{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-04-03","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1956-10-24","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429926\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Three yeart ago, Taffy, a collie dog owned by Mrs. Kathleen\nLucas of Port Credit, Ont, wai nearly destroyed after an accident\ncaused his foot to be amputated. But Taffy lived on to bark and\nspread the alarm that saved much of the town's $1,000,000 school\nfrom destruction by fire, The school was entered by thieves and\nfiremen believe they started the blaze, which did $50,000 damage\nbefore Taffy's barking attracted attention.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nCave-In Buries\nSeven Workmen\nbe\nTwo Bodies Recovered, No Hope Held\nFor Other Five Under Tons of Clay\nBy JOE MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVARENNES, Que. (CP) \u2014 Two bodies were unearthed at the bottom of a sewer excavation Tuesday night\nand rescue workers abandoned hope that any of the seven\nmen trapped in the ditch had\nsurvived a crush of tons of\nsliding clay.\nThe men were trapped Tuesday\nafternoon when timbers shoring\nthe walls of a 30-foot deep excavation gave way. Rescue workers\ndug desperately through the night\nin the hope that some of the men\nmight be alive.\nBut after discovery of the two\nbodies all but the most optimistic\nabandoned hope that any of the\nother men might be living.\nENCA8ED IN CLAY\nRescue workers said the men\nfound were so firmly encased in\nthe wet, blue clay that it was impossible  to  lift  them  from  the\n$fcl*0tt l&liM\nMt\nVol. 55\n*\u00bbJ>\n3%3\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: Variable cloudiness\nlittle change ln temperature,\nlight winds. Low and high at\nCranbrook 25 and 40 and Crescent\nValley 25 and 45.\nnelson, b; 6., Canada\u2014Wednesday morning, October 24,1956        n\u00b0\u00ab mo\u00ab Than *> o.\u00bby, .\u201e Saturday      no. 155\nHuripians Riot in Stalin Square\nGomulko Calls for Friendship\nWith Russ as Troops Withdrawn\nParking Problem\nTackled at Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A report to erty council Tuesday called\nlor eventual banning of all ground\nlevel parking except in basements\nin the \"high density\" downtown\narea.\nThe report, presented by the\nTechnical Planning Board, made\nrecommendations to improve the\nparking situation which would\ncost about $9,000,000.\nIt not only recommended eventual banning of ground parking\ndowntown, both on and off the\nstreet, byt said all worker-parking downtown should be eliminated. It said multi-tiered parking\ngarages should be constructed for\nshort-term parkers.\nThe report recommended a $1,-\n000,000 fund be set up immediately to buy any site that will be required for parking. It suggested\nthat'all new buildings outside the\nhigh-density area should provide\ntheir own parking facilities.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) - Canadian\ndollar was 1-32 higher at a premium of 2 11-16 per cent in terms\nof U.S. funds. Poland sterling\n1-32 lower at $2.78.\nditch and it would probably\nseveral hours  before the\nare freed.\nOne of the men was in an upright position, apparently trapped\nstanding when the tons of clay\npushed in from both sides of the\nexcavation. The second was\nslightly bent over.\nA driving rain, which impeded\nwork of the rescue crews, let up\nshortly, before 11 p.m. and volunteers were expected to continue\ndigging throughout the night.\nThe mid-afternoon accident occurred 200 feet from the St. Lawrence River bank in this community 15 miles north of Montreal.\nPUMP OXYGEN\nOxygen was being pumped\nthrough the sewer pipe in the\nhope of keeping the men alive until the rescue party could reach\nthem.\nThe men were completing the\nlast section of a sewer pipe leading from the Canadian Titanium\nPigments Ltd., plant to the river.\nMore than a quarter-mile had\nbeen laid and covered.\nEight men were working in the\nsection where the timbers gave\nway. One Jumped clear as the\nrushing earth closed in behind\nhim.\nTwo of the trapped men were\nidentified as Pierre-Paul Dupre of\nContrecouer, Que., and Valerien\nSt Germain of St. Robert, Que.,\nboth nearby communities. Names\nof the other men were withheld\nuntil their families are informed.\nSTRIKES, RIOTS\nROCK ALGERIA\nBelieved Reply To\nCapture of\nFive Rebel Chiefs\nALGIERS (AP)\u2014Killings, riots,\ngeneral strikes and Arab anger\nerupted across North Africa Tuesday.\nThe widespread violence was\nthe Arab reply to France's arrest\nof five masterminds of Algeria's\nnationalist rebellion through a\ndramatic aerial ruse Monday\nnight.\nThree Frenchmen were killed\nin a clash at Meknes in Morocco.\nStreet demonstrations broke out\nin Tunisia and Morocco. A 24-hour\ngeneral strike was declared in\nbodies j DoLn those former French protectorates and started to spread in\nAlgeria. French security forces in\nAlgeria braced themselves for\nviolent reprisals.\nThe whole Arab world began\nraising a diplomatic storm.\nThe 23-nation Asian - African\ngroup at the UN in New York\nwas reported asking Secretary-\nGeneral Dag Hammarskjold's\ngood offices in seeking release of\nthe five revolutionaries.\nNHA Loans Decline\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Lending activity under the National Housing\nAct declined by more than $125,-\n000,000 in the first nine months of\n1956 compared with the corresponding period last year, Central\nMortgage and Housing Corporation said Tuesday,\nThe decrease in terms of dwelling units amounted to 28 per\ncent.\nBy SIDNEY TAYLOR\nWARSAW (Reuters) -1 Communist party chief\nWladyslaw Gomulka restored Tuesday his close friend and\nformer fellow prisoner, Gen. \"Marion Spychalski, as deputy\ndefence minister in the first\nmajor move of his new regime.\nGomulka also appealed in a letter, broadcast Tuesday, for continued friendship with Russia, but\non a basis of \"mutual trust and\nequality of rights.\"\nPolish politburo flew to Poznan\nwhere a crowd of hundreds of\nthousands, threatened to turn a\nmass meeting into .an anti-Russian demonstration.\nBROKE  UP QUIETLY\nA reliable source said trouble\nwith   the   anti-Russian   elements\nAuthoritative  sources  reported had been expected but it was re-\nthat Nikita Khrushchev called off\nTuesday night Russia's strong-\narm tactics against Poland.\nThey said Soviet troop concentrations built up in central Poland\nwere dispersing and a Russian\nnaval squadron sighted off Poland's coast was withdrawn.\nA leading member of the new\nStruggle To Topple Giant Stalin\nStatue; Cry \"Go Home; Ruskies\n\/\/\nBy ENDRE MARTON\nBUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) \u2014 Tens of thousands\ndemonstrating Hungarians pushed into Stalin Square\nTuesday night shouting \"Ruskies (Russians) go home\"\nand \"Down with Geroe,\". Hungary's Communist party\nchief.\nSecret police fired shots into a crowd near Budapest's   broadcasting station.\nOne eyewitness said one man\nwas killed.\nPOLICE BREAK UP\nCAR THEFT RING\nVANCOUVER   (CP)   \u2014 Police\narrested nine teen-agers Monday\nnight to break up what is describ- .    ,\ned as the biggest ring of juvenile * *> be m08t urgently required\nU.S. Considers\nAid fo Poland\nBy JOHN 8CALI\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 The\nUnited States began an intensive\nsurvey of Poland's economic condition Tuesday but publicly maintained a hands-off attitude toward\nPolish' leaders' efforts to assert\ntheir independence ,pf Moscow.\nState department officials, anticipating a Polish appeal for\nAmerican economic aid, began\nexamining kinds of assistance\nwhich might be available in view\nof Poland's needs.\nTentative estimates were that\nfood and clothing, especially for\nhard-pressed city dwellers, seem\ncar thieves in the city's history.\nThe boys, irom 11 to .15 years\nold and all attending the same\nschool, were taken to juvenile\ndetention home pending further\ninvestigation.\nDetectives said more arrests\nwill be made but they would give\nno details of what led to the arrests or how the break came.\nThey said the number of stolen\ncars involved has already reached\n50 and the total is not complete.\nin Poland, at present,\nTo avoid any accusation biT interference, officials decided any\nsuch American aid should not be\nvolunteered but only given if and\nwhen the revamped Polish regime\nformally asked for it.\nTECHNICIANS\nWANT PARTNERSHIP\nDEAL WITH DENTISTS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A British Columbia dental technician\nsays a partnership deal between\ntechnicians and dentists could cut\nthe cost of dentures to the public\nin half.\nDave Matthews, president of the\n_,,\u201e,.,,\u201e..        ..tractor. They said they shoveled\nDental Technicians' Society, said '   ..    ..    ...    .\nSmouldering Coal\nRemoved From Bin\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 Workmen Tuesday fiinshed removing\n60 tons ot coal from a school bin\nhere after spontaneous combustion caused a smouldering fire in\nthe bin.\nThe job was a tedious one because proper equipment was not\navailable. Vorkmen with gas\nmasks and shovels descended into the 14-foot bin to fill a 300-\npound capacity bucket which was\nthen lifted to the surface by a\nported to save broken up without\nincident after hearing a letter\nfrom Gomulka,\nThe letter was read by politburo member Ignacy Loga-So-\nwinski Afterwards the people\nwent home, an  eyewitness  said.\nThe shakeup in the defence\nministry was a blow to Defence\nMinister Konstantin Rokossovsky,\nousted from the Communist party\nand whose future is still in doubt.\nSpychalski, 49, jailed with\nGomulka from 1951 to 1955 without facing trial, replaced Gen.\nKazimierz Witaszewski, who is\nknown for his Stalinist ideas.\nThough Spychalski's appointment\nas first deputy minister was made\nby the politburo, Rokossovsky\nhimself named Gomulka's supporter as political chief of the\narmy, a position also formerly\nheld by the deposed Witaszewski.\nGomulka's letter, broadcast, by\nStettin radio, called upon Poles to\ngive a \"firm rebuff to the whispering and voices aimed at weak\nening our friendship with\nSoviet Union.\"\nBut the letter added: \"We shall\nnot stray from this road of democratization and we shall not let\nourselves be pushed off this road.\"\nM^y*ve_p fo#\nWhoopers Captive\nBy BERNARD DUFRESNE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canadian\nwildlife experts are proposing\nthat two male and two female\nwhooping cranes, North America's\nlargest bird and now threatened\nwith extinction, should be held in\ncaptivity for breeding purposes.\nEverything else has been tried\nbut their number still is precariously low, an official of the Canadian wildlife service said Tuesday.\nBudapest radio, in a broadcast\nheard in Vienna, announced that\nuntil order is established in the\nHungarian capital \"all public assembly is forbidden.\"\nThe'crowd tried unsuccessfully\nto pull down a 26-foot statue of\nStalin, then managed to haul\ndown a huge red star on top of a\ntrade \u2022 union building facing the\nstatue.\nTheir demonstration was after\nIrnoe Geroe, successor to MaVyas\nRakosi as cheif of the Hungarian\nCommunist party, made a surprise broadcast calling lies any\nrumors that Hungary wants to\nloosen her ties with the Soviet\nUnion.\nGeroe had just returned from\ntalks with President Tito in Yugoslavia where the parties of the\ntwo countries pledged non - interference in each other's internal\naffairs.\nPolice were not visible near the\nsquare but five trucks of soldiers\nwho rushed to the area around the\nbroadcast station fraternized with\nthe the demonstrators.\nSCALE STATUE\nThousands of students and\nworkers took part in demonstrations during the afternoon, crying\n\"Out with the Russians\" and ''We\nwant a change in the government\" ..         \u2014\u2022   \u2022\u2022\"\u25a0    \u25a0\u2022\"\u2022\nBy night the crowd grew Into an unruly group numbering\nprobably 100,000.\nFollowing up afternoon demands that the statue of Stalin\nbe removed from the square because it was a symbol of tyranny, the crowd moved Into\nStalin Square.\nYoung workers, who had\nmarched in the afternoon demonstrated in oil-stained overalls,\ntook trucks with mounted wlnch-\nGranby Completes\n100 Feet of Shaft\nsuch an arrangement would cut\nthe cost of dentures to $75 instead of the $150 generally charged now.\nHe was commenting on a report by a special committee which\nrecommended the government\ncontinue to bar technicians from\ndealing directly with the public.\nDemonstrating Quebec Students\nSplatter Legislature Buildings\nBy GUY RONDEAU\nCanaidan Press Staff Writer\nQUEBEC (CP)  \u2014 Hundreds of angry university\n\/tudents tossed eggs, tomatoes and oranges at the Quebec\nlegislature buildings Tuesday after being denied an immediate interview with Premier\nDuplessis.\nThe students, mainly from Laval University and estimated at\n$\u00a3At a, SscotidL\n\"Wonderful things,\nelectrie blankets!''\n1000 strong, milled around the\nlegislative building chanting \"We\nwant Duplessis\" in French as they\nclanged kitchen pots and set off\nfirecrackers.\nThey refused to break up immediately after Ildebert Huard, president of the General Association\nof Laval Students, told them Premier Duplessis had agreed to\nmeet a delegation of 12 students\nlater to discuss increased provincial grants to universities.\n\"No, no, we want a hearing today,\" they shouted.\nDEMANDS NOT CLEAR\nAbout 100 provincial police constables, barring the entrance to\nthe legislature, made no attempt\nto break up the demonstration,\neven when the students began\ntossing coins at them.\nSmall bands of 100 or more\nyouths \u2014 many of them not students \u2014 wandered aimlessly\nthrough the streets Tuesday evening.\nThe demonstration started  In\nplessli refused to see the 12-man\ngroup representing Montreal\nand 'Quebec universities, Mr.\nHuard asked the students to\ndisperse and return In the afternoon.\nDuring the interim, Mr. Huard\nsaid, he received assurances that\nthe group would be received at a\nlater date by Mr. Duplessis.\nAs the milling, placard - waving\ncrowd, reassembled on the legislature grounds Mr. Huard told\nthem to disperse. He said the reason the delegation was not received was because the Quebec\ngovernment was not clear on what\nthe students wanted.\nHe said the demonstration had\nbeen \"misinterpreted\" and was\nnot directed \"against provincial\nauthorities\".       \u00bb\nSpecifically, the Laval student\ngroup rallied at the legislature\nIn support of a Monday night\nresolution by the student association demanding Increased\nprovincial aid to universities.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Granby\nConsolidated    Mining,    Smelting\nand Power Co. announced Tuesday it has completed 100 feet of\nglowing coals into the bucket at j a shaft which will be sunk 1200\none point. feet below the tunnel level of its\nThe coal is being stockpiled in j Granduc operation near Stweart\nthe school yard and will be dried in  northern  British  Columbia,\nbefore it is returned to the bin.        President L. T. Postle said the\nD.   Murphy,   school   caretaker,  shaft should be completed early\ndiscovered the fire Monday and\nlifted the man-hole covers to allow gas to escape and prevent\nan explosion.\nin 1957. '\nHe also said Granby will continue to take up Granduc shares\npresently under option.\nYouths scaled the statue on\nropes and fastened cables in its\nneok. But their work was amateurish. The cable snapped several times.\nThen they got acetylene torches.\nThe colossal statue swayed but\ndid not fall and the workers were\nstill trying at nightfall to topple\nit.\nLET IT FALL\n\"Sure, we won't go home before\nwe finish this business here,\" said\nan artillery, lieutenant who tried\nto keep order in the square.\nHis efforts chiefly were to warn\nonlookers that it could be dangerous for those near the statue when\nit tumbled.\nUniformed   men  of  the  AVH\nsecret police used tear - gas\nbombs to repel the crowd as it\nmoved in on the radio headquarters.\nFinally, an eyewitness said,\nthey used their rifles. One man\nwas hit in the face by a bullet\nand killed instantly. Another was\nwounded severely.\nThere were rumors others were\nwounded.\nCanada Tests\nAerobee Rocket\nFORT CHURCHILL, Man.. (CP)\n\u2014A 26-foot Aerobee rocket, packed with recording devices, soared\nan estimated 87 miles above the\nearth in the second successful\nlaunching of a scientific rocket\nfrom a site on the barren lands\nnear this northern military base.\nThe rocket was the first fired\nfrom a 120-foot, enclosed launch\ning tower. On Saturday, a 14-foot\nCajun rocket, also carrying scientific equipment, was fired from\na steel rail launcher.\nDecoding of radio signals automatically transmitted by the Cajun showed that it reached a\nheight of 67 V4 miles and a speed\nof 4,900 feet a second.\nFN Rifle Now\nBeing Produced\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Production\nof the FN (Fabrique Nationale)\nrifle for the Canadian army has\nstarted, it was learned Tuesday\nCrown-owned Canadian Arsenals Ltd. is to turn out the first\n100 of the Belgian-designed .300\ncalibre automatic weapons by the\nend of this month. Defence Minister Campney announced in June,\n1955, that the FN will replace\nthe Lee-Enfield .303 as the Canadian Army's standard infantry\nweapon.\nIt appears certain, meanwhile,\nthat the army soon will adopt the\nBritish Patchett submachine-gun\nin place of the Sten.\nUK. May\nCompromise\nOn Suez\nBy ARTHUR GAVSHON\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd dropped a\nbroad hint Tuesday that Britain\nmay accept a compromise settlement of the Suez dispute provided\nuser-country interest* are safeguarded by Egypt\nSoon afterwards Foreign Minister Christian Pineau oi France\ntook off for a sudden conference\nin London with Lloyd on the\nSuez.\nPrime Minister Eden and Lloyd\nmade a similar hurried flight to\nParis only last week to agree on\nnext steps in the dispute.\nLloyd made clear in the House\nof Commons that Britain does not\nmaintain that international management of the waterways ll the\n\"only method\" of protecting wei-\ncountry interests.\nNO CHANGE IN\nRUSS POLICY\nSAYS ADENAUER\nBONN, Germany (Reuters)\u2014\nRussia Tuesday reaffirmed that\nher price for German reunification is direct negotiations between\nEast and West Germany instead\nof free, all-German elections.    \u2022 <\nThe Soviet terms, published\nhere, have been rejected, repeatedly by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's West German government.\nIt refuses any direct contact with\nEast Germany on grounds the\nCommunist regime is not a freely-\nelected, popular government.\nThe press service of Adenauer's\nChristian Democratic Party said\nregretfully Tuesday night that the\nSoviet note \"proves, despite so-\ncalled destalinization, that there\nhas so far been no change in Soviet policy on Germany.\"\nGeneral Gruenther\nTo Visit Canada\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Gen. Alfred\nGruenther, retiring Supreme\nCommander, Allied Powers Europe, will pay a brief farewell visit to Ottawa Nov. 22 at the invitation of the Canadian government, the defence department announced Tuesday.\n27 Pound Rainbow\nFights Last Battle\nRENAME 8TREET8\nVIENNA (AP)\u2014Polish provincial authorities of Poznan have\ndecided to rename all squares,\nstreets and factories bearing the\nname of Stalin, Radio Warsaw an-\nthe morning, and when Mr, Du-1 nounced Tuesday,\nKaslo \u2014 The best catch in years\non Kootenay Lake \u2014 a battle-\nscarred 27 pound Rainbow trout-\nis the talk of the fishing fraternity\nin Kaslo.\nThe veteran rose Monday to a\nplug cast out by Mr. and Mrs.\nBud Stack from Wyoming, who\nhave a cottage here.\n, In its struggle to get free, the\n| fish had broken off two hooks on\nthe plug, and was holding by the\nthird hook.\nAlthough bearing five scars\nwhere it had been hooked in previous encounters with anglers'\nlures, it was a prime fish.\n\"It was in beautiful condition,\nTHIS PHOTO was taken from the deck of\nthe Atlantic coal boat Mariblanca and It shows\nthe two Canadian sailors, Bert 8mlth and Al Battersby .iboard their 26-foot ketch Orenda ai\nthey neared the coast of Britain. The two\nToronto sailors, who set out from Nova Scotia\nen 8ept. 1, were given up for lost when their\ntiny boat was sighted from the liner America\nbut no one could be seen aboard. When the\nMariblanca caught up to the ship, the two men\ncame aboard, accepted fresh provisions, then\nreturned to finish their voyage.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nwhich is unusual when they Jet\nto that size,\" one man said.\nMr, and Mrs. Stack will have\ntheir catch mounted.\nIn the Kootenay Lake trout derbies, the biggest catch was a 28\npound, 10 ounce Kamloops caught\nby Lorenzo Sammartino of Trail\nin 1940.\nThe unofficial champion h one\nhooked by W. A. Baillie Grohman\nback in the 80's that weighed 36\npounds. A 48 pounder was spawned at Gerrard some years ago, retired fisheries inspector CU. Robinson of Nelson, recalled.\nThe same day that the Stacks\ncaught their fish, a 17-pounder\nwas brought ashore by a Califor-\nnian fisherman here.\nAnd in This Corner...\nEAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) \u2014 Rosebuds, chrysanthemums,\ncarnations and sunflower seeds were on the luncheon menu Monday\nat tho 11th annual American Horticultural Congress,\nSome 150 delegates found a rosebud fruit cup at their lunoheon\nplates. It consisted of a conventional fruit cup with a tiny rosebud\nin the centre.\nDid they eat It?\n\"Sure,\" said Mrs. Evelyn Drake. \"A lot of people who work\naround flowerB make a habit of eating them.\"\nAlso on the menu: '\nPetal muffins made with the usual Ingredients, but including\nchrysanthemum petals. Orange blossom honey topped the muffins.\nWhlpped-oream carnations for desert, made with chopped carnation petals.\nCelery hearts and an autumn fruit salad spread on autumn\nleaves and sprinkled with yew berries.\n\"The chrysanthemum muffins were especially good,\" commented\nMrs. Drake, \"very spicy.\"\nINVERNESS, Calif. (AP) \u2014 A pet deer broke out of its pen and\nknocked down a passer-by Monday while the animal's owner, Dr.\nM. R. Ottinger was in Wyoming\u2014hunting deer.\nThe five-point buck sailed into Robert Bruckman. 57. He was\nnot injured.\nLOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) \u2014 Marvin Lee Perryman used a slide\nrule and a sheaf of mapB Monday to beat an $85 speeding fine.\nThe 29-year-old engineer proved to Judge Frank Ropke that\nthe officer who arrested him would have had to drive 140 miles\nan hour to catch him had he been doing 75 as the officer alleged.\n\"That's Impossible,\" said Perryman, who was appealing hli fine.\nThe Judge agreed.\n '  '\u2014' ' \"\t\nI \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24, 1956\nTONIGHT, THURS. \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-9:03\n.-_-__-*. ta,.\\i\\_., ^s^SS__%\nSPENCER TRACY\nROBERT RYAN\nBAD DAY AT\nBLACK ROCK\n\\HKE FMJCiS \u2022 DEAN lAGEEit V\/WJER BRENNAH\njoin iramiiHMif\nkALL THE FUN OF \"THE QUIET MAN\"\nVSIDNIY QIILIAT 4 HANK LAUNDER\nAlASTAIR SIM\nIU TRAVERS\nSHflHl)\nhora conn\nnuiBiNiw\nBEAUTIFUt HI0HUNDS\nKOIIANO\nCMC\nA FAMOUS I\nPLAVERS\nTHEATBE\nStarts Friday\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B.C.\nShow Time* 6:48 and 8:56\nTONIQHT and THURSDAY\nTHREE SAILORS AND A GIRL\nTechnicolor)\nCartoon and Newi\nJane Powell, Gordon McRae\nModern Irrigation schemes in\nCeylon are making use of water\nsystems that were first built up\n2,000 years ago.\nEvery Home Needs\nDETTOL\nAntiseptic\nSPECIAL OFFER\n4 ez. Bottle 634\nWITH 10 BAND-AIDS FREE\n8 oi. 1.10, 16 ox. 1.90\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St\nPhone 1203      Nights: 394-L\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nThursday, Friday, Saturday\n\"Garden of Evil\"\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTONIGHT ahd THURSDAY\nThe SEE Comedy of the Year\n\"DOCTOR AT SEA\"\n(Technicolor)\nShows at 7 and 8\nFINED $10\nBrian N. MacKay of the North\nShore, Nelson, charged with driving without due care and attention was fined $10 and costs by\nMagistrate R. S. Nelson In city\ncourt Monday. MacKay was charged with erratic driving and speeding on Hall, Baker and Vernon\nStreets October 17. He pleaded\nguilty.\nKORPACK Cement Products\nCo. Ltd.\nAND\nFERRAR0 BROS.\nSAND AND GRAVEL\n* CONCRETE BLOCKS\n* CINDER BLOCKS\n* CHIMNEY BLOCKS\nSAND \u2014 GRAVEL \u2014 CEMENT\n154 Wellington St.        Trail, B.C.        Phone 2105\n\u00a7fe*\nFIREPROOF\nHOUSEHOLD\nSTORAGE\nAGENTS FOR\nWILLIAMS\nLong Distance Moving and Storage\nPHONE 77\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n(NELSON) LTD.\n701 FRONT ST.\nReceive Wings\nTRAIL \u2014 Insignia representing\npromotions were handed to\nseveral Royal Canadian Air\nCadets Tuesday evening by Alderman S. N. Mitchell.\nThe alderman also pinned\nwings 'on two cadets who successfully passed flying trining courses this summer at Chilliwack and\nreceived private pilot's licences.\nW02 Neville Fryling came second in British Columbia with a\nmark of 82.5 per cent and will\nreceive a special trophy in Vancouver this weekend to be presented at the annual provincial\nmeeting of the Air Cadet League\nof Canada. Cpl. F. Baron came\nfourth in B.C. with 81.65. Highest\nmark in Canada 88.62 was award'\ned recently to Don Carmichael of\nVernon.\nPromotion received by cadets\nwere Cpl. R. Ernest to Sergeant;\nLAC R. Jackson, J. Curtis, F.\nBaron, R. Barnsley, R. Hubber-\nsty and R. Woodward to corporal.\nWINGS were-presented to three Nelson Air\nCadets by Magistrate R, S, Nelson Monday night\nat the Armory. Above, the magistrate congratulates the three members of Nelson Air Cadet\nSquadron 381, Warrant Officer ii) Gordon Anderson, son  of Mr, and  Mrs,  P. A. Anderson;\nFit, Sgt. Gordon Lowe, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. H.\nLowe; and Sgt, Keith Holmes, son of Mr. and\nMrs. J. 8. HolmeB. The youths also qualified for\ncivilian pilots' licences, having passed the examinations set by the. Department of Transport.\n\u2014Daily News Photo.\nEDMONTON MAN\nCHARGED IN\nTRAFFIC DEATH\nCRANBROOK \u2014 James Victor\nWaddinfiton, about 25, of Edmonton, was arrested and charged\nwith criminal negligence when\nhe was released from Kimberley\nand District Hospital on Monday.\nCharge resulted from the traffic death Oct. 4 of Axel Harold\nGranberg, about 65. of Cranbrook, Waddington appeared before Magistrate Richard Shiell ot\nCranbrook, and was released on\nball  until  Nov. 28.\nMr. Waddington Is alleged to\nhave drive na car in which Mr.\nGranberg and Donald Keith\nMontgomery of Drumheller, Alta.,\nwere riding when it went off the\nroad 27 miles north of Kimberley.\nThe car reportedly rolled over j\nseveral times throwing Mr. Gran- j\nberg out. Mr. Waddington suffered severe concussion, and Montgomery  escaped unhurt,\nGyres To Stage\nFasten Show,\nTea, Sale Today\nA tea, bake sale and men'i\nfashion show sponsored by th*\nNelson Gyro Club will be stag\u00ab<x\nthis afternoon In the badminton\nhall at theXivlc Centre. All ball\ning In the sale will be done by\nclub members.\nJoe Johnson, recreational director at the Civic Centre was\nguest speaker at the club's v\/eeld-*\nmeeting in Lhe Hume Hotel Monday. Mr. Johnson briefly outline\nfuture plans for recreation bi\nlhe city. A group rental plfe\nwherein local clubs and organic\natlons can exercise recreational\nactivities in the Civic Centre ._\nbeing  investigated, he said.\nKinsmen To Assist Polio Case\n- Need for polio funds was\nbrought home to the Nelson Kinsmen Club after their dinner in\nthe Hume Hotel on Monday night.\nF. E. Morris, chairman of the\npolio committee, said he has re-\nAttendance Zone\nMeetings Slated\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Annual school\nmeetings will be held all next\nweek in the various attendance\nzones of School District No. 9,\nSecretary-Treasurer C. H. King,\nreported to Castlegar School District Board meeting Monday.\nMeetings will  be held in Re- j to pick him up. An outlay of about\nthe  Kin-\napproached   soon,   and\nettes will also help.\nPast president Allan initiated\nBud Wilson, teacher at the junior\nhigh school as a Kinsmen.\nThe club extended best wishes\nto Robert Macintosh, who plans\noelved an urgent request to take 110 leave for the Coast soon.'\na young Kaslo child to Vancou-'\nver next Monday for examination\nand fitting with braces. Neither\nparent can accompany the .child,\nso Mrs. Morris will make the trip.\nIf the child has to stay ln Vancouver for any time, she will\ncome home and then go back later\nnata, Deer Park, and Castlegar\nMonday.\nRobson residents will attend\ntheir meeting on Tuesday, and\nthe Kinnaird - Blueberry meeting\nwill be held on Thursday ln the\nKinnaird school. The meeting for\nthe Tarrys area Is scheduled for\nFriday in tha Tarrys school.\nThere will be elections of a\ntrustee at each of the Robson and\nCastlegar meetings, and representatives will be elected at Deer\nPark and Renata.\n$2 TENDERED,\nNOT PAID\nThe city office is reminding\nhouseholders, licence holders and\nspouses of any owner of land or\nland and improvements that t\u00a3iey\nhave a week in which to make\ncertain that their names are on\nthe municipal voters' list. The\ndeadline Is next Wednesday.\nIn the case of householders, who\nhave been exempt from paying\nroad and poll tax for some time\nin Nelson, the tendering of $2 to\nthe municipal collector is required. The money is offered, but is\nnot collected, lt Is pointed out. The\ngesture Is required ln conformity\nwith the Municipal Election's Act.\nAn article in Tuesday's issue of\nThe Daily News stated that the\n$2 must be paid, when in actuality\nlt must be tendered.\n$100 from the club's charity fund\nwill be reimbursed by the B C\nPolio Foundation, and the Kinsmen will see that the boy has sufficient clothes for the trip\nPresident R. A. Jack and other members hoped that this would\nfocus attention on the Kinsmen's\npolio   work,  and  would  perhaps\nencourage   other   cases   to   come\nforward.    Past  president   J.  G.\nAllan said,  \"When polio strikes,\nthat's what we're there for.\"\nThe president alio mentioned\nthat, with the large money re\nserve  available  for  polio,  and\nthe decreasing Incidence of the\ndisease, delegates to the District\nFive zone  convention  in  Vancouver   on   the   Thanksgiving\nweekend    suggested    that    the\nKinsmen extend aid to retarded\nchildren   and other*-needing\nhelp. Local Kin were fully In accord with this suggestion.\nPlans are now being finalized\nfor the annual radio auctions, and\nsuggested dates are Nov. 29, Dec.\n4, and Dec. 6, subject to approval\nof CKLN and CBC authorities.\nThe club may also try to run\nbingo games in connection with\nthe auction. Proceeds will go to\nthe Kin charity fund to be used\nfor polio, helping crippled children, and equipping a room in the\nnew   Hospital.   Sponsors  will  be\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nAnnual Gyro\nMen's\nFashion Show\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\n3 p.m.\n.FEATURING  MEN'S  FASHIONS\nAND SALE OF MEN'S HOME COOKING\nTicked en Sals at Booth In\nMANN DRUGS LTD.\nTODAY, Oct. 24\u20141 to 3\nor Phone DOUG LAIRD at\nBANK OF COMMERCE, 1720\nMrs. Appleton\nOf Rossland Dies\nROSSLAND \u2014 Mrs. Edith Appleton, a resident of Rossland\nsince 1929, died in the Mater Misericordiae Hospital in Rossland\nMonday evening.,\nShe was born in England 73\nyears ago and came to Canada in\n1911. Her husband predeceased\nher ln 1953.\nSurviving Mrs. Appleton are a\ndaughter, Mrs. H. Palm of Rossland; two grandchildren and two\ngreat-grand children.\nVernon Wollops\nKamloops 9-2 fo\nRemain Unbeaten\nVERNON (CP)\u2014Vernon Canadians remained the only undefeated team in the Okanagan Senior Hockey League Tuesday night\nwhen they swamped Kamloops\nChiefs 9-2.\nThe Allan Cup holders served\nup a passing attack for 1500 home\ntown fans that left little to be\ndesired. Young Art 'Davison of\nthe Canadians had himself a big\nnight, scoring three goals and\npicking up three assists. Odie\nLowe was right behind, scoring\ntwice and collecting four assists.\nINQUEST\nADJOURNED\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Inquest into\nthe death of Pasquale Piovesan.\n39, of Kimberley, who died Monday as a result of an industrial\naccident, started Tuesday, and\nwas adjourned to a later date.\nMr. Piovesan, a heavy equipment operator for the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co., was\npinned In the cab of a mechanical\nloader he was driving Thursday\nalong a power line when the machine evidently turned over on\na slippery part of the road.\nLast Rites Held\nFor H. W. Wood\nFuneral services for Harold William Wood, who died ln Nelson\nSaturday at the age of 72 years,\nwere conducted at the St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Tuesday.\nVery Rev T. L. Leadbeater, DD\nofficiated.\nPallbearera were F. B. Pearce,\nC. M. Beltner, H. E. Stuart, J.\nPaul, W. Ironmonger and J. P.\nWalgren.\nMany floral tributes were received and many friends attended\nthe rites. Interment was In the\nAnglican Plot of the Nelson Memorial Park.\nHISTORIC NAME\nVaudreuil village and county in\nQuebec were named for the IVlar-\nquia de Vaudreuil, governor of\nNew France in 1705-2S.\nEaslbound Train\nim Hours Late\nThe eastbound train schedule to\narrive in Nelson at 6:15 Tuesday\nevening was travelling nine hours\nlate, and was scheduled to arrive\nin the City at 3:15 a.m.\nDelays were caused by two mud\nslides at Shellburn, seven miles\neast of Vancouver and the derailment of a freight train near Penticton. Slides at Shellburn covered\n150 feet of track to a depth of\nnine feet. Six cars overturned on\nthe Southern Kettle Valley line\n40 miles from Penticton when 18\ncars and a diesel locomotive\ncrashed off the track. No'one was\ninjured.\n4 NIGHT CLASSES\nNOW UNDER WAY\nRegistration is down from last\nyear at the Junior High School\nnight classes, full enrolment has\nbeen received for four courses offered this year have been filled\nup.\nFifteen juniors and approximately eight seniors are attending\nthe archery classes Monday evenings. Typing, wood carving and\nart sessions are well under way.\nThe Weather\nNELSON  38 41 .03\nToronto      43 69 \u2014\nWinnipeg      24 43 \u2014\nRegina   29 40 .09\nCalgary      18 46 \u2014\nEdmonton    .. M  32 39 \u2014\nKimberley  25 30 -\nGrand Forks   36 43 .04\nKamloops     38 47 .04\nPenticton      39 47 .05\nVancouver   39 47 \u2014\nVictoria      38 51 .03\nWhitehorse   10 26 .04\nSpokane        37 44 .02\nCouncil Pushes\nPlans for Jubilee\nA year of banner events is in\nstore for Nelson during Its Diamond Jubilee celebrations In 1957.\nSparked by Mayor Joseph Kary,\nCity Council is working on plans\nunder which a number of highlight events would be incorporated ln the program at various\ntimes during the year. Monday\nnight he suggested to the Mid-\nSummer Bonspiel Association dur.\ning a discussion on the association's call for assistance, that the\n1957 'spiel might be keyed to this\nplan.\nOther events would be opening\nof the West Arm bridge, the turning on of natural gas, and the Fall\nconvention of the Union of B.C.\nMunicipalities. It is expected that\na committee will be set up to organize the year's program, and\ncontinue on into 1958, B.C.'s centennial year.\nSentence Youths\nFor (ar Theft\nKIMBERLEY - Two juveniles\nInvolved in disappearance ot a\ncar Aug. 21 from Red's Motel here\nwere transferred from juvenile\ncourt to magistrate's court, and\nappeared this week before Stipendiary Magistrate V. M. Bourne\nLeonard Locust, who was apprehended in Fort St. John a\nshort time after the offence, received nine months determinate\nand '18 months indeterminate ln\nthe Young Offenders' Unit. John\nJoseph Denny, who was brought\nfrom Ontario to face trial, was\nsentenced to the same term in\nNew Haven.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFY\nFLANNELETTE\nPYJAMAS\nThe Nights Are\nGetting Chilly!\nWe have a complete range\nof quality flannelette pyjamas, all sanforized and all\nwith the Flexl-belt. Look for\nthe \"Yama\" label,\nPRICED AT\n$3.95 and $4.95\nFlannelette   Nightshirts\n$3.95\nGodfreys'\nl   PHONE BT-Z70-W BOX   i\nGENERAL\nMEETING\nof\nAll Nelson\nRetail Merchants\nThis is a very important meeting.\nAll merchants are urged to attend.\nDate: OCT. 25\nPlace: CHAMBER OF COMMERCE\nTime: 8 P.M.\nALUMINUM ROOFING\n6 Ribbed or Corrugated\n\u2022 Plain or Embossed\n\u2022 Cross Corrugated\n\u2022 Flat Coll for Flashing\nA better deal at\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\nPHONR 1511\nNELSON. B.C.\nJUVENILE  FINED\nA juvenile was fined $15 and\ncosts Tuesday when he pleaded\nguilty to driving without a licence\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate\nWilliam Evans in Nelson juvenile\ncourt.\n| A  TREAT  FOR  YOU\n(        ANO   VOUR  FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR  SPECIALTY\nj    Open 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chcp\nSuey House\n624 Front St.       Nelson\nPlanning to move? Call ui\nfirst. Our modern vans and\n\u25a0killed movers assure \u25a0 SAFE\nmove wherever you go. We nro\nagents for North American\nVan Lines. America's leading\nlong distance moving organization It costs no more to\nenjoy this finer service.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.    Nelson, B. C\nPHONE 33\nffctli^meri\niericar\nVArTTMS.lNC\nFor Service \u2022. \u2022\nCALL\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCO., LTD.\n351 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C.       Phone 666\nA Complete  Plumbing and  Heating  Service\nit\nSKIN\nLIKE MA!\nMl\n\"Tills medicine Ii proving to be excellent iluff\nfer my husband's ailment Ifieiema) and Kit tlcln Is\nclearing up like magic. For the first time In many yean he\nts retting properly at night. It has completely relieved the\nIrritation ond burning,\" writes Mrs. S. C. of Hagentbarg,\nB. C. Aid your druggist for free illustrated booklet today.\nchange MOW to a\nreally.BETTER Coal\nNorthern Wyoming Coal\n.   .   .   lower in ash!\n.   .   .   contains na v\/cste!\n.   .   .    does not clinker!\n...   is easily fired!\nOrder fQMHMRH COAL Nowl\nFor IMMEDIATE\nDELIVERY\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\nPHONE 889\ni\n \t\nCouncil, Parks Board Serve On\nCranbrook Centennial Committee\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook's\nmayor and City Council, and the\nmembers of the city parks board,\nC. T. Spence, David Frame and\nWilliam Hume sr., have been\nnamed the committee to arrange\nCranbrook's part in the 1958 cele\nbration of the province's centen\nnial.   Local   committees   are   at\nTuryk Heads\nFernie Teachers\nFERNIE \u2014 Fernie elementary-\nsenior high school teachers have\nelected their officers of the Fernie\nsub-local of the British Columbia\nTeachers' Federation.\nThey are president, Max Turyk;\nvice-president, Miss Emma Chub-\nra; secretary-treasurer, Miss Ann\nChivers; public relations officer,\nLloyd Hamilton; salary committee\nchairman, John Hayhurst; delegate to District Council of the\nEast Kootenay Teachers Association, Miss M. Moir, alternate, Syd\nCrookes. The following committee\nchairman were also appointed:\ncurriculum, Syd Crookes; in-\nservice training, W, S. Creamer;\nfederal aid and educational finance, Leon A. Rushcall, pensions,\nAlfred Simcoe; entertainment.\nMiss K. Shennon.\nMr. Turyk, by his election as\npresident of the Fernie sub-local\nis automatically named as executive vice-president on the executive of the Fernie District Teachers' Association.\nMr. Creamer and Mr. Hayhurst\nwere named as a special com'\nmittee to study and report on the\nB.C. Teachers' Federation Medical\nServices Association.\nliberty to select their own dates\nfor marking the event in the yearlong province-wide celebration,\nand Cranbrook committee has not\nyet chosen this city's.\nL. J. Wallace, . general provincial secretary for the centennial addressed the Council, outlining the province's early history\nwhich will be comemorated. He\nalso outlined the proposed method\nof financing the various celebrations. Straight grant of 40 cents\nper capita on the basis of the 1956\ncensus will be available to communities, while an additional 60\ncents per capita will be available,\nif locally matched, for some approved' permanent appropriate\ncommunity facility to be a permanent memorial of the occasion.\nSupport of the facility can be\non either a municipal basis where\ncity population is the statistical\nkey, and the city itself matches\nthe grant, or on a school district\nbasis where the entire area supports the project and benefits\nfrom it.\nFor Handicapped Children ...\nCranbrook Collects\n$1000 in Campaign\nBrogden Funeral\nHeld In Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Funeral services   were   held   here   for   John\nWestward Brogden, 69, a Saskat-\ni chewan  pioneer,  who  had  been\nmaking his home  with relatives\nhere.\nBorn February 23, 1887, in West\n| Bromich,  Staffordshire,  England,\nI he came to Canada at a young\n| man, settling in Southern Saskat-\n' chewan and working for the CPR\nuntil his retirement in 1937. Surviving are two sons, Kenneth iri\nKimberley, Arthur in Vancouver\nand   five   daughters,   Mrs.   C.   I.\nTrenholm,   Kimberley;   Mrs.   D.\nMartin, Lethbridge; Mrs. H. Archer and Mrs. G.. Adams, Niagara\nFalls, and Mrs. M. Ellison, Beams-\nville, Ont., two brothers and four\nlisters in England and 16 grandchildren.   His   wife   predeceased\nhim a year ago.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nHow Much       g\n,Do You Need? \"\n*600?\nJust en* oxamplo .\nNiagara Loans range from\n$ 100 to $1500 or more.\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n$66.75\n$46.65\n$31.45\ntctct or* lowtir ea many Niagara Loom.\nIAGARA\nI   LOANS\ni BRANCHES COAST-KWOAST\n560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1636\nU-7\nMilling To Start\nAl Velvet Mine\nROSSLAND \u2014 Mid-West Copper and Uranium Mines expects\nmilling operations at its Velvet\nmine property near Rossland to\ncommence this month. Rated capacity of the mill is 150 tons per\nday with a possible increase to\n175 tons daily.\nThe company's copper-gold mineralization is opened on four of\nsix known veins on the third\nlevel. Broken ore from these\nheadings is stored in an ore pass\nsystem between the third and\neighth levels while material from\ntwo stopes on the seventh level\nis being stored in advance of milling requirements above the eighth\nlevel. Crushing station is installed\nat the eighth level horizon.\nAn adidtional 16 claims were\nstaked adjoining the company's\ncopper   property   near   Winder-\nOrder Office Opens\nFor Natal-Michel\nNATAL \u2014 For the convenience\nof customers in Michel, Natal and\nSparwood, Simpson-Sears has\nopened an order office st the\nKootenay Hotel office at Natal\nThe order office is open every\nMonday.\nKaslo Approves\nSale of Raw Milk\nKASLO .\u2014 A bylaw permitting\nthe sale of raw milk within the\nmunicipality has been passed by\nthe City Council.\nThe Kaslo Dairy, under the\nownership of Mr. and Mrs. F. C.\nYoxall, has one of the highest\nratings for cleanliness and low\nbacteria oount in the province.\nThe Council felt justified in passing the bylaw and licencing Mr.\nYoxall to sell raw milk in Kaslo.\nRCMP Officer Goes\nCRANBROOK \u2014 With some returns still to be reported, a total\nof over $1000 has been contributed\nby the people of Cranbrook and\nDistrict in the canvass for financial help held by the Cranbrook\nBranch of the Kootenay Society\nfor Handicapped Children. David\nDelegates Listed\nBy School Areas\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Rural attendance areas of Cranbrook School\nDistrict all showed an increasing\ninterest in administration of\nschool district affairs by good\nattendance at meetings in the\nseven areas, and six elected new\nrural, attendance representatives.\nSchool Board chairman Murray\nMacFarlane attended all the meetings to answer any questions ratepayers asked, and Mrs. Stanley\nMcNeil also attended and outlined\nthe school budget and how it is\nprepared.\nElected at the seven meetings\nas rural representatives were:\nBull River, V. T. Ca'sselman;\nMayook, W. R. Hughes; Moyie,\nWilliam Redford; Fort Steele,\nFrank Hill; Wardner, A. Cameron;\nWycliffe, Mrs. J, F. O'Grady, all\nnewcomers to the board; and at\nYahk, Per Williams, rural trustee\nwill be elected by the six new\nrepresentatives from their own\ngroup at a meeting later this\nweek.\nExtra-municipal trustee on the\nCranbrook Distriot School Board\nfor the past, several years, E. W.\nHawkes has resigned because of\nhis inability to attend meetings\nregularly, and appointed to succeed him in this office and complete his term is Ronald Dale.\nCastlegar Air Cadet\nDirectors Chosen\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Members of\nthe Civilian Committee of Air\nCadet Squadron here at their annual meeting, elected four new\ndirectors to two-year terms. They\nare Mrs. E. Newman, J. L. Atkinson, E. Wallner and G. Andersun,\nwho replace A. Anderson and J.\nLamont whose terms of office expired this year, and two directors\nwho have recently left the distriot.\nThe remaining directors are Ian\nThompson, R. Rivers, E. Newman\nand Mrs. E. Murray.\nReport of the year's accomplishments was given by Art Anderson, who stated the Squadron,\nunder the leadership of Flight-\nLieutenant W. H. Reed, had a\nvery good year, and had come up\nwith some outstanding cadets.\nFrame was chairman of the canvass carried out by volunteers,\nmembers of the executive, and\nmembers of the Knights of Pythias and Knights of Columbus.\nCranbrook Junior Chamber of\nCommerce helped with advertising of the campaign through their\nmobile public address unit.        ',\nUnder the Society constitution\none-fourth of all donations of $2\nor more goes to the Kootenay\nSociety fund established to pror\nvide a permanent home and custodial care for handicapped chilir\ndren requiring It, to be located at\nBlewett.\nRemainder of the money Is for\nuse by the Cranbrook Branch in\nits local work, principal item of\nwhich is the operation of the two-\nhour day school at the United\nChurch where five pupils are at\npresent enrloled, with Mrs. F. J.\nDooling the teacher, and Mrs. J.\nC. Little her assistant. The school\nwas established by the Branch in\nlate summer and has been operating successfully since early September.\n\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24,1956 \u2014 3\nCastlegar Fair\nGain Substantial\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 A substantial\nprofit \u2014 the best in recent years\n\u2014was made by the 1956 edition of\nthe Castlegar Fall Fair, Mrs. A.\nMcDonald's treasurer report revealed at a recent Fair Board\nmeeting.\nOf 83 exhibitors\/ only four did\nnot receive prize money or the\nequivalent in merchandise. Prize\nmoney was the largest paid to\ndate, totalling $485.35.\nIt waa suggested that some of\nthe funds raised by the Board\nshould be ear-marked for the\nconstruction of display tables, and\nalso that the new Fair Board officers should be elected in January, so that an earlier start in\npreparations could be made,\nwhich would result in a greater\nsuccess and even more substantial\nprofits.\nLetters of thanks will be written to H. W. Herridge, MP for\nKootenay West, for his kindness I\nin opening the Fall Fair, to Celgar Development Company for\nthe loan of tables and planks and\nto L. V. Campbell for his cooperation.\nFINAL WEEKEND!\nHURRY - HURRY - HURRY\nYes! This is the last weekend you can take advantage of the Bay's Fall\nMade-To-Measure Suit Sale \u2014 and have a handsome new suit, delivered\nin time for Christmas! Choose your new suit from a wide selection of all\nwool fabrics, every wanted shade is there! Have your new suit tailored-\nto-measure in the style you wish \u2014 but hurry ... come in right away,\nto make your selection now!\nTwo-Piece\nSUIT\nExtra Pants 15.50\nBUY YOUR SUIT ON A CONVENIENT\nBAY BUDGET PLAN!\nPay NOTHING DOWN now! When your \u00bbuit orrivej in 5 or 6 weeks' time,\npay at low as $10 down and the balance as low as $8 monthly! Remember .. . the sale ends this Saturday!\nWoman To Be\nSentenced Monday\nCRESTON \u2014 Magistrate Guy\nConstable has postponed sentencing of Mrs Elvira Laurino ot Nelson until Monday.\nMrs, Laurino was found guilty\nearlier this month of assault causing actual bodily harm to Dominic Arcovio of Nelson. The of-1\nfence took place July 8.\nTo Vancouver Island on farmers* business\nBOSWELL \u2014 Kenneth Wallace,\nsecretary of the Kootenay Bound-\nINVEEMERE \u2014 Const. H. D.\n(Bud) Bowyer has been transferred from the Invermere RCMP\ndetachment to Port Hardy on\nVancouver Island. He has been in\nInvermere for over two years.\nary Central Farmers' Institute,\nrecently travelled to Deer Park\nand Renata, and to Salmo and\nFruitvale, on Institute business.\nCORRECTION\n450 PRICES ARE REDUCED AT LIBERTY\nINCLUDING THE VARIETY STORE (Downstairs)\nNOT 50 prices as advertised tn our ad in\nTuesday's paper.\nFour Cominco Men at Kimberley\nHonored at Retirement Party\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 A joint retire-1 J. Shore, A. Clark and J. McLeod\nment party honoring  W.  Carter,' on   their   completion   of   service\n| with the Consolidated Mining and\nI Smelting  Company  was  held  in\nthe   Chapman   Camp   hall.\n|     Presentations were made by G.\nOrtner, of Cominco's personnel\n; division In Trail on behalf of the\n' Company's Walter Reid for the\nj Benevolent Society, Do*n Harrison\nj for   the   Welfare   Society,   Clem\nThompson for the union and K.\nWhite for the assay office crew.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\n\u2022*'* j^JSai> \"\u00bb\u00bb\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by Ihe\nliquor Control Board or by the Government ot British Columbia\nFAST RELIEF\nFROM PAIN OF\nHEUMGIA\nWhen you suffer from pain ol r~\nNeuralgia, Headache or 11 ;\u2022:-11\nMuscular aches you want p;|\nrelief and you want it fast [ o' \\\\\n.... That's Aspirin! A tablet ]*\u2014'\nstarts disintegrating almost the instant you lake il-starts to relieve\nthat pain almost instantly!\nIT'S SWEATER TIME!\nTop Values (or Men and Boys\nLAMBSWOOL PULLOVERS\n5\"\nFor men of all ages... this is an exceptional opportunity to save! Rich lambswool blend V-neck pullovers in both plain or fancy knits at one low feature\nprice! All the wanted shades for Fall '56 are here in\nSizes S, M, L Shop early for the best selection.\nFamous Grandme're\n\"Smoothie\" Pullovers\nOver 30 fashion colors in a top quality\nsweater renowned for its smart appearance\nand long wear. A wonderful blend of lambs wool\nin   the   popular   V-neck\nstyle. Sizes 36 to 44\t\nart apj\n8\n.95\nNew Hit! 100%\nOrion Pullovers\nA teenager's dream! . . . Cashmere-like\norlon that is actually machine washable!\nNo fuss or bother with hand-washing or\ndry cleaning. These handsome sweaters will take\nlots of punishment. Rich\nfashion colors too. Sizes\n36 to 44\t\n7\n,95\nBoys' Wool Pullovers MEN* JUMB0 KNIT\nDoys woo. C(JRl|NG SWEATERS\n10\nBoth plain and cable-knit long sleeve pull-\nfine   blended      GSa\\    ft Q\novers   in\nbotany wool. V-neck styling\nin a warm, long-wearing\nsweater for boys 8 to 16\t\n3\nCurling requires a good, sturdy\nwarm sweater. These jumbo knit\ncardigans \"fill the bill\". Heavy botany wool yarns in rib stitch, with\nshawl collar. Sizes 38 to 44\t\n95\nBoys' \"Orion\"\nV-Neck Pullovers\nStyled just like the men's sizes \u2014 and it'*\nmachine washable too! A \"must\" for busy\nmothers!   Orion   has   top\nwearing qualities in spite\nof  its  soft,   cashmere-like\ntouch! See the vivid fashion\ncolors today. Sizes S, M, L\nMEN'S CARDIGANS\nFamous \"McGregor\" quality in fine-knit\nbotany wool. Both button or zipper front\nstyles in the rich shades of blue, grey,\ngreen or wine that men admire. Sizes\n36 to 44 :. :..\n9\n95\n5\n.95\n Nclantt SatllJ &MU0 'Questions?\n, .\ntpiiPP^fflSp W-~~f\u2122$\nEstablished April 22, 1902\ninferior British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized si Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBEH OK THE AUDI! BUREAU OK CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER OK THE CANADIAN PRESS\nTbe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news\ndispatches credited to lt or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24,1956\nSchool Libraries Important\nFrom the fact that the Parent-\nTeacher Association is asking for donations of books for the school libraries, it can be assumed that the ele-\n: mentary schools, at least, do not have\nthe number of books needed to supply\nthe wants of pupils. In these days of\nrising school populations this is understandable. Unfortunately there is\nStill a lingering feeling in many\nminds that books, other than textbooks, are a luxury, and too often\nwhen'estimates have to be pared, the\nallowance for library books is cut\ndown.'\nThere are, however, indications\nthat this attitude is changing. At\nCranbrook recently the B. C. School\nTrustees' Association passed a resolution asking for a survey of school\nlibraries, from which it appears that\nthey are by no means satisfied with\nthe library situation in the schools\ntoday.\nt A library today is not just a collection of books handed in and out.\nIt is, or should be, a well-balanced\nvariety of books designed to provide\nfor the differing needs of many read-\n\u25a0 ers. There is today a multitude of\nbooks to choose from, and this complexity of choice, together with cataloguing, shelf distribution, repairing\nand the lending of books makes the\nlibrarians' duties important. The importance of their work has long been\nrecognized, and the degree of Bachelor of Library Science is granted by\nthe Universities of McGili and Toronto, as well as other universities in\nthe United States.\nIn the larger cities, public libra\nries have a separate department or\nchildren's library under the direction\nof a librarian who specializes in such\nwork. With the variety of tastes, ages\nand reading ability the work of selecting books for children demands\nconsiderable skill and experience, and\nis not something which can be carried\non successfully by most amateurs.\nThere are few, if any, teachers hi\nBritish Columbia holding the degree\nof Bachelor of Library Science in\naddition to their other degrees. So far\nthe Department of Education does\nnot appear,to attach much importance to this degree. They have instead given summer courses which\nenable the teacher to some extent to\nmanage the mechanics of a school\nlibrary, but they cannot be considered as the equivalent of a degree.\nCarried on by teachers in addition to\ntheir teaching duties, it cannot be\nexpected that a school library can\ncompare in efficiency with a well-\nrun children's department in a city\npublic library.\nBasically the school library should\nbe the most important feature of a\nschool, and the Trustees' Association\nmay instinctively feel that the time\nhas come when it should be organized\non a sound basis. With the present\nwell-organized school districts it\nshould be possible to appoint one or\nmore full-time librarians who would\nhave the knowledge and experience\nnecessary to co-ordinate each school\nlibrary and provide for their maximum efficiency. The present haphazard system is unfair to the pupils.\nDrew Victim of Airplane  A&e\nGeorge Drew, now forced to rest and\nabandon his man-killing program, is a victim of the airplane age.\nTrains and boats gave earlier political\nleaders an opportunity to rest between\nspeaking engagements. George Drew proved\ntime and again that he could make a speech\nln Regina. consult with local party leaders\nuntil midnight, and be in the House of Commons for the Orders of the Day the next day.\nHe has been snared, too\u201e by the gadgets\nof modernity. Reporters with him on speak-\nA Canadian Triumph\nThe micro-wave network which has been\nofficially opened is a massive tribute tb the\nindustrial and electronic know-how of many\nCanadians. particularly'Canadians associated\nwith the telephone industry. The forty-two\nrelay towers that link Winnipeg with Toronto are the symbols of another major triumph over the vast distance and the difficult geography of the Dominion. Here is\nanother tie to bind Canadians closer together.\nThe micro-wave network is the result\nof a great co-operative effort on the part\nof seven rhajor telephone companies, Construction difficulties and engineering difficulties of building such a system across\n1680'miles, much of it wilderness, were\nenormous. These difficulties wefe met and\novercome.\nCompletion of the line will greatly improve communications between WAst and\nEast. The network provides for twelve channels which will ensure much better longdistance telephone service,\n-Winnipeg Tribune.\ning tours could watch the scenery between\nspeaking points, but Mr. Drew would have a\nportable dictaphone along attempting to keep\npace with correspondence.\nIt wasn't the fault of bad organization.\nIt was Just that much had to be dbne.\nUnder the existing system, however, the\nfirst name of the Opposition leader, it's a\ncase of \"Let George Do It\". Parliament has\nrecognized the duties of the chief critic of\nthe government, but has made no provision\nfor him to have staff and facilities on a scale\nin any way comparable to ttiat of prime minister. Yet the tacks which fall on him are\nalmost as onerous, certainly are as varied,\nand they cannot be shared by colleagues,\nwho, during half the year at least, must look\nafter private business.\nMr. Drew has had to keep pace with the\nexpanding work of Parliament and run his\nown interference, down to carrying his own\nbags and driving his own car.\nIt would have broken a man made of\nToledo steel.\u2014James McCook in Ottawa\nJournal.\n  VV   UHllf-O      * I 1UUMC.\nTheyTl Do It Every Time\n_5~oz2^ ~S^-7_\nSaskatchewan to Vote\nOn Time Question\n\"A plebiscile on a uniform system of\ntime in Saskatchewan will be held during\nthe 1 r>56 municipal elections. October 31.\"\nHon. L. F. Mcintosh, Minister of Municipal\nAffairs, has announced.\nMr. Mcintosh said that, due to inconclusive results obtained in past province-wide\nstudies by Select Committees of the Legislature and from questionnaires circulated by\nthe Department Of Municipal Affairs, the\nSaskatchewan Government has decided to\nbring the whole question of time to a vote.\nANSWERS\nOpen tb any. reader. Names of\npersona asking questions will not be\npublished. There Is no charge tor this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except, where\nthere Is obvious necessity for privacy\nReader, Nelson\u2014Can you tell me if there Is\nany way to soften cement that has gone\nhard through being in a damp cellar?\nWe have made many inquiries, and everyone gives the same ar)swer: Throw it\naway. There seems to be no known means of\nsoftening cement once it has hardened.\nR. S., Hostland\u2014I would like to know what\nkind of a Bible a soldier has in his pack-\nsack. There is some story about a pack\nol cards. Do you know It?\nThe story is as follows: A soldier arrested\nfor having a pack of playing cards in church\naddressed the judge as follows: \"I have been\nabout six weeks on a march. I have neither\nBible nor Common Prayer Book; I have\n\u25a0 nothing but a pack cards, and I will satisfy\nYour Lordship with the purity of my intentions.\"\nSpreading the cards before the judge, he\nbegan with the ace: \"When I see the ace,\" he\nsaid, \"it reminds me there is but one God;\nwhen I see the deuce it reminds me of Father\nand Son, and when I see the trey it reminds\nme of Father, and Son, and Holy Ghost.\nWhen I see four it reminds me of the four\nevangelists that preached\u2014Matthew, Mark,\nLuke and John; when'I see five it reminds\nme of the five wise virgins that trimmed\ntheir lamps\u2014there were ten, but five were\nfoolish and were shut out. When I see six it\nreminds me that the Lord made heaven and\nearth ln six days; when I see seven it reminds me that on the seventh day He rested\nfrom His great work and hallowed it; eight\nreminds me of eight righteous persons that\nwere sayed when God destroyed the world-\nNoah and his wife, their three sons and their\nwives; when I see nine it reminds me of the\nnine lepers that were cleansed by our Saviour\u2014there were nine out of ten that never\nreturned thanks. When I see ten it reminds\nme of the ten commandments which God\nhanded down to Moses on tablets of stone;\nwhen I see the King I am reminded of the\nKing of Heaven, which is God Almighty.\nThe Queen reminds me of the Queen of\nSheba who visited Solomon, for she was as\nwise a woman as he was a man. She brought\nwith her fifty boys and fifty girls all dressed\nin boys' apparel for King Solomon to tell\nwhich were boys and which were girls. King\nSolomon sent for water for them to wash;\nthe girls washed to the elbow, the boys to the\nwrist, so the King told by that.\nWhen I count how many spots there are\nin a pack of cards I find 365, as many as\nthere are days in a year; when I count the\nnumber of cards I find there are 52, the\nnumber of weeks in a year, and on counting the tricks I find 13, the number of weeks\nln a quarter. There are four different suits\nof cards, representing the four seasons. So\nyou see, sir, a pack of cards serves as a\nBible, almanac, and Common Prayer Book.\"\nGems of Thou&ht\nSELF-RESPECT\nEvery one stamps his own value on him-\nself.-Shiller.\nSelf-reliance and self-respect are about\nas valuable commodities as we can carry in\nour pack through life.\u2014Luther Burbank.\n* *      *\nMan is free born: he is neither the slave\nof tense, nOr a silly ambler to the so-called\npleasures and pains of self-conscious matter.\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* \u2666      *\nNeither esteem anything as of advantage\nto thee that shall make thee break thy- word\nor lose thy self-respect.\u2014Marcus Aurelius.\n* *      *\nResolve to be thyself: and know, that he\nWho finds himself, losts his misery.\n\u2014Matthew Arnold.\n* *      *\nWhin thou hast profited so much that\nth6u respectest thyself, thou mayest let go\nthy tutor.\u2014Seneca.\nWatch Your Language\nRAUCOUS \u2014 (RAW-kus) \u2014 adjective;\nhoarse; disagreeably harsh; stident, as a\nraucous voice. Origin: Latin\u2014Raucus.\nIt's Been Said\nIt is One of the worst errors to suppose\nthat there is any path of safety except that\nOf duty.\u2014William Nevins.\nWUl P.'.., Otta\nI WAS\nPLU66W'\nfor you\nALL7HE\nWAY,\nCOSMO-\nWl \u25a0 , Jl IST      WTUOSE GUVS4REO\n'HE4RDVOU60T  \u00a5_MP?ETrtp-WCgp\nBy Jimmy Hado\n1\n' the promotion-\ncouldn't u4ppe>j\ntd a nicer guv-\nin e4gt,_ kept\ntelling \"the big\nboss there's omly\none m4n fdr the\n\u2022job- cosmo\nCOLESL4W'\nTU4N A 64MBLER5 ,\nPET QUARTER-\nFB0NT-RUNNER6-THEy\nALWAYS PICK THE WINNER\n4FTER THE PHOTO FINISH\nIS ANNOUNCED'\"       ^\/'A\nW\nWELL,\n7H4NKKX),\nPHOOTKISS\"\nTH4NK you,\nVERMIN-  ,.\nyE4H-VERMlN\nW4NTEDTH4TJ05'\nME S4ID COSMO\nCOULDN'T RUN\n4 LEMON4DE\nST4ND-\n']____\n\u2022W\nTHOSE GUVS\nWEREN'T IN A\nPHOTO FINISH-\nTHEIR NOSES 4RE\nNEVER 4MywHERES\nNE4R THE GRIND'\nSTONE\nrjjM, KlNfi fKATUMl gMWCAm I\nListening to the\ns0ur-4pple back-\nsl4ppers le4d the\ncheering section'\nTUj\/rX Ar\/O A VP ofr  ,\n7MS UATLO HAT TO llji\nI.X.L.TB\/3M,       \\hm\nsiokahs, hash.     miVi\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThe glory that -shall be reveilqd\nIn us.\u2014Romans 8:18.\nThat would b_ a patent of nobility indeed. We are told that our\nglory will differ as the stars in\nmagnitude. We can really amount\nto something if Christ shines\nthrough us.\ndunt 3hL\nA woman Is a person who must\nhave dresses and hats like those\nworn by others, but insists on\nsomethln' different.\nYonr Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n By France* Drake\u2014\u2014\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Thursday, Oct. 25, 1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Fine aspects from several\nplanets today should give Impetus,\nencouragement to step ahead and\naccomplish more than on the\nordinary day. Finances, domesticity, study especially favored.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Your*Venus, Jupiter and several\nother planets, well positioned, be'\nstow fresh advantages, new avenues through which advance\nment can be made, benefits\nobtained, Do your best without\nstraining.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nSmall matters, which are often\nequally as important as the more\nshowy ones, are under fine vibrations now. Give your diversified\ntalents room in which to work.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nThere are no- unfriendly influences to hinder you or cause needless worry. You can handle any\ntype of problem or situation ably\nnow. Use your kind, .persuasive\npersonality where it can help.\nJULY 2 4to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014Day's immediate tasks and plans\nfor future gain are in generally\nfriendly hands: many major\nplanets in helpful array. Plan\nyour schedule so as to include\nsound planning as well as execu-\nMau Mau\nLeader Charged\nNAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) \u2014\nBritish authorities Monday\ncharged Mau Mau leader Dedan\nKimathi with murder.\nKimathi was captured Sunday.\nHis capture brought to an end\nan intensive five-week search for\nthe scar - faced, bearded leader\nwho liked to be called \"field marshal sir,\" \"prime minister of\nKenya\" and \"Sir Dedan Kimathi\". He is said to be responsible\nfor 29 murders.\nObservers here said he might\nhave been planning one last comeback in his terrorist efforts,\nspurred on by the royal visit of\nPrincess Margaret.\nIt is believed that only Stanley\nMathenge remains to lead the 300\nor so Mau Mau still at large.\nAUGUST 2\u00abV to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 The position of Venus\nand Jupiter favors artistic, home\nand family affairs;- also personal\nand financltl interests. Use discernment and good judgment to\ngain benefits.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Many and various\ngains possible this excellent day.\nWork with others where it Is ad-\nvantageous to do so and encourage\nthe young t0 get ahead.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio)) \u2014 This day's vibrations\nare so stimulating and generous\nthat you may be tempted to\nundertake too much, over-enthuse\nor try unfamiliar and harmful\nprocedures. Avoid such, a tend\nency. Your occupation, interests\ngenerally sponsored.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 A good out'\nlook for truly productive and progressive advancement. Finances,\nsound investments, business favored.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 If you make the\nmost of your fine talents and\nabilities you can have good results\nnow,\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Stimulating rays\nfor most matters. Apply talents\nwhere best suited and don't take\nthings for granted. Your agility\nof mind should bring gains.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You can gain through\nassociates, family, and particularly your understanding of people\nand their needs. You usually\noverlook the errors of others: do\nso today.\nYOU BORN TODAY are highly\nintelligent and roundly capable;\nare perhaps at times domineering\nbecause you know you can accomplish quickly and well \u2014 especially in emergencies. Curb this\ntendency, however; let your innate graciousness always work\nalong with your efficiency. You\ncould ably handle a position\ncarrying trust, authority and\nmuch responsibility. Don't waste\nvaluable time which could be put\nto developing your talents \u2014\ncdoking, writing, art .among them.\nBirthdate: Georges Bizet, famed\nFrench music composer; Thomas\nBabington Macauley, renowned\nessayist, statesman; Admiral Richard E. Byrd, aviator-explorer.\nKing Features\nLONDON LID\u2014 rianlst Liberace, wearing English-cut\ntweed suit woven with golden thread, dons a costermonger's\ncap, sewn with traditional pearly buttons, on arrival in London.\nCALVERT HOUSE\ntyeOnaeffiaMJmidfy'\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board Or by the Covernmenl ol British Columbia\nOne man tells another...\n\"Borrow with confidence\nfrom HFC\"\nThe word gets around as one friend te__\nanother about HFC\u2014\"They help you solve\nyour money problems!\" Whether you need\nexpert counsel about your finances from our\nhighly trained staff ... or a cash loan of up\nto 51,000 . . . you can have complete confidence in HFC\u2014Canada's first and most\nrecommended consumer finance company. For\nmoney or advice, visit HFC today!\nOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nG. M. Chilton, Managv\n608 Baker Streat, socond floor, phono 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nKIMBESLEY BRANCH, 420 Howard Strwl >h.M III 2-2228\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Renting\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n'   '\n'\nFIRST LINI\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH LINI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINI\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\nitach group of numbers or letters count as one word)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1  Insertion\n2 Consecutive, Insertion!\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n$ .20\n.39\n.43\n.00\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add lie for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates If payment ta\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nIon Consecutive Insertions 20s> a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run                \u25a0\n : '  Bill Me   .\t\nYOUR  NAMI\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n L\nAbout' the Town\n\"\u2014  By   Alice  Stevens\nPHONE   I36U OR  1844\nRev. and Mrs, J. N. Allan entertained Ministerial Association\nmembers and their wives at a social evening at the manse, 406\nRobson Street. Guests of honor\nwere Very Rev. Dean and Mrs.\nT. L. Leadbeater, who will be\nleaving Nelson shortly to reside\nin Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nH. D. Harrison, Mill Street, and\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Peebles, Latimer Street, return today from a\nvisit to Vancouver.\n...\nMrs. B. Hughes of Regina has\narrived to spend the winter with\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs.. L. G. Catley, 702 Observatory Street, after visiting Pioneer for the past few months.\n.' .   *\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Dennison,\nMill Street, are visiting Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nAmong those who have returned to their homes after attending\nthe Santor-Jorgenson wedding\nSaturday are Mr. and Mrs. Arnold\nBacon, Faye and David, of Edmonton, Mr. and Mrs. W. Forrest of\nTrail, and Mr. and Mrs. C. Campbell of Rossland.\n\u00bb   \u00bb   .\nMrs. M. K. Ozelle, 719 Nelson\nAvenue, was hostess to 21 members of First Baptist 4th Nelson\nCubs and Scouts Ladies' Auxili\nary.   Mrs.   P.   Lincoln,   Mrs,   R.\nWalkley  and  Mrs. J.  Hoilington\nassisted with serving.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dauna Jorgenson, who has\nbeen visiting her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. W. B. Jorgenson, North\nShore, returned by plane to Vic-\ntoria where she attends College\nof Education.\nCrawford Bay |\nCRAWFORD BAY - Maureen\nFoster recently broke her cullat j\nbone. She is improving and is\nback at school.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Halliday spent!\na few days in Spokane. i\nMrs. Halliday also had as her\nguests for a week, Mrs. Mills and1\ndaughter from Kimberley |\nMr. and Mrs. William Eddy and\nRalph Eddy of Creston were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Eddy\nEgypt's population, now about\n24,000,000, has more than doubled\nsince 1897.\nTeacher's Role in (oun.ei!)ng\nwmraranawwararetywwwwaemrtrararmrw.\nDO-IT-YOURSELF   KITS\nCraft Kits of Al) Kinds\nTo Keep Idle Fingers Busy\nRemember: 8wlfKnlt\nHome Knitting Machines\nat $49.95 will do al! a high\npriced machine will do\nSee Our Window\nHOBBY  SHOP\nAcross From the Bus Depot\ni   Phone 1703        Nelson, B.C.\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 \"Counselling\"!\nwas the topic of an interesting panel discussion presented at the\nOctober meeting of the Kimberley\nParent-Teacher   Association.\nThose taking part were Mrs..\nPennington, girls' counsellor at\nMount Baker High School, Cranbrook, Mrs. K. Poole and Miss R\nSoderholm, Senior and Junior\nHigh School Girls' Counsellors and\nR. Hopkins and L. Bedu?,, Senior\nand Junior High Boys' Counsel-;\nlors, all of the Kimberley High\nSchool staff.\n\"Counselling\" said the Cran-.\nbrook teacher in opening the dis-;\ncussion is the task of. trying to,\nhelp the child to see himself and j\nhis relations with others in a true1\nlight so that he may gain an in-j\nsight into his problems, thus laying a foundation for their solution.\n\"A counsellor must never advise, but rather must act as a mirror to reflect back to the student\nthe information he himself gives,\nthus clarifying his problem. Every i\nteaching situation, whether In\nhome or in school, is a counselling!\nsituation.\"\nMrs. Poole pointed out that the\ninterview is the chief technique\nused in counselling and may be\nnecessitated  by   problems in  re-\nI\nTftUotfyL  FASHIONS\nPREPARE  FOR  THE\nPARTY SEASON.\nSee Ourv\nFELT SKIRTS\nFancy or plain, and blouses\nin terrylene or jersey.\nSizes  10 \"to 18.\nDRESSES\nIn Nylon and new materials.\nFrom  Junior  size  10  up  to  62.\nllgious conflicts, parent-child and\nboy-and-girl relationships on any\nother matter resulting in poor\nschool progress.\nMr. Hopkins dealt with testing\nas a msans of obtaining information about the child upon which\ninterview may be based. Test give\nthe administrator a profile of the\nstudent and are invaluable to\ncounsellors, employers and in the\nchannelling of students into fields\nbest suited to their abilities.\nMr. Beduz told the meeting of\nthe various records accumulated\non each pupil from Grade I on.\nParents do not make enough use\nof counselling information, he\nsaid.\nMiss Soderholm outlined what\nis being done in the schools in\nthe field of vocational guidance,\nusing job studies, films, speakers,\nFuture Teachers' and Nurses'\nClubs, and so on.\nMany questions were asked by\nthe audience during the discussion. Miss Ruth Williams, P-TA\nprogram chairman, introduced the\nspeakers.\nIn a brief business session the\nPresident, Mrs. A, E. Oliver, reported on the successful Holiday\nTheatre presentation.\nMrs. W. Corriveau, playground\nchairman, gave a report of the\nsupervised playgrounds held during the summer.\nMiss C. MacKinnon, public\nhealth nurse in Kimberley, told of\na talk to the executive by Mr\nBarrett, Cominco psychologist ln\nTrail, or the formation of a branch\nof the Mental Health Association.\nMrs. H. McRae will chair a new\nMental Heal'th Committee on the\nP-TA executive.\nLegion LA\nPoppy Day\nArrangements for participation\nin Remembrance Day observances\nhere were made when Ladies\nAuxiliary to Nelson branch of the\nCanadian Legion met for its\nmonthly session Monday night In\nthe Legion lounge.\nMrs. Norman Brown, president,\nthanked past president Mrs. A. O.\nAllen for taking over In her absence at the September meeting.\nThe Remembrance banquet will\nbe held October 8, Instead of the\ncustomary smoker, and the\nLadies' Auxiliary will be relieved\nof catering duties which will be\ncarried out by a church group.\nThe banquet will be followed by\na dance and other entertainment\nPoppy,Day November 10 will\nbe in charge of Mrs. L. W. Bick\nnell ln conjunction with the\nbranch. Branch and auxiliary;\nmembers will work inside and on\nthe streets, helped by Air and Sea|\nCadets. I\nThe cenotaph service, to be at-'\ntended by Auxiliary members,\nwill take place as usual Novem-i\nber 11, and members will also at-;\ntend church service at St'\nSaviour's, ]\nCorrespondence read by Mrs\nIrene Kerr Included a letter of\nappreciation from hospital ad-;\nministrator R. H. Procter for a\ncheque for a mattress donated by;\nthe Auxiliary.\nMrs. Ruth McCrelght Informed\nmembers that during the summer\n\u25a0\u2014_\n-\"-__-____--____\u2014\nMnning\nAs\nsist\nance\nHarrop School\nOttawa Beauty\nMiss Rough Rider .\nOTTAWA (CP) - Margrete\nStevka, tall, slim 17-year-old\nbrunette who came from Hungary\nwith her mother in 1849, was\nchosen Miss Ottawa Rough Rider\n(or 1956.\nThe five foot, seven-inch, civil\nservice stenographer measures\n35V4, 24%, 36. She will compete\nfor the Miss Grey Cup title.\nand early tall she had sent plant..\nand cards to a number of sick\npeople.\nIn a lengthy report, Mrs. Allen\ntold of the recent work of the\noouse committee, which had\ntaken stuck of kitchen equipment\nand tidied cupboards. Her recommendations which have been accepted by the Auxiliary and will\nbe worked on shortly include\ndecorating the kitchen and cloakroom, covering the kitchen table,\nadding new rubber mats for sinks\nand new curtains tor both halls\nin the building, and replacement\nof broken kitchen goods.\nMrs.   M.   Colman   reported   on\nlayettes in the offing.\nCOOK BOOK\nA great deal of work has been\ndone in compiling a cook book,\nMrs. Steve Cameron said. For\nthe project, each member is contributing four of her favorite\nrecipes.\nMrs. G. E. Thompson reported\non Hospital Auxiliary work and\nthe proposed purchase of dressing\ngowns for men patients. She asked Legion Auxiliary members to\nattend the Hospital Auxiliaries'\nforthcoming tea in aid of this\ncause.\nA successful card party was\nheld in October, and another will\nbe held early in November, Mrs.\nDay stated. She urged attendance\nof Auxiliary members at these\nfunctions. The Legion fall tea will\nbe held November 17 and will\nfeature a bake table, \"white elephants,\" a contest and sale of\nwork.\nMiss Evelyn Forbes reported\nthat she and Mrs. W. H. Burns\nhad made 114 visits and had distributed 93 gifts to patients at the\nhospital. Mrs. J. Dawson was\nthanked for the many birthday\ncards sent out by the Auxiliary.\nRefreshments were served by a\ncommittee of Miss C. Elliott, Mrs.\nR. McCrelght, Mrs, W. Leslie.\nMrs. Allen and Mrs. P. T. Filleul.\nm\nHARROP - Mrs. P. Munch.\n!Iarrop school teacher, called a\nmeeting of the mothers of the\nchildren to discuss arrangemen's\nfor the Hallowe*en party and\nChristmas concert. A decision was\nreached to hold the Hallowe'en\nparty In the afternoon this year\nMrs. V. Rowley and Mrs. F. Fran-\nien undertook to make all arrangements for entertainment and\nto purchase the prizes. Tea will\nbe served to th. mothers by the\nteacher.\nThe Procter PTA suggested\namalgamating the Harrop and\nProcter Christmas concert this\nyear as there are fewer children\nat Harrop School and only Grades\n1 to 6 attending Procter School\nrtbw, This was voted down by a\nlarge majority of the mothers\nwho felt it would be better for\nthe children to hold the concert\nIn Harrop School. Refreshments\nwill not be served as previously\ndue to lack of space. Mrs. W,\nOgilvie, Mrs. V. C. Rowley and\nMrs, F. Fransen will go from\nhouse to house collecting for\ndonations towards the Christmas\ntreats. Another meeting will be\nheld on November 9 to make final\narrangements.\n\u20ac>u-i3 i\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24, 1956 \u2014 5\nBoswell Group\nTo Elect Officers\nBOSWELL - A public meeting\nwas held by the Boswell Memorial\nHall Committee, with T. Kunst\nas the only remaining committee\nmember present, the tour others\nhaving resigned. A new committee will be elected at the annual meeting in November.\n11 New Members Welcomed as\nScout Auxiliary Starts Year\nThe Fourth Nelson First Baptist\nCub and Scout Mothers' Auxiliary\nmet Monday at the home of Mrs.\nWedding\nAnnouncements\nand\nInvitations\n\u2022u1- s*\/t*.\nWEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS or INVITATIONS require the correct wording, the choice\nof type, and the latest designs in stationery . ..\nWe guarantee all these essentials in regard to\nSocial Printing. Ask to see the various samples\nthat we carry in stock . . . Also \"Thank You\"\nCards, Wedding Cake Boxes. If out of town,\nwrite for samples and prices.\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\nParish Founded\n10 Years Ago\nCASTLEGAR - Many Castlegar, Kinnaird, Blueberry and\nRobson residents gathered in S!.\nAlban's Parish Hall at Castlegar\nin honor of the 10th anniversary\nof the founding of the parish.\nArchdeacon B. A. Resker, wh.i\ncame to Castlegar at that time\nfrom Kimberley, gave a brief\nresume of the growth of the\nParish since its formation. Prior\nto the forming of the parish,\nCastlegar, Kinnaird, Robson, and\nBlueberry had been served by\nclergymen from Rossland or Trail.\nThe Archdeacon recalled some\nof his adventures ln finding living quarters before the present\nvicarage was built, and read an\ninteresting letter he had received\nfrom the late T. L. Bloomer of\nCastlegar, advising him of church\naffairs it that time.\nA letter was also read from\nRev. L. C. Johnston of the Castlegar United Church, congratulating the Parish on its 10th birthday\nMembers of the St. Alban's WA\nand the Evening Guild presenter!\nArchdeacon Resker with a framed\npicture of the Church, and the\nKinnaird WA made a presentation\nof a copy of the new book, \"The\nColumbia.\" The Archdeacon also\nreceived a card autographed by\neach of the guests.\nEntertainment for the evening\nwas of a musical nature, featuring\nfolk-songs by Dr. and Mrs. H.\nRuebsaat, a duet by Tannis and\nBabs Killough, and community\nsinging. A humorous monologue\nwas read by Beth McLeod.\nKelly Ozelle, Nelson Avenue, for\nIts first meeting of the season.\nThe meeting was very well attended, and 11 new members were\nwelcomed.\nIdeas were received for raising\nmoney to buy leaders' hats and\ncamping equipment. District Cubmaster F. S. Aikins attended later\nIn the evening and gave a talk on\nCubbing and Scouting, and answered questions asked by the\nmembers.\nRefreshments were served by\nthe hostess, assisted by president,\nMrs, R. Walkley, and Mrs. J.\nHoilington.\nClassified  Ads  Get  Results\nHml Wonder why\nDr. Chase's\nNERVEFOOD\nhelp* so many people soy\nWhen you feel\ntired, nervous,\nirritable- Little\nthings bother yon\n\u2014worries pile up,\nthat'll the time to\ntake  Dr. Chase's\nNerve Food.\nThe Vitamin Bl and Blood\nBuilding Iron in Dr. Chase'i\nNerve Food work together to\nhelp build upyour general health\n\u2014help you feci relaxed, at ease,\nable to forget you ever had\nnervous troubles.\nDr. Chaae's Nerve Food helps\nyou have the sound steady\nnerves that go with good health.\nHelps you feel in love with life\n\u2014confident\u2014energetic\u2014ready\nto enjoy your family, your\nwork, your friends.\nThe sooner you start, the sooner\nyou may feel the benefits of this\nnil-round tonic \u00ab9^\u2014 Economy\nnee $2JS s.  es you 4-1-i.\nDR. CHASE'S\nNERVE FOODv,lu\nFast, deep-down relief from\nArthritic and\nRheumatic Pain\nwith the skin-penetrating power of \"Deep Heat\"\nIf you suffer from those agonizing arthritic and rheumatic aches and pains,.. 2 you can't rest comfortably\nat night, here's welcome relief,\nJust massage New Mentholatum Rub on the sore\nplaces until absorbed. In 30 seconds this penetrating\n\"Deep Heat\" action starts bringing you welcome relief. Fjrsi a warm, soothing glowt Then a comforting\nease for aching knee, shoulder, hip, fingers and other\npainful joints and aching muscles.\nNew Mentholatum Rub contains a special combination'\nof medicinal ingredients to give deep skin-penetrating\npower. Agonizing pains are soothed, eased, comforted.\nGreascless, stainless. Get a tube of New Mentholatum\n\"Deep Heat\" Rub today.\nNew MENTHOLATUM \"Deep Heat\" RUB\nTea Planned\nSt. Paul's-Trinity United\nChurch, Fidelity Circle will stage\na tea and bake sale ln the Church\nHall Saturday,\nMrs. E. Swanson will convene\nthe tea, and Mrs. R. S. Nelson and\nMrs. W. H. Smedley will look after the sale. Other women will assist.\nProceeds o fthe affair will go\nto the Women's Federation at St.\nPaul's-Trinity United Church, of\nwhich the Fidelity Circle is a\nmember. Funds are then diverted\nto local church work, missions,\nand other enterprises.\nHARROP CLUB\nHOLDS ELECTION\nHARROP \u2014 The Harrop Community Betterment Club held Its\nfirst meeting of the season to appoint new officers for the coming\nyear.\nMembers elected were president, E. Smith; vice-president, C.\nMcNown; recording secretary.\nMrs. A. Feller; secretary treasurer, S. Hutcheson; directors, A.\nFeller, T. Sicotte and Mrs. L. Paul-\nhus; entertainment committee,\nMrs. J. McNown and Mrs. L.\nPaulhus.\nThe first event planned for the\nWinter is a showing of scenic\nslides by J. Hobson. A discussion\nwas held on the forthcoming\nHallowe'en party for the Harrop\nSehooi children and the sum of\n$5 was donated for prizes and\ncandy. The Club also plans to\nhelp with the Christmas Party\nDelay Sweetgrass\nRemoval\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 A federal court order has temporarily\nhalted a Securities and Exchange\nCommission action to remove the\ncapital stock of a Canadian oil\ncompany from the American\nStock Exchange for alleged mis.\nrepresentation of its gas and oil\nreserves.\nA restraining order issued Saturday holds up the SEC proceeding against Great Sweet Grass\nOil Ltd. for 10 days. The SEC\nseeks to have Great Sweet Grass\nstock removed from trading or\nsuspended up to 12 months. It has\nappealed the court order.\nBROADVEIN\nTILES\n10 decorator colors.\n14c EACH\njn&im0\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Helle-\nnius and children of Alega Lake,\nnear Prince George, who have\nbeen visiting Mrs. Hellenius'\nmother, Mrs. F. Bryant, have left\nfor their home.\nCharles Black who has been a\npatient in Creston Valley Hospital for several weeks, haB returned.\nMr. and Mrs. Harrison at Fernie visited the latters father Sara\nLombardo.\nCpl. L. Cook, who recently\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nBlack has now left for Vancouver\naccompanied by Mrs. Cook.\nROUGH SEESAW\nBARONS, Ai'ta. (CP) \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. Stanley Beningfield were\nawarded $1800 in an action\nagainst this village. Mr. Beningfield said that when he stepped\non one end of a lose plank in a\nboard walk, the other end flew up\nand tripped his wife, who suffered\na back injury.\naii.ii,iiiiii..iiiiiiiiii.,iiiiii..iii.i...is\n|    Women's    |\n1 Slickers |\nZ Choose from black or brown \u2014\n\"'. with  low medium or high =\nS     heels. Easy side zipper. 5\n= REGULAR 3.96 g\ni EXTRA SPECIAL, Only |\nI      $1.95      I\n| SIZES 4 TO 8\n| ANDREW'S |\n\u00a7      Leaders in Footfashion     =\n= Established 1902\nnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllr\nIs Your \"Dream House\" a\u2014\nRambling Ranch\nSuburban Farm\nStyle\n\u2022 If you're thinking (or dreaming) about\nthe home you'll build someday \u2014 you'll\nbe sure to find it by getting your\n\u2022 The House of the\nWeek STUDY PLAN\ncosts only\n35 cents\n\u2022 The STUDY PLAN,\nlike a scaled blueprint,\nshows you floor plans,\neach of the four elevations of the house, and\nis scaled at 1\/8-inch per\nfoot\n\u2022 The STUDY PLAN\nenables you to determine\nwhether or not you'll\nwant to go ahead with\nplans to build your own\n\"dream house.\"\n\u2022 The House of the\nWeek will feature a new\npopular design each\nweek. You'll have lots\nof opportunities to\nchoose the one you think\nwill fit your family's\nneeds.\n\u2022 Each house plan is\nspecially designed for\nThe House o\/ the Week\nby a well-known registered architect.\n\u2022 Tlie House oj the\nWeek enables you to\norder complete blueprints of the bouse you\nchoose directly from tbe\narchitect\n'     WATCH   FOR  THIS   BRAND-NEW   FEATURE I\nSend in the coupon for the STUDY PLAN you wont!\nEACH WEEK in the\nSaturday Supplement\nof the\nHI\n \u2014\n : :\u2014\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24,1956\nBusiness Spotlight. .\nUrges Removal of U.S. Tariffs in\nReturn for Canadian Power Pads\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nSEIGNIORY CLUB, Que. (CP)\n\u2014Free entry into the United\n-States of a wide range of Canadian products should be made a\ncondition of any Canadian-American power agreements which\nwould flood Canadian territory,\nor affect future generations of\npower in Canada, in the opinion\nof the policy committee of the\nCanadian Exporters' Association.\nProvision also should be made\nfor Canada to receive \"an equit*\nable portion\" of power developed\nin the United States under such\nagreements.\t\nThe committee's recommendation was presented to the Canadian Exporters' annual meeting.\nSo far as named, the products\ntor which free  entry  would  be\nasked, are from the mines, forests\nand farms.\nA8K TIGHT AGREEMENT\nUnder the recommendation, the\nfederal government would be\nasked not to make power agreements of the kind named unless\n\"the United States Congress\nagrees by solemn treaty to remove permanently tariff or other\nobstacles to the importation from\nCanada ot primary metals, minerals, oil, gas, lumber, pulp and\npaper and agricultural products,\nas well as other products, which\n\u00bban   be   produced   efficiently   in\nPROUD TRADITIONS\nTrois-Rivieres, pulp and paper\nmanufacturing city in Quebec, was\na busy trading post tn 1615.\nCanada for use or consumption in\nthe United States.\"\nThe effect of the adverse trade\ndeficit on the balance-of-pay\nments (situation between Canada\nand the United States was now\nlargely offset by American\ncapital Investment In Canada\nbut, for a variety of reasons,\nthis might not continue to be\nthe case.\nOne recommendation urged expanded credit facilities for the export trade.\nIt said credit facilities exist\nabroad which go beyond anything\nthe exporter can obtain in Can-\nada, either from the banks or from\nthe crown-operated export credits\ninsurance corporation.\nTO HELP OTHER AREAS\nAnother recommendation asked\nthe government that Colombo plan\nareas receive continued and\ntensified support; and that the\ngovernment spearhead a move to\nbring assistance to other underdeveloped areas.\nThe government would also be\nasked, under another item, to\nsuggest to the council of the North\nAtlantic Treaty Organization that\nNATO countries jointly promote\nimprovement of existing instruments of international economic\nco-operation for the maintenance\nof a healthy international balance\nof-paymenta situation.\nThe department of trade and\ncommerce was asked to extend\ngoodwill trade missions such\nthose undertaken in recent years\nby trade minister Howe.\nProtein Breakfasts\nAt leading\nFood Stores\n*SUGAR CU\u00bbJE1>\nYou owe it to your family to Insist on\nUfa-Insurance protection when you\nborrow. U your present loan is with\na company that does not allow you\nthis vital protection, don't delay,\nswitch to Trans Canada Credit now.\nLoans to $\u00a3S00 \u2014 protected at no\nextra cost by life-insurance\u2014can be\nquickly arranged.   Call 'us now.\nUICK CASH LOANS\nCANADIAN  yMe LOAN COMPANY\nmmmmmw\n525 VERNON ST. - PHONE 1690\ninn--\nBEFORE   BIG   SPLASH \u2014 Australian swimmer Judy Davies tries ont Melbourne's\nsparkling new swimming and diving stadium, bunt for 19S6 Olympic Games starting In November.\nIndians in Full Regalia Presenf\nBrief lo Members of B.C. Cabinet\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Wearing the\nfull regalia of the Capilano Tribe,\naged Chief Matthias led a delegation of 27 B.C. Indians \u2014 men and\nwomen \u2014 into the sedated provincial cabinet chamber at the legislative buildings at noon Tuesday.\nThe Indians ars asking the gov-\nLondon Paper\nTakes Peep\nInfo Future\nLONDON (CP) - The London\nnewspaper, The People, has published a-special edition to mark\nits 150th anniversary.\nBut the paper is only 75 years\nold, So its birthday edition is a\nlive look at the kind of paper it\nmight be printing in the year 2031.\nIn many ways, it's the same old\nworld.\nThere's a murder in the channel tunnel (which doesn't exist\nyet). A judge rejects peep pictures in a blackmail case (taken\nby a button-size telecamera) and\nin Sweden, a polygamy plan\u2014\"as\nmany wives or husbands as you\nlike\"\u2014flops after a 10-year trial.\nSCIENTIFIC  BACKING\nThe People claims scientific\nbacking for everything it sees in\n2031. Among the news carried 75\nyears hence:\nKing Charles, in his 83rd year,\nwalks away from a crash of a\nhelicopter he is flying himself to\nBalmoral, and his royal doctors\nrefuse fco advise him to quit flying.\n\"In the 21s* century,** they are\nquoted as saying, \"It's unrealistic\nto describe a man of 83 as more\nthan middle-aged.\"\nThe newspaper which relishes\nan expose in mundane 1950, crusades in 2031 against skyscraper\nslums.\nOn the sports page, there's\nthis amazing Item:\n\"The World's Test Series Is\napproaching Its climax with the\nNew York Giants, two points\nbehind Yorkshire In the baseball-cricket championship.\"\nFix Speed Limit For\nBridge Pedestrians\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Pedestrians\nwho cross the new Agasslz-Rose-\ndale toll bridge might find themselves in court if they don't\nproceed at a brisk, two-mile-an-\nhour speed across the structure.\nRegulations governing the use\nof the bridge was approved by\nthe B.C. Cabinet Monday.\nThe regulations state pedestrians are not allowed to cross the\nbridge at a speed less than two\nmiles an hour \"and shall, when\ncrossing, continue in one direction\nonly, without stopping.\"\nFailure to comply with the\nregulations makes a person liable\nto a fine not exceeding $300.\nFor Pure Pleasure\n!\u00abE MILDEST BEST-TASTING cigarette\nernment for support in their campaign lor the right of Indians to\nbuy liquor.\nRed Feather nodded, and the\nbells on his mocassins jingled\nloudly, as Chief Matthias plodded\ninto the chamber and saluted Premier Bennett and members of his\ncabinet. Then, without uttering a\nword, he pointed to Andy Paul,\npresident of the North American\nIndian Brotherhood, as spokesman\nfor the delegation.\nExtra chairs were rushed into\nthe council chamber to accomodate the delegates and there was\nscarcely an inch of room when\nall were seated.\nMr. Paulson presented a brief\naddressed to \"The Honorable Executive Council of ths Government of British Columbia.\"\nNeatly typed on foolscap paper, it asked the cabinet to \"immediately cause to be repealed\"\nsection 75 of the B.C. Liquor Act\nwhich now prohibits Indians from\nentering a liquor store.\nIt also stated that \"the benefits\nintended to be given to the electors through the imposition of\nthe five per cent sales tax is denied the Indians of B.C. to the extent enjoyed by the electors who\ndo not reside on an Indian Reserve.\"\nThe cabinet was asked to agree\n\"that an Indian residing on an Indian Reserve who is a registered\nIndian shall not pay a sales tax\nwhen the goods are delivered to\nan Indian Reserve.\"\nIt was pointed out that tax exemption for Indians is now Jn\nforce in the province of Quebec.\nWOU1D  RESTOCK  BEAVER\nThe oabinet was asked tor \u00bbn\nappropriation so that beaver may\nonce more be restocked in certain\nareas for the benefit of native\nIndians, as is now done in Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.\n\"While many of our people now\nfind employment in the many industries in B.C., there are yet\nsome who cannot find this kind\nof employment, and their only\nmeans of earning a livelihood is\nby trapping and hunting.\n\"We ask that special areas for\nIndians be allocated and that they\nshall not be discriminated against\nwhen trying to secure positions\nas guides.\n\"We ask that any regulation\nwhich impedes this avocation be\nrepealed as it is necessary to conserve Indians as well as animals.\n\"The diversion of streams has\nrendered extinct the former hunting and trapping areas and this\ndenial must of necessity be adequately replaced, or compensation\ngiven to the Indian affected.\"\nTRICK   KILL8\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\u2014\nLeslie Horan, 15, who had a habit\nof throwing peanuts into the air\nand catching them in his mouth,\nwas killed by a peanut that stuck\nin his throat. He collapsed at a\ntheatre after telling a boy companion that he could not breathe.\nDEALER\nOPPORTUNITY\nExclusive\nAvailable\nDealership\nin   Nelson\nProduct is new and without competition \u2014 as important to the\nhome as the washing machine and\nrefrigerator. This product has a\ntremendous future. Only those\nwith initiative and business ability\nshould aply. This is the golden opportunity you have been waiting\nfor and could be the key to your\nfuture security.\nrWltc today, giving full details of\nretail and selling experience and\nterritory desired.\nWrite BOX 166,\nFORT ERIE, ONTARIO\nMETAL PRICES .\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y., 16\nZinc, East St. Louis, 1.1 to\nSilver, N.Y., 91%\nWWME!WM<1M\nIke to Have Test\nWASHINGTON (AP) - President Eisenhower is to undergo a\n\"head - to - toe\" examination this\ncoming weekend, to be followed\nby a report to the public on his\nphysical fitness.\nWarn Newcomer\nOf Red Agents\nMONTREAL ( CP) - Czech-\nCanadians have been warned here\n\"to be on guard against Red\nagents who may try to intimidate\nyou.\"\nCommunist infiltration into Canadian life has increased \"very\ndangerously,\" the 3000-member\nCzechoslovak Association in Canada was told. A statement said\nthat about 30 or 40 post-war\nemigrants from Czechoslovakia\nhave returned in response to\ngovernment invitations.\nFrank Nemec was elected presi\ndent of the association. Mr. Ne\nmec, a former oabinet minister\nunder Premier Benes, said he\nlearned at the convention that Dr,\nRudolph Dostal of Toronto who\nrecently returned to Czechoslovak\nkia, is believed to have worked\nfor the Czech intelligence during\nhis five-year stay in Canada.\nChildren Cheer Margaret\nWAKUHA, Kenya (Reuters) \u2014\nWildly cheering African school\nchildren greeted Princess Margaret as she arrived in this picturesque town Tuesday.\nNakura, only a small town, is\nthe capital of the White Highlands, a fertile region which has\nbeen largely developed by British\nfarmers since the war.\nOn the 100-mile flight from Nairobi the princess passed over the\ncolorful Rift valley and blue-\nwater lakes. The flight was delayed 20 minutes because of\ncloudy weather.\nAfter an official welcome, the\nprincess walked into the town's\nattractive Green Park gardens\nthrough new gates, erected as a\nmemorial to her grandfather,\nKing George V.\nLater she was scheduled to fly\nto Amboseli, the large game r*\nserve near towering Kilimanjaro\nAfrica's highest mountain.\n&!\nCZECHS BUY U.K. CARS\nPRAGUE (Heuters) \u2014 Czech*\nSlovakia will begin importing\nBritish cars under a new tradt\nand payments agreement signed\nhere between the two countriM\nMonday.\nOttawa Civil Servant\nCheats Death in Singapore\n\"I nearly shot tbe police corpow)\ndead, two days after I met him.\nNo one would have blamed me; a\\\nwould have been \u25a0elf-defence. Bat\n\u2014 if I'd killed him, would I bt\nalive today?\"\nIn November Reader's Digest\na man who is now a Governmelt\nofficial in Ottawa tells why this\nquestion haunts him. His e*_b\ntrue life experience, -The Tw*>\nEdged Dagger\", won the Reader's\nDigest $2,500 award and appean\nin the current issue. Get tow\nNovember Reader's Digest today)\n41 articles of lasting intewai oca-\ndensed to save your time.\n\"\u2022^\nIO< OFF !\nx\nHW*\n*v\u00bb_&.\n*\\e<x^tf$\nNABOB'GREEN LABEL\nTEA BAGS\nonlts0\nu _^\u00bb\n. Teaasifshou\/c\/Jbe\/\nEnjoy tea as it should be at a\nwonderful saving. Not just tea but\nfamous Nabob \"Green Label\" Tea in\nhandy tea bags\u2014so quick and convenient.\nNabob\u2014the favorite tea for fine\nquality, flavor, and full, satisfying\nstrength.\n \u25a0\n~~\n\t\n' The Civic Centre Commission has accepted an offer\nby the Air Cadets to usher at hockey games in the Nelson\narena.\nThis was contained in a report of the commission's\nlast meeting Oct. 4 received and filed by Nelson city council Monday. Purchase of three thermostats to help make\nice, requested by arena manager Jack Morgan, was also\napproved.\nC. V. Linden, manager of the\nlocal Overwaitea store, thanked\ncouncil for the co-operation shown\nby civic officials during the construction of the new store at\nWard and Vernon streets. Two\nsigns on Vernon Street, reading\n\"No parking between signs,\" and\none on Ward Street, \"No parking\nto lane,\" at entrance and exit to\nthe store parking lot, were approved, Puplic work superintendent E. E. Olson will enquire if\nthe company intends to raise the\nsidewalk level.\n* *   *\nA request from Fire Chief E. S.\nOwens, that a dilapidated city-\nowned shed next to the gas\nworks, be demolished because it\nconstitutes a fire hazard, was referred to the water and fire committee with power to act.\n* * *\nA letter from Mrs. D. E. Bennett, 1109 Hall Mine Road, asking for a ramp over the new seven-inch curb on Kootenay Street\nto give access to her garage, was\nturned over to Mr, Olson with power to act.\n* *   *\nSeveral  complaints  have  been\nreceived about road repairs needed in the City. Tha latest came\nfrom J. F. Waters, secretary of T.\nH. Waters Co., 101 Hall Street, regarding' condition of the road bed\nat the bottom of Hall Street. The\nWorks Department hopes to make\npermanent repairs in the spring.\nIn the meantime they will try to\neffect temporary repairs with cold\nmix.\n* \u2022 \u2022\nAt their Oct. 9 meeting, council asked the B.C. Department of\nHighways to erect 30 m.p.h.. signs\non Front Street, which is part of\nthe provincial No, 3 highway. A.\nL. Freebairn, district engineer at\nNelson, said the matter will be\ntaken care of as soon as possible.\nSeveral aldermen complained\nabout the short \"Stop\" signs erected by the pepartment, claiming they were almost Impossible\nto see. Mr. Olson will look into\nthe matter.\n* *   \u2022\nJ. F.  Morrison, store  manager\nof the Hudson's Bay Company,\ncomplained again about bad sidewalks at the front and side of the\nstore. The matter was first\n< brought to council's attention last\nMay. turned over to the public\nworks committee, but no action\nhas been taken. Mr. Morrison\nsaid several people had tripped,\nand asked that something be\ndone at once. Several other sidewalks are in bad condition, and\nMr. Olson said \"we certainly will\nget around to H as soon as possible.\"\n* \u2666 *\nInvitation to join in Remembrance Day ceremonies came from\nSpencer Newell of the Canadian\nLtgion. Legion members and\ntheir friends will gather at the\nCenotaph for a brief service Sunday, Nov. 11, at 11 a.m., and will\nparade to St. Saviours' Pro-Cathedral for morning worship at\n11:15 a.m.\n* \u2022   *\nIt. H. Procter, administrator of\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nrwninded council that they had\ncommitted themselves to construct\na road from Park Street to Carbonate Street as part of the access\nto the new hopital. The B.C. government will build a road from\nFairview and along View Street.\nMr. Procter said consideration\nof natural gas heating has delayed calling of tenders till about\ntht middle of December. They\nwere to have been called at the\nend of this month. Target date for\nstart of construction is Spring of\nnext year.\n* \u2022   *\nMembers of the Nelson Curling\nClub have been invited to meet\ncouncil Nov. 5 to discuss plans\nfor the Jubilee Bonspiel next February. A letter signed by secretary J. H. Long had asked that\ncouncil arrange a special meeting,\nbut the mayor and aldermen were\nof the opinion that the club should\ndo most of the organizing themselves.\n* *   \u2022\nTwo applications for transfer of\nlodging house licences were approved, from W. M. Montgomery,\n805 Nelson Avenue, and I. Trot-\ntier, 330 Baker Street.\n* *   *\nThe city's new garbage truck,\npurchased recently from Wigin-\nton Motors and the Columbia\nTrailer Co., (Not Columbia Trading Co., as reported earlier) will\nget a new paint job, and will also have special light hookups installed. A new packer unit enables the truck to pack up to\ntwice as much garbage as carried\nby other trucks, and a special\ntrap catches runoff liquid from\nthe garbage. City Clerk C. W. R.\nHarper said it might be a good\nidea to paint all city trucks uniformly, similar to B.C. Department of Public Works vehicles.\n* *   *\nAid. Arthur Foster said It\nwould be impossible to make\na grant to the Salvation Army's\nbuilding fund appeal this year,\nas the city's donations fund has\nalready been overspent\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. Olson, in reply to Aid. W.\nS. Smith, stated that the Public\nWorks Department will put railings on some of the worst street\nsteps as soon as possible. He answered Aid. J. W. McClelland\nthat parking meters were being\ninstalled along Vernon Street.\nAbout a hole on Second Street,\nwhich produces a \"continual\nstream\" of water, Mr, Olson said\nhe plans to put a drain pipe across\nthe lane as soon as the resident\nconcerned puts the pipe across\nthe property. The superintendent\nwas asked to check the agreement\nmade with the resident some time\nago \"for safety's sake\".\nAn offer by S. Linton to purchase land ln the city watershed\narea near Apex Creek was turned\ndown on advice from Mr, Olson.\nHe said that sale of the property\nwhich is close to a suitable dam\nsite, might hinder the city's access to Apex Creek if Nelson were\nforced at some future date to get\nwater supplies from the Creek.\n* *       0\nAid. C. F. Blakeman was appointed acting mayor of Nelson\nfor the balance of 1956. The appointment was made at Monday's\ncity  council  meeting.\nBIG   CLOCK\nThe minute hand on Big Ben,\nfamous clock at Westminster in\nLondon, is 14 feet long and\nweighs 200 pounds.\n16 From Nelson-Creston To Attend\nSocial Credit Meet al Vancouver\nTwenty-six delegates from Nelson-Creston riding will attend the\nprovincial convention of the Social Credit Party in Vancouver\nNov. 9 and 10.\nSome 30 resolutions passed at\nthe annual convention of Nelson-\nCreston Association in Creston recently have been forwarded to\nVancouver for consideration at\nthe provincial meeting.\nNelson-Creston resolutions submitted include ones calling for\nincreases in government grants\nfor clinics and schools for handicapped children, tightening of re\nstrictions regarding wandering\ndomestic livestock on highways,\nbuilding of the Rose Pass (Marys^\nville to Crawford Bay) road as\nsoon as possible and inauguration\nof a \"more functional method'\nof inspection in regard to disease\nfree cattle areas.\nThe resolution on handicapped\nchildren stated \"the facilities of\nthe ordinary classroom are inadequate for handicapped children,\nthat specialized teachers are necessary for such a program, and\nresolved government grants be\nincreased and a director of handi\ncapped education be appointed to\nco-ordinate the efforts of all organizations in this field.\"\n\"Motor vehicle traffic Is increasing by leaps and bounds\"\nand tourist traffic is one of the\nprovince's \"more lucrative resources\", another resolution noted\nin suggesting tightening of restrictions regarding livestock on\narterial highways.\nENDORSE  ROAD\nThe B.C. government has committed building of the Rose Pass\nin their overall road building program, another resolution states.\nThe Creston convention endorsed\n\"the building of this road and\nurge the government to undertake this construction as soon as\npossible.\"\nThe resolution on disease free\nareas stated such areas were \"de^\nsirable\" and \"the present program\nis entirely unsatisfactory in that\nonly areas surrounded by unfree\ndistricts exist and the cattle and\ndairy industry is hindered by the\npresent method.\"\nDelegates from Creston area who\nwill go to Vancouver include Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Merriam, Mrs,\nUri, Mrs. Roberts, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Montgomery, Mr. Cameron,\nMr. McLaren, Mr. and Mrs. Ben\nWills, Mr. Rhodes, Mrs. Vigne,\nH. Young and Mrs. Amy Erickson.\nNelson area representatives will\nbe  Mr.   and   Mrs.  John  Hobson\nCanada's Baby Crop\nHigher, September\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 More Canadian babies were born in September than in the corresponding\nmonth last year, the bureau of\nstatistics said Tuesday.\nBirths in the month rose eight\nper cent to 37,825 from 35,035 in\n1955, but registrations for the\nJanuary - September period re\nmain virtually unchanged at 334,\n826 compared with 333,400.\nDeaths declined to 9751 from\n9765 in the month but rose to 98,-\n589 from 95,895 in the nine-month\nperiod. Marriages dropped 10 per\ncent in the month to 14,411 from\n15,982 but rose four per cent to\n93,709 from 89,850 in the nine\nmonths.\nTvi taken things for roliof from comfl-\npMlon for years. Now, al 75, I'm back on\nlihedulo\u2014regular as clock work thanks to\nKtlloss'i All-Bran.\" Mr. J. W. Lewthwaite,\nTtronio.\nGood-tasting Kellogg's All-Bran\nsucceeds in many cases where other\nmethods fail. All-Bran gets at the\ncommon came of irregularity\u2014lack\nof bulk in the things we eat. All-Bran\nis highly nutritious yet inexpensive.\nDelicious served with milk (hot or\ncold). Kellogg's\u2014tfie original ready-\nto-*at bran cereal. For comfortable,\nnatural regularity.\n$10.00\nWorth\nSPECIAL CERTIFICATE\n$10.00\nWorth\nFREE HEARING CLINIC\nfor the HARD OF HEARING\nOn Fri. and Sat, Oct. 26,27\nHUME HOTEL, NELSON\nFrom 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.\nt\nSAVE   THIS\nCOUPON!\nIT IS WORTH\n$10\nTO   YOU   ON   THE   PURCHASE   OF\nA  NEW\nffe&me\nDURING THIS CLINIC.\nYou are cordially invited to come in\nand have Mr. E. C. Gorling, who is one\nof Canada's leading Hearing Aid Specialists, give you free advice on your\nhearing problems. He will give you an For over 24 years\nAudiometer test of your hearing and  Mr    E    C    Gorling\nfnT\u201eJ?nUBahlinhe 'atCS' devel\u00b0Pmcnls has helped thousands\ntn hearing help. *\nSee the Latest l0 hear aeam- He is\nHEAR-N-8EE GLASSES \" '\"\"'l known, highly\nThe Hearing Aid Complete In trained specialist In\nOne Frame of the Glasses fitting difficult cases.\nINTRODUCING: the Tiny NEW BELTONE All Transistor\nHearing Aids. The ONLY Hearing Aid In all the world\nthat gives you this HIGHER FIDELITY HEARING.\nNO BUTTON NEED SHOW AT THE EAR\nDon't Miss This Opportunity to Have Your Hearing Tested\nThere Is Absolutely No Charge or Obligation\nTRADE-IN  ALLOWANCE   ON   YOUR   PRESENT   AID\nTERMS GLADLY ARRANGED \u2014 HEARING AIDS\nAT ALL PRICES\nHome Demonstration on Request \u2014 Phone Hotel\nE. C. GORLING & CO. LTD.\nRoom 311, 207 W. Hastings Street Vancouver 3, B.C.\nIf Hearing Is Your Problem\u2014Beltone Is Your Answer\nBE 8URE TO CUT AD OUT FOR CORRECT DATE\nMrs. W. J. VanMaarion, Mrs. Robert Stevenson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nLowe, Mrs. C. D. Olson, Mrs. 'J.\nMcMullin, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Wigin-\nton.\nThe newly - elected Nelson-\nCreston Social Credit executive\nheld their first regular meeting\nin Nelson over the weekend. Financial statement presented by\nMrs. R. H. Bradley, who was reappointed constituency treasurer, showed a favorable balance\nafter all election expenses had\nbeen paid. Mrs. Richard Palmer\nof Nelson was appointed constituency secretary and Frank Merriam of Creston was named constituency membership secretary.\nAn all-time membership record\nwas reported.\nF. Eichelberger,\nMining Man Dies\nHAYDEN LAKE, Idaho,\n(AP)\u2014Frank Eichelberger, 71,\nInternationally known mining\nengineer and metallurgist, died\nat his home here Sunday of a\nheart attack.\nHe was General Manager of\nthe Chrome Co., and In 1952\nwent to South Korea as a mining advisor to President Syunman  Rhee.\nEichelberger, whose brother,\nGen. Robert L, Eichelberger,\ncommanded the 8th Army\nthe South Pacific during the\nSecond World War, was general\nmanager of Idaho's Sunshine\nMining Co. in the 1930s and was\ncredited with making It the nation's leading silver producer.\nSTEADY  GAIN\nPublic health methods of Malaria control helped reduce Ceylon's death rate by 38 per cent\nin the past three years.\nNELSON DAILY Nt^WS, WED., OCT. 24, 1956 \u2014 7\nCereals Keep Mink Healthy\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014Porridge or\ncereal feeding of mlrik saves the\nAlberta fur farmer thousands of\ndollars in food costs annually. It\nhas helped solve the problem of\na diminishing supply of horse-\nmeat and fish.\nMink -farmers in the Lac la\nBiche district 120 miles north of\nhere started adding high percentages of cooked wheat and oats to\nwhat fish and meat were available when horsemeat and fish\nfeed started' to become short a\nfew years ago.\nThe experiment was successful\ndespite warnings from some fur\nfarming experts who said feeding\na high volume of dereals to mink,\nwhich are carnivorous, might be\ndangerous,\nFOUND SUCCESSFUL\nThe Alberta department of agri\nculture says many mink rations\nin the province today consist of\n50 to 60 per cent cereal.\nInformation on porridge feeding\nwas compiled by R. W, Gillies,\nAlberta fur farm supervisor, published in an issue of the Alberta\nFur Breeders Association bulletin\nand circulated to many fur farmers throughout Canada.\nTwo methods of cereal cooking\nare used. Some fur farmers prefer steam-cooking in a double I\nboiler; others install gas jets\nwhich spit direct flame to the bottom 'of the feed mixer. The latter\nmethod is most popular since it\nis more easily installed and requires a shorter cooking period,  j\nEgypt Signs Trade\nPact With Red China\nCAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt and\nCommunist China have signed \u25a0\ntrade agreement providing for\nmutual exports worth $33,600,000\nin the forthcoming year \u2014 an increase of 20 per cent over this\nyear.\nProduction of pearl shell in Australia  in   1955  reached   1301  tons\nvalued at $1,740,000.\nLIFE NOT\nWORTH LIVING?\nThen wake up the liver!\nYou know that lour, sunk, constipated feeling?\nIt may bs caused by the liver. It your liver\ndoesn't pour out up lo two pints of bile a day\nyour food may not diges! properly, gas bloiiii\nup your stomach and you feel thai life's lusl\nnot worth living. Thai's when the liver needs\nmild gentle Carter'i Little Liver Pills. These\nfamous vegetable pills help, stimulate the flow\nof liver bile. Soon your digestion starts function*\ning properly and ypu feel that happy days are\nhere again! Don't '\"er stay sunk. Always keep\nCarter's Little Liver Pills on hand.\nTHE NEW!\nNEW!!!\nSTARWEEKLY\nin its compact TABLOID SIZE\nBy now millions of STAR WEEKLY readers\u2014present and future \u2014\nwill be aware of\u2014and, we hope, excited about\u2014the coming of the\nNEW STAR WEEKLY.\nIn its new Tabloid size (pages IOV2 x 14*) it will be compact and convenient. It will now be printed all in Rotogravure (except the Comic\nSection and the Novel).\nIn every department there are impressive improvements. There is\nMORE STAR WEEKLY, and a BETTER STAR WEEKLY.\nThere's no publicarion so entertaining, informative, educational and\nWEEKLY8 on the whole continent as Canada's own NEW STAR\nNEW PICTURE\nSECTION\nYou'll like the new,\nimproved Picture Section.\nIt will be more colorful.\nIt will be stories told in\npicture sequence. Smarter\nin dress and design\u2014and\nmore enjoyable to read.\nSTAR WEEKLY\nNEW MAGAZINE\nSECTION\nONE big magazine section\nof 40 to 60 pages replaces\nthe two sections of 12\npages you formerly got.\nIt will be more colorful.\nIt will have more and\nmore varied features and\nstories.\nENLARGED\nCOMIC SECTION\nFour pages have been\nadded to the new COMIC\nSECTION. Always the\nbest Comic section available in Canada, this new\nStar Weekly Comic Section provides added entertainment\u2014added value.\nTHE FINEST ROTOGRAVURE IN ANY LAND\nTHE MOST INTERESTING PICTURES OBTAINABLE\nPRESENTED IN BEAUTIFUL COLORS\nAND IN FLOWING SEQUENCE\nTHE GREATEST COLLECTION OF BEST COMICS\nAND PLUS ALL THAT, AN ENTERTAINING\nNOVEL-EACH WEEK-BY A FAMOUS AUTHOR\nA COMPLETE\nCHOICE NOVEL\nEACH WEEK IN\nCOMPAQ\nTABLOID SIZE\nA novel, which would\ncost you several times the\ncost of the entire Star\nWeekly, is included with\neach week's issue. Stories\nto entertain\u2014thrill\u2014and\namuse you.\nCOMIC SECTION\ni\\'otc\u20142'l fttgts Of Ctt\nMAGAZINE\nGET YOUR\nHEW! HEW! HEW!\nTABLOID\nSTAR WEEKLY\nNO INCREASE\nIN PRICE\n \u2014\n\u25a0\u2014\n_ .\n:\n~\u2014 ' ' \u25a0\u2014\n;; :*;:\u2022\u25a0-'\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24, 1956\nDetroit Sharpshooters\nKeeping Wings on Top\nMONTREAL (CP) - Detroit\nRed Wings, who got away to a\nalow start a year ago, are the\nsharpest team bo (ar in the new\nNational  Hockey  League  season\nCoach Reveals\nBonus Sefup\nFor Next Year\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nSun says Coach Clem Crowe of\nthe British Columbia Lions has\ndisclosed a new bonus deal (or\nnext year which would cost the\nfootball club some $70,000 tf Lions\nwon the Grey Cup.\nCrowe is reported to have passed along the information at a\nplayers' conference Saturday\nnight with President Don Mackenzie on hand. It followed a\nmeeting of the club executive Saturday morning which passed a\nvote of confidence on the coaching staff and players, The Sun\nsays.\nThe report states that both the\nbonus deal and the vote of confidence are adding to dissension\namong the 27 members of the\nclub directorate.\nThe directorate meets tonight\nand one purpose of the meeting\nIs to discuss' the showing of the\ncoaching staff and team.\nThe deal, which The Sun says\nmust have come from the players'\ncommittee, of which Mackenzie\nis chairman, would give each\nplayer a $500 bonus If Lions made\nthe playoffs. Another $1000 would\nbe added.If they won the league\nand an extra $500, totalling $2000,\nif they won the Grey Cup. With\n35 men on the squad, this could\ncost $70,000.\nand their first-place position ts\nreflected in the fact they have\nthree men among tlje leading five\nscorers.\nTed Lindsay heads the NHL\nparade with six points\u2014two goals\nand four assists. He picked up\nthree assists last week to take\nover from teammate Norm Ullman, who had one assist and now\nis ln a four-way tie for second\nplace with five points.\nTod Sloan of Toronto Leafs is\nranked above Ullman in the official statistics because Sloan has\nfour goals \u2014 highest among the\nscorers \u2014 to Ullman's two.\nGordie Howe of Detroit joined\nthe five-point bracket for second\nplace along with Doug Mohns of\nBoston Bruins. Mohns' five points\nare all assists.\nFIVE HAVE FOUR POINTS\nCrowding the leaders with four\npoints are five players, among\nthem Jean Beliveau of Montreal\nCanadiens, scoring leader last season. Tied with him are Guy Gendron of New York Rangers, Jerry\nToppazzini of Boston, Marty Pa-\nvelich of Detroit and defenceman\nDoug Harvey of Montreal.\nThe Red Wings, unbeaten in\nfive starts, were dragging along\nin a fourth-place tie on two wins\nadn three losses at this time last\nyear.\nThe goalkeepers are revelling\nin low averages. Jacques Plante of\nMontreal and Lorne Worsley of\nNew York have each come up\nwith two shutouts. Plante's average for goals allowed is one a\ngame; Worsley'a is 1.60. Glenn\nHall of Detroit follows with 1.80.\nTHREE CANUCKS\nFINED $100 EACH\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The players on Vancouver Canuck! of the\nWestern Hockey League have\nbeen fined for \"indifferent play,\"\nCoach Art Chapman disclosed\nMonday.\nThe three, fined $100 each, are\nMotto McLean, Carl Kaiser, and\nGeorge Ford.\nChapman added that two play>\ners have been placed on the wai.\nver list but mentioned no names.\nFor tonight's game against Ed.\nmonton Flyers, Chapman has\nshuffled his forward lines, return\ning Wiggle Wylie to centre with\nFreddie Brown and Dick Lamou-\nreux on the wings. Gordie Pennell\nwill ventre between Mark Mar.\nquess and Ford.\nRalph Keller or Gordie Redahl\nwill work left wing with Phil Ma.\nloney and Jacke McLeod.\nSenior Badminton\nClub Starts Year\nAt a meeting held in the Sparwood Jr.-Sr, High School recently\nthe Natal-Michel-Sparwpod Senior Badminton Club was re-organized for the 1956-57 term. Officers\nelected for the new term were as\nfollows: President, Mrs. R. Glasgow, Sparwood; vice-president,\nMrs. C. Sofko, Natal; secretary,\nMiss Vallie Quarin, .Natal; treasurer, Walter Rybachuk, Natal.\nPlaying hours decided upon at\nthe Sparwood school auditorium\nwere every Wednesday from 7\ntill 9 p.m. and every Sunday Irom\n8 to 10 p.m. Dues for the season\nwere not settled for the time being while beginners were welcome\nto Join the club.\nAfter the meeting a few games\nof badminton were played to\nstart what is expected to be a\nbanner season with a record membership.\nMantle, Robinson\nTop Clutch-Hitters\nNEW YORK (AP) - Mickey\nMantle of New York Yankees and\nFrank Robinson of Cincinnati\ncame through with leading clutch-\nhitting performances during the\n1956 baseball season.\nMantle, certain for consideration as the American League's\nmost valuable player, and Robinson, a top National League rookie,\nled the major leagues in game-\nwinning blows with eight each,\nCredit was given each player\nwho put his club ahead to stay\nin the sixth, seventh, eighth,\nninth or an extra inning.\nClassified  Ads  Get  Results\nFERNIE RANGERS PREPARE FOR\nSTART OF COMING ICE SEASON\nFERNIE \u2014 FernU Ranger* Intermediate Hockey Club received\nannual reports and elected officers for the coming season at the\nannual meeting Sunday.\nThose elected were: President,\nDominic Citra; vice-president\nVernon Uphill; sec.-treas., Bert\nBrackenbury; executive, Ralph\nLento, Dave Kerr, Bill Corrigan,\nJim DiGeorgio, Orlando Carolei,\nAlex Taylor, Morley Obee and\nArchie Price.\nThe financial statement showed\nthe club to be in a healthy financial position having a substantial\nbank balance to commence the\nseason.\nDominic Citra. Bert Brackenbury and All Crompton were\nnamed delegates to the Alberta\nBritish Columbia Hockey League\nannual meeting which is to be\nheld in Fernie on October 28.\nGreat Falls, Montana, has submitted an application for entry\nto the league. A delegation from\nthat centre la expected to be present to state that club's case.\nGreat Falls hockey club was left\nout in the cold when Lethbridge\nAllisters and Medicine Hat Intermediate, entered the Big Six\nLeague of Calgary and District.\nIt was suggested to the meeting that greater fan interest\nmight be obtained if membership\nin the club at a nominal fee be\nsold. Another suggestion that a\nbooster club be formed was put\nforward. A third suggestion was\nthat a hockey clinic be organized.\nAll suggestions were left to the\nexecutive for consideration and\naction.\nQuality\nCommercial\nPrinting,\nQUALITY is what we emphasize when it comes\nto.Printing produced in our modern plant . . .\nequipped with the newest type faces, automatic presses ... A complete bindery . . . and\nabove all a trained staff that takes pride in\nturning out QUALITY WORK.\nTry Us With Your Next Order for Printing\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\n9iirffirh(?ampfirG\n  \u2014    TAPlf cnnnc\t\nSoccer Players in Britain\nThreaten Possible Strike\nBy JACKSORDS-\nWHICH BREED IS THE\nBETTER FIELD DOG -\nPOINTER OR SETTER\n?\nsoiHAire\neaMivf tsooo\nhunters, but\n0BCAUS6 He.\nCAMSTArtPTslfi\nHeat bbtter,\n\u25a0me BpitttBR.\nWAS THE ECXSB\nAMONS SOUTHERM\nBED SCOOTERS\nr _w V \u2022;\u00ab!>____.\nm \u2022fs-zr *   ^v\\M\nLO\/Ja, ttof days\nARE ROUGH OH A\nSETTER. THEM -toQ\nHB IS MOKE OP A\ncou-ecroa of\nCOCKLE BURS WHICH\n\u2022me WEARy hunter\nmust pick our *r\n\u2022me ewe of a hunt\nremoving cockle bur;\ncam be made easier on\nBOTH you AMD YOUR DOS\nIF, BEFORE SOIMG AFIELD\nYOU CUB PETROLEMJC-LLV\nON THE MOSTPIFFICULT\nPARTS\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) - Britain's pro-\nfessional soccer players Tuesday\nthreatened strike action unless\nthe Football League revamps its\nconstitution to allow rapid settlement of disputes between players and management.\nThe strike threat is scheduled\nfor discussion at Manchester Wednesday at a meeting between the\nleague management committee\nand the association Football Players and Trainers Union, which\nrepresents about 3,000 play-for-\npay   footballers   in   the   country\nThe union is asking that the\nmanagement committee be em\npowered to make spot decisions\nconcerning player - management\ndisputes. At present, the commit-\nKelowna Gives $50\nTo Olympic Rowers\nKELOWNA (CP) - Council\nvoted to contribute $50 toward\nthe University of British Columbia rowing team's trip to Australia next month for the Olympic\ngames.\nWhile council wished it could\nhave contributed more, Mayor J.\nJ, Ladd said, \"Every little . bit\nhelps.\"\ntee can only forward recommendations to the league.\nREJECTED EARLIER\nThe union move arises out of\nthe rejection by league clubs earlier this year of a number of\nmanagement committee recom-\nmcdations for increased minimum\nwages and ibonuses for players.\nFollowing a series of meetings\nbetween the union and the committee last year, agreement was\nreached on the basis of boosting\ngame bonuses to \u00a33 for a victory\nand 30 shillings for a-draw, compared to the present player bonuses of \u00a32 and \u00a31. The committee also endorsed union demands\n(or an annual minimum wage ot\n\u00a3416.\n\"Virtually promised**\nThe union claims the committee\n\"virtually promised\" the recommendations would be put into effect. But at the. league meeting\nlast June, club officials rejected\nboth recommendations.\nJoe Richards, league vice- president and a member of the management committee says:\n\"For us to go to the clubs to\nask for plenary powers would be\nunconstitutional and unthinkable.\nWe are custodians of the clubs'\naffairs, but any alteration ln po-1\nUcy, wages or extra payments\nmust be passed by the clubs.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nToronto \u2014 Howie King,'ID..\nReno, Nev., outpointed George\nChuvalo, 2063\/4, Toronto, 8.\nMontreal \u2014 Pat Supple, 118.\nMontreal, outpointed Gaby Pili-\notti, 119, Montreal, 10,\nNew York - Frankie Ryff, JJt.\nNew York, outpointed Frankie I*%-\npolito, 139%, New York, 10.\nMiami, Fla. \u2014 Virgil Akins, 1*8,\nSt, Louis, knocked out Pat Lowry,\nToledo, Ohio, 2. (Lowry weiffil\nunavailable).\nBillings, Mont. \u2014 Jimmy Mtr\ntinez, 153, Phoenix, Ariz., outpointed Pete Adams, 152, Newark,\nN.J, 10.\nParis \u2014 Alphonse Halimi. 11I\u00bbS \u25a0\nAlgeria, outpointed Tony CamfJ,\n120, Philippines, 10.\nAHL's Top Scorer\nNEW YORK (AP) - Bo EBk,\n27 - year - old Cleveland BaWui\nrookie, leads the Ameriofcn\nHockey League In scoring with\nnine points. Teammate Frtd\nGlover and Bruce Cline of Providence are tied for second vrtiti\nseven points.\nFOOD\ngreat with sparkling Coca-Cola\nThrow a basket party!\nA basket for every guest. Pile 'em high with crispy, golden-brown\nSouthern-fried chicken, plenty of potato chips and a decorative\nborder of good-to-munch scallions. Now, make sure each guest has\nhis ice-cold bottle of sparkling Coca-Cola. What a treat\u2014your\ngood food and that great taste of Coke!\n...with Coke\u2014to put you at your sparkling best!\nKING SIZE\n<48<\n6 bottle carton plus deposit\nREGULAR SIZE\n44'\u00bb\n6 bottle carton plus deposit\n\"Coko\" Is a registered trademark.\n&-KS-1Q7\nMcDonald Jam Go. Ltd.\nNelson, B.C. Phone 1055\nAuthorized bolder of Coca-Cola under contract with Coca-Cola Ltd.\n\t\n \t\nSPORTS\nJAs.\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN SHORT\nAt the risk of offending all self-styled Carrie Nations, let it be known right now that this agent is in favor\nof Sunday Sport.\nFor that reason, I was disappointed Monday to read\nthe Canadian Press story that said Vancouver's move to\nhave Sunday Sport legalized in the city had been thwarted\nin supreme court.\nIt was just another example of an organized minority\ndominating a disorganized majority.\nThere is no doubt in the mind of this reporter that\nthe majority of people in British Columbia are in favor of,\nSunday sport.\nAnd there is almost no doubt in my mind that nothing will be done to make such an eventuality possible until\nthose in favor of it combine\nto make their wishes known.\nH this column sounds like an\neditorial directed at the political,\nit is not intended to.\nIt is intended only to point out\nthat no political organization will\nmake a move toward legalizing\nSunday professional sport until\nthe powers-that-be are advised of\nthe wishes of the public.\nThe average sports fan in Canada sits at home on Sunday (provided he gets his wife's permission), turns on the television set\nsnd watches a National Football\nLeague encounter.\nWhy should he have to watch\nLeafs Travel\nTo Spokane\nNelson Maple Leafs, currently\ntied with Spokane Flyers for first\nplace in t)he Western International\nHockey League although they\nhavt played one more game, have\nan opportunity tonight to move\nInto first place all by themselves.\nLeafs are expected to carry to\nSpokane the same lineup that won\n5-4 over Trail Smoke Eaters here\nSaturday night. Archie Gaber,\nscorer of the winning goal in overtime, will travel down in a special\ncar at 3:30 so he can complete bis\nday'i work first\nRemainder of the team leaves\nshortly after noon.\nRed  Koehle, one of the most\npopular  veterans of  hockey  In\nNelson,   did   as   predicted   and\npulled his skates down from the\nnail he had hung them on.\nCoach Pat Egan said Tuesday\nthat he did not expect the dimin-\nutiv\u00ab redhead to be ready until\nnext week. He is not expected to\nstart in Rossland in-.Friday and it\nis doubtful whether h\u00ab will play\nln the return game here Saturday.\nNEISON DAILY NEWS, WED,, OCT. 24, 1956 \u2014 9\nRossland Warriors Win First Home Game\nThree-Goal Third Period Attack\n,  Gives Warriors Win Over Smokies\nROSSLAND \u2014 Rossland Warriors, newest entry in\nthe Western International Hockey League, made their\nfirst appearance before Rossland fans Tuesday night and\noutfought Trail Smoke Eaters for a 4-2 victory.\nThe game marked the return of senior hockey to\nRossland after an absence of 28 years. The last Rossland\nteam to play in a senior\nleague was in 1928.\nThe victory wa,s Warriors' first\nof the season. They had gone\ndown to defeat in Nelson and Spokane previously.\nIt was a furious third period\nassault that won out for Warriors.\nThey had scored the first goal of\nthe game after only 45 seconds of\nplay, but saw Smokies come back\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nPILLS 4\ntwo teams in whom he has only\na ftightNacquaintance rather than\ngo down to the local football field\nor hockey arena to watch the athletic event of his choice?\nBecause approximately one\nthird of the population dictate\nthat he must.\n*   *   \u00bb\nThe dictators, known to some\nas do-gooders, make their stand\nbecause, they say, sporting events\nsubtract from attendance at\nchurch.\nWell, let me ask you something,\ngentle reader. Do you think that\na man who isn't interested in going bo church will go to church\nonly because he has nothing better to do?\nI don't subscribe to that theory.\nBut neither do I subscribe to\nthe theory that sports should be\nallowed on an unlimited basis.\nMight it not be wise to duplicate Toronto's plan, whereby no\norganized professional sport on\nSunday can begin before 1 p.m.\nor continue beyond 6 p.m?\nThe benefits in being able to see\na  hockey  or  baseball    game\nSunday afternoon has been proven.\nAttendance i\u00ab larger, hence the\nteams are sounder financially and\nable to provide better players and\na higher-grade of competition\nAsk any sports impresario what\nhe thinks of sport on Sunday and\nhe'll tell you almost exactly what\nyou hav\u00ab read above. Ask any\nman who works Saturdays and\nhe'll duplicate our beliefs.\nAsk almost anybody why baseball in Nelson Is such a hit-or-\nmiss affair,\nAnd ii he cares enough to answer, he'll mention the summer\nhomes up the lake, refer vaguely\nto the hunting and fishing facilities in the area and take a backhanded swipe at City Council for\nhaving made no gesture toward\nputting lights at Civic Rrecreation\nGrounds.\nBut finally \u2014 and most emphatically \u2014 he will tell you that the\nplayers aren't interested, in many\ncases, because they often have to\npay to play.\nSome do pay to play because\nthey can like playing sufficiently\nto do so.\nOthers dont pay  to  play  because they can't afford _<-.\nAnd*the fan suffers.\nSeoul Scores\nAlston Managing\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014 The Boston\nGlobe quotes Brooklyn scout A.\nB. (Turk) Karam as saying Walt\nAlston, manager of the National\nLeague-champion Dodgers, has\n\"no guts\".\nThe Globe says Karam criticized\nAlston for his world-series managing in an interview with reporter Charley Laubenstein at South\nYarmouth.\n\"We had good replacements,\"\nKaram was quoted as telling Laubenstein. \"I noticed Casey Stengel (New York Yankee manager)\npulled Enos Slaughter out in the\nlast game. Why didn't Walt pull\nsome of our boys out of there\nwhen the chips were down?\n\"He'B got   no guts . .. . that's\nall.\"\nTEAM TIRED OUT\nAsked about the poor showing\nDodgers have made in Japan, Karam said:\n\"This bears out what I said before. The team is still dog-tired,\nThey're just worn out. That\nstretch drive (to win the National League pennant) was too much\nfor some of the old-timers.\"\nIn Brooklyn E. J. (Buzrie) Ba-\nvasl, vice-president of the Brook-j\nlyn club, when Informed of the\nKaram statement, said:\n\"If Mr. Karam was not misquoted, then he tl an ex-Dodger\nscout.\"\nCIVIC CENTRE\nStudent\nDancing\nFriday\n9 TO 12 P.M.\nFEATURING\ntjahi^ (MbhxqhL\nMASTER OF CEREMONIES\nSpecial Attraction\n2\nRock n Roll Teams\nFrom \u2022    <\nSPOKANE, WASHINGTON\nTHREE GROUPS\nEYEING ARGOS\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014At least three\ngroups are interested in buying\nthe franchise of Toronto Argonauts of the Big Four Football\nUnion, the Star said Tuesday.\nThe Argonauts have not yet officially put the club up for sale.\nBut, says the Star, Argo executives agree privately it's time\nthey got out of football. The paper adds the Argos will have lost\napproximately $125,000 in two seasons of operations. \"That is a\ndiet too rich for the Argonaut\nRowing Club \u2014 which operates\nthe franchise \u2014 to stand.\"\nto tie it and then take the lead\nin the same session. After a scoreless second period Warriors erupted for three goals in the first 10\nminutes of the final period to put\nSmokies on the run for keeps.\nTrail vainly tried to form an\nattack in the latter minutes of\nthe game, but the hustling Rossland forwards backchecked Smokies into the ice.\nThe game was comparatively\nclean. Both sides handed out some\nstiff checks, but only five penalties were handed out by referees\nBlair Peters and Ed Robbins.\nBud Andrews was top man in\nWarriors' attack with two goals..\nHal Jones with one, the winner,\nand Louis Secco added singles.\nGrant Warwick scored both Trail\nmarkers.\nAndrews had been cast off by\nTrail last season and moved to\nNelson, where he scored 33 goals,\n10 of them against Trail in eight\ngames.\nManaging-Director Flnl  Roisl\nhad  nothing but praise for his\nplayers after the game. \"They\nJunt out-hustled them,\" he explained. \"You can't keep a hustling hockey team down.\"\nWarriors  were  constantly  sifting through the Trail defence as\nthe   defence   got   no   help   from\nbackchecking forwards.\nOn the other hand, Rossland\nforwards played a backchecking\ngame all night.\nLINEUPS\nTrail \u2014 Goal: Martin; defence:\nSmith, Kraiger, Hamilton, Mc\nIntyre, Conn; forwards: G. War\nwick, Kromm, D. Warwick, Shabaga, Hockley, W. Warwick, Len\nardon, Penner.\nRossland \u2014- Goal: Seanior; de\nfence: Lofvendahl, Ferguson, Fletcher, Robertson; forwards: Luchini, Andrews, Chorney, Davis,\nJones, Molntyre, Desrosier, Turik,\nSecco.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Rossland, Andrews (Chorney, Luchini) :45; 8,\nTrail, G. Warwick (D. Warwick)\n1:23; 3, Trail, G. Warwick (Kraiger, Kromm)  18:06.\nPenalties \u2014 Robertson. 2:36, W.\nWarwick 3:56, Mclntyre 7:11,\nHamilton 12:30.\nSecond period\u2014 Scoring: none.\nPenalties: none.\nThird period \u2014 4. Rossland, Andrews (Chorney, Luchini) :20, 5,\nRossland, Jones (Mclntyre) 6:27;\n6, Rossland, Secco (Fletcher,\nTurik)  7:42. \u2022\nPenalty \u2014 Lofvendahl 8:20.\n\u25a0_HH_L..\"~ -..\u25a0.___.   - r<>v__\u00ab!_i_;i_s.; is __\u00bbs_as\nHottest goalie In the young NHL season, New York Rangers'\nGump Worsley, right, wrapped up his second shutout as Rangers\nblanked Boston, 2-0, In New York. While Worsley was turning\naside 27 shots, his opposite number, Terry Sawchuk, was having\nless luck In the Boston net. Andy Hebenton and Dave Crelghton\nboth fooled Terry. Here, Ranger forward Danny Lewlckl, left, Is\nabout to blast a shot at Sawchuk as teammate Bronco Horvath\nfalls to the ice. Two Bruin defencemen guard the goal and the\ngoalie,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian Photos\nJacques Plante NHL's\nLeading Goaltender\nPENTICTON VS\nEDGE PACKERS\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 Penticton\nVs were outfumbled by Kelowna\nPackers and won 4-3 in a scram-\nbly Okanagan Senior Hockey\nLeague game here Tuesday night.\nLeft  winger  Bob   Keil   scored\nthe winner with 15 seconds to go\nas he stormed in alone and flipped   in   a   backhand   shot   after! moved to the top of efficiency rat-\npulling goalie Dave Gatherum out I ings for National Hockey League\neff position. j goaltenders.\nWalt  Peacosh  with  two  goals;    Plante, last year's Vezina Trd-\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Montreal\nCanadiens' Jacques Plante, beaten\nonly once in two games last week.\nnetminder stopped 81 of 87 shots\nfor a .931 average on the week.\nHis average for the season dipped\nto .947.\nRangers gave Al Rollins of Chicago Black Hawks the busiest\ngame any netminder has had this\nand Ken Schmautz with one were J phy winner as the league's best! season when they defeated Hawks\nthe other Penticton scorers. Jim; goalkeeper, stopped 57 of the 58\nMiddleton, Greg Jablonski and; shots fired at him for a .983 aver-\nOrv   Lavell   were   the   Kelowna! age.   That   boosted   his   season's\nmarksmen.\nFlyers Down\nCanucks 4-3\n.VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Edmonton Flyers scored two goals in the\nthird period Tuesday night to\nedge Vancouver Canucks 4-3 and\nmove into a first-place tie with\nBrandon Regals in the Prairie division of the Western Hockey League.\nAbout 2000 fans saw Len Lunde\nscore the winning goal at 13:59\nof the third to leave Vancouver\nin last place in the coast division\none point behind Victoria Cougars.\nThe teams were tied 2-2 at the\nend of the second after a scoreless first period.\nBesides Lunde, Edmonton scorers were WHL veteran Tony Leswick, Don Poile and Murray Costello. Vancouver scorers were\nPhil Maloney, George Ford and\nJim Bedard.\nLunde tallied the winner at\n13:59. He took Frank Roggeveen's\npass and sped through the Vancouver deferfce to outguess goalie\nRay Mikulan with a corner shot.\nMichigan State\nNo. 1 U.S. Team\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Football\nexperts, reversing their previous\nopinions, picked unbeaten Mich\nBronchial Bout\nLays Up Plante\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Goalie Jacques Plante of Montreal\" Canadians was missing Tuesday night\nwhen the National Hockey League\nclub left for New York and tonight's game with Rangers.\n\"Plante suffered an acute bronchial attack after a practice session at the Forum and was takenj\nto hospital for diagnosis of a\nfever. He is expected to remain\nthere overnight.\nGerry McNeil of Montreal Royals, regular goalkeeper for the |\nHabs for four years prior to the1\n1954-55 season, will replace Plante\nfor the Rangers game.   '        *\nIn addition to McNeil, Montreal\nfarmhands Guy Rousseau and\nGerry Wilson are making the trip\nto New York with Habs in the\nevent Rocket Richard. Bernie Geoff rion and Floyd Curry axe unable to start.\nRichard and Geoffrion are suffering from elbow injuries while\nbruised  ribs.\n! record eight points to .975. i\n! Glenn Hall of Detroit Red\nWings was knocked from first\nplace to third as Toronto1 Maple\nLeafs and Boston BruinB each\npumped three goals behind him.\nHis week's average was an even\n,900 on 60 shots and 54 stops.\nThat lowered his total 39 points to\n.935.\nWORSLEY  IN  SECOND\nDespite being beaten five times\nby Canadiens, Lorne Worsley of\nNew York Rangers managed to\nhold second-place rating. He\nbounced back in his other two\ngames to record a shutout and\nallow  only   one  goal.  The  little\nknown whether they could see action.\n.. , ii        _   j      Curry  has several   \t\ngan State over equally unbeaten,,    *       _. _   \u201e,-,i_ir,\u201e .-..\u201e\nX, . , iu     _r     i       ii       ' All three flayers are making tne\nOklahoma as  the  No.  1   college     .l    \" _ *    u    \u2122. \u00abm\n\u00ab   __ ii   i 4_     tt    i _   _   trip, however,   but    l<t    was not\nfootball   team   in   the   United      H\nStates, Tuesday.\nIt was the first time this season\nthat Oklahoma's Sooners had finished anywhere but first in the\nweekly Associated Press poll of\nsports writes and broadcasters.\n,The 47-14 trouncing Michigan\nhanded Notre Dame last Saturday seems to have swung the balance.\nLions Give Crowe\nConfidence Vote\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Coach\nClem Crowe of British Columbia Lions was given a vote of\nconfidence by team directors\nTuesday night and was granted\nfull powers to select assistant\ncoaches for next season.\nThe directors also supported\npresident Don Mackenzie and\nthe executive committee.\nCrowe was hired as head\ncoach last year, after a season\nas an assistant, following dismissal of Annls Stukus, The\nteam finished the 1968 season\nMonday night In fourth place\nIn the five-team league,\nCombine in Victory\nSAPPORO, Japan (AP) \u2014 Carl\nErskine's slick pitching and a\nhome run by Duke Snider in the\nninth inning featured Brooklyn's\nDodger's 1-0 revenge victory over\nOklahoma racked up its I Tokyo Giants Monday,\nfourth victory at the expense of The barnstorming Dodgers now\nKansas, 84-12. I have a 2-2 record in their 20-game\nThat was the 84th win in a row j Japan-wide tour. They lost the\nlor the Sooners. Next Saturday it j Giants 5-4 last week. Erskine held\nwill be their turn to meet Notre i the Giants to three hits and one\nDame. | walk.\nLittle-Sympathy\nFor Newcombe\nBROOKLYN (AP) \u2014 The news\nthat Don Newcombe blames his\npoor world series pitching per\nEormances on a sore arm brought\nlittle sympathy from Brooklyn\nDodgers' brass.\n\"He says he has a bad arm,\"\nobserved Vice-President Buzzy\nBavasi, \"and that he also had one\nduring the series. All I know is\nthat April is a long way off and\nthis should make him easier to\nsign.\"\nNewcombe said in Japan Monday -that he hurt the arm in the\nfinal game of the National League\nrace. In addition to being battered out in both his world series\nstarts against New York Yankees,\nNewcombe has failed to last In\ntwo starts during the Brooks' current tour of the Orient.\n4-1. Rollins stopped 44 of the 48\nshots in that game and 32 of 33\nshots against Montreal in his\nother game for an average of .938\non the week. His fourth-place\nseason's total is .930, a gain of\neight points.\nBoston's Terry Sawchuk lost\neight points on his season's record\nto .910, good enough for fifth\nplace. Ed Chadwick of Toronto is\nlast with a .902 mark.\nRoyals Move to\nFirst Place Tie\nWith Halecos\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 North\nShore forfeited Tuesday a Pacific\nCoast League soccer game played\nSaturday against New Westminster\nRoyals.\nThe two points thus gained by\nNew Westminster gave them a\nfirst-place tie with Vancouver\nHalecos in the second half of the\nschedule.\nThe issue will be settled Saturday when the clubs meet here in\nthe final league game.\n$20,000 for Filly\nLEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) \u2014 A\nchestnut filly by C ita tion-Cherry-\nale fetched $20,000 Tuesday to\ntop the first session c_ the fall\nsales of yearling thoroughbreds\nat Keeneland.\n\u25a0John D. Noland bought the\nCitation filly, consigned by Da-\nnada farm.\nVOLUNTEER FORCE\nIndia's national volunteer force\ngiving elementary military training without liability for service,\nwas inaugurated in 1955.\nMOW TO HELP YOUR\nSore, Painful Piles\nIf you nro discounted about Rotting\nrid. of the itching soreness and burning\npain of your piles a grand surprise awaits\nyou when you try Hem-Roid, an Internal\npile treatment.\nOat n package of Hera-Roid at any\ndrug store and use as directed. You \u00abd)l\nbe pleased at how quickly your pjlo\ntrouble is relieved. Only $1.59 for tho\nbig 60 tablet package. If you are not\n100% pleased after using Hem-Rdd 2\nor 3 days as a test, ask for your money\nback. Refund agreement by all drug stores.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All Types\n509 Lake St Phone 898\nARROW BATTERIES\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nADULT\nSKATING\nTonight\n8:00 p.m.\nMusic by\nLAWRENCE WELK\nand His Champagne Music\nCanadian Championship Stakes\nDrawing Great Field of Horses\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWHL\nEdmonton 4 Vancouver 3\nOSHL\nKamloops 2 Vernon 9\nPenticton 4 Kelowna i\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The greatest  field  of horses  to  face  the\nstarter in  Canada  is assembling\nat New Woodbine Park here to\nprepare for Saturday's running of I\nthe  $50,000 Canadian  Champion-,\nj ship stakes. The race will have a\nI gross value of $62,800 if 16 horses\nI go to the post and  the  winner\n! receives $45,300.\n| A van arrived from New York;\n] Tuesday with Paper Tiger, owned\nby Hirsch Jacobs, and Prince\nMorvi, Australian horse owned by\nFrank C. Rand, Arizona mining\nmagnate. The two were accompanied by Jacob's two-year-Cld\nRoscoe Maney, a starter in the\n$7500 Grey stakes Saturday.\nPaper Tiger finished second to\nPark Dandy in last year's renewal of the Canadian championship.\nIts owner has been North America's leading trainer on 10 occasions. Prince Morvi is regarded\nas probably the best turf-course\nperformer in North America.\nCANADIAN  CHAMP  IN\nManwhlle, Wise Margin tfwned\nby Samuel Tufano, tested the\nWoodbine course Tuesday for the\nfirst time. The son of Market\nWise has won more than $300,000\nand is regarded as one df the\nprincipal contenders in Saturday's\nrace.\nTwo other \"horses, trained by\nHoratio Luro, raced and wo*n at\nNew Woodbine Monday \u2014 Dark\nArmor, owned by Luro, and Eugenia II, which he trains for W.\nArnold Hangar of New York.\nLuro indicated that both horses\nwill go to the post Saturday.\nW. R. Beasley of Toronto announced that his Canadian Champ\nis a certain starter. The Champ,\nbeaten only once in two years of\nracing in Canada, is only a three-\nyear-old and will be taking the\nworst of it racing against older\nand more seasoned horses.\nThe Canadian Championship\nwill be contested over a mile and\nfive furlongs-\nAUSSIES DEFEAT INDIA\nMADRAS, India (AP) - Australia beat India by an inning\nand five runs here Monday in the\nfirst match of the test cricket series between the two countries.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nE35I3 REV\n pup :\t\n\t\n\u2014\u25a0   \t\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24,1936\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThs Dally Newi does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO   Si OCRS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES '\nAcadia Uranium  13\nAlgom Uranium _   16.50\nAmai Larder  18\nAnacon Lead       2.25\nAnglo Rouen _      1.24\nAubelle  _ 13\nAumacno   43\nAumaque   15\nBase Metals  88\nBrilund _ 70\nBrunhurst    OB^i\nBrunswick     10.25\nCampbell C  _    15.75\nCan Met  _      1,75\nCassiar      8.00\nCentral Patricia       1.15\nChimo        .._ : 84\nChromium    _     3.00\nConiaurum    42\nCons Denisbn      8.35\nCons Discovery _      3.00\nCons Halliwell  _     1.66\nCons Howe         3,75\nCons M & S      29.37V4\nCons Bed Pop .\nCons Sanorm \t\nCon Sub  \t\nConwest        \t\nCopper Corp \t\nDonalda   __\t\nDuvan  ....\nDyno   \t\nEast Amphl \t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan\n.29\n.13\n3.40\n590\n1.66\n.43\n.65\n.91\n.081*\n1.45\n4.80\nFaraday            130\nFalconbridge     36.12\\4\nFrobisher    _    3.65\nGeco     _.    17.00\nGiant Yel           4.95\nGlen Uranium _ 21\nGoldcrest  _ 13V4\nGolden Manitou       2.15\nGunnar Gold     18.12*4\nHarminerals    \u2014 62\nHeadway              .93\nHudson Bay     87.00\nInspiration  _      1.10\nInt Nickel  _   99.00\nIron Bay        2,30\nJoliet Que  66\nJonsmith \u2014   18\nKenville       10\nKerr Addison     17.50\nLabrador\nLake Lingman \t\nLakeshore   _\t\nLexindin  \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLorado  \t\nLouvic't\nMacDonald \t\nMcLeod\n20.00\n.13\n3.75\n.16\n1.80\n1.09\n.18\n.65\n1.31\nMadsen R L         2.25\nMalartlc G F       1.30\nManeast   __ \u2014 18\nMaritime        2.43\nMilliken             130\nMming Corp _    22.00\nMogul        2.60\nMufti Mins       1.14\nNew Alger _ 20\nNew Bidlamaque _       .11H\nNew Fortune      23\nNew Highridge 53\nNew Jason   ..      .13\nNew Lund .    37\nNew Thurbols  13Vi.\nNipissing   ..  -      3.15\nNIsto _ 13\nNoranda New     5B.12Vi\nNormetals        6.85\nNornax    \u201e _      1.45\nN. Rankin        1.38\nNorth Can       1.74\nOpemlska      _    13.824\nPickle Crow           1.26\nPlacer Develop    12.75\nPreston E D           6.45\nQuebec Conoer      1.40\nQuebec Lah ...   _ 12ft\nQuebec Lithium     10,00\nQuebec Metallurgical       2 55\nQuemont     2.125\nRadiore            1.12\nRainville       1.40\nRayrock            1\/7\nSan Antonio  _ 74\nSherritt Gordon _.     7.80\nStadacona     31\nSteep Rock       20.874\nSlocan Van R61   18\nSullivan Con   3.90\nTeck Hughes      1.65\nTemagami    ,,      5.25\nThomp-Lund        1,30\nTomblll     _ 20\nTrans Cont Res 32\nUnited Keno       8.30\nUpper Canada  88\nVentures \u2014 -    40.00\nViolamac              1.75\nWaite Amulet    13.87*4\nYale      31\nYellowknife Bear  _    2.00\nYukenO _ 09Vi\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  $2\nBanfl     ..   _        3.1\nBailey Selburn     17.0\nCal & Ed        23.25\nCdn Admiral 48\nCdn Atlantic   8.30\nCan Decalta _< 52\nCentral Explorers       3.40\nCentral Leduc           3.75\nCon East Crest         .61\nDuvex        \u00ab _ 26\nEl Pen Ray      35\nGreat Sweetgrass      1 97\nHighcrest  \u2014 33\nHome A  _    11.87ft\nKroy           1.40\nLong Island Pete        .03ft\nMangold         .30ft\nMidcon  _ -     1.18\nNat Pete      3.85\nNew Continental _ 65\nNew Gas Expl      1.24\nOkalta    \u2014     2.40\nPac Pete     15.50\nPetrol       1-05\nPonder  \u2014 64\nProv Gas      195\nRoyalite       1475\nSpooner    \u2014 -\u00ab      -32\nTrans Era 42\nTriad    \u2014      8.10\nUnited Oils        189\nYank Canuck   _ 18\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi     38%\nAlgoma Steel      110%\nAluminum        J21\nAm Tel h Tel  168%\nAtlas St     29\nB A Oil         45ft\nBeatty Bros      _      7\nBell Telephone    48\nBrazilian    \u2014      \"ft\nB C Elec 4y\u00abs     81\nB C Forest           13ft\nB C Packers B    13\nBurns A  \u2014    12ft\nB C Power A       42V*\nBurrard A _ _      7V\u00ab\nCan Breweries    28\nCan Canners     42ft\nCan Celanese     14\nCan Cement  -     29ft\nCan Chem Co       8ft\nCan Derdge   r    20ft\nCan Oil .     .._    25ft\nCan P\u00abc Rly    32ft\nCan Packers A      38\nCockshutt        'ft\nCons Gas ..  \u2014    27\nDist Seagram   \u2014   32ft\nDom Foundries     29\nDom Magnesium     16ft\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  S3\nBralorne  \u00bb     4.85\nCanusa        . _ 10\nCariboo Gold    50\nFarwest Tungsten  25\nGiant Mascot  __ 27\nGranduc    '   4.50\nGrandview   , ! _ ll\nHighland Bell  _ 81\nHamil Sll  _        .04\nJackson Minis         .10\nJaye Ex        84\nKoote Base Metals  02ft\nNational Ex       \u201e       .42\nPioneer Gold _      1.60\nPremier Border  \u201e 12ft\nQuatsino      42\nReftves Mac         1.77\nSheep  Creek     80\nSilback Premier ,. 18\nSilver Standard  40\nSurf Inlet  _ 28\nTrojan  34\nTJtiea    _ 03\nOILS\nAltex 23\nA P Cons  _       48\nCal & Ed      22.50\nCharter        185\nHome           1175\nNew Gas Ex              1.15\nPeace River Gas     8.50\nPae Pete        15.50\nRoyalite          14.25\nRoyal Can _ _.....     -07\nSOarmac  22\nUnited        1.85\nDom Steel Ord\nDom Tar & Chem\nDom Textiles \t\nEddy Paper\nFamous Players  .\nFanny Farmer \u2014\nFleet Air  -\nFord A \t\nGatineau   -\nGoodyear '_\t\nGypsum Lime \u2014\nHiram Walker \t\nHoward Smith\t\nImperial Oil _\t\nImp Tobacco\t\nInt Metals \t\nInt Pete\nYour Family!\nWill\nThankYou I\nfor bringing home\nthis pure, delicious,\ninexpensive treat\n2111\n13 ft\n7ft\n.16\n16\n19\n1.05\n123\n28ft\n152\n28ft\n66%\n37%\n55ft\nlift\n38%\n33 ft\n18%\n16 ft\n17\n6%\n59\nLaura Secord _ \u2014\nLoblaw A   \t\nLoblaw B -\t\nMassey Harris   \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMont Loco     15ft\nMoore Corp    - 49ft\nNat Steel Car _  28ft\nPage Hershey \u2014 \u2014 94\nPowell River   \u2014 46%\nPower Corp        61ft\nRuss Industries    lift\nShawinigan     82\nSicks Brew     23ft\nSimpsons A       _   22ft\nStandard Paving  37%\nSteel of Can\nUnion Gas of Can ...\nUnited Steel\nWestern Grocers A .\n66 ft\n55 ft\n15ft\n18 ft\nFountains Abbey, near Ripon, ln\nYorkshire, England, was first established In 1132.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n00 Good Morning\n:30 As The World Turns \u2022\n:0O Valiant Ladv\n:15 Love of Life\n:30 Houseparty \u2022\n:00 Big Payoff \u2022\n:30 Bob Crosby \u2022\n:00 Brighter Day \u2022\n:15 Secret Storm \u2022\n30 Edge of Night\n:00 Search for Tomorrow\n:15 Guiding Light\n:30 The Matinee\n;45 Opportunity Unlimited\n:00 Garry Moore *\n:30 Godfrey Time\n:00 What's Cookin'\n:00 Western Roundup\n:30 Strike It Rich  '\n:00 Weather Vane\n:05 Regional News\n:15 Doug Edwards News (L)\n:30 Pick the Winner \u2022\n:00 U. S. Steel Hour \u2022\n:00 Godfrey and Friends\n<:00 The Millionaire *\n30 I've Got a Secret\n00 Song Shop\n15 TBA\n30 Do You Trust Your Wife?\n00 The Late Show\nKHQ TV \u2014 Channel 8\n8:10 Test Pattern\n8:15 Color Test Pattern\n8:25 Bible Reading\n8:30 It Could Be You \u2022\n8:00 Ding Dong School \u2022\n9:30 Fun to Reduce \u2022\n9:45 Home ' . '\n10:30 Tenn. Ernie Ford \u2022\n11:00 Matinee Theatre \u2022'\n11:55 Political Telecast\n12:00 Queen for a Day \u2022\n12:45 Modern Romances *\u25a0\n1:00 I Married Joan \u2022\n1:30 Band Stand\n2:00 \"Sleeping Tiger\"\n3:15 Women\n4.15 Mr. Engineer, Little Rascals\n5:45 My Little Margie\n6:15 Trouble With Father\n6:45 Weather Wise, The Frt Page\n6:55 Newspaper of the Air \u2022*\n7:00 Big Ten Highlights\n7:30 Eddie Fisher\n7:45 News Caravan \u2022\n8:00 Adven. of Hiram Holiday\n8:30 Father Knows Best \u2022\n8:00 I bed Three Lives\n8:30 Highway Patrol\n10:00 This Is Your Life \u2022\n10:25 Political Telecast \u2022\n10:30 News Desk\n10:35 All Star Theatre\n11:05 Racket Squad\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n11:45\n12:00\n12:15\n4:30\n5:00\n0:00\n0:45\n0:55\n7:0(1\n7:05\nTest Pattern\nStoryland\nKREM's Featurama\nSkipper Jim\nMickey Mouse Club\nWednesday Night Fights\nNewsroom\nWeather, Reporter ,\nPolitical\nFederal Men\n7:30 Wild Bill Hickok\n8:00 Disneyland\n9:00 Crunch and Dm\n9:30 Ozzle and Harriet \u2022\n10:00 Ford Theatre\n10:30 Channel Two Theatre\n10:45 Championship Bowling\n\u2022\u2014Means live line from network\n**\u2014Means program Is ln color\niProgramn subleot lo change by stations without notice I\nVanalta   ,S0\nVantor _ _  1.17\nVulcan ..1        .60\nYankee Princess  08\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers        1.50\nAlberta Dist Vt        1.35\nB C Forests ...\u201e\u2022   13.00\nB C  Power      42.00\nB C Telephone      43.3714\nCrown Zeller (Can)   23.25\nInt Brew B        _  4.30\nInland Nat Gas   6.87ft\nLucky Lager          4.30\nMacM & Blbedel B   33.00\nMid Western   3.75\nWestminster Paper   21.00\nWestern Plywoods   19.00\nUNLISTED\nAuwon        .07\nBluebirds  ._ 02\nWestern Mines  60\nWoodbury    05\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal   52.00\nCan Bank of Com          53.25\nImperial Bank bf Can ... 59.50\nRoval Bank of Can   66.50\nFUNDS\nBalanced Mutual  _    5.48\nCan Inv Fund _      9.87\nCommonwealth Int     8.53\nGrouped Income       4.22\nInvestors Mutual   10.98\nLeverage        6.19\nTrans Canada C          6.65\nIndia now is manufacturing 35,<\n000 railway freight cars ever\"\nyear.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY,\n8:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014March of Truth\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel In the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:45\u2014Roads and Weather\n7:30\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014 Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Composers In Modern\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Story Parade\n11:15\u2014Morning Melodies\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:10\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\nOCTOBER 24, 1956\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:30\u2014Western Serenade\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinet\n8:30\u2014Woman's World\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Children's Program\n4:45\u2014Legends of India\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Closing Markets\n5:25\u2014Musicale\n5:35\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Dinner Musio\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014CBC Wedensday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Canada at Work\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1956\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Morning Music\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n8:00\u2014News\n8:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n8:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Composers in Modern\n11:00\u2014Kraft Radio Theatre\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014Through the Listening\nGlass\n12:13\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matine*\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Along Olympic Road\n4:45\u2014Songs of the Sea\n5:00\u2014News\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Sports\n5:30-^Jazz Workshop\n6:00\u2014Bawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Designed for Music\n7:00\u2014National Newa\n7:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n8:00\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n8:30\u2014Business and Labor Review\n9:00\u2014Dream Street\n9:30\u2014Van. Chamber Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Great British Columbians\n10:30\u2014Eventide\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Half\ndiameters\n3. Devoured\n4. Piece of\nfurniture\n5. Coffee shop\n24. Man's\nnickname\n25. Plunderers\n6. To come out   26. Noc-\nfinally\n7. Beverage\n8. In lieu\n11, Children's\ngame\n13. Scon\nIS. Crar,p\n18. Brlmleu\ncapi\n19. Concealed\n21. The alder\ntree\n(Scot.)\nturn-\nal\nbird\n27. Young\nbear\n29. Heavy\nweight\n32.Celebrate\n33. Kind of\ndaisy\n34. Man'a\nnickname\nHttMHKi aaawt\nEUUtt MUHMHBI\nHUH HIMPIHH\nU'E U'jini.i\nrSEUHtlK ESQ\nRHHHWtlHJHiaHE\nHEW      UHH\u00abHH\nHGHHHB  Gian\nBnamsin nmai\nHainan, iaaaran\nMUHMH   HMIilUa\nYeiterdty'i Aniwer\n37. Too\n40. Fat (combining form)\n41. Mother\n42. Wide\nsash\n(Jap.)\nACROSS\n1. Kind of\napple\n5. Genitive of\n\"Cetus\"\n8. Detest\n10. Biblical\nname\n11. Carried\nthrough\n12. Banquet\n14. Keel-\nbilled\ncuckoo\n15. Bog\n18. Tantalum\n(sym.)\n17. Japanese\ndancing girl\n20. Weight\n(Asia)\n22. Young goat\n23. River\n(Russ.)\n24. Bedim\n27. Confection\n28. Cry of\na wolf\n29. Exclamation\n30. A bun\n31. King of the\nfarlel\n(Folklore)\n35. Neuter\npronoun\n36. Container\n38. River (Eng.)\n39, Part of\na flower\n41. Changed\nposition\n43. Tears\n44. Comply\n45. Tolerable\n46. Measure of\ndistance\nDOWN\n1. Backbone\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Itl\nAX YDLBAAX R\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In thU example A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters, apo\u00bb-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hlnta.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nAXH    AXDSJZD    UJYNDXHR      E J N K\nAXDSJZD    KBTZNK\u2014DKLSZHK.\nYesterday's Cryptoquotei HISTORY ABHORS DETERMINE\nJSM BUT CANNOT TOLERATE CHANCE-DE VOTO.\nDlstrleutnt by King Features Syndicate\n%\ni\n1\n~\n4\n%\n5\n6\n7\n0\ni\n%\n\u20223 '\n%\nIO\n^\/\/l\n11\n%\nii\nIS\n1^\n%\n%\nIS\"\nPA\nit\nn\n\\0\n19\n1\n30\n11\n^1\n%\n^A\n31\n%\n13\na-*\nIS\n1-\n%\n17\nJO\n%\nw\n\/A\n77V\nJd\ni\nV\n31\nII\nw\n\u00bb4f\n1\nU\n37\n^<\nb\n\u2014\nH\n44\n%\nM\nii.\n1\n\u00bb\n1\nM\ni\nV\/\n61\n%\n\u00a7\n\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0        \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n (Jl\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -    LARGE   RETU\nThat's the Want Ad Story   -   PHONE   1.844\nHELP WANTED\nYOUNG SALESMAN REQUIRED\n* for our sales staff In Nelson.\nSteady work in a career vocation. Staff benefits, pension\nplan, group insurance, medical\nplan. No travelling. Apply in\nwriting to Box 2159, Nelson\nDaily News, giving full details\nWE NEED A YOUNG MAN TO\ntrain for advertising saleswork\nGood appearance and enthusiasm more valuable than experience. Staff benefits include\ninsurance, medical and pension\nplans . Apply to The Nelson\nDaily News.\nWANTED - GOOD, FAST SA W-\nyer with knowledge of mill-\nwrighting for cedar mill. Good\nwages and year round employment for right man Apply Columbia Cedar Limited, Box 718.\nRevelstoke. or phone 3-X-l.\nDRAFTSMEN ARE IN GREAT\ndemand Train by home study\nin spare time for these well-paid\njobs. Diploma awarded Free\nfolder. Primary School of Drafting, Dept G. Box 123. Station\n\"Q\", Toronto. \t\nWANTED - DRILL RUNNERS,\nunderground and surface. Apply Andy Grubisic, Greenwood\nAuto Court, Greenwood, B.C.,\nor Nation Diamond Drilling Co.,\nRossland, phone 6-4787.\nWANTED - APPLICATIONS\nfor carrier boys in Nelson, particularly Fairview. Apply Nelson Daily News Circulation Department.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\nplaner man capable of setting\nup and grading. Top wages for\ngood man. Nelson Lumber Co.\nLtd., Fruitvale, B.C.\nWANTED - TWO 4th CLASS\nengineers. Apply Roy Armstrong, Cranbrook Sawmills\nLtd., Parson, B.C., phone Parson\n1-H or 1-D.\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED -\nlight duties, 1 boy, school age.\nJ. Wallach, South Slocan.\nHELP   WANTED - FEMALE\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED FOR\nelderly couple. Apply 612 Carbonate St.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED - POSITION AS\nsaleslady or ln office. Experienced and references. Apply\nBox 9273, Nelson Dally News.\nT 0 R   HANDYMAN,    JANITOR\nand repairs, phone 256-R.\nBABY SITTER AVAILABLE FOR\nevenings. Phone 1905-X.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nPLACE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR\nFall Chicks, and have eggs next\nsummer when prices are high\nAll popular breeds and cross\nbreeds and Ames In-Cross Hybrids for layers, and Pllch'i\nWhite Rocks for meat Rump\nand Sendall Ltd.. Langley. B.C..\nVernon, B.C.\nIV, MONTH OLD BULL FOR\nsale. Apply Mrs. Kabatoff, Slocan Park.\nMUST SELL - 2 GOOD MILK-\ning cows. Reasonable. H. Nlm-\niniken, South Slocan\nrOR SALE - 15 WHITE-FACED\newes and 35 lambs. M. MacFarlane, Boswell.\nMACHINERY\nEquipment\n1\u2014FORDSON\nMAJOR DIESEL\nCrawler tractor, angledozer,\nwinch, 1953 model.\nI\u2014JOHN DEERE\nCRAWLER TRACTOR\nAngledozer. winch, canopy,\n1955 model.\nl\u2014D-4 CATERPILLAR\nTRACTOR\nAngledozer. winch, canopy.\n1947 model.\n1\u2014 H.D.-14\nALLIS CHALMERS\nAngledozer, winch, canopy,\n1947 model.\nAll units may be seen and\ninspected upon request.\nLTD.\nMACHINE  SHOP\n824 Vernon St. Phone 593\nNelson, B.C.\nSAWMILL, SMALL BELLSHAW\nand power, Snap at $500 cash\nAlso Hornet power saw 2 man\nmotor overhauled, used only for\nfarm work. $100. Willow Point,\nJ. R. Ramsden.\nPERSONAL\n;.3|\n\/ WHAT FLOOR   \\\t\n\\ARE SHOESIEsJ\n>     ON?   \u00ab_\u2022\n\u25a0111 '^\ni   iff%\n%r\n^^^___Y\u00b0\/%_\n\/v_<y      .a\nH__K_I\nflfl HsPn\n-' \u00ab \u25a0\u2014\u2014n-B_E__B__t-V\"\nl)\u00b0m\nAUTOMOTIVE,\n\\a\\r      yriFS     8K YCIFS\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 ot Phone 366-R\nTHE ALMER HOTEL OPP~CFIt\nDepot, Vancouver. B.C. 100%\nfireproof, 24-hour elevator ser\nvice Clean, quiet and comfort\nable Reasonable rates City\ncentre.\nThey're Here!\nThe new 1957\nChevrolet Sedans\nDROP   IN   AND  SEE  THEM\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\n1956 Ford Club Sedan\n1956 Ford Custom Sedcn\n1956 Metfor Hardtop\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1954 Oldsmobile  Sedan\n1954  Buick Hardtop\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1953 Buick Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet   Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1952 Plymouth Sedan\n1952 Ford Hardtop\n1952 Chevrolet  Hardtop\n1951   Plymouth Sedan\n1951   Plymouth Sedan\n1951   Austin Sedan\n1951   Meteor Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Ford Sedan\nAND MANY OTHERS FROM\n1950   DOWN   TO   1339\nTO CHOOSE FROM\nMotors Ltd.\nYour Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Dealer\n323.VERNON ST\n(Formerly Nelson Transfer)\nFor a\nComplete\nService\nIncluding:\nir Body, Fender ond Painting\nit Automatic Transmission\n(A Specialty)\nit Front End Alignment\nir Tire Balancing\n\u25a0*: frame Straightening\nit Wheel  Straightening\nSEE\nMickey McEwen\nAT\ntiotors Ltd.\n701 Baker St.\nPhones 578 - 579\nMUST BE SOLD - 1951 CONSUL\n4-door, good condition. Phone\n1323-L, 307 Morgan St\nPROPERTY   HOUSES,\nFARMS   ETC.,   FOR   SALE\nPACKAGE\nINSURANCE\nWe have both Dwelling and\nMercantile Package Policies.\nInauire now and save up to\n20% on your insurance\npremiums.\nRENTALS\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n5-ROOM COTTAGE FOR RENT.\nUnfurnished. Cheap winter\nrates. 3 mins. walk from Nelson\nferry. Phone 1623-L-2, Con\nCummings, mornings or evenings.\nc Hardy\nVieociies Ltd.\n554 Ward St. hPone 135\nFOR SALE - IDEAL BUILDING\nlot. 60x90. facing Davies Street\nwithin city limits. Apply 604\nSixth Street.\nPARTLY FURNISHED 3 ROOM\nsuite, ground floor. Private\nentrance and bath, central. Ph.\n1404-Y evenings.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nroom furnished. Gas stove, frig-\nautomatic heat. Weekly or\nmonthly rates. 171  Baker.\nKENCOURT MOTEL - NOW\nopen for winter rentals. One and\ntwo-bedroom units, automatic\nheat. Phone 1581-L-2. _\nCLEAN, COMFORTABLE ONE\nand a half storey house on bus\nline. Apply Box 2334, Nelson\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE OR RENT - 2-BED-\nroom house, outskirts. Phone\n1323-Y.\nCASTLEGAR   -   4-BR.   HOUSE\nKirby & Brown, Nelson, ph. 296\n8 ACRE FARM. BLACK SOIL,\nfruit trees, near Taghum. J\nKaras. Taghum\n3 SALE MISt-ELLANEOU'.\nONE PROPANE 4-BURNER GAS\nstove with dual tanks, regulator\nand tubing: one Leonard refrigerator, '49 model: one Frigidaire\nautomatic washer, '54 model,\nexcellent condition, reasonably\npriced. May be seen at West\nTransfer warehouse or phone\n1497-Y.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPtS Ot\nur\u00bbd equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 2511\nPrior St., Vancouver B C Ph\nPAnfir- 6357\nBUY DIRECT FROM THE MILL\nLumber, plywood, doors, building supplies Write for complete\ncatalogue Vancouver Sawmills\nLimited, 1111 E. 7th Ave., Vancouver 12, B.C.\nDRY PLANER ENDS FOR KIT-\nchen range, fireplace or furnace\n$10 00 a cord Fir slabs and edging long lengths. 2 large cords\n$15.00  Phone 1757-R\nFOR QUICK SALE - HOT AIR\nfurnace with hot water copper\ncoils, also automatic GE thermostat oil burner control. 519\nSilica, phone 303-L.\nRAWLEIGH PRODUCTS\u2014ANY-\none wishing Rawleigh products\ncall E. C. Douglas, 1124 Stanley St., phone 1069-L.\nSEE HARVEY HOLMES AT\nBlewett about beef or veal for\nwinter. Can be financed. Beef\ntype cattle not all soup bones.\nDRY SLABWOOD FOR SALE -\nload of 2 cords, 12\" length, $25.\nImmediate delivery. Ph. 1476-X.\nAPPROX 411.000 B M 2x4. 2x6\n1x8. 1x6 lumber. $30 per 1000 S\nKudra. phone 1757-R\nFOR SALE - 30 TONS OAT HAY\nbaled, $22 per ton. Apply C. O.\nOgilvie, Wynndel, B.C.\nFRIGIDAIRE - ELECTRIC %\nrange in excellent condition\nPhone 416-L.\nWARM MORNING HEATER. PH\n2076 after 6 p.m.\nOLD    NEWSPAPER    BUNDLES.\n10c  Nelson Daily Newa\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening 924 Davies St\n30-30   WINCHESTER.   PHONE\n1540-R.\nGOOD USED DOMESTIC AUTO\nmatic coal stoker. Phone 1752.\nF'6R SALE - 1 DIESEL OLIVER\nCleetrack. Phone 1363-L-4.\nAMATEUR RADIO STATION \u2014\ncomplete. Phone 1468-L.\n1946     FORD.     REPOSSESSION\nCall 1690 or 525 Vernon St.\nNrlann Eailti Nrnis\nCirculation Dept  Phone 1844\nSubscription Ratei\nPrtce pei single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday\nBy carrier   per week\nts advance 35\nBj Mill tn Canad\u00bb outside Neisun\nOne month               $ 125\nThree months         $ 3 51\/\nSix montha         $ 9 51)\nOn\u00bb year          11200\nB)  mail  to  United   Kingdom  or\ntha United States\nOne month $ I lit\nThree monthi             $ sou\nSix monthi          \u00bb a so\nOne rear S18 01.\nWhere extra postage ll recv'iiea.\nabove rales plus postage\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nSUITE - 3 ROOMS AND BATH\nPrivate entrance, heat, water\nand electric range supplied Ph\n978-R.    '\nSMALL MODERN COTTAGE\nfor rent. Winter rate, $25 month\nSeen at Willow Point, J. R\nRamsden.\nBRAD'S AUTO COURT \u2014 WIN-\nter rentals. Self contained cottages, 2 large rooms and bath.\nPhone 1680.\n\u2022 REGROOVING\n\u2022 JOINTING\n\u2022 WELDING\n\u2022 STRAIGHTENING\n\u2022 END WORK\nSpecial Equipment\nExperienced Operators\nLET US SERVICE YOUR BAR NOW\nFOR RENT \u2014 \u2022 BED-SITTING\nroom and kitchenette, suit one\nor two quiet working people.\nPhone 488-R after 4 p.m.\nAuthorized\nOealer\nFOR RENT - TWO BEDROOM\nbungalow, uphill, $65 month.\nAvailable Nov. 1. Phone 1694-X\nevenings.\nCABINS FOR RENT - REASON-\nable winter rates. Lakeside Auto Court, phone 864.\nFUHNISHED 2-ROOM ~ SUITE\nfor rent. Call at 140 Baker or\nPhone 491-L.\nNORTH SHORE MOTEL\u2014OPEN\nwinter rentals Single and dou\nble units. Phone 1684.\nBED - SITTING ROOM, SUIT-\nable for 2, newly decorated. Ph.\n1905-X.\nOREGON8 CHAIN\nAND ACCESSORIES\n\u2022\nSee\nH   \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC   Ross or Alex McDonald\nDELUXE 3 - RM. SUITE, TILED\nbath and kitchen, $75 per mo.\nPhone 130 noon or after 5.\nFOR RENT OR SALE - LOVELY\nnew home, oil heat, hardwood\nfloors. Phone 375-Y.-\nFOR RENT \u2014 FURNISHED APT.\nclose in, private entrance. 412\nSilica.\n2 ROOM CABIN FOR RENT \u2014\nlight and water. Phone 921-Y-2.\n2  ROOM  FURNISHED  APART-\nment for rent. Phone 217-R.\nCASTLEGAR   -   4-BR.   HOUSE.\nKirby & Brown, -Nelson, ph. 296\n3 BEDROO'M HOUSE CLOSE IN\nBox 8985, Daily News.\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n114 Railway St Nelson   B.C\nPHONE  1402\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nCONCRETE LTD.\nPHONE 871\n3 - ROOM SUITE, GOOD LOCA-\ntion. Phone 993-L evenings.\nROOM   FOR    RENT    DOWN-\ntown. Phone 934-R.\nSUITE   FOR   RENT,   HEATED.\nApply 520 Carbonate.\nFOUR   -   ROOM   APART-\nment for rent. Phone 423-Y.\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED\nhousekeeping room. Ph. 726-L.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2 ROOM FUR\"\nnished apartment. Ph. 890-Y.\nFURNISHED 2 ROOM-APART-\nment. Phone 158-L mornings.\n3    ROOM    SELF    CONTAINED\nsuite, adults Only. Ph. 1828.\nSMALL HOUSE  FOR  RENT -\nApply 610 Silica St.\nTWO    UNFURNISHED    ROOMS.\nClose in. Phone 672-R.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTt-D TO BUY - TIMBER\nand ousb land in vicinity oi\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News\nCASH PAID FOR SCRAP MET-\nai. large or small amounts Box\n10812. Nelson Daily. News\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c lb.\ndelivered to The Daily News.\nASSAVEHS AND  MINB\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   W1DDOWSON  & \u00a35\nAssayers 301 Josephine St  Nelion\nH   S   ELMES   ROSSLAND \"BC\"\nAssayei Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nG  W   BAERG   BC\nLAN1J SURVEYOR\nBox 31 Fruitvale and\n373 Bauer St_ Nelson. BC\n\"BOYD C AFFLECK. MBIC\nBt' Land Surveyor  H Eng  iCivlli\n218 Gore St    Nelson    Phone 1238\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS\nLIMITED\nMachine\nShop\nAcetylene\nand\neiectrlc\n*eidins\nntotnr   -rew\nnd\ning   Phi\nle  593\n324  Vernon\nSt\nTIMBER   CRUISING\nfORrST     PFCONNA ISSANCt\nCo.. Box 863, Castlegar, ph  3268\nCASH PAID FOR SCRAP MA-\nterial, Any amount. Granite Rd.,\nphone 378-X-2.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24, 1956 \u2014 1\nON   THE   SKY   TRAIL \u2014 The Army Signal Corps' new optical tracker, which era\ntrace moving missiles 300 miles away, Is tested ln New Mexico. Focal length ot lens Is 160 Inches.\nAustralian Government Does Big\nin\nBy L. L. LECK |\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP)\u2014Aus-j\ntralians now are \"investing\"\nnearly $70,000,000 a year in government-owned or government-licensed lotteries. It works out to\nabout $2.25 a week for every Australian over the age of 19.\nSpecial prizes on occasion reach\nfabulous sums \u2014 the Tasmanian\nstate lottery for instance now is\nrunning a draw to be drawn about\nthe time of the Olympic Games\nin November for which the first\nprize is \u00a3500,000 in Australian\nfunds, equivalent of $1,125,000.\nTickets for this cost $56.\nThe Tasmanian lottery ts one of\nfive state-sponsored lotteries run\nat regular intervals. New South\nWales, the oldest of the state lotteries, runs about 350 every year.\nIts \"ordinary\" lottery running 260\ndays a year offers a first prize\nof $13,500, tickets selling for about\n56 cents.\nSPECIAL CLASSES\nThe New South Wales scheduled\nshows the extent to which lotteries have gained a foothold. In addition to the \"ordinary,\" New\nSouth Wales runs a \"special,\"\nwhere tickets costing $1.12 may\nwin a first prize of $25,000. Its\n\"m a m m o t h\" lottery has $2.25\ntickets eligible for a first prize of\n$67,500. All of them offer a mill-i\ntitude of smaller prizes.\nQueensland's \"golden casket\" is\nlhe second oldest, offering about'\n200 prize - drawings every year.\nThe state of Western Australia\nalso has a lottery with about 100\ndrawings a year.\nThe fifth big lottery system is\nlicensed by Victoria to be opera-:\nted by Tattersall's bookmaking\nbusiness.\nThe Victoria lottery is a com-j\nparatively new set - up, but last'\nyear it had 152 drawings with\nfirst prizes ranging up to $135,000 j\nand tickets costing from 56 cents\nto $2.25.\nA portion, generally one - third, [\nof receipts goes into state govern-\nment funds but the major revenue,\nis used to help maintain public,\nhospitals and similar institutions. I\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket declined slightly in one\nof the dullest of the recent sequence of sluggish sessions.\nAmong Canadian issues on the\nAmerican Exchange Jupiter Oils\nand Scurry-Rainbow gained 1-18.\nOther issues 'were mostly lower.\nShawinigan lost %, Canadian\nMarconi and Sapphire Petroleums\nslipped Vn. Smaller losers included\nGreat Sweet Grass Oil, Eureka,\nMolybdenite of Canada and Preston East Dome.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014A narrowly\nand quietly lower trend prevailed\nagain as the industrials drifted\ndown on the Montreal and Canadian Stock Exchanges. Price\nmovements were mainly fractional.\nNoranda led base metals lower,\nlosing a point while Powell River\ndipped % and Howard Smith faded % among papers. Banks were\na firm spot as Imperial jumped\n37_ in light turnover.\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not publisher) or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government ol British Columbia\nROOM ANO BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD ROOMS -\nnewly decorated. Phone 1196-Y\nROOM     AND     BOARD     FOR\nyoung gentleman. Phone 1179-X\nThe Highways\nNo. 3: Cascade, Rossland\u2014Santa Rosa summit, plowing in progress, carry chains \u2014 snowing\nRossland, Trail, Castlegar, Nelson\nBalfour \u2014 good. Kootenay Bay\nCreston, Goatfell, Cranbrook, Fernie, Crowsnest \u2014 generally good\nconstruction work Ryan to Aldridge and Moyie to Green Bay,\nthe section at Moyie Hill open to\ntraffic at the following times: 6\np.m. to 7 a.m., 7 a.m. to 8:15 a.m.\n(pilot car), 10 am. to 10:15 a.m.,\n12 noon to 1 p.m., 4 p.m. to 4:15\np.m.\nNo. 3A: Trail, Salmo\u2014good.\nRossland. Paterson\u2014good, Creston, Porthill\u2014good.\nNo. 6: Nelway, Nelson, South\nSlocan \u2014 good. South Slocan, Nakusp, Needles \u2014 good, rough section where reconstruction in progress. Needles, Monashee, Vernon\n\u2014fair to good.\nNo. 95: Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 fair to good, construction work Ryan to Aldridge and\nMoyie to Green Bay (see No. 3\nfor times open to traffic at Moyie\nHill), rough in sections Canal\nFlats to Golden due to construction work.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 good. Kaslo,\nNew Denver \u2014 good. Kaslo, Lardeau\u2014good. Lardeau, Gerrard \u2014\ngood.\nAlaska \"Highway \u2014 generally\ngood condition and snow throughout.\nBIG  or SMALL...\nWE PRINT THEM ALL!\nBy the 100 or by the 100,000 M\nOFFICE STATIONERY \u2022\nCHEQUE FORMS \u2022\nBUSINESS CARDS \u2022\nRESTAURANT MENUS \u2022\nRECEIPT FORMS \u2022\nFINANCIAL\nSTATEMENTS \u2022\nPROGRAMMES\nLETTERHEADS\nINVOICE FORMS\nENVELOPES\nWEDDING r\nSTATIONERY\nOFFSET PRINTING\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nOPPORTUNITY! ENJOY YOUR\nown business in good establish,\ned Watkins route. World-wide\nnstionally advertised products\nApply 2145 West Broadway\nVancouver 9, B.C.\n'AXISTAN COAL\nMines in Pakistan produced\n333,003 tons of coal in the first\nnaif of 19SS. against 312.000 tons\nin the same (eriod of 1955,\nFairbanks-Morse\nDividends Higher\nTORONTO (CP) - Canadian-\nFairbanks-Morse Co., Ltd. had\nnet earnings equal to $1.62 a common share in the first nine\nmonths, compared with $1.13 a\nshare in the corresponding period\nlast year-, Chairman Robert H.\nMorwe told the board ot directors Monday.\nWinnioeq Grain\nWINNIPEG   (CP)   - Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 11%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.03*4.\nYou Get DISTINCTIVE Printing\n' When You Place Your Order With Us\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -    NELSON\n \u25a0p\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., OCT. 24,195\u00ab\nCUT OUT... KEEP HANDY ... IT MAY SAVE A LIFE.\nCOUNTERDOSES For The Home\nPOISONS\nAcids -18\nAntifreeze \u2022 9\nBichloride of Mercury - 12\nCamphor - 1\nCarbon Monoxide \u25a0 16\nChlorine Bleach - 8\nCleaning  Fluids \u2022 17\nDisinfectant\nwith chlorine - 8\nwith carbolic acid - 6\nFood Poisoning - 11\nGasoline, Kerosene - 17\nInsect and Rat Poisons\nwith arsenic - 2\nwith sodium fluoride -14\nwith phosphorus - 6\nwith DDT - 11\nwith strychnine -15\nIodine Tincture - 4\nLye \u2022 *1Q.\nMushrooms \u2022 11\nOH of Wlntergreen \u25a0 \u00bb\nPaint (Lead) \u2022 11\nPowder From  Broken\nFluorescent Tubes -  1\nRubbing Alcohol  \u25a0 9\nTurpentine \u2022 17\nWashing Soda - 10\nOVERDOSES\nAlcohol  \u2022 9\nBarbiturates \u25a0 2\nBelladonna - 16\nBromides -11\nCodeine \u2022 18\nHeadache and Cold\nCompounds - 9\nSalicylates  (aspirin) - 9\nIron  (Ferrous Sulphate)-?\nMorphine, Opium - 13\nParegorle \u25a0 13\n'Pep' Medicines - 2\nSleeping Medicines - 8\n8 But do not force any liquids on the\npatient \u2014 if he is unconscious.\n\u2022 If a doctor is not immediately available,\nrush patient to nearest hospital \u2014 emergency department.\nTO  FIND CORRECT COUNTERDOSE\nDO THIS FIRST\nO Contact a doctor at once.\n\u2022 \u25a0 Keep the patient warm.\n# Determine if patient has taken\n(1) A POISON: something not meant\nto be taken internally ... or\n(2) AN OVERDOSE: a food or drug\ntaken in excessive quantity.\no While waiting for physician, give\nappropriate counterdose below.\nKEEP ALL POISONS AND MEDICINES OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN\nIn one of the lists printed at left, find\nsubstance causing the trouble.\nNext to that substance is a number. This\nrefers to counterdose bearing same\nnumber in the section below.\nI  Induce vomiting with an\n! emetic such as\n^Tablespoon of mustard, or\n-Soap and warm water, or\n-Salt and warm water, or\n-Finger in throat.\n) Give a mixture of\n.2 tablespoons of powdered\nburnt toast. ,\n1 spoon milk of magnesia.\n4 spoons strong tea.\nInduce vomiting.\n(See No. 1)\n-Give mixture as in No. 2.\n-Induce vomiting. (See\nNo. 1).\n-Give 2 tablespoons epsom\nsalt in 2 glasses of water.\n-Then give large quantities of hot coffee or strong\ntea.\n-Give 2 ozs. thick starch\npaste \u2014 made by mixing\ncornstarch and water,\n-Then give 2 ozs. salt in\nquart of warm water.\nDrink until vomit fluid is\nclear.\n-Finally, give glass of\nmilk.\n-4 ozs. hydrogen peroxide.\n-1 tablespoon sodium bicarb in quart of warm\nwater.\n-Then give 4 ozs. mineral\noil. Positively do NOT\ntake vegetable or animal\noil.\n-Induce vomiting. (See\nNo. 1).\n-Give 2 tablespoons\nwhiskey in 8 spoons warm\nwater.\n-Next give glass of milk\nor whites of 2 eggs.\n-Then give hot tea or\nstrong coffee.\n-Induce vomiting (finger\nin throat).\n-Give two teaspoons of\nsodium bicarb in a glass\nof warm water.\n8\n-Give 1 teaspoon of aromatic spirit of ammonia in\nglass of water.\n-Hot coffee or strong tea\nplus egg whits.\n-Give mixture as in No. 2.\n-Induce vomiting. (See\nNo. 1).\n-Give tablespoon of      v\nsodium bicarb in quart or\nwarm water.\n-Give strong tea or coffee.\n1 a -Give 2 tablespoons\nI \\J vinegar in 2 glasses of\nwater.\n-Then give white of 2\neggs or 2 ozs. olive oil.\nDo NOT induce\nvomiting!\n1|  -Induce vomiting (See\nI   No. 1).\n-Give 2 tablespoons epsom salt in 2 glasses of\nwater.\n-Then give large quantities of hot coffee or\nstrong tea.\n1^ For each tablet swal-\nX. lowed give white of 1\neggs in glass of milk.\n-Give mixture as in No.\n2.\n-1   oz.   epsom   in   pint\nwater.\n13\n-Give mixture as in No.\n2.\n-2 tablespoons epsom\nsalt   in    2    glasses    of\nwater.\n-Keep patient awake.\n14\n-2 tablespoons of milk\nof magnesia.\n-Give glass of milk.\n-Induce vomiting. (See\nNo. 1.)\n15\n(Give mixture as in No.\n2.\n-Induce vomiting.  (See\nNo. 1.)\n-Give artificial respiration if necessary.\n16\n-Rush victim into fresh\nair,\n-Make patient lie down.\n-Hot coffee or strong\ntea.\n1am -Induce vomiting. See\n\/  No. 1).\n-Give 4 ozs. mineral oil.\n-Hot coffee or strong\ntea.\nIn -Give 1 oz. milk of\nO magnesia   in   large\nquantity of water.\nDo NOT induce\nvomiting!\nChart based on \"American Druggist Counterdoses for the Home.\" Copyright 1955 Amerl can Druggist.\nTHI8 CHART 18\nSPONSORED   BY  YOUR\nPHARMACI8T IN THE\nINTEREST OF PUBLIC\nWELFARE\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nINFORMATION  APPROVED\nBY CANADIAN MEDICAL\nASSOCIATION\n(ALBERTA BRANCH)\nand\nALBERTA   DEPARTMENT\nOF PUBLIC  HEALTH\nJohn Howard Society\nColumbia Council on\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A British Columbia Council on Youth\nProblems will be formed as a result of a two-day conference of\nthe John Howard Society here.\nThe conference set up a 14-\nmember committee which will\ndraw up a constitution for the\ncouncil, to be formed to combat\njuvenile delinquency.\nThe council's main function will\nbe to survey youth problems, it\nwas reported by Harry J. Seed,\nPresident of the John Howard\nSociety.\nMr. Seed said B.C.'s present\nsystem of handling juvenile offenders is  developing  case-hard-\nto Form British\nYouth Problems\nened criminals and the process of\nrehabilitation must be started at\n\"the point of arrest.\"\nKarl Holton, chief probation\nofficer in Los Angeles County,\nwas guest speaker at the conference. He said in an interview that\nthe \"get tough\" policy called for\nearlier by Chief Constable George\nArcher of Vancouver would not\nsolve the problem of delinquency.\nCALCUTTA (Reuters \u2014 Police\nin this traditionally turbulent city\nare to use rubber bullets against\nrioters to hurt rather than kill\nthem. The hard \u2014 rubber bullets\nhave lead inside to give them\nweight and will be used if tear-\ngas and nightstick charges fail to\ndisperse rioters.\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\nf       LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&C0.\nChartered Accountant!\nAuditor!\n670 Baker 8L Phone 235\nFREE\nTRIAL\nOFFER!\ni\nBUY THIS\n75 Phillips'\nTablets\nOnly 49$\nUse the tablets In the free tin. If you\ndon't agree that Phillips' Tablets an\nthe best thing you'vo ever taken for\nUPSET STOMACH^ INDiaBSTION, HEARTBURN, return tho unopened 75-Ublot\npackage to the makers and get\nDouble your money back!\n0FFF.it LIMITED!     ,\nDeadly Poison\nKeeps Man Alive\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP)\u2014The\nremarkable combination of an ancient poison and a modern mechanical breathing machine has kept\na man alive here.\nCharles Norwood, 42, a miner of\nLitbgow, New South Wales, ran a\nrusty nail into his foot and developed tetanus, commonly known as\nlockjaw.\nHe was immediately taken to\nSt. Vincent's Hospital, Sydney,\nwhere he has been unconscious\nsince Oct. 1.\nCurare, a deadly poison used\nfor centuries by Indians on arrowheads has been injected into Nor-\n'wood every half hour since he was\nadmitted to hospital.\nCurare causes complete muscular paralysis.\nIf Norwood had not had the\ncurare, tetanus convulsions would\nhave killed him.\n' He has absorbed enough poison\nto kill 100 people, but the mechanical breathing machine has effectively taken over the work of the\nparalyzed respiratory muscles.\nDoctors are confident now that\nthe tetanus will gradually pass\nfrom his system, and that he will\nlive.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED    and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front 8t Phone 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL    TRAINING\nMedical   Arte  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\n$\nHAIGH\nTRU ART\nBeauty Solon\nPhone 327\n676 Balcer Street\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, Wo line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lilies. 10% discount for prompt payment\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8:00 P.M.\nBest materials only used on your\nshoes at TONY'8 SHOE REPAIRS\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2-4 p.m.\nNELSON PHARMACY\nOPEN TODAY TILL 5:30 P.M.\nDON   ELDER  8TUDIO\n405 Hall St Phone 120J\nOil Burner Service. Phone 38S.\nAll Makes Serviced.\nMICHIGAN   LOADER,   BACKHOE  FOR   HIRE.  PHONE 682-Y.\nDrapery   Special:   48\"  Barkcloth,\n$1.69.\nSTERLING  HOME FURNISHERS\nAnother  shipment  of Ladies' 8-\nway belts, $1.00 each.\nEBERLE'S ON   BAKER ST,\nMarlite tile board for bathroom\nand kitchen wall. Beautiful colors\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone  156    101 Hall St.   Nelson\nVoices wanted. Nelson Civic\nChoir: Soprano, tenor, alto, bass.\nContact Nelson Allen, phone 1333\nor 1160.\nDON'T FORGET TO SAVE SAT.,\nNOV. 10, FOR THE WIUC CONVENTION    DANCE,   EAGLES'\nHALL,  9-12.\nCelanese Bengaline, 45\" wide, navy,  black,  red,   periwinkle  blue,\npink, yd. $1.39.\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nFor special coffee, luncheon, buffet or dinner party, phone for reservations to the \t\nROUND   UP   ROOM\n391\nNELSON FIGURE SKATING\nCLUB \u2014 GENERAL MEETING\u2014\nFRI., OCT. 26\u20143 P.M. AT THE\nWOMEN'S INSTITUTE ROOMS\n\u2014CIVIC  CENTRE.\nPatients in Kootenay Lake General Hospital can have the Daily\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department, Dally News,\nLOWE8T PRICE8 ON CHOICE\nQUALITY FOOD FOR YOUR\nLOCKER OR HOME FREEZER\nINQUIRE AT THE LOCKER\nPLANT, 611 FRONT ST., PHONE\n1218, NELSON.\nGirls' and boys' skates in all sizes,\n$3.50 a pair, while they last.\nWE PAY CASH  FOR  USED\nFURNITURE  AND ANTIQUE8\nBIRCH'8 FURNITURE\n307 BAKER  8T. \u2014 PH, 47\nKnights of Pythias\nVisit  of  Grand  Chancellor  Flti-\npatrlck tonight. Oddfellows' Hall,\n8 p.m. Please attend. All K.P.s Invited.\nWe have a large selection of oil,\ncoal and wood heaters.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES\nFOR   USED   FURNITURE.\nHOME  FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, PH. 1660.\nATTENTION CANADIAN\nLEGION MEMBERS\nRemembrance Banquet and Dance\nat Canadian Legion, Friday, Nov.\n9th, at 7:00 p.m. Tickets must be\npicked up Thurs., Nov. 1st. Tickets $1.00.\nReserve Saturday, November 3,\nfor the Annual Bazaar of the Catholic Church, to be held in the\nCathedral Hall. Spaghetti Supper\nwill be served at 5:30 and 6:30.\nGet your tickets early. Bingo .in\nthe evening.\nATTENTION, JURORS\nJurors summoned to appear at\nthe Nelson Assize, Thursday '.the\n25th of October, 1956, are excused\nuntil Monday the 29th day of October 1956 at 11:00 a.m.\nThomas G. C. Fox,\nSheriff for South Kootenay.\nIT IS HERE! THE FABULOU8\nAMANA FREEZER AND FREEZER-REFRIGERATOR. WE HAVE\nA VERY ATTRACTIVE AM\/VNA\nFOOD PLAN WHICH WI'LL\nSAVE YOU MANY, MANY DDL\nLAR8 ON YOUR FOOD BUDGET. SEE TOM 8HORTH6U8E\nAT THE LOCKER PLANT AT\n611  FRONT ST. TODAY!\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nAPPLETON \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Edith Appleton will be\nheld in the Rossland United\nChurch, 1:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct\n25. Carberry Funeral Home is ln\ncharge of arrangements. Rev.\nLaughton\u00bbwill officiate.\nWANETA DAM and power plant on the\nPend d'Oreille -River near its confluence with\nthe Columbia River South of Trail are shown In\nthis aerial photograph, along with the new road\nto Waneta. The plant was opened early in 1954\nby the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, and cost $35 million,\nA. L. Fryling photo.\nOdds...\nand Ends\n,..by M.D.B.\nIn honor of my blooming cold I\nhave penned the following doggerel after reading a highly intelligent article on the matter\nsomewhere or other,\n* *   \u2022\nI see by the paper . . .\nPeople    with   snuffles   should\nsniffle, not blow,\n(Funny the things that I learn\nI don't know)\nFor    blowing    spreads    germs\nthrough   the  holes  in   the\nhead\nWhich    causes    infection    and\nsends you to bed.\nSo sniffle and snaffle and sniffle\nand snuff\nTill the cold has decided that\nyou've had enough,\nAnd if you'd do this like a good\nlittle girl'd\nYou'll find that you haven't a\nfriend in the worl'd.\n\u2022 *   *\nMy mention of Rev. Dixon in\nthis column a short time ago\nbrought a letter from him and his\nwife to say that they are getting\nadjusted to life in Ontario, and a\nbit of news I thought you might\nfind interesting. We quote: \"Have\nmet many old Ontario friends, and\namongst our callers have been\nMrs. G. E. Thompson of Nelson\non one occasion, and a week or\ntwo later Mr. and Mrs. J. C.\nChambers; also Mr. and Mrs. Walt\nAtkins and family who used to\nlive in the Thurman house next\nto Trinity Church. He has been\nan engineer at the uranium mines\nat Blind River, but just recently\nhas transferred to a new development at Temagami, not far north\nof North Bay.\"\n# \u2022   *\nI have heard many remarking\non how lovely the colors have\nbeen this Fall. I guess I can dig\nup my glads now, for we did have\na touch of frost Sunday night, for\nsure.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA large sheet of cement in what\nwill be our new commercial printing room was too much for neighborhood youngsters Sunday and,\nshod in roller skates, they made\nthe most of the big rink.\nNelson Public Works Department\nRequires More Storage Space\nTopcoat\nTime\nNow is   the   time   to   be\nthinking of that new\n    . TOPCOAT.\nOur stock l> now complete.\nTweeds are the favorite. '\nPick out yours today ond\nwe will hold it if you wish.\n$37.50 and up\nSee some of our coats shown at\nthe Gyro Men's Fashion Show\nWednesday afternoon.\nEMORY C\nLimited *^\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nCity Works Superintendent E.\nE. Olson outlined proposals for\nnew storage sheds planned near\nthe incinerator, on the city's foreshore property east of Powell's\nlumber yard, to council Monday\nnight.\nThe plans, only tentative at\npresent,   call  for expenditure  of\nPHONE   1844   FOR  CLASSIFIED\nClassified  Ads Get Results\nGas Filters\nSchool Slated\nFor Next Month\nNelson will have a gas fitters\ntraining school of its own in the\nmiddle of November, it was announced by W. F. Anderson, chief\ninstructor for Inland Natural Gas\nCo. Ltd.\nPrevious difficulties in securing\nfull instructional staff have now\nbeen overcome, Mr. Anderson reported, and Inland reports that\nthe Nelson school will now be\nheld from November 12 to 15.\n\"Though we have not yet selected an actual location in Nelson\nfor the school,\" Mr. Anderson\nstated \"we are pleased that a\nschool for Nelson will now be\npossible this Fall instead of in the\nlate Spring.\" \"We will be getting\nin touch with all of Nelson's\nplumbing and heating contractors\nand the appliance dealers, inviting\nthem and all interested parties to\nparticipate in the school.\"\nThe training school designed to\nassist the local trade to train for\nand successfully pass the government examinations for gas fitters\nwill hear lectures from provincial\ngovernment gas Inspectors, representative* of equipment and appliance manufacturers, and will\ncover pipe sizing, venting, appliance installation and maintenance, as well as the new provincial gas code.\nAttendance at the previous\nschools to date has exceeded all\nexpectations and along with the\naddition of the Nelson and Kelowna sites further schools and\nrefresher courses are now being\nplanned to handle the heavy demand for gas fitting and maintenance training.\nThe provincial government\nplans to hold official examination for gas fitters in Nelson in\nthe Spring.\nJAMMING OF BRITISH\nRADIO CUT BY RUSSIA\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The So.\nviet Union has sharply reduced its\njamming of British Broadcasting\nCorporation programs aimed at\nRussia, the BBC said Tuesday.\nThe BBC in its handbook for\n1957 said the reduction in interference was noted after Russian\nleaders Nikola Bulganin and Nikita Khrushchev visited Britain\nlast April.\nabout $32,000 for two Butler steel\nbuildings, foundations, moving\nequipment, fencing, and construction of a spur line. Money would\ncome from sale of the gas plant\nfor $70,000 to the Inland Natural\nGas Co., which city ratepayers\napproved last month.\nPlans were to make storage provision at the gas plant, but Mr.\nOlson said this would make the\nquarters \"very cramped.\" He estimated that the Butler buildings\ncould be put up in about a month,\nand emphasized that the order\nshould be placed soon. Mayor\nKary said the city \"has no place to\nstore its equipment for the winter,\" and Aid. George Eckmier\nsaid the Public Works committee\nis ready to go ahead \"as soon as\nwe have the money.'*\nOlson said he thought the new\nquarters would be quite adequate\nfor normal circumstances, and\nMayor Kary asked him to put the\nplans on paper for the next meeting, New heating will have to be\narranged for the asphalt plant to\nget the mix hot quicker and keep\nit hot' longer, and the city should\nalso consider building a new incinerator soon, Mayor Kary said.\nCity Clerk C. W. R. Harper\nnoted that many cities handle\nparking meter repairs right in the\nCity Hall. This means that, when^\never a citizen complains that a\nmeter is not working, a repair\nman can be dispatched with him\nimmediately.\nSocreds Favor\nMountain Time\nQuestion of changing to Mountain Standard Time, to give more\ndaylight hours the year 'round,\ncame up again at the Nelson tity\ncouncil table.\nBefore the city went back to\nPacific Time last month, the\nAssociated Boards of Trade and\nChambers of Commerce made\nstrong representations against\nchanging the time so that all\nKootenay cities would hava a\nuniform time. Cranbrook, Kimberley and other East Kootanay\nplaces use Mountain Standard\nTime.\nSmaller communities indicated\nthey would \"string along with\"\nNelson and Trail, but neither of\nthese two councils was willing to\ntake such a step,\nMonday night the Nelson-Creston Social Credit Constituency\nadvised Nelson councillors that\ntheir annual convention had gone\non record as favoring Mountain\nStandard Time \"east of the ltfth\nmeridian.\" The letter, signed by\nJean Merriam, recording secretary, was ordered received and\nfiled.\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty   Culture\nand Cold  Waves\nMedical   Arts.  Bldg.\n'hone  1922 Ste.  211\nHelen McCallum. Prop.\nLOW INCOMES\nAverage yearly income for an\nagricultural family in South India is just under' 30, about half\nof the rate in the north.\nFor All Your Baking Needs Try\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe flavor Is right On Sale at\nYour Groceri, or Phone 230.\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD. -\nHISTA-REX\nA relief for the distress and\ndiscomfort of colds.\n$1.00\nTriple Action.\nCOUGH SYRUP\nFor the Children.\n89*\nCity Drug\nCompany\n\"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nIT ATT RUM\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nGet them home SAFELY!\nDE-SKIDDED TIRES\nNow in\u2014A complete size\nrange   in\nDUNLOP\nTIRES\nSnow-Grip or Highway\nTread.\nOur John Bean Skid-Defier\ncreates hundreds of sturdy\ngrip blacks in tha tire tread\n\u2014 traction blocks that cut\nthrough the road film and\ncling to the road.\nPEEBLEf MOTOR*\n[HRYSLER-PLYMDUTH-FARGD-iWVTIRES\nC?\/\u00a3w 1090   'iTiOi'J^.fa.C. \"\n\u25a0   '\n i !\t\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1956_10_24","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429926","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1956-10-24 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1956-10-24 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0429926"}