{"@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":"2023-04-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1957-08-24","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430011\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" ' \u25a0 \" \u25a0'<- '\u25a0\u25a0\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Variable 'cloudiness.\nScattered thunder showers Saturday evenings Cooler, winds light.\nThe low-high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley 45 and 75.\nOutlook for ' Sunday: Little\nchange;\nSATURDAY EDITION \u00ab\nwith COMICS- 10c\nVol   55\nB. C, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 24, 1957\nRevenues Rise;\nBut Spending\nCuts Surplus\n*\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Federal revenues continued to\nrise in July but heavier spending trimmed the month's budgetary surplus to $90,100,000, down $19,900,000 from' last\nyear's $110,000,000.\nThis reduced the total surplus for the first four months\nof the fiscal year to $120,800,000, a cut of $119,600,000 from\n$330,400,000 a year ago, Finance Minister Fleming reported\nFriday in his monthly treas\nury statement.\nHe suggested that a least two\npoints had to be considered . in\ncomparing surpluses:\nThe defeated Liberal government had pinned Parliament's\none-shot $100,000,000 payment to\nthe Canada Council to this year's\nexpenditures. There was no similar outlay last year.\nFederal payments to provinces\nfor tax - sharing purposes now\nwere being made on a monthly\nbasis, compared with every three\nmonths last year. The latest treasury statement included payments\nfor four months. The comparative\nstatement for last year included\npayments for only three months.\nFORECAST SURPLUS\nThe Liberal administration, defeated in the June 10 election,\nhad forecast a surplus of $152,-\n000,000 for the current year compared with the $282,000,000 produced in 1956-57.\nIn . July,' revenues climbed by\n$41,600,000; expenditures rose by\n$61,500,000.\nBoosted partly by higher income\ntax collections, the government's\nrevenues   increased  in   July   to\n$501,500,000 from $459,900,000 last\nyear, boosting the April - July,\nfourth-month total to $1,686,700,00\nfrom $1,613,300,000.\nThe personal income tax take\nincreased in the month to $141,-\n500,000 from $136,800,000; corporation income tax to $141,100,000\nfrom $132,300,000.\nSome other revenue sources for\nJuly with last year's yields in\nbrackets: sales tax $65,800,000\n($63,300,000); import duties $45,-\n300,000 ($48,000,000); excise duties\n$28,200,000' ($18,900,000).     .\nExpenditures appeared to be up\nall down the line, with the total\nfor the month increasing to $411,-\n400,000 from $349,900,000 last year,\nswelling the four - month total to\n$1,475,900,000 from $1,282,900,000.\nDefence outlays rose in the\nmonth to $169,108,000 from $151,-\n800,000. Some other outlays with\nlast year's figures in brackets:\npublic debt charges $46,400,000\n($42,700,000); payments to provinces $38,100,000 ($9,100,000); family allowances $34,100,000 ($32,-\n800,000); veterans affairs $22,500,-\n000 ($21,000,000); public, works\n$11,600,000 ($10,600,000). '\nNot more  Than 6o  Daily.  10c Saturday\nNo. M\nLINED UP with their telescopes at their temporary camp in the Beskid mountains in northeast Czechoslovakia, these astronomers anxiously watch the sky, search-\n' ing for meteors. A group of 80 astronomers,  both  amateur arid professional, and\nranging from youngsters to elderly watchers, have journeyed to the mountains to\nobserve the annual display of meteors which occurs at this time of year.     \u25a0.'\nTrekkers, on Way to Scan Road\nPossibilities of Rose lass\n',\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. ...As,  \u25a0 \u25a0\nChrysler Turns Down\nReuther's Proposal\n.. DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler Corporation refused Friday to go\nalong with a proposal that the au-\n'tomdbile industry's big three cut\nprices on 1958 cars. Walter P.\nReuther of the United Auto Workers charged that \"General Motors\nsets the line and Chrysler knuckles under to the dictates of their\nlargest competitor.\" .\nIn a statement, the union presi-\nHail Losses\nHigher in '5?\n.By WILLIAM BOYD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (CP) - Hail losses\nfor this year in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta are increased from 1956 with 'Saskatchewan's the highest on record, hail\ninsurance company officials report.\nTo date in Saskatchewan about\n10,000 claims have been received\nby Saskatchewan Hail Association,\nmore than double the number received at this time last year.\n\"It is expected the company\nwill pay total indemnity of. not\nless than $4,000,000 in 1957, a record, amount in the company's 41-\nyear history,\" said J. S. Gisby,\nassociation manager.\nA. S. Simpson, secretary of Canadian Hail Underwriters Association, described the 1957 hail season\nas \"disastrous both for farmer and\nhail insurance companies.\"\n\"As far as Manitoba and Saskatchewan are concerned it is\nprobably the worst year in the\nhistory of hail insurance,\" he said.\ndent said \"General Motors,.having made the decision first, has\nin effect dictated.the.policy as it\nhas in every such major major\npolicy decision for the last 2C\nyears.\"\nGM president Harlow H. Curtice, in rejecting Reuther's plan\nto cut inflation by having the\nauto firms cut prices on a promise from the union to modify new\ncontract demands, suggested instead that the' UAW extend its\nGeneral Motors contract two\nyears as a \"contribution to economic stability.\"\nChrysler's reply, as did GM's\nThursday, agreed with. Reuther\nthat something should be done to\nstop inflation. But neither company is willing to make pricing of\nits products a matter of collective\nbargaining.\nGREAT UNCLE OF\nQUEEN DIES\nLONDON (Reuters) - Lt.-Col.\nMalcolm Bowes-Lyon, 83, great\nuncle of Queen Elizabeth, died\nhere Friday.\nBowes-Lyon was the seventh son\nof the 13th Earl of Strathmore..\nSeaman Stabbed\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Powell\nRiver seaman was stabbed Thursday night during a brawl which\nerupted in the women's side of a\ncrowded Hastings street beer parlor.\nPolice arrested a suspect a\nblock' from the Broadway Hotel,\nwhere the fight occurred.\nTreated in hospital for a deep\nwound in his left side was Cecil\nAdams, 28, a-tug boat mate from\nPowell River.\nBeautiful mountain country between Kootenay Lake and the\nSt. Mary's river country west of\nKimberley, will come under close\nscrutiny this weekend.\nIt will be with an eye to road\nbuilding possibilities ^hat the 22\nmen comprising parties formed by\nthe Kimberley and Nelson chambers \u25a0 of commerce, will look at\nRose Pass and Gray Pass.\nRose Pass lies between Crawford creek and the St. Mary's\nwest fork; Gray Pass to the south\nlies between Gray creek, and Red-\nring creek, a St. Mary's tributary.\nEach party from the two cities\nwill cross each other's tracks. The\nNelson group will move easterly\nSaturday while the Kimberley\nparty moves westerly, and the\ntwo will meet to; spend the night\nat St. Mary's river crossing.\nAn inter-connecfing transportation system has been worked out,\nwhereby one party picks up a\ntruck left by the other, and the\nother picks up horses.\nThe 12 Nelson men, when .they\nreach the junction of St. Mary's\nriver and Redding creek, will turn\nwesterly along the Gray Pass\nroute.\nThe Kimfierley group, when it\ncompletes the ' Rose. Pass route,\nwill go ffom Crawford Bay to\nGray creek' and home over that\npass.\nNelson city council members\nand their wives will go to Kootenay lake's 'east shore Sunday tp\ngreet the 10 Kimberley trekkers.\nThose who will be making the\ntrips are:,\nFrom .Kimberley: Fred Ingram,\npresident of the Associated Boards\nof Trade and Chambers of Commerce of Southeastern B. C; Al\nFabro, president of the Kimberley\nChamber of Commerce; Leo Nim-\nsick, MLA for Cranbrook riding;\nMayor Clifford Swan, Ed Lewis,,\nKeith Ansley, L. S. Garstin,|L.\nBouchard, John . Achtzener and\nWarren Keer, guide. . .\nFrom Nelson: M. B. Ryalls,,\npresident of the Nelson Chamber\nof Commerce; John Learmonth,\nH. D. Harrison, E. T. Bodard,\nFrank Beresford jr., Al Jeffery,\nE. M. Stiles, Tommy West, F. H.\nW. Chanter, Bob, Maber, A. R.\nRamsden and George Kemball,\nguide.\nSingapore Reports\nRed Plot Discovered\nSINGAPORE -(Reuters) '- The\nSingapore government said in a\nwhite paper Friday at his uncovered a new Communist plot to\ntake over Singapore by an armed\nrevolt.\nThe 8000 - word 'document was\npublished a few hours after police detained 35 persons, including five leaders of the left-wing\nPeople's Action party.\nThe five officials took over\nparty controls last week, police\nannounced,\nBritish troops stood by as police continued the raids in' this\nBritish crown colony which is due\nto get internal self - government\nafter next year.\nThe white paper said the outlawed Malayan Communist party\nwas gained. power among the\nworkers and in the People's Action party.\nIt warned that a secret Communist plot to take over Singapore had become more and more\nblatant in the last few months\nand said the colony faces rioting\n\u00a3\nNINETEEN-MONTH-OLD Jimmy Book, of Warren, 0.,,.casts a critical eye about\nthe barbershop, left. At centre, he -gives way to tears as he suffers the indignities of\nhaving his firsrtiaircut. At right, it wasn't so bad after all. Jimmy is the son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Book.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nand bloodshed if  Communist activities are not crushed.\nCHAIRMAN DETAINED\nTan Chong Kin, elected chairman of the People's Action party\nlast Tuesday, was among the five\nparty officials detained by police\nofficers.\nThe raids were the biggest since\nCommunist-inspired rioting broke\nout in Singapore in October, 1956.\nThe new leaders of the People's\nAction. party replaced members\nof the moderate section, who said\nCommunist penetration of the\nparty no longer could be disguised.\nChile Run for CPA\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Canadian\nPacific Airlines will extend its\nservice to Santiago, Chile, Sept. 23,\nthe company announced Friday.\nCanadians from both eastern\nand western Canada will be able\nto fly direct to Santiago on one\nairline for the first time, CPA\nsaid. The airline now links. Vancouver, Toronto and^ Montreal\nwith Mexico, Peru and Argentina.\nCatholic Schools\nTo Pay Back Tax\nVANCOUVER (.CP) 5- The Roman Catholic school beard of Mail-\nlardville, ,B. C, 15 miles east of\nhere, has agreed to pay more\n.than $10,1500 in back taxes in order to regain possession of three\nseparate schools seized by municipal authorities last year.\nArchbishop William Mark Duke\nof Vancouver instructed the\nschool board Thursday-to pay the\nbill thus ending a lengthy' controversy that created divisions within B. C. ruling Social Credit party.        ,\nAn announcement issued jointly\nby Archbishop Duke .and. the\nSchool board- committee Friday\nsaid:' \"After \u25a0 consulting* with the\nchurch authorities, the Catholic\nschool board of Maillardville has\nagreed to cq^perate in, meeting\nthe school tax in order to reopen\ntheir schools for the school year.\n.\"The^decisioh was reached in\nthe. interests of all and for the\ncommon. good.\"\nCatholic schools operated untaxed in Maillardville, a small\ncommunity settled 50,years' ago\nby millworkers from Quebec, for\nalmost 40 years until 1953.\nIn that year the government ordered the Coquitlara municipal\ncouncil to tax them, as parochial\nschools in other areas were taxed.\nCLIMBER'S BODY\nMAY BE LEFT\nTERRACE, B. C. (CP) - The\nbody of Maj, Rex Gibson, president of the. Alpine Club of Canada, may remain lashed to a\nrock on the northern B. C. mountain peak where he died.\nThe veteran climber and two\nU. .S. alpinists fell ZOO. feet Sunday down the side of. 9000-foot\nMount Howson, 40 miles east of\nhere.\nMaj. Gibson, about 65, died\nTuesday from internal injuries.\nThe other two climbers, Dr. Sterling Hendricks of Silver Springs,\nMd., and Don Hubbard of Washington, are recovering in hospital\nhere.\nMaj. Gibson's body lies strapped fo a rock on the bleak cliff-\nside 40 miles east of here.\nRCMP Cpl. George Phillips said\nFriday Mrs. Gibson stated hpr\nhusband often expressed the wish\nthat no: risk should he taken in\nbringing him out if he died on a\nmountain.\nSyria Tells U.S.\nSlop Interfering\nCAIRO (Reuters) \u2014 President\nShukri \"el Kuwatly of Syria asked\nthe United States Friday to stop\nmeddling in his country's affairs.\nHis plea, which appeared in the\nEgyptian newspaper El Ahram,\nwas issued as Kuwatly prepared\nto return to Damascus after a period in an Alexandria' hospital for\na reported stomach ulcer condition. He has been in hospital since\nshortly after a Communist party\nmember, Col. Afif Bizry, became\ncommander-in-chief of the Syrian\narmy last week.\n\"The West, particularly the\nUnited States, should leave us\nalone,\" he said. \"It should put an\nend t'o allegations that we are\nCommunists.\n\"The West should stop directing\nits policies for the services of\nZionism.\"\n\"I regret,\" he added, \"that the\nWest is unable to distinguish between communism and a policy\nof liberation and Arah nationalism.\n\"The West appears to regard all\nthose who do not follow its orbit\nas Communists.\"\n\"The Arab countries will never\nturn Cbnimunist and can never\nbecome a base except for their\nown people.\"\nTeachers'\nStrike Ends\nEDMONTON (CP) - A teachers' strike that began last June\nat Guthrie public school at the\nnearby Namao' RCAF base' has\nbeen settled.;. ..  \u201e..... .'    '\u25a0'\u25a0'!'\nSqdh. Ldr. E. C. Kerslake,\nschool board chairman, said Friday agreement has been reached\nbetween the board and the 25\nteachers who went on strike on\nback wage demands. '\nThe agrement, reached at a\nmeeting with the Alberta Teachers' Association, gives the teachers from $2300 to $6100 in retroactive increases covering the last\nthree school terms. It also provides for further discussions\nwhen the teachers return to work\nnext month to settle salaries for\nthe 1957-58 term.\nWhen the teachers walked out\nthey claimed they had not \u25a0 received a salary increase since\n1953.\nThe strike occurred shortly before departmental examinations\nwere to be written by grades 9\nahd 12 pupils. The teachers, however, volunteers to work without\npay to supervise the writing of\nthe examinations to the children\nwould not suffer loss of a year's\neducation.\nSeek Missing Plane\nVANCOUVER (CP) - RCAF\nsearch and rescue officials said\nFriday night an air search will\nbe started at dawn tor a light aircraft missing on a flight from Penticton, B. C, to Lethbridge, Alta.\nThey said the search. was requested by civil aviation authorities when the plane, a Stintson\nwith registration CF-EYC, failed\nto arrive at Lethbridge.\nA couple and- their two children\nwere believed to be aboard.\nRCAF headquarters here declined to release their names or\nhometowns pending further efforts to locate the plane.\nActress Escapee Says\nRomania Afraid to Revolt\nMONTREAL (CP) - A leading\nRomanian actress' arrived in Canada Friday and. told of a hare-\nand-hounds chase on the canals'\nof Venice in. her flight from her\nCommunist homtland.\nSwelte Nine Diaconescu, 29, arrived by air with Adrian Popovici\nof. Montreal, the uncle to whom\nshe wired for help in her get-away\nadventure.\n\"My first message is to thank\nCanada for her hospitality and\ngenerosity,\" said Miss Diaconescu, who described herself as' the'\nleading comedienne in Romania's\nBucharest National Theatre and\na star in. radio, television and in\nfilms.\nThe actress, who said she left\nbehind her parents and a sister,\nwas member of a.Romanian' theatre delegation which attended an\ninternational festival at Venice .in\nJuly.     '\nPOLICE KEPT WATCH\nThere were nine actors in the\nparty and-we were accompanied\nby 17 police personnel charged\nwith watching us,' Miss Diaconescu said.\n\"I made my get-away July 25.\nBut I had wired my uncle in Montreal when I got to Venice. The\nwire was only a few words but\nhe understood. We fled together\nafter the last performance and it\ndidn't take the guards long to\nnotice we had gone. They set out\nafter us..-..\n\"We got into a gondola my uncle had hired, then transferred\nto a motorboat and finally to a\ntaxi which took us to the train\nfor Padua, Milan, Rome and then\nParis. We left there for Montreal.\"\nShe wants to work in Montreal.\nShe fled because of the Communists although she received an excellent salary.\nShe said the thing that keeps\nthe Romanians from rising against\nthe Communists is the fear that it\nwould develop into another Hungary.\nRussia\nAgreement\nSays Russia Wants All on Own Terms;\nU.S., Russia Continuing With Tests\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Britain blasted at Russia in tnt>|\nUnited Nations disarmament negotiations Friday, witR\ncharges the Soviet Union is blocking any agreement except\non its own terms.\nDavid Ormsby-Gore, the British, delegate, noted that,''\nRussia had just exploded another nuclear weapon at ito\nSiberian proving grounds.\nIt is ironic, Ormsby-Gore said,\nthat Soviet nuclear weapon tests\ncontinued after the Russian disarmament delegate, Valerian Zorin, upbraided Western powers\nlast Wednesday for continuing\natomic bomb tests; .\nThe United States, too, set off\nanother test blast Friday. It was\nthe 13th atomic blast in the series of tests being carried out in\nNevada.\nAn American comment at Fri-\nMan Believed\nDrowned in\nWindermere\nINVERMERE \u2014 Name of a man\nbelieved to have.drowned Friday\nat Whiteswan Lake, about 20 miles\neast of Canal Flat, had not been\nreleased Friday night.       \u2022\nFailure of a D8 bulldozer driver\nemployed by Dobbin and, Sons,\ncontractors, of Westbank, B. C,\non a forest road project, to return\nfor his lunch Friday alerted a\nsearch by fellow workers, who\nfound tracks of the machine' leading into the lake 65 to 70 feet deep.\nThey later, found his hat by the\nlake.\nRCMP from Kimberley went to\nthe scene immediately.\nThis project 16 part of \"an extensive forest service roed building program in this area for about\na year.\nFACES TRIAL ON\nFORGERY CHARGE\nPRIN.CE GEORGE (CP) \u2014Rev.\nRobert A.. Jenkins has been committed to stand trial in county\ncourt on 31 counts of .forging endorsements on old age pension\nJenkins is accused of forging the\nendorsement of a Mrs. Mary f.\nHorm on monthly old age pension\ncheques issued by the federal Department of Health and Welfare\nfrom December, 1954, to June,\n1956, Inclusiye;\nThe former minister of St. Andrew's Lutheran - Presbyterian\nChurch already is servhjg a year\nin prison after confessing to a\ncharge of obtaining' money by\nfalse pretences.\nday's disarmament conference -....\nthe 150th meeting of the UN subcommittee \u2014 was that tests ar*'\nnot banned now.\nBRITISH COMPLAINT\nThe British delegate complained that Russia apparently\nseeks to make any ban on nuclear\ntests conditional on the 'West's accepting Russian solutions for tho\nproblems of European security.\nThe mood in tha conference appeared somewhat depressed by\nthe news of the two more tests\nof nuclear weapons.\nZorin listened to tha British delegate without any sign of emotion, and then relieved the gloom;\na bit by asking a number of serious questions about the new-\nWestern proposals.\nThese would prohibit nuclear\nweapon tests for a period of taw\nyears, a concession to Russia\nwhich objected to an earlier 10-\nmonth prohibition proposal.\nIt was suggested that, if Zorin\nwishes, the negotiations might be\nadjourned for a week or more to\ngive Russia tima to make its studies.\nAll The Bells to\nRing for Queen\nOTTAWA (CP) ,*. AD 'the beDf\nand chimes in Ottawa are to ring\nout in welcome when Queen Elisabeth .and -Prince Philip arrive la\nthe capual Oct. is for, a tour-day\nvisit \u25a0\n\u2022 Mayor George Nelms \u25a0 said Friday he. will issue a proclamatios\nasking that all church bells and\nchimes throughout the i city ba\nrung .continuously tor 18 minutes.\nThe bell ringing'is to be time*\nso that it .begins just.as the Queen\n-enters the-centre of the. city, at\nroute from Uplands airport on Ottawa's outskirts to> Government\nHouse, where she and the prince\nwill,stay during the visit.\n- Arrangements also are being\nmade, Mayor Nelms sai(Jf*?8 get\nchildren of newly-arrived immigrants to wear costumes characteristic of their native lands when\nthey assemble at Lansdowne Park\nfor a' drive-past by the. royal\ncoupler This drive around the football park will come on tho final\nday of the visit, Oct 16.\nJodoin Seeks Meet\nWith Diefenbaker\nOTTAWA (CP) - President\nClaude Jodoin of the 'Canadian\nLabor Congress conferred Friday\nwith Labor Minister Starr and\nsought a meeting with Prime Minister Diefenbaker on the turbulent\nstrike situation at Murdochville,\nQue.\nThe head of the 1,000,000-mem-\nber organization, who joined the\npicket lines at Murdochville Monday, said later he made no representations to the minister but\nposted him on developments at\nthe Gaspe town and asked him\nto help set up the meeting with\nMr. Diefenbaker.\nMr.  Starr said after the con\nference he would try to set up a\nDiefenbaker-Jodoin meeting, possibly for next Tuesday.\nAt the same time, the minister\nsaid in an interview he regards\nthe federal governmnt as having\nno jurisdiction in the Murdochville\nscrap between the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) ariB\nGaspe Copper Mines Limited.   :'\n\"The questions of a settlement\nof the dispute and of the preservation of law and order in Murdochville lie with the Quebec\nauthorities,\" he said. \"We cannot\nintervene unless we are asked to\ndo so by the provincial authorities.\"\nAnd in This Corner ...\nMUERZZU8CHLAG, Austria (AP)\u2014A 26-year-old typist from\nVienna was peacefully sun-bathing In a field here when a snorting\nbull appeared, Leaving all her clothing, the woman fled.\nSeveral hours later a passing farmer was startled when 'a\nvoice coming from behind a tree pleaded with him to chase the\nbull from the field. ^\nThe girl now Is back In Vienna, nursing a cold.\nCAMP PENDLETON, Va (AP)\u2014Reporter-photographer Hewlett Stith of the Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch got a bang from this\nassignment. \/\nStith came here to take pictures of the'Virginia National Guard\nin training. He stopped to look at a gun range and its radar tracking units.\nSuddenly he let out a yelp. A radar beam had set off a flash\nbulb in his hip pocket. '\nResult: A blister the size of a half-dollar.\nBOWLING GREEN, Va. (AP)\u2014\"We'll get It straightened out In\na day or two,\" says red-faced Chevrolet dealer T. B. Blatt about\nthe huge billboard on the highway near here.\nThe sign, erected for Chevrolet by an advertising agency, declares:' \u25a0\n\"When  money talks, It says Chevrolet.\"\nBut the next line adds: I\n\"See your local Ford dealer.\"\n\u25a0\u00a3.\n 3U-NELS0N DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1957 | Doukhobor Official Soys . . .\nLord Recommendations\n[Constructive Approach\nVANCOUVER (CP) -A.prom-\ninent Doukhobor said Friday that\nthe Lord idquiry recommenda,\ntions on sale of Doukhobor, lands\nwere a constructive approach, but\nhe felt the sale price should be\nbased on the outstanding debt and\nnot the current market price.\nThe fourth interim report by Mr,\nJustice A. E. Lord was made public Thursday. It recommended that\nland formerly owned by Doukhobors that was repossessed by insurance companies during the depression, .then taken over by the\nB. C. government, should be sold\n<i STAR LIGHT!'\n1 DRIVE-IN \u25a0\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n1:00 and 9:15\n\u25a0 \u25a0gaga; jbpEffiflLp\ntiiiSBe9iooBSB'jn\u2122\u00bb.\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEQAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nOne Showing (1:30 p.m.\n\"JHE MAN BEHIND THE GUN\"\nRandolph Scott\n\" \"GENEVIEVE\" (Color)\nKay Kendall, John Gregson\n\u25a0p^a^^HiiapsMMspqniM\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B. C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"SAFARI\" (Tech-Cine) \u2022\nVictor Mature, Janet Leigh\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n2 Shows Nightly at 6:45\n'GUNFIGHT AT O.K. CORRAL'\n(Tech.-VistaVis)on)\nBurt Lancaster, Kirk Donglas\n'      NEWS\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTime Appro*. 8:15.\n\"The King ond I\" (Cine)\nDeborah Kerr, Yule Bryner\nTravelogue \u2014 Cartoons\nTo Appeal\nFruit Grower's\nConviction\nI Exhibition Entries\nRunning Ahead of '56\n.\nf:    More than 100 individual entries\n3 have come in to date for the competitive part of the West Kootenay\nI fedilbltion.\nI This is more than he'd keen re-\n,1 eelved to the same time prior to\nj last year's Exhibition, and effi-\n:; tills say that If the rat* con-\n\"- Unties, there will be a record en-\ni try.\nAs many entries have come In\n, by mall as hava been delivered\nI personally, indicating ' strong In-\nI terest in the district.\n1 Two groups have already en-\n! tered the highly competitive sec-\n1 tion for women's organizations,\n| for which a first prire of $40, se-\nS cond prize of $25 and third prize\n| Former Nelsonite,\n| Brother of\nI Mrs. Affleck, Dies\nI A  former  resident of Nelson,\n\u00a7 Rev. James McDougall, died re-\n\u00ab cently in Scotland. He was an ac-\n\u201e countant in the Imperial Bank in\nj Nelson about the turn of the cen\n! tury and was an Anglican rector\nj hi Vancouver for 15 years.\nI He Is survived by his widow and\nI two brothers and two sisters, one\n' of whom, Mrs. T. Spencer of West-\n. view, B. C.,,,taught school In the\n| Nelson district about 50 years ago\n| and the other sister, Mrs. Boyd\nI C. Affleck, resides In Nelson.\nof $15 are at stake. This was topped last year by Fairview Catho-\nlle Women's League.\nUlth Battery\n\"News\nDally orders, part 1, by Lieut\nF. W. M. Drew, commanding officer, 111th MAA Battery, RCA.\nCA (M).\nDuties\u2014Orderly NCO, Aug. 2#\nBdr. M. G. Bennett; Sept. J\/L-\nBdr. J. Denholm. \/\nParades\u2014Training, Aug. 27, 1950\nhours, as per syllabus; Aug. 29,\nsports, 1950 hours. ^\u2014\nDress\u2014Training, sports parades,\ncasual.\nAnnual Inspection will be held\nSept. 17 at the Armory. Members\nknowing persons Interested in\njoining, the unit are asked to have\nthem.jotn -before Sept. 3, so they\ncan be fitted vwith uniforms. Newcomers may join during the week\nfrom 9 to 5, or on Tuesday or\nThursday nights from 8 to 10.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Vancouver lawyer acting for fruit\nfarmer Peter James Sherstobitoff\nof Creston said Friday he will\nappeal the farmer's conviction for\nviolating, a regulation of the B.C.\nFruit Board.\nShersobitoff, charged with contravening board regulations by\ntrucking fruit for direct sale jn\nAlberta, was fined $25 and costs\nin Cranbrook court.Thursday.\nLawyer' Col. C. C. I. Merritt\nclaimed Friday certain regulations\npassed by the board are dictatorial\nand invalid.\n\"Parliament gave the board\npower to regulate inter-provincial\nfruit trade, not suppress it,\" he\nsaid.\nKELOWNA 1CP) -J. G. Campbell, chairman of the B. C. Fruit\n\\ Board, Friday welcomed the court\nruling handed down Thursday in\nCranbrook which upheld the principle of orderly marketing.\n\"This legislation which has the\nsupport of the majority of growers\nenables us te move a large volume of fruit to market in an orderly manner,\" Mr. Campbell\nsaid.\n\"To have it upheld by the magistrate means a great deal to the\nindustry as we have ample proof\nthat central selling is vital to the\ngrowers interests.\n\"I certainly hope the court's decision will deter1 the small number of growers who, In trying to\nsell their fruit outside of the\nscheme, are only undermining orderly marketing and trying to\ntake advantage of those growers\nwhose efforts are stabilizing the\nmarkets.\"\nP. S. Sherstobitoff charged with\nviolating the orders of the-Fruit\nBoard by transporting fruit to the\n,prairies, was fined $25, with $72\ncosts in Cranbrook Thursday.\nback to the sect at 60 per cent of\nits market value.\nPeter S. faminow, secretary-\ntreasurer of the Union of Independent Doukhobors of Canada, said\nhe personally felt it was the first\nconstructive approach to the problem.\nHe said the solution .was not\nentirely adequate, but it was encouraging that the government,\nafter prolonged inactivity on the\nland problem, should finally' put\nforward a positive formula,\nMr. Faminow said he preferred\nthe system used in Alberta. Under\nthis, the authorities first decided\nthe priority among claimants.\nThen they found out the debt outstanding.\nThen the. land was classified according to value, and the debt was\nshared among the lots on a pro\nrata basis. Finally, the payments\nwere not decided on a fixed percentage, as Mr. Justice Lord suggested, but on the basis of the individual's ability to pay.\nCatholic Clergy\nTransfers Announced\nClergy  appointments  were  aij-j ceivlng his Bachelor of Arts denounced this week during the an-1 gree.\nnual retreat for priests of the Ordained March 29,1952, in Holy\nRoman Catholic Diocese pf Nelson.! Family Church, Toronto, by Bi-\nThe retreat was held at Notre i Shop Johnson, Father Cullen was\nDame College, i assistant pastor at Kelowna that\n. Rev, L. J. Smith, pastor at Na-i summer, professor of biology at\nkusp, becomes Rector and Bursar \"\"'\"\"\nof Notre Dame College,\nONE GOOD YEAR\nA pistachio tree will produce\nfruit heavily one year, little or\nnone the next.\nMODERN\nPRESCRIPTION\nSERVICE\nPrompt and Courteous-\nFree City Delivery\nMail Orders Prepaid\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your  Fortress of  Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\nMounties Win\nSAN DIEGO (AP) \u2014 Vancouver\npounded out 15 hits, including two\nhome runs by Jim Marshall, to\nscore a 14-3 Pacific Coast League\nvictory over San Diego Friday\nnight.\nMel Held, who scattered eight\nhits, gained his eighth victory\nagainst five losses. Ed Casque, the\nfirst of four San Diego pitchers,\nlost his seventh. He has a like\nnumber of wins. '\nVancouver .. 015 053 000-14 15 2\nSan Diego ....  300 000 000\u2014 3  8 1\nHeld and Atwell; Gasque, Mesa\n(3), Nichols (4), Bell (4) and Jones.\n$25 FINE\nG. R. Malone of Trail was fined\n$25 and costs Friday after he\npleaded guilty before provincial\ncourt Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans to speeding on the\nNorth Shore.\nTraffic Notice\nThe Smelter Hill at Trail will be closed\nfor repairs starting 7:00 a.m. Tuesday,\nAugust 27,1957. All traffic will be de-\ntoured through Warfield.\n3E  CORPORATION  OF\nDISTRICT OF TADANAC\nim\nOil Soon to Equal\nStorage Facilities\nSPOKANE (AP) - Test production of oil at the Sunshine Mining Company's new well at Ocean\nCity, Wash., is continuing at a rate\nthat will soon fill available storage facilities there, president Robert M. Hardy Jr. said Friday.\n\"So far we have heard from only\none horizon,\" he said. \"There are\nseveral more potential producing\nhorizons in the depth already\ndrilled.\"\nA. F. Wynne, manager of tho\nc o m p a n y's patroleum division,\nsaid the well is flowing at the\nrate of 226 barrels a day \"and\nlooks better than it ever did to\nme.\"\n\"Easing pressure has been reduced so we can get the optimum\noutput from the well,\" he said.\n\"If we desired, we could let the\noil roar out of the ground at more\nthan 400 barrels a day, but what\nwould happen to our natural pressure then?\"\nTwo Pass\nSwim Tests\nMichael Ozelle and Lucille Johnson passed their junior and intermediate Red Cross swimming\ntests respectively at Lakeside\nPark on Friday.\nMost of the students took their\ntests Monday, but examiner Robert Stangroom arranged a special session because Michael and\nLucille were away at',the time.\nThis completes all the Red Cross\nwater tests for this year.\nFormer Kelson\nWoman Honored\nSunday, August 11, was set aside\nas \"Isabelle Jerram Day\" at the\nFort Kobbe Chapel as two of her\nher compositions were presented\nduring Protestant services and\nmembers of the congregation bade\nher farewell at a \"coffee call\" following services, a release from\nUnited States Army Caribbean\nheadquarters, Fort Amador, Canal\nZone, states.\nMrs! Jerram. and-her husband,\nCapt. Jerrald ,M. Jerram, commander pf the 20thj Infantry Service Company, are former natives\nof Nelson, where they met in high\nschool. Mrs. Jerram is the former\nIsabelle . Younge and, her sister,\nMrs. G. K. DeLong! resides on\nUpper Granite Road.\nAt the special service, Mrs. Jer-\nram's latest anthem, an arrangement of the Twenty Third Psalm,\nwas sung by a choral group including herself and fellow members of the Kobbe choir, and her\npecial Easter composition\nGreater Love Hath No Man,\"\nwas given as a solo by Mrs. Mildred Crawford.\n\"As we all know, Isabelle has\nbeen most generous with her time\nand talents.\" Chaplain (Capt.)\nThomas L. McMinn, Jr., declared,\n\"She has directed our Junior\nChoir, Senior Choir, most recently\nserved as a member of the Senior\nChoir! We especially remember\nher for her work in the1 choral\nChristmas and Easter stories by\nthe Junior Choir f both of which\nwere televised over CFN.\n\"A compter as well as a director, she has written many pieces\nof sacred music. We have been\nmost fortunate to have such a person working with us in the chapel\nprogram, one who had invested so\nheavily of her time and talent in\nGod's work. It is with extreme re.\ngret we see her leave.\"\nLEAVING ZONE '\nCapt. and Mrs. Jerram, commander of the 20th Infantry's Service Company, and their three\nchildren^were to leave the Canal\nZone for the United States on' Saturday, Aug. 17, aboard the USNS\nGibbins.\nMrs. Jerram also has been honored for contributions to other\ncommunity activities at Kobbe. In\nMay she was appointed to the\nKobbe Hall of Fame and her picture added to the display at the\npost theatre.\nShe. was honored for her work\nas distaff president\u2014a key post\nin the Woman's distaster control\norganization\u2014and her subseouent\nservice as distaff briefing officer;\nher leadershiD in the Officers'\nWives Club; her membership on\nthe post chapel board; choir work,\nahd other youth activities.\nThe Jerrams and their three\nchildren\u2014Vance, 8, Jerryl, 6, and\nValeria, 3\u2014expect to move to\nSeattle.\nRev. Dermot Cullen, editor and\ncirculation manager of The Prospector, Diocese newspaper, becomes pastor of Our Lady of\nLourdes, Nakusp, and missions.\nRev. M. J. Guinan, becomes assistant pastor at Immaculate Conception Church in Rusland. Rev.\nJ. F. Postmar formerly of Notre\nDame, becomes editor of The Prospector.\nFather Smith was born June 27,\n1919, in Quincy, Ifassachusetet, son\nof the late Mr- and Mrs. William\nSmith. He attended St. John's\nSchool there, then St. Clements\nSchool in Canton, Mass. He took\nhis secondary school work at St.\nFrancis Xavier Minor Seminary in\nDuxbUry, Mass., attended Sacred\nHeart College in Girard, Pennsyl-\nvanis, also St. Augustine's Seminary in Toronto.\nHe was ordained April 25, 1948,\nFeast of St. Mark, in his home\nparish, St. John's Church, Quincy,\nIt was the first ordination in that\nchurch. He was appointed assistant\nRev. F. Monagham at Kimberley,\nthen served, as editor of The Prospector for one and one-half years\nbefore, going to Nakusp in December, 1952. He was also diocesan\ndirector of the Catholic Youth. Organization.\nSon of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Cullen\nof Toronto, Father Dermot Cullen\nwas born September 15, 1924, in\nToronto. Primary education was\nat Holy Family School, and secondary education was at St.\nMichael's College. Father Cullen\nwept to the University of Toronto\nand St. Augustine's .Seminary, re-\nNotre Dame from 1952 to 1958,\nand second assistant at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate. He was\nalso CYO director for Nelson deanery, diocesan director of Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, and\ndiocesan director of the religious\nvacation school.\nFather, John Francis Postma\ncame here from Holland a few\nyears ago. His parents, Mr. and\nMrs, A. Postma, still live in The\nHague, where Father Postma was\nborn. He took his primary school\nwork there, and went to St, Paul's\nCollege, Sterksel, Holland, and\nSt. Charles' College, Boxtel, Holland, for secondary education. He\nattended St. Boniface's Seminary\nin S'Heerenberg, Holland, and St,\nAugustine's in Toronto.\nFather Postma was ordained\nJune 5, 1954, in Nelson.\n54th Battalion\nReunion Tonight\nMrs. Gansner\nTo London\nMrs. L. S,\" Gansner of Nelson\nleft Thursday by plane for London, England, where her father,\nthe former John Harvey Of Vio-\ntoria, B.C., died recently.\nPlans Nearly\nComplete for\nUBC Meeting\nPlans for the annual meeting\nnext month of the Union of B. C.\nMunicipalities are nearing com-\njletion, convention chairman Aid.\nC. F. Blakeman said Friday.\nLineup of guest speakers is not\nyet finished. There will be six\nbusiness sessions in the Civic\nTheatre, with two receptions sponsored by local businesses, three,\nluncheonsi and two evening \"-.banquets in the Civic Centre.\nCouncil met In committee Wednesday night to 'discuss the plans.\nThe UBCM executive will meet\nSeptember 24, and a \"run-through\"\nof the civil defence orientation\ncourse will be held for aldermen\nconnected with civil defence. Business sessions start September 25,\nending September 27.\nMore than 700 reservations have\nbeen received so far, and visitors,\nwho include wives accompanying\ntheir husbands, will be housed\n\"everywhere we can possibly\nhouse them,\" Aid. Blakeman said.\nCo-operation has been received\nfrom most hotels and motels, and\nAid. Blakeman said guests may\nhave to be pjaced as far out as\nBalfour. Aid. George Mermet is\naccommodations chairman.\nA tour of'the South Slocan power\nplant and a motor cavalcade up\nKootenay Lake have been arranged to entertain the wives.\nIIHI\"ii';;;ii;illllllllllllllllll'llllllll\nBig Grocery Bill\nAt Cadet Camp\nVERNON (CP)-Catering officer K. L. McLean says 1000\narmy cadets ate their way\nthrough more than 60 tons of\npotatoes during their summer\ncamp here which closes this\nweekend.\n\u25a0 They also put away more\nthan 30 tons of meat, three\ntons of cereals, 90,000 eggs,\nfive tons of butter, five tons of\nbacon, three and a half tons\nof turkey and almost fourtons\nof jam, he said.\nCamp officials say a, check\nshowed cadets attending last\nyear's camp put on an aver-,\nage pf four pounds, seven\nounces.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllll'\nMembers of Lt.-Col. A. H. G.\nKembell's old 54th battalion gather\nherq, today Ior their 18th reunion\nsince the First World War.\nC< H. Bradshaw of Trail, president of the association, said that\nabout 35 members of the infantry\nunit, which was recruited in the\nKootenays and dissolved after the\nend of the war, will attend the reunion.\nThe 54th battalion came into\nbeing as a result of efforts on the\npart of a British Indian army veteran, Col. Kembell, who was living in the Kootenays when the\nwar broke out. He was killed during an engagement at Somme.\nMr. Brandshaw said 350 of the\noriginal 1,100 members came\nback. Two of the more distinguished members are public works\nminister Howard Green, and H. W.\nHerridge, West Kootenay CCF\nmember of parliament.\nThere are only 12 members left\nin Nelson, and some in other Kot\nenay points. One man is coming\nfrom Penticton and another in\nVancouver said he would be unable to attend! R. G. Howe of Nelson said.\nDavid Thompson\nOfficially Opened\nINVERMERE - Official opening\nof the new David Thompson Memorial Park was the feature event\nFriday at the East Kootenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition.\nCarole Portman of Invermere\nwas chosen queen of the Fair in\na contest sponsored by the Invermere Junior Hospital Aid. Runner-\nup was Helen Tarmiston of Canal\nP'lat. Crowning ol the new queen\nby retiring queen Ann MacKill of\nInvermere will be a feature of the\nFair today. The Cranbrook City\nBand will lead a parade at noon,\nand the, festivities will be held\nafter.    -\nA record was set Friday for\nfirst-day attendances, with many\nbeing present from Kootenay and\nAlberta points.\nKerry Wood pf Red Deer, noted\nauthor, was a hit as barbecue\nmaster, and also unveiled a crest\nin the new park.  Designed by\nWindermere artist Beverly Harris, it shows Mount Nelson, which\nThompson named. A lone star!\nrepresent the great geographer.\nMaster of ceremonies R. N. Talbot of Calgary introduced Charles\nLandwell, great-grandson of David\nThompson, and the two Columbia\nRiver adventurers, E. G. Stanley\nand Peter Swann. R. O. Newton,\nMLA for Columbia, also spoke.\nRunning in conjunction with the\nFair is a two-day stampede on new\nstampede grounds in the Park.\nCowboys from many B.C. and Al-\nVeteran of\nIwo Wars Dies\nA veteran of both World Wars,\nMalcolm MacLeod, 65, who had\nlived at Taghum the past four\nyears, died Thursday in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\nMr. MacLeod enlisted in the\nFirst War in 1916, was wounded\nat Vimy Ridge, and discharged\nin 1919. He spent some time at\nYorkton, Saskatchewan, was\nminer at Smithers, and later a\njanitor here. He enlisted again in\n1940, and was discharged in 1945.\nBorn in Stornoway, Scotland, he\nhas no known relatives jn this\ncountry.\nCAROLE PORTMAN\n. . . Chosen queen\nberta points are taking part, and\nwinners will not be announced until after the final evdn tonight.\nOnly casualty Friday was Larry\nTegart, who brbke some ribs in the\nbareback event.\nINVERMERE - Completion of\njudging at East Kdotenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition\nproduced the following winners:\nPoultry, Carl Jones, Invermere;\ndairy produce, Echo Poultry Farm,\nInvermere; fruit, J. A. McDonald,\nFlagstone; grain and grass seed,\nWinston Wolfenden; forage crops.\nJ: A. McDonald, Flagstone; seed\npotatoes, R. B. Harris, Windermere; vegetables, Lim Man You,\nInvermere. I\nLake Windermere stampede\nopened Friday afternoon and will\ncontinue today. Results of fall fair\nqueen contest were to be announced Friday night following official\nopening of the new David Thompson Memorial Park by Kerry Wood\nof Red Deer:\nAttendance is good and weather\n^perfect for this 46th annual Fall\nFair.\nNelson Air Cadett\nDoing Well at Camp\nDonn Livingstone of Nelson,\nnow at the Royal Canadian Air\nForce Cadet's camp at Abbots-\nford, is a member of the international drill team that will compete\nSaturday against an American\nteam at the Pacific National. Exhibition in Vancouver.\nAnother Nelson cadet, Nick\nFenger is also reported to be doing well at the camp.\nHerridge Here\nH. W. Herridge. MP for Kootenay West, is to arrive in Nelson\ntoday and will be here until Tuesday.   .\nLUGGAGE\ntitiMvalL\nSee  The   Spanking   New\nJet-Flyte\nand\nStar-Fire\nSeries\nBy  McBRINt-\nOPEN STOCK     \u2022\n3bo WADE'Sphono\nBaker \u00ab \u00abl\/6 J 1350\nBomb Barrage\nOpens CNE\nBy RICHARD  RAYMOND\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) - A multicolored .salute of aerial bombs\nburst in a staccato barrage over\nToronto's western waterfront Friday as Lieutenant - Governor\nBreithaupt of Ontario officially\nopened the Canadian National Exhibition for 1957.\nThe lientenant-governbr grinned\nbroadly as he closed a remote-\ncontrol switch' releasing the sa-\ndute.\nThe salute marked the beginning of the fortnight-long 79 th\nCNE and ended the opening ceremonies, attended,by CNE officials\nand a group of national and local\ndignitaries, including Finance\nMinister Fleming.\nMr. Breithaupt referred to the\nCNE as an \"international, force\"\noperating in Canada'and urged\nCNE officials to develop it more\nasv an international trade fair to\nfoster Canadian trade and help\nreduce Canada's \"steep and dangerous\" foreign trade deficit.\nThe Canadian International\nTrade Fair was discontinued two\nyears ago.\nUnited Lutheran\nServices Delayed\nIt will not be possible for the\nUnited Lutheran Church, which\nwill be using the former St. Paul's\nUnited Church for its services, to\nbegin worship services before September 8, Rev. E. H. Nygaard,\npastor, said Friday.\nAt that time, the Sunday school\narrangements will be announced.\nDecision Toddy\nOn Doukhobor\nGirl's Custody\nDecision will be given this mor.\nning as to whether 10-year-old\nPatsy Gienger will return to the\nNew Denver dormitory school or\nbe allowed to live with one of her\naunts.\nThe case was conducted. Friday\nbefore family court judge William\nEvans. Corporal Alexander Boro\ndula of Nelson RCMP detachment\nand lawyer John Steeves of Van\ncouver, presented the two sides\nof the case. Patsy is the oldest\nchild of Mrs. Mary Gienger, who\ncommitted. suicide earlier this\nsummer at Krestova. The widow's\nother two, children are below the\nschool age.\nPatsy was given permission to\nleave ' the school to attend her\n(mother's funeral and is living with\nMrs. Gienger's sister, Miss Helen\nAntifaev of Crescent Valley. Also\nseeking custody of the child is the\nfather's sister, Miss Helen Gienger of New Westminster. Both\npromised to send the child to\nschool.\nCourt was advised that application will be made within the next\n10 days to the Supreme Court for\ncustody of all three children. The\nsuperintendent of child welfare,\nnow Patsy's legal guardian, was\nof the opinion the girl should be\nreturned to-New Denver awaiting\nthis decision.\nBoth aunts appeared in court\nFriday.\nThe Weather\nNELSON\n51   81   \u2014\nMAKE\n\u25a0cCSft-i\nLAST AU YEAR LONG J.\n\u2014^ ~T-\u2014;\u2014'r-r^7mim\ni^m. Capture it all in Snapshots    \u25a0\u00ab'-*\u25a0\nMake Us Your Headquarters\nFor Cameras, Equipment and Film\nfijtZMd\u00a3UfJL   CAMERA STORE\n497  BAKER  ST        9^\u00a3jtiWt\nTALENT SHOW\nHELD AT CAMP\nHere we are, the eighth day at\nCamp Koolaree, and just can't\nseem to realize where the time\nflew.\nAt breakfast the two girls from kl\nthe kitchen staff had to wait on \u00bb^|\nthe flunky and his helper. Such\nsloppy waitresses! The bread was\neither too thick or too tliin.\nWe started with a discussion cf\nthe Lord's Prayer at chape). At\nlunch we were told it was to be\ngirls' day. The first mates automatically ibecame cabin leaders.\nJane Daly as Chief First Mate became \"Ritchie,\" and the pursers\ntook on the other jobs. Sally Eaton\nbecame Barb Humphries, ' Aria\nBallentine the nurse, Erla Shannon \\he camp mother, Heather\nMcLean the \"sporty,\" Linda Christie as \"Kayo,\" and Janet Anderson as \"Maysy.\"\nAs a treat we all went to Chapel\nBeach for swimming. We had a\ngrand time and the water wrs\nlovely. Dinner was a riot, with\nthe leaders acting up as campers.\nTonight we put on a talent show.\nThey say there were television\nscouts on hand for the occasion. \/\nEveryone performed royally as wa\nhad two visitors frorn^ \"Buckingham Palace.\" Our winners wera\nBrenda Sanft, baton twirling; Gail \u2022\nKrueger, German song; Maureen\nTheil, acrobatic dancer; Margare'.\nHill, elocution.\nAs it was girls' day, the leader?-\nhad to put on the skit. The play\nthey put on was called \"Overheard by a Bluebird.\" An act wes\nput on based on conversations\naround the camp, which proved\nboth surprising and hilarious.\nCourt House to\nGet Cleaning\nCleaning the exterior of the Nel\nson Court House in preparation for\nB. C.'s centennial next year, will\nbegin next week, government\nagent K. D. McRae announced\nFriday. The job will be done by\nJ. Boshard and Sons of Vancou-\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\n410 Kootenay St. \u2022\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1630        Nights 544-R\nSWEATERS\nSWEATERS\nSWEATERS\nFall Sweaters in a galaxy\nof colors and styles ....\n-jfc- Tony Day.\n^ y\/anen\nFULL FASHIONED: machine washable. Moth-proof.\nChoose from literally dozens ol\ncolors tn pullovers, sleeveless,\nzests, coats and cardigans. \u2014\ngee the new BAN-LON pullovers; exclusively to Warren.\nYou'll like the prices. ,\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\n 33^7\nSlocan Fall Fair Draws\nMore Entries Than Ever\nSLOCAN CITY - The third an- ond\nnual Slocan Women's Institute Fall\nFair produced good quality exhibits, and many more entries than in\nprevious years.\nJudges were Mr. and Mrs. F. H.\nW. Chanter and Mrs. C. Shannon\n61 Willow Point. Mrs. C. Bjerg of\nSlocan City.judged the art section.\nMrs. E. Storgard welcomed visitors. A varied musical program\nfeaturing local teenagers was enjoyed by the large number ol visitors in attendance. Tea was also\nserved. i\n\u2022 Mrs. P. S. Popoff, Slocan Park,-\nwon the prize for the most entries,\nBO.    -\nA patchwork quilt made by Institute members was won by Mrs.\nJ. Murphy, Fort St. John, B.C.\nA special display table featuring\nhand-made dolls of different nations by Mrs. W. Jensen and art\nand driftwood handicrafts by Mrs.\nBjerg interested the crowd.\nPrize winners in   the   various\nclasses are as follows:\nFLOWERS\nAsters, three blooms, assorted\ncolors, Mrs. J. Life, first, Sharon\nPinchbeck, second'; carnations,\nsix blooms, Mrs. J. Gordon, first,\nPopoff, first; clarkia, three spikes,\nnrV color, Mrs. F. 'Konkin, first;\ndahlia, pompom, three blooms,\nMrs. F. Konkin, first, Mrs. P. S.\nPopoff, second; dahlia, large, three\nblooms, mixed colors, Mrs. P. S.\nPopoff, first, Mrs. F. Konkin, second; gladioli, three spikes, any\ncolor, Mrs. P. Konkin, first, Mrs.\nK., Life, second; gladiolus', one\nspike, Miss J. Pinchbeck, first,\nMrs. Zita Hicks, second; godetias,\nsix spikes, any color, Mrs. If?, Life,\nfirst; golden glow, six spikes, Mrs.\nP. \"S. Popoff, first, Mrs. E. Storgard, second; marigolds, African,\nsix blooms, Mrs. J. Gordon, first,\nMrs. P. S. Popoff, second; nasturtiums, best bowl, Mrs. P. S.\nPopoff, first, Mrs. J. Moran, second.\nPansies, 12 blooms, mixed colors, Mrs. F. Konkin, -first, Mrs. P.\nS. Popoff, second; petunias, single,\nthree blooms, Mrs. H. O'Neail,\nfirst, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, second;\npetunirjs, double, three blooms,\nMrs. P. S. Popoff, second; phlox,\nperennial, three blooms, any color,\nMrs. M. Hird, first, Mrs. T. Mori-\nshita, second; roses, one bloom,\nany color, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first;\nsnapdragon, six spikes, mixed colors, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first; Mrs.\nH. O'Neail, second; stocks, three\nspikes, any color, Mrs. L. Anderson, first; Mrs. K. Terakita, second; sweet peas, collection, krs.\nK. Terakita, first, Mrs. M. Osis,\nsecond; zinnias, six blooms, mixed colors, Mrs. P. Popoff, first;\nMrs. K. Terakita, second; house\nplant, foliage, Mrs. E. Storgard,\nfirst, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, second;\nhouse plant, flowering, Mrs. M.\nSmedbol, first, Mrs. T. Morlshita,\nsecond; best arrangement basket\nof flowers, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first;\nbest arrangement bowl or vase,\nMrs. J. Dechkoff, first, Mrs. T.\nMorishita, second; tuberous begonia in pot, Mrs. T. Morishita,\nfirst; Miss J. Pinchbeck, second;\nroses, three blooms, any color,\nMrs. K. Life, first. ,\nVEGETABLES\nBeets, six, Mrs. M. Osis, first;\nMrs. F. Konkin, second; beans, six\nyellow, six green, Mrs. W. Verigin, first, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, sec-\ncarrots, six long, Mrs. J.\nPowski, first, Mrs. M. Osis, second; carrots, six short, Mrs. P. S.\nPopoff,' first; cucumbers, 2, Mr. J.\nPowski, first, Mrs. L. Anderson,\nsecond; tomatoes, six green, Mrs.\nP. S. Popoff, first, Mrs. L. Anderson, second; tomatoes, six red,\nMrs.. Konkin, first, Mrs. Verigin\nsecond; onions, six, Mrs. P. S.\nPopoff, first; Mrs. F. Konkin, second; cabbage, two, Mrs. E. Storgard, first; Mrs. M. Hird.\nCauliflower, two, Mrs. M. Osis,\nfirst, Mrs. M, Hird, second; corn,\nsix sweet, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first,\nMrs. F.'Konkin, second; peas, 12\npods, Mrs. B. Mills, first, Mrs. E.\nStorgard, second; potatoes, 12\nwhite, Mrs. J. Dechkoff, first, Mrs.\nW. Verigin, second; potatoes, 12\nred, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first, Mrs.\nF. Konkin, second; pumpkin, one\ngarden, Mrs. J. Gordon, first;\nsquash, one hubbard green or gold,\nMrs. I. .Anderson, first; Mrs. J.\nMichiels, second; marrow, one,\nMrs. P. S. Popoff, first.\nBAKING\nWhite bread, Mrs. M. Osis, first,\nMrs. J. Moran, second, Mrs. E.\nStorgard, third; white bread (special prize), Mrs. M. Osis, first,\nMrs. L. Anderson, second, Mrs. E.\nStorgard, third; brown bread, Mrs.\nM. Osis, first, Mrs. E, Storgard,\nsecond, Mrs. J. Moran, third; milk\nrolls, Mrs. F. Konkin,1 first, Mrs.\nE. Storgard, second, Mrs. M. Osis\nthird; cinnamon buns, Mrs. E.\nStorgard, first, Mrs. F. Konkin,\nsecond; Mrs, M. Osis, third; bak-.\ning powder biscuits, Mrs. H.\nO'Neail, first, Mrs. M. Hird, second.\nButter cake, iced or frosted,\nMrs. F. Konkin, first, Mrs. J. Bou-\ndier, second; apple pie, Mrs. J.\nMoran, first, Mrs. Fannie Anderson, second; raisin pie, Mrs. D.\nHird, first, Mrs. Fannie Anderson,\nsecond; chocolate cake, Mrs. J.\nLife, first, Mrs. V. Lister, second,\nMrs. E. Robison, third; sponge\ncake, Mrs. V. Lister, first, Miss V.\nVerigin, second, Mrs. M. Osis,\nthird.\nCHILDREN'S ART\nsix to 10 years, pencil drawing,\nDoug Swanson, first, Terry Simmons, second, Lorraine Kinakin,\nthird; water coloring, Jeanette,\nfirst, L. Markin, second, M. Kal-\nmakoff, third; eleven to 14 years,\npencil drawing, A. Lawrenoff, first,\nBetty Hawka, second, Betty Haw-\nka, third; water coloring, Janet\nHird, first, A. Kooznetsoff, second,\nD. Clough,'third; Fifteen to 18\nyears, water coloring, Zita Hird,\nfirst.\nFANCYWORK\nEmbroidered pillow slips, Mrs.\nP. S. Popoff, first, Miss V. Verigin,\nsecond; patterned knitted sweater,\nsize 6 to 16 years, Mrs. P. Konkin,\nfirst; patterned knitted sweater,\nsize six months to five years, Mrs.\nJ. Boudier, first, Mrs. P, S. Pop-\no'ff, second; northland sweater, any\nsize, Mrs. H. Gustafson, first, Mrs.\nH. Gustafson, second;.men's knitted socks, Mrs. W. Verigin, first;\nknitted mitts, any size, Mrs. K.\nLife, first, Mrs. P. S, Popoff, second; crocheted doilie, Mrs. W.\nGreenwood, first, Uv\\. W. Greenwood, second; crocheted tablecloth, Mrs. H. Gustafson, first,\nMiss V. Verigin, second; embroidered luncheon cloth, Mrs. Lyn\nHicks, first, Mrs. J. Boudier, second; child's garment made from\nworn garment, Mrs. P. S. Popoff,\nfirst, Mrs. V. Lister, second.\nJAM AND CANNING ,\nStrawberry -jam, Mrs. M. Osis,\nfirst; raspberry jam, Mrs. V. Adams, first, Mrs. M. Osis, second;\ncanned peas, Mrs. M. Osis, first,\nMrs. P. S. Popoff, second; canned\nbeans, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first,\nMrs, L, Anderson, second; canned\ncarrots, Mrs. P. S. Popoff, first;\ncanned strawberries, Fannie Anderson, first; canned raspberries,\nMrs. M. Osis, first, Mrs! R. jGor-\ndon, second; canned cherries,\nMrs. P. S. Popoff, first, Mrs. R.\nMills, second; canned apricots,\nMrs. V-. Lister, first, Fannie Anderson, second; canned peaches, Mrs.\nV. Lister, first.\nPilot- Ma|ces Skillful\nLanding, Engine\nDead, Other Afire\nMONTREAL (CP)-An amphib\nian aircraft with one engine dead,\nthe other afire and its landing\ngear stuck, was landed Safely by\na Vancouver pilot in Lake St.\nLouis Thursday.\nVeteran bush pilot Jimmy Phil-\nlipsen of Vancouver said:\n\"It was nothing much. We've\nhad tougher moments before but\nthey are usually way up north on\nsome lake where nobody's\naround.\"\nCo-pilot Jimmy Balfour of Oshawa, Ont., said the stricken Canso\naircraft had been circling Dorval\nairport here with a dead engine.'\nWhen the other caught fire, Phil-\nlrpsen peeled off for the lake.\nGAPING HOLES in the earth have been carved by men and machinery working on the East Trail Itorm sewer project, which is SO per cent complete. Streets\nhave been torn up in this district for several weeks, requiring traffic to detour in\nmany instances.-rA. L. Frying photo.\nHistory Re-enacted as\nTwo Adventurers Land\nINVERMERE \u2014 E. G. Stanley plorer David Thompson landed his\nand Peter Swann of Edmonton ar-\nrived on schedule after a leisurely\ntrip up the Columbia to avoid arriving too soon at the pre-arranged\nwelcoming ceremony on the beach\nat Lake WiifBermere where ex-\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount tor prompt payment.\nWill lease 3-bedroom house $65\na month. Phone 1020-Y.\nHoliday Dance at Procter\nAugust 31st. Everyone welcome.\nBaby Budgies, just off the nest.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nThe Cutest Souvenirs, Novelties at\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nFor Sale: Nine cubic foot fridge.\nPhone 1627-R-l.\nSoccer team leaves at 10:45 this\nmorning for Riondel.\nHousekeeper to take full charge.\nH. Nixon, Appledale.\nNelson Tennis Club Beach Party\nat the Timbers tonight.\nFleury's Drug Store\nOpen Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.\nFisherman's Headquarters.\nTILLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C,\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nHeating installations and service\nGas or oil. Norm Bowcock, Ph. 385\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Neblon\nHEY, KIDS!\nEnter your favorite models in\nthe 1957 Fall Fair and win one of\nthe valuable prizes.\nA Message to Ex-Teachers\n\u201e From\nThe Minister of Education\nThe public schools of the Province again require the'\nhelp of trained teachers who are not at present teaching.\nQualified ex-teachers who are free to do so can perform at this time a yery important public service to the\nchildren of British Columbia by indicating; that they will\nconsider returning to teaching.\nIf you are willing to give some thought to this matter,\nplease complete the information required on the following coupon and mail immediately to the1 Department of\nEducation, Victoria, B. C. You will then receive information as to those areas requiring teachers.\nLESLIE R. PETERSON,\nMinister of Education.\n(N.B. This coupon Involves no formal commitment.)\nFull   Name    _ \u00bb\t\nMaiden name, If married  -   .\u201e\t\nAddress _,_._   __\t\nAge    .\"      Telephone   No.     \t\nType   of   Certificate \u201e_\t\nProvince  where  Certificate   was   Issued      _\nYears  of  Teaching   Experience      _\t\nDo you prefer to leach In your home community ?    \u201e. \t\nWould you be willing to teach elsewhere in B.C. 7  _ \u201e\t\nSignature.\nEarly, and Gravenstein apples\nand plums for sale. Phone 1056-L.\nNew ladies dresses and skirts\nA good fall selection in all sizes\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nH. W. Herridge will be in Nelson at the Hume Hotel, Aug. 24, 25,\n26 and 27.\nDry slab wood for sale, $11.50\nfor 4 ft., cord; $15.50 for 12 inch\ncord. Phone 330-L.\nGood selection: Used Bicycles,\n$7.50 up. I\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\nYour\n'one stop\" back to school\nstore.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBeautiful Wedding Flowers\nFashion-Styled at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER  SHOP\n1956 B.S.A. motorcycle, just gone\n800 miles, $225.00.\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\nPiano\u2014Solid Mahogany, A-l\u2014$225\nWE PAY CASH\nFOR USED FURNITURE\nBDJCH'S FURNITURE \u2014 PH. 47\nPhone 505 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n& permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 211. Phone 1922.\nTHE GREEN DOOR\nOpen 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily.\nEnjoy your favorite tune while\nhaving the best milk shake in town\nDacron and Terrylene Pillows.\nNon albigue and washable.\nReg. $6.95 for $5.95.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nMetal medicine cabinets with\nplate glass mirrors and shelves.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.'\n101 Hall St. - Nelson - Phone 156\nRENT A LOCKER TODAY AND\nSTART TO SAVE. A LIMITED\nNUMBER AVAILABLE. FARMERS QUICK FREEZE LOCKER\nPLANT, 611 FRONT ST.-PH. 1218\nFLOWER SHOW AT\nPROCTER, LABOR DAY\nPrizes for best exhibits\nAfternoon tea, games, carnival\nEveryone welcome.\nSPENCER\nFOUNDATION GARMENTS\nDiscount until end of month on\nnew dacron and cotton mesh material. Mrs. W. H. Naylor, Box 597,\nCastlegar. Phone 5133.\nDANCE\nLast open-air dance of season at\nBalfour, across from Beach Inn,\nSaturday, Aug. 24, 9-1. Music by\nthe Kootenaires Orchestra. Admis\nsion 75c.'\nparty 150 years ago.\nTheir red canoe was met at the\nAthalmer bridge by lake craft and\nescorted across the lake, choppy\nwith a morning breeze. One male\nswimmer and one duck met the\ncanoe out in the lake. They were\nofficially welcomed by Les Oulton,\npresident of the board of trade,\nand R. O. Newtonj MLA, directly\nin front 6f the David Thompson\ntree on the lake shore.\nThe two men left Edmonton August 3 on the first lap of their journey overland which took 12 days.\nDuring the trip they climbed two\nunnamed peaks which they: hope\nAIR TRAFFIC\nVENICE (AP) - The International Film Festival has accepted 14 films from 10 nations\nfor its mid-September run. Spain\nhas entered a film called \"un\nAngel Volo Sobre. Brooklyn (An\nAngel Flew Over Brooklyn).\"\nto name after Stanley's wife Lillian and Swann's fiancee, Beverley\nSeward.\nPicking up their canoe at the\njunction of the Blaeberry and Co-\nlumiba Rivers, they spent nine\ndays paddling eight hours a day\nand had to lie low on the river to\navoid a premature arrival at\nAthalmer.\nStanley was still awaiting word\nfrom Edmonton as to whether his\nfirst child, expected momentarily,\nhas arrived. Sawnn's fiancee met\nhim on a canoe on the river.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUO. 24, 1957\u20143\nJubilee Jamboree Jottings\nBy Ven. Archdeacon\nB. A. Resker, Castlegar\nSUTTON, Coldfied, England;\nAugust 14 \u2014 On Monday night the\ngreat Jamboree ended with a most\nsoul-stirring half-hour ceremony in\nthe great Arena. Thirty thousand\nscouts were standing en masse before the stands, which were full of\npeople. The boys were not in their\nnational contingents, but were all\nintegrated in one great world-wide\nbrotherhood.\nSouvenirs were given to a boy\nfrom each of the 84 nations. They\ncame up with their national flag\nborne aloft by a boy from' the\nUnited Kingdom. The flags were\nmassed around the platform. The\nMayoress of Sutton, Coldfield,\ncame to the platform to received\nthunderous applause from around\n50,000 voices in thanks for all the\ngreat generosity of the people of\nthis borough, which has lent its\nhuge park for the tent city of 35,000,\nand for their help at the time of\nthe great flood on the August Bank\nHoliday.\nLord Rawallen, the Commonwealth Chief Scout, then spoke, and\nLady Baden-Powell mounted the\nflag-surrounded dais to the sound\nof trumpets and tumultous cheers.\nThere she stood for a minute or\ntwo in her Guide uniform and raised her two arms as a signal for\nsilence, and all the cheers ceased\nat once. She gave a wonderful talk\non the words of Queen Elizabeth II,\n\"This is not the end but the beginning.\" She said that the \"J.I.M,\nhad shown the strength of the Scout\nmovement, and that it must go on\nand on as a mighty power for peace\nand good in the world. She then\ncalled the boys and leaders to renew their Scout promise in their\nown language.\nSTIRRING OCCASION\nThat was one of the most stirring\nthings I have ever heard and witnessed. Thirty-five thousand in so\nmany tongues all making the same\ndedication to a life of honor and\nloyalty to God and their country,\nThe \"Scout's Own\" had been\nheld on Sunday, and Lord Rawallen had pointed out the deep mean\ning of the Scout promise and law.\nWhen the closing ceremony was\nover the boys faced the back of the\nArena for a fireworks display which\nincluded a Scout badge 25 feet\nsquare. The boys then marched\narm in arm, singing.\nWhen I passed through Sutton\nPark today all the boys had left in\ntheir special trains for hospitality\nin the various centres of England.\nAll that remained in the empty\nfield, where for two weeks there\nwas a city of tents, were scars in\nthe brown earth where thousands\nof feet had trampled in the mud\nof the past week. The 35,000 had\nmarched away singing the Jamboree song to the ends of the earth.\nTORONTO (CP) - Comedian\nBob Hope said Thursday night he\nwould willingly testify in the libel\ntrail of Confidential magazine at\nLos Angeles if asked to do so.\nHope, who arrived in Toronto to\nprepare for a' two-week engagement at the Canadian National Exhibition which opens today, made\nthe statement at a press conference.\n\"I would be glad to appear If\nthey subpoenaed me,\" he said.\nHope said he was once the subject\nof a Confidential article which he\nidentified only as \"pure garbage\nabout me and some other character,\" He did not say when it was\npublished.\nConfidential, its sister publication, Whisper, and persons involved in their publication are charged with conspiracy to commit criminal libel, and publishing lewd and\nobscene matter.\nKLEENBURN . .\nWESTERN MONARCH\nGALT - GREENHILL\nCANMORE Briquettes\nCoal\nPHONE 889\nTowleR\nFuel & Transfer\nOur Way of Life\nIS BUILT ON PRINTING\nATTENTION MEMBERS OF THE\nCANADIAN LEGION AND\nWOMEN'S AUXOJARY\nMembers are requested to meet\nat the Legion on Monday at 9:45\na.m. in order to attend the funeral\nof our late comrade Malcolm MacLeod.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMacLEOD \u2014 Funeral service'for\nthe late Malcolm MacLeod will\nbe held on Monday at 10:30 a.m.\nat the First Presbyterian Church.\nRev. J. N. Allan will offioiate and\ninterment in the Soldiers' Plot,\nNelson Memorial Park.\nThe Printed Word Enlightens, Entertains\nand Educates\n\u25a0'..* \u2022\u25a0 , \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0..'\u25a0'\nIt Promotes New Products, Services and\nIdeas\nSmall Wonder That We the Canadian\nPeople Live so Well\nSave Money $ $ $  Read the Classified\nColumns as Well as the Display\nAdvertisements of Your Local Stores\nin\nthe\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n Nrlsmt Daily $\u00abU0\n'.*'\u25a0 Estahlisbud  April  ill   ItKIJ   '\nInterior  British UO\/umWaS Latgesi Daily Neivspapfjf\nPublished every morning- except' Sunday and statutory\nhdllduys. by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED. 266 Bakei Street, Nelson, Britiah Columbia,\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail Post Utiles) Department, Ottawa\nMKMBISH  Ot   1HL  AUUl'l   BUREAU  OH   CIRCULATION'S\nMEMHEH Ot   1'HE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Hress ts exclusively entitled to ihe use foi republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it oi to Ihe Associated Press Oi  Reuters In this paper,\nand also tne local news published therein.\nSaturday, August 24, 1957\nHighway Work Should Be Pushed\nIt may be that the provincial gov-    cars cannot travel over them until they\nernment's first rush of zeal for. good\nworks has fallen off or that it feels it\nis;Tibw time to count its pennies, but\ncertainly this year there, has been a\nslowing up of the number of road contracts left and a disposition to leave\nthem to the middle of the working'\nseason,\n\u25a0There seems no good reason for\nthis. To the ordinary observer it would\nseem that the proper and most profitable thing to do would be to let the\ncontracts as early in the year as possible and to expect the contractor to\nwork from the spring to fall.\n' Speed is an essential thing In our\nroad construction. There is plenty of\nwork on hand, but none of it seems to\nbe \"going' ahead as fast as it should.\nProjected roads may stimulate the\nImagination and raise our hopeB, but\nare completed. Hope deferred maketh\nthe heart sick and our hopes for the\ncompletion of the cutoff from Castlegar to Paulson have been deferred\nto another year. Mr. Gaglardi has announced that a contract for $000,002\nhas been awarded for the construction of 8.76 miles of highway construction in the Castlegar-Sheep Lake section.\nAt the best, this leaves three\nmonths for the section to be completed\nand quite possibly it will have to be\nfinished In the sping. The Kootenays\nbadly need this \"road and too much\ntime has been wasted. It would be just\nas well early next year if the chambers of commerce for the district chivvied the government round a little. It\nis leaving things too late.\nSouth Africa's Choice\n'The Nationalist Government in South\nAfrica, has been periodically threatening to\nleave the Commonwealth and declare the\ncountry a republic. Tht idea was expressed\nthe.other-day, with peculiar confidence and\nexpansiveness, by External Affairs Minister\nEric Louw:\nI believe that South Africa as a republic would develop and grow just as\nAmerica grew when she was no longer a\nBritish colony.\nThe historical comparison is a thoroughly\nmuddled one. The \"Thirteen Colonies\" which\nbecame the United States were colonies in\nevery sense of the term, subject to the control of the British Government of the day in\nboth internal and external affairs. Whatever\nthe right or wrongs of the American Revolution, it did accomplish two definite things:\nIt gave these communities control of their\nown destiny, and it forced them ,to unite.\nAmericans are. thus justified in contending\nthat the separation from Britain, was an\nessential  step  in  their  country's  rise  to\ngreatness.\nThe situation of the Union of South\nAfrica is altogether different. Since 1910, it.\nhas been a United Dominion with a highly\ncentralized Government. And since the adoption of the Statute of Westminster in 1931,\nit has enjoyed full autonomy. Not for many\na long day has Britain had any influence in\nthe Union's foreign or domestic policy. It is\ndifficult to imagine how withdrawal from the\nCommonwealth could possibly open a new\nera of growth.\nCertainly the proclamation of a republic\nwould do nothing to solve the nation's basic\nproblem. South Africa today is a place\nwhere 2,900,000 whites are trying to hold\n11,000,000 Negroes, half-castes and Asians in\na permanent and degrading subjection. This\nruling minority is not even united, hut divided by a bitter feud between Boers and\nBritish; and it neither encourages nor receives any substantial reinforcement from\"\nimmigration. How long the grim experiment\ncan be maintained np one can say,,but unless present policies are changed the end\nCan only be bloody revolution.\nWhat real chance has South Africa, under this shadow, to. \"develop and grow just\nas America grew\"? Who would migrate to,\nor invest money in, a country which is like\na keg of dynamite?\nIf the South Africans are serious in their\ntalk of withdrawal, there should be no objection from Canada and the other Dominions. The Union has become an anomaly\nwithin the Commonwealth. It is developing,\n6tep by step, into a totalitarian State with an\nideology of race supremacy which is reminiscent of Nazi Germany. Its continued\nmembership is bound to $>e a source of constant friction with the Asian and African\nDominions. It has chosen a road which leads\naway Irom everything the Commonweallh\nstands for; better it should go down that\nroad alone.\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nVictims of Monopoly\nCanada's television world has been\nthrown into an uproar by the planned re:\nvision of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation winter programs. Whatever the purpose of the changes \u2014 whether to attract\nmore viewers or save money, or both \u2014\nthey are bound to hit the performers hard.\nAt, least three and perhaps more long-\nestablished shows are to disappear, and it\nis estimated that 100 musicians will lose\n.their jobs, along with a large number of\n.dancers, actors; writers and technicians.\nWhat makes the plight of these displaced men and women particuarly difficult\nis the policy which has made television\nproduction the virtual monopoly of a Government corporation. In key cities across\nthe country, only CBC stations are licensed,\nIt's Been Said\nI make courtiers. J, never pretended to\nmake friends,' said Napoleon. On a rocky\nlittle island he' fretted away the last years Of\nhis life\u2014alone\u2014Bruce Barton, American\nauthor and advertising executive.\nand it also has the exclusive right to organize networks. A musician or actor \"released\" by the corporation from one of its\nMontreal or Toronto or Vancouver outlets\nhas no place to go.\nIn the United States, where private enterprise dominates the entertainment industry,\nthe position is quite different. A performer\nout of a job can seek employment with\nthree nation-wide network systems, and with\nscores of-big-clty'tations which produce programs of their own. In Canada, however, a\nTV entertainer, in practice, must work for\nthe CBC or not at all. If the corporation has\nno place for him, he has only two alternatives: to drop out of television altogether or\nto go to the United States \u2014 as so many of\nCanada's most promising performers are\ndoing.\nThis is an ironic commentary on the\nclaim of CBC apologists that its special and'\nprivileged position is necessary in order to\nencourage Canadian talent. In actual fact,\nCanada's entertainers would be in a for\nbetter position if the CBC monopoly were\nbroken and private enterprise permitted to\nestablish stations in the larger cities\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to tno Editor on ouy topic of\nflonulno Interest are wclcomo It they are\nBrief, auurate onrJ fair No letter will be\nInserted In'whoto or in pert Mottoi ever\ntha sl'dhtture and idril tit ot the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be\nreturned. ;\nRose Pass Seen as Key\nTo Extensive Development\nTo the Editor: v   -\nSir\u2014Thanks for the editorlal^'Idle for\n100 Years'' reprinted from the Ogden (Utah)\nStandard-Examiner in your issue of-tho uith\ninstant. Comparisons are odious but enlightening.\nYour quotation from a U.S.A. paper's\nfactual statement is an illustration of the\nserious study our good neighbors to the south\nare applying to the problem of \"aging.\"'\nTheir treatment of the aged is an outstanding contrast to our Canadian social services\nregarding aged and unemployed.\nThe last general election in Canada\nshowed what both our late government and\nthe people'thought about such matters.\nAutomation is one of our greatest social\nproblems to be faced in a realistic manner,\nand technological control of all phases involved is inevitable.\nThe earlier we Canadians apply such to\nall phases of our governmental system, the\nsooner we will have a better balanced economy, free from such regular periods of depression such as we of the octegenarian and\nolder groups have experienced and fancy\nwe foresee.\nWe must seek to devise plans to forestall or counteract unemoloyment which, is\nthe worst feature facing humans of 45 years\nof ate uowards.\nWe. of the Kootenay districts could do\nourselves a good turn and a'so provide a\ns'.eadv line of employment by way of developing our scenic .attractions, from the\nInternational Boundary on the south to the\nAlaska border at the northwest corner of\nCanada, with branch lines to east and west\nat s'ich suitable points as are shown on the\nB, C. ATiculf're and Industrial Conference\nMap of 1955. You are invited to study the\nwhite line shown thereon. It reoresents\nmostly what is above the 7000 foot \"timber-\nline,\" and along which automobiles can\ntravel 80 per cent or more in sections sen-\narat.ed only V rocky portions wh'ch could\neasily be broken down bv a few battery\nshots bv nuarrvmen or minors.\nThen bulldoxers could push over the\nbumns and haul gravel for foundation of\nblacktopoing, and th\"s produce the best\ntourist attraction ii Ihe worM at the lowest,\ncost developing the notenti'?! o' our most\nprofitable natural resources. No labor. worfh\nmentioning is being thus employed on such\na li\"\" of work, as yet.\n,Th\u00bb advantages of Kootenay. Columbia,\nand other laics add sr~,\u2122\u00bbnts in favor of\nsuch a nrni\u00b0ct '-r a \". r\u201e r>nf\u00bbn\u00bbrv effort.\nLet's set on with th\". jab. \"Rose Pass short\ncut\" should be a starter!\nJ. F. Huchcroft\nP. O. Box 67. Cranbrook, B. C.\nPM's Broadmindedness\nA pleasant enough story has come to our\nears, right from the small town of St. The-\nr\u00abse; in Terrebonne County. It appears that\nthere, as no doubt in other places, the post\noffice building superintendent was not allowed to hoist a flag or in any way decorate\nthe building for which he was responsible on\nreligious holy days. Now, this year, at the\nsuggestion of Andre Faut.eux, a lawyer,\nsomebody asked Prime Minister Diefenbaker himself if it was true that a government\nbuilding could not be decorated on the occasion of a Catholic festival. The Conservative\nleader said that it had never entered his\nmind, 'and that he saw, no objection to the\ndecoration of pnWic, buiWi\"\"s even for Catholic holy days. Thereupon, he gave full permission to the penple of St. Therese to decorate theirpost office fot Corpus Chrsti Day','\nadding that thsv should place reli\"ious emblems in sufficient number andvas thev liked.\nIt would appear, th\"o, that under the\nLiberal governments of Messrs. King and St,\nLaurent to take such a liberty would have\nbeen eaulvalen't to a Political sacrilege, for\nwhich a civil servant had to nay dear.\n\u2014Le Courrier de St. Hyacinthe.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nrne Daily News does not nolo itself responsible in tne fvent\nef an err'or In the following llste\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nNo Need for Alarm\nQuote of the week undoubtedly was made\nby a four-year-old girl found bv a search\nparty after being lost in Yosemite National\nPark for two and a half days. \"I wasn't\nlost,\" she said, \"but I saw a black bear\nwho was.\"\u2014StratfoVd Beacon-Herald.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nThlE STTWM6ER\nVDUYE 'NlEVEl?\nSEEN BEFORE\nCL4IMS TO BE\nSUCH.,4 FUMBLE-\nTHUMB you\nKt-IOvV IT'S\n'\u00a9OlM<5 TO BE\nA W4STED\nAPTERHOOH*\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nAbove all things put on charity,\nwhich Is Ihe bond of perfectness.\nAnd let the peace of God rule In\nyour heart. Colosians 3:14-15.\nWe excuse our own faults readily enough, but the same faults in\nothers, are not forgiven.\nfiunt dial\nTTteN. he\nST4f?TS\nSERVING \u2022\"\u2022\u2022'\nTH4T'S ALL.\nBROTHER\/'\nJkOHxAKDA VP.'OP.\nTUB MTLO Mr TV\nMichael morou,\n119 D'JNOaS dr.. \u00bb-,\ns.smFatiictsca, s \u2022\nCAM\nShe ain't the friendly kind. I've\nknown her a year and she's never\ntold me any of her husband's\"\nfaults. .\n(ClfiDlnii Prices)\nMINE>\nAlgom Uranium  18.00\nAnaoon Lead \u2014 83\nAtlln Buff - \u00ab\nBarnat         ~      \u2022\u00bb\u00bb\nBase Metals      \u2014     .45\nBaska Uranium  '.23%\nBibis Yukon 0B\nBoymar 08\nBrllund.   5*\nBrunhurst  _..,_..:...     -OVMs\nCampbell C _.....    7.00\nCan Met .' _    8.20\nCassiar    -    7,10\nCentral Patricia     1.87'\nChimp'.   \u25a0 '- 75\nCoin Lake .. 14,\nCons Denison    16.87%\nCon* Discovery     2.75\nCons Halliwell .....\\ 44\nCons Howe  \u2022    2.10\nConsM&S       20,50\nCons Red Pop -    .13V4\nCon Sanorm 08\nCon Sub    1-08\nConwest          4.15\nCopper Corp 30\nCopper Man ..- 10\nDonalda      11\nEast Amphi' 07%\nEast Malartic     1.30\nEast Sullivan     2.30\nElder Gold     84\nFalconbridge   28.75\nYaraday         2,08\nFrobisher  2.05\nGeco .  '  1.50\nGeo Scientific Pros 51\nGiant Yel             4.00\nGlen Uranium 25\nGoldcrest      '.08\nGrandines      07\nGunnar Gold   17.12%\nHarminerals  15%\nHeadway     .42\nHollinger         28.00\nHudson Bay \u2666   5L0O\nInspiration\"      .49%\nInt\u00abN!ckeI    80.75\nIron Bay     2.80\nJoliet Que  28\nJonsmith 12\nR J Jowsey 55\nKenville         07\nKerr Addison   15.87%\nLabrador ' 19.50\nLake Lingman 09\nLakeshore     5.85\nLexindin   11%\nLittle Long Lac     2.25\nLorado     1.02\nMacassa     2.15\nMacDonald  38\nMadsen RL      1.50\nMalartic G F      1.40\nManeast         \u00bb, 15\nMaritime Mining  91\nMcLeod      1<08\nMilliken           2.85\nMining Corp    13.00\nMogul         84\nMulti Mins _ 75\nNew Alger ....\"....      .09\nNew Delhi     65\nNe,w Highridge 15\nNew Harricana 20\nNew Jason        .08\nNew Lund ., 27\nNipissing     1.70\nNisto    \u25a0  .07\nNoranda New   42.00\nNorgold 12\nNormetals     3.00\nNorpax     66\nNorth Can  :     1.10\nNorth Rankin     1.14\nPickle Crow         1.051\nPlacer Develop _     9.75\nPreston E D     :...    7.00\nQuebec Copper 47\nQuebec Lab .  09\nQuebec Metallurgical     1.56\nQuemont .'.     9.75\nRadiore  67\nRayrock \u201e._'.     1.48\nSan Antonio  53\nSherritt Gordon     5.00\nSilver Miller 61\nStadacona  23%\nSleep Rock .    17.37%\nSlocan Van Roi 07%\nSullivan Cons  _     2.11\nSylvanite     1.50\nTeck Hughes    1.80\nThomp-Lund       .65\nTomblli  63\nUnited Keno    4.15'\nVentures  _   31.50\nVicour       .09%\nViolamac \u201e    1.28\nWaite Amulet     6.65\nWlltsey Goglin  24\nWright Hargreaves     1.35\nYale         .-. 20\nYellowknife Bear     1.10\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc 27\nBanff Oils       \u201e     2.95   '\nBailey Selburn    13.75\nBata Petroleum 09%\nCal & Ed         29.87%\nCan Admiral 51\nCdn Atlantic      7.20\nCart Devonian    7.00\nCan Decalta       70\nCentral Explorers      7.60\nCons Peak 09\nDuvex      44\nHome A \u201e  17.00\nLiberal-Pete          2.13\nLong Island Pete 15\nMarigold 19\nMidcon 86\nNat Pete             3.70\nNew Gas Expl     2.20\nOkalta          Z02\nPac Pete   28.12%\nPelrol 70\nPonder 55\nProv Gas     3.50\nRoyalite   18.00  .\nSpooner 32\nStanwell Oil    1.29\nTriad' '     :...    6.50\nUnited Oils      2.'98\nYank Canuck         .10\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi      29%\nAlgoma Steel \u201e  32%\nAluminum _   -37\nArgu6 2nd pfd    44%\nAtlas St  \u201e \u201e,.    21%\nB A Oil   48\nBell Telephone \u201e   89%\nBrazilian      .'.     8%\nB C EleC 4s    \u201e   76%\nB C Elec 4%s    90%\nBC Forest        10%\nBC Packers A     13%\nB C Packers B    14\nBC Power A        45%\nCan Breweries   25\nCan Canners  \u201e '.   14\nI Can Celanese ,15%\nCan Chem Co  6%\nCan Dredge \u00ab  17%\nCan Oil         \u00bb  35\nCan Pac Rly   30%\nCons Gas  103\nDist Seagram ,  26\nDom Foundries  81\nDom Steel Ord   27\nDom Stores       49\nDom Tar & Chem     9%\nDom Textiles  0i\nEddy Paper  41\nFamous players  17%\nFleet Air 66\nFord -A  _  88 .\nGatineau   2B\nGoodyear '.  160\nGoodyear pfd  43\nGypsum Lime  28%\nHoward Smith  27\nImperial Oil  49\nImp Tobacco  10%\nLaura Secord  19%\nLoblaw A   23%\nLoblaw B '.  23 '\nMassey Harris     6%\nMcColl Frontenac  70%\nMont Loco         17\nMoore Corp  63\nPage Hershey  114%\nPowell River .'.  40\nPower Corp  64\nShawinigan   82\nSicks Brew   21\nSimpsons A  17%\nStandard Paving  36\nSteel of Can   62%\nUnited Steel     13%\nWestern Grocers A  32%\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne'\t\nCariboo Gold \t\nFarwest Tungsten\t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc \t\nGrandview  .....\nHighland Bell\t\nNational Ex \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino   \t\nReeves MacDonald \t\nSheep Creek     \t\nSilback Premier\t\nSilver Ridge     \t\nSilver Standard\t\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor \t\nTrojan \t\nUtica\t\nOILS\nAltex\t\nA P Consolidated\t\nCalgary and Edmonton .\nHome \t\nNew Gas Ex        \t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite \t\nRoyal Can\t\nSparmac  \t\nUnited \t\nVantor \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers    \t\nAlberta Distillers Vt\t\nB C Forests\t\nB C Power\t\nB C Telephone \t\nCrown Zeller (Can)\t\nInt Brew B \t\nInland Nat Gas\t\nLucky Lager \t\nMacM & Bloedel B\t\nMid Western \t\nWestminster Paper \t\nWestern Plywoods \t\nUNLISTED             Bid\nAuwon  07\nWoodbury\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can\nRoy Bank of Can\nPIPELINES\nAlta Gas Trunk ..\nTrans Can Com ,.\nFUNDS.\nCan. Inv. Fund ....\nCommonw'lth Int.\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\t\nTrans Can \"C\" ..\n.02\nJ3.00\n44.00\n51.00\n64.00\n16.00\n31.00\n8.49\n7.08\n3.65\n9.85\n5.02\n5.60\n.16\n4.75\n.48\n.12\n.11\n1.85\n.10\n1.35\n.30\n1.25\n'..07%\n.47\n1.10\n.47\n.06%\n.05\n.25\n.12\n.10\n.34\n.02%\n.20\n.49\n30.00\n16.25\n2.10\n11.75\n17.50\n.60\n.22\n2.95\n1.78\n1.50\n. 1.40\n10.50\n45.00\n40.75\n18.50\n4.00\n4.25\n- 4.00\n27.75\n2.90\n24.25\n12.50\nAsk\n.02%\n44.00\n45.60\n52.00\n66.00\n16.50\n31.50\n9.26\n7*78\n3.99\n10.65\n5.52\n6.10\nHoffa Pledges Union\nCleanup if Elected\nWASHINGTON (AP) - James\nR, Hoffa pronounced him 5I'll\n\"shocked and disturbed\" -today\nby the presence of New York underworld characters in the teamsters union and pledged a cleanup\nif he is elected union president,\nRestrainedly, the midwest boss\nof the teamsters said that \"from\nindications around the country\"\nhe believes he will be called on\nto head the giant union at its convention next month.\nHoffa's declaration of clean up\nintentions was given to the Senate rackets investigating committee.\n\"Amazing,\"   commented   committee counsel  Robert  F.  Kennedy.\nFAMILY AID PLEDGED\nFor four days, Kennedy has\nbeen developing a contention that\nBank Reports\nDebt Decline\nMONTREAL (CP) _ Debts\nowed by Canadian consumers to\nmoney - lending institutions are\nrising less rapidly, the Bank of\nMontreal says In its August business review.\nThis is attributed to factors including charge accounts, instalment buying and personal cash\nloans.\n\"Charge accounts are usually\nregarded as a convenience rather\nthan a credit medium,\" the announcement says. \"They seldom\nbear interest and are usually repaid within 30 days.\"\n\"Moreover; their rate of\ngrowth has been relatively modest during the last few years.\"\nBy contrast, the bank says, an\nestimated $1,139,000,000 \u2014 more\nthan eight times the amount at\nMarch, 1948\u2014was owed on Instalment financing at the end of last\nMarch.\nOf the personal cash loan\nfactor, in the last quarter of 1955\n\"the total in this category grew\nby only $9,000,000 compared with\nan increase of $51,000,000 in the\nsame neriGd of 1955.\" '\n'57 SAW DECLINE\nIn the first three months of\n195,7, it Says, there was a net decline of $24,000,000 compared with\nan increase of $22,000,000 a year\nearlier.\n\"Just aS the upward leap of\nconsumer debt contributed to the\nInflationary pressures in the Canadian economy in 1055 and 1956\"\nthe review says, \"a slower climb\nin consumer debt should t^nd to\nretard the progress of inflation\nin 1957.\"-\nThe European\nWay of\nLearning\nF. 6. PEARCE\nThis is tiie season of the supplemental exams for the students\nof the university. Such is our\nsystem that a student may fail\noutright in one or more subjects\nand have to repeat them, or he\nmay fail and yet do so well as\nbe allowed to take an examination\nin that subject again the same\nyear. .\nThis means that each subject\nis regarded as a, unit in which\none may pass whereas in Europe\nuniversity examinations are considered as a whole and one must\npass-in all of them. Failure to\npass in one means a complete\nfailure of the examination and the\nwhole must be repeated.\nUnder the European system It\nis quite possible for a student\nto fail in one subject one year,\nrepeat the whole course and then\nfail in a subject in which he\npassed before and again fail the\nwhole.\nThus a degree in Europe is\nmuch more difficult to obtain than\nis the. case in North America.\nWhether their system produces\nmore scholarship is- a matter of\nopinion;\nAccording tu many, observers\nEuropean students put much more\neffort into their study than do\nour native born. They seem \u25a0 to\nattack ^heir work with more concentrated effort than is the case\nwith many who are born in the\ncountry. This may be due to tradition and .the belief that to fail\nis a disgrace. Our tradition is\nquite the opposite. In the days\nwhen entrance to high school was\nthrough the entrance examination\nit was expected that every student\nshould have at least two tries..\nThis did not make for a determination to win but rather that\nfailure did not matter and the\nresult was that many students did\nnot do their best to pass on-the\nfirst occasion.\nPUT STUDY FIRST\nEuropeans put first things first\nin regard to study. They sit down\nwith their books at a table, they\ndon't lie on a couch and they don't\nwander about the room or have a\nradio playing. They .concentrate\nsolely on learning and they are\nencouraged by the fact that everyone else tries to keep as quiet as\npossible at their study time. The\nwhole family regards th\u00bbir studies\nas important and that attitude\nlalone helps them a lot.\nEuropeans are systematic in\ntheir studies. To \u2022 a great extent\nthey are trained in learning. The\nnotes they take ore key words and\nphrases which will recall the\nmatter of the subject to them.\nNotes in themselves are of little\nvalue except as an aid to testing\nthe student's memory, except for\nthe fact that they train the student\nto pick out the essential points in\nhis work.\nIt is ouite oossible that mkny of\nour students have far more knowledge than tiHr examination results show. This mav be due\nfundamentally to that they do not\nknow how to answer examination\nquestions. Eurooean students have\na lot of traini\"\" in this on old\nexam papers. Th\"v rio so much of\n\u2022his that often tlrir t\"9\"hsrs hive\nan uncannv knack of forecasting\nwhat questions are likelv. but the\nDractice serves to make them enm-\nprjtent to answer questions well.\nWhen the European student gets\nhis exam question paper he looks\nat the number of questions and\ndecides how much time he should\nlive to each. He then reads\nthrough all the questions and' decides on the one he thinks he can\nanswer best. When he answers a\nquestion he makes sure he is giving the examiner the answer he\nwants and keeps the whole answer\nas concise as' possible. When he is\nfinished and if he has time to\nspare he re-reads his answers and\nmak\u00bbs'an\" correction necessary.\nBut in the end the reason whv\nEuropeans do so well at universities, is because th^y take- the\nmatter of tlrar studies verV seriously. Everyone should do that.\nthe  underworld  characters  (jot   '\ninto the union in the first place\nthrough machinations of Hoffa in\nalliance   with   mobster   Johnny\nDto.\nOnly moments earlier, Hoffa\nhad testified under Kennedy's\nquestioning that he has agreed to\n\"look out for\" Dlo's 'family if Dio\nhas a long prison stay.\nKennedy wal slugging away\naway with questions about Hoffa's relations with Dio when Senator Irving Ives (Rep. N. Y.)\npopped in some questions about\nHoffa's intentions If he Ib elected\nunion president.\nIn response, Hoffa said that,\n\"friendship or not\" he would take\ndisciplinary action against John\nMcNamara of New York teamster looal 195 if a union hearings\nshows that McNamara was instrumental in setting up \"phony\"\nNew York teamster locals staffed\nby officers from the underworld.\n\"I am shocked and disturbed\nvery much as to what these individuals did and how they got .\nthere,\" Hoffa said.\nTO BE  RESPECTABLE\nIves said that Hoffa had \"consorted with bums and criminals^!\nthroughout almost his entire caW\neer, and that he wanted to know\nwhether Hoffa would continue to\ndo so if elected 1 as president of\nthe union.  \u2022\n\"I intend fo conduct myself In\nkeeping with respectability,\"\nHoffa replied.\nThe Dio family, which Hoffa\nsaid he had agreed to look after,\nis Mrs. Dio and two children.\nDio now is in prison In New\nYork, awaiting sentence on a\nshakedown conspiracy convictibn.\nHe also is under indictment In\nconnection with the acid blinding\nof labor columnist Victor Riesel,\nand faces charge of federal income tax violations.\nDIDN'T KNOW RECORD\nHoffa acknowledged Thursday\nthat in 1953'he had had dealings\nwith Dio about organizing New\nYork taxi drivers. But he insisted\nhe did not know then that Dio\nhad a record of alleged anti-union shakedowns.\nUnder further questioning today, Hoffa said he still has a\nfriendly relationship with the\nracketeer and told of the promise to look out for Mrs, Dio.\nStill pleading a faulty memory,\nHoffa told the Senate rackets investigating   committee  he  can't\nrecall whether he had business\ndealings with Dio. ]\n\"I can never recall doing any\nbusiness with Dio,\" Hoffa said\nunder questioning by Kennedy.\nHoffa acknowledged that he did\nhelp to arrange two or three\nyears ago for Dio to demonstrate ,to the teamsters union, and\nsome' truck line operators in Chicago a two-way radio device.\nIt was Hoffa's fourth day fn\nthe witness chair.\nMost Modern\nPotash Mine\nREGINA (CP) - International\nMinerals and Chemical Corporation, one of the largest potash\nproducers in the United States,\nannounced today it plans to spend\nmore than $20,000,000 in the'next\nthree years on construction of\nwhat it describes as \"the most\nmodern and efficient potash mine\nin the world\" at Esterhazy, Sask.'\nLouis Ware, president of IMC\nand its Canadian subsidiary, International Minerals and Chemical Corporation (Canada) Limited, told business men and provincial government officials at a\nluncheon work on a 3,000 - foot\nmine shaft and on the first buildings has been under way since\nJune, Esterhazy, a town of 850, Is\n130 miles northeast of Regina.\nHe anticipated the hole would\nbe sunk and buildings completed\nprobably some time in 1960.\nThe company, he said, is capable of financing the entire project with its own funds, appropriating money each year as work\nprogresses. But he added \"it\nmay be desirable, at some later\ndate, to secure additional capital\nin Canada and this possibility is\nbeing studied.\"\nMr. Ware, whose company has\nan office in Regina and sales offices in Montreal and Ottaiva,\nforecast the Saskatchewan mine\nwill \\play an important part in\n\"making the N 0 r t,h American\ncontinent Self - sufficient in its\nneed for potash for centuries\ncome.\"\nStarr to Visit CLC\nOTTAWA (CP) - Labor Minister Starr will pay his first visit\nto the headquarters of the 1,000,-\n000-member Canadian Labor Congress here Monoay.\nHe said Friday he is going at the\ninvitation of CLC President\nClaude Jodoin and will inspect\nthe headquarters and have a talk\nwith the congress chief.\n <2 3M^\n% Tests Reduce Pelvic Cancer\nVANCOUVER  (CP)  \u2014  Annual | the Canadian Medical Association\ntests and a greater use of surgical opportunities will help beat pelvic cancer in women, Dr. Jack E.\nHarrison said in an interview here\nregarding a paper he presented to\nI   the\nI TO %:\nrTlllllll,     By Alice Stevens-\nPHONE   1369   OR   1844\nMr. and Mrs. Henry D. Stuart\nand their children Grant, Marilyn,\n.Valerie and Edward, of Fernie,\nhave been visiting Mr. Stuart's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Stuart,\n705 Fifth Street.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. A. A. Spence of\nCastlegar announce the engagement of their youngest daughter,\nWendy, to Mr. H. M. (Tim) Court,\nyoungest son of Mrs. Alice Court,\nof Raymond, Alta. The marriage\nwill take place in the Castlegar\nUnited Church Friday, Aug. 30th,\nat 7 p.m.\nannual meeting\nProfessor of obstetrics and gynaecology at the University of B.C.,\nDr. Harrison said there were' two\nbasic' ways of eliminating forms\nof pelvic cancer.\n, \"When necessary gynaecologi-'\ncal surgery is being done at the\nend of the child-bearing period,'1\nhe said, \"consideration should always be given to removal of organs which have no further function and which are potential sites\nfor development of cancer.\"\n\u25a0At the same time, a \"conservative attitude\" shouid be adopted\nby doctors and patients toward\nmajor surgery for correction of\ninfertility and any other operations during the usual child-bearing time of life. \u00ab\n\"Early recognition of cancer\nthrough the increasingly accurate tests, at our disposal, can\nprevent cancer of the female pelvic organs from reaching a stage\nwhere radical treatment becomes\nnecessary,\" said Dr. Harrison.\n\"If all women can be persuaded to present themselves for examination, then the commonest\nform of pelvic cancer can likely\nbe eliminated.\"\nCookery Column\nClassified Ads Get Results\nCome jo Chuft\nCordial Welcome\nto\nWorship\nTomorrow 11a.m.\nBt. PmtlVSratig Kttiirti\nCorner Josephine and Silica Streets\n\"A aUturtlt Wifrt a ftrjaUfng\/'\nMinister Music\nDONOVAN   JONES MERLIN R. BUNT\nB.D.,  Th.M. Director,   278-L\nREV.\nB.A.\nAnglican Church of Canada\n>ST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nRector: REV. CANON GEORGE W, LANG, B.A., L.Th.\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 25TH, 1957\nTENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n.1:00 a.m.\u2014Mattins.\nPreacher: The Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong, Officiant: Mr. Cecil Burgess.\nJflatruta Itttted (Efjurrif\nCorner of Fifth and Elwyn\nRev   H. R.  Whitmore, Minister\nOrganist: Mr. Angus Fraser\nDuring August, Fairview United and First Baptist Churches\nare united in First Baptist Church.\nSUNDAY:\n11:01) a.m.\u2014Series, Lord Teach Us to Pray.\n\"LIVING IN AN ATTITUDE OF PRAYER.\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Series, What Jesus Means To Me.\n\"JESUS IS OUR MASTER.\"\nP\nE\nN\nT\nE\nC\nO\ns\nT\nA\nL\nREV. REUBEN'SWANSON, PASTOR\nPh. 886-Y\n9:45 a.m.-SUNDAY SCHOOL\n11:00 a.m.-MORNING WORSHIP\n7:30 p.m.-EVANGELISTIC   SERVICE\nTUESDAY-Bible Study and Prayer\nFRIDAY\u2014Young .Peoples\nSt. John's\nLutheran   Church\nThe Church of\nThe Lutheran Hour\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sis.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St.  Phone 729-X\nAUGUST 25\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine Service.\n\"WOULD JESUS WEEP\nOVER US ALSO ?\"\nSunday School begins\nnext Sunday 10:00 a.m.\nAll Are Cordially Invited.\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nFAIRVIEW\nCanon W.'J. Silverwood\nA.K.C., B. Sc.   j\nRector\nu:30 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014South Slocan.\nRegular Services\nBegin Sept. 8th\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Prayer.\n7:30 p.m.-Evening Prayer.\nItrat (Slturri? at\nGUjrtut \u00a7rtntttfi!\nA Branch of the Mother Cmuch\nThe First Church of Christ\nScientist In Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"MIND\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m.\nReading Room 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily from\n2:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nSALMO\nHILLCREST\nPENTECOSTAL  CHURCH\n10:011 a m -Sunday School\n7:30 p.m.-Evening Service.\nPastor:  Roberl A. Dclgatty\nPhone B2-F\nThese Vegetables\nGet Into Fine Pickle\ni By MARY MOORE\nSomebody in Dawson Creek read our recipe for\nSociety Chip Pickles last year and told, the chief dietician\nof our newest hospital in my city about it when they were\nboth in Edmonton last month,'\nThe C. D.\" said she-would telephone me on her return with a\nrequest for a repeat, for it was\nso good, and besides, the D.C. girl\nhad lost her recipe. I think she\nmust have a mailing subscription\nto our paper.\nAnd another thing. I've been\nsaving watermelon rinds from a\nbig watermelon that is lasting too\nlong. The cart is before the horse\nfor I'm cutting the rind away\nfrom the pink flesh and may have\nto throw it away 1\nSOCIETY CHIP PICKLES\n(repeated by request)\nFourteen dill - size cucumbers\n(smaller ones may be used but\nyou need enough to nearly fill a\n1-gallon crock). Pour fresh boiling\nwater over them for four mornings, on the fifth morning slice\nthem about Vt to % inch thick. Let\ndrain. Have ready this syrup to'\npour over them hot; 1 quart vinegar, 8 cups sugar, Vt cup pickling\nspices (not too many red peppers),\n2 tablespoons salt. Bring this to a\nboil with spices tied loosely in a\ncheesecloth bag, and pour it hot\nover the cucumbers for three\nmornings in succession. On the\nninth morning pour syrup in\nkettle, reheat \u25a0 and drop sliced\ncucumbers into it. Heat through,\nfill jars and seal. ,\nWATERMELON PICKLE\nThe rind plus a little of the pink\nflesh from an average-sized watermelon yields about 2 quarts of this\nlickle. This is inexpensive but\n\u2022jives a luxurious appearance to\nvour party pickle tray.\nTwo quarts prepared watermelon\nrind (include a thin pink line of\nthe flesh on the edge of the rind),\n2 quarts lime water (2 tablespoons\nslaked lime (bought at drug store)\nto 2 quarts cold water) or 2 quarts\ncold brine (8 tablespoons coarse\nsalt, non-iodized, to 2 quarts\nwater), 5 cups granulated sugar,\n4 cups water, 4 cups vinegar, 1\nfirst lajfflai\nCottonwood and Fourth Sts.\nMinister: REV. K. IMAYOSHI\n716 Stanley St. - Phone 1420-L\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Welcome to Sunday\nSchool. Joint services with Fairview\nUnited Church at\nFirst Baptist\nChurch.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.\n7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship.\nTHURSDAY:   ,\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nand Prayer.\nRev. H. R. Whitmore\nin charge during August.\nmiBBian\n(ftmtf ttattt Cljurrf}\n803 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON   .\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.-Evening  Service\nTHURSDAY\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting\nFRIDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young  People's\nItrat\nPrpabgtprtan\n(ftlfurri?\nREV.  J,\n11:00 a.m.-\nMlnlster\nN.  ALLAN\n-Morning\nB.A.\nWorship\nSunday School\nTo Be Announced\n\u00aeI\u00ab\n\u00a7aluatum Arwt}\n613 Victoria St.\nLieut, and Mi-n. G. Qi-lco\nSUNDAY       i\n0:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday  School -\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nClassified Ads Get Results.\nCHURCH  OF   JESU8  CHRI8T\nOF, LATTER DAY SAINTS\n(Moi-monl\n10:30 a.m.-Sunday School.\nEagles Hall   041  Bakei St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President Phone 762-R\ntablespoon whole cloves, 1 tablespoon whole allspice, 1 stick cinnamon, 1 large piece ginger. Cut\nthe rind from which, green skin\nhas been removed, into squares,\ndiamonds or other fancy shapes\nabout VA to Vi inches in size.\nSoak in the lime water 4 hours or\nif using'brine overnight. Drain,\nrinse well in clear cold water.\nCover with cold water, adding 1\nteaspoon salt if lime water was\nused for soaking. Cook in this until\nbarely tender, not more than 25\nminutes. Drain. Combine 2 cups\nsugar, 4 cups water and 1 cup\nvinegar. Drop in spices tied in\ncheesecloth and boil 5, minutes.\nAdd watermelon and cook gently\nuntil transparent. Remove spice\nbag and let stand, covered, overnight.. .   \u25a0\nIn morning add remaining 3\ncups sugar and 3 cups vinegar\nand simmer gently until syrup is\nslightly thickened \u2014 about 20 to\n25 minutes. Turn into hot clean\njars, cover with syrup and seal.\nMakes about 4 pints.\nPOPULAR CUCUMBER RELISH\nOne dozen large whole cucumbers, 8 cups chopped onions, 3\ngreen peppers, 2 tablespoons salt,\n1 teaspoon turmeric, 1 lb. sugar,\nVA teaspoons mustard seed, 4 cups\nvinegar. Grind vegetables through\ncoarse knife of food chopper. Mix\nwith the salt in a large crock or\nbowl and let stand 1 hour. Drain\nthrough 2 or 3 thicknesses of\ncheesecloth so that excess liquid\nmay be discarded in the first\nplace. In a large kettle, combine\nthe turmeric, sugar, mustard seed\nand vinegar and bring to boil over\nmedium heat. Add drained vegetables all at once and mix. Reduce\nheat and simmer slowly until\nvegetables are just tender. Do not\novercook. Pack in hot sterile jars\nand seal at. once. Excellent for\nhot dogs.\nEASY MUSTARD BEANS '\nFour quarts butter or wax\nbeans, 4 cups vinegar, 1 cup\nbrown sugar, % cup,white sugar,\n1 tablespoon celery seed, 2 teaspoons salt, % cup each dry mustard and flour, 1 tablespoon turmeric. Clean, remove stem end\nand cut beans into 1 or 1%-inch\npieces; boil in salted water until\nbarely tender. Drain. Bring to\nboiling point 3 cups vinegar and\nthe sugars. Mix together the\ncelery seed, salt, mustard and'\nflour, and turmeric, then mix to a\nsmooth paste with the remaining 1\ncup vinegar. Bring these to a boil,\nstirring until thick, then cook for\n10 minutes in double boiler, stirring once or twice. Pour this over\nthe beans and bring to boiling\npoint stirring slowly. Seal in hot\nsterile jars. Makes about 6 pints.\nPICKLED BEETS\nFour -quarts small beets, not\nover 2 inches in diameter, 3 cups\nvinegar, 2 cups water, 2Vt cups\nlight brown sugar, 2 teaspoons\nwhole allspice, 1 or 2 sticks cinnamon, 1 teaspoon whole cloves, VA\nteaspoons salt. Wash beets by\nscrubbing, cut off all but 1 inch of\nstem. Do not cut off root. Just\ncover with cold water, bring to\nboiling and cook covered until\nbarely tender, 25 to 30 minutes for\nbaby beets; if more mature beets\nare used they, require longer\ncooking.\nDrain and cover with cold water\nand slip off skins, stems and root\nend, Mix together sugar, vinegar,\nwater, spices and salt: Bring to\nboiling point and boil 5 minutes.\nAdd beets and bring just to scalding point. Skim out beets and pack\ninto sterile jars. Fill jars, but not\noverflowing, with hot. vinegar\nsyrup. Seal at once. Yield: About\n4 quarts.\nNOTE: I do not know if I made\nthe selection of pickle recipes that\nyou are wanting. If not write to me\nand'let me know what you have\nbeen watching for and I will in\nelude it in the \"You Wanted To\nKnow ...\" section or if you\nenclose a stamped envelope I will\nsend you a reply direct,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1957\u20145\nA FAMILY REUNION, held recently at Brilliant was attended by Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Koftinoff of Brilliant, their son and daughter-in-law, five daughters and sons-\nin-law and 15 grandchildren, all pictured above. From left to right, top row, family includes Mr.,and Mrs. Mike Kalesnikoff (Judy) of Brilliant, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Putney (Tannis) of Niagara Falls, Ont., Mr. and Mrs. George Koftinoff jr. of Fruitvale,\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Gorkoff (Olga) of Robson, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Konkin (Doris) of\nFruitvale, and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Rilkoff (Polly) of Kinnaird Gordon Peftitt photo.\nYmir Notes\nYMIR \u2014 Mr.: and Mrs. John\nGratkowski were guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunik\nThey also visited their brother\nClem and family. They are former,\nresidents of Ymir, now residing in\nWebster, Alta.\nMr. and 'Mrs. M. Martin had as\nguests, Mr. and Mrs. Martin's\nsister and, her husband, Mr! and\nMrs. G. Funk of.Vancouver.\nMrs. Dinah Tetz and her three\nboys Rickey, Terry and Garnet,\nwill spend two weeks in Vancouver\nwith Adin Tetz, who is receiving\nmedical treatment.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Gillis entertained Mrs. Gillis niece, Carol Cos-\nsamir of Natal.\nMr. and lifts: George McNauglfc\nlon had as guests the * later's\nmother, Mrs. E. J. McNaughton\nof Boulder, Mont., Lome McNaughton and family of Seattle and\nother,members of the family from\nparts of B.C.,\n\"You Wanted\nTo Know...\"\nDepartment\nConducted by MARY MOORE\nQUESTION: My mother grows\nthese yellow tomatoes and wonders if you would know of any\nrecipe for preserving or doing\nthem down in any way. We enjoy\nyour   column   very  much\nhave had many a good recipe\nfrom 4t, for lifstance the icicle\npickle. It is great... Mrs. L. M,\nANSWER: Thank you, Mam.\nYELLOW TOMATO PRESERVES\nOne    pound    yellow    tomatoes\npeeled and sliced, % pound\u00ab6Ugar,\nVt lemon. Peel tomatoes carefully\nand cut into thin slices. Add sugar\nand let stand 1 hour. Add lemon\nsliced- wafer  thin,  including  the\nrind. Cook gently 'until tomatoes\nare clear and the syrup thickened\na little. Pour into sterile jars and\nseal.\nYELLOW TOMATO AND\nPINEAPPLE PRESERVE   \u2022\n. Two lemons, 1 small fresh pineapple or 1 No. 2 can of crushed\nor diced, 1 quart yellow tomatoes,\n3 pounds sugar (or only two\npounds if canned pineapple is\nused.) Cut pineapple in small\ndice. Simmer fresh pineapple in\njust enough water to cover (or\ncanned pineapple in its own juice)\nfor 5 minutes. Add the sugar and\ntomatoes which have been dipped\nin boiling water, then in cold and\ncarefully \"peeled and cut in quarters. Add the juice and grated rind\nfrom the lemons. Cook gently until\nthe syrup thickens and fruit is\nsomewhat transparent, or in other\nwords of thinnish preserve or\nmarmalade consistency. Pouf into\nsterile jars and seal'. NOTE: Heat\nmay be turned off early and tills\nmay^be allowed to stand, covered\novernight, when it will require a\nshorter cooking period.\nYELLOW TOMATO SALAD\nScald, peel and chill yellow egg\ntomatoes. Serve with mayonnaise\nmade with lemon juice. instead of\nvinegar. Garnish with crisp cucumber and red sweet peppers. If\ndesired it may be mounded around\na scoop of cottage, cheese. I think\nripe olives are an effective garnish\nand accompaniment.\nQUESTION' I am an ardent\nfollower, and my family has\nthoroughly enjoyed rhany of your\nwonderful recipes, I am writing\nin the hope that you might have\nthe recipe for \"Dry Garlic Spare\nRibs,\" as they are prepared by\nChinese restaurants. They are\nsimply delicious. I would very\nmuch appreciate receiving it.\nMrs. C. E. LaR.\nANSWER: The recipe that I am\ngoing to give you is not called Dry\nGarlic Spare Ribsi but it is dry\nwhen done and it does contain\ngarlic. I am almost positive it is\nwhat you are after.\nROASTED RIBS WITH GARLIC\nTwo pounds ribs (or pork tenderloin), Vi cup sugar, 2 tablespoons\neach catsup and soya sauce, 1 teaspoon molasses! preferably Chinese), 2 teaspoons salt, Vi teaspoon\npepper, 1 chopped garlic clove. Vi\ncup chicken stock (or boiling\nwater in- which chicken bouillon\ncube has been dissolved). Combine\nall ingredients except meat to\nmake the sauce and mix them\nwell. Pour them over the meat,\nbeing sure both sides have been\nmoistened well. Cover and let\nstand. 7 or 8 hours or overnight in\nrefrigerator, turning over once,\nand basting or brushing with the\nsauce. Two hours before serving\ntime place, drained ribs on a rack\nwith a drip pan beneath, adding 1\ncup water to lower pan to prevent\nsmoking. Roast at 350 degrees\nFahrenheit for VA hours (if tenderloins ' are   used   they   require   2\nHolidaying Here ...\nNew York Qirl Prefers\nNelson to Big City\nMISS CAROL TAYLOR\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nMiss Carol Ann Taylor of Brooklyn, who is spending the Summer\nwith her grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. H. W. McLelian, Railway\nStreet, Nelson, will take Nelson\nover the bustle of New York any\nday. ...\nMiss Taylor, bqrn at Vancouver,\nmoved to New York at the age of\neight with her parents, and has\nlived there ever since. She recalls\nthat some of her early childhood\nwas spent in the Interior, including\nNelson and Trail. Her father is a\ncommercial artist for the United\nStates government.\nCarol attends a girls' high school\nin'Brooklyn where she returns in\nthe early part of September to\ntake Grade 11. Her studies include\na preparatory course in registered\nnursing. She travels 16 miles\nround-trip by subway train each\nday to attend classes.'\n\"My hobbies are swimming, in\nfact Lspend a big part of my time\nswimming while I'm visiting Nelson, and I love reading and good\nmotion pictures too,\" she ' says.\n\"And you might say my hobby by\nforce is washing dishes.\"\nDuring recent years, Carol has\nvisited B.C. on various occasions,\nand says her New York friends\nremark that she almost speaks\nwith a Canadian accent.\nThe city is too large to suit, her\nliking, and although she misses her\nfamily, she says she has enjoyed\nher holiday in British Columbia\nand prefers the carefree way of\nlife in Nelson to the hustle of New\nYork.\nADMIRES EVANGELIST\nMiss Taylor attended two of,\nBilly Graham's meetings in May,\nat Madison Square Gardens and\nForest Hills outdoor stadium ofl\nLong Island.\n\"My Impression Dr. Graham\nis that, although he is a man of\ngreat humility, he is definitely\nthe most dynamic speaker I\nhave ever heard.\",\n\"I feel sure that the current\nfour-month crusade is having great\nsuccess with the people of New\nYork. Before I left home, I could\nsee quite a change in my friends,\nand I know the crusade has meant\na great deal to me personally.\"\nAncient Pottery\nFound in Quebec\nST.    ANDREWS   EAST,     Que. jg\n(CP)\u2014Two pottery fragments be- w\nlieved between 15 and 25 centuries j\nold have shed new light on an\nearly North American race. They\nwere found by Paul Sacre of Montreal on a golf course in this com- \u2022\u25a0\".'\nmunity, 30 miles west of Montreal.\nDr. J. D. McColl, president of,,\nthe Archaeological Association of\nQuebec, identified the fragments\nas  the handiwork   of the   Point\nPeninsula people \u2014 named after .\nthe site of the original discovery;\nHe links the fragments with the'',\nmajor find at Sheek Island  near\nCornwall, Ont. \u25a0... ;\n\"So little is known of the Point\nPeninsula people that any tract)\nof their culture holds tremendous\ninterest for archaeologists,\" said\nDr. McColl. \"There is a theory\nthat the Point Peninsula people, .\nwere' forerunners of the Iro- \u25a0!\nquois.\"\nHe said the finds la St. .\nAndrews East, Point Peninsula,\nSheek Island and Deep River,\nOnt., and Oka and Lacolle, Que.,\nindicate the people were nomads\nand ate chiefly fish and game.\nFrom time to .time the nomadi\nmoved to conduct business, arrange -\nmarriages and bury the dead. Burials were important and ceremonies. The dead were dismembered,\ncremated and buried in a pit with\nstone blades and other objects.\nWarfare was n o t common but\nviolence was.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PR0GRAM8 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Market Review\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Musicale\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Outdoors\n10:00-Post Mark U.K.\n10:30\u2014Juke Box\n10:55-Weather\n11:00\u2014News\n11:02\u2014Juke Box\n11:30\u2014Rhythm Pals\n12:00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014DanCetime\n1:00\u2014Jazz Special\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1957\n2:00\u2014Dancetime\n2:30\u2014Don Messer\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Can, Weekly News Review\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30-Can. Symphonies\n4:00\u2014Rhythm With Ruther\n4:30\u2014Old Country Sports\n4:45\u2014Sports College\n5:00\u2014Drive-In\n5:30\u2014Standard Festival Jazz\n6:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Musicale\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Halifax Theatre\n8:30-J?rairie Schooner '\n9:00\u2014Musical Program\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:30-Sign Off\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1957\nhours, and turning over after first\nhour); turn over after 'A hour. If\ndesired they may be basted' during\nfirst half hour. It is better to overcook them a little than to undercook them. -\n8:45\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Overseas News\n9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardener\n10:15-rJust Mary ,\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n11:00\u2014This Is My Story\n11:30\u2014Religious  Period\n12:00\u2014Chapel Royal\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n12:57\u2014B.C. Weather\n1:00\u2014Footloose\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014World Music Festivals\n3:30\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Weatherman ;.     -\n3:45\u2014Musical Program\n4:00\u2014UN on tha Record\n4:15\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacl*\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhoust\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorals\n8:00\u2014Summer Stage\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Sun. Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports Newi\n10:15\u2014Horizons '37\n10:30\u2014Sign OH\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSUNDAY, AUGUST'25, 1957\n' 3:35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:42\u2014Weather Report\n3:45\u2014Musical Program\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Music for a Summer Sunday\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:'30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Summer Stage        \"...\n9:00\u2014Summertime\n10:00\u2014News   i  \u25a0\u2022\n10:15\u2014Horizons '57\n10:30\u2014The Sacrament\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014Theme\u2014and Variations\n8:55\u2014Weather\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014The Answer Man\n9:30\u2014The Concerto\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardener & Weather\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n11:00\u2014Chamber Music\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n12:00-^Songs of Gabriel Faure\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n12:57\u2014Weather Forecast\n1:00\u2014International Geo. Year\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014World Musical Festival .\n3:30\u2014News ,\nMONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1957\n\u25a07:00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15-5\\lusical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes \u2022\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Western Roundup\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Holiday In Music \u2022   .\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n11:00\u2014Intermission\nll:15-Songs in the Morning'\n11:30\u2014Through the Listening Glass\n12:15-News\n12:25-Showcase     -\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u201420th Century Masterpiece\n2:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3r45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Adventure Ahoy\n4:45\u2014Smugglers' Cove\n5:00\u2014News    \u25a0\n5:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n5:45\u2014Rawhide\n6:00\u2014Country Capers\n6:30\u2014Music for Strings\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Lorna Doone\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00-BBC Concert Hall\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Oriental Interlude\n10:30\u2014Dream Street\n 6\u2014NILSCN DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1957\nBritish Auto Research\nAims at Export Field\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian  Press  Business  Editor\nThe British motor-car industry,\nstaging a comeback in Canada\nafter a dip in sales from postwar highs, is pursuing an active\nprogram of research directed particularly at the export market.\nThis was stated in an interview\nin Toronto by Dr. Albert Fogg,\ndirector of Britain's Motor'Industry Research Association.\nSales of British cars in Canada\nreached a high of about 50,000\nin 1950, but dropped off in the\nsucceeding years.\nIn  1956,  however,  sales  went\n, up 25 per cent over 1955 to about\n25,000 cars, and this year, on the\nbasis of first-quarter figures, are\nrunning well ahead of 1956.\nThe high sales in the early postwar years were partly due to motor-car scarcities.\nThe extent of the drop in the\nsucceeding years, however, may\n\u2014In the opinion of Dr. Fogg-\nhave been due l.o being \"a bit too\nearly in the field.\"\nFor six war years the British\nIndustry did nothing for the civil-\nIan market. Then, with the close\nof the war, they were directed\nby the government to divert 75\nper cent of production to export.\nINADEQUATE FACILITIES\nThe result was that they sold\nabroad what was essentially a\npre-war car designed for British\nuse, and for which they had inad-\nTo Protest Loss\nOf Roil Service\nPARRSBORO, N.S. (CP)-The\n2,000 residents of this Mines basin town may soon be without\nrailroad service. The Cumberland\nRailway and Coal Company has\napplied to the board of transport\ncommissioners for permission to\nabandon its service between here\nand Sprlnghill, N,S.\nMayor George P. Graham said\nthe company indicated lt would\nremove all its property including\nabout 28 miles of track between\nhere and Springhill.\n\"It's a blow to this part of the\ncountry ... we are protesting lt,\nof course.\"\nThe company said the line has\nbeen losing money for years.\nequate overseas servicing facilities. . . ' .  \u2022 '\u2022 j\nOther European cars had more\ntime, Dr. Fogg added, to consolidate their designs and to set up\nservice facilities before they tackled the market.\nDr.' Fogg said this situation\u2014\nboth in regard to car development\nand servicing\u2014had been corrected, and added that leading continental makes in this market \"do\nnot compare as motor cars\" with\npresent British products.\nHe feels that British cars should\nnot attempt to copy North American designs. The Nprth American\nmarket, for Instance, was taking\n\"everything we can make\" in the\ndistinctively-designed sports car.\nBritish' research, Dr. Fogg\nstated, is directed at making a\nmore economical and more reliable carof less weight, He added:\n' \"I think we can reasnably forecast fuel economies of the order\nof 25 to 30 per cent over the next\nfew years.\"\nNEW DESIGN\nIn body design, research was\ntrying to make the whole of the\nsheet metal work in the body\nstructure carry some of the stresses rather than concentrating\nthem on a heavy frame and just\ndropping the body on top.\n\"This,\" he added, \"is leading\nto lighter and stiffer construction,\nand a safer motor car. The\nmethod now is almost universal\nIn the British industry, but we\nare trying to make it better.\"\nBritish cars were moving towards auto m a t i c transmission\nand within five years there was\n\"good prospeot\" that all British\ncars would have some form of it.\nOther research' was behig directed towards pneumatic suspension\u2014wherein the, springing element would be air in combination\nwith hydraulics (oil).\n\"In commercial vehicles,\" Dr.\nFogg commented, \"I think we\ncan claim to lead the world in\nreliability and economy under\nany conditions. We have large die-\nsel-engine trucks doing 250,000\nmiles without any- major overhaul. In Britain no one will buy a\ncommercial vehicle unless he is\nsure he own't have to touch it for\nat least 100,000 miles. There are\ninstances of 500,000 miles without major overhaul,\"\nLoneliness Big\nUrban Problem\nLONDON (AP) - 'A friendless\nwoman died alone in a tiny London apartment, leaving a diary\nwith- the same entry for every\nday of the last year of her'life,\nIt said: \"No one. came.\"\nTens of thousands of other Britons\u2014men and women of all ages\nand from all walks of life\u2014are\nexperiencing that same hopeless,\nunwanted feeling. Loneliness has\nbecome a major social problem\nin this land of the welfare state.\nThe plight of the lonely in cities\nand villages throughout Britain\nwas related in a special report\nprepared by a committee of 14\nwomen social workers from the\nNational Council of Social Service, a privately-financed organization headed by Viscountess Fal-\nmouthv. \u2022\nThe committee reported a \"distressing and widespread\" problem affecting up to 1,500,000\npeople who live by themselves.\nIn one sense, national characteristic's make the problem o<ou-_\nliar to this country. Traditional\nBritish reserve makes it almost\nimpossible for many lonely pur-\nsons to break out of their agonizing isolation.\nALOOFNESS\n\"The impersonality of town life\nis greatly intensified in this coun\ntry by our passionate belief in\n'keeping oneself to oneself,\" said\nthe report.\nBritain is a country where, generally speaking, people don't 'ike\ntalking to strangers.' And that\ncomplicates things for the lonely\nperson who finally summons up\nenough courage to try to mike a\nfriend.\nThe study group intendewed\none young woman who said: \"1\nhave lived in the same flat in a\nLondon suburb 15 years, and I\nhave never been on more than\nnodding acquaintance with my\nneighbors.\"\nThe welfare workers urged the\nbuilding of more social clubs and\ncommunity centres to cater to\nlonely people. They also advised\ncreation of a good neighbor service to help the shy and self-effacing find their way into | contact\nwith others.\nINFORMAL INTRODUCTION- British Prln-\ncess Mrtrrjarct turns from her cigarette and book to pat a friendly\ndog while attending outdoor horse show In Gloucestershire, Eng.\nWoman Enters Battle\nSave Shaw Alphabet\nMUSICAL HARMONY\nThe octave of any musical note\nhas exactly double the number of\nvibrations of the lower note.\nBy ALVIN  STEINKOPF\nLONDON. (AP)--Mrs. Clara S.\nRichter, a New York lawyer and\nwriter, has announced a new\nBritish - American campaign. to\nsave the alphabet reform fostered by the late George Bernard\nShaw.\nMrs. Richter, a personal friend\nof the Irish dramatist who died\nin 1950 at 94, says she believes a\nman should be able to dispose of\nhlu estate in any lawful manner.\nShaw left a complicated will to\nfurther his project of simplifying\nthe English language by making\nit easier to spell, speak and\nwrite. He thought the alphabet\nshould have about 40 letters of\ninvariable sounds.\nThe will, which his executors\nstruggled six years to interpret,\nprovided that money be set aside\nto make preliminary studies of\nthe problems bf alphabet reform.\nGMC\nOne good\ndeserves another\n.. arid so\nyour\nThis habit of growing is a happy one... but it takes perseverance,\npatience and, most of all, efficiency to make any business expand\nthe way it should:\nEfficiency! That's our key word and your chief concern. And\nbusinesses that thrive On GMC trucks have solved a lot of their,\nefficiency problem* right there ... by choosing trucks almost\ncustom-designed for specific applications and with the exact\ncombination of engine, transmission, rear axle and chassis to\nhandle their jobs without waste of time and money.\nSee your GMC dealer and name your hauling problem. Watch\nhow fast be produces the right solution to it... the solution that\nmeans proven-efficient GMC trucks working and saving for you.\nThen\u2014watch your business grow 1\ngrows\nWORLD'S MOST\nCOMPLETE RANGE\nOF TRUCKS\nA GENERAL MOTORS VALUE\nNELSON MOTOR PRODUCTS LTD;\n281 Baker Street\nPhones 121-122\nLast January the chancery division of the high court set aside\nthat portion of the will.\"\nSince then, British exponents of\nalphabet reform led by Isaac Pitman, member of Parliament and\na grandson of the inventor of a\nsystem of shorthand writing,\nhave campaigned to appeal the\ncourt decision.\nJOIN WITH PITMAN\nMrs. Richter announced here\nthis week that she and fellow\nmembers of the American theatre\ncouncil- have joined forces with\nPitman. Mrs. Richter hired a\nfirm of lawyers to undertake action here as a \"friend of the\ncourt.\" The move would parallel\nPitmafi's effort.\n\"No new evidence would be\npresented but points of law, some\nof them invplving procedures established a century or more ago,\nmight be raised,\" said one of the\nlawyers. \"At any rate, this show\nof American interest might give\nsome moral strength to the British action.\"\nThe British action is an appeal\nlo a higher court by the public\ntrustee,\" a government office\nwhich Shaw named as his execu-\ntor; This is the office which\nstarted the legal action after\nhesitating to carry out Shaw's\nplan without benefit of court rulings.\nASKED NO REFORM\nShaw's will did not ask the executor to reform the language,\nbut merely to make a world-wide\ninquiry to determine how much\ntime and money might be saved\nif the system of setting down\nEnglish sentences were simplified. The Chancery Court held the\nplan was not t feasible, and directed the funds set.aside for It\nbe given to alternative benefactors named by Shaw, the British\nMuseum; the Royal Academy of\nDramatic Art and the National\nGallery of Shaw's native Ireland.\n\"The court's decision was a\ngreat disappointment to Shaw's\nfriends,\" said' Mrs. Richter. \"It's\nstill good law, British and American, that a man should be able to\ndispose of his estate in any lawful manner he sees fit.\"\nForeign Exchange Market Turns\nTo Canadian Dollar, German Mark\nBy SAM DAWSON\nNEW YORK (AP)-The American dollar is selling at a discount\ntoday to both the Canadian dollar\nand the German mark\u2014for quite\ndifferent reasons.\nIn neither case is the strength\nof the U.S. dollar in question.\nThe Canadian - dollar brings\n$1.06 In American money because\nthe Canadian dollar Is scarce and\nis in great demand.\nAmericans want it for investment in Canadian securities and\nproperty. Many West Europeans\nare frightened by the shakiness\nof their own currencies and are\nputting their funds into Canadian\nor American securities or cash.\nOn the 90-day futures foreign\nexchange market the American\nHollar Is selling at a five per cent\ndiscount from the German mark.\nForeign speculators have put\nmany millions of dollars into German marks, thinking to make a\nquick profit of about 10 per cent\nif the mark is revalued upwards\nin terms of dollars\u2014or to escape\na loss If other European nations\nfollow France's move toward devaluation of Ihe franc.\nJETTISON STERLING\nThe  foreign  exchange market\nLAST MENACE GONE\nAUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) - A\nsmall black Katipo spider with\nred marking on its back, the one\nwild creature in New Zealand\ndangerous to life, may soon be\nless dangerous. An antidote to its\nvenom has been developed.\nBatory Sail\nNew Polish\nBy DON DALLAS\nWARSAW (Reuters)-A link in\nPoland's drive to re - establish\ncontacts with the West after\nyears of cold-war isolation will be\nmade next Monday when the\nJiner Bafory sails for Montreal.\nIt will be the first direct transatlantic 'link between North\nAmerica and Poland In nearly\nsix years. The sailing of the Ba-\ntory is a reflection of the new\npolitical thinking in Poland.\nPoland is once again welcoming direct contacts with the West.\nThis year there has been a considerable influx pf Poles from\nNorth America revisiting relatives and friends.\nTravel facilities for Polish citizens today, although still restricted, are much freer than\nthey have been for several years.\nThe Batory, which can carry\n800 passengers, will call at\nCopenhagen, Denmark, and\nSouthampton, England, on its\nMontreal run.\n(Coincldentally, The Associated\nPress reported' from Copenhagen\n15 passengers quit the Batory\nthere Thursday when the liner\ncalled at the Danish capital on\nan excursion trip. The travellers, on the first organized Polish tour to Denmark since the\nwar, asked for political asylum. I\nSUSPENDED SERVICE\nThe Batory ran regularly on the\nNew York-Gdynia run from 1947\nuntil April, 1951. Then, at the\nheight of the cold war, the service was suspended.\nIn 1949, Gerhart Eiseler, German-born American Communist,\nsailed from the United States to\nBritain on the Batory, en route\nto East Germany to become a\nleading propagandist there.\nAmerican authorities sought unsuccessfully to have Eiseler detained in Britain.\nU.S. authorities then suspended\ning Brings\n-West Link\nit from the New York run. It was\nadapted to tropical conditions\nand put on a regular run,to India, and also made occasional\ntourist cruises to the Norwegian\nfjords and the Mediterranean.\nThis summer the ship underwent a capital repair in Bremer-\nhaven, West Germany, and was\ncompletely renovated and modernized in preparation for the resumed transatlantic crossing.\nConfidential Trial\nWins Russ Interest\nLONDON (AP)-The Confidential magazine criminal libel trial\nis getting top billing in Russia.\nMoscow radio told the Russian\npeople today that' the trial is an\nexcellent example of morals In\nthe United States.\nIn its first comment on the Los\nAngeles case, Moscow radio began by describing Confidential to\nits millions of home listeners.\n\"Its staff,\" said a .commentator\n\"consists of ex-policemen and former private detectives whose\nduty it is to peep through keyholes Of Hollywood bedrooms and\nreport on the private lives of the\nscreen's famous stars.\"\nThe commentator, as do most\nRussians, pronounced the name\nof the American movie capital\n\"Gollyvud.\"\n\"Gollyvud, apparently is not disturbed by this scandal,\" said the\ncommentator, \"for its interest lies\nin, profit-making and it has always considered that publicity encourages profits.\"\nAtomic Beams\nFight Cancer\nSAN FRANCISCO (API-\nBeams of atomic particles so\nstrong they pass through fhe\nbody are being used in the treatment of cancer, a medical sci-\nentiut said Thursday.\nThe beam is being supplied by\none of the older, middle - sized\ncyclotrons at the University of\nCalifornia, It produces a stream\nof protons of the strongest medical X-ray. Protons are the cores\nof hydrogen atoms. '\nThirty patients have been\ntreated in this way, Dr. Cornelius\nA. Tobias of the university's Len-\nner Laboratory told the western\nelectronics convention.\nAmong the patients were several women with advanced breast\ncancer. The beam was used to\ndestroy their pituitary glands.\nElimination of this gland stops\nthe production of several hormones, some of which promote\nbreast-cancer growth.\nThe proton beam does about\nIhe same thing as X-rays except\nthat it can be concentrated more\neffectively on a target deep inside the body and does not have\nto be shielded to prevent damage\nto -non-target areas or operating personnel, Dr. Tobias said.\nAlso it. does not burn the skin\nas lt passes through toward the\ntarget.\nEquerry to Queen\nOTTAWA (CP) - Brig. Alrd\nNesbitt,\" 49, of Montreal will act\nas equerry to Queen Elizabeth\nduring her visit to Canada in October, the prime minister's office\nannounced today.\nCol. E. H. Ainslie, 51, of Was-\nkada, Man., and Ottawa will act\nas the ueen's medical officer.\nHe serves as senior consultant\nfor army medical services here.\nBoth officers will attend the\nQueen during her visit to the\nUnited States.\nis also seeing a flight from the\npound sterling to the Canadian\ndollar and the German mark.\nTalk of the possibility of devaluation of the pound has become so\nwidespread that the British government felt compelled to deny\nany such intention. But foreign\ntraders don't want to hold either\npounds or francs longer than\nthey have to, just In case.\nWobbllness of the French franc\nis the most disturbing element in\nEuropean finances. An across-\nthe board devaluation of the\nfranc would seem sure to bring\non a general revaluation of\nEuropean currencies. Some look\nfor the French to act next month.\nThere is no flight from the\nAmerican dollar to the Canadian\ndollar. What is happening is that\nAmericans are Investing millions\nin Canadian resources and Canada's growing industries. Canadian corporations come to New\nYork to borrow money and float\nsecurities, because they can save\nmoney here. While American Interest rates have been rising,\nCanadian rates are still higher,\nso that borrowing is cheaper\nhere.\nTURN TO CANADA\nBut all these American funds\nand the fleeing currencies of\nEurope must be turned into\nCanadian dollars to be put to\nwork there. This demand for the\nCanadian dollar has sent it steadily up.\nThe German mark is so strong\nbecause it has a balance-of-pay-\nments surplus of more than $5,-\n000,000,000 in its foreign trade\ndealings with its neighbors. Only\nwith the dollar area is West Germany, running a trade deficit.\nWest Germany, with the exception of Switzerland, has the\nstrongest financial setup In\nEurope.\nBonn doesn't want to mark the\nvalue up in terms of the dollar\nbecause that would make German products, like the Volkswagen, more expensive here and\nhurt their competitive position.\nUse of Oasis\nProtested\nLONDON (AP)-Saudi Arabia\nhas protested to Britain against\nusing .the disputed Buraimi oasis\nas a base in the campaign to\ncrush the rebels of Oman, the\nforeign office disclosed today.\nA note from King Saud's government delivered here Thursday came as a diplomatic echo\nto Britain's Intervention in the\nPersian Gulf territory on the side\nof the sultan of Muscat and\nOman.\nA foreign office spokesman\ngave no details of the Saudi protest beyond the fact that lt has\nbeen received here.\nOther diplomatic informants\nreported, however, the Saudi government expressed \"surprise and\nastonishment\" lhat the Buraimi\noasis which King Saud claims as\npart of his kingdom should have\nbeen used as a military base in\nthe Omani campaign.\nThey said the note charged\nthat the use of Buraimi for military purposes violated the British - Saudi Arabian arbitration\nagreement of 1954 \u2014 an accord,\nwhich was arrived at in the hope\nby arbitration.\nNO MATE IN SIGHT- Tradition says Helen\nFisher, Bradford, Pa., winner of Wcllesley's senior class hoop-\nrolling race will be first to wed. As yet she's npt-eneaeed.\nTRAVELLING?\nfor expert service, telephone.\nYour local Canadian\nPacific agent will be glad\nto handle all travel arrangements for you . . . including reservations and\nrickets for rail, airlines or steamships travel . . .\nhelp you with your itinerary . .. baggage checking ... telegrams and other details to help make\nyour trip a pleasure.\nInformation and rturvoilont from\nMr. A. M. Steele,\nBaker and Ward Sts.,   Phone 203\nONlV   SCENIC, DOMF,ROUTE   IN   CANADA\n ^^-^^^-\n9b5i\nStampeders Shooting High\nIn Weekend Competition\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nCalgary Stampeders, companions of the .coal .bin in the western\nfootball conference for years, can\nhave first place in the standings\nthis weekend for the beating of\nEdmonton Eskimos and British\nColumbia Liops.\nOff on the right foot after winning their season-opener for the\nfirst time since 1953, the Stampeders need a victory ever the\ndefendlng-champion' Eskimos tonight at Calgary for a Bhare of\nfirst place.\nAnother success over the Lions\nat Vancouver Monday night\nwould put the Cowboys alone in\nfirst place, a lofty position for a\nclub that has been out of last place\n. only once In four years, and out of\n\u2022the play-offs throughout that per-\n.iod.\nMeanwhile, at Regina,, tonight,\nSaskatchewan Roughriders and\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers will try\nto break a deadlock for last place,\nwhich they Share after Riders lost\ntheir first two games and Bombers their first.\nSTAMPS HOPEFUL\nStampeders, with apparent harmony under coach Otis Douglas\nand some self - confidence instilled\nby their 8-1 triumph over B.C. last\nMonday, have raised hopes at home,\nof an upset over the Eskimos, This\nis indicated iri the demand for\ntickets, described by club officials\nas the greatest In five years.\nTo stop   the   Eskimost   Stam\npeders need a big front line to, Coach Frank Ivy of the Eskimos,\ncontain the Edmonton running attack and an offensive that can\nscore often. They also need a\npass defence against quarterback\nDon Getty, a Canadian who is\ndangerous with receivers like\nJackie Parker, Bill Walker and\nJohnny Bright in front of him.\nwho says he'd hate to mjike a forecast of victory tonight, says Stampeders have a tremendous line. .\n\"We figured lt out and their line,\naverages six feet three inches and\n235 pounds to a man. That's pretty\ntough to run against.\"\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMOUNTIIS TO MISS\nMORRIE MARTIN     '\nSAN DIEGO, Cqlif. (CP)-Morrle Martin, ace of the\nVancouver Mounties' mound staff, jumped the club\nThursday to go to his home in Washington Mo.\nMountie manger Charlie Metro said Martin, who\nhas won 13 games and lost three for the second-place\nPacific coast league team, is emotionally upset.\nIt was understood that the southpaw has been disturbed since his brother was severely injured in a re,\ncent automobile accident.\nIt was not known whether Martin will return to the*\nteam before the season .ends Sept. 15. If he does not\nthe Mounties will be left with eight pitchers\u2014six starters\n\u2014in their stretch drive to overtake San Francisco Seals,\nwho lead them by three games.\n\"ill\"\" I Ill\"ll\"\"\"\"l\"llll\"llllllllll|lll|lllllllllllll|llllllllllll||lllll\nOttawa Tops Argonauts\nTo Capture First Slot\nBalding (lose\nIn Golf Event\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - Ken Venturi of San Francisco rocketed\nFriday to a one - stroke lead in\nthe $35,000 Milwaueke open golf\ntournament with a four-under-par\n66 for a 36-hole total of 134.\nHigh winds with gusts up to 40\nmiles an hour and a driving rain\nraked the 6355 - yard Tripoli Golf\nClub course through most of the\nsecond round of the 72-hole tournament.\nOnly f o.u r strokes separated\nVenturi, whose 134 is six under\nthe standard, and the next seven\npros.\nWithin easy reach of Venturi,\nwho completed his round before\nthe weather turned bad, were Toronto's Al Balding, Don Whitt of\nAlameda, Calif., and Bob Rose-\nburg of San Francisco with 135s;\nJohn Cleary, \u2022 Hartford, Conn.,\n136; Sam Snead of White Sulphur\nSprings, W.Va., 137; Texan Howie\nJohnson and Mike Souchak of\nGrossingers, N.Y., 138s.\nTORONTO (CP) -\nRough Riders defeated Toronto\nArgonauts 22-17 .Friday night in\na Big Four football game. It was\nOttawa's second straight victory\nof the.new season.\nThe win .moved the Riders into\nlirst place,\nFrank Clair's Riders, who defeated Tiger-Cats 20-7 in the opener at Ottawa Tuesday night, out-\nhustled and outfought the Argos\nlo lead all the way, after a scoreless first quarter.\nRiders counted two converted\ntouchdowns and a single in the\nsecond quarter to move in front\n15-0 and after Argos cut the margin to 15-10 early In the third quarter the Riders drew away by scoring another converted touchdown\nbefore the final quarter to lead\n22-10.\nThe Argos battled gamely In\nthe filial quarter but their drive\nwas too late and not enough to\novertake the alert Riders. The\nToronto club could get only one\ntouchdown in tha. final 15 minutes\nwhile holding the scrappy Ottawa\nteam scoreless.\nHOW GAME WENT\nTommy Lewis, speedy half-back\nfrom University of Alabama, Ar-\ngo castoff Al Pfeifer and home-\nOttawa brew Bobby Simpson scored the\nOttawa touchdowns, Gary, Schrel-\nder converted all three and Bobby\nJudd, a star-of the game with his\nrunning and kicking, booted a sec-\nond-quar.ter single to round out\nthe Ottawa scoring.\nArgos counted two converted\ntouchdowns and a field goal. The\nsix-pointersi were scored by Art\nPowell, big Negro end from San\nJose State College, and Pete O'-\nGan-o, two-way end from UCLA.\nBart Moll converted both and\nadded a 24-yard field goal in the\nthird quarter.\nThe Riders outrushed Argos 203\nto 165 and gained 205 yards\nthrough the air on 10 completions\nin 22 pass attempts.\nTwo Top-Seeded Tennis Teams\nAdvance Into Tourney Finals\nQUEBEC (CP) - The two top-\nseeded men's doubles teams won\ntheir semi-final matches Friday\nto qualify for a shot at Ihe title\nlnvthe province of Quebec tennis\nchampionships.\nBrazil's Carlos Fernandez\nteamed with Montrealer Henri\nRochon the second - seeded pair,\neliminated Quebecers Jacques Gi-\nguere and Jean Marois 6-1, 8-6,\n6-0 in their match.\nIn the other contest, Vancouver\nplayers John Swan and Paul\nWilley, ranked third, went down\nbefore Bob Bedard, Sherbrooke,\nQue., and Toronto's Don Fontana\n6-3, 3-6, 12-10, 6-3. In the crucial\nthird set the Vancouver team tied\nthe count at 10-10 on Swann's service, lost to Bedard's service in\nthe next game and lost out as the\nGilchrist's Service\nAinsworth,  B.C,\nIMPERIAL GAS AN  OILS\nATLAS   TIRE3\nOpen Sunday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn ' NelsOn-Kaslo   Highway\ntop seeds broke Willey's service\nin the final.\nMontreal's M a r i e 11 e Laf-\nramboise, an unseeded player,\nhad herself a big day in the women's events. She won a semifinal singles match 7-5, 6-2 from\nthird-ranged outside entry Sarah\nMae Turber of Evansville, Ind.,\nand then teamed with the Indiana\nplayer to win 6-4, 11-9 over top\nseeds Eleanor Dodge,* Montreal\nand Anne Stacey Bedard, Sherbrooke, Que., in a doubles semifinal, i\nIn her singles title match.Sunday Miss Laframboise will go\nagainst Susan Butt of Victoria,\nthe top-rated player from outside\nthe province. Miss Butt stroked\npowerfully past Siegelinde Boeck\nof Montreal, second Quebec seed,\n6-3, 6-3 in her semi-final game\nFriday.\nThe Laframbojse-Turber team\nwill meet Miss Butt and Anne\nBagge Vieira, Brazil, in the title\nmatch today. Miss Butt and Mrs.\nVieira, second seeds, won 2-6, 6-4,\n6-3 over Toronto players Joan\nO'Brian and Inga Weber.\nTonight\nBABE RUTH\nBASEBALl\nNelson vs Trail\nSUPPORT THE  KIDS\nQUEEN  ELIZABETH  PARK\n5:45  p.m.\nFOUR MARKS FALL\nUNOFFICIALLY\nAT CNE MEET\nTORONTO (CP) _ Four Canadian traqk records were broken\nunofficially Friday as the Canadian interprovincial track and\nfield championships opened at the\nCanadian-National Exhibition.\nThe two-day meet concludes a\nweek-long track school under the\nCanadian Olympic Training Plan.\nThe school is sponsored by the\nCNE and the Canadian Legion.\nDiane Matheson of Montreal\nand Stan Levenson of Toronto\nbroke the women's and men's Canadian 220 - yard dash records.\nBoth are members of Canada's\nlast Olympic team.\nOther record-breaking- times recorded were in the juvenile girls'\n440-yard relay by Hamilton Olympic Club and by John, Passmore\nof Richmond Hill, Ont., who set\nthe fourth unofficial mark in the\nmen's 440-yard hurdles.\nOfficials held little hope that\nthe records would be accepted as\nthe CNE track does not meet international standards.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results in\nFriday's English cricket matches:\nLeicestershire 258 and 188 for\n7 declared, Essex 200. Match abandoned, rain. (Leicestershire t w o\npoints).\nNorthamptonshire 117 and 215,\n.Derbyshire 146 and 51. Northamptonshire won by 135 runs. (Northamptonshire 12'points; Derbyshire\nfour points).\nYorkshire 401 for 5 declared,\nWarwickshire 229 and 63 for no\nwickets. Match abandoned, rain.\n(Yorkshire four points). \/\nSomerset 351 and 117 for 6, Sussex 241. Match abandoned, rain.\nNottinghamshire 168 and - 250,\nLancashire 140 and 94 for no\nwickets. Match, abandoned, rain.\n(Nottinghamshire four points).\nHampshire 370 and 69 for 4 declared, Worcestershire 269 for. 4\ndeclared and 147 for 9. Draw.\n(Hampshire four points).\nLOGART WHIPS WALT\nDETROIT (AP) - Cuban Isaac\nLogart butboxed Walter Byars for\na unaimous decision Friday night\nin a 10-round welterweight match\nat. Olympic. Stadium. Logart\nweighed 146, Byars 146Vi\/\nJ\/UL\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\n-By JOHN SHORT\nI heard a parable once. It was about a boy being\nsent to do a man's job. I thought about it Thursday night\nas I read the round-by-round reports of Floyd Patterson's\nsuccessful defence of his heavyweight boxing title.\n!> Floyd, at 22 the youngest fighter ever to hold the\nheavyweight championship of the world, is undeniably a\nman. He proved it by defeating Archie Moore to win the\ncrown,,; he provided additional verification by the coldly\nefficient manner In which he demolished Tommy (Hurricane)\nJackson last month.\n\"Rademacher is also a man, but In a different sense.\nAny person who rises from the canvas seven times In one\nbout must possess all the Instincts of bravery that one body\ncan possibly hold. Any man who will face a rival with\ninferior equipment to fulfil an \"\ncher. He is a stinging hitter whose\nprowess lies in speed rather than\npower. But enough stinging punches can snuff out a life as surely as\ncan a lesser series of harder blows.\n\u2022 *  *\nPete Rademacher \"was a boy trying to do a man's, job. He won 70\nof 77 amateur bouts. But amateur\nbouts are rarely the vicious type;\nin most amateur bouts, referees\nare cautioned to make certain one\nor the other boxer does not incur\n-severe punishment,\nRademacher, for all his 77 bouts,\nnever before had fought a rival\nwhose fistic arsenal was so well\nstocked. He never fought a rival\nwhose fists were so fast, whose\nmoves were so deceptive, and\nwhose ability to ladle out punish\nment had been proven against professional opponents,\nBefore fhe Patterson - Jackson\nbout, the Hurricane's backers were\nsaying! \"Who'd Patterson ever\nbeat?\nMost sensible fans before Thursday's bout were saying: \"Who'd\nPete ever fight?\"\n* <\nRademacher lost the fight. But\nby arising seven times from the\ncanvas In Seattle Thursday night\nhe won the war.\nAnd if Youth Unlimited profits\nfrom his devotion to a cause,. Pete\nRademacher's bruises will '.hurt\nless.\nBesides, his ideal has been fulfilled. He fought the champ. Perhaps\nin time to come, it will be realized\nthat Pete fought a man who was on\nhis way to becoming one of the\ngreats.\nideal is\u2014truly\u2014a man.\n* \u2022 .\u2022\nA man can be killed In a boxing\nring. It is fortunate Pete Rademacher's name was not added\nThursday to the too-long list of ring\nfatalities. Referee Tommy Loughran had said a little blood or a\nlittle grogginess wouldn't convince\nhim to stop it.\nHe was going to let the fight go\nuntil one man couldn't get up.\nThat's what he said. That statement, heard so shortly after Jack-\njon's unmerciful beating at Patterson's hands which caused the\nblown-out Hurricane to make' a,\nquick trip to hospital, was frightening.\nPatterson is not a killing pun-\nReturn Match\nHere Tonight\nVisitors in Nelson Saturday evening for a baseball exhibition with\nNelson Babe Ruth Leaguers will\nbe Trail aggregation that was\nbeaten 7-3 in an exhibition earlier\nthis week..\nWalks arid, poor support contributed to the near downfall of\nwlnn(pg pitcher Don McLean who\nfell behind 3-0 as early as the\nfourth inning. But Nelson pulled\nthe game out with a six-run spurt\nIn the last- inning. Ernie Wah\nslapped two hits, Mike Ingledew\na triple and Bruce Blakeman a\nkey single for Nelson. -Blakeman's\nsingle counted two runs for Nelson.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis   100 010 000- 2   7 0\nPhiladelphia    000 001 02x\u2014 3 10 0\nMizel and H. Smith; Haddix and\nLopata. HRs: Philadelphia, Repulski.\nMilwaukee   t... 000 100 100\u2014 2  5 1\nBrooklyn   000-000 003\u2014 3  8 0\nConley, McMahon (9) and Rice,\nCrandall (8); Koufax, Roebuck\n(8), Drysdale (9) and Roseboro.\nW: Drysdale. L: McMahon. HRs:\nMilwaukee, Aaron.\nCincinnati   202 101 000\u2014 6 13 0\nPittsburgh   .... 000 000 000- 0  4 1\nNuxhall and Burgess;., Purkey,\nO'Brien (4), Smith (7), King (9)\nand Foiles. L: Purkey.\nChicago\n000 200 000 000 000 0- 2 11 2\nNew York\n.   000 100 100 000 000 1\u2014 3 11 0\nRush and Neeman; Worthington, Constable (11), Monzant (11),\nMiller (14) and Thomas. W: Miller.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York .. 000 010 003 0\u2014 4 10 1\nCleveland ',.. 200 101 000 1\u2014 5 10 1\nShantz, Byrne (6), Cicotte (7),\nGrim (9) and Berra; Narleski,\nDaley (9), Garcia (9), Tomanek\n(10) and Hegan, Naragon (10).\nW: Tomanek. L: Grim. HRs:\nCleveland, Woodling; New York,\nMcDougald.\nWashington   .. 000 300 001- 4 11 2\nDetroit  052'500 13x\u201413 16 0\nRamos, Black (7) and 'Courtney; Maas and House. L: Ramos.\nHRs: Washington, Courtney (2),\nDetroit, Maxwell, Kalipe.\nBoston   000 100 000\u2014 14 2\nChicago  020 001 Olx\u2014 4   8 0\nSullivan, Susce (8) and Daley;\nPierce apd Lollar.  L:  Sullivan.\nHR: Boston, Jensen,    -\nBaltimore 100 000 000 001\u2014 2  9 0\nKansas..... 100 ooo 000 ooo- J  3 1\nJohnson and Triandos, Ginsberg\n(7); Kellner, Burnette (3) and\nThomson. L: .Burnette. HRs: Baltimore,. Nieman.\nATTENTION BOWLERS\nEnter your team now! league Bowling Start* Sept. 9.\nMondays\u2014Men's\nTuesdays and Wednesdays\u2014Ladles.\nThursdays and Fridays\u2014Mixed\n10 Pins at 9 p.m. every Friday\nSingle entries also accepted\nFREE  IN8TRUCTION8 FOR BEGINNERS\nNELSON BOWLADROME LTD.\n616 VERNON 8T, - PHONE 1W\n13 Entries Likely\nOSLO (AP) - The world ice\nhockey championships Feb. 28 to\nMarch 9 next year will probably\nbe the biggest sports event in\nNorway since the 1952 winter\nOlympics here.     x\nOrganizers said that at the mo\nment 13 nations are likely to participate. ,   .\nThey are Canada, United\nStates, - the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Sweden, East Germany, Finland, Poland, Norway,\nSwitzerland, Western Germany,\nHungary and Romania.\nThe organizers said that the\nlast four are not sure, however.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1957\u20147\n\u2022\u25a0rowrSM'-fJii.-.^\u2014^_, .jwfc   .ijssmrmiiphi i    \u25a0\u25a0>!!    m k..-ji\u2014\nU.S. Follows Canada Lead\nIn Banning Fowl Callers\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States lined up Friday\nwith Canada in banning the use\nof electronic callers by waterfowl\nhunters.\nThe department of the interior\nannounced an amendment to the\nmigratory waterfowl laws, effective for the 1957-58 hunting season, whlph it said Is broad enough\nto apply to all migratory game\nbirds.\nThe\u00abdeadly effectiveness of electronic devices In calling ducks\nand geese to the hunters' guns\nand the potential threat of excessive kills brought abput the order\nthe announcement said. -\nCanada recently announced a\nsimilar ban. Winston Mair, chief\nlllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllll\nJunior Champ To Show Here\n, A little extra prestige was afforded the annual Nelson Open Golf Tournament Friday night when Carl Locatelli of Nelson Golf and Country Club announced that\nBill Wakehafn of Victoria, Canada's 1957 junior golf\nchampion, will appear for the Labor Day Weekend affair.    \u25a0\nNephew of Bill ami Gord Wakeham of Nelson, Bill\nreceived several calls in the past few days from his\nuncleB and from golf club officials and finally revealed\nhe would be available.\nIt Is hoped that a strong crew of junior stars from\nCalgary and Spokane will also put in an appearance.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nBoxing Adage Proved-\nPro Will Beat Amateur\nBy BOjB MYERS\nSEATTLE (AP) --The good\nbook of boxing says no good amateur can beat a good professional. So Friday newly written in\nthe book is the registry:\nOn the night of Aug. 22 Thomas\nPeter Rademacher, 28, the 1956\nOlympic Games ohampion, in his\nfirst start as a professional, was\nknocked out in six rounds by the\npro champion of the world, Floyd\nPatterson.\nInscribed also were the facts\nthat Rademacher in his rash and\nWINNER OVER\nMARLENE BOWS\nSACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -\nJoanne Gunderson, a precise golfing teen-ager from Seattle, made\nIhe final of the U. 'S. women's\namateur for the second year in a\nrow Friday with a sparkling 3\nand 1 victory over Anne Richardson of Columbus, Ohio.\nAnn Casey Johnstone a 34-year-\nold mother from Mason City,\nIowa, snapped up the other semifinal wtih a 7 and 6 win over Oregon's Carole Jo Kabler, who defeated Toronto's Marlene Stewart\nStreit in the quarter-finals.\nJoanne, who lost* last year to\nMarelne, and Mrs.'-Johnstone, a\nsemi-finalist in 1956, play the 36-\nhole final today at the 38-36-74\npar Del Paso Country Club course.\nMiss Gunderson, playing what\nshe called a grudge match stayed\nwith par and defeated the \"blonde\n21-year-old Ohioan by sinking a 12\nfoot putt on the 17th. Miss Richardson went two. down at the turn\nwhen she missed a three-footer.\nJoanne said she wanted to win\nto avenge a 6 and 5 defeat by\nMiss Richardson in the recent\nwestern amateur at Omaha.\nThe Seattle redhead was junior\nchampion last year.   :\"'.\nAll-Homebrew Final\nIn Canadian Amateur\nBy   AL  VICKERY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Nick Weslock of Windsor, Ont., and Ted\nHomenuik of Winnipeg shot their\nway Friday into the 36*ole final\nin the Canadian amateur golf\nchampionship.\nWeslock, never over par on- any\nhole, defeated Bob Kidd of Vancouver 4 and 2 in one 36-hole\nsemi-final, while Homenuik . won\nthe other 5 and 4 over Alan Thirlwell -of Newcastle-on-Tyne, England, a member of the British\nWalker Cup team..\nIt marks the second time Weslock, now an American citizen but\nholding dual residence in Canada\nand the U. ,S\u201e has reached the\nfinal. In his other outing, he lost\n6 and 4 to Bill Mawhinney of Vancouver at .Saskatoon tn 1950.\nSECOND. MANITOBAN\nHomenuik becomes the second\nManitoban t6 get into the final. In\n1936. BObby Reith Of Winnipeg,\nlost 8. and 1 tb Fred Haas Jr., of\nNew Orleans, La.'      ,'    v\nBoth Homenuik and Weslock\nhad to stave off brilliant late\ncomebacks by their' opponents to\nSalvage victories, Homeiuiik, nine\nup after, the first 18 holes Friday\nmorning, found his lead cut to\nfour by the 29th, but he captured\nthe 31st for his only win on the\nlast round. It proved to be enougli\nas it pilt him five W with live to\ngo. The match ended w.hen they\n.halved the next hole. \u25a0\nMeanwhile, Weslock, four up after 18 and also at 27, saw his mar\ngin dwindle to one hole when Kidd\nshot three successive threes on\nthe 28th, 29th and 30th. The 41-\nyear-bid eastern veteran; however,\nroared back to take the next three\nwith birdies to close out the match\non the 34th hole.\nLIKES MEDAL PLAY\nWeslock, approximately nine under par, in medal play, said since\nthey took out the stymie rule he\nliked to play his match play on a\nmedal basis.\n\"I believe if I shoot par or better, I'm going to win nine out of\n10 of my matches.\"\nHomenuik, who had showered\nand left for home before the other\nmatch ended, believed he made\n\"several \"poor shots\" during the\nafternoon round.\n\"Now that tension reTally builds\nup when the other guy gets his\ngame back,\" the 23-year-old Win-\nnipegger said. \"But. I knew if I\ncould just get going on the back\nnine then I'd be okay. That's my\nbest nine.\" \u2022 -\"\nGOOD USED,\nMACHINERY\nTwo Dlcsel-POwered Road Graders\nModel 404 Roiiio-Mmlol D494\nChampion.\nATIONAL\nACHINERY\n'o Limited\nuranviiie\n- Island\nVancouver  9,\nbrash attempt to do the impossible was gallant and game, awkward, and wild, dangerous and\nstrong\u2014and he grew woefully tired after three rounds.\nSeven times the big fellow from\nthe Apple country of Yakima,\nWash., and adopted son of Columbus, Ga., visited the floor of\nthe ring over the pitcher's mound\nin Sicks' Stadium. ,\nSTAYED DOWN IN 6TH\n.The seventh time, after 2:57 of\nthe sixth, he failed to get up at\nthe count of 10, by referee Tommy\nLoughran.\nRademacher's one big moment\ncame in the second. He can say\nto his grandchildren that at least\nhe floored a world champion.\nLoughran signalled to the timekeeper no knockdown, indicating\nPatterson had been either pushed\nor slipped to the canvas. Patterson, more startled than wounded,\nwas up at four. After the fight it\nwas disclosed there had been a\nknockdown.\nThe crowd of 16,961 was In an\nuproar for the, native son. They\nkept up, the encouragement even\nafter Patterson floored their hero\nin the third, four agonizing times\nin the fifth, and twice more in the\nanti-climactic sixth.\nBaseball Stand\nings\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW\nL\nPet.\nGbl\nMilwaukee ...\n....   74\n46\n.617\n\t\nSt. Louis \t\n....   68\n53\n.562\ntVt\nBrooklyn  \t\n69\n54\n.561\nSVt\nCincinnati  ...\n....   62\n59\n.512\n12V4\nPhiladelphia\n....   62\n59\n.512\n12Vt\nNew York ...\n59\n66\n.472\nnvt\nChicago \t\n..:. 46\n72\n.390\n27\nPittsburgh  .\n...   44\n75\n.370\n29Wi\nof the federal wildlife service at\nOttawa, said then 'the move was\nprompted largely by experience\nin the U.S. electronic callers had\nnot been widely used in the Dominion hut the ban \"was designed\nto cut them off before they could\nbecome a problem.\nU.S. PROHIBITION\nThe U.S. order prohibits the\nuse of \"recorded bird calls or\nsounds or recorded or amplified\nimitations of bird calls or sounds.\nRoss L. Leffler, assistant secretary for fish and wildlife, announced last May 17 that the electronic waterfowl-calling devices\nwere reported devastatingly effective in luring birds within gun\nrange.\nHe said their use was being\nstudied with a view toward a possible ban or control measures.\nLeffler at that time cited reports that a new type of call in\nthe- form of a recording of the\nsounds of flocks of geese feeding\nhad proven so effective In\nits realistic reproduction that extended use could threaten preservation of the species.\nReports from east coast hunting areas where the electronic devices were used last year were\nthat in one case five hunters killed\ntheir limits in 90 minutes and on\ntwo occasions during that period\nas many as 2000 geese hovered\nover the blind. In another case\non one farm where there were\nfour shooting pits a kill of 1285,\ngeese was reported.\nWKWSL Finals\nBegin Sunday\nin Rossland\nSunday afternoon, Nelson Royals' visit Rossland Royals in the\nfirst game of a best-of-five final\nseries to decide the playoff champion of the West Kootenay Women's\nSoftball League. Rossland finished\nwell ahead of Nelson in the regular-season's play, but Nelson, as\nit did last year, has come up with\na surprisingly strong outfit just\nin time for the playoffs.\nAfter having won on two games\nall season, Nelson whipped Salmo\nMiners three games to one in a\nbest-of-five semi-final, while Riondel Blue-Belles forced Rossland to\nthe limit in the other set.\nSecond game of the series will\nbe played at Queen Elizabeth Park\nMonday night.\nSouthpaw Ruth Bambrick will\nhandle Nelson's hurling chores,\nwith veterans Gail Christopherson\nand Marie Stangherlin on hand to\ndo battle with Rossland pitcher\nNorma Calvert.\nTo replace regular catcher\nMyra Cain, who left a short while\nago to join the Air Force,. Nelson\nreceived permission to borrow\nDonna Rotter, regular backstop\nof Salmo's club.\nBASEBALL\nTONIGHT - 5:30 P. M.\nNelson Outlaws\n^ VS\nDeer  Park,  Wash.\nSUNDAY, AUG. 25\n1130   P.M.   and   4:30   P.M.\nNelson Outlaws\nV8\nNew Denver\nCIVIC\n,CENTRE\nGROUNDS\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1957\nIffiiin is\nPMOWO-PM.\nFOR QU\/C\nPhone 1844\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 1844\nBIRTHS\nBROWN - To Mr. and Mrs. Ered\nBrown, 520 Wasson Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital August 23, a son.\nHUIBERT - To Mr.' and Mrs.\nCharles Huibert of Castlegar, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nAugust 22, a daughter;\nMcPHARLANE - To Mr. and\n\u2022Mrs. George McPharlane, 404 Silica Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital August 22, a son.\nVINGO - To Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Vingo, 804 Silica Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nAugust 22, a.sod. -\nHELP WANTED\n-  LOGGING ,\nEMPLOYMENT\nImmediate openings are available in our logging operations\nfor the following personnel.\nTop wages, MSA Medical Coverage. , '       -\n1\u2014Licensed Scaler\n1\u2014First Aid  Attendant with\nscaling experience\n2\u2014Compassmen\n<       KOOTENAY\nFOREST- PRODUCTS\nPhone 1200 \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\n\u2022    UNUSUAL  WINTER\nSALES OPPORTUNITY\nEarn up to $300 a week on commission basis selling tested chemical compound \"ICE CHASER\".\nMelts ice and snow 30 times\nfaster than salt. Absoultely non-\ncorrosive, non-injurious to grass,\nshrubs and concrete. Most economical, yet most effective answer to ice control problem in,\nCanada. ICE CHASER warehoused in Canada for prompt\nshipment. Two way opportunity.\nSell every retail outlet from\nlargest department'* store to\nsmallest gasoline station, as well\nas Government, industry, institutions. Every building, every individual a prospect. Full time\nman wanted but part time acceptable. If your present line dies\nin the winter, take ICE CHASER\nfor big commissions when t h e\nsnow flies. Write or wire CONSOLIDATED PAINT & VARNISH CORP., 1831 Willey Ave.,\nCleveland 13, Ohio, U.S.A.\t\nHELP WANTED\ni (Continued)\nTRAINEES WANTED\nAir Engineer and Aeroengine\nMechanics\nYoung men age 17 and over,\nwith Grade 12 or equivalent\nstanding who are interested in\nfinding- employment in the aircraft industry are invited to apply for training at the Vancouver\nVocational Institute. No previous\nexpedience required'.\nClasses will start on or about\nOctober 1, 1957.\nFor further information write\nor apply in person tb the Vancouver Vocational Institute, 250\nWest Pender Street, Vancouver,\nB.C.\nHave you successfully sold cook-\nware, aluminum windows, roofing\nproducts or other specialties? If so,\nyou can sell a product that guarantees repeat business and pays\nyou high earnings every week of\nthe, year.\nWe are the leaders in our field\nestablished over 12 years. Our nationally , advertised products- are\nfully guaranteed, expendable, year-\nround necessities for every factory,\noffice, store, etc.\nProtected territory assure? continual repeat business at full commission of 20% on all orders received. A car is essential. Write\nThe Certified Electric Company,\nCommercial Park, Dundas, Ont.\nLEARN BLUEPRINT READING\nby home study. Your ability,to\nread blueprints will bring promotion to a better paid job. Diploma awarded. Free folder. Blueprint Reading Dept. G3, Primary\nSchool of Drafting, Box 123, Station\"\u00a9.'', Toronto. ,.\nWANTED-MAN OR WOMAN TO\nsell Rawleigh Products in Nelson. Either part - time or full-\ntime applicants considered. For\nfull details, write to W. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd., Dept. GG-72, Win-\nnipeg 2., Man,\nDRAFTSMEN ARE IN G R E A T\ndemand. Train by home-study in\nyour spare time for a well-paid\nsecure job. Diploma awarded.\nFree folder. Primary School of\nDrafting,' Dept. G, Box 123, Station \"Q\", Toronto.\nACT, NOW IF YOU WANT TO\nmake money. Join in a progressive company. Sell household\nnecessities and cosmetics. Every\nhouse in your territory a potential customer. No dull season.\nWherever you may live write\nfor details: M. Baker, 1600 De-\nlorimier, Dept\/80, Station C,\nMontreal.   '\nTELEGRAPH MESSENGER BOY\nwith bicycle. Must be 15 yrs. old.\nIf returning to school, do not apply. CPR Telegraph Co.\nYOUNG MAN WANTED\nExcellent opportunity for ambitious young man to learn tire\nshop trade. No previous experience necessary. Apply \u25a0 in person to Algar's Tire Service &\nRetreading Ltd., 520 Lake St.   ''\nEXPERIENCED APPLI-\nance and furniture salesman for\nlocal branch of appliance company. Salary and commission,\nM.S.A., Group Insurance and\npension plan benefits. Apply Box\n1508, Nelson Daily, News.\nBE AN AGENT, BUY WHOLE-\nsale, no investment. For samples\nand price list write to: P.O. Box\n801; New Westminster, B.C.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\n9:30\u2014Good Morning\n9:45\u2014Dizzy Dean    '\n9:55\u2014Baseball Game of Week *\n1:00\u2014Saratoga Handicap       a\n1:30\u2014Western Roundup\n2:30\u2014Lone Ranger\n4:30\u2014Wild Bill Hickock\n5:00-r-Western Roundup\n6:00\u2014Jimmy Durante Show *\n6:30\u2014Two For the Money *\n7:00\u2014Gale Storm Show *\n7:30\u2014SRO Playhouse \u2022\n8:00\u2014Gunsmoke \u2022\n8:30\u2014Jimmy Dean Show *\n9:00\u2014The Bucaneers    '\u25a0\n9:30\u2014The Lone Wolf      ,\n10:00-The Late Show\nSUNDAY\n1:00\u2014Good Afternoon\n1:30\u2014Oral Roberts\n2:00\u2014Bowling Time ,\n'3:00\u2014This Is the Life\n3:30\u2014Variety Time\n4:00\u2014Face the Nation *\n4:30\u2014World News Roundup *\n5:00\u2014Annie Oakley\n5:30\u2014You Are There *\n6:00\u2014Lassie *\n6:30\u2014My Favorite Husband *\n7:00\u2014Ed Sullivan *\n8:0O-G.E. Theater *\n8:30~Alfred Hitchcock *\n9:00\u2014$64,000 Challenge *\n9:30-Errol Flyrfn\n10:00\u2014News Commentary\n10:30\u2014What's My Line\nHELP WANTED\n(Continued!\nMANAGEMENT AND\nFOREMANSHIP TRAINING\nCOURSES\nManagement and Foremanship\nTraining Courses are now being\nscheduled in Vancouver for September, October and November.\nCourse No. 1: Covers Job Instructional Training (J.I.T.) and Job\nSafety Training (J.S.T.). The\ncourse streamlines the tech-\n. niques of giving instructions\nthrough communication and\ncontact with the employee and\nstresses the importance of Job\nSafety. \u25a0\nCourse_No. 2: Covers Job Relations -Training  (J.R.T.). This\ncourse covers Employee-Management Relations, the understanding of worker attitudes\nand handling problems.\nLength  of  each   course   (40\nhours) one week of 5 days \u2014\n8:30 a.m. to -5:00 p.m.\nCourses are conducted free of\ncharge as they are sponsored\nand financed jointly by the Federal and Provincial Govern-\nments.\nThese are Management - Development courses for all levels\nof supervision in Industry, Commerce, Hospitals, etc., and are\naimed at improving Supervision\non the Job, Safety of Employees,\nand Better Employee-Management Relations.\nFor reservations or further information write to R. E. Evans;\nDepartment of Education, Room\n701 Vancouver Block, 736 Granville Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nTeleDhone PAcific 1388. i\nHELP WANTED - FEMALE\nKHQ TV \u2014 Channel 8\nSATURDAY\n8:13\u2014Test Patterns   -\n8:25--NARTB\n8:26\u2014Bible Reading\n8:29\u2014Program Previews\n8:30-Gumby *\n9:00-Fury *\n9:30\u2014Major League Baseball\n(Cincinnati vs Pittsburgh)\n12:00\u2014Short Subjects\n12:30\u2014Little Rascals\n12:45\u2014Lakeland Village Film\n1:00\u2014Western Theatre\n3:00\u2014True Story *\n3:30\u2014Detectives Diary *\n4:00\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\n5:00\u2014Western Theatre '\u25a0...\u25a0'..\n6:00\u2014Trouble With Father\n6:30\u2014People Are Funny *\n7:00\u2014Julius Ea Rosa Show *\n8:00\u2014George Sanders Mystery\nTheatre *\n8:30\u2014Dollar A Second *\n9:00\u2014Encore Theatre *\n9:30\u2014Adventure Theatre *\n10:00\u2014Death Valley Days\n10:30\u2014Late Movie\n\"Adventure Island\"\nSUNDAY\nl:30-Outlook *\n2:00\u2014Christopher Series\n'2:30\u2014This Is the Answer\n3:00\u2014Travel Film\n3:30\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\n4:00\u2014Great Crusade \"True Glory\"\n5:00\u2014Meet the Press\n5:30\u2014Cowboy Theatre*\n6:30\u2014Circus \"Boy *\n7:00-Steve Allen *\n8:00\u2014Goodyear Playhouse *\n'9:00-The Web *\n9:30\u2014Front Page\n9:40-Molly\n10:05-Stars On Six\n\"The Fugitives\"\n10:30\u20140. Henry Playhouse\n11:00\u2014Crosscurrent\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n3:00\u2014Roy Rogers Roundup\n4:00\u2014Space Ranger\n4:30\u2014KREM Cartoons\n5:00\u2014Renfrew of Mounted Police\n6:00-Hollywood Offbeat\n6:30\u2014Flight 7\n7:00\u2014Billy Graham *\n8:00\u2014Lawrence Welk *\n9:00\u2014Country Music Jubilee *\n9:30\u2014Championship Bowling\n10:30\u2014Million $ Theatre\nSUNDAY\n12:55\u2014News\n1:00\u2014Cartoons '\n1:30\u2014Gene Autry\n2:30\u2014Faith For Today\n3:00-^-Wild West Theatre\n4:00\u2014College Press Conference\n4:30\u2014Open Hearing *\n5:00\u2014Compass *\n5:30\u2014Ray Milland Show\n6:00-You Asked For It\u00bb\n6:30\u2014Hollywood Film Theatre\n8:00\u2014Polka Time\n8:30\u2014Midwest Hayride *\n9:00\u2014Mike Wallace Interview *\n9:30\u2014Sunday Spectacular\n(Programs'subject to change by stations without notice.)\n$23 WEEKLY FOR WEARING\nlovely dresses given to you as\nbonus. Just show North American\nFashion Frocks to friends. No\ncanvassing, investment or experience necessary. North American\nFashion Frocks, Ltd., 3425 Industrial Blvd., Dept. Y-2440,\nMontreal, P.Q.\nNEED EXTRA MONEY? WORK\nsparetime at home! We need\nwomen to sew, do handiwork or\naddress enyelopes; Many other\ninteresting money making opportunities offered. Send stamped\nself addressed envelope. Write\nSnow Handicrafts, Box 1811,\nDaily News.\nWANTED \u2014 COOK FOR TEN\nmen crew Iofging camp. Preferably one that can cook Russian dishes. $160.00 per'month.\nApply Crockett Store, Genelle,\nB.C.\nEXPERIENCED WAITRES\nses wanted. Bijs Depot, Creston,\nB.C.\nWAITRESSES WANTED - TOP\nwages paid. Ph. 391 or 1877.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDON'T WAIT FOR FALL. PLAN\nnow! The rush is on. Steps, sidewalks, driveways, basement\nfloors. All carpenter work and\nstucco work, roofing,- etc. Phone\nJ329-L. H. Zylstra and Sons.\nEXPERIENCED LOGGER WITH\none or two horses wants work\nskidding, logs or poles. Box 6144,\nNelson Daily News.\nHANDYMAN WANTS ODD JOBS.\nPhone 256-R.\nDRESSMAKER, ALTERATIONS A\nspeciality. Phone 1678-L.\nMACHINERY\nAS NEW\nREAL BARGAINS\nSaws\n$275\n1\u2014 430A Brand New. Use your\nold 430 or 325 bar and chain.\nNew price $435.\nNOW   \t\n1\u201473, converted to new D77\nand not used. Was C97C\n$487. NOW   $410\n1\u2014New D55. Used very little as\ndemonstrator. New t^ftfi\nprice $406. NOW ...  *P<,WU\nUsed Saws\n1\u201473 McCulloch.\nAs new.\t\n1\u2014430 McCulloch, 54\" CTt?\nbar. Good.  \u201e _... *<\" \u00b0\n1\u2014325 McCulloch.\nNew motor\t\n1\u2014P.M. Good wood \u00ab\u00a3CK <\nsaw V\u2122\n1\u2014IEL, 1956. Direct drive. CtlB\nNew chain. Only ...... \"P\"0\nSee\nH. \"FRITZ\" FARENHOLTZ,\nC ROSS or ALEX McDONALD\n\u2022MAC'S\nWELDING &\nEQUIPMENT CO., L.TD.\n614 Railway St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\n$200\n$95\nMACHINERY *>\n(Continued)\nCATERPILLAR\nUSED  TRACTORS\nNew or used\u2014there are more\nCat tractors bought in B.C.\nthan all other makes put together! The reason is simple,\nCat equipment is the best! \u2014\nTake this opportunity to pick\nup a. top quality used tractor.\nCAT D9 Tractor, like new, with\nonly 450 hours, with Cable\nangledozer, full 90-day warranty.  Located   at  Vancouver.\nS2SS '$47,000\nCAT D8 Tractor with 8A cable.\ndozer and winch. Bonded Buy,\n90-day    warranty,    located    at\"\nSt $23'500\nCAT D7 Tractor. Has hydraulic\nangledozer, Hyster winch. Bonded- Buy. 90-day warranty. See\nthis one in Vancouver. FT-3726.\nPriced\nat \t\nCAT D6.Tra.ctor complete with\n6A hydraulic dozer and winch.\nThis machine is offered \"as is\"\nf.o.b. Prince George. FT-3645.\nPrice on request.\nCAT D4 Tractor with hydraulic\nangledozer, D4 Hyster winch.\nMachine In good 'condition. Offered \"as is\"; located in Prince\nGeorge. FT-3667. t7\u00abt;n\nPriced at   QiOOV\nCAT D2 Tractor with 2A hydraulic dozer and Hyster winch.\nA very good machine. Buy and\ntry   special.   F.o.b   Vancouver.\n85\\,:-L *72oo\n$19,000\nSee Your\n' CATERPILLAR\nDealer\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 137 - Nelson\nPhone JU-62281 \u2022 Cranbrook\n1 ONLY\nOLIVER  TRACTOR\nModel OC3-42, Serial 2WH-\n894, equipped with Ware front\nend loader, Model H.G.H., Serial 49-1451. Good condition.\nPrice\n1  ONLY.\nOLIVER  TRACTOR\n(Model OC3-42, equipped with\nOliver Model H.G.T., front\nend loader, with trip type\nbucket. Good condition, Price\n1 ONLY\nCATERPILLAR\nGAS TRACTOR\nModel R-2. Tractor No. 4J-288.\nNo blade or winch. Good condition.\nPrice\n$1350\nCompany Ltd.\nMining, Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery\nP.O. Box 230\nPhone 18 or 1139\nEVENINGS, 1914\nirs t\nFor over 40 years we have\nbeen, headquarters for\nmachinery repairs of all\nkinds.\nOur completely equipped Welding and Machine Shop is constantly engaged in keeping\nlocal industries operating.\nWe can also supply your needs\nin Welding Supplies,- Industrial\nTransmission Equipment.\nMACHINERY  LIMITED\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nBLACK AND DECKER 6\" HEAVY\nduty adjustable power saw, as\nnew, \u00a365. Phone 829-L.\nI.\n MMPMBIMR\n3?63\n\"*1rWf\u00bb\u00a5\u00ab^W|\u00bb\nSMALL INVESTMENT \u2022 -\nThat's the Want Ad Stoiy \u25a0*\nPHONE  1644\nMACHINERY\n.     IClJIltWUlK'l\nINTERNATIONAL TD-18\nWith double drum, Carco\n.winch and ^uoyrus-ISrie hyr\ndraulic dozer. Ex- (tCChf)\ncellent condition, i fyvVM\n30 TON\nLOWBOY TRAILER\nWith less than' 2000 miles \u2014\nK\"...   $3,250\n18 FT.\nRENELL CABIN CRUISER\nWith   75   H.P.   Gray   marine\n$1400\nsecond\ntrailer.\n'       27 FT.    ,'\nALMA HOUSE TRAILER\n..:.,';>v $995\nGOOD !USED TRUCKS\nAND FARM MACHINERY\nPROPERTY, HOU5H,\nFARMS. ETC., FOR SALE\n;      (Continuedi \u25a0\n~*,*r<r^*.0r1~***\nuinpie\n..Thesmaii.Iiic.\nG.M.C. Trucks and A-C Dealer\nNewport, Washington\nPhone 2-X-l\n.FOR HIHE NEAR NEW TP18\nbulldozer. Mobile accommodation for 3 men available,- will go\nanywhere. Ph. 44, Dewis Transport, Silverton, frO,\nPROPERTY,   HQUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nl^On North Shore. 2 acres, 1\nonly: cleared. A nice 2.^B.R.\nhome w)th large L,R, and K-,\nmodernistic bathroom. Lot ol\nroom on property for further\nhousing, the full price of this\n\u00ablehom9   $6750\nWith ab'out $2500 cash\npayment.\nBalance on very easy terms.\n1\u2014A lovely, almost new bungalow, ebove the new bridge.\nLocated on large lot, \"72' x\n140'. House has L.R., K-, 2\nB.R.s, modernistic bathroom,\nall on one floor. Pull basement with 3rd B.R., oi) furnace, laundry room and extra\n, space. This house i? only 6\njja.s old and in perfect con-\nFuiinpriee  $1 1,500\n$6000 Cash and take over\nagreement for sale at 6%.\n3\u2014A splendid buy op Latimer\nSt,, near schools. House has\n' 3 B.R.s, L.R., D.R., K. and\nmodernistic bathroom, all on\nmain floor. Extra 2-roomed\nsuite in basement, S.C., also\nfurnished and rented, Prop-.\n\u25a0 erty is 100' x 120' and. developed. Double garage on prop-\n..    erty. Full price of this prop.\ne4is $8950\nWith approximately $2600\ncash down, balance $50 per\nmonth plus 6% interest,\n4\u2014A few really good building\nlocations left, yet. Ask about\n. these. We would also appreciate your property listing.\nS\u2014Here is a lovely home. It consists of 4 B.R.s, L.R. with fireplace, D.R., K., lovely bathroom and 2 B.R.s on main-\nfloor, 2 other large B.R.S upstairs. Ample closet space.\nFull basement with rumpus'-\nshop and oil furnace. \u2014\nroom, laundry room, work-\nGrounds and house in wonderful condition. This desirable home may be purchased\n% $13,000\nWith half cash down, and  '\ngood terms to responsible\nparty.\nReal Estate and Insurance Agency\n532 WARD ST.      PHONE 68\nATTRACTIVE\nUPHILL   CORNER\nLOCATION\nFinest type of family home,\ncorner, 60x150 with, most at.\ntractive grounds all improved.\nView L.R., 3-4 bedrooms, attractive modern kitchen. Two\nbedrooms and bathroom down.\nFull basement, oil fired furnace, glass lined tank. AH the\ngg* ....   $12,750\nTerms to be arranged.\ning\n& Son-Ltd.\nM.   (Trader)   Parker,   Salesman.\nS68 Ward St.   , Phone 717\nNORTH SHORE BEAUTY, 2 YRS.\nold, 3 bedroom bungalow, modern to better living. Heatalator\nfireplace, high basement. D\/P\n$4000, balance to mortgage. Payments $65 includes taxes, princ,\nint. Price includes auto, gas\nrange and equipment. Immediate\noccupancy. Phone 1679-L.\nFOR SALE - 3 BEDROOM HOME\non 2-3 acre. Ph. 1884-Y for particulars,\n(Contjiiuea In Next Column)\nFairview location. A very\nbeautiful 3 - bedroom horne.\nKitchen with dinette. Oak\nfloors. All rboms oh ground\nfloor. Full basement, concrete,\nfoundation, 2 lovely lots;\nlawns'and   flowers,   etc.'\u2014\nSS,.,     $12,300\nOr $12,000 Cash:\nAnd certainly well worth it.\nCar Insurance and Package .\nPolicies a Specialty\nC. W. Appleyord\n.-;., & Co. Lta\nEstablished 45 Years\nBox'28 .   Phone 269\n421 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C.\nREAL ESTATE LISTINGS\nRequire homes valued $4000-\n$7500. All cash available' to\nvendor.\n' NORTH. SHORE     ,.\"\nBrand new. Early occupancy.\n3-bedrpom,    modern .design.\nFuji basement, N.H.A, 5% In-\nFTW:.:... *!3,500\n'.  *NEW HOMES    :\nLet us arrange to build you\na new home. N.H.A. financing and view available.\nWILLIAM\nKALYNIUK\nAGENCIES,\nLow Cost Auto Financing,\nReal Estate and Insurance\n534 Josephl\u00a7e St.        Nelson\n, PHONE 1777    :\n*-t^t*f\u00bb*TT!P\u00bb*W-f'\nR.R, NO, 1 ,\nTwo dwellings on Vt acre of\nlatjd wjth 200 ft, beach frontage.' Ideal permanent and\nsummer home combined and\nrental income from second\nresidence. Terms,   JgQOO\nPROCTER\n.Two   separate   dwellings   op\ntheir' own lots. Modern . and\nwell kept. Only 1 block from\ncentre of town. Terms. Prices\n$6500 and $4500\nCORRA LYNN\nSmall,   comfortable   dwelling\nsituated on 10 acres-of property. Ideal berry and chicken\npS,K9W.;....wooo\nP, E* Po.ujin\nReal Estate - Insurance\n582 WARD ST,   .  PHONE 70\nIf Listed at a\nFAIR  PRICE    :\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY     '\nC. W. Applevard\n& Co. Ltd.  -.-'\nBox 26 . Phone 269\n421 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING.SER-\nvice - Used parts for '47 Olds,\n'52 Ford motor. '50 Willys panel,\n'37 Ford, '46 Meteor Mercury,\n'37 Ford, '46 Plymouth, '47, '49,\n'50, '51 Austin, Hillman, Prefect,\nVanguard, Morris Minor cars.\nFor sale, '42 Dodge .sedan, '49\nAustin. Phone 1363-L-2 or write\n' Box 382, 24 Ymir. Road. Nelson.\nfem >AM> MISCELLANEOUS\nm^m^^'fjm^^,\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar, see us about Our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\n, months. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777 and save money.\nFOR SALE - 1956 FORD FOR-\ndor Customline sedan, 6 cylinder,\ndriven 6000. Apply Home Furniture, 640 Baker.\n'53 METEOR CONVERT. - A-l\ncondition.. Continental kit, radio,\noverdrive. Phone Passmore 2-T\nFOR SALE - 1941 3 TON CAB.\nover truck, good tires and' li-\n. cenced. Phone 1670-X-l.\n1955 FORD FAIRLAIN - WILL\ntake older car as part payment\nPhone  1990.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY\nFOR SALE - LADIES' WEAR IN\nAmerica's largest oilfield. New\nstock. Protected lines. Stock\nand fixtures, $11,000, Sv-knass\nforces sale. Apply Box 1623, Nelson Daily News.\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\n'   \u2022   \u25a0 >Ltd     '   .\n-Phone \u00a3171  \u25a0\u25a0\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill; mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rppe, \u2022 pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and .shapes,\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, -B.C., Ph.\nPAcific  6357-'    ''    i\t\nLUMBER FOR SALE - 2x4, 2x6,\n2x8, 1x6, 1x8, $35 \u25a0 per thousand\nover 4000 ft,, free delivery Ph\n1757-R or apply Bon 2581, Nelson'\n. Daily News, ;';.\n1 McCLARY SUNSHINE 18\" HOT\nair furnace, used 3 winters; 1\nDelco coal stoker; 1 forced air\nfan. Thermostatic control which\nkeeps fire lit. Apply 664 Victoria\nSt.,. Trail,\nNYLON LACES 36 YDS. $1.00,\nRibbon, 1500 yds. $1.00, Beautiful tafietized, M-V. Postpaid.\nSchaefer, , 264, Drummondville,\nQue.'\nOFFICE FURNITURE, 3 FILING\ncabinets, desk,, large steel cab,\nJnet, mapping table, conference\ntable, chairs, etc. Ph. 372-R after 7 p.m. ',-    v\nSlilRVKL GAS FRIDGE. .CLASS A\n. condition. Freezer compartment.\nUsed one year. $295.00. Apply S,\nA,' Conkin, Slocan Park, B.C.\nBUY WHOLESALE - TREMEN-\ndoiis savings, Write for price\nlist, to: P.O, Box 801, New West-\nminter, P,C,      '    ;  y'\n1 NEW 18 CU, FT.' AMANA\nfreezer >; refrigerator, -going at\nWholesale price. Can be seen at\nthe Locker Plant, 611'Front St,'\nDINING RM. SUITE, BEDROOM\n.suite with dpuble bed, combina-\n, tion wardrobe, small tables and\n. playoerirPh; 418-Y.\nCHESTERFIELD   AND   CHAIR,\n- rug, combination radio and rec-\n' ord, oil heater. Ph. 674-X. after\n6 p.m. 524 Innes St.\nFOR SALE-GOOD GRADE SPIN-\nning,wool. 85c per pound. P. $.\nGross, Pincher Creek, Alta,\nSMALL OIL HEATER _ $20.00.\nGood condition, leaving town. Ph.\n713-R, 409 Wasson St. \u25a0     '\nYOUR J, ft, W ATKINS REPRE-\nsentative is A. E. Aldous. Box\n370, Fruitvale, B,C,,    ..\nSOME HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS-\nBargain prides. Phone 271-Y.' >\nSUNBEAM CENTRAL HEATING\nfurnace\". Reasonable. Ph, 1219-L,\nBEEF, PORK \"AND VEAL \u25a0\nHarrop, phone 1278.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening 924 Davies St\nWINE DAVENPORT AND CHAIR,\nSuite 6, 507 Carbonate St,\nRENTALS\nWANTED - WILL . PAY 'SUB-\nstantial rent for 3 or 4 bedroom\nmodern house. Reliable, well-\nestablished, tennant. Willing to\nsign lease ub to year, Jack\nHutchinson- Phone 1090.\nSMALL OFFICE' AND WARE.\nhouse with shelving-convenient-\n. ly located in Truck Terminus\nBldg:, on ground floor. Phone 77\nfor particulars.\nYOUNG MARRIED TEACHER\ndesires semi-furnished or un-\nfurn. apt.'suite or cottage jn or\n'close to town. Apply Box 1710,\nDaily News.\nFURN. HOUSE FOR 2, ALL EL-\nectrlc and oil. Near bridge and\nlumber company. Available Aug.\n26.,F. A. Baker, 1106 Beatty Ave.\n'   Ph: 743-L-3.\nFARM FOR RENT OR SALE.\nBeautiful view, house and outbuildings, phone, lights and water. Also possible revenue.' Sevei.\nmiles from ferry. Phone 820,\nCASTLEGAR,, BUSINESS PREM-\nises with  living quarters.    76\ni Maple St\u201e Castlegar. Phone or\nwrite Zuckerberg, Castlegar,\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly < rates. Allen' Hotel, 171\nBaker- Street,\nFOR RENT-6 ROOM STUCCO\nhouse, lull basement, furnace.\nAdults. Apply Box 1712, Daily\nNews.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM\nwith water in room, for, respectable gentleman. Close in, Phone\n' 9G#Y.      :    ' ,\nRM. FOR YOUNG MAN, FRIDGE,\nkitchen facilities. ' Ph. 321-R\nmorn. Apt, B, 576 Baker St.\"\nMODERN, HEATED, UNFURN.\nsuite, B.R., L.R., kitchen, utility\nroom, Ph. 2075.   .\nEXTRA  NICE 3  RM.  MODERN\n' apartment. 1 BR, Phone 130.\n2-RM.  FURN.  HEATEO\"TUITF:\n823 Vernon St. Adults;\nAPARTMENT   FOR  RENT.   AP-\nply Hobby Shop. Ph. 1703\nLOWER DUPLEX   FOR   RENT\nCall'after 2 p.m., 515. Hall |t.\nROOM FOR RENT DOWNTOWN.\nPhone 93441.       \u2022   .   _.'.'\nFURN.  OR  UNFURN.  3 ROOM\nsuite, Ph. 697-X.. \"\u25a0.'\" I\n4 - ROOM  APART. APPLY 412\nSilica- Street..   ;    : '\nFOR RENT - 3 RM. FURN. APT.\nclose in. Phone 208-L.\nBEDROOM. FOR RENT <- CLOSE\nIn. Phone 343-Y,\nWAITED TO BUY m USK&PIPE,\nsir tiger from 4 in, to tvln, diameter, Kootenay Forest Products Ltd., phone 1200,\nWANTED\" ySEb BOOKER FUR-\n\u25a0 naces, blower and thermostat op-\ntional. Write Box 679, Creston.\nSAWPUST BURNER WITH HOP-\nper, to attach to furnace. W- %.\nPereverzoff,  Appledale.\n35 MM. ENLARGER - PHONE\n491, South Slocan. ,    .\nWANTED - LARGE BABY CRIB,\nfflorl condition. Phone 1263-X.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n\u25a0i' E, W; WIDDOWSON tt CO.\"\"\nAssayers,-301 Josephine St.\/ Nelson\nH. S.  ELMES, ROSSLANP, B.C.\n'   Agsaver Chemist.Mine Re'p.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nr BOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\"\nBC Land Surveyor. P.. Eng. (Civil 1\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.      7\n)       Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St., Nelson   Phone 111?\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTSj LIMITED i\nMachine Shop  Acetylene and\nelectrict welding, motor rewind'\nii'g.'Phore 593.  \u2022 324 Vernon St.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n25 H.P. LONG SHAFT 0VIN\n'rude outboard, 1954 model, $376;\n12 h,p, i Elgin,' 1956 model, gear\nshift and tank, $250. Also com\nplete line of 1957 Evinrudf models', jefferey Radio and Appliances Ltd\nFOR SALE-16' CABIN CRUISER\nwith dual controls, Universal\nMarine engine, and 4-wheel\nlaunching, trailer. Phone 1974-L.\nTRAILERS\nMORE TERRY AND ALIO TRAIL-\ners   have   arrived to provide\n, homelike-comfort at your favorite fishing or hunting spot. Engineered, for easy towing. Bulit\n- for rugged travel. Flbreglas in-\n* sulated. Barrett Trailer Sales.\n745 Kipling St\u201e Trail.\nFOR SALE - 25' VAGABOND\nhouse trailer, iinderfloor heat,\nfndga and propane stove, fully\nequipped. See at S. Skoks, 61\nYmir Road,\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC\nWANTED - 6 TO 10 WEEKS OLD\ncockerels. No Leghorn. Apply\nBox 1810, Daily News.\nCOLLIE. PUPS FOR SALE~H;\nHarrop, phone 1278.\nGOOD MILKING COW FOR SALE\nMike Kabatoff, Winlaw. B.C.\nPETS, CANARIES. BEES\nWEIMARANER PUPS FOR SALE.\nThree months old. Registered in\n.C.K.C. ,Can De registered, in\nA.K.C. Price reasonable. For\nparticulars write A. W. Clarke,\nR.R.,1, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED - HOMES FOR MO-\nther oat, 2 females.- Ph. 1102-L.\n.1   11.1. H..1.   -\u00ab.i 1 11    ..11. ,11.11 II .1 ,\nHOTELS qnrt MOTELS\nCOLONIAL  HOTEL.  fiPOKANE,\nW'islliui'toii. Clean, comfortable\nrooms, nates from (2 to u for j\u201e\nPerking 1 bloek., Opp, PaylesS\nStore at N. lMVi Post.\nVACANCY FOR MIDDLE \u2022 AGE\nlady, at Roekha'ven Rest Home,\nCreston, P.O. Box 888, B.C,\nROOM AND BOARD\nRM. AND BD. SUITABLE FOR\nlady; or gentleman. Apply 411\nSilica, phone 1011-R.'\nBD.  AND  RM.  FOR 2 YO\"UNG\ngentlemen. Ph. 1179-X.   \u25a0\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nFridays Box 493 Phone 366-R' or\n483- R\nNflann'Sattjj Npme\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday\nBy carrier per week\nin- advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month       $ 1.25\nThree months    $ 3.50\nSix months ;...,.,,,..,.   $.6.50\nOne year , ....      $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States    .\nOne month     $ 1.76\nThree' months    \u00bb 5.00\nSix months  , ,    $ 9.50\nOne year  $18.00\nSubscription Rates\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove'rates  plus postage.  :\u2022'\u25a0\nFor Delivery by carrier in Crap-\nbrook phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely;\nIn Kimberley Mr. G. A. Bate;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs, Ross Saundry.\nOMDENPS\n\u25a0     By The Canadian Press\n.Power Corp. of Canada Ltd, so\ncents Sept. 30, record Sept. 20.\nBritish - A.meriean Bank Note\nCo, Wd, 85 cents Sept. 16, record\nAug. 30. '\nCrown Zfjllerbach Corp,\nib eeitte Oct. 1\", record Sept.. 10.\nGiant Yellowknife Gold Mines\nLtd. 15 cents Oct. 15, record Sept.\nW\nHoward Smith Paper Mills Ltd,\noorri, 25 cents; pfd. 50 cents Oct,\n81, record Sept. 30.      \u2022.\nJ The Premier Trust Co. $2 Oct,\n1, record Sept. 13.\nDominion Tar and Chemical\nGo; Ltd. com. 12W cents Nov. 1,.\nrecord Oct. 1,- pfd. 25 cents Oct,\n1, record Sept. 3.\nMystery 'telegram\nPuzzles Scientists\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - ' Scien-\nlists meeting here to discuss how\nlife began have received a mystery telegram from India saying\nthe problem has been solved.\nThe cable was received Wed.\nnesday and signed Layji Bhai\nPatel, Junagadh, India. It rea^-;\n\"Life under laboratory conditions\ncreated; initial success. Further\nexperiments on hand.\"       -,.  \u2022\nProfessor Wendel Stanley ol the\nUniversity of California said he\na*hd other American scientists\nattending the International Symposium of the Origins of Life and\nthe Earth had not beard of Layji\nBhai Patel, British professor J.\np. Bernal said he is \u00ablso unfamiliar 'with the name.\nThe symposium'began Monday\nand continues until Saturday,\nNone of'the 40 scientists present\nhas claimed any success in creating life from matter;\nNSLSCN DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1957\u20149\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-Stock market prices slid below the level ol\nMonday's sharp break Friday 'in\na quiet decline which clipped an\nestimateit $3,100,000,000 from (he\nquoted value of listed stocks.\nThe decline was general but\noils, coppers and selected 'Issues\ntook some stiff losses,\nThe Associated Pre?s average\nof 60 stocks fell $2.50 to $173 70\nwitH* the industrials  down  $3.90,\nthe rails down $2,50 and the. ut|H-\nties down 40 cents.\nTORONTO (CP) \u25a0 -, The stock,\nmarket settled down in dull? slow\ntrading. Western oils lost nearly-\nVA points on their index while base\nmetals'and industrials were each,\noil more than three-quarters of a.:\npoint.     \" \u2022'.\u2022'\u25a0\/'  \u2022\u25a0',!\nSTILL U.SED\n! The first tramway \u2014 forerunner,\nof. the streetcar line for conveying passengers - was established\niri New York in 1832,\nToday's Specials at\ncELR'OYS'. ';\u25a0'\u25a0\nj*   1957    AUSTIN AS? SEDAN\n'^1957   JUSTIN 6-CYL A95 SEDAN\n\u2022  line'7   BUICK 4 D00R SEDAN\nlyD\/    2-Tone,   Whitewall   Tires,   Automatic\nTransmission,   Radio.   Power   Brakes,\nPower Steering,\nCHEV.  4-DOOR  SEDAN\nNew Car Condition\nA riderless horse that crosses\nthe finish line in a horse race Is\ndisqualified for carrying insufficient weight. . .\nMO\u00a5ING\nTo New Premises\n, At The End of the Month\nSTOCK REDUCTIONS OF\n;'7 >\u00a77 CHEVS -'\u25a0-\n\u25a0 ' '57 OLDS.   ;,'.\nAlso ~\n1 USED CARS AND TRUCKS\nFOR THE DEAL OF A LIFETIME\n, SEE\nMotors Ltd.\nPhone 6222 or 1329\nTRAIL, ,B. C.\n^1956\n^;;1956\nj|f\"l955 1'-m.c. i'ic:r.iii'\nit 195.5\nWE PAY CASH FOR YO*UR GOOD USED CAR\nMETEOR 2-DOOR\nTwo-Tone, Radio.\nFORD STATION WAGON\n2-Tone  Paint,   Radio,\nNew. Car Condition,\nMOT*\nAUSTIN - MORRIS SALES ANP SERVICE\nBaker and Hendryx St.     \u2014     \u25a0 Phpne 2000\n\u00bb^^-^>f gjjjg g-*g *:*i*'r.~-~*m~,\"m~*m<>\u00bb\n\u25a0^\u25a0w*^^-^^\u00bbi*-\nBert... You'll\" -Never Be Hurt\n\u25a0w\nu\n\u2022hi\nr-'-l\nLOSt AMD FOUND     '\nlost' - pair \"Of mssES in\n.brown case. Phone 133.\nPlease Don't. Deal With Bert or I'll Lose MY Shirt.\nSigned, Reuben Buerge.\n\"\"' \" '    '\u25a0-^\",\"\"1 \u2022'\u2022'.   \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0         \u2014...\u2014\u25a0\u25a0   mrmwra jli-m.   mmmmt\n'Bert's \"Car' Sales\n' \u25a0-\u00ab\u25a0.'\nAcross From Civic' Theatre *\u2022\nDIVISION OF REUBEN BUERGE MOTORS\nBERT STEPHENSON, Mgr.\n, 1956 MONARCH LUCERNE\nImmaculate. Only 11,000 miles.\n1956 OLDSMOBILE 2 DOOR SEDAN\nRadio, heater, low mileage.\n\/'\/\u25a0\u25a0 FAMILY SPECIALS    .\n1952 FORD SEDAN        1952 QHEV 4 DOQR\n: Overdrive, $895 - : $1087\n\".       1952 AUSTIN COUNTRYMAN:\ns       Sorry'folks, we have only a few 1937 Chevs left this yeqr.\n1 only 1957 Chev V8, 150 Station Wagon. .\n1, only 1957 210 Chev Sedan, 6 cylinder, standard transmission.\nSeveral 1957 Chev Beluirs, in different models.   ' ''\u2022   '\u2022\nI need '52, '53, !54, \"55 Chev's. Premium allowances.\nO.\ns\nft\n<\nft\nft '\ni\ns.\n*\u25a0'\nfir-\nBert. 4 .You'll Never Be 'Hurt\nYour;\nM\n\/\n&\nOpen Daily Until 9:00 p.m. for\nCar and Gas Sales\n.     AISO   .   .';  .'\nGood Used Gars\nAT POPULAR PRICES\n323 Nelson Avenue -Phone 1454\nPeebles I Peebles\nPEEBLES SPECIAL DEALS\ninclude all the frills af no,extra cost!\nUsed Car,Ti\nAll new Plymouth-Chrysler Cars\n< 'All Makes \u2014-All Models\nTremendous Trade-in Prices\nHere are a few choice Used Cars '\nS '53 Custom DeSoto\nPower Steering, Auto-\n:  rnetic. A dream ore cer\nto drive and own.\nw\n\u00abT\n\u00bbm\\\nIRMf\n'55 Dodge1'Custom\nRoyal   Sedan\n; Beautiful J-Tone. Radio\nPowerfllte Trans:,\nCustom Seat Cavern.\n'53 Ford Custom\n... Line Sedqn\nValue Plus. '$1095.\n'56 Plym. Savoy V8\nImmaculate   condition.\nGuaranteed to five.\nyou service.\n'54. Plymouth\nDeluxe Sedan\nLihe hew; one owner.\nRadio,  A.C.,  Seat\nCovers.\n'53  Pontiae Chief\n- Sedan\nReal Value. Only $1095.\nPEEBLEf MOTOR! li.\n:.C%r^fp90' <7Mr>~-,B,C.\n; THE BRIGHT SPOT . . . . WEST END BAKER STREET\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY,:AUG. 24> 1\u00ab7\nPrescription\n\u2014 SERVICE-\nMann's\nClinic Pharmacy\nMedical Associate\nClinic Bldg.\nHendryx St.\nPHONE 1505\n. Mann's\nDrug Store\n498 Baker St.\nPHONE 81\n'4*~\u00bbi,C~Jm)m\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nQueen's Own Watch\nLatest A-Bomb Test\nBritannia Seeks Way\nOf Continuing Operations\nBRITANNIA BEACH, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014 The management and men' of\nBritannia Mining and Smelting\nCompany Limited are considering\na re-arrangement of work schedules in order to save the company\nenough nioney fo keep operating.\nIt was announced recently the 67-\nyear-old copper and zinc mining\noperation might close down because of failing meta! prices.\nA joint statement, issued Thursday by vice-president G. C'Lipsey\nof the company and president J. H,\nBalderson of the Britannia Mine\nand Millworkers Union, Local. 663,\nsaid both sides have deliberated for\na week. They have worked out\nschedules which will be presented\nto management and workers for\napproval this week.    .\nThe new plan will \"permit the\nThe Kootenay's favqrite dance\nRendezvous. An ideal spot for\nyour out-of-town Summer\ndancing  pleasure.\nFor More Fun Join the Gala\nWeekend Crowd.\nTONITE\non ii t i\nTo Music Styled by\nMEN OF NOTE\ncompany to effect economies in an\neffort to cone with the rapid decline\nin metal prices. It is hoped that this\nplan will provide an alternative to\nclosure by keeping.company-losses\nat a minimum pending either a recovery in metal market or government action.\"\nAbout 850 men are employed at\nthe Britannia Beach operation. Total population of the Howe Sound\ntown is only 1700.\nDEATHS\n\u25a0\n. By The Canadian Press\nVatican City \u2014 Giovanni Cardinal Mercati, librarian of the Roman Catholic Church.\nQuebec City \u2014 Mrs. H. L. Pryse,\nwife of Capt. H.\\L. Pryse,. Cunard\nSteamship Lines'rnSrinesuperin\ntendent for Montreal and Quebec\nCity'.\nATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev.\n(AP)\u2014A platoon of the Queen's\nOwn Rifles of Calgary watched\nfrom trenches Friday as a Wood-\nred fireball burst over the Nevada desert before dawn.\nIt was the 13th atomic explosion of the United States 1957\ntest series. The Canadians; assigned- here from their Alberta\nbase, were among. 450 military\nobservers who watched from 3,-\n000 yards from ground zero.\nThe military men did not take\npart in manoeuvres after the\nblast.\nThe flash of the blast was visible over a large area of the west.\nGLOWS THROUGH FOG\nDowntown buildings in Los An-\nMetals Prices\nNE. WYORK \u2014 Commodity spot\nprices:\nLead, New York, .14; Zinc, East\nSt. Louis, .10; silver, New York,\n.90%.\nHAIGH\nTRM-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n570 Baker St.\nPhono, 327\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n\" .     LIMITED        mf\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&   CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n576 Baker St Phone 235\nMrs. Lawrence McPhail\nB.   C. Registered Music Teacher of'\n(Piajw^&dc, atuL  Jhs&iy.\nPresents results obtained by ALL candidates prepared for\n1957 Royal Conservatory of Music of Toronto exams as follows\nTHEORY:\nGRADE II\u2014First Class   Honors,   Shannon   Norris,\nDiane  Rogers,   Nandine  Hendrickson,\nDiane Muraro; Honors, Beverly Mathi-\nson, Roberta McFadden, Vicki Sparkes.\nHISTORY III\u2014First Class  Honors,  Lynn  Mclvor;\nPass, Judith Godfrey, Cecilia Buckley.\nHISTORY V\u2014Honors, Sheilah-Lawrence McPhail.\n-Honors: Linda Farenholtz.\nPass: Katrine Stewart.\n\u2014Honors: Mary Buckley, Gail Meakins.\nPass: Roberta McFadden.\n\u2014Honors: Donna-Marie Wilson, Sarah\nLaw; Pass: Mildred Fulkco, Carroll\nCoventry. \u2022\n-Honors: Cecilia Buckley.\nPass: Scott Clinch Owen.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC FESTIVAL 1957;\nLieder Class under 21:  PIANO, Georgette Major,\nI -first; Sheilah-Lawrence McPhail, second.\nBeethoven Open Class\u2014Sheilah-Lawrence McPhail,\nfirst. ,\nHeintzman Cup for Highest Mark in Piano'Classes\nby Nelson Contestant, Sheilah-Lawrence\nMcPhail (tie).\nSTUDIO: 808 CARBONATE ST.  '      PHONE 1070\nPIANO:\nGRADE\nIV-\nGRADE VII-\nGRADE VIII-\nGRADE\nIX-\nGRADE\nX\u20141\nKOOLAREE ECHOES\nWater Sports\nIfHeld at (amp\nDay Six -~ This being Sunday,\na different schedule was followed,\nand an extra hour's sleep.\nThe chores were quickly finished,\nand everyone got dressed, up for\nchurch. Chief First Mate Jane Daly\nconducted the service.while..Gail\nKrueger favored us with a solo..\nMrs. Kettlewell of Nelson gave\nthe girls an inspiring message. It\nwas thirty years ago this Sunday\nthat she delivered her first sermon to a girls' camp, and one of\nthe girls made up her mind-that\nshe would be a girls' work leader.\nToday that girl is head of a girls'\nschool in southern Saskatchewan.\nMrs. Kettlewell told us to aim\ntowards big things and now is the\ntime to set our goal in life and\nnever lose sight of it. She hoped\nthat some of us would be assisting\nin a similar camp some day. We\nwere left with this thought in mind,\n\"Take my life and let it be consecrated, Lord, to Thee.\".\n\"Ritchie\" was pleased to mention that 50 per cent of our leaders\nthis year were campers at the first\ncamp she directed five years ago.\nThis afternoon everyone was on\nthe beach cheering for their cabin\nduring the water sports events.\nResults were:\nCrawl: 1. Cabin 6, 2. Cabin 5,\n3. Cabin 2. Side Stroke: 1. Cabin 6,\n2. Cabin 5, 3. Cabin 2. Breast\nStroke: 1. Cabin 6, 2. Cabin 3, 3,\nCabin 2. Back Stroke while reading a' newspaper: 1. Cabin 6, 2.\nCabin 2, 3. Cabin 1. Pajama Relay:\n1. Cabin 6, 2. Cabin 3, 3. Cabin 2.\nOrange Retrieving: 1. Cabin 6, 2,\nCaibn 2, 3. Cabin 1. Plain Dive: 1.\nCabin 3, 2. Cabin 6, 3. Cabin 4.\nComical\" Jump: 1. Cabin 3, 2. Cabin\n4, 3. Cabin 1. BrOom-Boat Race: 1.\nCabin 4, 2. Cabin 3; 3\". Cabin 5.\nOur sporty \"Salty\" Pam Brayley\nof Rossland certainly handled\nthings in great style. The. posture\nof Judy McCallum was so outstandingly correct' it inspired the\nleaders to hold a posture contest.\nA special \"K\" will be awarded to\nthe girls whose posture most resembles Judy's during the rest of\ncamp. Mrs. Kettlewell showed us\nan exercise to promote \"standing\ntall\".\n\"Benny\" conducted the Vesper\nService at sun down. Her service\ncentred around the four greatest\ngifts in life: to be happy at play,\nto be content at work, to be united\nin love, and to be united in work\nand worship\nThe drama group directed by\n\"Marty\" put on a radio play,\n\"Where the Cross Was Made.\"\nCabin seven,\" the leaders' cabin,\nwas presented with a special award\nof two brooms for housekeeping\" today. The totem went to cabin four.\nDay Seven \u2014. Theme at chapel\nthis morning was, \"friendship.\"\nIt's really a joy to start each day\nworshipping together outdoors.\nToday we each started new interest groups. Some of us will be\nbringing home copper pictures, aluminum brackets, or foam rubber I\nflowers.\nWe, lost one Barbara today and |\ngained another. We were sorry to\nsee Barbara Lee leave, but welcomed Barbara Humphries to our\ncrew as a leader for the remainder\nof camp.\n\"Pilot\" Mrs. Forrest is having\nmore trouble judging the housekeeping, but cabin six is really in\nthe lead. They won the totem pole\nagain, but cabin one took the shield.\nAt volleyball cabin six won over\ncabin three, and at softball cabin\none beat cabin two.\ngeles were bathed In a flashbulb-\nbright glow. The flash was visible in San Francisco despite a\nheavy fog.\nNewspaper men, barred from\nthe test'site, witnessed the explosion from Angel's Peak, ' 45\nmiles from ground zero.\nThe device-was exploded from\nadaptive ball6onl,500. feet above\nthe Yucca Flat test. grounds.,\nThe dark red fireball flared\nbriefly, then faded.\nToday's test was roughly one-\nhalf of nominal in power.   -\nA nominal bomb is equal to 20,-\n000 tons of TNT.  .\nThe blast, codehamed \"Dop-\npiers,\" 'was originally set for\nMonday and postponed to today\nbecause of weather and technical\ndifficulties. ,   , , \u00ab..\nPLANES FLY TESTS\n, There were 41 missions by military planes, and eight scientific\ntest's   conducted   in   connection\nwith the explosion.\nThe U.S. Atomic Energy Commission said the only traces of\nfallout' were anticipated ; off the\ntest site and the bombing and\ngunnery ranges surrounding it.\nThe detonation was heard as a\nsharp bang' at the control point\nat the test site, followed by a\nprolonged rumbling.\nThe rumble was heard at\nBishop and Inyokern, Calif.,\nsome 240 miles away, and at St.\nGeorge, Utah; 200 miles distant.\nRuss 'Volunteers'\nReported In Syria\nLONDON (AP). - A, Daily Express correspondent reports thousands of Russian \"volunteers\"\nare pouring into Syria.\n\"My information,\" correspondent Aondla Wise writes from Damascus, \"Is that most of these\nmen' are here to stay\u2014and \"fight\nfor. the Syrians when Syria feels\nthe time has to come to try to\nroll Israel into the sea.\" i\nWise says the volunteers include\nair force and tank instructors,\nmaintenance men for radar-controlled anti-aircraft guns, geologists,, engineers and agriculturists.\n'The cannon fodder will be supplied from Syria's struggling 4,-\n000,000 people,\" he adds. \"The\nknow-how men, technical officers\nand non - commissioned officers,\npilots, and tank commanders will\nmore   often  than  not  be  Rus-\nRed China Welcomes\n41 American Youths\nPEIPING (Reuters) - A party\nof 41 American youths arrived in\nthis capital today to a wildly\ncheering welcome to begin a visit\nto Communist China.\nThe American party travelled\nhere by train from Moscow,\nwhere they attended an international youth festival. Their trip\nto China was made, despite, the\ndisapproval of the United States\nstate department, which warned\nthe youths that their visit here\nwould violate American travel\nrestrictions.\nThe party entered China on a\nspecial train with other youth\ndelegations, including Canadians\nand West Africans, after crossing Siberia.\nOdds...\n^ Ends\nbyHD.B.   \u25a0\nNotice in a news item that 52\npeople are stranded in Paris. Boy,\nI'd like to be stranded in Paris, if\nI were going to be stranded anywhere there's no place that I'd like\nto be stranded better. As you can\n\u2022see I badly need a holiday, even\nmy grammar has gone to pot.\n* *  *\nI shall be on holidays when the\nchildren start back to school and\nI have noticed signs of preparation\nfor getting back to the three Rs;\nSuntanned   feet  that  have  seen\nmore water in the last couple of\nmonths than they'll see for the rest\nof the year are being fitted for\nshoes  to  start  back.   Distressed\nmothers  are\" finding  how much\ntheir offspring have grown since\nlast term necessitating many a\nnew outfit.      .  .   ,\n.*:'*'#\nOf cOUrse the rush for pencils,\npens, rulers and such will -come\nduring the first two days when the\nchildren, get their supply lists.\nMeantime the children have been\nmaking the most of the summery\ndays we have been having lately,\nswimming to their hearts' content.\nThe tempo of their play seems to\nheighten as they realize playtime\nwill soon be over and they try to\nmake the most of the days left.\n* *  *\nI am looking forward to finishing\noff.my holiday at the fair. Give me\na circus or a fair and I can spend\nhours in happy content just wandering and looking. I go home with\nmy feet all but worn off at the\nknee's and back I go next day for\nmore. The sights, sounds ' and\nsmells are so exhilarating. Perfect fruits and vegetables polished\nand washed are a joy to look at\nand the flowers and all the rest\nof the exhibits that have gone to\nmake the fairs so wonderful in the\npast heighten my anticipation. Be\nseeing you at the fair.\n* *  #\n' By the way, I received a nice\nletter from a lady at Burton who\nwas pleased to get the bird food\nrecipe for during the winter. They\nhave been putting out suet for the\nbirds which has attracted the blue\njays and larger birds. I hope they\nwill get a wider variety with the\nseed mixture to add to their Winter joys.\nU.S. Still Cutting\nMilitary Manpower\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) - The\nUnited States has scaled down its\nmilitary manpower by nearly 1,-\n000,000 men since the Korean\nWar and still more cuts are on\nthe way.\nTotal.strength' now is 2,794,411,\nincluding, 997,916 army,. 919,070\nair force, 676,532 navy and 200,-\n893 marine corps.\nBy comparison,- current\nstrength of Canada's armed\nforces is 116,700, made'up of 50,-\n638 RCAF, 46,684 army, and 19,-\n378 navy.\nEconomic pressure has been\ncited as the official reason for\nihe U.S. reductions. In announcing some cuts last month, Defence Secretary Wilson estimated\nihey would trim $200,000,000 from\nthe country's top-heavy $38,000,-\n000,000 defence bill.\nIncreased firepower of American fighting units abroad,\n|. coupled. with streamlining of unit\nmakeup, are other factors.\nThe reduction is being concen-\nMacmillan to Visit\nCommonwealth .\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Macmiilan will visit Aus1\ntr.alia, New,Zealand, India, Pakistan and Ceylon at the beginning\nof next year, it was officially announced today.\nHe has accepted \"with the\ngreatest plea sure\" invitations\nfrom the prime ministers of these\nfive Commonwealth countries, the\nannouncement said,\nMacmiilan will leave London\nabout Jan. 7 for India where he\nwill stay from Jan. 8 to Jan. 12.\nHe will be in Pakistan from Jan.\n12-16, in Ceylon Jan. 16-18, in New\nZealand Jan. 20-28 and in Australia Jan. 28-Feb. 11.\nThis will be the first visit by\na British prime minister while\nholding office to any of the five\ncountries named.\nIt js unlikely he will come back\nto London by way of North America, By the time the tour in Australia ends, Parliament here will\nalready have been sitting for\nabout two weeks.\nPlot to Seize\nSingapore\nNipped in Bud\nSINGAPORE (Reuters) - The\ngovernment of this British colony\nmoved today to stamp out what\nit has called a secret Communist\nplot to seize control of Singapore.\nDuring the night police detained\n35 persons under the anti-subversion law in a series of surprise\nraids on offices of left - wing\nPeople's Action party.\nA few hours later the'govern-\nment published a report warning\nof \"attempts to create an essen-\nt i a 11 y dictatorial Communist\nstate.\"\nThe report says a secret Communist plot' to take over Singapore \u2014 Britain's main far East\nfortress\u2014has become \"more and\nmore blatant\" in the last few\nmonths. The government had \"an\ninescapable duty\" to stamp out\nthe plot.\nBritish troops and Gurkha soldiers stood by 'as hundreds of police carried out widespread raids\nin the biggest \"anti-subversion\"\naction since riots said to be Communist-inspired erupted last October.\n\"The most serious subversion\nhas been among,the workers and\nunions in Singapore,\" the report\nsaid.\n\"The Malayan Communist\nparty is planning for the day\nwhen it can form a united front\nin an all-out attempt at revolution.\n\"Riots and bloodhsed will fol-\nkow security action against the\nCommunists if subversive groups\nare allowed to develop unchecked.\"\nCommenting on the report, a\nhigh government official said\nthere is no direct evidence that\nCommunist China or Russia has\na controlling say' in Communist\npenetration of Singapore, but\nthere was a definite link between\nCommunist guerrillas fighting in\nthe jungles of neighboring Malaya and the \"secret plot\" in\nSingapore. j\nThe Communist party is illegal both in Singapore and\nMalaya.\ntrated in the Far East, site of\nanti-American outbursts a few\nmonths back. All U.S. ground\ntroops are being withdrawn from\nJapan. The remaining 7,000 U.S.\nmilitary personnel there will be\n(reduced further, by June, 1958.\nLest its NATO allies also start\ncutting back, the U.S. plans no\ncurtailment of the firepower of\nits five divisions in Europe.\nWhile some support personnel\nwill be brought back from Europe, the streamlined units will be\narmed with more modern weapons to increase their fighting\nstrength and compensate for any\nreduction in manpower.\nThe United States came out of.\nthe Second World War with a\npeak manpower, strength of 12,-\n124,418, made up of. 8,293,766\narmy (including 2,310,436 in the\nold army air force), 3,359,283\nnavy and 471,369 marine corps.\nCOLD WAR BUILDUP\nPost - war discharges reduced\nmanpower to a low of 1,398,726\nby 1948. The development- of the\ncold war and the outbreak of\nfighting in Korea forced the U.S\nrapidly to expand its services,\nbuilding them up to a peak of\n3,685,054 by April 30, 1952.\nBy comparison, Canada came\nout of the Second World War\nwith a peak manpower strength\nof 799,835, made up of 495,804\narmy, 211,151 air force, and 92,-\n880 navy.\nThis fell to a post - war low\nof 32,896, made up of 14,641 army,\n11,479 RCAF and 6,776 navy. The\nKorean War brought a rebound\nto a total of 132,481, made up of\n'64,549 air force, 49,983 army, and\n,17,949 navy.\nBritain proposes even deeper\ncuts than the U.S. in her manpower totals. S h a p i n g her military policy to economic demands\nand the new concepts of nuclear\nwarfare, she has announced her\npresent forces of 690,000 men will\nbe cut to 375,000 by 1962. Britain's\nwartime peak strength was 5,-\n089,000 men, her post - war low\n660,000 in 1950 and her top Korean\nstrength 848,400 in 1952.\nDANCE\nat Ymir\n.\u25a0'--'\"\"'       '\u25a0...\u25a0'. \u2022\nTonight\nMUSJC  BY  \"\nROCOTONES\n9 to 1 \u2014 Adm. 75*\nOntario to Build\nThermo f\/anfs\nTORpNTO (CP) - Plans to\nbuild two, thermo-electric generating plants that will raise Ontario's electricity output by 3,600,-\n000 kilowatts by 1968 were announced Friday.\nTo be built near Tororrto and\nHamilton, the plants will cost\nabout $250,000,000 each, and when\ncompleted will be the largest\nthermo plants in the world, chairman James Duncan of the Hydro-\nElectric Power Commission of\nOntario said.\nMr. Duncan said Ontario Hydro is negotiating with the defence\ndepartment and the city of Toronto to buy the 216 - acre Long\nBranch rifle ranges near Toronto.\nThe commission is negotiating\nwith the Hamilton harbor commission for an approximately 200-\nacre site in the Burlington Bay\narea.\nThe generating sites must be\nnear large bodies of water because of the vast quantities of\nwater needed to cool the generating equipment.\nAlso water was needed to facilitate transportation of the 4,000,-\n000 tons of coal each plant will\nrequire each year.\nBack\nTo Books\nSchool Days Are Not\nFar Off.\nSee Us For All Your\nNEW . . .\n\u2022 Sweaters\n\u2022 Slacks\n\u2022 Cords\n.. \u2022 Jeans\nAT\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     U\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nHEADS CHESSMEN\nVANCOUVER (CP) - John G.\nPrentice of Vancouver was elected Thursday as president of the\nChess Federation of Canada for his\nthird successive term.\n,D. A, MacAdam, Montreal, was\nelected vice-president and J. B.\nBergevin, Montreal, was chosen\nsecretary.\nRed China News\nBan End Greeted\nWASHINGTON (AP) - State\nSecretary Dulles has won commendation from congressional\nleaders for his decision to permit\n24 American news correspondents\nto report from inside Red China,\ning the reporters to be stationed\nthere on a six-month trial basis\npoints to an end of an eight-year\nblackout on direct reporting by\nAmericans from the China mainland.\nSpokesmen for groups in the\nnewspaper' field called Dulles'\nmove a step in the right direction\u2014but said it ought to go further.\nSenator Hubert' Humphrey\n(Dem. Minn.) called it \"a long\noverdue but welcome retreat\nfrom an untenable position.\"\n\"If Red China will permit\nAmerican newsmen to observe\nand report on happenings on the\nmainland, this could very well be\nthe lifting of the Iron Curtain.\n\"This could bring profound political reprecussions. The next\nstep might well be the release of\nAmerican prisoners and a final\nsettlement of the Korean War.\"\nWilliam F. Knowland of California, the Senate Republican\nleader, said it is \"desirable to,\ngive the American people access\nto the news on the Chinese mainland without having to get it\nsecond hand, either through Red\npropaganda agencies or foreign ^\nnews services of other countries.\"\n15 Escape Tunnel\nPITTSBURGH (AP) - Fifteen\nmen were trapped in an underground sewage tunnel for nearly\nthree hours today before being\nrescued. None was injured.\nThey were trapped after fire,\nset off by the electric motor of a\nlocomotive, blocked the tunnel\nentrance.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nHelpful Snapshot Advlc*\nREXALL  PHARMACY\nCity Drug\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nHIGH ABOVE THE LAKE, West Arm bridge construction men move around\non huge steel beams as thpugh they were on safe ground. Here, Rod McLelian,\n60 feet above the water, uses a sledge hammer to: pound a vertical beam into place.\nIt is hinged at the top end to allow the other end to move into place before the ends\nare bolted. A strong wind made walking hazardous on this particular day.\n:     ; \u2014Daily News photo.\nAll You Have to Do Is to Buy a Car\nOVER $3 50\nIN VALUE\nAnd GET\n1. $30 Grocery Credit Note.\n2. 100 Gals. Gas Credit Note\n3. Handsome Gift for the Lady.\nPLUS\nBIG TRADE-INS\nWHAT MORE CAN YOU ASK ?\nNelson Motor Products\nLtd.\nPhone 658-9\nNelson, B.C\nM\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_08_24","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430011","@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":"1957-08-24 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-08-24 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\/1.0430011"}