of the\nsoldiers returned east. Meanwhile, the rails were jammed\nwilh settlers looking for land\nto raise cattle and wheat.\n\"The place Is booming\nmore than any other town\nalong the CPR line,\" Sir John\nA. Macdonald wrote in 1885.\n\"It is of great importance\nthat we should initiate every\nkind of industry. At this\nmoment settlors are rushing\ninto Calgary.\"\nMADE KILLINGS\n- Keeping, pace wilh the\nrapid growth .was no easy\ntask* Calgafy was incorporated as a city in 1893 and\nthose inept politicians and\nland dealers were making a\nkilling in speculative real\nestate ventures.\nThe city today is spending\n$73,000,000 on a 20-ycar down-\nt o w n redevelopment plan\ndesigned to wipe out the last\nvestiges of helter-skelter\ndevelopment spawned at the\nturn of the cctilury.\nThe Duke of York and his\nwife, later to become George\nV and Queen Mary, were Calgary's first royal visitors in\n1900. The city's select set of\ncalllc barons, meat packers\nand horse traders snruced the\ncity up for the royal couple.\nCalgary was lhe centre of a\nthriving livestock industry by\n1901 and the population had\nreached 4.091. Offers of free\nland by the Dominion government brought another rush\nprior to Ihe First World War\nand Calgary had 43,704 residents in 1911.\nIt also had its own street\nrailway system and the first\nfully automatic telephone system ln the world when lhe\nwar slowed immigration to a\ntrickle.\nIn the spring of 1912 a tall\ncowpoke from Cheyenne,\nWyoming, named Guy Wead-\nick, arrived in town with a\npreposterous plan that was to\nchange the destiny of the\ncity.\nHe was the originator of the\nCalgary Stampede. Mr.\nWeadick wanted to make Calgary the home of the world's\nbiggest rodeo\u2014not in a few\nyears, but tnal very summer\n\u2014and he did it after some\nfancy financial footwork.\nLEFT HIM BROKE\nOn Ihe alternoon of Aug. 31,\n1912. Calgary played host to\nthe greatest aggregation of\nCanadian and American cowboys ever assembled. The\nStampede was a roaring success\u2014though Mr. Weadlck's\nfinancial arrangements left\nhim flat broke.\nStampede officials estimate\nthat more than 20,000 cowboys have competed in the\nrodeo since 1912. Among\nthem: Lee Ferris, the Canada\nKid, and Pete Vandermeer,\nthe Prince of Wales Cowboy;\nYakina Canutt, Pete Knight\nand Dick Cosgrave, and more\nrecently, Casey Tibbs, Marty\nWood and Kenny McLean.\nChuckwigon races, another\nof Mr. W e a d i c k 's brainstorms, were added in 1923\nand quickly became Ihe\nStampede's biggest single\nattraction. It is probably the\nmost exciting rodeo event\never devised and now is a\nregular feature of rodeos in\nother parts of Canada and Ihe\nU.S.\nThe Stampede, the Trans-\nCanada Highway and the\ncity's proximity to the U.S.\nand the Rockies have combined to make tourism one of\nthe city's top three industries,\nrivalling oil and agriculture.\nLast July's Stampede drew\nmore than 650.000 visitors and\nthe city estimates it made\nclose to $40,000,000 on the season from tourists,\nThe while hal. a 10-gallon\nStetson, has become Ihe city's\ngoodwill symbol, thanks to\nDon McKay, Calgary's barnstorming mayor who never\nwent anywhere without one\nduring his nine years in office\nthat ended in 1959.\nIt is almost impossible for\na visiting dignitary to get out\nof town without one. Queen\nElizabeth owns one, so does\nBobby Kennedy, says Doug\nJohnson, manager of Ihe Calgary Tourist and Convention\nAssociation.\nA LONE COMMANDO\nMr. Johnson, who took over\nwhere Mayor McKay left off,\nwas once described by the\ntourist manager of a rival\ncity as \"the best tourist tackier in the business, a one-man\ncommando squad.\"\n\"The world today goes\naround on a gimmick,\" he\nsaid. \"We needed something\nfor this town to hang its hat\non\u2014so we picked the hat. It's\na symbol that is known\naround the world now.\"\nMr. Johnson thinks nothing\nof walking into a U.S. luxury\nhotel decked out in $80 cowboy boots, a wide-brimmed\nhat,   a  buckskin  jacket  and\nToday\nin\nHistoi\nT\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nAug. 28 1967 . . .\nCount Leo Tolstoy, one of\nthe world's great classical\nwriters, was born al Vasna-\nya Poliana in Russia 139\nyears ago today\u2014in 1828.\nTolstoy did not distinguish\nhimself at university but by\n1854 he was making his\nmark as a writer with a\nnumber of brill ianl sketches\nof Ihe Crimean War. After\nhis return from the war\nTolstoy freed Ihe serfs on\nhis estate, became revolutionary in his educational\nschemes for the peasants\nand became known as a\nsocial reformer. He married in 1862 and began his\ntwo masterpieces. War and\nPeace and Anna Karenina.\nHe continued writing for a\nnumber of years, gradually\ngiving himself up to studies\nand to the needs of the\npoor.\n1904\u2014First U.S. traffic\njail sentence: five days for\nsecond speeding offence at\n20 m.p.h\n1963\u2014 M I x e d crowd of\nabout 200.000 held demon-\n\u25a0tratlon for civil rights\nmovement at I bicoln\nMemorial. Washjrjginn\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1917\u2014the Duke of Devonshire, Governor-General of\nCanada, signed the military\nservice bill to bring in conscription. A Russian division on the Focsani front\nrouted.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago\ntoday\u2014in 1942\u2014RAF and\nRCAF attack Nuemburg\nand Saarbruccken; 30\nbombers lost. Soviet planes\nraid Helsinki, Finnish capital.\nWords ot Life\nI came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.\nLuke 5:32.\nfrontier suit. \"It's my job.\nA professional Calgary\nbooster, he has the figures lo\nprove that all the western\ngimmickry works-\"We had\n2,900,000 visitors during the\nlasl calendar year.\"\nPolitically, Calgarians are\npredictably unpredictable.\nGenerally, they send Progressive Conservatives to Ottawa,\nmostly Social Creditors lo\nEdmonton and anybody Ihe\nleast bit colorful to cily hall.\nOne of the city's early mayors spent his first night In\noffice In jail on charges\ntrumped up by the olher can-\ndidale.\nCalgarv has produced one\nprime minister, R. B. Bennett\nwho carried the Conservative\nstandard In the Commons\nfrom 1930 to 1935, the worst\nyears of the hungry '30s.\nMore recently, two Calgarians have held cabinet posts:\nDouglas Ilarkness, defence\nminister in the Diefenbaker\ngovernment, and Harry Hays,\nagriculture minister in lhe\nPearson administration.\nAt the provincial level, Calgary was the focal point of\nIhe Social Credit movement\nin the 1930s. Voters here sent\nWilliam I Bible Bill) Aberhart\nto Edmonton in 1935 as premier of the fiist Social Credit\nadministration in Canadian\nhistory.\nMr. Aberhart, one of the\nmost controversial politicians\never to enter the Canadian\npolitical arena, held office\nuntil his death in 1043 when\nthe reins of power passed to\nPremier E. C Manning.\nFUTURE ROSY\nThe future looks rosy for\nthe Stampede City.\nln 1966 Ihe city absorbed\n$114,392,000 worth of new construction, most of It concen-\ntrated in housing and downtown office buildings. This\nyear civil officials anticipate\nanother $120,000,000 in new\nconstruction.\nThe population doubled\nfrom 112,000 in 1949 to 230,000\nin 1960 and projections indicate there will be close to\n650,000 citizens by 1981. Calgary adds a phenomenal 1,000\npersons a month.\nCalgary has already\nestablished a reputation as a\nfinancial centre and Canada's\noil capital. Its Cowtown\nnomenclature is known across\nthe nation, ln Canada's second century it wants to add\nsecondary industry to its list.\nBob Edwards knew a good\nthing when he saw it. He\npraised the city in his own\npeculiar way. but his words\nstill ring true today.\n\"It's the damnedest place\nI've ever seen,\" he told a\nfriend in 1920.\nAn Oddity of Today\nTORONTO (CP)-In an age\nof specialization. Angela\nDaneau Lattanzi is an oddity.\nNot only is she a professional\nlibrarian hut a competent\npainter. She has combined\nthese two interests in a life-long\nstudy of illumination, the elaborate ornamentation found in\nearly manuscripts.\nIn her painting, Mrs. Lattanzi\ncaptures the vibrancy and color\nof her native Palermo, Italy.\nHer abstract style is marked by\nbold strokes of color\u2014they're .\nher trademark. Some of her\nwork is currently on view privately at the home of a friend,\nHis Lions Pets\nBURNABY, B:C. (CP)-Jnhn\nPlant says lions make lovable\npels\u2014and he doesn't get any\nargument from his neighbors.\nMr. Plant has hod five different felines living with him at\nhome during the last year. The\nfirst one he accepted under\nduress when his employers\nasked him to take care of one\nthey were using for a promotional campaign.\nMr. Plant became attached to\nthe linn cub and during Ihe following months graciously\nplayed host tn four more. His\nlatest visitor is a five-monlh-old\ncub named Bcnjie, from the\nSeattle Zoo.\nJosephine Phelnn, chief librarian at the Earlscourt public\nlibrary.\nLibrary work brought these\ntwo women together when Mrs.\nLattanzi was a guest librarian\nat Earlscourt four years ago.\nShe has since retired from library work though she will\nteach a course in manuscript\nillumination next fall at the\nUniversity of Palermo.\nMrs. Lattanzi has written two\nbooks on this subject. She discovered two 12th century manuscripts.\n\"They supplied a valuable\nlink between the Byzantine\nstyle of illumination and the\ngothic style of the 13th century,\" she said.\nFor Mrs. Lattanzi, painting is\na passion. \"It's my personality\ncoming out.\"\nSPARKS COULD FLY\nBELGRADE (AP)-If electricity generated by\nYugoslavia's Kolubara power\nstation had a little extra punch\nrecently it may have been\nbecause Ihe power source was\n418 pounds of burning hashish,\nmade from marijuana. Unable\nto get the national drug industry to take Ihe $800,000 load\nconfiscated from smugglers,\ncustoms officials turned it over\nto the power plant as fuel.\nOFF TO SEE EXPO 67-Two 15-year-old boys, Brian\nWeinstock (left) and John Chamberlain bid farewell\nto Chicageans on Michigan Ave. as they start on a\n900-mile trip to Expo 67 in Montreal, Qua. They will\nreturn by train.\nTRUDY\nPreparation and training can\nreduce < rtaualties and loss of\nproperty h Ii g n emet gentIt \u25a0\narice Ft ery municipality should\nbe prepared.\n\"Son,  you'll  have  to understand  that  arguments\nbetween mommies and daddies are just another\npart of marriage.\"\n1\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., AUG. 28, 1967 \u2014 3\nCommunity, National Welfare Highlight CFUW Meet\nA RadiM\nFOR THE NEWEST SLANT ON LOOKING SLENDER, if you\nare a half-size, look to Radiant's superbly shaped costume for\nall seasons. Both dress and jacket are closely related by North-\nSouth lines that slope down and widen gradually hemward.\nHas the delightful effect also, of stretching you to new heights.\nTake note of the neckline tab on the dress that finds its twin at\nthe waist of the jacket. The Original of Printed Paltern A867 is\nsilk and worsted. Make your version in a transition blend,\ndoubleknit wool or ribbed faille.\nPrinted Pallern A867 is available in Half Sizes 12'b, 14'i, 16'i,\n18'i, 20>2, 22'2. Size 16's costume requires <m yards 39-inch.\nSend ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pallern A867 to N.D.N. Pattern Dept. 60 Front St. West, Toronto, Ont. Please print plainly\nTOUR NAME, ADDRESS with STYLE NUMBER and SIZE.\nNEW 1967 COUTURE PATTERN BOOK - sensational dresses,\ngowns, costumes, suits, coats lor Misses, Half Sizes from world-\nrenowned designers, many photo'd in finest fabrics. Plus 50c\nFree Coupon \u2014 apply to any $1 pallern in Book. Send 50c now!\nSudbury Woman\nHeads CFUW\nVANCOUVER 'CPt - Mrs.\nRobert Orange of Sudbury,\nOnt., was elected president of\nthe Canadian Federation of\nUniversity Women as its triennial conference closed Saturday.\nA member of CFUW since\n1948, Mrs. Orange had been\n1948, Mrs. Orange had been\nregional vice-president for\nOntario. She succeeds Mrs. M.\nVice - presidents elected\nwere: Mrs. J. L. Black of Mid\ndle Sackville, N.B.. for the\nEast, Mrs. G. A. Monty of Dor-\nval for Quebec, Mrs. G. E.\nBoyce, of Trenton for Ontario,\nand Jessie Casselman of White\nRock, B.C., for the West.\nOther new national officers\nare Recording Secretary Mrs.\nR. A. Bell, of Bells Corners,\nOnt., Membership Secretary M.\nW. Trenholme of Montreal, and\nTreasurer Mrs. Walter Little of\nParry Sound, Ontario.\nRiondel Notes\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL - Mr .and Mrs.\nTyekedri and three girls of Winnipeg spent a holiday with the\nlatter's uncle and aunt. Mr. and\nMrs. F. Hooper.\nEric Sandeman has been busy\nmoving his furniture to Brooks.\nAlta, Wilf Hewitt accompanied\nhim on one of his trips as far as\nLundbreck to visit relatives\nthere. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Sandeman and their three youngsters\nleft Wednesday.\nMrs. Saxby Hawkins has her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Findlay Moore and granddaughter Susan visiting her.\nMr. and Mrs. Vic Johnson\ndrove to Oliver to visit relatives\nfor a few days.\nMrs. George Veale is having a\nreunion with her family this\nweek. Her mother. Mrs. Woodford and sister Phyllis drove here\nfrom Warner. Robert Woodford\nand his fiancee Cheryl drove\nfrom Vancouver. They are all at\nthe Veale home.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Ruesser had a\nsurprise visit from old friends\nlast week. J. Valletti, his daughter Mrs. Tessie Fanucchi. her\nson and a friend from Hillsburg,\nCalif.\nMrs. Marg Koch of Creston\nbrought her mother. Mrs. A. Mc-\nKeever; her sister Pat and four\nchildren to visit old neighbors\nalong the lake.\nRIONDEL \u2014 Recent visitors to\nlhe Jimmy Lemmon family have\nbeen Mr. and Mrs. R. Hammond,\nand Lorefta Enns of Lashburn,\nSask., also Mr. and Mrs. H. Robertson and family of Alberta.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Colman. Spencer, Marilyn, Dona, Kevin and\nLinda, from Kamloops. have\nheen camping at Riondel beach.\nMr, Colman was principal of the\nJ. A. Cochran School in Riondel\nfor many years.\nMrs. Hugh Armstrong, with\nLynn. David. Larrie and Bobbie, of Vancouver, and Mrs. Jim\nSutcliffe. with John, Jamie, Michael and Margaret Anne, of\nBellevue, Washington, have now\nleft for home after spending the\nsummer with Mrs. John Sutcliffe.\nToni Jacyno, of Benson Lake,\nis visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. Cor-\nmack.\nMr, and Mrs. P. Mattson have\nreturned from an extended trip\nto Norway and Sweden, where\nthey visited various members of\ntheir families. Mrs. Mattson had\nseen her relatives seven years\nago. but it had been 43 years\nsince Mr. Matson had visited his\nhome town.\nMr. and Mrs. Dennis Bouillet\nwith Tracey and Allen, have re\nturned from a three-week trip to\nExpo. They travelled by plane to\nToronto, where they visited Mrs\nBnuillet's sister and family, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Russell. Tracy remained in Toronto while her mother and father and Allen took in\nthe sights of Expo.\nBy ELINOR READING\nVANCOUVER (C P t-T h e\nCanadian Federation of University Women closed ils 17th\ntriennial conference Saturday\nafter four days of discussions\nthat leaned more toward community and national welfare\nthan women's rights.\nOutgoing President Mrs. M.\nJ. Sabia of St. Catharines, Ont.,\ntold delegates at the final session that 30 national women's\norganizations are planning a\nwomen's conference on the\nreport of the Carter royal commission on taxation.\nShe said the Tax Foundation,\nan independent group interested\nin fiscal policies, has been\nasked to sponsor the meeting.\n\"But whether they sponsor it\nJohn Dortman has returned\nhome from the Coast, where he\nhad been taking medical treatment.\nMrs. B. Fichten is now back\nwith her family after a long stay\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital at Nelson following a car\naccident,\nMr. and Mrs. F. Germann and\ntwo children, from Denver,\nColo., were recent visitors of\nMiss Rosie Germann.\nMiss C. Dobbs and Mrs.\nSpringott, of Chepstow, Monmouthshire, England, are visiting their brother, Horace Dobbs\nand family. Mrs. Dobbs entertained at a lawn tea.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Cann and children have returned from a holiday in Winnipeg, where they attended the Pan - American\nGames.\nR. Meredith is home from\nU.B.C. Summer School.\nMr. and Mrs. K. Billfeld, with\nMona and Clara, of Yellowknife,\nare visiting Mr. and Mrs. E. Ma-\nthieson. Mrs. Mathieson and\nMrs. Billfeld are sisters. The two\ngirls arrived a week earlier by\nplane, while their parents motored down, spending some time in\nSaskatchewan.\nSHOPKEEPERS FINED\nTEL AVIV (API\u2014Four Arab\nshopkeepers in Gaza were fined\nSaturday by an Israeli military\ncourt for heeding incitement\nnot to open their shops on Saturday. The shop \"losings have\nbeen used by Arabs to protest\nIsraeli occupation of Arab territory in the June 510 war.\nor not. we'll have it. The\nwomen of Canada must find out\nwhat tax legislation they\nwant.\"\nMrs. Sabia said the report's\nrecommendations on taxation\nby family unit represent \"a\nmajor change in taxation.\"\n\"The women we want to\nattract back into the labor\nforce will say it's impossible\nfor them to work at the rate of\ntax progression.\n\"Single people are discriminated against.\n\"Those with millions and millions   will   find   some   loophole\nJesus Christ\nSermon Subject\n\"Christ Jesus\" was the title of\nthe lesson sermon read in Christian Science churches Sunday.\nThe responsive reading was\nfrom fsaiah and included this\nverse: \"And the spirit of the\nLord shall rest upon him, the\nspirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and\nmight, Ihe spirit of knowledge\nand of the fear of the Lord.\"\nsomewhere.  The middle people\nwith a family industry   will   be\nwiped out.\"\nREVISE CONSTITUTION\nAlso at the morning's meetings, delegates completed revisions ol the federation's constitution and elected new national\nofficers. Mrs. Robert Orange,\nof Sudbury, Ont., was installed\nas president.\nResolutions passed at the conference ranged from questions\nof women's rights to community problems such as water pollution and drug addiction.\nThey asked for a married\nwoman's right to an independent legal domicile, for a minimum marriage age of 16 years,\nfor provincial inquiries into the\nstatus of women, and for\nchanges in the income tax act\nto allow working mothers to\ndeduct housekeepers' wages.\nThe federation's traditional\nconcern for education was\nreflected in resolutions dealing\nwith university courses on educational television channels and\nschools.\nGuest speakers during the\nconference examined the role of\nuniversity and university graduates in a world rapidly changing.\nMUST KEEP FREEDOMS\nDr. Althea K. Hottel. president of the International Federation of University Women, told\nmembers at the opening meeting that they as educated people could not \"sidestep\" the\nessential problems of the day.\nSpeaking on \"the intellectual in\na world of revolution,\" Dr. Hottel said women must preserve\ntheir freedoms in order to contribute to their entire country,\nand not to its women only.\nOther speakers dealt with\nproblems of developing distinctively Canadian universities.\nDr. Geoffrey C. Andrew,\nexecutive director of the Association of Universities and Colleges in Canada, told the conference the nation's universities\nwill not come of age until they\nfocus upon \"the particular\nproblems and possibilities of\nCanadian society.\"\nArchitect Arthur Erickson,\nspeaking at Simon Fraser Uni-\nv e r s i t y, said a university's\narchitectural style must reflecl\nits needs and organization, and\nmust change to suit the university's changing function in the\nsociety.\nDr. Ian McTaggart-Cowan,\ndean of graduate studies at the\nUniversity of British Columbia,\nconcluded the series with a\nsummary of particular problems facing Canadian graduate\neducation. He also asked that\nschools look to their own environment and resources to\ndevelop distinctive programs.\nThroughout the convention\nmuch of the delegates' interest\ncentred upon the federations\nstudy of continuing education\nfor women. The pioneer\nresearch project, completed\nwith government assistance at\na cost of $25,000, says that\nwomen graduates in Canada\ncan make a much larger\nprofessional and economic contribution than they do. The\nreport says they can be encouraged to do so by educational\nand vocational counselling,\npart-time work and study\narrangements, and changes in\nattitudes, tax laws and public\nservices.\nWATER FILLS BODY\nAbout 80 per cent of the body\nis water. All the processes on\nwhich life depends take place in\nfluid\u2014food digestion, building\nand oxidation of protoplasm\nand waste removal.\nFALSE TEETH\nRELINED AT HOME!\nStop lining psstea, powders ittd\npads. ACRYLINE relines plates in\nminutes. Uala up to SIX MONTHS.\nEases sore, tender truma, ACRYUNE\nis odorless and taatelrw, harmless to\ndentures, Is specislly designed lor\nhome use, and makes pistes (eel like\nnew. ACRYLINE is available in one\n& two platesitesat your drug counter.\nLISBON (AP)-Portugal has\nissued a call for more women\nnurses to join the air force as\nparachutists. The first women\nparatroopers were admitted to\nthe air force six years ago and\nare parachuted into isolated\nareas of Portugal's African colonies of Angola .Mozambique\nand Guinea to aid soldiers\nwounded in battle against\nnationalist liberation fighters.\nAct now for money help. See HFC\nmount\nMONTHLY PAYMENT PUNS\nOF\n(V   i   \u00ab   '   11   t  31\nX  [   1!\nL01H\nMetal\nawrrsj\nswflrtr mnnh\ntsoalAr monllii\n\u2022 100\nXZ7.\nTZ1.\nJZZXZ\nJ8.12\nw.\u00ab\n300\n 1\t\n1\u00bb.35\n28.37\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\nHI'-.\n   23.73\n32.86\n51.24\nIBM\n'11111.\n   41.45\n58.11\n91.56\nnun\n\".1111.\n57.72'\t\n,JM,\n2S00\n'nis\n90.181\t\n\u25a0\u00ab**\u00bb*\nr.\u201e.\n3000\nrum\n10S.J21\t\n**\u2022*\u2022\n\u25a0mm\n<000\n101.01\nUi.il\n144.30  .\u201e\n\u2022M.M\n.....\nSOW\nliUf\nHill\n1M.371\t\nTf you have an\nimportant money\nneed\u2014for paying bills\ngetting a better car,\nbuying things for the\nhome or family,\nmeeting an emergency\n\u2014don't hesitate.\nCall Household now.\nAbo \u2022 \u25a0,-..'   mtwte srtneipil tog Msrsrt i\u2014 art bnes\n\u00ab| arsenal foayetsnt but de no! aitst* rheeot el aWSBMaasa,\nAs*, shoot tredit life km-rasc\non loans It low group rata*\nHOUSEHOLD FINAN\nNELSON\n608 Baker Street \u2014 Telephone 352-5575\n(at Josephine above Burn's Building Materials)\nTRAIL\n1287 Cedar Avenue \u2014 Telephone 368-8251\n(opposite   Hudson's   Bay*\nAsk about our evening hours\nDEAR HELOISE:\nWhen you are making\nFrench toast, cut the bread in\nquarters before dipping it into\nthe egg mixture. The quarters\nare much easier to turn, and\nthere Isn't any sticking.\nMaranell Kemp\nt    *    *\nTou're right, Maranell.\nWhen I tried it, I also found\nthat If you cut the slices Into\ntriangles or squares, they even\nfry differently and lend variety to the breakfast.\nMoreover, you can get more\npieces In the skillet at the\nsame time, and it's easier to\neat.\nAnd don't forget that\nFrench toast can also be varied by what you put on top of\nIt \u2014 syrup, honey, Jelly or\njams, powdered sugar, granulated sugar, and even cinnamon sugar.\nHeloise\n\u2022 *    *\nDEAR HELOISE:\nHow do YOU mend a tear\nin a brand new screen door ?\nI used lightweight nylon\nfishing line and made a neat,\nunobtrusive darn.\nWorks fine.\nMrs. MacDonald\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nNow   that's    one   for   the\nbooks! I would never have\nthought of It.\nWe like you!\nHelolse\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nDEAR HELOISE:\nWhen I purchase a plastic\nj  checked    tablecloth    for    the\nI  kitchen dinette, I get a larger\n!  size than necessary and clip\noff the exce&s to use for window ruffles.\nIt makes a very nice ensemble.\nBonnie C. White\n\u2022 *    *\nDEAR HELOISE:\nWhen our five children were\ngrowing up I needed everyone's cooperation to keep the\nhouse in order. Like most\nchildren, they would leave\ntheir    personal    clothes   and\nthings lying about the house-\nanywhere but in the proper\nplace.\nHowever, when they were\nold enough to get an allowance, I figured they were old\nenough to pick up their own\nthings. I put a carton in my\ncloset, and any personal things\nof the children that I found\nlying around out of place, I\nput in the carton.\nFrom then on, I made the\nchildren pay a fee of so much\nper article to reclaim their\nthings.\nI assure you, my system\nquickly cured the worst violator, and saved me many a\nstep.\nR. J. M.\n\u00ab    t    *\nDEAR HELOISE:\nWhen using instant tea to\nmake a cold drink, try pouring\na little hot water on the tea\npowder and sugar. Stir and let\nstand a little while, then fill\nwith cold water.\nIt gives a better flavor.\nA Reader\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nDEAR HELOISE:\nHere's a good one.\nI find that an empty roll-on\ndeodorant bottle makes a remarkably efficient dispenser\nfor glue or muscilage.\nSimply pry off the plastic\nball top for easy access, fill\nthe bottle with glue, and replace the ball. Keep the\ncap screwed on tightly after\neach use to be sure the glue\ndoes not dry out and render\nthe rolling ball inoperative.\nA \"roll-on\" spreads just\nenough glue to do a perfect\njob. and we all know how glue\ntravels!\nLilla Davies\n\u2022 \u00ab    *\nHeloise welcomes all maiL\nespecially household hints\nwhich she can pas3 on to readers as space permits. However,\nbecause of the tremendous volume of mail she receives daily,\nHeloise is unable to answer\nall individual letters. She will\nanswer readers' questions in\nher column whenever possible.\nWow! ... Now Fall's On Sale!\nTwo Huge Floors of Fall Fashions . . .\nOn Sale Now at Sweet Sixteen in Nelson\nRun . . . Hop . . . Skip . . . or Jump . . . But Hurry In for the Firit Choice!\nOPEN MONDAY\ntf 1967. K.nj Feature, Syndicate. Inc.)\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., AUG. 28, 1967\nMURPHY, SCALES LEAD ALS TO WIN\nMONTREAL (CP> - End,\nRoger Murphy and halfback!\nCa a r1i e Scales scored twoi\nt o u c h d o \\v ns each to spark\nMontreal Alouettes tn a 34-22\nvictory over Toronto Argonaut!\nin an Eastern Football Confer- j\nence game before an estimated;\n15.1)00 spectators Saturday\nnight.\nThe victory was the first inj\nthree games so far this season j\nfor the Alouettes and left them;\nin last place in the EFC stand-;\nings with two points.\nThe loss left the Argonauts\ntied for first place in the EFC,\nstandings with Hamilton Tiger-\nCats and Ottawa Rough Riders.\nMurphy scored both his\ntouchdowns on passes from\nquarterback George Bork while\nScales, released by the Argonauts   earlier   this season, got.\nboth   his   majors   along   the\nground.\nLarry Fairholm scored the\nother Montreal touchdown when\nhe picked up a fumble and\nraced into the Toronto end\nzone. Ron Parson converted\nthree of Montreal's five touchdowns and Dave Lewis kicked a\n66-yard single to round out the\nMontreal scoring.\nThe Argonauts got touch-\ndowns from ,Iim Rountree, Jim\nDillard and Bobby Taylor. John\nVilunas converted all three\nToronto touchdowns and added\na single on wide field goal\nattempt.\nSTARTED STRONG\nIt looked as though the Argonauts were going to run the,\nAlouettes out of the park as\nToronto grabbed an 8-0 lead\nafter less than four minutes of\nplay in the first quarter.\nHowever, the Alouettes didn't\ngive up and by halftime Montreal held a five-point lead over\nthe Argonauts, 20-15.\nVilunas gave the Argos a 1-0\nlead at 2:09 of Ihe first quarler\nwhen his field goal attempt\nfrom Montreal's 32-yard-line\nwent wide and Fairholm was\ntackled in the end zone.\nJust over a minute later.\nRowntree scored for the Argo-\nn a u t s when he intercepted\nBnrk's intended pass for Gerry\nSternberg and returned it 60\nyards.\nMurphy got the first of his\ntwo touchdowns of the game at\n9:04 when Montreal elected to\ngamble on a third-and-seven\nsituation on the Toronto nine-\nyard-line.\nBork    fired   the    touchdown\npass to the uncovered Murphy\nand Parson's convert narrowed\nToronto's lead to 8-7.\nWith 23 seconds remaining in\nthe first quarter Dillard\nplunged over from the one-\nyard-line, capping a Toronto\ndrive lhat started on the Argonauts' 28-yard-line.\nMAKES FINE RUN\nScales narrowed Toronto's\nlead to 15-13 at 6:47 of the second quarler when he scored his\nfirst touchdown of the game on\na nifty 22-yard run. Less than\neight minutes later, Scales put\nthe Alouettes ahead for the first\ntime in the game, scoring from\nthe one-yard-line.\nTile Alouettes continued their\nmarch towards their first victory when Lewis made it 21-15 in\nthe third quarter on a 66-yard\npunt which came at 6.11.\nMurphy made it 27-15 less\nthan four minutes later when\nhe combined with Bork on an\nelectrifying 64-yard pass-and-\nrun play and Fairholm scored\nIhe last Montreal tuochdown a\nlittle more than a minute later\nwhen he picked up Larry Ferguson's fumble on the Toronto\n47-yard-line and raced all the\nway for the major score.\nTaylor closed out the scoring\nin the game when he took a 15-j\nyard pass from Toronto quarterback Wally Gabler in the\nMontreal end zone al 13:35 of\nIhe fourth quarter.\nStatistically, t h e Alouettes\npicked up a total of 479 yards\noffence to 288 for the losers.\nMontreal had 25 first downs\u201412\npassing, 11 rushing and two\nthrough penalties\u2014to 12 for the\nArgonauts, who gained six first\ndowns passing, five rushing and\none on a penalty against the\nAlouettes.\nBork attempted 28 passes,\ncompleted 17 and had two inter-\ncepted for a total of 313 yards\noffence through the air.\nTwo Wins  Marked Up\nBy Max Bell Horses\nBy l.ORNE BRl'CE\nEDMONTON (CP) - Saturday was a great day for Max\nBell of Calgary.\nGilmore.    from    the   Golden\nBaseball Linescores\n\u00a9assto\nPRIZEWINNERS\nINCLUDE-\nAt the\nSign of\nthe Chevron\nGordon L. Dobbie Sr., Victoria\n$1,000.00\nMiss G.B.White, North Surrey\n$1,000.00\nJ. Eugene MacLeod, Victoria\n$1,000.00\nEdgar J. Doucette\nRichmond\n$100.00\nMrs.\nP. Chrlstoferson\nRichmond\n$100.00\nLawrence Robinson\nBurnaby\n$100.00\nAlbert J. Bumphrey\nVictoria\n$100.00\nH. B. Carleton\nVictoria\n$100.00\nMrs. D. W. Bonshor, North Surrey ($100)\nDavid Glen Howarth, Princeton ($100)\nllene Carlson, Vancouver ($100)\nW. H. Christian, Powell River ($100)\nC. A. Stone, North Vancouver ($100)\nGerald Stewart, Victoria ($100)\nPeter Pilho'er, Vancouver ($100)\nGeorge Warkentin, North Surrey ($100)\nJ. S. M. Harts, North Vancouver ($100)\nDon Nicholson, Vancouver ($100)\nD. H. Bridger, Vancouver ($100)\nJohn T. Ross, North Burnaby ($100)\nGlen J. Buckley, North Surrey ($100)\nJ. J. Keno, Ladysmith ($100)\nDavid Mitchell, North Vancouver ($25)\nRoy Cammack, Vancouver ($25)\nMrs. Marie Vasseur, Kelowna ($25)\nRoy Donald Firman, Prince Rupert ($25)\nLawrence Therrien, Williams Lake ($25)\nH. W. Hollett, Montrose ($10)\nWilliam McCormick, Rutland ($10)\nJack Badger. Coquitlam ($10)\nKarl Baver, Kamloops ($10)\nAndrew Swanson, Quesnel ($10)\nW. D. Davies, Sardis ($10)\nEdwin Miles, Ladner ($10)\nFred Senter, Campbell River ($10)\nAndy Stinn, Vernon ($10)\nC. R, Rolston, Burns Lake ($10)\nJakob Friesen, Clearbrook ($10)\nAlbert Riplinger, Bralorne ($10)\nMurray Finlay, Trail ($10)\nJohn C. Woodhouse, Campbell River ($10)\nNorman Wrest, Summerland ($10)\nG. Smith, Port Alive ($10)\nEd Lacharity, Alberni ($10)\nPLUS HUNDREDS OF OTHER $25, $10, $5 AND $1 WINNERS\nNEXT MONTH-WHY NOT YOUR NAME?\nM\nIt's easy to win Cash in a Flash. Whenever you\ndrive into a Chevron Dealer or Standard\nStation, pick up a free Cash in a Flash card\n...snap it open and you can win up to $1,000\n\u2014 INSTANTLY! If you are not an instant\nwinner, save all cards and win as soon as\nyou have a matching top and bottom.\nTens of thousands of dollars in prizes \u2014 and\n1700 cash winners every week! Nothing to\nbuy. No limit to the times you can win.\nRemember, too \u2014 you win every time with the\nfriendly, efficient service and unsurpassed\nproducts awaiting you at Chevron Dealers\nand Standard Stations everywhere.\n\\.\nTHE CHEVRON\/STANDARD MEN\nBy   THE   ASSOCIATED   TRESS\nAmerican League\nX. York OOtl (11)0 030\u2014 3   8 1\nWash. 001 100 002\u2014 4  8 1\nBarber, Bouton (7), Hamilton\n(2-41 (9> and Gibbs; Pascual,\nLines (31, Baldwin (8\\ Cox (7-\n2i i8) and Casanova. HR: Wash\n\u2014Valentine (9).\nMinn 000 000 Oil\u2014 2  9 0\nCleveland        000 203 OOx\u2014 5  9 1\nKaat   (9-131,  Ollom   (6),   Holland  -8'  and Nixon.  Zimmerman   '8>:   Hargan   (14-10)   and:\nSims. HR: Cleve\u2014Alvis (17).\nBoslon 022 120 100- 613 1\nChicago 000 002 000\u2014 2   5 1.\nSlephenson (2-0', Brandon (6\\\nand Ryan: Hmien 114-5). Wood'\n(5),   Jones\nJosephson.\nFirst\nCalif.\nBall.\nJohn   (7)   and\nono 005 oon\u20145   5 1\n100 030 000\u20144   9 0 j\nMcClothlin  (11-5),  Kelso   (6),\nRojas  17'  and Rodgers:   Phoe-,\nbus. Drabnwsky (7-4)  (6). Miller 17), Watt >9i and Roznovsky.'\nCM\nSisters Win\nFive Junior\nTennis Titles\neBv LEWIS LEVENDEL\nOTTAWA (CPi-Tne\nBarlkowicz sisters of Ham-\nt r a m c k. Mich.\u2014Peaches, 18,\nand Plums, 13 \u2014 went home\nSunday after capturing a total\nof five titles at the Canadian\nopen junior tennis championships.\nThe five-foot, seven-inch older\nsister, 1967 U.S. national junior'\nchampion, won the under-18 sin- :\ngles crown, joined with l.inda\nTuero of Metavle, La., to win}\nlhe under-18 doubles and paired\nwith John Lamerato of Hamtramck to capture the mixed\ndoubles title.\nUsing a strong two-handed\nbackhand shot. Peaches was too\npowerful for Miss Tuero, 17, in\nwinning the singles 6-2. 6-3.\nIn the doubles final. Miss\nBartkowicz and Miss Tuero won\nover P. Hogan of La .lolla,\nCalif., and Virki Rogers of Rye.\nN.Y., 6-1, 2-6, 6-3.\nLamerato      and      Miss\nBartkowicz   knocked   off   Sieve\nCornell of Oakland, Calif., and\nMiss Tuero 6-3, 7-9, 6-3.\nOUTLASTS AUSTRALIAN\nln the feature match Saturday before a crowd that included Governor-General Michener\nand Registrar-General Turner,\nJohn Williams of Bridgend.\nWales, outlasted Ian Russell of\nMelbourne. Australia to win the\nunder-18 boys' singles title 4-6.\n6-3, 5-7, 6-3. 6-0.\nAfter the match, the husky\nRussell, who will enter South\nern Methodist University in\nDallas this fall nn a lennis\nscholarship, said a cramp in his\nleft thigh hurt his game in the\nlast two sets.\nThe tall, blonde Williams who\nwill enter a London hospital\nthis fall as a medical student.\nwon the 1966 British national\njunior championship. He will\ndefend his title next month.\nHe said he should have won\nthe match in four sets. \"I had\nhim in the third set, but 1 let\nhim slip.\"\nAfter noticing his opponent's\ninjury in the fourth set, Williams said he \"lobbed him a\nlot, to take the energy out of\nhim.\"\nWith nnly an hnur's rest. Williams joined with Cornell to\nparticipate in the u n d e r-18\nboys' doubles final. They lost\n6-3. 5-7. 7-5 to the team of\nMacClaflin of Coral Gables.\nFla.. and Bulch Palmer of\nPhoenix, Ariz,\nNEW YORKER  BEATEN\nPlums Barlkowicz won the\nunder-14 girls' singles title over\nLaurie Tenney of Scarsdale.\nN.Y., 6-3, 6-4.\nBut she lost the under-16\ncrown to smooth-stroking Jane\nKincaid of Huntington. W. Va..\n8-6. 6-1.\nIn the under-14 girls' doubles\nfinal, Plums teamed with Laurie to trnunce the team of Sue\nPritula of Detroit and Donna\nStockton of Garden City, N.Y..\n6-4, 6-1.\nEmilio M o n I a n n of Hamtramck was also a doublp winner at the tournament. He won\nthe under-14 boyr,' singles\nknocking off top-ranked Jeffrey\nMiller of Plainfield. N J.. 6-2.\n2-6. 6-2 and joined with Ted\nMacBeath of Dartmouth. Mass .\nto defeat Miller and Gene\nMayer of Woodmere. NY. 8-4\n6-3 in the under-14 doubles\nfinal.\nHusky Sandy Mayer. Gene's\nbrother, playing a well-rounded\ngame, won the under-lfi title\nknocking off Lameraln 7-5. 6-3.\nHRs:  Calif\u2014Mincher  (20). Bait\n\u2014F. Robinson (25).\nCalif\u2014Bait, second, ppd, rain\nDetroit 003 010 100\u2014 5  7 0\nK. Cily 000 020 000\u2014 2   6 0 j\nWilson H8-9' and Freehan,\nHunter (11-13), Pierce (6), Aker\n18' and Roof. HR: Det\u2014Cash\n(18).\nNational League\nClncl. 010 310 100- 6 10 0\nHouston 000 001 000\u2014 1   9 1\nM alone y       112-91       and\nPavletich:     Blasingame    (S-6),\nDukes   (6),   Schneider   19)   and\nBaleman.\nSecond\nClncl. 010 003 011- 6 11 2^\nHouston 101140 Olx- 8 13 1;\nPappas (18-91, Nollebart 15),\nMcCool 16' and Coker,\nPavletich (6); Cuellar (12-9)\nand Brand.\nPitts. 000 000 000\u2014 0 6 1\nPhila. 010 000 OOx\u2014 1 2 0|\nVeale (14-7). Face (8) and\nMay, Sanguillen 18'; Wise (8-9''\nand Oliver. HR: Pha\u2014Oliver.\n110'.\nSt. L. 000 000 010 000-1 13 0\nLos A. 000 000 100 001-2 12 2\nWnodeshick    (2-1)    (11),   Willis\n(12) and McCarver; Drysdale,\nRegan 15-8) (ID and Roseboro\nFirst\nAtlanta 000 010 000\u2014 1  6 11\nSan Fran.      000 111 OOx- 3 8 2\nJohnson (13-7'. Hernandez (71\nand Ueckcr: Sadecki (6-5) and\nHaller. HR: SF-McCovey (22'\nSecond\nAtlanta\n200 0011000 000 00\u2014 2   9 2!\nSan Fran.\n200 000 000 000 on\u20142 J\u00bb 2\n000 100 100 000 01\u2014stPi\nLemasler, Raymond  \u2022 10',:\nUpshaw  (1-1)  (12>  and Torre;\nHerbel,  Linzy  (8'.  Bolin   (5-8)\n(13) and   Dietz,   Haller   (13).\nHR: SF-McCovey (23).\nNY-Chi 2 ppd rain\nWest Farms of Okotoks, Alia., 1\nowned by Bell, gave lhe stable\nils first win in the C a n a d i a n\nDerby.\nFive thousand miles away,\nanother of Bell's horses, ]\nDominion Day. won a prep race\nin England for the St. Leger.\nLady Taj, a speedy mare and\nan entry with Gilmore, \"softened up\" Blenheim Park\nenough for Gilmore to cornel\nfrom behind and win the IV:\nmile event at Edmonton.\nBlenheim Park was second in\nIhe 38lh running of Ihe race for\nthree-year-olds, finishing a nose\nin front of Fortitude.\n\"The filly (Lady Taji ran a\ngreat race,\" said Bell. \"She\nsoftened up Blenheim Park\nenough\" for Gilmore to come\nfrom behind in the stretch.\nllaig's Task, an invader from\nthe Pacific Coast, was fourth.\nOther horses in the eighl-horse\nfield were, in order, Never\nDelay, Locked Out, Lady Taj\nand Prince Blue.\nGilmore, a brown colt by Tall\nChief 2nd out of Anglirish,:\nstumbled coming out of the\ngate and didn't want to run, but\nwas whipped into desire and\nearned $16,430 for Golden West |\nFarms, which often has had\ngood horses in the race bill had>\nnever won.\nThe $16,430 out of a total\npurse of $21,980 is the largestj\nnet value to a winner of any\nrace wesl of Toronto.\nThe time of 2:24.4 was a\nderby record but did not mean\nmuch as the two previous times\nIhe derby was run at l\u00bba miles,\nthe Irack was not fast.\nThe previous fastest time for\nIhe derby's 1-Vmile distance\nwas last year's 2:27.2.\nAlthough the running surface\nwas fast, the time was two-\nfifths of a second off the track\nrecord for the half-mile Northlands oval. The 2:24 record is\nheld by three horses.\nIn sunny, warm weather, the\nrecord crowd of 14.400 shoved a\nrecord of $96,689 through the\nm u t u e 1 s and het a record\n$373,097 on the eight-race card.\nRoth  the  mutiiels  are  Western\nCanada records. The previous\nderby highs were set last year\nwhen 13,800 attended, wagered\n$93,454 on the race and $530,430\non the card.\nJockey Gerry Rasmussen. 27,\na native of Donalda, Alta., said\nthe favored Gilmore stumbled\ncoming out of the gate and was\nlast for the first half of the\nrace.\n\"I figured we would take our\ntime and make it up,\" he said.\n\"Gilmore didn't want to win\nbadly so I hit him with my\nslick. As the horses rounded the\nturn into the stretch, I really\ngave it to him.\"\nGilmore knifed through \"a\ntight s q u e e z e,\" Rasmussen\nsaid, and finally got into the\nlead in the stretch.\nThe whip \"kinda changed his\nmind a little,\" about Gilmore'i\nlack of desire to win.\nGilmore was pulling away in\nthe final yards.\nIt was also the first derby\nvictory for jockey Rasmussen\nand trainer Roy Johnson, 40,\nwho came from Toronto especially to handle the entry of\nGilmore and Lady Taj. Gilmore, Lady Taj and Blenheim\nPark have done most of their\nrunning this year on Ontario\ntracks,\nBlenheim Park took the lead\nfrom Lady Taj wilh three furlongs to go and had the lead\nturning for home, then faltered\nin the stretch.\nFortitude, always well\nplaced, moved up to second\nturning for home but hung In\nthe drive.\nStudy At Home\nHigh School. College and\nSelf-Improvement Courses\nlhe University of Tennessee\nCORRESPONDENCE\nDivision nf University\nExtension\nKnnxvuTe, Tennessee 37916\nMall In Ihe above address:\nNAME \t\nSTREET \t\nCITY\nSUN-RYPE PRODUCTS LTD.\n5% BONDS \u2014 1961 CROP YEAR\nRegistered holders of 5% Bonds of Sun-Rype Products Ltd., for 1961 Crop\nYear dated August 31, 1962 are reminded that the above mentioned bonds\nbecome due for payment on August 31, 1967, and must be surrendered\nto the Head Office of Sun-Rype Products Ltd., 1165 Ethel St., Kelowna, B.C.,\nbefore payment is made. This may be done by mail or in person. If there\nhas been a change of address from that appearing on the bond, please\nadvise us.\nJ. M. Conklin,\nSecretary-Treasurer\nWhen did Niagara\ncome into the picture?\nA medical bill. A clothing bill. A car repair\nbill. They all seemed to come at once. Jack\nneeded money in a hurry.\nAnswer: A Niagara Loan. Jack talked It over\nwith the manager of the nearest Niagara\nOffice. Besides getting the money, he got a\nlot of good advice on budgeting. With a\nNiagara Loan, Jack was able to pay all hfs\nbills at one time. And repay the loan on easy\nterms to suit his budget.\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 d*^ Group of Companies\nNIAGARA\nii LOANS a\nSfJI Raker SI.\nPhone 352-7232\n Aussie, New Zealander Win\nCanada's First Grand Prix\nBy JACK TRACY\nMOSPORT, Ont. (CP) - Australian Jack Brabham Sunday\nwon Canada's first Grand Prix\nlor Formula 1 cars when he\nloured the Mosport road circuit\nat a rain-slowed average of\n82.72 miles an hour.\nA paid crowd of 39,471 saw\nthe three times winner of the\nw o r 1 d driver's championship\nrace a car of his own design in\nthe 220-mile event in elapsed\ntime of two hours, 40 minutes,\n40.0 seconds.\nFor the fans, It was their first\nsight of tho small, fast open-\nwheeled, single-seaters racing\non a Canadian track.\nThe heavier sports cars have\ndominated Canadian sports racing since the last war but Formula I Is the criterion of world\nchampionship racing.\nThe event was one of 11\ncounting towards the world title\nand brought to Canada in honor\nof the centennial year.\nFor the 42-year-old Brabham\nthe victory meant $10,575 in\nprize money and the Player's\nAward.\nIn second place was New\nZealander Denis Hulme in\nanother Brabham. Hulme, leader in the 1967 world title race,\nfinished one minute, 1.9 seconds\nbehind Brabham. Hulme won\n$6,350 in prize money.\nDan Gurney of Costa Mesa,\nCalif., only American in the 16-\ncar field, finished third in an\nAmerican Eagle and won $4,\n000.\nJim Clark of Scotland, twice\nwinner of the world title and\nfavorite to win Sunday's race\nbecause of his showing in practice sessions, went out of the\nevent when rain wet his ignition.\nBut Clark was still able to tie\nthe lap record for the 2.45-mile\ncircuit when he was clocked at\none minute 23.1 seconds. The\nrecord was first set last year\nby Gurney in a Lola T70 sports\ncar.\nThe drizzle that slowed the\ndrivers' performance caused\nseveral spin-outs on the wet\ntrack and forced Clark out 'if\nthe race with a short-circuited\nignition.\nTop Junior Athletes\nNamed to Team\nOTTAWA (CP) - The six\noutstanding individual competitors in the junior track and\n(1 e I d championships were\nnamed Saturday to the 67-mem-\nber Canadian team that will\nmeet teams from Britain and\nFrance here next Saturday.\nThere will be 28 events in the\nIri-counlry meet and each country Is permitted two competitors per event and one team in\nrelay events.\nOfficials selected 19-year-old\nWilf Wedman of Vancouver as\ntop male competitor for\nestablishing a new Canadian\nnative high Jump record of six\nfeet, eight inches\u2014a quarter-\nInch higher than any Canadian\nhad ever jumped.\nJay Dahlgren, 19, of Vancouver was named outstanding\nfemale athlete after she threw\nthe javelin 187 feet, one inch\nmore than 20 feet farther than\nthe old women's junior record\nof 144 feet, five inches.\nOutstanding junior boy was\nGeorge Cloutier of Ottawa-with\nwins in the long and triple\njumps.\nRoberto Picco of Toronto,\nwith wins in the 440. 880 and\nthe mile was named top junior\ngirl.\nJoan  Fisher  of  Ottawa  was\nSPINS, GETS FOURTH\nGraham Hill of England,\nClark's Lotus team-mate, spun\nout on the 77th lap, got back in\ncontention and was awarded\nfourth place.\nMike Sponce of England was\nfifth in a BRM and Chris Amon\nof New Zealand sixth in the\nonly Italian Ferrari in the race.\nBruce McLaren of Now Zealand,   who   at   one   point   was\nlying fourth and threatening the\nleaders, finished seventh.\nThe only Canadians in the\nrace, which was dominated by\ndrivers from elsewhere ln the\nCommonwealth, were making\ntheir debut in Formula I cars\nafter years of racing sports\ncars.\nAl Pease, Toronto commercial artist, finished 12th in an\nAmerican   Eagle   brought   for\nhim from Gurney's stable.\nEppie Wletzes, Toronto auto\ndealer, was listed as a non finisher when he was disqualified\nfor having help in pushing his\ncar after a spin-out.\nAs a result of the race,\nHulme is leading the 1867 world\nchampionship standings with 43\npoints, Brabham is second with\n34, Amon third with 20 and\nClark fourlh with 19.\nChicago-Boston Split Twins'\nVictory Boots Minnesota Back\nchosen outstandingjuvenlle^glrl Jafter bowing to Kansas City 2\nafter winning the 100-yard dash\nand establishing a record of\n24.6 seconds in the 220. Existing\nrecord was 24.7 seconds.\nJohn Konihowskl of Moose\nJaw, Sask., was named outstanding juvenile boy for wins\nin the 120-yard hurdles and the\ntriple jump where he set a new\nrecord of 48 feet, 5',i inches.\nExisting record was 47 feet, IVi\ninches.\nWedman, Miss Dahlgren,\nMiss Fisher, and Miss Picco\nwere all members of Canada's\nPan-American team at Winnipeg.\nBy THE ASSOCIATED   PRESS\nPinch hitter Rocky Colavlto\ndrew a bases-loaded walk with\ntwo out In the 11th inning Sunday night, giving southpaw\nGary Peters and Chicago White\nSox a 1-0 victory over Boston\nafter Red Sox took the double-\nheader opener 4-3 on two\nhomers by Carl Yastrzemskl.\nMinnesota's 6-3 victory over\nCleveland, coupled with the\nChicago-Boston split, sent the\nTwins back into first place in\nthe American League race\u2014one\npercentage point ahead of the\nRed Sox and one game up on\nthe White Sox. Fourth-place\nDetroit fell Vi games back\n1.\nStandings\nAmerican League\nW  L   Pet.\nGBL\nMinn.\n72   56   ,563\n_\nBoston\n73   57   .562\n_\nChicago\n71  57  .555\n1\nDetroit\n71   58   .550\nVi\nCalif.\n65   62   .512\n6V4\nWash.\n61   69   .469\n12\nCleveland\n61   70   .466\n1JV4\nBall.\n57   69   .452\n14\nN. York\n58   71   .40\n14V.\nK. City\n54  74   .422\n18\nWhite Sox filled the bases\nwithout a hit in the 11th inning\nof Ihe nightcap before reliever\nDarrell Brandon walked Colavi-\nlo, forcing In the winning run\nPeters, who allowed only four\nhils before leaving for a pinch\nhitter in the 11th, gained his\n15th victory in 22 decisions.\nYastrzemski poled his 33rd\nand 34th homers in the opener\n\u2014tying Minnesota's Harmon\nKillebrew for the major league\nlead\u2014and right fielder Jose\nTartabull killed a ninth-inning\nChicago threat by throwing out\nKen Berry at the plate to complete a game - ending double\nplay.\nJim Merritt checked the\nIndians on seven hits while\nRich Rollins and Rod Carew\nhomered in the Twins' victory\nat Cleveland. Joe Azcue, robbed\nof a two-run homer by Ted\nUhlaender's circus catch in the\nsecond Inning, hit a two-run\nblast ln the ninth for the\nIndians.\nRoberto Rodriquez, making\nhis first start in the malors,\nand reliever Paul Lindblad\ncombined for a five-hitler as\nAthlelic's nipped the Tigers on\nRamon W e b s t e r 's two-run\nhomer. Jim Northrup homered\nfor Detroit.\nNew York Yankees drubbed\nWashington 8-2 behind Tom\nTrcsh, who drove in four runs\nwith a double and sacrifice fly,\nand Ruben Amaro, who belted\na three-run homer.\nCalifornia and Baltimore had\ntheir scheduled doubleheader\nrained out.\nSt. Louis' National League\ninning comeback by the Astros,\ntailed 4V4 inning contest on\nTony Taylor's two-run triple\nand Larry Jackson's four-hit\npitching.\nthe third inning and trimmed\nLos Angeles 6-2. Winning pitcher Nelson Brlles triggered the\nbig  inning with  a  single  and\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., AUG. 28, 1967 \u2014 7\nStamps' Win Over Lions\nGives Them Western Lead\nJulian Javier stroked a key triple.\nTommy Harper and Pete\nRose each knocked in three\nruns in Cincinnati's 11-8 victory\nover Houston. Rose walloped a\ntwo-run homer for the Reds,\nwho weathered a four-run ninth\nPhiladelphia surged to its\nseventh straight victory, blanking Pittsburgh 2-0 in a rain-cur-\nRich Nye scattered five hits\nleaders struck for five runs In\nand Randy Hundley homered as\nChicago Cubs extended New\nYork's losing string to eight\ngames by topping the Mets 3-1\nin a game hailed after seven\ninnings by rain. The second\ngame of the twin bill was\nwashed out.\nSan    F r a n c i s c o 's    Mike\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Calgary\nStampeders took over sole possession of first place in the Western Football Conference Sunday\nby defeating British Columbia\nLions 16-7 hefore 28,436 fans at\nEmpire Stadium.\nCalgary has won four games\nand lost one while Lions, who\nwere playing their first game under new head coach Jim Champion, are winless in five starts.\nCalgary end Terry Evanshen\nscored his club's only major\nmidway through the first quarter. Bill Goods added 10 points\nfor Stampeders, hitting on three\nof four field goal attempts as\nwell as a convert.\nThe  lone  B.C.  scoring   play,touchdown,\nwas   a   touchdown   by   Leroy|   Llons eve\u201eed th   5\nSledge which wan converted by [ tho  ,hrce.m|nute  mark  ot the\nLions used newly-signed quar-1 throughout Ihe game, lugged It\nterback Dave Mathieson spar- to the 14, Leroy Sledge moved\nIngly as an alternate to veteran!clcared the \"\"* for Larry\nBernie Faloney. But on his first\nplay Mathieson, a former\nWashington State star, fumbled\nthe ball on his own 10-yard line.\nCalgary quarterback Pete\nLiske had plenty of time lo execute passing plays. He set up\nhis club's first touchdown at\n8:36 of the first quarter. He\nbootlegged left from his own\n13-yard line and spotted\nEvanshen open in the left end\nzone. Evanshen appeared to be\nwell covered by Lions' Steve\nShater, but he plucked the ball\nfrom   Shafer's   grasp   for   the\nTed Gerela.\n| second quarter when Bill Lasse-\nIn addition to absence of for-|ter intercepted a long Liske\nmer coach Dave Skrlen, the | pass ne caught it on the Cal-\nLions were playing without twolgary 47 and ran it to tne 24 Bm\nkey   defensive   linemen\u2014Tom\nBrown and Wayne Foster.\nBrown, a former all-Canadian, retired last week and Foster was sidelined with a knee\ninjury.\nMunsey, a key man for Lions\nit   to   the   four   and   Munsey\nEilmes to crash over from\nthere.\nAs the second quarter drew\nto a close, Goods kicked a 26-\nyard field goal to give Stamps\n10-7 halftime lead.\nNeither team was able to\npress close to pay dirt in the\nthird quarter.\nGoods, also back-up fullback\nto Lovell Coleman, hit from 38\nand 39 yards in the final period.\nB.C. meets Winnipeg Thursday while Calgary doesn't play\nagain until Sept. 4.\nTERRY EVANSHEN\n. . scores only major.\nMcCormick blanked Atlanta 2-0\non a five-hitter for his 18th victory before Clete Boyer's 22nd\nhomer and the two-hit pitching\nof three hurlers led Braves past\nGiants 4-1 for a doubleheader\nsplit.\nCanadian Junior Golf\nChamo To Try U.S. Links\nCowan Seeks to Retain\nU.S. Amateur Golf Title\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.\n(AP)\u2014Gary Cowan, a Canadian\nand the first foreigner in 34\nyears to win the United States\namateur golf championship,\nwill be here this week to defend\nthe title he captured last year.\nowan, a 28-year-old insurance salesman from Kitchener,\nOnt., won the title by defeating\nDeane Beman of B e t h e s d a,\nMd., In an 18 hole playoff. The\nCanadian, who has represented\nhis country in virtually every\namateur international team\nevent, forced the playoff with a\nstunning 67 in Ihe final round at\nArdmore, Pa.\nAnother Canadian, Sandy\nSomerville of London, Ont., won\nthe top prize of American amateur golf In 1932.\nCowan, Canadian amateur\nchamp in 1961, passed up his\nautomatic berth in the United\nStates Open this year. But he\ndid compete in the Canadian\nAmateur at Victoria and was\neliminated In the first round of\nmatch play.\nGOLF HONOR SHARED\nCowan, who has a Uz-year-\nold son, has been winning\nnational championships since\n1956, when he won the Ontario\nand Canadian junior titles. He\nwas named jointly with Nick\nWeslock of Burlington, Ont., as\nCanada's top amateur golfer in\n1962.\nA 180-pounder who stands\nsix-feel-one, Cowan faces a\nchallenge from several leading\nAmericans, including Marty\nFleckman, amateur sensation\no fthe U.S. Open this year.\nCowan was named top ama-\nCHAMPION DRAFTED\nA U.S. Army private who won\nthe British amateur last spring\nis seeking his second national\ntitle of the year. Bob Dickson, a\nmember of the victorious U.S.\nWalkor Cup learn last spring,\nwon the British title the following week and .vas drafted into\nthe army 40 hours later.\nHe could become the first\nplayer to win both the U.S. and\nBritish crowns in one season\nsince Lawson Litlle in 1935.\nThe 1959 Amateur, played\nover the Broadmoor East\ncourse, was won by Jack Nick-\nlaus. The West course, which\nnestles in the foothills of the\nCheyenne Mountains, was completed by architect Robert\nTrent Jones only two years ago\nEightcen-hole rounds will be\nplayed on each of the four days\nof the medal-play tournament\nstarting Wednesday, with the\n\u25a0list cut to the low 60 and ties\nfor Friday and Saturday.\nBy STERLING TAYLOR\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Jay Pauk-\nkunen of Port Arthur wants to\nfind out how good United States\ngolfers are before he decides\nabout making golf his career.\n\"I want lo go the University\nof New Mexico and try to get\non the college team,\" the 18-\nyear-old Grade 13 graduate said\nSaturday after winning the\nCanadian junior golf championship.\nHe defealed Doug Roxburgh 4\nand 3 for the title.\n\"It's a bit early to make up\nmy mind about serious golf\nnow.\"\nPaukkunen was dead serious\nabout winning the championship from the first day he\narrived at the Toronto Golf\nClub early last week.\nHe was one of the few golfers\nto shoot a consistent 73-75\u2014148\nduring the two-day qualifying\nround that made him the second lowest qualifier going into\nWestchester Golf\nAgain Rained Out\nRYE. NY. (AP) - The\nworld's richest golf tournament\n-the $250,000 Westchester Classic \u2014 was turned into a sodden,\nfrustrating travesty Sunday\nwhen the second round was\nwashed out for the third\nstraight day, with Tennessee's\nMason Rudolph again the chief\nvictim.\nRudolph, bespectacled, clerk-\nish-lnoking veteran of nine\nyears on the tour, for the second straight day had shot to the\nfront of the star-spangled field,\nfiring a five-undcr-par 67 for\n133. only to have the effort\ncompletely erased.\nHiggs' Bowling\nDrops Pakistan\nLONDON (CP)  - Pakistan's\nhopes of making a fight of the\nteur golfer of the Americas in | third and final test against Eng\nJanuary   by   Golf   Digest,   a\nmonthly U.S. publication.\nFleckman was third behind Jim\nWiechers   of   Atherton.   Calif.,\nand Beman, now a professional,\nwas fifth.\nFleckman led the Open after\nthe first round and again after\nthree rounds. He is considered\none of the longest hitters in golf\nand observers believe bis power\nmay he decisive over the 6.891\nyard, par 35-35-78 West Broadmoor course.\nNow he must start anew from\nhis opening round 66 with the\nfinal three rounds scheduled\nMonday, Tuesday and Wednesday.\nAll players in the 150-man\nlist, shooting for the $50,000\nfirst prize, will lee off as originally scheduled last Friday\nwhen play was cancelled before\nanvone had teed off.\nO n Saturday, seventy-nine\nwere still on lhe course when a\nheavy rain storm sent players\nand spectators scurrying.\nSunday, players had not completed rounds when the 6.573-\nyard, par 72 Westchester course\nwas swept by a thunderstorm\nwith sporadic lightning and\ndrenching rain\nPUTTING DOES IT\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNelson Girl\nCaptures\nBatting Title\nKAMLOOPS (CP)\u2014 Marlene\nJones drove In four runs as\nPrince George won the B.C.\nSenior B Women's Fastball\ntitle Sunday by blanking Co-\nqilltlnm 7-0.\nAlso In lhe tournament were\nKamloops, Prince Rupert, Victoria, Nelson and Whltchorse.\nPat Lelebvre, who played\nthird base for Prince George,\nwas judged the most valuable\nplayer In the double-knockout\nevent. Teammate Gwen Rem-\npel, winner of Sunday's game,\nwon the pitching award, while\nAnne Konkin of Nelson took the\nbatting crown,\nIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nthe  regular  match-play  championship.\nIronically, the Port Arthur\ngolfer had failed to qualify for\nManitoba's four-man Interprovincial team this year. Golfers\nin the Port Arthur area of\nOntario are members of the\nManitoba Golf Association\nwhich sponsors the four low\nqualifiers in the Canadian\nchampionship.\nPaukkunen paid his own way\nto Toronto.\nHe reached Saturday's 36-hole\nfinal by winning five match-\nplay rounds with some of the\nbest putting ever seen in the\ntournament.\nHe had won a match Friday\nmorning with a 30-foot birdie\nputt on the 18th green and\ncame from behind to tie his\nmatch in the afternoon with\nanother 30-foot birdie putt on\nthe same green.\nHe grabbed a 3-up lead on the\nsixth hole of Saturday's final\nagainst Roxburgh and kept his\n15-year-old opponent under such\nconstant pressure that the Van.\ncouver whiz kid never\nproper opening.\nQueens Blank Savoys\nIn Ragged Soccer Play\n27th hole and after both golfers\nhalved the next four holes,\nRoxburgh again cut the lead to\n3-up on Ihe 32nd.\nThe Vancouver player's\ncomeback was short lived, however, and he lost the 33rd hole\nand the match when he missed\na six-foot put for a par four.\nPaukkunen won the Pepsi\nCola Trophy for his victory.\nFriederichs\nTop Sailor\nTORONTO (CP)-Bud Friederichs Jr. of New Orleans Saturday successfully defended his\nNorth American Dragon-class\nsailing championship for the\nsecond successive year.\nThe 27-year-old stockbroker,\nsailing Williwaw, became a\nstrong favorite for this week's\nworld competition by sailing to\nthree first-place finishes and a\nsixth in the four races held in\nan abbreviated championship.\nFriederichs retains the\nhad; George L. Craig memorial trophy with his victory.\nHe sank at least three birdie\nputts of more than six feet during the final match that lasted\n33 holes before Roxburgh ran\nout of holes. Paukkunen was 4\nup with only three holes\nremaining.\nLEAD REDUCED\nThe Port Arthur  golfer  had\nIncreased his lead to 4-up with\nJapan Wins\nLittle League\nWorld Series\nWILLIAMSPORT,   Pa.   (AP)\nJapan won the Little League\nan eight-foot birdie putt on the I World Series for the first time\n18th. Roxburgh cut the lead to\n3-up on the 25th hole when officials ruled that Paukkunen had\nimproved his putting line and\nawarded the hole to his opponent.\nPaukkunen went 4-up on the\nIn the 21-year history of the\nannual classic for small fry\nwith a 4-1 victory Saturday\nover North Roscland of Chicago.\nMasahiro Miyahara, a 104-\npound right-bander who pitched\na onc-hil shutout in the first\ngame of the series, won his second game, allowing only three\nIn a not too satisfactory soccer match Saturday evening,\nNelson Queens defeated their\nhometown rivals, the Savoys,\n2-0. Playoff bound Queens did\nnot look too impressive In a\ngame that just might have been\nwon by the Savoys.\nThe Queens began shorthand-\ned. But they were also surprised by a much stronger Savoys team than they had previously encountered.\nThe Queens seemed to be|\ncaught off guard by the new\nSavoys team: time and again\nthey found themselves backed\ninto their own goalmoulh.\nInstrumental In keeping the\ngreenshirls on the attack was\nnewcomer Dave Wilson playing\nat left half. Hustling, classy\nball control, and long, accurate,\ndefence-splitting passes by Wil\nson kept the Savoys forwards\nnear goal-scoring territory. Wil\nson is a welcome and badly\nneeded addition to the Savoys\nhe gave all players a lesson in\nhard work.\nBIG SURPRISE\nThe Queens' chances to score\nin the first half were only nc\ncaslonal; none were really dan\ngerous. A big surprise was the\nwork of Savoys' Jack Halliday\nat right fullback. In the absence\nof Fisher Crockett, Halliday.\ndespite his youth, played an\nexceptional  game.\nAt the half the score was a\n0-0 deadlock. The Savoys had\ntheir scoring chances but had\nnot capitalized.\nIn the second half the game\ndeteriorated. Both teams share\nthe blame for the nagging and\ncomplaining that persisted until\nthe final whistle.\nThe Queens came back to\nplay the more dangerous soccer In the second half, and they\nearned two goals from Tony\nBrand. The first was an alert\nmove. A goalmouth pass from\nQuinto Maida was headed out\nFootball Scores\nFootball\nScores\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSATURDAY\nContinental League\nToronto 22 Akron 7\nEugene 20 Sacramento 28\nOrland 13 Charleston 10\nWheeling 17 Hartford 30\nWestern Conference\nW L T F A Pt\n4 1 0 104 51 8\n3 1 0 94 83 6\n2   2   0   72   80   4\nby Stan Grill, but Brand hit the\nball almost simultaneously and\nnodded it into the net.\nBrand's second goal came on\nanother pass from Maida. Halliday misjudged; Mlttelstadt had\nno chance. With darkness coming\non there was little good soccer\nto be seen except for the tiring\nWilson's hustle, Joe Brand's encouragements to his Queens,\nand the hard work of the Savoys\ndefenders; Mittelstadt, Dennis\nSteele, Halliday, and Grill.\nExcept for a postponed game\nbetween the Savoys and Kimberley, the league's cellar-\ndwellers, the season wraps up\nnext week. Both Nelson teams\ntravel to Trail. At 1 o'clock Spokane and the Savoys play, and\nat 3 Trail battles the Queens.\nThere is still a chance that the\nQueens will gain one point on\nCranbrook Rovers and earn a\nsecond place finish.\nCalgary\nSask.\nWinnipeg\nEdmonton\nB.C.\nPLANT GETS HIGH\nCHESTER, Pa. (API-Officials of Delaware County say\nthey found six-foot-high marijuana growing near the county\nincinreator.\n2   3   0 76 88 4\n0   5   0 60 114 O\nEastern Conference\nW L T F A PT\nOttawa            2   1   0 85 54 4\nHamilton         2   1   0 53 53 4\nToronto           2  2  0 64 89 4\nMontreal         1  2  0 57 53 2\nJUAL AUCTION\nSERVICES\nSales Every 2nd Saturday\n1 p.m. alternately\nWe Sell Anything \u25a0 Anywhere\nCASTLEGAR\n365-6767 365-5001\nCRESTON\n356-2956\nTinactin\nAttacks\nAthlete^\nFoot\n*Refl.T;M.,Scherina Corporation Umlterf\nPACIFIC\nWATER WELLS LTD.\nDrilling  Contractors\nfor\nFast, Efficient, Complete Service\nIn\nIndustrial and Domestic Water Supplies\nBox 329, Castlegar, B.C.\nPhone 365-6933\nPRODUCE SEEDS\nA single fern leaf may produce 50.000,000 spores which'' hits and an unearned run\nare released from spore cases1 He retired the first 13 Chica-\nfound on Ihe underside of the, go batters before giving up a\nleaf. I single in the fifth inning.\nU.S. Swimmer   Sets Mark\nIn World University Event\nWin money!\nThere are\nthousands\nand thousands\nof cash prizes\nin Number 7\npacks now.\nTOKYO 'CPi \u2014 Douglas Rus- happy. Japan won the first gold Toronto are expected to corn-\nsell of the United States set a medals, taking two in Judo. | pete in the swimming events,\nworld record of 59.5 seconds in In basketball, the favored i along with Bill Gillespie of the\nthe 100-metre backstroke today U.S. team trounced the Philip-1 University of British Columbia,\nas   swimming   competition   got pines 79-53. J Lawrence Smuk of the Univer-\nunder way at the World Univer-    Brazil   beat    Belgium   72-56. j sity of Saskatchewan   and  Len\nsity Games. South Korea routed Hong Kong j Chase of Sir  George  Williams\nRussell smashed the old mark 114-43. and Japan walloped\nof 59.6 in winning his heat of i Thailand 93-32.\nthe loo. I   Competitinn   began   also   in\nEighty-six had  finished their!    Thompson Mann, also of the1 volleyball, tennis and fencing\nrounds, including Rudolph, who  United  States,   established  the I   The other three sports of the ter Wong of the University of\nland \u201e.,. hiaei.rt hv   \u00bb   or.ni went   on   a   fan,astic   Putting   previous record in the 400 metre I games   are   swimming, which: Alberta   was   entered   in   the\ndTisShmli..   ?,, V\" I spree with his seven-year put-; rnediey relay at the 1964 Olym- starts  today,   track   and  field fencing    competition.    Richard\nburst o   fast bowling   by   Ken ting   ola(,e   whicn   he   has  pics in TokyC) |startjng  Wednesday  and  gym-!Danielson of the University of\nHiggs at tne oval here Saturday. > labelled the \"Blue Goose;\" and1    Tne games, boycotted by the'nasties beginning Thursday.       Alberta  in  gymnastics  and\nin   the   space   of nine balls, i young  pros  Jf,rrv   pitman  of   Communists,   opened  24  hours1   Canada  is  represented  in j Charles Maignon of McGill Uni-\nHiggs snapped up the first three L0Cust valley.  N.Y..  and  Lee; iate because of a thunderstorm, track   and   field    by   Abigail i veraity in judo.\nwickets without conceding a run Trevino of El Paso, Tex., who; Sunday's    opening    ceremonies Hoffman and Dave Bailey from|   The mini-skirts at the opening\nand   Pakistan,    needing 224 to bad   moved   into  second   place   were in the colorful splendor of the University of Toronto,  Bill! ceremonies were worn by Japa-\nn.-n.J   nn   InnlMft.   Anlnni     IMfni-Arl  ! 1 1.1 1       T,...l\u00bblnU        ...Hi.        HLJ. .    .   _. * l_ .       _,   \u00bb._., .... [ . . ....\nUniversity in Montreal\nThe University of British\nColumbia team is entered in\nthe volleyball competition. Les-\nvaid an innings defeat, tottered\nlo 26 for 4 at the close.\nEarlier. England was dismiss\ned for 440 after resuming at ils\nbehind    Rudolph    with    36-hole   a mini-Olympics. Icreennuch of Dalhousie Univer-jnese co-eds who  marched  into\nscores of 135. ;    There was royalty, fireworks. sity in Halifax and Ray Haswell! the packed R0.000 seat National\nThe rules specify that unlessIand   mini-skirts   to'delight   a of   the   University   of   British Stadium   with   placards   iclenti-\nall players can complete rounds j packed crowd of 80,000 In the! Columbia. tying each of the er participat-\n01 ern'\"hl score of 257 for 3 in  in  one day   the entire  day  is National Stadium I   Then   Van    Ryn    and   Gave inc   nations    The   Games   will\nreplv In Pakistan's 216 I eliminated. I    Then, to mai.e the host nation Strattan  of   the   University  of'end Sept. 4.\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,\n28, 1967\nYour Individual Horoscope\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Tuesday, August 29. 1967\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\nI Aries) \u2014 You may experience a\ntendency to lethargy but some\nnew activities, indicated now,\nshould soon correct that. Don't\nlet too much time elapse between\nplanning and action.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n_ You may experience a surprise, a necessary change. Do\nnot be led by emotion and sympathy to over-commit yourself or\nto act against your intuition and\nexperience.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n1390 ON THE DIAL % Mc CABLE FM\nMONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1967\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n6-0O\u2014News and Reports\n6:10\u2014Morning Show\n6:30\u2014News\n7 00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Sports\n7:10\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:25\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Morning Show\n7:45\u2014Sports\n7:46\u2014Music\n8:00\u2014News\n8 111- -Sports News\n8:15\u2014Music\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Morning Show\n9:00\u2014 News\n9:10\u2014Bill Good Sports\n9:15\u2014 Summer Young\n9:45\u2014Coffee Time\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Coffee Time\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Happy Time\n11:15\u2014Women's News\n11:20\u2014Happy Time\n11:40\u2014Summer Sounds\n11:55\u2014Preview Commentary\n12:00\u2014Summer Sounds\n12:30\u2014News\n12:40\u2014Sports\n12:45\u2014Music\n12:55\u2014News\n1:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n1:45\u2014Music\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Music\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014Summer Sounds\n3:30\u2014Good 'n' Country\n4:00\u2014News\n4:10\u2014Hit Parade\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports\n5:10\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Tempo\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Closing Stocks\n6:15\u2014Back to the Bible\n6:45-Sacred Heart\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Music\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014Music\n9:00\u2014News\n10 00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Sports\n11:08\u2014Music\n12:00\u2014News\n\u2014 Mercury's position warns be-sur\nagainst indiscretion, misinterpretation. You are forewarned. Your\nkeen mind and good jdugment\nshould help you counteract adverse influences.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 To get your schedule working\nproperly, you may have to put\nforth some extra effort. Some\nmatters will be more difficult\nthan others; will, therefore, need\ncloser care and precautions.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leol\n\u2014 Be ready to cope with strangers, odd situations. Pinpoint objectives; be selective about methods and side issues. Step up\nmomentum where possible.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 If you are careful\nto guard against impulsive arts\nand words, the day should he\ngenerally smooth. Dividends indicated from past efforts.\nSEPTEMBER 24 lo OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 By no means, discount the SMALL things for,\nthrough these, you can often\nachieve your most worthwhile al-\ntainments. Study techniques,\nsuggestions. Appraise values\nthoughfully.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 People disappoint? Results not up to par?\nWith good judgment, you must\nhandle things ably and composedly \u2014 you CAN. Don't set too\nfast a pace.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Feel \"on\nthe spot\"? At such moments,\nself-restraint and going slow-to-\n\u2022e are the recipe. Business that makes you seem so unusual-\n''\u2022 -\u2014.:..-    _.      nn.,\u201e\\n\\      mn.\nly perceptive at crucial moments. Birthdate of: Oliver\nWendell Holmes, writer, physician: John Locke, writer, philosopher.  __\nTiosjdkcM^L by.\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMONDAY, AUGUST 28,  1967\nMorning Show\n6:10\u2014The\n7:00\u2014News\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotional\n7:54\u2014Music\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014Summer Young\n9:45\u2014Along the Way\n9:59-DOOTS\n10:00\u2014News\n10:03\u2014Along the Way\n11:40\u2014The Archers\n11:55\u2014Assignment\n12:00\u2014Along the Way\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Along the Way\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n1:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Holiday Parade\n2.30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03\u2014T-Can Matinee\n1   3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:10\u2014Music\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sport Desk\n5:10\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:15\u2014Music\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Music\n6:00\u2014The World at 6\n6:30\u2014Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Centennial Diary\n7:30\u2014R.P.M.\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014Playback\n8:30\u2014Good N. Country\n9:00\u2014News\n9:03\u2014Country Magazine\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Best of Ideas\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014The Best of Ideas\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After Hours\nups and downs leveling off, but\nbe cautiuis, nevertheless.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 i Capricorn i \u2014 The position of\nSaturn warns against Ihe errors\nof duplication,  repetition,  AND\nforgetting minor details. If running on schedule, don't try to\noverpress; generally, be steady,  i\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY   JjOMItO.   {tfh&slstJL\n20 (Aquarius! \u2014 You have re-1\nceived  unexpected  favors  and\ngains in the past:    now   have\ncause to appreciate them and\nwork for more. An excellent period for sincere striving.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\nI Pisces I \u2014 Associations, meetings, agreements will not all\nplease: some recent developments may have irked. With\ncalm demeanor and effort, you\ncan balance the scales, equalize\nthings.\nYOU BORN TODAY are willing to strive for \u2014 and usually\nattain \u2014 lofty goals. You dislike\ndisagreements, but could cause\nthem yourself through inflexibility and contrariness. The better\nyou is competent, enthusiastic,\nlikeable, cautious and conservative. You are ambitious and\nmake many influential friends;\nenjoy the arts and find great\nhappiness in the company of intelligent persons. Persistent and\ncourageous, you are a champion\nin defense of Ihe underdog. You\nare often considered \"lucky\",\nbut it is your knack for research,\nyour keen observation and your\ncontinuous search of knowledge\nBRITISH SOCCER\nTUESDAY, AUGUST 29,  1967\n6:00\u2014The A.M. Show\n7:57\u2014A.M  Show and\nNewscasts\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Summer Young\n9:45\u2014Along the Way\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:03\u2014Along the Way\n11:40\u2014The Archers\n11:55\u2014Assignment\n12:00\u2014Along the Way\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Along the Way\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:40\u201451st North\n1:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n1:45\u2014Network Resume\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Sing Something Simple\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03-Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Round Up\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports\n5:15\u2014Tempo\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Tempo\n5:56-Stock Market\n6:00\u2014The World at 6\n6:30\u2014Tuesday Jadz\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Mods Make Music\n7:30\u2014Christian Frontiers\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014CBC Tuesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Canadian Chamber Music\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Music '67\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After Hours Till 6 a.m.\nLONDON      (CP)-Saturday's\nsoccer    results:    ENGLISH\nLEAGUE\nDivision  I\nChelsea 1 Fulham 1\nCoventry 2 Sheffield U 2\nLiverpool 6 Newcastle 0\nMan United 1 Leicester 1\nNotts F 2 Arsenal 0\nSheffield W 2 Burnley 1\nSouthampton 4 West Brom 0     i\nStoke 3 Man City 0 *\nSunderland 1 Everton 0\nTottenham 5 West Ham 1\nWolverhampton 2 Leeds 0\nDivision II\nAston Villa 3 Rotherham 1\nBlackburn 2 Hull 0\nBlackpool 1 Millwall 4\nBolton 1 Cardiff 1    .\nCarlisle 2 Middlesbrough 2\nCharlton 0 Preston 0\nCrystal P 1 Derby 0\nHuddersfield 2 Birmingham 3\nIpswich 5 Bristol C 0\nQueen's PR 2 Norwich 0\nDivision III\nBarrow 1 Bournemouth 1\nBrighton 3 Shrewsbury 0\nBristol R 1 Colchester 1\nNorthampton 3 Grimsby 0\nOldham 0 Peterborough 2\nOxford 5 Bury 4\nSouthport 2 Watford 0\nLeyton Or 0 Torquay 2\nWalsall 3 Gillingham 0\nDivision IV\nAldershot 1 Halifax 1\nBradford 0 Hartlepools 1\nBrentford 3 Newport 1\nChester 1 Port Vale 1\nChesterfield 4 Notts C 0\nDarlington 2 Bradford C 2\nDoncaster 1 Swansea 2\nExeter 1 Crew 4\nLuton 2 Barnsley 0\nRochdale 3 York 2\nWorkington 2 Lincoln 4\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE CUP\nAirdrieonians 2 Partick 1\nArbroath 1 Alloa 1\nAyr U 1 Stranraer 0\nBerwick 1 St. Mirren 3\nBrechin 2 Forfar 1\nClyde 2 Motherwell 1\nDumbarton 1 Raith 1\nDundee U 0 Celtic 1\n.Dunfermline 1 Kilmarnock 3\nEast Fife 1 Albion 0\nEast Stirling 3 Stenhousemuir\nHamilton 3 Montrose 1\nHibernian 2 Dundee 4\nMorton 3 Queen of S 2\nQueen's Pk 1 Cowdenbeath 0\nRangers 3 Aberdeen 0\nSt. Johnstone 3 Hearts 2\nStirling 1 Falkirk 1\nIRISH LEAGUE\nUlster Cup\nArds 0 Llnfield 4\nDistillery 0 Bangor 1\nGlentoran 2 Derry City 1\nPortadown 1 Glenavon 2\nRUNS UP TAB\nVENTURA, Calif. (API\u2014In\naddition to questions on Vietnam, government spending and\nother subjects, Rep. Charles M.\nTeague asked in a poll of his\nconstituents, \"Whom would you\nlike to see president?\" Tne\nRepublican says the post office\ndepartment ruled the political\nquestion voided his use of the\nfranking privilege and required\nhim to pay $5,462.50 for the\n190,000 pieces of mail.\nMADE WITH MILK\nMost of the commercially-\nmade white bread in Canada is\nmade with enriched white flour\nand added skim milk solids.\nPLEASE A MAN\nMake the man in your life\nvery, very happy. Knit this\nhandsome, warm slipover with\nor without sleeves. Easy!\nSmart for golf, campus, casual\nwear. Knit in simple rib pattern.\nPattern 886: sizes 34-36; 38-40;\n42-44.\nTHIRTY - FIVE CENTS in\ncoins 'no stamps, pleasei for\neach pattern to Laura Wheeler,\ncare of N.D.N. Pattern Dept.,\n60 Front St. West, Toronto, Ont.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS\nSend for Big, Big 1968 Needle-\ncraft Catalogue \u2014 hundreds ol\nknit, crochet fashions, embroidery, quills, afghans, gifts, toys\nPlus 6 free patterns printed inside. 50c.\nBook of prize  AFGHANS.  12\ncomplete patterns. 60c\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\nVnwujDiL. Vrlahlin,\nPrinted Pattern\nTELEVISION   FOR  TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n-Live Program\n(C)\u2014Color Program\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel 2\n7:30-lron Horse*  (Cl\n8:30\u2014Blondes Have More\nFun*  (C)   (Special)\n9:30-Peyton Place*  'C>\n10:00\u2014Big Valley* (C)\n11:00\u2014Nightbeat <C>\n11:30\u2014Joey Bishop*  IC)\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\nDaily Crossword\n6:30-Leave It to Beaver , 8:30-Vacation Payhouse. C\n7:05-Truth, Consequences 'C> 1 9:00-Andy Griffith Show'C\n7:30-Gilligan's Island* id 9:30-NFL P'^~nJ\u2122bal\n8:00-Mr. Terrific* <C> Green Bay at Dallas'<Ci\n112:30\u2014Local News IC)\t\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\n7:00-Best of Groucho\n7:30-The   Monkees*   'O\n8:00-1 Dream of Jeannie\" (Cl\n8:30\u2014Horsepower\n9:00-The Road West* IC)\n10:00-ftun for Your Life* (Cl\n11:00\u2014News  and   Weather   <C>\nU:30\u2014Tonight With Carson* (O\n1. Abrogation\n2. Ireland\nI. Islet\nI. Scotch\nriver\n5. Incisors\n6. Bulging\njar\n7. Deserts\n8. Ray\nBolger,\nfor one\n11. Male deer\n13. Sandhill\n15. Unhappy\n17. Strike\n18. Exclamation\n21. Passe\n22. Prlca\n24. Split\npulse\n25. Public\nvehicles\n26. Lizards\n27. Member\nof a\nfamous\ntrio\n28. Appear\n29. Stringed\ninstrument\n31. Soothes\n34. Dilatory\n35. Corn brea*\n37. Solemn\nwonder\n38. Immerse\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nCastlegar, Channel 3; Cranbrook, Channel 10\n12:00-Luncheon Date\n12:30-Scarch for Tomorrow\n12:45\u2014Guiding   Light\n1:90\u2014Luncheon  Date\n1:30-As the World Turns\n2:00\u2014By  Invitation\n2:30-Focus\n3:00-Take   Thirty\n3:30\u2014Edge ol Night\n4:00\u2014Communicate\n4:30\u2014Vacationtime\n5:00\u2014Mr. Piper\n5:30\u2014The Citadel\n6:00\u2014News\n6:15\u2014British Calendar\n6:30\u2014Time Tunnel\n7:30\u2014Sing-Along  Jubilee\n8:00-The Saint\n9 00-Suspense Theatre\n10:00-CBC Magazine\n10:30\u2014Quiet Nights\n11:00\u2014News        \t\nCJLH-TV \u2014 Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Date \u2014 1\n12:30\u2014Luncheon   Date   With\nSeven\n1:00-Summertime \u2014 \"Cattle\nTown\"\n3:30-Take Thirty With\nMadame Benoit\n4:00\u2014Communicate\n4:30\u2014Vacationtime\n5:00\u2014Cartoons\n5:30\u2014Vagabond Honeymoon\nTUESDAY\n6:00\u2014Round Up \u2014 Sports,\nWeather, News\n6:30\u2014Sentimental Agent\n7:30\u2014Windfall\n8:00\u2014Our Place\n9:00\u2014Expo This Week\n9:30\u2014Wojeck\n10:30\u2014More Stories From\nInside Quebec\n11:00_CBC News\n11:20\u2014Final Edition\t\nACROSS\n1. Peruse\n5. Amphibian\n9. Clinton's\nditch\n10. Island of\nNapoleon's\nexile\n11. Malice\n12. Oxlike\nmammal\n14. Honor card\nin bridge\n15. Posture\n16. Rough lava\n17. Persian\nruler\n19. House part\n20. Burned\n22. Apple\ncenter\n23. Shore\nrecess\n24. Spanish\ntitle\n25. Form\n27. Pendant\nornament\n30. Past\n31. Young\nhorse\n12.\" Fair\nLady\"\n33. Evergreen\ntree\n15. By\nmeans oi\n16. Scent\n17. Idolize\n19. Iota\n10. Pinion\n11. Stitches\n12. Fencing\nfoil\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nA  X  V  I) I, II  A   A  X R\nla    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\n%\n2\n',\n1\nfft\nt\n.\n;\n8\nV\/\nCU\n%\n9\n%\n0\nV\/\nrVV\nII\n%\n12\n11\n14\n^\n%\nib\n16\nW<\n17\nIS\n%\n19\n20\n21\n%\nH\n$\n%\nti\n%\nM\nV4\n^t\nJb\nIt\n%\nH\n2b\n29\niO\nV\/{\nii\n%\nu\n15\nM\n'd\n%\nW\n56\nyA\nhi\nH\nVA\nH\nVA\n40\nY\/r\n7\/t\n4,\n&\n01\nVA\n6-2 a\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nJ D Y  L  S\nProgram, sublert to change by station, without notice.!\nW G L\nRDQLT,     SDC     CD\n\u2014 D HKWG     JVRIl\nYLWSC       CD       XL\nXL     BSTLGHCDDT.\nSLEEKLY ELEGANT\nIt's one-sided, but this slimming dress speaks ils lines clearly and in the most flattering\nterms for you. Note the easy fit,\nstanding tunnel neckline. New\nand smart!\nPrinted Pattern 9298: Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 14\nlakes 2-1i yds. 35-in.\nFIFTY CENTS (50ci in coins\nI no stamps, please) for each pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME.\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nSend order to MARIAN MAR\nTIN. NDN Pattern Dept., 60\nFront Street West, Toronto, Ont.\nPLAN YOUR NEW FALL\nWARDROBE, send now for our\nnew Fall-Winter Patern Cata\nlogue. 100 fresh, exciting shapes\nin all sizes. Get one pattern free\n\u2014 clip coupon in Catalogue. Send\n50c now.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., AUG. 28, 1967        9\n*\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nPART  TIME   HOUSEKEEPER\nneeded immediately. \u2014 Phone\nPeebles Motor Inn, 352-3525.\n-106-tfn\nHELP WANTED\nMALE OR FEMALE\nPAY-RAISE\nWRITE for free 100-page book\n\u2014 tells you how to   train   at\nhome   for   top   paying   jobs.\nCheck your group.\n\u2022 ART CAREER\n\u2022 BOOKKEEPING CAREER\n\u2022 WRITING CAREER\n\u2022 BUSINESS CAREER\n\u2022 PROF. ENGINEERING\nCAREER\n\u2022 DRAFTING CAREER\n\u2022 FORESTRV CAREER\nCANADIAN INSTITUTE OF\nSCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY\nLTD.\nSuite 205,263 Adelaide St. W.,\nToronto\nNAME\t\nADDRESS \t\nCITY \t\n-201-201\nFLUNKY WANTED BY SEPT\n11. $350 per month and hoard\nApply in writing to G. P. Sawc-\nzuk Logging Co., Box 326, Nel-\nson, B.C, \u2014197-202\nexperiencedITor nTn G\ncook wanted. Apply in person\nonly, no phone calls, to Villa\nDining Lounge, North Shore,\nNelson. \u2014196-201\nBABYSITTER. FRIDAYS,   N.S.\nHall area. Phone 352-6358.\n\u2014197-202\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED MEAT~PACK\ner and grocery territory sales\nman wilh car, 15 yrs. Wholesale marketing and sales, familiar B.C. territories. Bob\nMcLeod, ph. 352-5443, Nelson.\n      -196-201\nDAY CARE,  MY H0Me7bE-\nhind Hume School. Ph. 352-2993\n -200-202\nBULLDOZING, HOURLY OR\ncontract. Phone Ken Lipsack.\n226-7444.  or 226-7202.  -198-203\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR\n- Gus Stenberg, ph. 352-6H!i2.\n-193-218\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nCONVENIENTLY L O CATED\nSuperette Grocery with three\nbedroom apartment over.\nNorth Shore at bridge approach, a growing area and\nclose to three Motels, across\nfrom A. & W. Drive-In. Contact us tor full information.\nPrice includes land, building j\nand all required eqp. (stock:\nextra). Showing good volume\nand excellent potential for j\naggressive couple. For quick\nsale. $23,900, on suitable I\nterms. T. D. Rossling and |\nSon, Ltd., 568 Ward St., Phone\n352-3501. Real Estate Is our\nonly business. \u2014200-205)\nPERSONAL\nthe Credit Union\n\u2022 Low Cost Loans\nTRAILERS\nMOBILE HOMES\n(Continued) '\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES, MOTORCYCLES\nFOR SALE: RETAIL STORE ON\nBaker St. For further information apply at 351 Baker St. or\nPhone 352-7311. -190-201\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED, BUILD-\ning lots, tarm land, city and\ncountry residential Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Nelson. Ph 352-2425.\n-231-tfn\nWE REQUIRE 2 OR 3 BDRM\nhouse in Nelson. Purchaser\nhas $4000 down payment, and\n$100 monthly. Price range,\n$14,000. Phone or call at Wm.\nKalyniuk Agencies.     -192-tfn\nCASH BUYER WISHES TO\npurchase 2 or 3 bedroom home\nwith early possession in Balfour area. Please call Win.\nKalyniuk Agencies, phone\n352-2425. -192-tfn\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND  FARM  SUPPLIES\nBUCKSKIN SHETLAND PONY.\nVery gentle. Also 4 other saddle horses. Ph. Mary McGhee,\n367-9910, Fruitvale.     -197-202\nCAN BE BOUGHT ON TERMS:\n3-yr.-nld stallion. Nicest pony\nyou've ever seen. Ph. 352-6861.\n-197-208\n5-YEAR-OLD SHETLAND, li\nWelsh gelding of medium size.\nPhone 365-3183. -196-tfn\nYEAR-OLD HE I 1' E It Foil\nsale. Phone 359-7786. -200-202\nMake the Classified Way Pay\nMedia Services\nHas a\n1967 CAMARO\nQUICK SALE\n\"327\" V-8 Engine, Automatic Trans. Console\nShift, Power Brakes, Radio. Yellow With Special\nDeluxe Black Interior, Low Mileage, Immaculate, can be financed.\nNelson List Over $4,000\nFOR QUICK SALE\nPhone or write Box 184,  Nelson  Daily News,\nfor appointment to view.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,   ETC.,  FOR  SALE\nR E D F I S II CREEK SALES-\norama: For a short time only,\n$100 down payment will buy\nyou a lakeshore lot; creekside\nlot or upland lot, whichever is\nyour choice. Cash will also be\naccepted with a discount. \u2014\nProperly is located at Redfish\nCreek. 17 miles norlh of Nelson, just beyond the Harrop-\nProeter ferry 66-foot access\nroad leads to beautiful sandy\nbeach. Fishing extraordinary\nPitch your tent or park your\ntrailer now, in view of building\nyour home later, and watch\nthe spawning Kokanee landlocked salmon\u2014a phenomenal\nsite. Contact William Kalyniuk\nAgencies, phone 352-2425.\n\u2014181-tfn\nFOR  SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n\u2022 Life Savings Insurance\nYour Insurable Savings Earn Life Insurance.\n\u2022 LOAN PROTECTION\nHERE IS A REAL BARGAIN:\nRestaurant equipment like new\nOne\u20143-eompartment stainless\nsteel sink; 1\u2014Gorland 24-inch\nfry grill; 1 \u2014 Moffatt double\ndeep-fat fryer on stand; 1\u20144\nunit Silex coffee maker. \u2014\nGarage equipment: 1\u2014Exide\nfast battery charger; 1\u2014grease\ncart, air pressure type. Call\nafter 5 p.m., 352-6761.\u2014198-tfn\nWeedex Wonder Bar\nThe easy, hot weather way to\nget rid of Dandelions and\nPlantain. Only $4.49.\nNelson  Farmers' Supply\n524 Railway St.\nYour Insurable Loan Balance is Protected\nAgainst Your Death or Permanent Disability.\nNelson & District\n507 Vernon St.\nPhone 352-7410\nFor Better\nand\nUSED\"\"\nMOBILE\nHOMES\nSee\nUnited Trailer\n405 Cranbrook St.\nCranbrook, B.C.\nPh. 426-5295 Res. 426-4973\n-179-tfn\nKNIGHT AND syUIRE Mobile homes are at Barrett\nTrailer Sales. Fruitvale.\n-14-tfn\n-201-h\nWINLAW DISTRICT PIONEER\nfamily are offering their property, consisting of 3-bedroom\nnewer home, barn, 2 chicken-\nhouses, garage; situated on\nabout 28 acres, plus 15.82\nacres ol river bottom hay land.\nOpportunity for rural living\nplus raising livestock. For\nprice and terms please contact\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies,\nPhone 352-2425. -149-tln\n-161-h\nDUO- HEET COMBINATION\nfurnaces burn oil. wood, coal\n\u2014 even rubbish \u2014 without conversion or adjustment. When\nsolid fuel burns down, oil\ntakes over. Phone 226-7221 to\nsee furnace in operation under no obligation.      \u2014185-210\n-201-h\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical  guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAuctioneers\nJUAL AUCTION SERVICE\nWe sell  anything  \u2014 Anywhere\nCreston - 356-2956\nCastlegar   365-6767,   365-5001\n       -172-tfn\nKOOTENAY   AUCTIONS\nBox  263 Nelson 352-6016\n-207 tin\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL  ENGRAVING\n266 Baker St Nelson, B C.\nPhone 352-3552\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\n-tfn\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS    YIIUIIH. IS   LTD.\n(Dolsun Sales I\n213 Baker St    Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nSHIELDS PONilAC-BUICK Lid.\nComplete  Automobile  Service\n701 Baker St       Phone 352-5505\n\u201410 tin\nBuilding Supplies\nB B B\nBUILDING SUPPLY  LTD.\nEverything in waturprool\nplywood\n301  Bakei St      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS\nBUILDING MATERIALS LTD.\n602 Baker St       Phone Mil-Htl'll\n-tin\nCOLUMBIA TRADING  CO.\n609 Ward St       Phone 352-5571\nI  Block South ol Woolwnrth's\n-tfn\nContractors\nLnszlu llii.w.nk. Oener.1l Masonry\nStone   Brick   Cement   Stucco\nPlastering\nI323 Falls St        Phone 352-7692\n-239 tfn\nFor Bulldorlng. Call\nKEN LIPSACK\nPhone 226-7444 or 226-7202\nMornings lo 10 a.m.\nEvenings after 6 p.m\n-192-217\nDress   Making\nNelson Dressmaking\n522 Vernon St.       Ph   352-7524\nPlumbing & Heating\nJ   O   RIESTERER\nPlumhing and Heating\nPh  352-5H0      210 Rnbsnn St\n-26-tfn\nPrinting\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS\nPrinters    Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\n-lll-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nVIDEO   P.I,F\u00bbTRllNlrS\nZenith    Elertrnhnme T V\nSales and Service\n394 Baker St Ph   352-3355\n-lSOlfn\n'59 Rambler Station Wagon,\nfull price . $495.00\n'60 Pontiac Hard Top, V-8 auto.\nRadio, full price . $695\nTil Zepher Zodiac Sedan, 6 cylinder, automatic $695\n$40.00 down $25.00 per month\nwill purchase any of these\nmodels.\n170 BAKER ST.\nPh.  Mr.  Smith  332-3233\n-200-201\nWRECKING '57 RAMBLER, 53\nChev Pickup. '56-'59 Fords,\n\"55-'61 Chevs, '60 Chev Pickup, '56-'58 Ford Station Wagon.\n'57 Volkswagen. '59- '60 Renault. '56-'57 Bulck, '55-'56 Ply\nmouth, '60 IHC 4x4 Good\nmotors: '56 Chev 265 V8, '56-\n'57 V8 automatic Rambler.\n'57 ford V8s and 6 cylinders;\nCottonwood Wrecking Service,\nBox 382. Nelson, Ph 352-5815.\n-140tfn\n1964 BU1CK SKYLARK SEDAN.\nPower steering and brakes, radio, 6 wheels and winter tires,\nIn excellent condition; also\n1965 Epic. Top condition, and\nwinter tires Included. Some\nterms on very reasonable\nprices. Phone 365-8030.\n\u2014197-202\n1966 DODGE MONACO 2-DOOR\nH.T. V-6, P.S., P.B., CONSOLE\nauto.; tachometer, reverb.,\ndual exhausts. Phone 365-7493.\nCastlegar, after 5 p.m.\n\u20141 (18-203\nRefrigeration\nRefriier.'ilion Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\n803 Anderson St      Ph. 352-5455\n-tmnin\nCHUCK'S   REFRIGERATION\nAND APPLIANCES\nInstallation   Servirinfi     Hepairi\n711  Stnnlev  SI   Nelson\nPh   352-7861\n-143 tfn\n1961 CORVAIR MONZA SPORT\nCoupe. Auto, trans., radio,\nwhilewalls: good condition \u2014\nReasonably priced. \u2014 Phone\n352-6281. -200-203\n1067 TOYOTA; 4-SPD.; RECLIN-\nIng bucket seats; 90-h.p.; 30\nm.p.g.; radio, rear seat speaker. Downtown Texaco, phone\n352-2724. -199-204\nSporting Goods\nFred Wlliteley's Spnrl Shop\nB8 Baker St       Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarrv's Topsnll. Sand and Gravel\nPh   352-2355 Days. 352-7576 eves\n-tin\nGarages\nUpper   Fairview   Motors   Ltd\nCor 7th at Davies   Ph  352-2525\nTransistnrized Ignition\n-tfn\nniiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1\nNewspaper Advertising\nPoys  Over  and  Over\niniimiiiiiiiii mi \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nVacuum   Cleaners\nELECTKOI.liX Sales \u00bb Service\n711 Innes St Ph   352 7341\n\u201477 lln\n'54 WILLYS 4 WHEEL DRIVE,\nlarge panel, warn hubs, 6 cyl.\nGMC motor. Very good condition.   $550.   Ph.   368-5354.\n-201-201\n1963 ANGLIA. ONLY 30,000 MI.\n1 owner, clean; plus 2 winter\ntires. $750. Phone 352-2327.\n\u2014199-201\n1964 DODGE POLARA CON-\nvertible. Low mileage. One\nowner. Phone 365-7941.\n \u2014196-201\n'62 GRAND PRIX, 389 CU.'lN.\nAll power; many ertras. \u2014\nPhone 352-7096. -200-205\nBEFORE YOU SELL OR LIST\nyour Nelson or North Shore\ndwelling, enquire about our\nservices. We buy for cash, sell,\ntrade and appraise at fair\nmarket value. Also we have\nmortgage facilities lo help you\nget all or most part cash. T.\nD. Rosling, 568 Ward St.,\nPhone 352-3581, Real Estate\nis our only business. \u2014200-211\nIF~THE PA\\rME^TS_6N~THE\nhouse you sold don't come in\nfast enough to meet your need,\nwc could buy the balance\nfrom you. We pay in cash.\nBox 374, Trail. B.C.    -115-tfn\nDON'T JUST INSTALL ANY\noil furnace and pay nigh fuel\nbills later. Only efficient Duo-\nMatic has complete .'lame revolution with heat exchanger\nand smoke outlet at bottom\nOn display at Valley Comfort,\nAppledale;  phone 226-7221\n\u2014183-210\nA.A. MEETS 8 P.M. FRIDAY,\nSelkirk Health Unit. Information, phone 352-3458. Box 465.\n-144-tfn\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT SEPT. 1-BEAUTI-\nful 3-bedroom duplex. Carpets\nin living room and master bedroom, built-in range, full basement; soundproof wall adjoining units. $125 per month. For\ninterview apply Box 183. Nelson Daily News. \u2014199-201\nAVAILABLE AFTER LABOR\nDay: Comfortable, partly furnished, winterized cottage at\nSitkum Creek, North Shore.\nPhone 352-3525. -196-tfn\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\n3-BDRM. HOUSE FOR RENT.\nPhone 359-7573. -200-205\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE HOMES\nSAFEWAY\n1957  PONTIAC   4-DR.   SEDAN.\nAll accessories. Ph. 352-6358.\n-200-203\n'65 HONDA CB 160. EXCEL-\nlent condition. Phone Rossland,  362-5129. -196-201\nFREE INSPECTION DO YOU\nrequire a business location\nwith 120 feet on highway and\nnear Baker SI ' Call William\nKalyniuk Agencies Ltd.. phone\n362-2425 -285-tfn\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF\n59c. cut and wrapped. Sides!\nof grain-fed pork, 35c, cut and|\nwrapped, 39c Home cured\nHams and Bacon. Delivery\nweekly to Nelson, Castlegar,\nTrail and Salmo. Newdan\nFarms, Creston. B.C. Ph 356-\n9901. \u201498-tfn\n2-ROOM FURN. SUITE, SU1T-\nable for couple. Call at 116\nVernon St., or phone 352-5602\nafter 6 p.m. -187-tfn\nONE LARGE ROOM, USE OF\nkitchen, furnished and heated\nPhone evenings, 352-6985.\n-200-205\n'67  YAMAHA   100  TWIN JET.\n5,000  miles.   Phone  825-4363.\n-201-206\n1964 HONDA 90 AND HELMET.\n$225.00.  Ph. 352-7604. -201-203\n1967  HONDA 90, $250,  PHONE\n352-5285. -194-tfn\n'60   JAGUAR   3.4   LITRE,   A-l\nshape. Ph. 352-5035.    -201-212\n'69  V-8  AUTOMATICS-DOOR.\nPh  352-3787. -172-tfn\n'66 TRIUMPH T-120 TT; 650 CC\nPhone 365-5210. -192-203\n1959 JEEP FOR SALE. PHONE\n352-2571. -200-tfn\nMACHINERY\nTRACTORS AND LOADERS -\nDH-14A w\/dozer, winch, $15,-\n750: Euclid C6 w\/dozer, $17,-\n50(1; D8-46A w\/dozer, good,\n$32,500; 988 w\/54 yd. bucket,\n$38,500; Mich. 275A W\/4 yd.\nbkl., $17,950: 977 w\/21i yd.\nbucket. $10,500: DW21 Tractor\/Scraper, $9,850. Financing\navailable. Call Spokane collect,   535-6878. -196-202\nFOR SALE-1962 VAUXHALL 4-\ndoor sedan Good running order, good rubber Clean Inside\nand out   Phone 352-3553.\n-145-tfn\n1959 BUICK IN VERY GOOD\nrunning cond. Rebuilt transmission. Aug. 24. What offers?\nPh. 352-3058. -201-206\nUSED WATER PUMPS\nVi\" Beatty, 2 cylinder.\n2\" Fairbanks,  1500GPH\nReconditioned, $95.00 each\nSTEVENSON\nMACHINERY LTD.\n510 Latimer St.      Ph. 352-3561\n-201-201\nVALLEY AUTOMirriVE LTD.\nMassev Ferguson New Holland new and used farm equip\nment Parts sales and service\nPhooe 356-2254 Creston, B C.\n-233-tfn\nFOR SALE - 1956 FORD 750\ntank truck. 1500 gal.. 3 comp.:\n6 barrel deck. Phone 352-2157,\nor write Box 39.        -196-201\n1958 INTERNATIONAL DUMP\ntruck, 1958 Mossey-Ferguson\ntractor and backhoe; also miscellaneous parts Ph Castlegar\n365-51117 or 365-3158       -161-tfn\nLINDAL CEDAR HOMES. -\nBeach Panorama model shown\nby appointment. 18-Mile, North\nShore. Contact G. W Harding,\nR.R.  1, Nelson,  ph. 229-4603.\n -154-205\nBUSINESS. 30-FT . ON BAKER\nSt.. buildine 2-storey frame.\nAll this for under $25,000 -\nPlease contact Wm Kalvniuk\nAgencies  Ltd.    Ph   352-2425\n \u201497-tfn\nSMALL FARM - 3 BDRIvL\nolder home in Ymir on 16\ncleared lots, stream running\nthrough center, good barn.\nPriced tor quick sale. Phone\n352-2543. \u2014174-200\nWe Can\nSAVE\nYou money on Plumbing\nFREE\nPlan and layout service\nPlastic and copper in stock\nat our Nelson store\nSimpsons-Sears \u201481-tfn\nWANTED FOR GOLF COURSE,\none (Ford preferred), 2 plow,\nhydraulic lift tractor, with\nside mower if possible, or\nwithout, good shape but cheep-\nly priced. Valley View Golf\nCourse, Perry's B.C. \u2014201-203\nPLASTIC PIPE - LOWEST\nPrices. Mac's Welding and\nEquipment Co. Ltd., 514 Railway Street, Nelson, B.C.\n-149-tfn\nMISC. FURNITURE FOR SALE\n\u2014Electric  range,   buffet,   antique chests, etc. Ph. 352-2701.\n-200-205\n2-STOREY 3-BDRM. HOUSE ON\n10  acres.   2-car   garage   and\nbarn. 4 miles from bridge on\nthe North Shore. Ph. 825-4383.\n-199-204\nA BARGAIN FOR HANDYMAN\nin central part of Salmo: Old\nstyle house nn 2 lots. Box 46\nor phone 357-9791.      -198-203\n256 ACRES. 1 MILE FROM\nCrcslnn Gond early spring pasture with waler and roads. \u2014\nPhone 356-4306. \u2014198-203\nCHOICE   LOT,   VIEW   LOCA-\nlion.   75'   frontage   on   upper\nside of View St. Ph. 352-7435.\n-196-201\nCOAL FURNACE AND STOKER\nin good cond. Make offer. Ph.\n352-3331 evenings or weekends.\n-174-tfn\nKELVINATOR   REFRIGERAT-\nor, $75. Phone 352-2304.\n\u2014197-202\nUSED 24-IN 4-BURNER ELEC-\ntric ranges. \u2014 Call Coleman\nElectric, 352-3175.       -lll-tfn\nTREE-RIPENED FREESTONE\npeaches. R. Oborne's, Robson.\n-193-204\n2-BDRM. HOME ON 7 ACRES\nat Longbeach. Access to beach\nPhone 352-5215 mornings or\n352-2155 after ^ p.m. \u2014194-tfn\nBUILDING LOTS^FOrTaUe\nin South Nelson. Ph 352-3625\nor apply at 708 Richards.\n-176-201\n.30-06 AUTOMATIC PLUS 120\ncartridges. Brand new. Phone\n352-6700 after 5 p.m. \u2014196-201\nASHLEY WOOD HEATER. A-l\ncondition. Phone 332-5958.\n-196-201\n1-BDRM. APT., 2 BLKS. FROM\nBaker St. Furnished and heated. $50 per month. Ph. 352-6145.\n-199-204\nROOMS FOR RENT BY DAY,\nweek or month at the Royal\nCanadian Legion, Nelson.\n-158-tfn\nROOM FOR RENT: 1 OR 2\ngirls to share; Fairview district. Phone 352-2630.   \u2014199-204\n1-BDRM., USE OF KITCHEN,\nall found. Female only. Phone\n352-5252. \u2014193-tfn\n2-ROOM FURN. SUITE, ALSO\nhskpg. rooms, at 140 Baker\nSt. Phone 352-3384.      -188-tfn\n4-ROOM   SUITE,   FURN.  AND\nheated. Ph. 352-6985 evenings.\n-199-204\nFULLY FURNISHED 2-BDRM.\ntrailer. Phone 352-7886.\n-199-204\nSELF-CONTAINED 3-RM. STE.\nStorage space. Phone 352-7139\nafter 6 p.m. -198-tfn\nOFFICE   SPACE   AVAILABLE\nfor rent. W Kalyniuk Agencies\n-206-tfn\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS AND\nsuites: dishes, linen supplied;\nparking. 171 Baker St. -35-tfn\nMARIANNE APARTMENTS. -\nAttractive suites. Ph. 352-3217.\n-144-tfn\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING   RM\nPhone  352-2796. \u2014199-204\nMOBILE HOMES\nFOR SALE\n12x60 Safeway 2 B.R.\n12x60 Safeway 3 B.R.\n12x60 General 3 B.R.\n12x56 Safeway 2 B.R.\n12x52 Duchess 2 B.R.\n12x44 Safeway 2 B.R.\n10x52 General 2 B.R.\n10x42 General 2 B.R.\nCOMING SOON\n12x52 Safeway 2 B.R.\n12x64 Manor House\nby Safeway with\nUtility Room\nWe Have a Good Selection ot\nSmaller One Bedroom Units\n27x8 California\n25x8 Columbia\n25x8 Nashua\n15' Golden Falcon\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS LTD.\nBox 1458 Phone 365-5047\nCASTLEGAR\nWalt and Val Hill\nJohnny and Nan Ruud\n-195-tfn\n(Continued Next Column)\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nMERCURY 200. EXCELLENT\ncondition. Run only 30 hours,\nReasonably priced. Phone 352-\n3309 after 5 p.m.        \u2014197-202\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nGOOD HOMES WANTED FOR\nkittens. Phone 352-5616.\n-193-tfn\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nMODEL T FORD OR MODEL\nA. Reply to Box 1181, Castlegar, B.C. -192-209\nAIRCRAFT FOR SALE\nPIPER PA-18-A, 135 H P. SU-\nper Cub. 100 hours since major. $5500. Phone 352-3J75 Nelson. Trades accepted.\u2014180-tfn\nEVACUATE MISSIONARIES\nKINSHASA, The Congo (AP)\n\u2014Myron Cortman of Halifax\", a\nCanadian working with the\nEvangelization Society of Gib-\nsonia, Pal, was among 11 missionaries evacuated by U.S. air-\ncrait Saturday from the rebel-\ntroubled eastern Congo. He arrived here with a group of Americans who had been stationed at\nKalima and Shabunda.\nBERGMAN'S BACK-\nNewsmen get a spirited\nperformance from actress\nIngrid Bergman as- she\nrata about her starring\nrole in Eugene O'Neill's\nMore Stately Mansions, in\nLos Angeles. It will tie her\nfirst play on the American\nstage in 21 years.\nUSED 6-YR. CRIB; GOOD CON-\ndition.  Ph. 229-4817, Balfour.\n-198-203\nit Happened in Canada\nDELUXE G.E. FRIDGE AND\n22\" G.E. electric range. Phone I\n352-2993. -200-2021\nl\u00ab ISLAND OF\nxte DEAD\nLARGE VIEW LOT, BUILDING\nsite bulldozed. Ph. 352-2433.\n-199-204\n6 ACRES ON MAIN HIGHWAY\nBear Slocan City. Ph. 352-2738.\n-187-tfn\nPUBLIC   NOTICE\n1964 FAIRLANE 2-DR   H.T. -\nAuto, radio,  red and white;\ntop condition. Phone 352-6266.\n-200-202\nVeterinarian\nDon't   forget   the   Kootenay\nAnimal Clinic. Creston. lor all\nyour   Veterinary   needs.   Open\ndaily from I) - 5. Ph   356-2822.\n-201-tfn\n1954 FORD BACK SEAT. COM-\nplete with like-new seat cover.\nBox 177, Shoreacres, B.C.\n-198-203\n1958 CHRYSLER WINDSOR -\nGood: cordlt'on. Best offer. -\nPhone 352-6461 after 5 p.m.\n-199-201\n'66 530 CASE BACKHOE WITH\ndump truck. Phone 442-8500 or\nBox 43, Grand Forks. -194-205\nWANTED  TO RENT\nWANTED: WELL-KEPT 3 OR 4\nbedroom home, unfurnished.\nExcellent references. Write G.\nMulloy. South Slocan, or ibnne\n359-7414. -200-205\nBrnnclt and White Construction requests bids from all sub-\ntrades for the Knslo Elemen-\ntory-Secondnrv School. Bennett\n& White, 748B Gilley Avenue,\nBurnaby, B.C. \u2014200-201\nLOST    AND    FOUNT\nFOUND: TORTOISE. PERSON\nmay claim by identifying and\npaving for ad. Phone 352-3984\nafter 5 p.m. \u2014 2OO-205\nMORTGAGES\nHOUSE.   OUTSIDE   CITY\nlimits. Phone 825-9942.\n-199-204\nPhooe 332-3552 tur Classlln-d\n$6500 AGREEMENT FOR SALE\nfor $5350. repayable $100\nmonth') including Tc Contact\nWm K:ilyniuk Agencies ltd.\nphone 352-2425. \u2014184-lfn\nNelsmt\nSatlij Nnus\nCirculation Dent.. Ph. 352-3552\nIn CRANBROOK. contact MRS.\nC CLOAHtX  501S-5th St.\nIn KIMBERLEY   contact MRS.\nW   MORRIS   355 Haney St\nPrice per single copy   10 cents\nBy carrier oer week   45 cents\nin advance\nSubscription  rates:\nBv mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month $ 2.25\nThree months 5 50\nSix months 1100\nBy  mail  to  United   Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne   month $ 2.50\nThree months 6.75\nSix   Months 12 50\nOne  Year 23 00\nBy mail to U S A or\nFoiemn Countries\nOne   month $ 3 00\nrhree muutns   ..-       sou\nGgOSSS ILE- IN THE SHAWENCE glVER, BELOW   .\nQUEBEC CITY - USED BY BRITAIN PROM THE YEAR\nI8S2 >& A PLACE FOR SCREE-NM6 IMMIGRANT}\nr-OUDKEASE- I\nTHOUSANDS, FLEElNfi PEJTUENCE AND FAMINE\nARRIVED FROM EUROPE SUFFERINC FR0MCM0LEM\nOR TYPHUS AND THEIR ONLY PIECE OF THE NEW UNO '.\nSSOMBA OJMVtaV GGOi(\u00a3 US-\n*DUCHE#DaMILIW,\n(Miser ar \u00a3A\u00aboiM>.L.AiaM<uftO\nPOUNDED CANADA'S\nF\/esr HOSPITAL\"\njte HOTEL DIEU. QUEBEC Crry\nim 1639\n4 LICENSE \"UTE\nNUMBER WAS t-EFT\nIMPRINTED ON A\nHYDRO POLE THAT\nWAS STRUCK BYA\nCM.-fTMrnx\nOvxtje\/o-\n&. j\nJ.F\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS. MON., AUG. 28, 1967\nMANN'S CLINIC\nPHARMACY\nOpen All Day Today\nTo Give You\nPrescription Service\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 35c line, 45c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nNICE APARTMENT FOR\nLADY.   PHONE  352-6024.\n\u2014191-tfn\nBINGO TONIGHT\nUKRAINIAN HALL, 8 P.M.\n-283-H\nCUTEST SOUVENIRS IN TOWN\nHOBBY SHOP - Open Mondays\n-191-tfn\nHousing Crisis Predicted For\n68 Without More Mortgage Money\nDual  Controls.   Phone 352-5252.\nNELSON   DRIVING  SCHOOL\n-158-h\nBadminton racquets for every\npurse. $3.50, $5.00. $8.00. $11.95\nand $17.95. Also indoor and outdoor shuttlecocks.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n\u2014201-201\nTRAIL    BUSINESS    COLLEGE\nNEW TERM BEGINS SEPT. 5.\nOFFICE REOPENS AUG. 21.\n-136-h\nCENTENNIAL COSTUME\nBALL, CIVIC ARENA.\nSEPT. 22nd.\n-191-tfn\nAdvance Notice\nLEARN\nTO\nDANCE\n10-week course starts Friday.\nOct. 13, in modern dancing:\nwaltz, fox-trot, swing (jitterbug',\nby Mr. and Mrs. J. G. James.\nNelson s leading dance team. Enroll now as class limited. 352-5274\n-197-h\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON (CPi-Results of\nSaturday's Rugby League\nmatches:\nBradford N 23 Leigh 12\nDewsbury 18 Barrow 17\nHull 29 Oldham 20\nHove the Job Done Right!\n\\I\\C GRAVEC\n\u2022 LIMITED        \u00abJ#\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nHunslet 15 Huddersfield 16\nLeeds 17 Featherstone R 15\nLiverpool C 15 Blackpool B 12\nSt. Helens 13 Hull K R 8\nSwinton 11 Keighley 13\nWakefield T 78 Batley 9\nWarrington 36 Workington T 6\nWhitehaven 11 Doncaster 16\nWigan 53 Bramley 8\nYork 31 Rochdale H 14\nln 1960. the population of\nSouth America was distributed\nat the rate of 20.4 persons a\nsquare mile.\nCOIN CAR WASH 25c. KEEP i\nYOUR CAR CLEAN CHEAPLY.\nNELSON 66 SERVICE, 702 NELSON  AVENUE. -198-203\nGirls and boys bikes. $10 to\n$35? Electric and gas stoves, $5\nto $50. Chesterfields and chairs.\n$20 to $25 a set. Ph. 352-7812.\n-201-202\n20^ OFF All Ready-Made\nDrapes,  lined  and   unlined\n45\", 54\" and 84\" lengths.\nSTERLING   FURNISHERS\n-197-202\nIN LOVING MEMORY\nMemorial Stone and Bronze\nPlaques\nNELSON MONUMENTAL\n& STONE\n533 Baker St.\n-151-h\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTURCAK \u2014 Requiem Mass\nfor Mr. Stefan Turcak of Castlegar, who died in Nelson Saturday. August 26th, will be celebrated at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate Tuesday-at 10-aJii\nThe Rev. E. A. Brophy will be\nthe celebrant and interment will\ntake place in Nelson Memorial\nPark. Rosary wil! be recited at\nthe Thompson Funeral Home,\nMonday at 8 p.m. In lieu of\nflowers, friends wishing to so\nare requested to make memorial donations to the Canadian\nCancer Society, c'o The Treasurer. P.O. Box 760. Nelson, B.C..\nNewspaper  Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nBy NICK FILLMORE\nTORONTO (CP) - Canada\ncould have its greatest housing\ncrisis in 1968 if the federal government does not make additional mortgage money available to home builders in the\nfall, says W. G. Connelly, president of the National Home\nBuilders Association.\nMr. Connelly said Thursday\nhe warned Labor Minister\nNicholson, minister responsible\nfor housing, in July, that a critical shortage of mortgage funds\nwould halt most residential construction in September unless\nthere was an immediate infusion of government funds.\nHe said, however, the mortgage market has not improved\nsince he met with Mr. Nicholson.\nPrime Minister Pearson said\nWednesday that the federal\ngovernment has decided foi the\npresent not to make more mortgage money available to home\nbuilders through the Central\nMortgage and Housing Corn\nThe cabinet would review the\nhousing situation later, he said.\nMr. Pearson said the government cannot go ahead with the1\nfall mortgage lending program1\nas he had hoped because il is;\nreducing its demands on the\nmoney market. Finance Minis-j\nter Sharp has said government'\nborrowing to finance such programs  as  that  of  CMHC  has\nreached the limit.\nMAY BE TOO LATE\nBut a review of the housing\nsituation in the fall may be too\nlate, Mr. Connelly said.\n\"The loss of even a few\nweeks at this time could be crucial to the building program,\"\nhe said. \"Once the industry is\nhalted there is a very necessary time lag from the moment\nmortgage money is made available until the shovels go into\nthe earth to start producing\nhomes again.\"\nThe federal government allocated a record high $788,000,000\nfor lending by CMHC for 1967\nbut officials in the housing\nindustry hoped to get an additional $200,000,000 for a special\nfall program.\nMr. icholson said in March\nhe hoped funds would be available to make possible a record\nhigh 170,000 home starts in 1967.\nbut current ligures indicate the\nactual number will fall far\nshort of the mark.\nCMHC said there have been\nonly 56.270 home unit starts in\ncommunities of more than 10,-\n000 population across Canada in\nthe first six months of 1967.\nFewer than 135.000 dwelling\nunits were started in 1966 and\nfigures   indicate    starts    have\ncontinually declined from a\nhigh of 176,000 in 1965.\nMeanwhile, the cost of a\nhome in any major Canadian\ncity has increased steadily. The\nconsumer price index for housing for the month of July\nreached an all-time high of\n151.9.\nThe over-all cost of house\nconstruction in Canada from\n1956 to 1966 increased by 25.6\nper cent.\nCanada is 12th among industrial Western nations in the\nratio of housing completions to\nincreases in population. It is far\nbehind Britain, Sweden and\nWest Germany: some distance\nbehind Belgium, Denmark. Finland, Italy, France. The Netherlands and Switzerland: and\nslightly behind the United\nStates.\nAt the 1961 census, an estimated 923,000 Canadian households were lodged in broken-\ndown, crowded or unsanitarv\nhouses, or were going into debt\nto pay the rent.\nHousing officials say these\nare the families that do not\nhave an income that will allow\nthem to buy a home under the\nNational Housing Act, through\nCMHC. NHA loans are not\nreadily available to a family\nwith an income of less than\n$7,000 annually.\nH. W. Hignett, president of\nCMHC, said recently that the\nfederal government has the\nmoney and legislation to provide everyone with decent housing, but added that provincial\nand municipal governments\noften lack the desire and knowledge to co-operate and develop\nprograms.\nMr. Connelly said Thursday\nt h e provincial governments\nmust do more to solve the housing shortage by working with\nfederal officials.\nHe said the new Bank Act,\nwhich enables chartered banks\nto go into the mortgage lending\nwith repayment guaranteed\nunder NHA, will only gradually\nhelp solve the housing shortage.\nG. W. G.\nWork Clorhts\n\u2022 Texas Ranger\nPants and Shirts\n\u2022 Driller Drill Pants\n\u2022 Cowboy Kings\n\u2022 Carpenter O'alls\nEMORY'C\nLTD.      U\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nMANAGUA ROCKED\nMANAGUA, Nicaragua <AF\n\u2014A mild earthquake jolted\nManagua and surrounding area\nSunday morning. No serious\ndamage was reported.\n<3?\n<X>\nTrail Business College\n625 VICTORIA ST.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nPHONE 368-5711\nCOURSES OFFERED\n20\nweeks\nSpeedwriting Secretarial\t\n16 to\nSpeedwriting Stenographic\t\n14 to\n16\nweeks\nPitman Secretarial\t\n(For Those Who Have Covered   Pitman Theory in\n16 to\nHigh School)\n20\nweeks\nPitman Stenographic\t\n(For Those Who Have Covered   Pitman Theory in\n14 to\nHigh School)\n16\nweeks\nGenera\/ OHice\t\n.   .   14 to\n16 weeks\nitfsL $w&. iksi \u00a3mL Jhaimnq.\nHours 9 a.m. to 12 and 1 p.m. ro 3 p.m.\nClasses Begin September 5th\nENROL NOW\nFRANCES COOK, B.A.\nPrincipal\nGovernment Says Mortgage\nAllocation Won't Change\nBy LARRY DWORKIN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCanada's multi-billion dollar\nconstruction industry received\na severe jolt last week when\nthe federal government decided\nagainst injecting more mortgage money into the economy\nthis fall.\nThe government allocated a\nrecord $788,000,000 for lending\nby Central Mortgage and Housing Corp. this year, but officials\nin the housing industry hoped to\nget an additional $200,000,000\nfor a special fall program\nPrime Minister Pearson said\nthe government decided not to\nmake more mortgage money\navailable to home builders\nthrough CMHC because the\ngovernment is reducing its\ndemands on the money market.\nFinance Minister Sharp said\ngovernment borrowing to\nfinance such programs as that\nof the CMHC has reached its\nlimit.\nCRISIS PREDICTED\n\\V. G. Connelly, president of\nthe National Home Builders\nAssociation, said the country\ncould have its greatest housing\ncrisis in 1968 if additional mortgage money is not available to\nhome builders this fall.\nMr. onnelly said the loss of\na few weeks at this time of\nyear, when fall and winter programs are being planned, could\nhave serious results.\n\"Once the industry is halted,\nthere is a very necessary time\nlag from the moment mortgage\nmoney is available until the\nshovels go into the earth to\nstart producing homes again.\"\nPeter Dalton, president of the\nCanadian Construction Association, said shortage of investment funds and slack in the\neconomy are combining to cut\nthe volume of constrution this\nyear below that in 1966.\nThe construction industry\naccounts for about 20 per cent\nStrike May Increase\nCopper Prices\nNEW YORK I AP'-Speculation about the possibility of a\ncopper price increase grew\nlouder this week as the U.S.\ncopper industry strike entered\nits seventh week.\nA member of the Federal\nReserve Board said the copper\nprice probably will have to\nmove up.\nMetal merchants are looking\nfor an increase on their already\npremium-priced copper if the\nstrike continues much longer,\nsays the American Metal Market, the daily newspaper of the\nmetalworking industry.\nIn London. The Financial\nTimes says that if trading follows its normal seasonal pattern and the U.S. strike continues, it is difficult to predict\nanything but higer copper\nprices.\nIt was estimated that the\nstrike  has   caused   the loss  of\nof Canada's gross national\nproduct. In 1966 construction\ntotalled about $11,100,000,000,\nSTARTS FALL SHORT\nSome housing officials hoped\nfor 170,000 home starts in 1967.\nCurrent figures indicate the\nactual number will fall short ol\nthe mark.\nElsewhere on the business\nscene, Algoma Steel Corp.\nannounced it is shelving $85,-\n000,000 of its $175,000,000 expansion program and laying oil\nmore than 900 workers because\nof a decline in demand.\nThe Canadian steel industry\noperated at 77 per cent capac\nity during July and production\nwas eight per cent down from\n1966.\nThe Steel Company of Canada\nLtd. and Dominion Foundries\nand Steel Ltd. said they do not\nintend to cut back capital pro\njects.\nIn a statement announcing\nthe cutback in its expansion\nprogram, on Algoma official\nreferred to the damaging effect\nof heavy steel imports from\noverseas.\nAbout 15 per cent of Canadian\nsteel requirements are import\ned, principally from Europe\nand Japan.\n180,000 to 200,000 tons of copper,\nwiping out the estimated world\nsurplus of 140,000 tons expected\nfor this year.\nLITTLE PROGRESS\nMeanwhile, there was little if\nany progress in negotiations to\nsettle the walkout by members\nof the United Steelworkers\nUnion.\nThe Aluminum Co. of America announced it is increasing\nthe price of its can stock, or\ncontainer sheet, much of which\nis used by makers of cans.\nAlcoa said that effective Oct.\n16 the price will go up 25 cents\na base box, which is 31,360\nsquare inches.\nAlcoa said its increase is consistent with its policy of keeping its prices generally in line\nwith those of the steel industry's tin plate A number of\nsteel companies recently raised\nthe price of tin plate.\nMOD MALL TO\nBOOST BUSINESS\nQUEBEC iCPi-The merchants of Rue St Joseph, main\nstreet of Lower Town, have\ndressed their street with a Mod\npedestrian mall in an effort to\nincrease sales.\nThe mall, similar to Ottawa's\nSparks Street, opened May 19,\ncomplete with 226 trees, flowers\ngalore, 60 benches and crowds\nof curious Quebecers\nAnd the project's promoters\nare so sold on the idea they\nwould like to enclose the entire\n3,700-foot mall with a roof that\nmight cost $4,000,000 to build.\nThis would top off efforts\nbegun m 1963 by a business-\nmens' association to liven up\nthe old St. Roch area, long Quebec City's central shopping district.\nIts share of sales has been\nthreatened by huge suburban\nshopping centres. These offer\nfree parking by the acre and\nindoor shopping, air-conditioned\nin summer, heated in winter\nThe mall, which includes 152\nshops at street level, was\ninstalled at a cost of $65,000 by\nthe city and the merchants\nassociation, le Centre d Affairs\nSt. Roch Inc.\nAlthough many merchants\nwould like more time to judge\nthe mall, their experiment\nseems to be showing signs of\nsuccess.\n\"The results have been wonderful,\" says Charles-H. Robit-\naille. 50, general manager of\nthe merchants association.\n\"Some specialty shops such as\nshoe stores have increased\nsales 100 per cent.\"\nA meeting will be held later\nthis year with city engineers to\ndiscuss the feasibility of installing a roof over the mall. Mr.\nRobitaille believes it can and\nshould be done.\nMayor Gilles Lamontagne has\nexpressed interest in the proposal, which would be financed\nby both merchants and the city.\nThe mayor is awaiting a\nreport on urban redevelopment\nfor the region, expected to be\nmade public late in August\nAbout 450 businesses in the\narea banded together in 1963 to\ntackle a common problem:\nLack of parking space compared with suburban shopping\ncentres.\nDEPUTY\nLAND INSPECTOR,\nNelson.\nSalary: $456 - $559 per month,\nleading to higher positions as\nLand Inspector, rising to $760\nper month when qualified\nthrough training and experience. To examine, classify,\nvalue and report on applications for the alienation of\nCrown land under the Land\nAct; to recommend the best\nuse of a designated property:\nto train for the more complicated types of inspections.\nSecondary School graduation,\npreferably some University\ntraining or diploma in agriculture, forestry or estate\nmanagement with knowledge\nof field survey methods or\nvaluation techniques; willing\nto take in-service training\ncourses and promotional-\ntransfers.\nCOMPETITION  NO. 67:913\nApply to VICTORIA by\nSEPTEMBER 6. 1967.\nAUDIT ACCOUNTANT,\nNelson.\nStarting Salary: $456 to $538\ndepending on qualifications,\nrising to $646 per month and\nfurther promotional opportun-\n'ties.\nTo inspect, investigate and\nndvise on application of the\nConsumer Tax Act in the\narea.\nPreferably a recognized ac-\n-ounting degree or considerable   responsible   experience\nncluding some auditing.\nCOMPETITION NO. 67:917\nApply to VICTORIA by\nSEPTEMBER 6. 1967.\nENGINEERING\nTECHNICIANS,\nInterior Locations.\nSalary. $559, rising to $670\nper month for initial period.\nUnder professional guidance\nto undertake river, stream\nand lake pollution surveys. I\ninvestigate complaints and as\nsist in enforcement of the Pol-\nution Control Act.\nRequires Secondary School |\ngraduation and additional re- I\nlated training and experience\nInitial training nf approxima j\nlely three months in Victoria I\nfollowed by posting to Okana- |\ngan. Prince George or Koot- i\nenays\nCOMPETITION NO. 67:919\nApply to VICTORIA by\nSEPTEMBER 6, 1967\n\u00ab,.\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_08_28","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\/1.0440332","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. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1967-08-28 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1967-08-28 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}