{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-04-03","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1956-11-28","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430024\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nEgypt Presses\nsT\nBritish, French\nWithdrawal\nWants UN Consider Expelling U. K\u201e\nFrance if Answer Unsatisfactory\nBy ROD CURRIE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)-Egypt and India\nTuesday prodded the United Nations to demand from\nBritain, France and Israel a definite answer on their plans\nfor withdrawing from Egypt,\nEgyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi said that if the answer is not satisfactory the UN\nshould consider expelling the\nthree parties from the UN\nFawzi gave the last speech before the General Assembly turned from the Middle East problem\nand took up again the much-postponed general debate. '\nEarlier India's V. K. Krishna\nMenon demanded immediate UN\ninvestigation of reports of a\nFrench armoured buildup in Port\nSaid.\nASK UN CHECK\nHe urged that UN Secretary-\nGeneral Dag Hammarskjold communicate immediately with the\nFrench government \"to put the\nassembly at rest in regard to\nthese reports.''\nLater, Hammarskjold announced he has sent inquiries about the\nreported landing of a French tank\nregiment.\nThe speeches by Fawzi and\nMenon followed the assembly's ac\ntion Saturday in approving an Asian-African resolution calling for\nthe withdrawal \"forthwith\" of\nBritish, French and Israeli forces.\nFawzi said the assembly is\n\"duty bound and entitled\" to ask\nthe representatives of the three\ncountries \"to come forth and tell\nthe assembly when the withdrawal of invading forces from Egypt\nwill be completed.\"\nWON'T CLEAR CANAL\nFawzi also said delay in withdrawal is \"holding up and delaying clearing of the Suez Canal.\"\n\"Egypt could not possibly conceive such clearance while forces\nremain in Egypt and while there\nis still the possibility of hostilities taking place.\"\nFawzi also alleged atrocities\nIn Egypt by the Invading forces\nard said civilians had been\n\"slaughtered without mercy.\"\nThe charges by Egypt, he said,\nmust not be left without thorough Investigation followed by\n\"retribution and redress.'\n\u2014 1 _ - , _ , . , r\u2014r\u2014\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nebon lailn\nKootenay: Overcast low clouds\nin nearly all valleys but clear on\nthe ridges. Little change in temperature. Light winds, Low-high\nat Cranbrook 12 and 20, Crescent\nValley 25 and 30.\nVoL 55\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOV. 28, 1956\nStay on Job for Peoples'\nSake, Hungarians Told\nBy  ENDRE   MARTON\nBUDAPEST (AP) \u2014 Budapest's\nCouncil of Workers asked its\nmembers Tuesday night to stay on\nthe job \"in the interest of the\npeople.\" But a spokesman for the\norganization said there was little likelihood of any quick agreement with the government of Janos Kadar, the Soviet-supported\npremier.\nKadar's speech Monday night\n\"did not serve  the  interests of\nJordan To Cut\nBritish Ties\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) \u2014 Jordan's Premier Suleiman Nabulsi\nannounced Tuesday he was pro-\neeeding to cut his nation free from\nits long alliance with Britain and\nto liquidate her miltary bases\nthere.\nThe announcement to the new\nJordan parliament in Amman\nraised Western fears that the little\nkingdom, sliced off from Palestine\nby Britain after the First World\nWar, was opening the doors still\nwider to Soviet penetration of the\nMiddle East.\nThe development, together with\nIndications that Syria rapidly is\nbecoming the first Soviet satellite\nin the Middle East, could extend\n\u25a0the Kremlin's influence all the\nway to the Red Sea at Aqaba.\nNabulsi said his government\nwas studying the establishment of\ndiplomatic, cultural and'economic\nrelations with the Soviet Union,\nand would seek financial aid from\nneighboring Arab countries to replace the annual $33,000,000 subsidy and assistance grant from\nBritain.\nthe Hungarian people and it hinders a peaceful solution,\" a resolution passed by the council said.\nThe council represents the capital's workers.\nKadar declared that former premier Imre Nagy and his government \"committed an unpardonable crime against the Hungarian\nnation\" by failing to take action\nagainst the counter revolution.\"\nKadar contended that fascists\nand reactionaries gained control\nof the Hungarian revolution shortly before Russian military might\nmoved in' on Nov. 4.\nDEMAND  NAGY  RETURN\nThe workers have been demanding that Nagy be returned to\npower in place of Kadar and that\nthe Russians withdraw from Hungary.\nA council ipokesman declared:\n\"We will   not  yield  end  the\ngovernment knows It. Imre Nagy\nhas been, and remains, our first\ndemand and In the end we will\nwin  anyway.\"\nNot  More  Than Gc  Dally,  tOo Saturday\nNo. 184\nSawmill Workers\nFace Layoff\nPORT ALBERNI (CP) \u2014 About\n100 Port Alberni swamill workers\nwill b$ laid off next Monday when\nMacMillan and Bloedel reduces\nproduction at its plywood mill, a\ncompany official said today. He attributed the layoff to a reduced\ndemand for plywood despite an\nintensive sales campaign.\n_h-L a. Second.\nU.S. Seeks To\nMend Relations\nAUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)\u2014President\nEisenhower moved to heal a split\nwith Britain and France over the\nSuez crisis Tuesday. He also arranged to review the international\nsituation at a Sunday conference\nhere with State Secretary Dulles.\nA White House statement said\ndifferences which have arisen\nbetween the United States and her\ntraditional friends and allies are\nthose arising from a particular international incident\"\u2014British and\nFrench military action in Egypt,\nand U.S. refusal to back that action.\nBut the statement said further:\n\"These differences in no way\nshould be construed as a weakening or disruption of the great\nbonds that have so long joined our\nnation with the United Kingdom\nand the Republic of France and\nour other allies in assuring that\npeace, justice and freedom*- shall\nprevail.\"\nEisenhower and Dulles will meet\nSunday at Augusta National Golf\nClub to review the international\nsituation and'discuss the cabinet\nmember's participation in a Paris\nmeeting on the NATO ministerial\ncouncil starting Dec. 11.\n\"I KNOW t spend more than\nyou earn, but then you're\nWORTH more than you\nearn!\"\nWANT TOURIST\nINDUSTRY SURVEY\nBy JACK VAN DUSSEN .\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A committee of\nCanadian tourist experts Tuesday\nsuggested a \"complete and comprehensive\" economic survey be\nmade of Canada's tourist industry.\nThe survey, to cost some $40,-\n000, would be the first of its kind\nin Canada.\nThe committee was formed at\nlast year's annual federal-provin\ncial conference to consider .the\nfeasability of a study to estimate\nthe importance of the tourist industry to Canada. Its recommendation that the survey be started\nwas made as the 11th annual conference drew to a close.\nPROBING THROUGH SNOW, Hon- Wesley D. Black, provincial secretary,\nturns the sod to mark the official start of the Cre'ston-Salmo cutoff near No. 3\nHighway just West of Creston. Rev. E. R. Hope and Hon. W. N. Chant, minister\nof public works, look on. The ceremony was watched by several hundred persons, including members of the Trans-Canada Highway Association (Crow's Nest'\nRoute), Monday afternoon. The cutoff will give motorists a second route to West\nKootenay, eliminating the need to cross Kootenay Lake'by ferry.\u2014Buckna photo.\nBums1 UH Force Tb Separate\nAnglo-French, Egypt Forces\nPORT SAID, Egypt (Reuters)\n\u2014Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns, UN\ncommander-in-chief   in    Egypt,\nhas decided to move United Nations troops  into the area  be-\ntween Anglo-French and Egyptian forces south  of Port Said,\nIt was announced Tuesday.\nThe decision was made known\nat a press conference in Cairo by\nthe Canadian general's liaison officer, King Gordon.\nThe announcement said the\npresent United Nations Emergency Force in Port Said will be\nincreased to battalion strength and\nstationed at Port Said and Port\nFuad.\nBurns took the decision \"as a\nfurther step in the activity of\nthe relevant decision of the General Assembly,\" the announcement\nadded.\nTROOPS WITHDRAW\nMeanwhile, more British troops\nwithdrew from the Port Said\nbeachhead   as   further   reinforce-\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 James\nCarey charged with murder, filed\nnotice with the Supreme Court of\nCanada Tuesday that he will cross,\nappeal against the crown's fight\nto take away a new trial ordered\nfor Carey by the B. C. Court of\nAppeak\nments for UNEF arrived in Egypt.\n.Three RCAF planes landed at\nAbu Suweir airport in the canal\nzone with 160 Indian troops, bringing UNEF to a total manpower of\n1,415.\nNo numbers were given for\nTuesday's  British   withdrawals.\nQuestioned on plans for a full-\nscale withdrawal the British\nspokesman said such a withdrawal\nprobably would take two or three\nweeks once it got started.\nVehicles also are being shipped\nout, he said, in what constituted a\n\"considerable movement outward\" Monday and Tuesday.\nHe denied reports -that the British had brought in armored units.\nYUGOSLAVS ARRIVE SOON\nOn Thursday, 700 Yugoslav UN\ntroops with 130 vehicles and about\n500 tons of equipment and stores\nwill arrive here by sea and probably will spend several days here\nbefore going to some destination.\nsouth of the British frontline at\nEl Cap.\nReports reaching British army\nheadquarters here said Egyptian\ntroops were blasting craters In\nroads running south from the\nadvance positions of the Anglo-\nFrench ttroops along the Suez\nCanal, presumably for tank\ntraps, and were laying mines.\nParliament\nTuesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nExternal Afi'j!;-s Minister Pear\nson said 4he Commonwealth was\non the verge of dissolution over\nBritish intervention in the Middle\nEast.\n\u25a0 Maj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkes, VC\n(PC \u2014 Esquimalt - Saanich) said\nthere are large numbers of youn,\nrecruits with only a few months'\ntraining in the Queen's Own\nRifles.\nFinance Minister Harris was besieged by opposition pleas to help\nease interest rates and credit\ncurbs.\nSenator Sarto Fournier (L\u2014Quebec) said Canada was right in\nchastising Britain and France for\ntaking the \"law into their own\nhands.\"\nHarris Begged to\nEase Credit Curbs\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Finance Minister Harris was besieged by opposition pleas in the Commons\nTuesday to help ease interest\nrates and credit curbs \"so that\nhard-pressed municipalities might\nfind it easier to raise much-\nneeded capital.\nBut Mr. Harris gave no indication of any plans to change federal policy. In time of Inflation\nand when money was scarce, all\nsectors of the economy found it\ndifficult to raise funds without\npaying high interest rates, he said.\n\"If a municipal corporation\nfinds that as an elected body it\nhas to choose between paying a\nhigher rate of interest and postponing work it has in mind, that\nis simply a resonsibility which\ncomes to all of us at one time or\nanother, whether it be the federal\nor a' provincial or municipal gov'\nernment or indeed a business in\nstitution.\"\nThe question \u00a9I the impact of\nfederal  policy  on  interest  rates\nand the availability of investment\nfunds arose during the Commons\nquestion period.\nBOND MONEY TIGHT\nErhart Regier (CCF \u2014 Burnaby-\nCoquitlam) asked whether Mr.\nHarris was aware that Bank of\nCanada action was making it exceedingly difficult for municipal\ngovernments to market bonds at\nsuitable interest rates. Would the\nfederal administration consider\nsupplying municipalities with low-\ninterest funds?\n\"The question Indicates a complete misunderstanding of the\nmoney market at the moment,\nreplied Mr. Harris. \"It is not the\naction of the bank which in caus-\ning the rise in interest rates; it\nis the demand on the money supply to both in business and in gov.\nernment circles. The Bank of Can.\nada interest rate is only a reflection of the increased interest rates\nin the money market,\"\nBonner Scores\n\"Tight Money\"\nEDMONTON (CP) - Attorney-\nGeneral Robert Bonner of B. C\nsays the Federal Government's\n\"tight money\" policy is a direct\nthreat to the economic welfare ctf\nall Canadians.\nMr. Bonner tojd the Alberta\nSocial Credit League annual convention Tuesday night that the\nfederal policy places big com\npanies in a preferred position to\nfinance expansion and its general\neffect would be a tendency to-\nward elimination of the small\nbusinessman in Canada.\n\"This policy is both unnecessary and in itself inflationary\"\nMr. Bonner said. \"It favors big\nbusiness over small business and\nencourages monopoly while pen.\nalyzing individual effort.\"\n$100 Fine Follows\nBingo Raid\nVANCOUVER. (CP) \u2014. William\nQuigley and the Cordial Club\nTuesday were each fined $100 for\noperating a common gaming\nhouse. The charges followed\nbingo raid in August.\nRemanded for sentence Nov. 29\nwere Gordon and Albert Town\nand Delmar Estates Ltd. Charges\nagainst 13 other individuals ahd\none company were dismissed.\nPCs Rap Gov't Stand\nIn Suez Canal Crisis\nFog Shows No\nSign of Lifting\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An 800-\nfoot-thick blanket of fog covered\nsouthwest British Columbia Tuesday night as it has for nearly a\nweek.\nThousands of dollars have been\nlost by airline companies whose\nschedules have been turned topsyturvy.\nAirline officials estimated the\ntotal cost in rerouted flying operations and cancellations at\n$200,000 and perhaps more.\nThe damage caused by shipping\nand road accidents during the six-\nday pea-souper also totals thousands of dollars.\nTuesday a CNR yard employee,\nGary Peterson, 20, was killed at\nNew Westminster because he\ncouldn't see a train bearing down\non him. At least a dozen persons\nhave been injured in traffic accidents.\nThieves have been active under\nthe pall, television reception affected and mails delayed. Car\ntraffic has been-light at night an*\nduring the weekend shops and\nparking lots reported a drop in\nbusiness. \u25a0\nVancouver Canucks postponed\ntheir Tuesday night hockey game\nhere against the Calgary Stampeders fearing the fog would\nmean low attendance.\nLate Tuesday the wather office\nat Vancouver reported no sign\nthat the fog would lift within 24\nhours.\nBlame U.S. Policies ior Big Share\nOf Trouble; Criticize St. Laurent\nBy DON PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Progressive Conservatives Tuesday strongly criticized in the Commons the Canadian\ngovernment's attitude toward Britain and France in the\nMiddle'East crisis and blamed a large share of the trouble\nthere on United States pol\nicies.\n\"The Canadian government has\nchosen to allign itself with those\nwho are not satisfied with the\nplain statement of purpose and\nthe expression of good faith on the\npart of the government of Britain and France in this matter,\"\nsaid Donald Fleming.\nThe Conservative member for\nToronto Eglinton at another point\nsaid:\n\"While we are not the U.S. Congress, nevertheless we are entitled to say of the policies of the\nUnited States that they are responsible to a very considerable\ndegree, a regrettable degree, for\nthe trouble that exists in the Middle East today.\"\nBLAST CANADA'S POLICY\nBoth Mr. Fleming and Howard\nGreen.(PC - Vancouver Quadra)\naimed blasts of criticism at Prime\nMinister St. Laurent as the Commons moved through the second\nday of the special parliamentary\nsession to consider Canada's role\nin the Middle East and its planned\n$1,000,000 contribution to Hungarian relief. (See also story on\nHoward Green Page 12)\nBefore the House was a Conser-\nLaing Found\nNot Guilty\nBy   JACK   BEST\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A British Columbia Supreme Court jury\nTuesday found former Liberal\nleader Arthur Laing of B. C. not\nguilty of libel and slander against\nWade and Wells Co., Ltd., contractor on the Stewart-Cassiar\nroad in the northern part of the\nprovince.\nJohn Alley, counsel for Mr.\nLaing, immediately moved for dismissal of the action. Cecil Merritt, . counsel for the plaintiffs,\nasked that judgment be reserved\nuntil Wednesday while he decides\nwnether to acquiesce in the move\nfor dismissal.\nMr. Justice Norman Whittaker\nCeylon Urges\nWithdrawals\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister\nBandaranaike of Ceylon said Tuesday there Is no room for complacency in the explosive Middle East.\nHe told reporters at a press conference that the people of Asia\n(eel the situation is \"delicate, difficult and dangerous.\" He warned\nthat there may be further deterioration unless there is immediate\nwithdrawal of British, French and\nIsraeli torces from Egypt.\nMr. Bandaranaike left Ottawa\nlate Tuesday by air .for New York\nafter a 27-hour visit to the capital.\n-The\nToo Many Crown\nCorporations,\nSays Dupuis\nSHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)\npresident of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce said. Tuesday\nthat Canadians have been carried\n\"too far and too fast along the\nroad to big government.\"\nRaymond Dupuis of Montreal,\nelected last month at the association's annual meeting, told a service club Rotary that \"big gov\nernment\" poses two threats: Gov\nernment competition with business\nand high taxation to meet its\nspending.\nHis text was released to the\npress before delivery.\nGovernment had. invaded Canadian business, he said, through 35\ncrown corporation employing 146;\n400 persons. The number of employees in Canadian crown corpor\nations had doubled during the last\n16 years.   .\nIf the trertd continued the foun.\ndatlon of the country's free economy could be shaken. Many gov\nernment enterprises, begun as\ncrown corporations during the Second World War, had lingered \"long\nafter the emergency had pasted.\"\nthen adjourned the hearing .until\n11 a.m. Wednesday.   \"\nThe actio ngrew out of a let\nter Mr. Laing wrote to Mines\nMinister Kiernan last spring, subsequently published in the press\nand read at two public meetings,\nasking for an official investigation of the handling of the Wade\nend Wells contract.\nCARE URGED\nCourt officials said the move for\ndismissal of the action was necessary because the jury's verdict\nin a slander and libel case is not\nnecessarily the verdict of the\ncourt.\nIt was learned that Mr. Mer-\nritt's request for time to consider\nhis course of action resulted from\na recommendation which the jury\nattached to its verdict that in political controversies \"reasonable\ncare\" be exercised that a third\nparty who\u00abmay be innocent be\nnot brought into it.\nIn his charge to the jury, Mr.\nJustice Whittaker said It must\ndecide whether the statements\nmade by Mr. Laing were critical\nof government road policy In\ngeneral and former lands minister R. E. 8ommeM In particular or whether they were\ndefamatory of Wade and Wells.\n13 Tanks Lost in\n$1 Million Fire\nCALGARY (CP) - Fire raged\nthrough a huge tank hangar in the\nSarcee army camp just outside the\ncity Tuesday destroying military\nequipment valued at an estimated\n$1,775,000.\nThirteen Centurion tanks, six\nbelieved to be new, were twisted\nand burned to ruin by the blaze.\nFire Chief Barney Lemieux said\nTuesday night the short but furious blaze was the biggest in the\nhistory of the Calgary area.\nOne man, a civilian workmen,\nwas burned but his condition is\nnot serious.\nArmy officials said the 19.00U-\nsquare-foot, steel and concrete\nhangar which was demolished in\ntiie blaze, was worth about $150,-\n000. It is believed it was a wartime structure.\nNo official value could be placed\non the tanks. The accepted figure\nfor a Centurion tank is $123,000.\nvative non  -  confidence motion\ncritizing the government,\nMr. Fleming termed the prime\nminister's statement Monday \"petulant, belligerent and provocative\" and said much ot Mr. St.\nLaurent's \"impatience\" a t e m \u00bb\nfrom the fact there is growing\nsympathy in Canada and other\ncountries for the Anglo-French intervention in Egypt.\nMr. Fleming took particular ex-\ncetpion to Mr. St. Laurent's statement that he has been \"scandalized\" more than once by the attitude of the big powers \"who have\nall too frequently treated the charter of the United Nations as an\nInstrument with whioh to regiment smaller nations.\"     \\\n\"Is that not a gratuitous eon-\ndemnation of Britain and\nFrance?\" asked Mr. Fleming.\nEarlier, External Affairs Minister Pearsdn said that at one\npoint after British-French land action began in Egypt the Commonwealth was \"on the verge of dissolution.\"\nMr. Pearson described current\nevents in Syria and Lebanon as\n\"a matter of immediate gravity.\"\nINCREASE FORCE?\nJohn Diefenbaker (PC - Prince\nAlbert) asked whether the UN\nEmergency Force in Egygpt will\nhave to be increased to deal with\nthe new problem arising from the\n\"critical\" situation in Syria and\nLebanon.\nMr. Pearson said the UN force\nwould soon be greatly increased.\nIts terms of reference dealt only\nwith 'matters there, but the UN\nGeneral Assembly was in session\nand he felt the force's functions could be extended if necessary.\nOn the Hungarian   situation,\nhe said there is some hope that\nEastern Europe is beginning to\nfree Itself from Soviet shackles.\nBut \"It would not help, and It\nmight hurt the people there, If\nwe held out promises of .liberation by force which at this time\nwe might be unable to. fulfill.\"\nCanada could help by keeping\nthe spotlight of world opinion on\nRussia's \"savage actions\" against\nHungarian freedom lighters   and\nby working to get the UN into\nHungary as observers and investigators.\nMr. Green said Canada for 10\nyears has been currying favor\nwith the U.S. The government was\n\"the U.S. chore boy.\" The U.S.\nhad brought on seizure of the Suez\nCanal by refusing financial help\nfor the proposed Aswan Dam on\nthe Nile River.\nNow U.S. policy was to build up\nEgypt and presumably-get Britain\nand France out of the Middle\nEast. Nothing Mr. St. Laurent had\nsaid indicated Canada's policy was\nany different.\n'Ws high time Canada had a\ngovernment which won't knife\nCanada's best friends .in the\nback.\"\nThe government had made the\nmonth of November \"the most disgraceful period for Canada in the\nhistory of the nation.\"\n70 Hungarians\nDue Tuesday\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The first\nflight of Hungarian refugees to\nCanada from Vienna will arrive\nin B. C. next Tuesday and the 70\nHungarians will have a'temporary\nhome at Abbo'tsford airport 45\nmiles east of here.\nIt is the first of six flights\nchartered by the Canadian, government by which Canadian Pacific Airlines will bring 420 refugees\nto Canada.\nFamilies will be kept together\nas much as possible, Hungarian\nofficials said here. Employment\nofficers would search for jobs for\nthe'Hungarians and teachers, employment officers, immigratian of-\nDOLLAR HIGHER ficials and welfare leaders are to\nNEty YORK (CP) \u2014 The Cana- meet the flight at Abbotsford.   '\ndian dollar  was  Vt higher  at a!    Three more flights, each carry-\npremium  of. 4 13-32 per cent in j ing 70 refugees, will arrive at Abbotsford before the middle of De-\ncamber.\nMost of the Hungarians are expected to stay several days at the\nAbbotsford reception centre. Rev.\nFrederick Metzger at Vancouver\nis in charge of finding accommodation for the refugees in homes.\ntafma of U. S. funds. Pound sterling % higher at $2.78%.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U. S.\ndollar today closed at a discount\nbf iVt per cent in terms of Canadian funds, down Vi. Pound sterling $2.66%, down Vs.\nI\nI\n v\n_\u2014 , . , , , ,\t\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 28, 1956\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-9:00\nThey called them \"canoe commandos!\"\n.a****.\n.You'll be part of an exciting\n[experience in sheer suspense...\nwhen you see      %___jl^,\n^W^p PARAMOUNT\nSPENCER TRACY\nROBERT WAGNER\nTOMORROW\nCIVIC\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C. |\nHrowing TONIGHT, THURSDAY\nShows at 7 and 9 p.m. ,\n\"THIS   ISLAND   EARTH\"\n(Technicolor)\nJeff Morrow, Faith Domerqne\nBANKS CONSIDER\nOVERTIME PAY\nTORONTO (CP) - Canada's\nleading banks are actively considering paying their 60.000 *m-\nployees time and a half wages for\novertime work ln hopes of trading a $36,000,000 union wage demand, it was learned Tuesday.\nTha Royal Bank of Canada, biggest bank, employer, announced it\nwill pay union-Btyla overtime after a 40-hour week to its 12.000\ntellers, clerks and accountants.\nSpokesmen for the Bank of\nMontreal, Bank of Nova Scotia,\nImperial Bank of Canada, Toronto-Dominion Bank and the Mercantile Bank all indicated that\nthey are considering it.\nCanadian Bank of Commerce officials refused to deny or confirm\na \u2022tiggestion that they plan to Institute overtime starting Dec. 1.\nClassified Ada Get Results\nDorothy Gray\nBLUSTERY\nWEATHER LOTION\nLarge 12 ounce Bottle\nReg. $2.50 \u2014 For Only $1.28\nGreaseless, Soothing,\nAH Purpose Lotion.\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine 8t\nPhone 1203      Nights: 394-L\nGets 10 Years\nFor Robbery.\nWith Violence\nNEW WESTMINSTER  (CP)  \u2014\nArchie Maurice Mullen convict,\ned of robbery with violence, was\nsentenced Monday to 10 years imprisonment by Mr. Justice A. M\nManson.\nMr. Justice Manson described\nMullln'j attack on in elderly In.\ndian woman as \"a serious crime\nand a sadistic attack.\"   '\nThe woman, Mrs. Alice Nichols,\nwas robbed of $1,400 at North\nBend June 22, 1955.\nMullin'a accomplice, Archie\nSmith, told the jury that Mullin\nbeat and burned the woman while\nhe searched her cabin for the\nmoney. Smith was earlier sentenc\ned to seven years when he plead\ned guilty to a similar charge.\nS. Africa Cuts\nUN Representation\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)\nThe Union of South Africa said\nTuesday it is reducing its UN representation to a token group, as\na protest against what is considers to be intenfence with one of\nits domestic problems, the racial\nissue.\nIn a voice that rose st times to\nsharp, fitter tones, Foreign Minister Eric H. Louw charged that\ntne General Assembly violated its\nown charter by voting to place\ntwo items concerning race relations in South Africa on the\nagenda for this session.\nOne item concerned charges\nthat Indians ln South Africa have\nbeen mistreated. The other was\non \"the question of race convict\nin South Africa.\nSummer Bonspiel Group Quits\nProtest Council's\nStand on Arena\nIce Rental Charge\n\"In view of the fact that the\nNelson City council cannot see its\nway clear to give the association\nthe use of the Civic Centre arena\nand curling rinks gratis, and that\nto continue under the present\nsystem and pay the $2400 demanded by the city would mean bankruptcy to them,\" the Nelson Midsummer Bonspiel association decided Sunday afternoon at a special meeting to suspend operations.\nThe decision was made \"with\nreluctance\" but the association felt\nthat for the city to ask a group\nof its own citizens to pay $2400\nfor the use of the two rinks for the\nprivilege of putting on the city's\nown bonspiel was \"just a little too\ncold-blooded a business deal.\"\nFurther, it stated, when told by\nthe manager of the Civic Centre\nthat the price would be $2400 for\nthe week, it was also told that in\nthe event of the Calgary Stampeders returning next summer for\npre-season football training, the\nbadminton hall would not be\navailable for the mixer.\n\"It is apparent, therefore, that\nin certain positions in the city,\nthe bonspiel, a $50,000 business, already stands second in importance\nto a venture that cost the city\nsome $2900.\" \"Even Shylock,\" the\nassociation protests, \"only demanded his pound of flesh, but the\ncouncil and commission' want the\nwhole carcass and would keep the\nmiserable hulk still working.\"\nThe association contends that as\nthe curling event is the city's own\nbonspiel, \"the use of the Civic\nCentre should be given gratis to\nthem as the city's contribution and\nin that way there would be no\ntrouble with a long-term lease as\nAlderman Elizabeth Wallach has\npointed out.\"\n' That  contribution   to   the   city\nwould  mean  \"book   entries   for\nlight and power, a little wear and\ntear on  machinery  and  a   little\nextra in wages. It keeps a crew\nworking in the summer  months\neven when there is no bonspiel.\"\nThis contribution, the association  felt,  Is \"little   enough   to\ngive    as   compared   with   the\nmonths of work that is put Into\nths bonspiel  by the executive,\nto say nothing of the value de.\nrived by the city,  But for the\ncouncil  to  demand $2400 from\nthis  three-year  old   association\nwhich Is working for the welfare  of the city  can   only  be\ncompared to infanticide.\"\nFor the donation of $750 from\nthe   City,   the   association ^points\nout, the city received the following this year:\n$1450 for the use of the Civic\nCentre; $4000 worth of publicity\nand promotion, A queen to represent the 'oify at the PNE,\ntourist and publicity about Nelson and district in a 2B-page booklet given to all curlers and circulated to sanyone asking information about Nelson, (1200 printed); An estimated $40,000 spent\nin the city of Nelson by bonspiel-\ners, 17 businesses in Nelson selling their own stock of penny\nmatches with summer bonspiel\nadvertising, boosting the city of\nNelson; a score of gimmicks and\nhours of fun given some 800 people from all parts of Canada,\nsending them home with wonderful memories of Nelson, and many\npromises to return\n\"There were other items, too,\nboosting Nelson, and for all those\nbenefits the association asked only\nthe use of the Civic Centre gratis. I\nThe council decided it was too\ngreat a request.\"\nIn the news story on page two\nof the Nelson Daily News Wednesday, Nov. 21, continued the Association, Aid. Wallach is reported as saying \"she had found\npeople extremely interested to\nhear for the first time, that the\ncity granted $750 this year and\nlast year for the event. The 1954\ngrant was $1000.\"\n\"The same people might be\nTOMORROW\nTHE SHOOTING BEGINS\nAttend the Kiwanis\nTurkey\nShoot\nCivic  Centre\n* TOMORROW\n* FRIDAY\n* SATURDAY\nmission Free\ninterested,\" the association suggested, \"to know that the cost\nof the arena to the bonspiel as-\nsociation*rose from $900 to about\n$1700 in 1954, and for the past\ntwo years when we received\n' $750 from the city the cost was\naround the $1400 mark (so who\nwas paying who?) They might\nbe interested to know that the\n$2500 just mentioned is- all the\ncash donated by the city in 12\nyears of bonspiel and this compares with $2900 which the city\nhas underwritten the Calgary\nStampeders in one year. It is\nsaid that of this $2900, some\n$2400 can be accounted for in\nsecond-hand equipment at the\nCivic Centre.\n\"The same people might be interested to know that the city's\ndonation of $750 was just half\nwhat Sptfkane TV stations gave\nthe bonspiel association for Nelson and its bonspiel; for the 'TV\ntime was worth $1500, and cost the\ncity of Nelson nothing, and the\nbonspiel only the cost of getting\ntheir publicity men and queen\ncontestants there and back. Counting radio broadcasts of a Spokane\nstation, one entire program being\nbroadcast from the Nelson Civic\nCentre while bonspiel play was\non, the value of this publicity was\nworth roughly-half what the city\ngave.\n\"And what value could be placed\nupon Johft Fisher's nationwide\nbroadcast last spring when he\neulogized \u25a0 the Nelion Summer\nBonspiel? And finally, people\nmight be interested to know that\none drug company we contacted\nfor one of the association's gimmicks, sent forward without question $191 worth of merchandise,\nSo much for what we received.\n\"Would ..it be of interest to\npeople to know that the association gave the Nelson City Band\n$200; that it underwrote the\nKootenay Kiltie Highland Games\nand Dances to the tune of $530 in\norder to get them in as part of the\nbonspiel and enlarge the bonspiel\nweek in point of view of spectator appeal; that it gave the Nelson Curling club $200 for the use\nof its rocki, the first remuneration it has received in 12 years,\nand asked that if possible the money be used to make the waiting\nrooms a little more comfortable\nso the bonspiel guests and other\nvisitors could enjoy themselves\nmore, and that it gave $50 to the\nNelson Garden club.\n\"In   the  same   writeup_    Mayor\nKary raised the point of council\nrepresentation at the association's\n'meetings.  The  association  would\nlike to point out,  that far from\ngelling representation at the meetings,  except  for  a  short    space\nlast year when Alderman T. H.\nBourque  was  delegated   to  meet\nwith us, only one member of the\ncouncil and only one member of\nthe  commission  has paid  the $1\nyearly fee to join our association.\nIf the plea is that they did not\nknow there was a fee to join, it\nis   but  another   example   of   the\ntype   of  spoon-feeding   the   bonspiel   association   has   had   to  do\nto run this event year after year.\n\"While   the   bonspiel   associa\ntion would  like to make clear\nthat the above Is the opinion of\nIts members, it is willing to ad\nmit  that   its  opinons  could   be\nwrong,  and   the   council's    attitude right \u2014 that we may be\nout of step with public opinion,\nIn the event we are wrong the\ncouncil should have no trouble\nfinding a working organization\nto replace us.\n\"However, as leaders in public\nthought and action it now behooves the council to take steps\nimmediately to ensure the city,\na bonspiel for next year. Victoria\nwould dearly love to see Nelson\nout of the picture and several\nother cities would like a try at\na summer bonspiel. Further the\ntourist publicity bureau is already requesting the date of the\nNelson 'spiel for 1957. Time is\nrunning out.\n\"In answer t6 the mayor's sug\ngestion that the association wait\nuntil   the   council's  first  meeting\nnext  year  for  request  for  additional    grants,    the    association\nwould like to point out that the\nincrease in the number of entries\nat the last two summer bonsplels\nvas due to longer and mdre Intensive advertising and that wait\n\\g for the 1957 council's decision\nand at least four of the present\nouncil will be on again next year\nmd  apparently    they    think the\n:harge of $2400 is fair) would pre\nCouncil, Commission\nFeel Action\nTaken Too Hastily  \u2022\nMembers of City Council, Nelson Recreation Commission and\nthe Civic Centre Commission were\nasked to comment on the statement by the Midsummer Bonspiel\nAssociation Tuesday, that lt would\nsuspend operations in view of\nCouncil's stand on arena and\ncurling charges.\nThe association has operated\nthe bonspieUor three years. Prev\niously, the.'spiel was run by a\nvoluntary committee with assist\nance and direction from members\nof the Curling Club, Civic Centre\nCommission and the City Council.\nAssociation executive is, W. W\nWait, president; Albert Maida,\nvice-president; L. G. Peerles, secretary - treasurer; and George\nBarefoot, N. C. Stibbs, Mrs. O. G\nMaclntyre, \u25a0 Art Waters, Jesse\nSeaby, Mrs. R. H. Bush, R. L.\nBruce, Ernest McLachlan and O.\nC, Odegard, directors.\nThose asked to comment by The\nDaily News by telephone expressed regret at the decision of the\nassociation, and all expressed the\nhope that some way of keeping\nthe bonspiel alive would be found\nMayor Joseph Kary was \"very\nsorry to hear of the decision,\"\nbecause he felt the bonspiel was\nan event of importance to the city,\nand'expressed the hope that others\nwould step forward to see that it\ndid not die.\nHe said  that   while   Council\ncould    not   change    its   stand,\nwhich was that It could not commit next year's council to flnan\ncial support of the bonspiel, It\nhad given the association assur\nance that the support would be\nforthcoming without doubt\n. This assurance could be expected early in the n,ew year. He explained that under the Civic Centre Commission organization,  the\nCivic budget is set out af the first\nof the year and the year's business\nmust come to a close before com\nmitments for the next year could\nbe made. Council had given $750\nlast year.\nAid. Elizabeth Wallach. of the\nRecreation Commission said the\nbonspiel association nad done a\ntremendous amount of work and\ndeserved much credit for what\nhad been done, but she could not\nsee how either Council or the\nCommission could make commitments before next year.\nThe bonspiel group was doing\na   tremendous  job   of   boosting\nthe city, but others were doing\nthe same and they would feel\n\"just as Justified\" In  receiving\nspecial   grants,   She   felt   they\nshould look for more help from\nthe general public.\nAid. Arthur Foster. Council finance chairman, recalled that $750\nhad been given them this year, a\nsimilar amount in 1955, and $1000\nin 1954. To promise more at this\ntime of year was impossible because the city had to be prepjied\nfor unforseen expenditures.\nThe association had been told\nby Council that tne 1957 council\nwould undoubtedly \"view their\nactivity with favor and make some\nappropriation towards the bonspiel,\" He was sure action would\nbu taken early enough to allow trie\nassociation to get its promotion\nprogrftm under way in time.\nIt would be unfortunate if ths\nbonspiel folded up In the city's\nanniversary year. He had urged\nthat heads of events such as the\nsummer  bonspiel and  the   B.C.\nCurling Bonspiel work with the\nDiamond Jubilee Committee to\nprepare the  year's  whole  program,  and   felt  that .the   city\nwould    probably    help    \"to    a\ngreater degree than ordinarily\"\nbecause of the city celebration\nand   the   province's   centennial\ncelebrations In 1958,\nHe recalled that Mayor Kary.in\nstudying the problem, ban found\nthat the cities of   Kelowna   and\nPenticton made no contribution to\nthe regattas and  peach   festivals\nlllllllflllllllltlllllllllBllllltlllllllllllli\nFiremen to\nThe Rescue\nAn ancient vintage automobile's trip to the junk yard was\nalmost permanently postponed\nTuesday night but Nelson Fire\nDepartment was in the nick of\ntime.\nFiremen were called to 126\nChatham Street at 7:30 where '\na 1930 model car was reportedly engulfed in flames. Owner\nColin Bunt of 1310 Front\nStreet, attempting to start the\ncar in preparation for its trip\nto the junk yard this morning,\nhad poured gas into the car-\nbuietor and it immediately\nburst Into flames\u2014believed to\nhave been ignited from a candle by which he was illuminating his mechanical corrections.\nFiremen extinguished the\nblaze with a 15-pound carbon\ndioxide extinguisher, Mr. Bunt\nthanked them and quipped:\n\"I'll sell it to you for five\nbucks; that's what I paid for\nit.\" The firemen declined the\noffer.\nFire Chief E. S. Owens reported that no damage resulted and the vehicle would\nprobably stand the trip.\ntiiiii i ill ii i ii i lint in iimiim ii mi r\nWiden Search\nFor Duhamel\nA broadening search for Clifford\nArthur Duhamel, 33-year-old former Vancouver cafe owner is In\nprogress.\nDuhamel was committed by Stipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans September 17 to stand trial\non a charge of possessing goods\nworth more than $50 \"knowing\nthat the same were obtained by\ncommitting an offence which is\nindictable in. Canada.\"\nHe was released on $2500 bail\nand was to appear in county court\na week ago.\nMonday authorities started pro\nceedings to estreat the bail, and\nformal notices including a bench\nwarrant for his arrest have been\nissued.\nI litiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinr\nNelson Gas Franchise\nGranted to Inland\nVICTORIA\u2014The cabinet has approved an award\nby the Public Utilities Commission of the natural gas\nfranchise at Nelson to the Inland Natural Gas Co.\nUnder the deal, Nelson sells its present gas works\nto Inland for $70,000 and gets three per cent of the\nproceeds annually from the sale of natural gas by\nInland in Nelson.\nThe PUC also awarded franchises to Inland for a\nstring of 17 other interior communities.\nRiondel, Trail Rites\nFor B. D. Ricketrs\nFuneral services for the late\nBertram David Ricketts who died\nin Kaslo November 24 at the age\nof 54 years, were held Tuesday in\nthe Riondel Community Hall. Rev\nDr. H. K. Johnston of St. Andrew's\nUnited Church in Kaslo officiated.\n\"Abide With Me\" and \"Rock of\nAges\" were sung accompanied by\norganist Mrs. Leonard Brown\nThere were many floral tributes.\nPallbearers were Ivan Parkman.\nGeorge Cormack, Mardie Grahma\nHoward Vance, Dave Bishop and\nJack McKinley. Interment was in\nMountain View Cemetery in Trail.\nRICHARD OPERATED ON\nMONTREAL (CP) - Maurice\n(Rocket) Richard Tuesday was op\nerated on for an elbow injury and\nclub officials said he likely will\nbe sidelined for two or three\n' weeks.\nThe said bone' chips were removed and a sac of fluid drained\nduring the operation.\nvent the bonspiel \"advertising\nfrom being placed in prairie curling rinks before the end of their\nplaying season. Last spring the\nearliest possible time the council\ncould give us, the association declares, was in late March and the\nassociation had to cool its heels\nuntil then.\n\"In conclusion, the association\nwould like to emphasize, that it\nlost about $400 on the actual bonspiel last year (although it made\n$1500 on the Queen contest) and\nit cannot see facing an additional\n$1000 cost before it evert gets\nstarted.\"\nwhich   were so successful  in the\nC-Kanagan. They were self -sartairi-\ning.\nj    \"Laurie   Lefeaux,   chairman   of\nt    the   Civic   Centre   Commission,\nsaid the Commission felt rentals\ncharged were not exorbitant   In\nview of cost*. A scale of rentals\n''based on reasonable costs\" had\nbeen stt and the commission had\n*o abide by this, i\n\"We try not to soak anyone, and\ntry to get a certain peneuitge of\nrevenue to cover at least part Ot\ntne cos1,\"Tie said. He did not think\nthey   were   prohibitive.   Renting\nof th\" arena meant the floor nad\nto be removed and ice laid weiJ\nahead   of  the  bonsp'fl.  and  this\nprocess had to be repeated when\nit   was  time  to  take out  ice\u2014\"a\ncostly proposition.\"\n\"We have held it down cc.rtw.se\nas low as we can go.\"\nMayor Joseph Kary said Tuesday night that official word of the cabinet's approval of the gas franchise\nhad not been received, but that the advice was ex-\n. pected shortly Officials of Inland Natural Gas Company would be in the city soon, possibly today, in this\nconnection, he said. It had been planned to have the\ncompany \"take over\" Dec. 1.\niitiiiiEiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMM'\n1956 Kinauctions\nTo Start Thursday\nThe, annual Kinauctions of the\nair, sponsored by Nelson Kinsmen\nClub, are slated to begin Thursday over CKLN.\nMerchandise donated by locaJ\nmerchants will be auctioned off to\nlisteners and in addition prizes\nwill be awarded each of the four\nauction nights. The last three\nnights of the series, December 4.\n7 and 11. will feature radio binso\ngames. Winners will receive $100.\nMembers of the club will officiate as masters of ceremonies, j.\nG. Allan is scheduled for the opening auction\nProceeds this year will aid the\nHandicapped Children's Fund, tentatively   planned   in   conjunction\nNo Response Yet\nTo Chief's Appeal\nChief Robert Hars.iaw of Nelson\nCity Police said Tuesday that no\none had yet responded to his appeal for associates of A. G. Marshall to step forward in order that\nfuneral proceedings may be ar-\nrangsd. Authorities have ascertained that Marshall\" has \"no relatives in the country.\"\nMarshall's remains were found\nin a mountain near Salt Lake City.\nUtah, by a hunter last weekend.\nMarshall, missing six years\/was\nbelieved to have fallen to the base\nof a steep cliff.\nChief Harshaw issued an appeal\nfor close friends of Marshal] to\ncome forward Monday; after Marshall's remains had beert positively\nidentified.\nCar Extensively\nDamaged by Fire\nExtensive damage was reportedly incurred when a late model sedan suddenly burst into flames as\nowner P. E. Poulin attempted to\nstart the vehicle at 617 Carbonate Street, Tuesday night about\n9 o'clock.\nCity firemen were immediately\ncalled, but Chief E. S. Owens said\nsalvage recovery only remained\nwhen the fire was finally extinguished.\nA spark from the distributor or\nstarter wa? believed to have ignited gasoline vapors, causing the\nblaze.\nwith the Polio Fund. Plans are to\nestablish a school to train personnel as qualified-supervisors, psychologists and staff to work with\nthe 2700 handicapped children in\nthe province, and to aid the established groups working for the welfare of the youngsters. The fund\nwill also aid children who would\nbenefit from the available facilities offered in hospitals but who\nare unable to receive treatment\nowing to a lack of funds; and to\nestablish a clinic in affiliation with\nthe Medical Faculty at the University of British Columbia, which\nwill deal with any known child\nailment and eventually allow room\nfor 300 youngsters to recuperate.\nThe plan was proposed in view\nof the expected decrease in polio\nvictims through the use of Salk\nvaccine.\nFuneral Held\nFor A. Hanson\nFuneral services for the late\nAugust Per Hanson, who died in\nNelson Thursday at the age of 60\nyears, .were held Tuesday in the\nchapel of Thompson Funeral\nHome. Rev. E. Hanson of the MiF-\nsion Covenant Church in Nelson\nofficiated. Hymns \"Nearer. My\nGod, to Thee\" and \"Abide With\nMe\" were sung.\nCremation followed the services\nflTfTf\u00bbWtif\u00a5tT\u00a5lfttttH\nThe Weather\nNelson            30 32\nKimberley     16 19\nKaslo          23 29\nPenticton   .    31 33\nSpokane          ...      . 21 35\n$wjl ddm, cl _fi@L\nmm\u2014 QhhDW \u2014*\n\"HUNTER\nCHECKS\"\nIn new patterns, new colors.\nThese fine Sport Shirts come\nin a wide range of colors . . .\nCompletely washable and\ncolor fast . . . neat Arafold\ncollar will) inserts \u2014 never\nwrinkles.\nEach\n7.95\nGodfreys'\nPHONE W*Z70'\u00bbJ\u00bbI BOX\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nMUMMSLUR WW MAM\nfor Rut COMFORT ant SATISFACTION\nPHONI 889\nTOWLER Fuel & Transfei\n(Heote.1^\nCOAL\nGreet Your Host\nWith\nPARTY\nFOODS\nSELECT FROM NELSON'S\nLARGEST SELECTION\nImported Fresh\nChocolates, Biscuits\nBe sure ond visit us in our\nValue Packed Sale \u2014\nThis Weekend at\nLIBERTY\nComing Thursday Over CKLN\nKINAUCTIONS\nPlus EXCITING NEW\nKIN RADIO BINGO\nm.\nNelson Retail Merchants\nGENERAL\nMEETING\nTODAY\nCHAMBER of COMMERCE ROOM\n2:00 P. M. SHARP\nThis is an important meeting to discuss new factors\nbearing on the establishment of uniform retail\nstore hours in Nelson.\nIt IS Urgent That All Merchants Attend.\n \u2014\u2014\u2014i\u2014\u2014p-p\u2014p*.\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\"   .'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n,\n....\n,       \u25a0 -..\u00ab:,,-.J\u2122l,\n^\u2122\n3m\nB.C. Has Most To Offer\nTourist, Chant States\nBy STAFF REPORTER\nCRESTON \u2014 A feeling that B.C.\nhas more to offer tourists than\nother parts of Canada was expressed by Hon. W. N. Chant,\nprovincial minister of public\nworks, at a banquet Monday night\nin Lhe Prince Charles High School\nhere, Which concluded the ninth\nannual meeting of the Trans-Canada Highway Association (Crow's\nNest  Route),\nSubstituting for Evan S. Jones,\ndeputy minister of highways, who\nwas unable to attend the meeting,\nMr. Chant, a member of B.C.'s\nSocial Credit government, said,\n\"when we undertook the B.C. government, we found roads were\nneeded all over.\" He also reminded the gathering of the split in\npublic works duties, under which\nHon. P. A. Gaglardi became minister of highways.\nAddressing a mixed audience of\nAlberta and B.C. residents, Mr.\nChant said that, although he had\nlived in Alberta for 36 years, \"the\nprovince of British Columbia is\nto me the better province.\"\nThe minister said that much of\nhis work was concerned with the\nconstriction and maintenance of\ngovernment buildings. He said it\nwas impossible to find money to\nbuild the $30,000,000 or $40,000,000\nworth of new buildings that have\nbeen sought from the government\nin the near future, but, \"if you\nwant a new building, we'll get\naround to it as soon as we can. At\npresent four out of five public\nworks dollars are being used for\nmental hospitals, jails, boys' and\ngirls' homes, and similar types of\naccommodation.\nDelegates were urged to remember that, while the provincial budget \"sounds like a lot of money,\"\nall of it is needed and being well\nspent in B.C.\nTWO  PURPOSES\nTwo main purposes must be\nkept in mind when planning or\nbuilding roads, the minister, said,\nimprovement of communications\nand importance to the tourist'industry. Tourists spent $90,000,000\nin B.C. last lear alone, Mr. Chant\n.said, giving added voioe to the\nmeeting's cry for better highway\nfacilities to keep vacationers in\nCanada longer. He estimated that\n$10,000,000,000 would be needed\nfor B.C. roads in the next 10 years,\nand looked forward to -greater\nprosperity which better roads\nwould help to encourage.\nReferring briefly to the irou-\nbled International situation, Mr.\nChant said self-preservation\nwas a very Important consideration, and, \"In the bottom of my\nheart, I don't think atomic weapons would be used. The human\nrace has too ..much ..common\nsense to go out and destroy ourselves. Self-preservation will\nprevail,\" he thought.\nThe minister also reported tfiat\n\u2022h\u00bbsJ one example . . .\nNiagara Loans range from }\n$100 to $1500 or mora\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n1*\n30\n24\n$74.90\n$40.05\n$41.40\nPloaso bring along proof of own\u00ab\nship ol lata model cat.\nffato* tm$ fowwr oft moey Nfogaro loan..\nI AGARA\nLOANS\n560   BAKER ST.\nPHONE  1636\nHON. W. N. CHANT\n\"the conditions and systems in\nour western world today were\nborn in the depression years of\nthe early thirties. \"Great strides\nhave been made in the monetary\nsystems of our western countries,\"\nand he continued that the Bank of\nCanada dictates national banking\nand finance policies.\nMr. Chant urged prime consideration to needs of the home market. \"Let us realize that development of the home market is most\nimportant and profitable,\" the\nminister concluded.\nHon, Wesley D. Black, MLA for\nNelson-Creston, provincial secretary, and minister of municipal\naffairs, cautioned members not\nto \"lose sight of peaceful pursuits\"\nin the midst of war talk. \"There\nare times when we need to sit\nback and take a good look at ourselves.\" He thought success was\npossible \"so long as we are content to work together for a common purpose.\nSpeaking In thi school where\nhe once taught, Mr, Black said\nthe Creston-Snlmo road will be\ncompleted \"as soon a. possible.\"\nThere had been a good deal cf\n\"kidding\" about a suggested\ndate for completion of the road,\nmany thinking that It should be\nready to help with the 1958 B.C\nCentennial festivities. Members\nwere reminded that they\n\"should be concerned about tho\neconomic developments that\nshould take place in this val\nley,\" and start to \"go out and\nsell what we have to sell.\"\nD. W. Taylor, president of the\nCreston Bqard of Trade, was\nchairman of the banquet. Rev. H.\nB. Knipe of Creston United\nChurch offered grace.\nE. R. McFarland of Lethbridge\nsaid that, through \"tremendous\"\ngovernment help, \"I think we're\ngetting somewhere.\" Good trans-\nCanada nighway connections provided an '^answer to keeping Canadians Canadian-wide conscious.\"\nIn view of the possible world de.\nvelopments, \"we've got to be able\nto get across this country on four\nwheels in the immediate future.\"\nOne of the foreseers of the Cres.\nton-Salmo route, Frank Rotter, of\nthe Salmo Chamber of Commerce,\na B.C. director of the Association,\ntold of seeing a possible Summit\nLake route while on a timber\ncruising trip in 1949. He went to\nsee Hon. E. C. Carson, then minister of public works, in Victoria,\nand they flew over the route four\nA TREAT FOR YOU\nAND YOUR FRIEND8\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR  SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St.      Nelion\nSLATE RETURNED\nBY HOSPITAL\nEMPLOYEES\nCRANBROOK - All officers of\nCranbrook sub-local of the Hospital Employees Union were renominated at its November meeting,\nand were returned to office for\n1957 by acclamation. Mrs. Charles\nWakaluk continues chairman,\nHenry Ogden vice-chairman, Mrs.\nVictor Nelson secretary-treasurer,\nAlec Kortash, J. P. Stuckel and\nMrs. Enid Masse trustees, and Mr.\nKortash warden.\nThe sub-local was the first in\nthe Kootenays feo receive bargaining certification and sign a contract, increasing wages to the\nstandard of the Okanagan last\nJanuary 1. Since then sub-locals\nat Kimberley, Fernie and Creston\nhave been certified and have contracts, as have sub-locals at Rossland, Trail, and Nelson Organization toward this end among employees of other hospitals in the\nKootenays is continuing.\nAs delegate to the recent annual\nmeeting of their local 180 at Vancouver, Mrs. Wakaluk and Mr.\nOgden reported designation of\ntheir union had been changed with\nelimination of \"Federal\" from its\ntitle following merging of the\nl;wo Canadian labor councils. They\nalso reported on union policies\ndiscussed at the provincial meeting and plans for the Interior, and\nfor terms for renewal of the initial contracts in the area which\nare due January 1.\nThe contract committee of the\nsub-local here is now drawing up\nits proposals for its term of renewal which will be presented\nsoon to the St. Eugene Hospital\nboard of management in preparation for opening of negotiations.\nTenor to Substitute\nFor Mack Harrell\nCRANBROOK - Walter Fried-\nericks, leading tenor with the San\nFrancisco Opera Company, will\nbe the soloist at the opening Cranbrook-Kim ber ley Civic Music Association concert here next Monday instead of Mack Harrell, Metropolitan Opera baritone who is\nill. Concert is the first of four at\nCranbrook and Kimberley undertaken by this new organization\nwhich has had excellent support.\ntimes in one day. Mr. Rotter also\norganized the 1948 trek.\nHeralding the start of the Cres-\nton-Salmo route, Mr. Rotter said,\n\"we've accomplished what we've\nworked on for many years.\" The\nspade with which Hon. W. D.\nBlack turned the first sod at the\nCreston end Monday afternoon\nwill be kept by the Salmo Board\nof Trade for sod-turning ceremonies at their end.\nOther head table guests included\nReeve D. Andrews of Creston, H.\nD. Harrison of Nelson, now vice-\npresident of the Association, Paul\nFajnor, president, Creston Junior\nChamber of Commerce, H. Duper,\nR. D. Gardiner and H. Ewing.\nIn India, the art of makeup is\nregarded as a ritual and all women\nare expected to make the_hest of\ntheir natural beauty.\nMOVING?!\nTake Ths Reliable Way\nWILLIAM\nLONG DISTANCE\nWith or Without\nPacking\nPhone 77\nTHE DAMAGED TIP of an\n810-foot television towpr in\nNorth Bergen, N.J., Is shown at\na 90-degree angle befora locking Itaelf against the tower. The\nunused structure was rammed\nby a plane which crashed In\nflames on the roof of a private\napartment house, killing four\npersons.\n\u2014Central  Prew Canadian.\nUnion to Renew Talks\nWith Coal Operators\nCALGARY (CP) - The policy\ncommittee of the ' United Mine\nWorkers of America, District 18,\nmet Tuesday to discuss new pto-\nposals to present to mine operators\nin the wake of a strike in seven\nof the eight coal mines in the\nDrumheller area.\nEdward Boyd, seoretary of the\nunion, said the meeting was held\nto discuss the reopening of nego-\nVeteran Hunter\nBags 800-Pound\nBull Moose\nNATAL \u2014 With the big game\nhunting season now in its last\nmonth in the district, many species of big game have been\nbrought in since the season opened in September.\nMike Jacino, an oldtime hunter\nin the Michel district who retired\nfrom the mines only a few weeks\nago after over 40 years service,\nshowed his marksmanship at the\nage of 62 when he bagged an eight-\npoint bull moose while hunting\nalone above the old No. 8 mine.\nThe animal weighed over 800\npounds, while the trophy head\ncontained antlers that measured\n52 inches from point to point. Two\nyears ago the same hunter shot a\n11-point tjull moose while hunting\nin the-vicinity.\nBoth sets of antlers are now\nproudly displayed above the doors\non his garage at his home. The\nprized trophy would not be entered in the East Kootenay Big\nGame Trophy competition.\nSTRAGERHEADS\nWYNNDEL SKIERS\nWYNNDEL \u2014 When the Wynndel Ski Club held its annual meeting in the hall a new slate of officers was elected. Officers are,\nL. Strager, president, Jack Wigen\nvice-president, and Miss Cathy\nHagen, secretary, Films were\nshown of some of the eventful\ndays in last year's skiing and provided amusement to all. These\nfilms were taken and shown by\nJack Wigen.\nA building has been obtained to\nbe used as a club house and a\nwork party has been organized for\nSunday. The girls will have charge\nof the club house and the boys\nwill overhaul the ski tow in readiness for the winter's activities.\ntlations Wednesday between companies and the union.\nThe nature of the new union\nproposals was not disclosed.\nW. C. Whittaker, managing director of the Coal Operators Association of Western Canada, said\nthe meeting with union officials is\nsimply a matter \"of seeing\nwhether we can agree,\" and added:\n\"that should not take too long.\"\n.   Mr, Whittaker said:\n\"We should know by the end of\nthe week whether or not we have\na contract.\"\nAbout 1000 men walked off their\njobs in the Drumheller district\nSunday and Monday to back up\nunion demands following a strike\nvote last Friday.\nMr. Boyd said \"the action of the\nmembership in Drumiieller and\nEast Coulee in unauthorized and\nunwarranted in view of the operators agreeing to reopen negotiations.\"\nThe miners have not had a wage\nincrease since 1953 when basic\nrates were set at $13,15 a day for\nminers and $12.27 for laborers.\nThe Highways\nNo. 3 \u2014 Cascade, Rossland \u2014\ncompact snow, carry chains. Rossland, Trail, Castlegar, Nelson,\nBalfour, Kootenay Bay, Goatfell\u2014\nmostly bare, slippery sections,\nsanded. Goatfell, Cranbrook, Fernie, Crowsnest \u2014 generally good,\nicy sections sanding, construction\nwork Ryan to Aldridge and Moyie\nto Green Bay, the section at Moyie\nopen all day but subject to 2 hour\nclosures from time to time for\nblasting.\nNo. 3 A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 mostly\nbare Trail to Fruitvale, compact\nsnow Fruitvale to Salmo.    \u2022\nRossland, Paterson \u2014 mostly\nbare, slippery sections, sanded.\nCreston, Porthill \u2014 bare.\nNo. 6 \u2014 Nelway, Nelson, South\nSlocan \u2014 good, slippery sections,\nsanded. South Slocan, Slocan City\nNakusp, Needles \u2014 rough gravel\nsections, slippery sections, sanded.\nNeedles, Monashee, Vernon\u2014fair,\ncompact snow upper levels, slippery.\nNo. 95 \u2014 Kingsgate. Cranbrook\nGolden \u2014 sanding, construction\nwork Ryan to Aldrfdge and Moyie\nto Green Bay, section at Moyie\nopen all day but subject to two\nhour closures from time to time\nfor blasting operations, Canal\nFlats to Briscoe \u2014 fair to good.\nBriscoe to Golden \u2014 some snow\nand possibly ice.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 icy sections,\nsanding. Kaslo, New Denver \u2014\nslippery upper levels. Kaslo, Lar-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 28,1956 \u2014 3\nHighways' Publicity Planned\nBy Staff Reporter\nCRESTON \u2014 Concern for better\nCanadian roads and more tourist\nadvertising won for E. R. McFarland, of Lethbridge, another term\nas president of the Trans-Canada\nHighway Association (Crow's Nest\nRoute).\nMr. McFarland, a Lethbridge\nmotor dealer, was re-elected to\nhead the organization again at its\nninth annual meeting held Monday in Creston under the local\nBoard of Trade. The jovial presi-\nThomas Nimsick\nFuneral Held\nROSSLAND \u2014 Thomas Nimsick,\nKootenay pioneer whose residence\ncovered nearly 60 years and who\ndied recently at Mount St. Francis\nInfirmary in Nelson, was buried\nTuesday. He was 84 years old, and\nwas the father of L. T. Nimsick\nof Kimberley Member of the Legislature for Cranbrook.\nBorn at Eganville, Ont., he came\nwest on railway construction in\n1889 and followed woods and mining work. He was employed at the\nNorth Star mine at Kimberley and\nthe St, Eugene mine at Moyie in\n1898 and 1899, then moved to Rossland where he was a miner for\nmany years, then operated a dairy\nbusiness until retirement in 1939.\nHe was an active member of the\nWestern Federation of Miners,\nearly day union, a member of the\nKnights of Columbus, and for 48\nyears belonged to Aerie 10, Fraternal Order of Eagles who conferred\nhonors on him this year as third\noldest member of Rossland aerie.\nHe is survived by two sons, L.\nT. Nimsick at Kimberley, A. J.\nNimsick at Drumheller, Alta., two\ndaughters, Mrs. F. P. Spring, Cranbrook and Mrs. Edwin Johnson,\nKimberley, 16 grandchildren and\neight great - grandchildren. His\nwife died in 1931. Requiem mass\nwas celebrated at Sacret Heart\nChurch here by Mgr. A. K. Maclntyre, followed by burial in the\nfamily plot of Calvary Cemetery\nat Rossland.\ndent is building a home on Nelson's North Shore, and is well\nknown to many local businessmen\nas \"Ernie.\"\nOther officers were named in\nTuesday's paper, with the excep-\niton of J. M. MacBeth of Castlegar,\nnew secretary.\nOne very unusual feature of the\nmeeting, held in the Bus Depot,\nwas a large model of the proposed\n\"Y\" turnoff at the Yahk junction,\nwith an information booth in the\ncentre, built by John Learmonth\nof Nelson. The present \"T\" arrangement constitutes a dangerous\nturn, and some motorists go right\npast it without realizing their mistake until they land at the Kings-\ngate customs office. If highway\nengineers consider this arrangement unsafe, the Association suggests that the booth, which need\nonly be a small building, be built\nat the side of the junction to serve\nwestbound traffic on No. 3 highway. Delegates did not feel that a\nbooth proposed recently by the\nprovincial government near the\nsite would be acceptable.\nDEFEATED\nA resolution from one delegate\nthat the government be urged to\ncomplete the Blueberry - Paulson\nroad by 1958, B.C.'s centennial\nyear, in order to provide an all-\nweather hard-surfaced highway to\nAlberta, was defeated because, as\nanother member said, the Association didn't think it advisable to\n\"pick out\" part of the road. The\nmover of the resolution suggested\nthat the Blueberry-Paulson cutoff\nis a \"very, very important thing,\"\nand has been proved financially\nand physically possible. He also\npointed out that^new Salmo-Creston cutoff could not possibly be\nfinished by then, but other representatives thought there was no\ndoubt the Blueberry-Paulson road\nwould be ready to take full advantage of the centennial year\ntourist traffic.\nPresident McFarland was empowered to appoint \u25a0 committee to advertise district roads.\nThe executive will arrange financing of the advertising program.\nA Kimberley man told the meeting that the Moyie and other sections were completed last year,\nand that adequate junction connections will be made to Elko. A\n27-minute film showing the beauties of the road was shown to several groups by the Kimberley\nBoard of Trade to raise needed\nfunds, and the board hopei to set\nup a film library. Tourists can now\ntake scenic round trips through\nthis area, coming up through Alberta and down through British\nColumbia, or vice-versa. With respect to the Yahk junction, he reminded the meeting of the B.C.\ngovernment's \"right-angle junction\npolicy.\" The government also intends to put overpasses, underpasses, or signs at all highway railway crossings in the near future,\nhe said. \"There is, and will rt-\nmain, an East Kootenay in British\nColumbia,\" the delegate eon-\neluded.\nTwo Cominco Miners Lose Lives\n!n Tulsequah Blasting Accident\n\"Feeder\", Not \"Bleeder\" Roads\nNeeded In Canada, Meeting Told\ndeau \u2014 fair, icy sections. Lardeau,\nGerrard \u2014 fair.\nAlaska Highway \u2014 snow and\nicy conditions throughout, carry\nchains.\nWASHINGTON   ROAD   REPORT:\nSnoqualmie Pass: Foggy, road\nicy in places, 17 inches old snow\nat Summit. Stevens Pass: Clear,\ncompact snow and ice on road in\nplaces, 39 inches old snow at summit. Blewett Pass: Clear, compact\nsnoWsand ice on road, seven inches\nold snow at Summit.\nTRAIL \u2014 Georg\u00ab Andrew Lud-\nwick, 30, and Thomas Bud Royko,\n22, lost their lives in a weekend\nblasting accident.\nThey were employed as miners\nin Cominco's Tulsequah Chief\nMine at Tulsequah, B.C., about\n60 miles East of Juneau, Alaska.\nThe accident occured at 2:30 a.m.\nSunday.\nMr. Ludwick was married. His\nwife, Edith Ludwick and two\nchildren live at Cochran, Ont. Mr.\nBy Staff Reporter\nCRESTON\u2014Theme of attracting\nAmerican tourists to Canada, and\nkeeping Canadian travellers in\nCanada as long as possible, permeated an address by Harold Long\nof Lethbridge, Alta., at a luncheon\nheld following the morning session of the ninth annual meeting,\nTrans-Canada Highway Association (Crow's Nest Route) Monday\nin the Bus Depot here.\nMr. Long, retired publisher of\nthe Lethbridge Herald, was introduced by C. .W. Ramsden, general\nmanager of the Nelson Daily News,\nand recalled meetings of the Old\nRed Trail'Association in the early\n1900's. The speaker also remarked\nthat construction of better roads\nin Alberta was started when farmers put barbed wire across trails\nabout the time of the First World\nWar.\n\"WONDERFUL PROGRESS\"\n\"Today we are a little impatient\nbecause No. 3 highway is not\ncompleted,\" Mr. Long said, remarking that \"wonderful progress\" has been made during the\nlast 10 years. He thought the highway might be completed between\n1958 and 1960, and \"now, of all\ntimes, is the time to build,\" referring to a suggestion at the Association's 1955 annual meeting in\nLethbridge that the group should\ndisband. People must be told about\nour, highways, he reminded the\naudience.\nMr. Long thought that No. 3\nhighway would be completed\nmany years before No. 1 highway\nKORPACK Cement Products\nCo. Ltd.\nAND\nFERRAR0 BROS.\nSAND AND GRAVEL\n* CONCRETE BLOCKS\n* CINDER BLOCKS\n* CHIMNEY BLOCKS\nSAND - GRAVEL - CEMENT\n154 Wellington St. Trail, B.C. Phone 2105\nis completed through the mountains.\nReflecting   on   the   Idea   that\nbetter  American   highways  are\ntaking much of Canada's tourist\nincome,   Mr.   Long   said,   \"let's\ngive   them   a   chance   to   learn\nsomething   about   Canada,   We\nwant feeders for No. 3,\" he said,\nInstead of \"bleeders\" that might\ndirect traffic across the line.\nThe retired newspaperman also\nsaid that a closer connection between the western sides of Glacier\nand Waterton National Parks, \"in\norder to give the world an idea\nof how two nations can live side\nby side in peace,\" would be another boost to tourist income. Of\nthe  718,000  tourists  who  visited\nGlacier National Park this summer,   650,000   were   in   cars,   and\ncould  easily  have  been  directed\ntowards Canada.\nExploratory talks about the road\nwere bogged down in the 1920s\nbecause the B.C. government refused to cede 50 to 75 miles of\nterritory to Waterton National\nPark. The question is being\nbrought up again.\nU.S. authorities estimate that, in\njust 10 years' time, they will be\ncatering to' many more travellers\nthan at present, and, \"what better\nreservoir of tourists could we have\nthan to provide a route for these\npeople to get into Canada?\"\nMr. Long suggested that an 18-\nmile route could easily be provided from Waterton to connect\nwith the present highway at Chief\nMountain. Denis O'Connell, also of\nLethbridge, showed a film of a\npack trip which had been made\nover the 18-mile rou\\e, giving some\nof the remarkalbe scenery that\ncould be opened up to tourists.\nConstruction of the route could\nbe made easier by hard-surfacing\na good logging road that presently\ncovers part of the ground, Ms-\nLong said.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nPhanteff to move*\nfirst  Oar modern  .\n\u25a0Wiled movers Msurt\nmove wherever ro* fo.  We\nare agents for North Ame*^\nsi\nVan   Line*,\nfading long distant*  _\nerganiiation. 1 coots no _   .\nto enjoy ths finer mitwl\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker Si.   Nebon, B.C.\nPhone U\nMau Mau to Die\nNAIROBI, Kenya (AP)\u2014Dedan\nKimathi, 35, self-styled Mau Mau\nfield marshal, was sentenced to\ndeath Tuesday for possession of a\nrevolver and ammunition.\nRoyko was single. He is njrvjveti\nby his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hoyko of Collington, Alta.\nThe accident is being inveitigat-\ned.\nLIFE NOT\nWORTH LIVING?\nThen wake up the liver 1\nYou know that sour, mink, constipated feeling?\nIt may ba caused by the liver. If your liver\ndoesn't pour out up to two pints of bile i day\nyour food may not digest properly, gai bloats\nup your stomach and you feel that life's just\nnot worth living. That's when the liver needs\nmild gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills. Thes\u00ab\nfamous vegetable pills help stimulate tho flow\nof liver bile. Soon your digestion starts function-\ninn properly and you feel that happy days are\nhere again! Don't mr stay sunk. Always keep\nCarter's Little liver Pills on hand.\nFor Service\nCall . . ,\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B C. Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and  Hearing  Service\nSlash your car's running costs\nImproper or poor lubrication soon shows up in rough\nriding . .. faulty steering . . . body squeaks . .. can\nmean trouble and repair bills.\nThat's why we give your car guaranteed Shelluhrica-\ntion. We follow a special chart for the make and model\nof your particular car. With Shellubrication, you get\nlubrication in accordance with the requirements of your\ncar ... when, where and how the maker specified. Yon\nget a written receipt showing all the work done. And\nwhat's more, we give you a careful notation of any parts\nthat may need additional service or replacement. This\nway, you know your car is kept in good, safe condition.\n' Remember, regular Shellubrication helps keep your\n, car's running costs low ... so drive in for a guaranteed\nShellubrication\u2014soon. Your car will handle belter ;; i\n' serve you longer .. .be safer to drive!\nFARROWS\nShell Service Station\nLocated 1 Mile Irom City Limits\nOn Ymir Rd.\nPhone   1794 Nelson,  B.C.\n m\n'\u25a0i'yJ-iC-!-''''<''.'':y-;. \u25a0:'.:\u25a0 >*'i\n\u25a0   \u25a0 '      \u25a0'!.    !!'.!IJilUMpp.ajWlv. \u25a0\u25a0\nNrlamt 0ath| Nrma\nifistahiisnea April fl.  1UU2\n' \/nterloi British Columbia I Latqeet Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholiduyB   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED,  236 Baker Street,  Nelson,' British Columbia.\nAuthorized si Second Class Mail  Post Uttice Department, Ottawa,\nMEM&EH ur   ML AUU11   UUKilAU U* (.'HtUUUATlONS\nMfcMUER Ut   i'riiti CANADIAN   PRtlSB\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tot republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to 1'he Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nWednesday, November 28, 1956\nTime\u2014and the Main Lake Ferry\nA correspondent writing to this\nnewspaper says that he was a passenger on the Kootenay Lake ferry on\nOctober 27 when the ferry, which\nshould.have sailed at 10 o'clock, was\ndelayed 18 minutes for a rancher\ndriving a light delivery truck containing two pigs. He goes on to say\nthat the rancher probably did not\nrealize that he was stealing the time,\nnot only of every person aboard the\nferry, but also of every person in the\nlong line of cars waiting for the ferry\non the other side of the lake.\nIt certainly seems unreasonable\nthat all those aboard the ferry should\nbe kept waiting for a man with two\npigs, unless perhaps they were expectant pig mothers and he was hurrying them home for the event, but\nwhen the writer talks of precious\ntime, just what does that mean?\nIn every day there are 1440 minutes, and 18 out of those is not many.\nNo one can really steal time, for so\nlong as we are alive it is ours. True,\nwe often have it taken up by listening\nto people or doing things which we\nhave no wish to do, but even that is\nnot precious time. We emerge at the\nend with time with which we can do\nwhat we like and that with, often\nenough, we do nothing-\nClocks, and particularly time\nclocks, are an invention of civilization\nand by no means its best effort. Punctuality is enforced on us, and the only\nones who escape it are women and\nchildren, and these, if they are not\ncounting the passing minutes, at least\nseem to enjoy them.\nNor is punctuality always a blessing. That same ferry in December of\nthe first year of the war pulled out\nfrom Kootenay Bay on its last trip\nfor the day right on time. Minutes\nlater the bus pulled to a stop and the\nsoldiers on Christmas leave had the\nmortification of seeing it only a little\nway from shore and, what was worse,\nhad to spend the cold dreary hours\ntill six next morning huddled in the\nbus. Hours, not minutes, of their time\nwas stolen from them by the-captain's\npunctuality. \u2022\nWhat time means to us is largely\na matter of circumstance and our\nattitude. Shakespeare's Touchstone\nsaid that with a rich man who did\nnot have the gout it ambled gently\nalong, but with a thief condemned\nto the gallows it went at a gallop, and\nin these days perhaps a better illustration is how long a holiday seems\nat its beginning and how short it\nseems when it is ended.\nTwo Important Issues\nBy DR. GORDON BATES\nGeneral Director, Health League of Canada\nIn an issue of \"Health\" there appeared\nthe results of two polls carried out by the\nCanadian Institute of Public Opinion, commonly called the Gallup poll. The one has\nto do with the opinion of the Canadian publie\nabout fluoridation of water, the other about\nthe teaching of- French in primary schools.\nThe results of both polls are significant. A\nmajority of the Canadian public appear to\nbelieve both in billngualism and in fluorida-\ntion of water to prevent caries.\nWe think that the results in both cases\nare in evidence of the intelligence of the\naverage Canadian. We have talked so much\nabout fluoridation that it Is unnecessary to\nadd anything on that subject. Wheh lt comes\nto the question of bilingualism. we are reminded of the statement of a famous man\nwho said In effect that the man who has\ntwo languages becomes two men. The man\nBusiness Co-operation\nA novel co-operation scheme has been\nlaunched by six small ship repair yards in\nand around the North Norway town of\nHarstad. Designed to enlarge their combined\ncapacity, expand production, and stabilize\nemployment through th,e slack winter\nmonths, the experiement has attracted wide\nattention. The Norwegian Productivity Institute has allotted Kr. 42,500 to carry out\nthe plan, and the North Norway Development Fi,ind has granted another Kr. 30,000.\nImplementation of the project will be coordinated with the area planning in the\nprovince of Troms.\nWith the aid of a consultant from tht\nProductivity Institute, the Harstad yards\nwill shortly begin a comprehensive market\nanalysis and draft detailed plans for their\nco-operation. What the owners have in mind\nIs to set up a joint office staff to handle\npurchases and warehousing, as well as to\ndevelop a joint sales organization. Production will be specialized with a view to subcontracting for each other. Other ideas include a cost-saving storage pool, and a\nmanpower loan arrangement.\n\u2014News of Norway.\nwho speaks another language in addition to\nhis nativs language immediately begins to\nunderstand those who speak the other language. What is equally important, this fellow\nwho speaks the other language begins to\nunderstand him.\nA knowledge of French is essential for\nCanadian unity. It is desirable to make easier\nthe spreading of essential knowledge on\nhealth and publie health throughout the\nworld. The English speaking have much\nknowledge which may be of value to those\nwho speak French. One has only to mention\nthe name of the great Pasteur to realize\nhow much the English have to learn from\nthe French. The barrier of language as it\nhas been called is a barrier which prevents\nthe communication of ideas essential to the\nprogress of civilization. At the moment, that\nbarrier can only be abolished by the achieving of a second language. In Canada certainly for the English-speaking that second\nlanguage is French.\nPolicy First Need\nThe resignation of Mr. George Drew\nfrom the leadership of the Conservative\nparty necessitates a national convention to\nchoose his successor.\nWe suggest that the party has greater\nneed of a new, well thought out policy than\nof a new leader. For the last quarter century, the party has been looking in all\ndirections for a leader who cfiuld capture\nthe public fancy, and has failed to find one.\nWe are of the opinion that, if it had\nhad a policy in which it really believed,\nand by which it was willing to sta'nd or fall,\nit would not have found it necessary to\nchange leaders so often; and, perhaps it\nmight have found a leader capable 6f giving\nit the leadership it needs.\nWe don't envy any man the job of leading a party that has no common faith. And\nwe don't think the Canadian people will\nsupport a party that has nothing but a leader\nto attract them.\u2014The Rural Scene.\n?Questions?\nANSWKRS\nOpen to any reader NameB ot\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished Theie is no charge tor this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWKRiSD BV MAIL except where\nthere is obviouf; necessity for  privacy\nC. J., New Denver\u2014Where would I write to\nfind out if shares issued by Alert Oils\nLtd., 1926, are of any value now?.\nAlert Oils Ltd., 19116, is dormant at the\nmoment but not defunct. The shares would\nnot be of any value and may come to life\nlater.\nWorried, South Slocan\u2014Would like to know\nthe reason for dampness in a house and\nwhat could be done to prevent it? This\ndampness, sometimes actual beads 6f\nwater, is on the lower part bf the walls,\nHave also noticed that clothing stored in\nthe lower drawer of a built-in dresser\nwill get moldy.\nThere are various causes for damp\u2014such*\nas poor foundations, drainage seeping under\nthe house\u2014but mostly the lack of ventilation\nis to blame. It would be worth your while\nto ask a builder's advice. It is possible that\nthe trouble can be easily prevented with\nsmall expense. Screened louvers in the basement can work wonders. Also condensation\non walls may be prevented by special paints\nused In priming coats. Another cause can\nbe absence of eaves troughs and downspouts.\nfrequently resulting ln bespattered walls and\nwatersoaked ground outside the walls.\nReader, Trail\u2014What is the time for 100 yards\nsprint, world's record, that Is? I believe\nit is 9.3 seconds but I would like proof\nIf this is so.\n100-yard sprint. 9.3. held by Melvin Pat-\nton, U.S.A., 15th May, 1948.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of\ngenuine Interest are welcome if they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will bs\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe signature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be\nreturned.\n'Tigs Is Pigs\"\nEven on Ferries\nTo the Editor;\nSir\u2014Your recent editorial page contained a letter from an irate, and possibly\nulcerous, traveller, bemoaning the M.V. Anscomb having delayed its Kootenay Bay sailing time 18 minutes while waiting for a local\nrancher with two pigs.\nThis is jUst one example of the consistent\ncourtesy shown by the crews of the Kootenay Lake service, and which is generally\nappreciated by all. If the pigs were on the\nway to market it seems they would have\nthe most reason to complain about the Anscomb sociability diminishing their time on\nearth. One of the pigs put.it in verse form\n(with background music from \"Porky and\nBess\"):\n\"HAMMUS KOOTENA1TUS\"'\nLet there be no waiting on the shore\nWhen I put out to Balfour.\nIt's short enough\u2014my time on earth-\nWhile fattening up 3'our bacon's girth.\nMy master phoned to the Anscomb's berth.\nAnd said he'd speed for all he's worth.\nThe aaptain agreed to delay the sailing,\nAlas, alack! my poor life curtailing,\nNow\u2014when looking at Christmas ham so\nmerry.\nRemember\u2014it may be me who held up\nthe ferry.\nBoaringly yours \u2014 \"PORKY\".\nI think it splendid that the ferry waited\nfdr the pigs. It just proves that \"every hog\ndoes have its day.\"\nB. E. LATREMOUILLE.\nR.R, No. 1. Nelson, B.C.\nForgotten Person\n.. Now that potent pressure groups and the\ngovernments who legislate for them regard\nthe rest of us as the expendables of Canadian life, individuals should take action by\nmaking personal representations, to remind\ntheir municipal, provincial and Dominion\nrepresentatives that each and every voting\nCanadian is first of all a citizen with inalienable rights that must be safeguarded\nby any government that wishes to be democratic in practice and reality.   \u2022\n\u2014The Rural Scene.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nUlKirtJ II I hmm- \u00ab\u00ab\u2022\ntS,4SB4G,NBVty ELECTED MAYOR\nOP MORSECMESTER, TCOK THE JOB\n\u25a04S4INST HIS WILL-TO HE4R HIM TELL IT\"\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nfVOyE4RS L4TER-JUST TPV AHD\nGET HIM OFF THE PUBLIC RWROLL\nAHD 64CK INTO PRIV4TE ENTERPRISE -\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nWith God all things ars possible.\nMatt. 19:26.\nBut Christ said nothing is impossible to us. We should try to be\nperfect as the Father in heaven is\nperfect. Would not that be a miracle indeed?\n(hint dint\nA woman usually worries about\nthe future until she gets a husband,  but  a  man  doesn't worry\nabout the future until he gets a\nwife,\nt <\u2022\"\"' f HAY\/ 1 WISH T MIGHT-!\n\"lie*    **c****37>   ^\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n-By Frances Drake-\nLook  in   the section  in  which calm,   sensible   confidence.   ACT\nyour birthday comes, and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nt0 the stars,\nFor Thursday, Nov. 29, 1966\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Poise, dignity, forthright action\nand a saving sense of humor will\nput this day in the success column\n\u2014and will make you happy, too.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014You may find yourself somewhat limited today, especially in\nbusiness or professionally, but\nit's a good day for some retrospection, personal investigation,\ndouble-checking.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nYour horoscope calls for intelligent, steady action. Don't spend\nmoney foolishly. You have encountered harder days, so don't\nlet anything stump or discourage\nyou, Be awake to new bids.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nA good day if you are fit and\nwilling to take the bad with the\ngood. A smart approach, some\nconstructive, aggressive moves\nwill be highly effective.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\u2014\nYou can advance in some ways,\nmay be opposed rigidly in others.\nBut no one can stop you from trying, wherein lies. the greatest\nstrength \u2014 and attainment in the\nend.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 You may have to approach tasks with a somewhat different attitude during this complex period. Discuss, make\nchanges when necessary for better\nprospects. Personal wishes can\nwait.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 A day to capitalize\non your talents. Let experience\nand intuition guide you. Reasonable desires can be achieved by\ndevotion and consistency.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Don't let disappointments hamper initiative. Seek\nintelligent associations. You need\ncommunication with alert minds.\nRemain steadfast to good work\nand deeds.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Plan something\ndefinite for free time that will\nrelax nerves, brighten mental outlook. During busy hours, maintain\nThird Suspension\nOrdered For PGE\nNORTH VANCOUVER (CP) -\nPacific Great Eastern Railway\nservice from Squamish to North\nVancouver will be suspended Sunday to allow blasting on the upper\nlevels highway, under construction\nabove the railway.\nThe suspension is the third during the last month.\nSaturday, a rock slide tumbled\ndown at mile 23.5 and delayed a\nregular mornirtg train for four\nhours. It carried a North Vancouver Board of Trade delegation\non a familiarization trip to Se.ua-\nmlsh.\nA rock slide delayed the inauguration trip of the train for 24\nhours last August.\nFASTRHIfF\nmoM\nSHIMMM\nDUE. TO COLD\nWhen you hsve a Sore Throat\ndue lo a cold you want really\nlasl reliel from Ihe pain...' |''i II\nand here's how to get il!   i     \\\nJusl gargle three limes daily   \t\nwilh 3 Aspirin tablets dissolved in\none-third ol a grass o( water. You'll\n(eel belter fast!\njgpjRlN\n_______________ i^W\\\nAPftoBueroF]!_K{__\\\nE\nJL\nwhen you should.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Don't, pass\nrumors; investigate all data, then\nbe cautious in acting. Call in other\nwise heads tor consultation where\nyou can. It Is a better day than\nit may seem at first.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 This is a time for\ndiscretion, consolidating endeav,\nors for the general good, for aiding\nsound projects. Don't give up in\ndifficult matters. YOU can win\nwith that extra effort.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You may be tempted\nto burn that old candle at both\nends now, to take on too many\nthings at once, or to become dis\ncouraged at certain obstacles\nDON'T.\nYOU BORN TODAY have a\nwealth of gifts for a happy\nsuccessful life, if you put your\nbest foot forward EVERY day\nand if you will control emotions\nand energies wisely. Yours ii\nstrong Sign. It reflects spiritual\nenlightenment, generosity, courageous action; gives keen intuition\nand honesty. Curb a tendency to\nspeak out too quickly or brusquely. A public career is suitable to\nyour talents. You shine in emergencies, can out-think those who\ndepend upon logic alone. You despise anything of sub-normal\n\u25a0character. Birthdate of; Louisa\nMay Alcott, author; Amos Bronson\nAlcott, philosopher, educator.\nKing Features\nMajor British\nAuto Firm May\nCome To B.C.\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Four primary British industrial concerns,\nall of them In the metals induatiy,\nare considering locations on Anna-\ncis Island, it was announced here\nby William Kirby Laing, director\nof John Laing and Sons Ltd,, a\nBritish construction firm,\nGrosvenor - Laing Ltd., which\nfunctions in conjunction with John\nLatng and Sons (Canada) Ltd., ,16\nhandling construction and engineering fields on the >Annacis\nIsland project of the Grosvenor\nestates On the Fraser River,\nCommenting on the possibility\nof a major British auto industry\nlocating on the Annacis project.\nMr. Laing said, \"that one is definitely on the boards but the\ncurrent situation in the United\nKingdopi is such that it is temporarily sidetracked.\"\nHe added, \"currently we've got\n25 factories let and occupied and\nthree more are under construction.\"\nAs for hydro-electric projects in\nBritish Columbia he said; \"We are\ngoing after big hydro-electric\nprojects here . . . There are certainly plenty of them to be built.\nMr. Laing is here on a 10-day\ntour of the John Laing and Sons\n(Canada) Ltd. operations in B.C.\nHe remarked that he is \"particularly taken with the way men\nhandle concrete here.\"\nGov't Fair Gome\nSays deB. Fart-is\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Sen. J.\nW. deB Fjrris, defence counsel ot\nB.C. Liberal leader Arthur Laing\nin a slander and libel action, said\nin Supreme Court that \"Laing's\nattack was on the government and\nthat is fair game.\"\nMr. Laing is being sued by the\ncontracting firm bf Wade arid\nWells Co. Ltd. of Trail for statements he made last August about\nconstruction of the Cassiar-Stewart\nRoad.\n'I don't know of any case where\nI have felt so much responsibility\nas in this one against my good\nfriend Art Laing and I make no\nbones about my friendship.\" Sena-,\ntor Farrls said.\nMr. Laing was entitled to criticize the government's road building policies although an attack On\nWade and Wells would no member\nOf the Opposition any. good, he\nsaid.\nBennett To Pl-ove\nExpansion Plans\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Premier\nBennett says \"results will be seen\nin due course\" of the government's\nplan to expand secondary industries in B.C.\nThe premier met with industrialists and bankers ln Toronto\nSaturday.\nAt the same time he lashed out\nonce again at the federal government's credit squeeze which he\nsaid was hurting Canada as a\nwhole.\n\"The majority opinion of these\nindustrialists was that as far as\ncredit restriction was concerned\nthe pills that are being offered are\nnot doing the job expected,\" he\nsaid.\nThe complicated bone structure\nof the human foot is not gen-\nerally completed before the suit\nof 10.\nB.C. Challenges Alberta\n> BRITISH \u2666\"( ZfJ-TZP\nCOLUMBIA ^ALBERTA\nThe greatest lumbering\nboom in history is developing in northern B.C. and\nBritish Columbia and Alberta are rushing rail lines\nand highways to completion in a race to tap this\nnew wealth. Read Harold\nHilliard's exciting on-the-\nspot coverage of the contest in this week's issue of\nthe NEW Star Weekly.\nIt's entitled \"B.C. Challenges Alberta.\"\nTimely advice for fathers is presented by Don\nGoudy in the feature \"It's\nUsually Father Who Pays\"\n\u2014another in the seriel\n\"What Are Your Legal\nRights.\"\nT\/u WEIVf NEWI NEWI lt\u00abr WaaUy\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government ol British Columbia\nWedding,\nAnnouncements\nand\nInvitations\nw>.\nin**\nWEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS or INVITATIONS require the correct wording, the choice\nof type, and the latest designs in stationery . . .\nWe guarantee all these essentials in regard to\nSocial Printing. Ask to see the various samples\nthat we carry in stock . . . Also \"Thank You\"\nCards, Wedding Cake Boxes. If out of town,\nwrite for samples and prices.\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE\nNELSON\n About the Town\nAlice Stevens\nPHONfc  latitl OR  1844\nJ.' Wiginton,     Mrs. M.\nMr.  and  Mrs.  R,\nBevanne Apartments, were recent\nSpokane visitors.\n\u2022 \u2022\nMrs. W. J. Van Maarlon, 715\nSixth Street, was in Creston for\nthe aod-breaking ceremony of the\nSalmo-Creston cutoff.\n* *   *\nMrs. R. G. MoKeown has returned to her home in the Terrace Apartments after a three month trip\nin the East.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nMrs. S. Romance of Winnipeg\nis visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hogg,\nNorth Shore.\nMr. and Mrs. Don Taylor, 41DB\nRichards Street, were in Edmonton to attend the funeral of Mr.\nTaylor's father.\n* \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Everett Kuhn, 512\nInnes Street, had as a visitor Mrs.\nKuhn's mother, Mrs. P, S. Beatt\nof Alberni.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMary Wrfltmore group of Fair-\nview United Church met Monday\nevening at the home of Mrs. R\nA. Gibson, 608 Fourth Street. Mrs.\nElsie Morgan and Mrs. William\nPeck were co-hostesses. The evening was spent in pricing articles\nto be sold at their bazaar.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. T. N. McGillivray,\n702 Sixth Street, had as weekend\nguests Miss Elsie Odegard and\nMiss Shirley Odegard, who were\n\u00abn route home to Vancouver after\nvisiting Norway, Sweden, Denmark and France.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nGlenn Morton, 304 Observatory\nStreet, observed his seventh birthday with a party.\n* \u2022   \u00ab\nRod Matheson of Vancouver visited friends in the city.\nFox has returned to\nher home in Vancouver after visiting her son and daughter-in-law,\nSheriff and Mrs. T. Fox, Fifth\nStreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Aileen Oakley and daugh.\nters, Gaye and Lauren, have been\nvisiting Mrs. Oakley's parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. A. B. Cathers, 809 Sixth\nStreet. They have left for Montreal and will sail on the ship In-\nvernia for France, where Mrs.\nOakley's husband, LAC A. Oakley\nis stationed with the RCAF.\nMrs. J. A. Clarkson and daughters, Yvonne and Karen of New\nDenver visited her husband's parents, Mi-, and Mrs. James Clarkson 419 Silica Street.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Art Stevens, 715\nNelson Avenue, attended a meeting of Lions International at\nCranbrook at which Canadian\nLions president, . Dr. Douglas\nFleming was honored guest and\nspeaker.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJohn Learmonth, North Shore,\nmotored to Creston to attend the\nceremony at which Hon. W. D.\nBlack broke the sod to start construction of the Salmo-Creston\ncutoff.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Bruels, Richards Street, have returned from\na two week visit to White Rock.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. D. E. Mclvor and Mrs. A.\nM. Ferguson were co-hostesses at\nthe meeting of 56 group of Fair-\nview United Church. At the home\nof Mrs. Harold Reese, 612 Fifth\nStreet, members turned in bazaar\narticles.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nG. R. Bradshaw of Kenora, Ontario, is visiting his mother, Mrs.\nJ. C. Bradshaw, at the Bevanne\nApartments, Silica Street.\n; 1. \u2014\u2014-\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 28,1956 \u2014 5\nLegion Auxiliary Doubles Sums\nGiven to Veterans Hospitals\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nPERFECT FOR weekend parties are these gay separates\nwhich combine to make a colorful party outfit. The delicate art\nof the Orient inspired the lovely print of the skirt and its matching blouse. The shirt hai a pretty wing collar and wing-cuffed\nshort sleeves and Its skirt li all-over quilted and luxuriously\nflared. A crushed cummerbund Is worn at the waist. It is reversible being printed on one side and velveteen on the other.\nCARS Auxiliary Asks\nFor Volunteer Drivers\nThe urgent need for volunteers to and from tha arthritis  clinic\nlo drive patient* from their homes\nRiondel Notes\nRIONDEL \u2014 The Riondel Recreation Club held its monthly\neard party in the Recreation Hall\nrecently. The winners were as\nfollows: bridge, high scores, Mrs.\nE. Hallstrom, Paddy Etmanski,'\nbooby, Ronnie Hallstrom; cribbage\nhigh scores Mrs. Jean Shannon,\n\u25a0Steve Fedur; booby, Mrs. E. Mc-\nWhinnie; whist, high scores, Mrs.\nAmy Mathisen, Mrs. B. Mawdsley\nbooby, Mrs. P. Matson.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Aikman of\nCranbrook recently visited their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Lyle Jolie.\nMiss Isabelle Lemmon, who is\nattending Business College, was a\nrecent visitor at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lemmon.\nReg Derbyshire and Bob Childress left for a four-day hunting\ntrip to the Windermere district\nA surprise birthday party in\nhonor of Mrs. Muriel Gendron was\nheld in the Gendron home. The 30\nguests arrived en masse and an\nevening of games, dancing and\nsinging was thorqughly enjoyed by\nall. At midnight lunch was served\nand a birthday cake wasicut by\nthe guest of honor after which she\nwas presented with a gift by Mrs.\nJ. Lemmon on behalf of all those\npresent. The party was a token of\nappreciation for Mrs. Gendron's\nmany services' to the community.\nPhotographs were taken by Jimmy\nKeyes and Geoffrey Charlton.\nHosts and hostesses for the evening were Mr. and Mrs. Lemmon,\nMiss Joan Brandon and Mr.\nCharlton.\nGIFTS   for   MEN\nUnique and attractive\nNovelty Numbers just made\nfor the unusual man,\nLighters, Ashtray*, Tie Clips,\nCigarette Cases, Cuff Links,\nWallets, Hunting Knives,\nKey Cases and many\nother choices.\nHOBBY SHOP\nAcross From the Bus Depot\nPhone 1703 Nelson, B.C.\nwas tha most important subject\ndiscussed by the Women's Auxiliary to the Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society at the monthly meeting Monday afternoon in\nthe Nurses' Home.\nIn a report for the driving committee, Mrs. C. H. Hamilton stated\nthat many persons suffering from\narthritis must have help to reach\nthe clinic where treatments are\ngiven. In these cases, the work of\nthe volunteer driver is invaluable.\nENTHUSIASTIC GROUP\nEnthusiasm was the keynote of\nthe meeting as the 14 members\npresent listened to optimistic reports from' the committees. Mrs.\nH. O. Borch, reporting for the arts\nand crafts committee, stated that\nlast week's sale of stuffed toys,\ncorsages and other handiwork\nmade by the patients was successful.\nMrs. Vincent Fink, for the visiting oommittee, reported that two\npatients were visited in their\nhomes during the month and four\nin Mount St. Francis Infirmary.\nMiss GladyB Ewing, Auxiliary\npresident, annourlced that Mrs. J.\nS. Mcintosh is now publicity chairman for the group.\nPlans for the annual Christmas\nparty for home patients were discussed at length.\nFAIRVIEW UNITED GROUPS\nREADY FOR TEA, BAZAAR\nFairview United Church groups\nhave held meetings to make final\npreparations for their tea and bazaar, today.\nMany pretty and useful articles\nwere received when the North-\nMrs. W. A. Weatherhead. The\nview Circle met at the home of\nMary Whitmore group is in charge\nof the work table, and priced articles at its last meeting. The women will also sell Christmas cards.\nSix members of the Ida Eliza-\nLister Notes\nLISTER\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf\nDomke of Libby, Mont., were visitors of Mrs. A. Domke.\nMiss Isabelle Millner of Seattle\nis visiting her parents, Mr, and\nMrs. R. T. Millner.\nMr. and Mrs. Otto Hanke and\nchildren and Mr. Edward Hanke\nof Saskaton, Sask., are visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. Robert Huscroft.\nMiss Frieda Herman has arrived\nin London, England, after an en-,\njoyable crossing.\nMiss Marjorie'Sherstobetoff, now\nemployed at the Kootenay Lake\nHospital at Nelson, was visiting\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J.\nSherstobetoff.\nThe Lister - Huscroft Women's\nInstitute held its annual tea and\nbazaar at the Lister school. The\nbake and tea tables were well\npatronized.\n9014    14%-24%\nlyKT*\nTMocIlll fashions\nMATERNITY WEAR\nLook   Pretty   In   a\nFancy Blouse:    $7.95\nand\nPlain Skirt:   $7.95\nor The Two Together at  $14.95\ntwo.piece maternity\nSuits:      $14.95\nCotton Smocks:       3.95\n\"THE STORE OF COURTEOUS  SERVICE\"\nHALF-SIZE   FASHION\nHere's an easy way to slim your\nfigure! Sew this pretty dress\u2014see\nhow its graceful lines whisk the\ninches away! Bodice beautifully\ndetailed with rows of tucks; skirt\nhas a soft flare, smart hip pockets.\nProportioned to fit perfectly\u2014no\nalteration problems!\nPattern 9014; Half sizes 14^,\n1\u00ab%, 18%, 20^, 22%, 24%. Size\n16 takes 4 yards 35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY - FIVE CENTS ,\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St.. W..\nToronto. Ont\nbeth group met at the home of\nMrs. K. R. Yale Tuesday to price\narticles. Thi* group will be in\ncharge of the kitchen. Besides\nhelping with the bazaar, Ida Elizabeth group members assist St.\nPaul's - Trinity United Church\nclothing aid.\nHome cooking will also be done\nthis morning in time for the bazaar.\nThe Fifty Six group's department lies in serving and decorating tea tables. Naomi group has\nmade yule logs and Christmas\nstockings, will arrange for the\nfish pond ahd help with the serving.\nThe Ladies' Auxiliary to Nelson\nbranch of the Canadian Legiori\nmeeting Monday in the Legion\nlounge, voted double the amounts\nit gives annually to the veterans\nhospitals.\nThe money goes to Hycroft, Es-\nsondale, Shaughnessy and Tranquille. The action was taken at\nthe request of provincial headquarters.\nMrs. Norman Brown presided at\nthe monthly meeting.\nReports were given by treasurer\nMrs. B. L. Gray, whose report\nshowed finances in good conditions;\nways and means committee by\nMrs. Gray, who told of the successful tea and returns, and Mrs. Ruth\nMcCreight for the sick visiting\ncommittee, who said cards and\nflowers had been sent to the sick.\nMrs. S. C. Colman said she was\nworking on layettes and had packaged those sent to Queen Charlotte Hospital, London, England\nShe noted that there were always\nsome layettes on hand for needy\nlocal cases. Members knit the garments and Mrs. Colman does the\nsewing.\nR.EDECORATION\nFor the house committee, Mrs.\nA. O. Allen's report was received\nwith applause and showed much\npreparation. She gave estimates\nsubmitted for redecoration of both\nhalls and rest rooms, and said the\nColor Slides Shown\nTo Cranbrook Group\nCRANBROOK \u2014 November entertainment by the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society for those under treatment able to attend was\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew McCrindle, when the chief\nprogram item was showing of color\ntransparencies of New Zealand,\nthe trip to Canada and outstanding East Kootenay scenes taken\nby CARS resident physiotherapist\nMiss Elaine Rapson, who came\nhere from New Zealand a few\nmonths ago.\nCranbrook CARS branch set a\nJanuary date for its annual meeting and election of officers. At the\nmeeting Miss Rapson reported 44\nEast Kootenay patients received\n108 treatments during the month,\nof whom 22 were Cranbrook\npeople.\nLittle Helpers Hold\nAnnual Yule Party\nChurch of the Redeemer Little\nHelpers held their annual Christmas party when missionary boxes\nwere received.\nAbout 35 children accompanied\nby their parents were present.\nAppendicitis\nThreat To Some\nBy Dr. Herman N. Bundesen\nAlthough the death rate for\nsimple acute appendicitis is extremely low (only 0.3 per cent),\nappendicitis still is dangerous for\nthe very young and the very old.\nAn appendectomy is a relatively simple operation. In the fiefd\nof medicine, we feel that we have\na specific remedy for this disease\nin surgery.\nIn both the elderly and the\nyoung, appendicitis carries an\ninordinately high risk because of\nvagueness of symptoms.\nIn the aged, onset of the disease\nusually is insidious. The victim\nmay fail to seek treatment\npromptly, either because of fear\nor because he is accustomed to\ndiscomfort. Also, his complaints of\ndiarrhea and vague abdominal distress may give the appearance of\na chronic illness.\nYoung children, of course, usually can be little if any help to\nthe physician trying to diagnose\ntheir ailment. Often it Is difficult\nto differentiate between symptoms\nof pneumonia and appendicitis In\nchildren. And sometimes the two\ndiseases exist at the same time.\nThere's one aid, though. As Dr.\nF. F. Boyce so aptly put it, \"The\nchild with pneumonia Is likely to\nsleep for long periods, while the\nchild with acute appendicitis does\nnot let himself or let anybody else\nsleep.\"\nEven though the usual symptoms of appendicitis may not be\npresent in young or aged victims,\nit's a good idea for you to know\nthose symptoms.\nLOCALIZED  PAIN\nGenerally a pain occurs in the\nmiddle of the abdomen. Soon it\nbecomes a dull, severe and continuous pain localized in the lower\nright part of the abdomen. It's\nmade worse by sneezing or coughing.\nLoss of appetite ie fairly common, as is sickness to the stomach\nThere may be vomiting and a mild\nfever varying between 99 and 102 !\ndegrees. j\nWhen in doubt, call the doctor |\nNever try to diagnose the ease '\nyourself.\nPHONE   1844   F.OR   CLASSIFIED\nwork of Gordon Sutherland was\ngreatly appreciated, the small hall\nbeing completed, and the large\nhall nearly finished. A letter of\nthanks will accompany his cheque.\nShe said she appreciated the help\ngiven by Miss Martin in matching\nthe curtains which are being made\nby Mrs, Colman and will be hung\nas soon as possible.\nNew glasses, pots and mats, and\nother articles, had been added to\nhe kitchen equipment; and all\ndishes have been checked. The\nkitchen will be carefully supervised, and&all broken dishes will\nhave to be replaced by those responsible,\nMrs. W.  H.  Burns, acting as\nsergeant at arms,  reported for\nMiss Evelyn Forbes on hospital\nvisiting, Mrs, Colman and Mrs,\nW.  n.  Gibbon  had   made   126\nvisits and distributed 98 treats.\nMrs. P. T. Filleul  and  Mrs. R,\nKellogg  will   be  In  charge  of\nhospital  visiting for December.\nHospital  Auxiliary  representative  Mrs.  G)  E.   Thompson   reported having served at the tea\nand having sold tickets.\nA booster prize was won by Mrs.\nBurns. '\nCorrespondence read by Mrs.\nIrene Kerr included Christmas\ngreetings from Mrs. Bingham of\nthe Fraser Valley District, and in\nformation regarding a former\nAuxiliary member who \"is in hospital there. The members there\ntake care of funds allotted by the\nNelson auxiliary for comforts in\nthis case.\nA letter from the zone secretary\nMrs. Tonkin of Kaslo regarding\nNelson's donation to the zone typewriter, thanked ^he auxiliary.\nMinutes of the executive meeting of the B.C. Command LAS\nmeeting at Chilliwack October 26,\nwere read. Sixty-four official and\n50 fraternal delegates attended.\nPoints noted were that the word\nsovereign\" had been adopted in\nmany instances in place of the\nKing or Queen, and that the fee\nwould be raised.\nMinutes of the zone meeting\nheld at Fruitvale in October were\nread, and Mrs. Brown read resolutions and comments made at the\nB.C. Command executive meeting.\nIt seemed that the solution to a\nnumber of _ allowance problems\nwas a national health plan.\nSome welfare work undertaken\nby the executive was mentioned,\nand further work is to be done.\nCook book prepared by the\nAuxiliary will be back from the\nprinters soon, Mrs. Steve Cameron\ninformed members. Two hundred\nhad been ordered.\nPoppy Day was a great suooess,\ndue to a great extent to untiring\nefforts of Mrs. Len Bicknell, general convener. The secretary was\ninstructed to write  a   letter   of\nthanks to her. Mrs. Brown thanked\nall those who worked on the\nstreets, in the kitchen and on the\ntables.\nYULE HAMPERS\nMrs. Gray and Mrs. C. O. Anderson will be in charge of.,Christ-\nmas hampers, and Mrs. Brown\nasked for names of the needy to\nbe submitted soon.\nA nominating committee of Mrs.\nC. O. Anderson, Mrs. Fred Castle\nand Miss Clara Elliot was appointed and election of officers and an\nexchange of gifts will feature the\nDecember meeting.\nMrs. Brown mentioned that a\nNelson veteran, M. E. Harper, and\nhis wife, were celebrating their\n50th wedding anniversary, and the\nmeeting wished that congratulations be sent to them. Their son,\nC. W. R. Harper, is a former president of Nelson branch.\nAn auxiliary member, Mrs.\nPeter Markin, who recently had.\na baby, will also receive greetings.\nMembers asked to attend the\nbranch m'eeting December 6 as the\nprovincial secretary, Duncan McLennan, and zone president A. A.\nLamb, will be in attendance, and\nrepresentatives of district Legion\nbranches.\nMiss Clara Elliot's committee\nfor the tea were Miss Forbes, Mrs.\nC. Millis, Mrs. Bicknell, Mrs. B.\nLawrence, Mrs. B. McCreight, assisted by Mrs. Colman.\nCEDAR\nCHESTS\n\u2022 LIMED OAK\n\u2022. WALNUT\n\u2022 SEAMIST MAHOGANY\n\u2022 UPRIGHT AND\nSTANDARD MODELS\nTABLES\n\u2022 LIMED  OAK\n\u2022 WALNUT\n\u2022 MAHOGANY\n\u2022 MARBLE TOP\nGive Your Home a Living\nGift for Christmas\nA   SMALL   DEPOSIT\nHOLDS TILL CHRISTMAS\nNew Denver WA\nElects Officers\nMEW DENVER \u2014 Miss Gladys\nReynolds was again named presi\ndent of St. Stephen's Anglican\nChuroh Woman's Auxiliary when\nthe annual meeting was held at\nthe home ot Miss M. II. Butlin.\nMrs. Thomas R. Buckham ie\nvice-president, and Miss Butlin,\nsecretary-treasurer. Standing committees will be appointed at the\nDecember meeting.\nRev. J. W. Spurrell, who conducted the election, expressed his\nappreciation ot the \"wonderful\nhelp\" given to the parish by the\nWA.\nThe president welcomed Mrs. J.\nL. Wilson, Mrs. M. E. Emerson and\nMrs. Robert Fairhurst as new\nmembers, and expressed pleasure\nat the excellent attendance at the\nmeeting.\nA Christmas remembrance was\nsent to Miss Trudy Morrison, The\npresident and Miss Butlin will\npack parcels ter England and\nJapan. Eaoh member brought a\ngift for the parcels.\nAnnual reports were given.\nHarrop Children Aid Work\nOf Missionaries in Mexico\nHARROP\u2014The Harrop Sunday\nSchool children have sent a gift\nof $5 to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mas-\nson, missionaries stationed at Hu-\nchuetla, Mexico, as t donation\ntowards their mediaal and mis*\nsionary work among the Indians\nliving there. The Harrop children\nhave    sent    personal    Christmas\nhave\ncards  to  the   family  and\nadopted ttism as a project. ,\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Masson and\nbaby will soon be furloughing in\nCanada. Thay have recently escaped bombings and shooting,\nclimaxing opposition to their\nChristian work but there is an encouraging group of converts\namong ths Indians.\n15-Years Jewels\nPresented by\nRebekah Lodge\nAt tha November meeting of\nths Queen City Rebekah Lodge,\nheld in fee Odd Fellows Hall, M-\nyear Jewsl was presented to Mrs.\nDave Praudfoot, Owing to foe absence of regular noble grand Mrs.\nG. Wood, the presentation was\nmade by Mrs. Kelly Ozelle.\nAnother 15-year jewel Is being\nsent to Mrs. Lily Langridge, former Nelson resident, now living\nin Vancouver.\nA busload of 28 Rebekahs recently went to Castlegar to initiate Helen Richardson of Castlegar, in the Rebekah degree, A few\nmembers from Trail were present.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nBlack have left for Vancouver\nwhere they expect to stay two or\nthree months. Mr. Black wiH be\nunder medioal treatment.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Mason have\ntaken over the management of\nthe Tourist Hotel, during Mr.\nBlack's absence.\nClassified Adt Get Results\nWinter\nFootwear\nFor AH the family.\nMen's Zipper Overshoes \u2014\nAnkle height. <__\u2022 ___\u2022\nPair   \u25bc0.3'.>\nLadies' and Misses' Jodpurs\n\u2014warmly lined, ttm *% jf-\nblack and white. ^ \/ a mm J\nChildren's Rubber Boots. \u2014\nfrom    *Z.95\nANDREW'S\nLeaders in Footfashion\nEstablished 1803\nOIL Trouble In EGYPT\nA search for oil in the\nSahara Desert, where millions of unexploded mines\nlie buried, is being eon-\nducted by American oil\ncompanies with demolition\nsquads and helicopters.\nThis story of hair-breadth\nescapes and deadly danger,\n\"The World's Most Hazardous Oil Hunt\" appears\nin the NEW Star Weekly\nthis week.\nAnd a sports feature\n\"Young Mr. Dynamite\"\npresents a close-up of\nHowie Meeker, youthful\nmanager of the Toronto\nMaple Leafs, out to spark\nthe Leafs to the Stanley\nCup.\nTha NEWI NEWI NEWI (Mr Waahlt\nHml Wonder why\nDr. Chase's!\nNERVE FOOD,\nhasps so many paotHa \u00aba\u00bb\n%\nEATON'S  a  a  a\nBIRTHDAY\nSALE\nSTARTS THURSDAY\nWhen yon feel\ntired, nervous,\nirritable- little\nthing* bother yoa\n\u2014worries pile up,\n\u2022bat's the time to\ntake   Dr. Chase's\nNerve Food.\nThe Vitamin M  and Blood\nBuilding Iron m Dr. Chase's\nNerve Food work together to\nhelp build upyour genemhearth\n\u2014help yoa leet relaxed, at ease,\nable to forget yoa ever bad\nnervons troubles,\nDt, Chase's Nerve Pood helps\nyoa have tbe sound steady\nnerves that go with good heardi.\nHelps yoa feel in lore with Rfe\n\u2014confident\u2014energetic\u2014tcady\nto enjoy yonr family, yooc\nwork, your friends.\nThe sooner yon start, the sooner\nyou may feel the benefits of this\nall-round tonic.' G9fi\u2014Economy\n\u25a0hse $2.23 saves yoa 44\u00a3\nDr. CHASE'S\nNERVE FOOD.*..*,\nfor\n3 Big Sale Days\nThursday, November 29th\nf riday, November 30th\nSaturday, December 1st\nWatch for Our 20-Page Flyer\nBeing Delivered To Your Home\n*\nT EATON C\u00b0\nCANADA\nLIMITED\n636 Baker St.\nPhone 1860\n PfPPPipp   \u25a0 ;\u2014' : j ; ! 1 -\u25a0 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014i\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WHO., NOV. 28,1956\nHighest Scout Award\nTo Handicapped Boys\nOTTAWA (CP) - Governor-\nGeneral Massey, Chief Scout ol\nCanada, presented 27 honora and\nawards \u2014 two ot them posthumous \u2014 at a colorful investi-\nture at Government House.\nTwo physically handicapped\nboys \u2014 Peter Drummond Fraser,\n12, ot New Glasgow, N.S., and\nRonald Keith Human, 16, of Mor-\nden, Man. \u2014 received the Corn-\nwell Scout Badge, highest award\nof the Canadian Boy Scouts Association.\nThey received the award for\n\"remarkable Scout-like determination and fortitude\" in carrying\nout Scouting duties and passing\nScout testa successfully and cheerfully.\nSUFFERS RARE DISEA8E\nThe Fraser boy, who has one\nleg amputated below the knee,\nsuffers from a rare disease which\ncauses haemorrhages in various\nparts of his body. Young Human\nwas born with a muscular defect\nwhich prevents him from developing properly.\nThe badge ia named for Scout\nJack Comwell, a ship's boy who\nremained at his post despite\nwounds in tha 1916 navy battle of\nJutland after the other members\nof a 10-man gun crew were killed\nor wounded. Comwell won the\nVictoria Cross posthumously.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Ruddick of\nCobourg, Ont. received the Bronze\nCross for gallantry with special\nheroism, awarded posthumously\nto their sons Paul, 9, and Ronald,\n11, who died July 8, 1955, while\ntrying to save a six-year-old boy\nfrom drowning at the mouth of\nFactory Creek in Cobourg.\nSAVED OTTAWA WOMAN\nThe Bronze Cross also was pre\nsented to. Richard1 Charles Evoy,\nIS, of Ottawa who an June IS,\n1055, saved an Ottawa woman\nfrom drowning in the Ottawa\nRiver.\nOther awards and their recipients included:\nSilver Cross for gallantry with\nconsiderable risk: Stewart Sym-\nmes, 9, Port Moody, B.C.; Kirt\nWoolf. 12, GlenwoOdvllle', Alta.\nMedal for meritorious conduct:\nLeon D. Stovern, 17, Wadena, Sask.\nSilver   Wolf   for  isrvlcef   of\n\u2022   exceptional character: Dr. H. T.\nJames, Vancouver,\n8llver Acorn for distinguished\nservice:   Andrew   Blyth   White\nVictoria.\nGEORGETOWN (AP) \u2014 British\nGuiana has its first Catholic diocese in the colony's 174-year history of Catholicism. Bishop Lester\nM. Guilly has been enthroned as\nbishop of Georgetown. The new\ndiocese embraces all of British\nGuiana.\nrm rum\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nSays Caspian Sea\nBelieved Shrinking\nLONDON (Reuters) - The Caspian Sea has dropped about seven\nfeet and its surface area has\nshrunk by about 13,500 square\nmiles in the last 25 years, the\nSoviet news agency fass reported.\nIt said the .drop ln sea level was\ndue to a warmer climate in the\nbasins of rivers flowing into the\nsea, and to Russian irrigation\nand hydro-electric projects.\n0AM&, lip. Ufitk\n9238  .\nUs\/ fcfcnlflktflV\nCINCH TO MAKEI\nFive days out of seven, this is\nthe dress you'll reach for! It's\neasy to sew\u2014jiffy to iron\u2014always\nlooks crisp and fresh! Make it all\none color, or hava the top and\nskirt contract for a smart new\nseparates effect. Choose faille,\nwinter-cotton, textured rayons.   .\nPattern 9238: Missis' Sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40,\n42. Size 16 take IVt yards 39-inch.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY FIVE CENT8\n(35c) ln coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted,) for this pattern Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your, order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St. W\nToronto,   Ont\ngo through\nfaster\nwhen you\ncall by number;\"\nLong Distance is fast\u2014often twice as fast\u2014when\nyou call by NUMBER. Here's why. By giving the\noperator the out-of-town NUMBER\u2014rather than\njust the name and address\u2014you won't\nhave to wait while she gets the\nnumber from \"Information\" in I keept-\nt of\nthe town or city you're calling.       \/nut-oft0\"-'\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANY\n\u2022fa\nChoree.1 Skileh Sy Bihtrt C. Itttd\nThe Hon. Treffle Berthiaume\nMontreal did not yet number a hundred thousand people\u2014with len than a\nthousand telephones\u2014when Treffle' Berthiaume took over La Presse\", ln 1889.\nFounded five years earlier, the paper waa in shaky financial condition, with only\nfourteen thousand subscribers and little paid advertising. Its owners, business.\nand newspaper men, were financially unable to support it. Faced with an\nobvioualy insoluble situation, they decided to offer \"La Prtsae\", lock, stock and\nbarrel, as a gift to the young man of \"La Minerve\", an influential weekly of the\ntime\u2014provided he assumed the indebtedness of the sick paper.\nBerthiaume accepted the challenge. Bom at St. Hughes de Bagot on August\n4th, 1848, he was originally a typographer by trade. Haid working, a keen\nstudent of mass psychology, he gathered around him a few of his fellpw workers\nat \"La Minerve  and fell courageously to his task of reviving a moribund paper.\nTo him the job was truly a personal challenge. For an ordinary craftsman\nto succeed where practised business men and renowned newspaper men had\nfailed, such was the task facing him. Enough to whip the ambition of an energetic man of forty!\nTreffle' Berthieume's perseverance, judgment and capacity for work swept all\nobstacles before him. Under his inspired guidance, the circulation of \"La\nPresse\" rose to 20,000 in less than two years, then to 60,000, and to 100,000 at\nthe turn of the century. No Canadian daily had ever reached such heights.\nFor more than forty years, \"La Presse\" was to retain its circulation supremacy\nin Canada.\nOne of the secrets of Mr. Berthiaume's success was that he surrounded himself\nwith able men to whom he gave his full confidence and warm friendship. Deeply\nhuman, he knew how to ensure the co-operation and loyalty of his fellow workers.\nThus within a few years, it had become obvious that \"La Presse\" not only\nwould survive, but would prosper. Mr. Berthiaume had reason to be proud of\nbis accomplishments and of his financial success.\n\"La Presse\" was born on Notre Dame Street East, next door to the Chateau\nde Hamezay, since then converted into an historical museum. It subsequently\nmoved to St. James Street, near St. Lawrence Boulevard. In 1898, Mr.\nBerthiaume decided on the construction of a new, red stone building, at the corner\nof the two streets mentioned. Inaugurated in 1900, it still houses \"La Presse\".\nTo the growing influence of the paper, its owner added his personal one in the field\nof public opinion, when he was appointed to the Quebec Upper House to represent\nthe Alma circumscription.\nUnder {he guiding hand of the Hon. Mr. Berthiaume, the paper increasingly\nbecame the favorite daily of the French-speaking population in Canada as well\nas in areas such as New England, where many French Canadians had emigrated.\nOn his death, on January 2,1915, Treffle Berthiaume left to his children and\ngrand-children tne largest French daily newspaper in North America, which he\nhad taken over almost on the verge of bankruptcy and lifted to the very summit of\nsuccess. \"La Presse\" did honor not only to the French-speaking people of Canada\nbut to the French language press the world over.\nMr. Berthiaume's distinguished successors have been worthy of the founder,\nand \"La Presse\" today still leads the French language press in Canada.\nOne ot a series featuring Canadian Editorj and Publisher!\nPrepared By Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association\nTrain Runs Over\nMan In Dense Fog\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\n(CP) \u2014 Gary Peterson, 20, of\nNew Westminster, a CNR yard\nemployee, was killed early Tuesday when run over by a train in\ndense fog near hear.\nAnother yardman, Donald Snyder, who was standing on the\nground, noticed Peterson's lantern disappear from about the\n10th car of the 27-car freight train\nwhich the victim had been riding.\nSnyder immediately gave the\nstop signal and the train came to\na halt after moving about two\ncar lengths. The crew found Peterson on the tracks. He was pronounced dead on arrival at hospital.\n'Peg Diphtheria\nCases Increase\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Seven new\ncases of diphtheria in Winnipeg\nwere reported today by the city\nhealth department, raising the\ncity's total in the recent outbreak\nof the disease to 47, highest in\nNorth America,\nDr. Roper Cadham, deputy,\nmedical heavy officer, has appealed to parents to have their\nchildren immunized by free\nclinics. Immunization by doctors\nare covered by the Manitoba medical service.\nPrivate doctors and the city\nclinics report they have been\nswamped by children wanting immunization shrtls. There are about\n75,000 children in Winnipeg.\nRestrictive Trade Commission\nReports on Tobacco Marketing\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Restrictive Trade Practices Commission,\nin a 2-to-l majority report, has\nsuggested the Ontario Flue-Cured\nTobacco Marketing Association be\nturned into a growers' co-operative to ease the rigidity of its control over the industry.\nThe association, , through its\nmembership of all tobacco buyers\nand most of the growers, is working under arrangements which\ncontemplate the actual closing of\nthe market to all except association members, the commission\nsaid.\nIts 148-page report, developing\nout of allegations by combines investigator T. D. MacDonald, was\ntabled in the Cornmons Tuesday\nby Justice Minister Garson.\nRESTRAINT ALLEGED\nMr, MacDonald alleged the association restrained and injured\ntrade contrary to public interest.\nIt had worked to reduce production and competition in sales, to\ndeny membership tb some prospective growers and to deny non-\nmember growers an opportunity\nfor early sale of their crops.\nCommission chairman C, Rhodes\nSmith and member A. S, Whiteley\nClassified  Ads Get Results\nNavy Auctions Bells\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The admiralty is cashing in on the\nChristmas shopping spree by offering surplus ships' bells for sale\nat between $5.50 and $28 each, it\nwas announced Tuesday. The bells\ncome 'from every type of naval\nvessel.\nit\na a I 81 ro I\n\"My daughter-in-law has boon suffering from\nEcionia, Two days after using F99 slio was on tht\nphono to toll us tho could jump for Joy at tht rtlltf sht\nwas golfing; In one month sht was practically frtt; now\nthe Is perfectly ok again. Thanks to F99,\" writes C.E.S., Vancouver. Atk your druggist for fret illustrated booklet today.\nsuggested the association work\nwith the Ontario government and\nthe Quebec and federal administrations to form a statutory\nmarketing agency best adapted to\nthe needs of the industry.\nThe third member, Guy Ro-\nberge, said he agreed the association had lessened competition,\nbut in doing so it had followed\nclosely public policy.\nOntario produces about 95 per\ncent of Canada's' flue-cured crop.\nIn the 1944-55 period, the proportion of the Ontario crop grown by\nassociation members ranged from\n90 to 99 per cent. Production has\ngrown steadily, climbing to 168,-\n000,000 pounds in 1954. About 75\nper cent of the crop is consumed\nin Canada, going into cigaret production. The balance is exported.\nChanges In HAIR DO'i\n... Over The Century\nLime, alum, lamp black,\nhoney and ostrich feathers\nhave all been used in \"my\nlady's\" hair dressing. In\nthe NEW Star Weekly\nthis week Gwen Cowley\nreviews coiffure fashions\nfrom Cleopatra's time to\nthe modern Bouffant cut\nand Interplanetary Coif.\nRead \"A Century of Hair\nDo's\".,\n.' With \"My Fair Lady\"\nthe themo of the fashion\nworld tha NEW Star\nWeekly brings you \"Fair\nLady Fashions In Lace\"\nand the exclusive touch of\nParisian designer Henri\nDior.\nD.. NEWI NSWI NEWI Star   WeeUly\nB_i tatau\/ut U)h$sJ.QA.\nEASY TO KNIT1\nKnit a shrug to toss over everything, to keep you warm and cozy!\nIt's done ln a fast 'n' easy pattern\nstitch\u2014so becoming with all your\ntall and winter fashions!\nPattern 508 has easy-to-follow\nknitting directions. Misses' Sizes\n32-34; 38-38 Included in pattern.\nSend TWENTY FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN. 60 Front St W, Toronto,\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\nScarfe Warns\nAgainst\nMass Thinking\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mistaking mass information for mass\neducation could result in \"getting\neveryone thinking alike which\nwould be ruin,\" Dean Neville V,\nScarfe warned here.\nAddressing Vancouver Woman's\nSchool for Citizenship, the head\nof University of British Columbia's\nCollege of Education said;\n\"What some pepole think is mads\neducation is not much more than\nmass information \u2014 a kind of\ninstructional information put over\nto large numbers. It is not the\nsame as education.\"\n\u25a0 Dean Scarfe said education \u2014\nthe business of stimulating thinking \u2014 begins after information has\nbeen supplied.\n\"Real education requires a\nteacher and small groups,\" he\nsaid. \"It does not mean however\nthat the teacher cannot be helped\nby means of mass information.\n\"It helps more people to know\nmore things quickly; facts, reports, information, news.\n\"If however you try to indoctrinate and propagandize people\nso they all think, feel and behave\nalike you are killing education,\nIt is shutting people's minds rather\nthan opening them. It would be\nruin.\"\nIf people don't think for themselves, he said, they are \"gullible\ndupes\" conforming people who\nbelieve   everything  they  read.\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft book for 19561 Dozeni\nof other new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet knitting, embroidery,\niron-ons, novelties. Send 25 cents\nfor your copy of this book NOW \u2014\nwith gift patterns printed in It!\n\"It's a Mirror\nof Main Street'\nArchie R. Burnie, Manager\nNelson Branch\nBank of Montreal\nEvery time I read one of my\nbank's annual report) I am reminded of the days\nwhen I was a junior wilh the Bank in a town very\nmuch like thi,s. The branch manager had that\nwonderful knack of seeing things from more than\none point of view. He could take the Bank's annual\nreport, and show how It tied in with the day-to-day\nbusiness of our own branch and of our community.\n\"Conditions here on Main Street,\" he would say,\n\"are reflected in the overall picture of the country's\nprosperity, because, after all's said and done, Canada\nis the sum-total of hundreds of Main Streets like this.\"\n\"The folks who buy and sell on Main Street \u2014\nand that includes all of us in this bank \u2014 are the\nsame kind of people \u2014 multiplied over and over\n\u2014 who set the patterns of our progress clear across\nthe country.\"\nSo it is with the Bank of Montreal's 139th annual\nreport, for the year ended October 31st, 1956. It's a\nmirror of Main Street While the report deals wilh\nbillions of dollars, reflecting conditions in the country\nas a whole, its figures mirror the progress of B of M\nbranches just like mine and the prosperity of the\ntowns they serve from coast to coast.\ntt) j _______ aitoim\n'WW\n&m*AA, rf \/&usi*lt\nThe Facts behind the Figures\nin the B of M's\n139th Annual Report\nDEPOSITS amount to $2,589,031,509, well over half of which is\nthe personal savings of Canadian* in all walks of life. The remainder is money deposited by business firms, institutions and\ngovernments. The bulk of this money is hard at work in the\nform of loans to people and businesses of all types.\nLOANS, at 11,383,079,003, establish a new record. The B of M's\nloans in Canada \u2014 the highest in its history \u2014 are helping every\nbranch of the Canadian economy to prosper. Large and small,\nthey have been rtiade to business and industrial enterprises of\nnil kinds \u2014 to farmers, fishermen, oilmen, miners, lumbermen\nand'ranchers \u2014 to citizens of every calling, to provincial and\nmunicipal governments and school districts.\nINVESTMENTS ia high-grade government bonds amounted to\n$697,652,544. This money helped to finance many importnnl\ngovernment projects, designed for everyone'* benefit Other\nsecurities held by the Bank \u2014 which include a diversified list of\nhigh-enjality short-term industrial issues \u2014 brought totnl investments to $916413,032,\nBank of Montreal\nWORKING   WITH   CANADIANS   IN   EVERY   WAtK   OF   tIFE   SINCE   1817\n .\t\n. ,     __\nSPORTS\nCanadians Qualify in\nOlympic 400 Metres\nMELBOURNE    (CP)    \u2014    Two to qualify. In the Women's javelin\nCanadians qualified for the second\nround in the 400 metres when the\nEmoke of battle cleared away at\nthe Olympic Games here today\nThey were Terry Tobacco of Cumberland, B.C. who was first in the\nheat and Murray CocktJUrn of\nToronto, Ont. who was second in\nthe heat. Laird Sloan of Montreal\nwho was fourth in the heat failed\nChampionship\nCurling Play To\nStart Next Week\nPlay which will decide Nelson\nrepresentatives in competition\nleading to the Dominion championships is to start at Nelson\nCurling Club next week.\nUp to Tuesday night eight rinks\n\u25a0 had entered with the deadline for\nentries noon today. It is expected\nthese rinks will play as a separate section in the next curling\nclub competition and from this\nwill emerge three rinks (possibly\nfour) to represent Nelson at the\nzone playdowns to be held at Trail\nZone winners will advance to the\nB.C. Bonspiel here in February\nand the B.C. winner will play in\nthe Dominion championships later\nIn the season.\nRinks entered to date arc Art\nWaters, Milt Ryalls, Jim Harvey.\nLen Peerless, last year's zone representative; Dick Palmer, Art Ron-\nmark, Jim Leeming and Roy\nMaurer.\nMargaret George of Mervin, Sask\nalso failed to qualify.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nLee Calhoun of Gary. Ind., won\nthe gold medal in the 110-metre\nhurdles.\n\u2022 \u2022    a\nParry  O'Brien   of   the   United\nStates won the shot put final,\nSingapore defeated Afghanistan\n5-0 in field hockey game.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nRomania defeated Australia 4-2\nin the opening game of the water\npolo tournament.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nVladimir Kuts of Russia won the\n50C0-metre run, giving him a\ndouble in the Games.\nGreat Britain defeated the United States 9-7 in the first round\nof the epee competition in fencing.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLars Hall of Sweden won the\nindividual gold medal and Russia\nthe team gold medal in the pentathlon competition.\nShirley Strickland de la Hunty\nof Australia won the women's 80-\nmetre hurdles, repeating her 1952\nwin.\nWarriors Edge Smokies\nTo End Losing Streak\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 28,1956 \u2014 7\nHOSSLAND \u2014 Pinoke Mcln\ntyre scored in the dying seconds\nto give Rossland Warrior's their\nthird victory of the Western In\nternation Hockey League season\nin the game here Tuesday night\nbefore more than 700 fans, Mclntyre accepted a pass from team\nmate Johnny Ripien and swept\ninto the Trail end flipping the pill\npast Seth Martin to give Warrior's\ntheir 4-3 vitcorv. The victory\nended a Warrior losing streak at\n13 games.\nTrail  dominated   play   through\nWITH STANE\nAND BESOM\nTuesday's results of the Kelson\nCur\ning  Club's  first  competition,\nnow\nnearing  its  close,   were   as\nfollows:\nE.\nC. Hunt 12, J. Bailey 11;\nE.\nRamsbottom 9, R. Chandler 7;\nL.\nPeerless 5. L. J. Maurer 8;\nR.\nF. Wallace 7, H, Hinitt 10;\nR.\nPalmer 15, F. Carmichael 6;\nW\nGold 9, J. Thom 8;\nA.\nS. Horswill 5, A. B. Gilker 8;\nA.\nWaters 13, N. Sardich 7;\nR.\n9;\nA.\nCarmichael 11, J. McMurchy\nJ. Hamson 7, D. Cathcart 10,\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs  to All   Types\n609 Lake St Phono 898\nARROW  BATTERIES\nSoccer Players\nGel Suspension\nVANCOUVER (CP), - Seven\nplayers were suspended and four\nothers severely reprimanded Monday as the B.C. Soccer Commission\ncracked down on rough play in\nthe Mainland Soccer League.\nPils, first division leaders, lost\nJackie Marsh for the balance of\nthe season, Ernie McLaren for\nthree games and Bobby Marsh for\ntwo.\nThe suspensions resulted from\nPils' Nov. 12 fracas with North\nVan Celtics. Earl Cherneski of\nCeltics was suspended two games\nfor his part in the scuffle.\nRussell Hendricks and Earl\nWinship of Clarke and Buzza \"A\"\nare under indefinite suspension for\nfailing to reply to the commission\nwhile clubmate Bill Barbour was\ngiven four games for \"acting in a\nmanner detrimental to the game.\"\nHendricks and Winship were reported for tearing referee Tom\nMiller's clothing following the\ngame of Nov. 11.\nReprimands went to Bob Swin-\nton of Pils, Steve Biddle of Sap-\nperton, Malcolm McManus of the\nCeltics and Bruno Bevilacqua of\nSacred Hearts. They were warned\ntheir next offence would result in\nsuspensions.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nAdult\nSKATING\nTONIGHT 8:00\nMUSIC BY SKATIN TOONS\nFirst Curling\nCompetition\nNearing Finals\nThis week will see the wind-up\nof the Kootenay Forest competition at present under way in Nelson Men's Curling Club. The draws\nhave been exceptionally successful with few defaults posted.\nWith the 36 rinks divided into\nfive sections, play has been very\nclose. The following rinks are trying for top honors: (Standings\nwere prior to Tuesday's games).\nSection A:\nJ. Harvey, four wins, one loss;\nL. McEachern, three wins, one\nloss, one tie, each with one game\nto play.\nSection B:\nD. Cathcart, three wins, one loss,\none tie, one to play; F. Carmichael,\nthree wins, one tie and two to\nplay; A. Hamson, three wins, one\nloss and two to play.\nSection C:\nW. Gold, four wins, one loss; A.\nWaters' three wins, two losses; J.\nThom, three wins and two losses;\nall with one game to play.\nSection D:\nJ. Leeming, four wins, one loss:\nH. Farenholtz, three wins and one\nloss, one tie; H. Moore, three wins,\ntwo losses; all with one game In\nhand.\nSection  E:\nL. Peerless, three wins, two\nlosses; R. Maurer, four wins, two\nlosses; each with two games to\nplay.\nWith playoffs for this competition winding up this week, a new\none will start early next week and\nall curlers not listed as active have\nbeen asked to register to prevent\nanyone being missed out.\nJOCKEY INJURED\nBALTIMORE (AP)\u2014Jockey Joe\nSnyder suffered head injuries\nTuesday and was taken to hospital after he was involved in a\nthree-horse spill during the running of the fourth race atPimlico.\nThe veteran rider was later reported   resting   comfortably.\nmost of the game, out-shooting\nRossland 39-26 for the session but\nwere unable to battle Reno Zanier\non more than three occasions. Mc<\nIntyre sparked the Rossland vie.\ntory with two goals while former\nNelson Leafs Vic Lofvendahl and\nBud Andrews added one apiece.\nJack Mclntyre, Cal Hockley and\nBobby Kromm notched the Trail\nmarkers.\nWhile the game was rough\nthroughout, only three -penalties,\ntwo tp Trail, were handed out by\nReferees Bab Maker of Kettle\nFalls, Wash., and Johnny Ursaki\nof Couer d'Alene, Idaho,\nThe Rossland victory was recorded without the use of the\nleague acquired Bill Short, who\nhad not returned from a trip to\nSeattle by game time.\nTRAIL 8CORE8 FIRST\nTrail opened scoring in the first\nas Jack Mclntyre fired a shot from\n25 feet out to net the puck between\nthe legs of \/the Rossland goalie\nwho had gone down on one knee\nin an attempt to make the save.\nScoring was even in the second\nas each team notched one marker.\nHockley gave Trail a two-goal\nedge aftej; less than one minute\nof play as a result of a big scramble in front of the Rossland net.\nRossland notched their first with\nonly two seconds remaining as\nVic Lofvendahl caught a rebound\noff a shot fired by fellow defence-\nman George Ferguson.\nRossland evened the reading\nearly in the third as Bud Andrews\nslipped through the Smoke Eaters\ndefence and beat Martin. They\nwent ahead a little more than five\nminutes later as Pinoke Mclntyre\nscored on a long shot. Trail came\nback to even the score late in the\nperiod before Mclntyre notched\nthe winner.\nLINEUPS\nRossland \u2014 Goal: Zanier; defence: Fletcher, Ferguson, Lofvendahl; forwards: P. Mclntyre,\nJones, Lucchini, Chorney, Andrews, Rypien, Birukow, Hyssop,\nDesrosier.\nTrail \u2014 Goal: Martin; defence:\nSmith, Kraiger, Coburn, Conn;\nforwards'. G. Warwick, Kromm, D.\nWarwick, Hockley, Shabaga, J.\nMclntyre, B. Warwick, Tambellini,\nLenardon,\nSUMMARY\nFirst period \u2014 1, Trail \u2014 J. Mclntyre (Kromm) 16:54.\nPenalties: Lanardon 4:54.\nSecond period \u2014 2. Trail \u2014\nHockley (B. Warwick) 1:03; 3.\nRossland \u2014 Lofvendahl (Ferguson, Desrosier) 19:58.\nPenalties: Coburn 12:02, Smith\n14:56.\nThird period \u2014 4. Rossland \u2014\nAndrews (Rypien, Mclntyre) 3:30;\n5. Rossland \u2014 P. Mclntyre (Rypien) 8:53; 6. Trail \u2014 Kromm (G.\nWarwick, D. Warwick) 14:15; 7.\nRossland \u2014 P. Mclntyre (Rypien,\nAndrews) 18:46.\nPenalty: Lofvendahl 9:48.\nMOORE PLANS\nTO SHOW HE'S\nNOT TOO OLD\nBy CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Archie Moore,\nready to prove that life begins at\n40 or more, has nothing but dis>\ndain for hecklers who intimate\nthat Rocky Marciano may have\npushed him over the hill.\nMarciano kayoed Moore ln the\nninth round of their heavyweight\ntitle fight 14 months ago. Rocky's\nretirement now has brought about\na unique situation that will make\nboxing history.\nBy defeating 21-year-old Floyd\nPatterson at Chicago Stadium Fri\nday night, Moore can become the\noldest man ever to wear the heavy\nweight \"crown and the first light\nheavyweight champion to gain it,\nPatterson, by winning, can become the youngest titleholder and\nthe first Olympic champion to take\nit.\n\"I'm a Moore man,\" says Sam\nPian, who helped pilot Tony Zle\nto the middleweight championship.\n\"But the thing I'm thinking about\nis how much, ii anything, did Marciano take out of Moore.\n\"When Marciano polished off a\nman he kept haunting them. You\nnever hear of his victims any\nmore. He took care of Jersey Joe\nWalcott, Roland LaStarza, Rex\nLayne, Ezzard Charles and Don\nCockell. Did he take care of\nMoore? Maybe we'll find out Friday.\"\nBRINGING CANADA Iti flrat gold medal In\nthe 1956 Olympics, these University of British\nColumbia oarsmen won the fours without coxswain Tuesday. The crew was Archie MacKinnon, Lorne Loomer, Walter d'Hondt and Don\nArnold, stroke The entire team Is pictured above,\nshown In back row, from left are: Carl Ogawa,\nPhil  Kueber, Dick McCIure, Bob Wilson, Dave\nHelllwell, Wayne Pretty, Bill MacKerlloh, Doug\nMcDonald and Laurie West, stroke. Second row,\nthe four: Archie MacKinnon\/ Lorne Loomer,\nWalter d'Hondt and Don Arrlold, Manager Ted\nDubberley Is shown at right, front, with doublet\nscullers Ken Taylor and Tommy Gray, who won\nthe Olympic trials but were not selected to make\nthe trip to Melbourne.\nThunderous Welcome\nFor Returning Esks\nBy DON HANRIGHT\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Football-\nhappy Edmonton welcomed home\nits beloved Eskimos Tuesday. Santa Claus hadn't a look in.\nThe Grey Cup champions received a thundereous \"well done\"\nfrom an estimated 60,000 throats\nthat far. outweighed the welcome\ntendered the old gent in white\nwhiskers when he came to town\nNov. 17, greeted' by roughly 10,000\npersons.\nThe Eskimo ovation was one of\nlhe noisiest, most jubilant whoop-\nups downtown Edmonton has ever\nheard or seen.\"Yet it was one of\nthe shortest parades, two float-\nloads of players and four bands\none piont along the 20-block route.\nTicker   tape,   crepe   paper   and\nballoons   in   the   Eskimos'   green\nand gold colors cascaded down of-\nFive Fined for\nExceeding Duck Bog\nNHL Play Sees More\nGoals Than Usual\nMONTREAL  (CP)  \u2014 Montreal Mohns, Bos\nand Detroit players dominate the^ Litzenberger,\nscoring race in the National Hockey   League   but   Boston   Bruins\nstill are winning the most games\nand leading the league.\nThe whole circuit is scoring\nmore goals than for several sea-\nqns.\nThat's the picture sketched   by\nI NHL statistics for  last week,\n3 14 17 25\nChi    ...   9   7 16 14\nH. Richard. Mtl       . ..   6 10 16 10\nPenalties in minutes by clubs:\nDetroit   154,  Chicago   180,  Toronto 186, Montreal 267, New York\n286, Boston 292.\nRecord of goalkeepers:\nG Ga So Avg\nHall, Det\nwhich Jean Beliveau of Montreal Sawchuk,  Bos\nregained    the   scoring   lead   by   Plante,  Mtl\nbreaking a tie with Ted Lindsay McNeil,  Mtl  ....\nof Detroit and the Bruins main- Montreal total\ntained a one-game lead over the. Chadwick, Tor\nRed Wings. Worsley, NY\nThe leaders: Bower, N Y ....\nG A Pt Pn N Y Total \t\nBeliveau, Ntl  _    9 16 25 49! Rollins, Chi \t\nLindsay,  Det    10 14 24 18      Standings:\nHowe,  Det   _  10 13 23 14'Boston\nUllman. Det     5 14 19 17 Detroit  ...\nM. Richard. Mtl     7 11 18 37  Montreal .\nOlmstead, Mtl     5 13 18 28 Toronto .\nHarvey,  Mtl       1 17 18 24 New York\nStasiuk. Bos       8   9 17 30 Chicago\n18\n20\n12\n9\n21\n20\n18\n1\n19\n20\n0\n1\n4\n0\n4\n1\n2\n0\n60 2\n60   1\n2.33\n2.25\n1.42\n3.55\n2.33\n2.85\n3.11\n4.00\n3.18\n.3.00\nPlante Back\nIn Aclion\nTORONTO (CP) - Jacques\nPlante returned to action in the\nNational Hockey League last week I taking only eight minutes to pass\napparently unaffected by a chro-'\nnic case of asthma which had kept\nhim out of eight games.\nThe Montreal Canadiens* netminder picked up where he left\noff before his illness and improved his lead in the efficiency\nrating for NHL goaltenders.\nPlante was beaten on only two\nof the 45 shots fired at him in\ntwo games for a .956 average\nwhich raised his season's mark a\npoint to .952.\nMeanwhile, Glenn Hall of Detroit Red'Wings reclaimed second\nplace by maintaining a .steady\npace in his three games while\nBoston Bruins' Terry Sawchuk\nslipped three points, which\ndropped him to third place.\nHall stopped 91 of 98 shots for a\n.929 mark on the week and a season's rating of .926. Sawchuk put\nin his worsjt week of the season as\nhe marked up an even .900 average, allowing seven of 69 shots to\nget by him. His season's total is\n.923.\nLorne Worsley, tiny New York\nRangers goaltender, managed to\nadd two points to his average for\na fourth-place .914. He had a .922\nmark for the week. Al Rollins of\nChicago Black Hawks kept his average at .908, posting the same\nmark for the week.\nToronto Maple Leafs' Ed Chadwick managed to get back to the\n.900 position by turning aside 112\nof 122 shots during the week for\na .918 total, giving him'.901 on the\nseason.\nGerry McNeil, who replaced\nPlante in the Montreal nets,\nplayed one game but was beaten\nfive times by Chicago for an .81a\nverage and a season total of .873.\nfice buildings, while in the streets\nfootball fans jammed six-persons\ndeep to wave and shout their approval of the whipping given tne\nMontreal Alouettes in the iinal\nSaturday.\nThe leading band blared a sonr\nbre \"Alouette\" to a funeral-march\nstep, while a dilapidated auto of\n1920 vintage carried a sign reading; \"The mighty Alouette ma'\ncnine\" and another bearing a\nmimick'ing: \"Wait until 1957.\"\nShapely redhead Jane Mackie,\nMiss Edmonton Eskimo oi 1956,\ncarried the coveted Grey Cup in\nher lap as she rode in an open\nconvertible under a sunny sky.\nJackie Parker and fullback\nJohnny Bright were among those\nwho hadn't arrived back in Edmonton by Tuesday night. They\nwere driving their cars back from\nToronto, while other players returned on an airliner mete by a\nsmall contingent of fans here at\nj:20 a.m. Monday,\nIt was an official \"Eskimo Day\"\nin Edmonton, schools and government offices closing at 2:30 p.m.\u2014\na half-hour before the parade\nstarted\u2014along with some commer-\nFARGO, N. D. (AP) \u2014 Five\nmen were fined and placed on\nprobation    when    they    pleaded\nguilty Tuesday td bringing moreicial \u00b0Hices and a few stores,\nthan 10 ducks each into the U. S.j    The Payers were to be guests\nfrom Canada. I later at a special civic banquet in\nFined $150 was Dr. John Pat-jlheir honor.\nterson,  Des   Moines,  retired veterinarian who was placed on probation for two years,\nFined $50 each and placed on\nprobation for  two years were:\nEmil Ries Tuttle, outdffor editor of the Des Moines Register-\nTribune; Lowell O. Harris, Mar-\nshalltown Sportsmens Club; Carroll Willcox, Patterson's son-in-\nlaw; and Dr. John W. Patterson\nJr.,  Des  Moines,  Patterson's son.\nFights\n59\n42\n26\n61\n49\n22\n33\n57\n16\n43\n60\n15\n40\n60\n11\ncZ&omai Q\/Zctamt Ifi&JifaM 3Z&6.\nAMMERSTBuRG, ONT\nVANCOUVER, B  C\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nCOLD WEATHER IS\nCOMING!\nWhy not hove a\nDependable\nGoodyear\nBATTERY\nInstalled new ! !\nPriced as Low as $13.50\n(Lets Trade-In Allowance)\nPLUS   12-MONTH  GUARANTEE\nDon't Forget We Have a Good Stack of Genuine\nGOODYEAR SUBURBANITES Ready for Mounting.\nANDY'S Tire Shop\nSwaps Walks Again\n| CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) \u2014 Swaps,\n57 45 28 j California thoroughbred who\nranks as One ol the top race horses\nof all time, walked Tuesday for\nthe first time since x-rays disclosed he had fractured a tiny\n.* I bone in his left hind leg during\nI an Oct. 9 workbut at Garden State\nrace track.\nSwaps, still wearing a small\ncast to protect the injured canon\nbone which veterinarians say has\nhealed completely, walked from\none stall to another one bedded\nwith straw.\nThe big horse, one of the fastest\nsprinters ever to race, has been\nsupported in a special sling in a\nstanding position ever since he\nhurt himself seven weeks ago.\n323 Vernon St.\nPhone 1930\nBy The Associated  Press\nNew Orleans \u2014 Ralph Dupas,\n142, New Orleans, outpointed Siegfried Burrow, 144, Germany, 10.\nNew York \u2014 Italo Scortifthini,\n161%, New York, outpointed Hardy (Bazooka) Smailwood, 162^,\nBrooklyn, 10.\nProvidence, R.I. \u2014 Franz Szu-\nzina, 181, Germany, stopped Char-\nHe (King) Cotton, lSSVi, Todelo,\nOhio, 3.\nLeicester, Eng,\u2014Randy Turpin,\n175, England, stopped Alex Buxton. 175, England, 5.\nHolyoke, Mass.\u2014Ted Doncaster,\n171, Sackville, N.B., outpointed\nGerry Tessier, 168, Springfield.\nMass., 12.\nTed Kennedy\nMay Come Back\nTORONTO (CP)-Ted Kennedy,\nformer Maple Leaf captain who\nquit the game at the end of tha\n1855 leason after winning the National Hockey League'! most-valuable-player award, may return\nto lead hia old team out of its\nslump, manager Hap Day said\nTuesday.\nThe 30-year-old Kennedy donned\nhis uniform, and worked out with\nthe team Tuesday.\n\"Teeder told u\u00bb if he thinks he\ncan help the team, he'll return,\"\nDay said.\nThe Leah need a lift, with only\none win ta the last 11 starts. They\nhave dropped from first to fourth\nplace in the league.\nHand Operation\nFor Campanella\nBROOKLYN (AP)\u2014Roy Campanella, slugging catcher of Brooklyn Dodger^ enters hospital today\nto undergo a hand operation\nThursday, club publicity director\nArthur Patterson announced\nTuesday.\nThe 35-year-old receiver will!\nhave bone chips removed from I\nhis right thumb by Dr. Herbert!\nFett, who performed two pre-1\nvious operations on Campanula's!\nleft hand. \u2022 . ]\nObviously handicapped by the;\ndamaged hand, the National\nLeague's three - time most valuable player caught only 124 games,\nhit 20 home runs and drove in\n73 runs on a sub-par .219 batting\naverage. The year before Campanella batted .318, slammed 32 home\nruns -and drove in 107 runs to\ncapture the league's MVP award\nfor the third time.\nREESE FIRST TO\nSIGN FOR '57\nBROOKLYN (AP) \u2014 Pee Wee\nReese, captain and shortstop of\nBrooklyn Dodgers, became the\nfirst member ol the National\nLeague champions to agree to\nterms for the 1957 baseball season when he returned his signed\ncontract Tuesday for an estimated\n$39,000, a reported Increase of $2,-\n000 over last year's figures.\nThe popular veteran, 38 next\nJuly, enjoyed one of his best seasons in 1958, figuring prominently\nIn the Dodgers' second straight\nchampionship. He batted .257 but\nplayed ln nearly every game, was\nhis old brilliant self in the field\nand proved one of the most dangerous clutch hitters on the club.\nIt All Started\nWith E?e\nCleopatra let her robe slip off one\nwell-rounded ahotrider aa she sued\ntip Caesar. He looked like a\nRoman candle burnt at both\nends, bat there was one thing\nabout him she Eked: the Roman\nEmpire.\nIn December Reader's Digest\nare Richard Armour's vanhibtted\nremarks selected {rom his fates*\nbook about famous femma fatales.\nGet yonr December Reader's\nDigest today: 39 articles of lasting interest including the best\nfrom current magazines and\nbooks, condensed to save tout\ntime.\nAWARD  WINNER\nNEW YORK (AP)-Scott Frost.\n1955 Hambletonian winner, has |\nbeen voted the Headliners Award\nfor the third straight year, the\nU.S. Harness Writers Association\nsaid Tuesday.\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by Ihe Governmenl of British Columbia\nQuick, Easy Way to Shrink\nPainful Piles\nHere U d nice, clean, cosy way to got\nreal relief from (ho nagging diitreti oi\niwollan, painful pilei without tht incon-\nvenienca of ointment*, pile pipe* or nip*\ncoaitodet.\nTha iseret it In taking jut ona email\nHem-Roid Tablet, with water, two or\nthrao timet a day. Works through effer>\ntive INTERNAL action. Quickly ecses\nconstipation, relievai Itching, iorenes\u00bb and\npain. Helps thrink pllet and pannitt than\nWhy eufler needlewly when Hem-Roid\noften you 10 much. Get a package today,\nSpo for younelf how nice Hotn-Roid ii to\nurn, how effective it ii Bnd how much\nmora comfort it will quickly  brinR you.\nAll drug itcres, Low coil, Monev tc-\nfunded if you are not 100% pleated.\nFor Pure Pleasure\n\u00ab\u2022 MILDEST BEST-TASTING \"\u00ab\u00bb\"\"\n - . -        ^^^^^^^^^^\nCHRISTMAS GIFT GUIDE!\nEvery Department Is Loaded With Hundreds of Sparkling Gift Items To Make This the Finest Christmas Ever! Check These Pages for Only a Few of the Many Top\nValues! Do Your Gift Shopping Now While the Selection Is Complete and Avoid the Last Minute Rush! And Remember - the Bay Offers You Both Convenient Charge\nand Budget Account To Ease the Strain on Your Pocket book and Spread Your Payments In Regular Monthly Instalments If You Wish.\nExquisitely Feminine Slips\nDreamy Styles in Crepe and Nylon\nCrepe Slips\nA wonderful gift item at a low budget price, styled\nfor perfect fit and long weor. Dainty lace and nylon\ntrim   at   hem   and   at   bodice.   Sizes   32   to   40.\nWhite         .\nSizes 42 to 46\n2\n98\nDainty Nylon Tricot\nGift Panties\nSave on this wonderful gift item. Regular values of .69\nand .79, these panties are being offered at an extremely\nlow sale price. Choose several from the grand selection\nof pastel colours. Small, Medium, Large.\nNylon Slips\nA new-shipment of adorable nylon slips has just\narrived, long wearing, easy-to-care for opaque\nnylon with deep fluted nylon at the hem and bodice.\nWhite or Champaign. Sizes 32 lo 40   ..\t\nOthers ot 2.98 and 3.98. 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Now while they last\t\nCuddlesome Snuggledown\nNighties, Pyjamas, Bed Jackets\nKitten-soft snuggledown is more popular thap ever, now\nits \"redmanized\" to prevent shrinkage or stretching and\ncomes in lovely colours of strawberry, powder, and yellow.\nThe NighY.es\nChoice of long or short sleeve styles ornamented with\nsmocking, ribbons, lacy ruffles or guilting.\nSZSSML   3.98 and 4.98\nand O.S.\nThe Pyjamas\n3.98 and 4.98\nThese have tops as frilly as the nighties and there is a\ndashing ski style with knit V neck, cu_ffs_and trouser cuffs.\nSmall, Medium,\nLarge  _._i   J.^O and\nThe Bed Jackets\nWarm and comfy yet styled with that dainty charm to\nmake you look attractive. Two lovely styles to choose from.\n2.98 and 3.98\nCharming, Conventional or Contemporary Styling in\nTable or TV Lamps\nA pair of lamps gives balance to your room. A grand array\nof new styling in lamps, including TV, boudouir or table\nlamps are now on display for your selection.\nCeramic TV   Lamps\nIn beautiful glaze finish of striking design and coloring.\nEye catching and useful decorations for your home. Ceramic\nDeer Body in Black or Green 1 A Q C\nwith planter effect, ea     IVi\/D\nVase-Shaped Boudoir Lamps\nColorful, with opaque\nporchment shades, ea.    ._ \t\nOwl-Styled Lamps\nGlowing, useful lamp to highlight a child's\nroom, perhaps a pair as Boudouir Lamps, ea\t\nPersian Cat TV Lamps\nWatch the eyes glow. A lovely gift\nand so smart too, ea.   _.\t\n4.95\n5.95\nGive a Gift for\nThe Kitchen\nConvenient Space Saving Containers for Your\nKitchen or Pantry.\nSpace Saver 12-Quart Step on Can\nHeavy duty, styled for today's smart kitchens, conveniently boxed as a gift. \/I QQ\nAssorted colors. Only     T.JrO\n4-Piece Cannister Sets\nSmart sqLjare type. Handy for Flour, Sugar, Tea, Coffee.\nAssorted colors with contrasting lids. *%   CsO\nSet        3.50\nBread Boxes\nHinged cover, with shelf to match the\ncannister sets. Each  ..\nWaste Baskets\nNew styling, high in popularity.\nAssorted colors. Each .....  \t\n1\n49\n4.50\n1.98\nNovelty TV Lamps\n,a95 m,fs#?\nSt\/\/** .\nSPeCfAL\n,   valuc\nNew, completely different, every one a winner\nHorse for animal  lovers, Car for  sportsmen.\nYou'll love these. Only ea   \t\nNovelty Lamps, Gun for Den type,\n10.95\n23-Pc. Electric Train\n**vA-ue\nTABLE LAMPS\nCandy stripe, ultra modern styling in   table   lamps.\nAttractive tiered shade carries stripe effect  into base\nof lamp. Choice of Pink, Green, Yellow, Bronze.\nThursday, Friday and Saturday Shoppers.\nEach      s\nDual-Purpose Serv-a-Table\nNew, smart, lovely occasional, table. Easily made up, or collapsed for storage. Remove-\nable tray, that will delight any hostess. Attractive shades with contrasting Q QC*\nDlack legs. Each       V.5'\\j\nWondering what to give that boy for Christmas? Well,\njust listen to this! How about an electric train at a price\nthat will suit your budget? A tender, covered car, open\ncar, tank and conductor's car, 8 curved rrack, 8 straight\ntrack. This is hard to beat for price or auality. Thursday,\nFriday Saturday Shoppers. 1 A   QQ\nLimited Quantity. Reg. 24.95        It'.X^'\nP'8lSl\u00abl\u00abl\u00ab<!l\u00abl\u00abl\u00abl\u00ab;t(II\u00abI\u00ab\u00bb!sSlgieiC*!51<ls;i\u00abl\u00abISI\u00abHl\u00abUf!!\u00abl\u00ablel\u00abl!lSHl5t5i\u00abl\u00abl\u20ac^\nLook-English Made 42-Piece\nDINNER SET\nRegency British Anchor English Porcelain in attrac-\n| five patterns, 42 pieces include 6 of each: Dinner\n| Plates, Breakfast Plates, Bread and Butter, Soup\ntr Coups, Cups and Saucers and Fruit Nappies.\n42 Pee. Set 16-95\nQuilted Chromespun\nScatter Cushions\nAttractive, practical scatter cushions to highlight any room. Attractive chromespun in assorted shades v\/ith floral designs finished with\nbutton centres. Approximately 13\" square. Each \u2014 \t\nBeautiful Imported Damask\nThe   perfect   setting   for   your   holiday\ntable! A distinctive cotton and rayon damask tablecloth with matching napkins.\nChoice of Pastel Green or Peach.\nSi?e 52\" x 70\" *7 QC\nwith 6 napkins. Set       * a~mr\nSize 64\" x 84\" **)   QC\nwith 8 napkins. Set    I mm. \\7 J\nTea Sets\nWashable, attractively printed tea cloths\nwith 4 matching napkins. Tea Cloth size\n45\" x 45\". Ideal gift item.      A   QQ\nPrinted Table Cloths\nStunning patterns, lovely colors, rayon printed table cloths. A gift that        A   Crt\nwill really please. Size 54\" x 54\". Each ...       t'-.^V\/\nMortone \"Hand Painted\" Lace Cloths\nA distinctive gift. Scottish made, imported. Size 48\" x 48\".\nhand painted lace cloths. Each ,  \t\n6.95\n5-Piece Kitchen Utensil Sets f\nSpecial purchase \u2014 Here's the ideal Christmas gift for |\nMom \u2014 a complete set of handy kitchen gadgets in- J\neluding the masher, turner, fork, soup ladle, spatula, 1\nstirring spoon. Stainless steel with long lasting wooden S\nhandles. Limited Quantity. A   QQ j\nThursday, Friday, Saturday Shoppers, Set....      a.ir* 3\nuteotte\n: iNCORPOjwrao. at?,:. MAY\nI\n ^\t\n\t\npo3\nCHRISTMAS GIFT GUIDE!\nSANTA WILL BE IN TOYLAND THURSDAY AND FRIDAY FROM 2:30 to 3:30 P.M. '\nMake Saturday Family Shopping Night! Open Saturday Evening Until 9 P.M.\n'\"^.\u2022SP \u2022*.\u00bb\u00bb'\nColorful Sport Shirts\nFor\"Him\"\nCasual is the keynote for today's modern living \u2014\nand the men on your gift list will really appreciate\na handsome sport shirt- Our selection is the finest\never \u2014 rich shadow tones, new metallic^ thread designs, and soft-finish plain shades. Sizes small to\nextra large.\nWHITE SHIRTS\nGive \"Him\" Practical Warmth\nguaranteed collar Give \"Him\" Style\nA thrifty gift \"buy\" ... Good quality\nwhite cotton broadcloth with a \"plus\"\nfeature \u2014 famous \"Airplane\"' cloth\ncollar guaranteed to outwear the shirt\nor a new shirt free! Sizes 14% to 17.\n298 Alpacama Coats\nShadow Check Shirts\nYou would ordinarily pay 6.95 for\nthis fine vfscose fabric in rich block\nand shadow checks! They're tops in\npopularity on any gift list \u2014 tailored with medium spread collar and\ntwo breast pockets with flaps. \u2014\nSizes S, M, L.\nGIFT\nDRESS\nSHIRTS\nBy B.V.D.\nChoose from white or popular plain\nshades of blue, grey, tan or mint \u2014 expertly made by a world famous maker.\nFine-count cotton broadcloth in neat short\npoint fused collar style. Regular cuffs. \u2014\nSizes 14% to 17%.\nThe luxury of alpaca-cashmere-wool blend combined with warmth-without-weight make.this topcoat a gift he'll treasure for\nyears! The finest of tailoring by\nCanada's-leading maker in both\nlight and darker shades. Sizes\n36 to 44- \t\n1 Only $10 Dov\/n on Budget Terms!\n4995\nRegular 39.95\n~4Gb-\nMen's Topcoats\nIf he needs a new topcoat, here is an excellent opportunity to give him a gift he deserves \u2014 and save over 10% as well! Choose\nfrom all wvool tweeds, gabardines, or fleeces.\nSizes 36 to 44. Pay\nCorduroy Dresses\nPerky little jumper style corduroy dresses\nwith nylon top \u2014 styled \"just right\" for\nthe  festive  season  ahead.\n\u2014 They'll make an ideal\nChristmas gift for girls 1\nto 3:  \t\n3\n49\nParty Dresses\nGay little nylon party dresses with attractive lace trim. They'll make ^^ _ _\nthe little girl on your gift ^^ 49\nlist a \"princess\". Pastels and '  x \u00b0   u   '\nwhite. Sizes 1-2-3\t\n3\nBoys' Cardigans\nWonderful \"Tow-Hue\" 100% orlon in the\npatterns little boys adore! Button front styling in assorted two-tone, _ \u00ab,. _\ncolor combinations. \u2014 A mk QB\n\"must\" on your gift list. \u2014 \/\/Mo.-\/\nSizes 3 - 6x :\t\n4\nFlannel Slacks\nWool and rayon blend flannel for Christmas\ndress occasions. Half belt ^^ _ _\nstyle with boxer waist at ^^k WH\nback. Mid-grey shade only, '  x \" \"''\nin sizes 3 to 6x\t\n3\nConvoy Jackets\nTeenagers styling In poplin with attached hood.\nAll have quilted inner lin- ^  <a^    mm m\ning for extra warmth. \u2014 ^   ^J .95\n\"Fashion right\" color com- '\nbinations, in sizes 7 to 14. ..\nwun anacnt\n13\nNylon-Pile Jackets\nThe latest thing jn lightweight jackets with all\nthe warmth of much heavier garments. Wind-\nproof nylon outer shell in hip length style \u2014 fully\nlined with new wonder ^m am mm, m\npile of 100% nylon. Attrac- ^ M\\ ,_f J\nlive campus styling. Sizes\n7 to 14\t\n14\n*\/\u2022\u2022*\nLustrous Satin Slippers\nThe slipper to brighten \"her\"\nChristmas in lustrous embroidered black satin with\ncontrasting lining. Platform\nsole, wedge heel. Sizes 4% to\n9. N and M widths.\n3\n95\nA Big Favorite With the Ladies\nWomen's Moccasin Slippers\n3\"\nChristmas Gift Magic in Exciting Gift Accessories!\nGift Sheer\"Baycrest\"\nStretchie Nylon HOSE\nWith soft padded leather 8oles and\nheels. Fur trim, warm lining, fancy\nbeaded vamps. Colors of red, blue,\npink, white to choose from. Siezs 4-9.\nMen's Romeo Slippers\nMan's favorite ... Kid leather uppers\nwith a choice of zipper or elastic side\ngore, hard leather sole, yet soft and\npliable to the foot; rubber heel. Full\nand half sizes 6 to 11. Brown only-\nMen's Opera Slippers\nSoft soled slippers of pliable brown or wine\nleather uppers, soft fleeced cotton lining and padded leather soles and\nheels. Designed to give\nyou lasting comfort. Full\nsizes only 6 to 11.\n5\n95\nv\nSave Up to One-Half on\nSlipper Socks\n3\n95\nA truly sheer nylon in 66 gauge, 15 denier. Here are four\nreasons why you should give. \"Baycrest\" quality, straight\nseams always, perfect fit, super comfort, style value. Now\navailable in lovely holiday shades. No need ril ^Q\nto worry about size, as they stretch to fit....       ' ' \u00b0'\nGift Box of 3 Pairs Only $4\nReg. 98c. Chinese Mules\n79\nJust the thing for around\nhome. Embroidered silk mule\ntype slippers with padded\nleather soles in black,, blue or\nwipe. Sizes 4 to 9.        \t\nThe most comfortable indoor footwear for children, misses and boys. Knit from 100% worsted\nwool with genuine soft cushion leather soles,\nwith 3-D applique designs in assorted colors' \u2014\n_   L'his is a regular 1.98 value.\n| ~ Child's sizes S, M, L.     .98\nMisses' (hose size) 7, 8, 9  1.39\nBoys', hose size 7, 8, 9.   1.59\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY SPECIAL       S\nFoam Tread Slippers .\nFor Men, Women and Children\nThese slippers are made of fine corduroy and plaid\nuppers with soft cushioned insole and leather outsole.\nThe backs wUl not break down. Soles will not scratch\nthe floors or furniture. Very light in weight and if\ndirty you just wash them. We have a complete run\nof sizes and colors. *\nWomen's        Children's\nMen's Sizes    Boys' Sizes Sizes Sizes\n4.95 3.95 195 2.95\nLuscious Boxed Chocolates\nSmiles 'n' Chuckles Handcraft quality one pound assorted fancy chocolates attractively boxed. d*l\nBuy several now at this low price  ^_\\i\nNylon Scarves\n.69\nChoose the right scarf from this wide array of sheer\nnylon to fine wool materials in a wonderful assortment of new styles and colors.\nPriced from \t\nLadies' Fabric Gloves\nA truly wonderful fit in a nylon simplex In a slip-on\n\u2022 style with three-row tuck points, hemmed top and\nfitted wrist. Available in black, white and   1 Q.C\nother leading fall colors   I*^?\nBoxed Rhinestone Sets\nAn outstanding value in rhinestone sets; ideal for\nChristmas giving. Set consists of necklace and earrings to match in assorted styles *\\ QQ\nto suit your taste  sfatJ'J'\n mmwm    - '\n\t\n\u2014 '  .\nI \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 28, 1956\n\/\n1   VDU WILL BE IN\n.CONTACT WITH THEM\nDAILY, AND IT IS\nIMPORTANT THAT\nM       YOU LEARN HOW\nN-,   TO DEAL WITH\n1     ^_         THEM\nitf^l\n'rWV!\nL^        ,             ,\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News don not hold Itself responsible In tho event\nof u error In tho following lists.-\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAnlgo Rouen  _ \t\nAtlin Ruff  \u201e\t\nAubelle  _r\nAumacho    M _\nAumaque   \u201e\t\nAunor   \t\nBarnat \u2014 -\t\nBase. Metals  \t\nBaska Uranium \t\nBoymar  \u201e..\nBnlund  \t\nBrunhurst  _ \t\nBrunswick \t\nButfalo Ank  \t\nBuff Can  _ :.\nBuff Red Lake _\nCampbell C \t\nCan Met  '.\t\nCassiar  \t\nCentral Patricia  \u201e \t\nChimo\t\nCoin Lake \t\nCons Denison  _.\nCons Discovery \u201e\t\nCons Halliwell _\t\nCons .Howe  \u201e...\nCons M & S _\nCons Red Pop \t\nCon Sanorm \t\nCon Sub  _\t\nConwest    _\t\nCopper Corp\t\nCopper Man\t\nDetta M  _\t\nDonalda    \u2014\t\nEast Amphi \t\nEast  Malartic   \t\nEast Sullivan  \t\nFalconbridge   \t\nFaraday   _\t\nFrobisher  _ ..\nGeco   \t\nGeo. Scientific Pros\t\nGiant Yel. \u2022 .'. _\nGlen Uranium _\t\nGoldcrest  \t\nGold Eagle _\nGolden Manitou \t\nGrandines     \u2014\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerals    \t\nHasaga\t\nHeadway   \u2014\t\nHollinger\t\nHudson Bay   ...\nInspiration \t\nInt. Nickel \t\nIron Bay \u2014\t\nJoliet Que _\t\n-Jonsmith   \t\nR J Jowsey \t\nKenville   a\u2014\t\nKerr  Addison   i.\t\nKeyboycon \t\nLabrador     ...\nLake Lingman _\t\nLakeshore    _\t\nLexindin \t\nMacassa    \u2014\t\nLouvic't   \t\nMacDonald _\t\nMackeno\nMadsen R. L\t\nMalartic G. F _\t\nManeast  _....\nMaritime Mining\t\nMcLeod    -.\nMilliken    _\t\nMining Corp. _\t\nMogul    \t\nMulti Mins \t\nNew Alger  _\t\nNew Delhi  \t\nNew Fortune\t\nNew Highridge\t\nNew Harricana \t\nNew Jason   \u2014\t\nNew Lund  \u2014 -\t\nNipissing   \t\nNisto    \u00bb\t\nNoranda New _\t\nNorgold    _ -\t\nNormetals   \t\nNorpax  \t\nNorth Can _ _\nNorth Rankin \t\n.12%\n14.12V\":\n1.52\n.53\n.12%\n.09\n.31\n.11\n1.91\n.40\n.60\n.60\n.08\n.53\n.07\n8.00\n.65\n.12%\n.07\n13.37%\n1.70\n7.00\n1.02\n.75\n.09\n9.75\n2.98\n1.49\n3.40\n26.25\n.21\n.08%\n2.84\n5.50\nJ.00\n.13\n.07%\n.29%\n.08\n1.25\n4.45\n33.75\n1.37\n2.75\n15.37%\n.85\n4.50\n.66\n.12\n.07\n1.75\n.15\n17.50\n.33\n.12\n.60\n22.87%\n81.00\n.73\n90.00\n1.70\n.45\n.13\n.51\n.14\n16.25\n.07\n18.50\n.11\n2.90\n.14\n1.80\n.15\n.60\n.37\n1.96\n1.15\n.14\n1.95\n1.13\n1.33\n19.00\n1.90\n1.10\n.13\n.33\n.15\n.30\n.16\n.08%\n.25\n2.60\n.10\n80.50\n.10\n6.00\n.80\n1.11\n.90\nOpemiska    ;    11.00\nPickle Crow .:.     1.15\nPlacer Devel _ _   12.00\nPreston E. D      5.80\nQuebec Lab    10\nQuebec Lithium       8.25\nQuebec Metallurgical       2.10\nQuemont _     18.75\nRadiore    , 99\nRainville       1.05\nRayrock        1.31\nSan Antonio      6.70\nSilver Miller 75\nSteep Rock       18.75\nSlocan Van Roi .\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite  \t\nTeck Hughes \t\nTemagami   \t\nThomp-Lund   \u2014\nTombill \t\nTrans Cont Res .\nUnited Keno ..\nUpper Canada\n.14\n3.60\n.93\n1.40\n4.00\n.94\n.15\n.27\n5.85\n.70\nVentures        35.00\nViolamac   -..        1.25\nWiltsey Goglin  12%\nWright Hargreaves      1.45\n.28\n1.59\n.07\n.61\n3.20\n17.00\n24.25\n.45\n5.50\n7.50\nYale\nYellowknife  Bear  _\t\nYukeno   a.\t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduv \t\nBanff   Oils   \t\nBailey Selburn\t\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCan Admiral  _\t\nCdn Atlantic     \t\nCanadian  Collieries   \t\nCanadian  Devonian         6.05\nCentral Explorers        3.70\nCentral Leduc      3.70\nCon East Crest ....\nDuvex   \t\nGreat Sweetgrass\nHighcrest  \t\nHome A  \t\nKroy    \t\nLiberal Pete\n.21\n1.05\n.28\n12.37%\n.85\n2.03\n.14\n.24\n.70\n3.85\n.51\n1.05\n2.30\n14.87 V4\n1.00\n.63\n1.55\n16.50\n.25%\n.72\n7.50\n1.70\n.12\nimmw^^n\nWatching\nYoor\nWeight?\nChew refreshing, delicious\nWrigley's Spearmint Gum,\nSatisfies you\u2014yet it'i\nnever rich or ruling.\nLong Island Pete \t\nMarigold  _....\nMidcon\t\nNat. Pete  -\t\nNew Continental \t\nNew Gas Expl  _\nOkalta  \t\nPacific Pete  \t\nPetrol   \t\nPonder   \t\nProv Gas  \u2014\nRoyalite    \u2014\t\nSpooner   \t\nStanwell Oil \t\nTriad  -\t\nUnited Oils\t\nYank  Canuck   \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi         32\nAlgoma Steel  _  105\nAluminium     109\nB.A. Oil      45%\nBeatty Bros _  6%\nBell  Telephone    45 Vs\nB.C   Forest     12%\nB.C. Power A   40%\nBurns A  11%\nCanadian Breweries _  24%\nCanadian Canners   14\nCanadian Celanese  12%\nCan.   Cement     28%\nCan Chem Co    7\nCanadian Dredge  _  18\nCan Oil _  24Vi\nCanadian Pacific Rly  29%\nGockshutt   ~ 7%\nCons. Gas  _  26%\nDist Seagram   29\nDom. Foundries    28%\nDom Magnesium   14%\nDom. Steel Ord  -. 20%\nDom Stores   38%\nDom. Tar & Chemical   11%\nDom. Textiles   _  8%\nEddy   Paper     54%\nFamous Players   15%\nFleet Air  _.  1.05\nFord A ...   103\nGatineau 5% pfd   101\nGoodyear     140\nGypsum Lime  _  23\nImperial Oil   53%\nHoward Smith  50\nInt. Metals  _  38%\nInt.   Pete        41\nLaura Secord   16\nLoblaw A  _  17\nLoblaw B  _  17%\nMassey Harris   6%\nMcColl Frontenac  61%\nMont. Loco .\nMoore Corp. \t\nNat. Steel Car ...\nPage Hershey ...\nRuss. Industries .\nShawinigan\n15'\n46%\n26%\n. 90\n10%\n79%\nSicks Brew       22\nSimpsons A\nSoutham   \u2014\t\nSteel of Canada\t\nStandard Paving _\t\nTaylor Pearson \t\nUnited Steel  \t\nWinnipeg Gas  _\n19%\n48\n66%\n33\n9%\n59\n10>\/4\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\n00\n:30\n9:45\n10:00\n10:15\n10:30\n11:00\n11:30\n12:00\n12:30\n1:00\n1:15\n1:30\n2:00\n2:15\n3:00\n3:30\n3:45\n4:00\n4:30\n5:00\n6:00\n6:05\n6:15\n6:30\n7:00\n8:00\n9:00\n9:30\n10:00\n10:15\n10:30\n11:00\nKXLY TV \u2014 Channel 4\nGood Morning\nSearch For Tomorrow *\nGuiding Light *\nValiant Lady\nLove of Life\nAs The World Turns \u2022\nOur Miss Brooks \u2022\nHouseparty *\nBig Payoff *\nBob Crosby \u2022\nBrighter Day *\nSecret Storm *\nEdge of Night \u2022\nVariety Time\nWhat's Cookin'\nGarry Moore *\nGodfrey Time \u2022\nPolice Report\nWin A Dinner\nStrike It Rich *\nKlixy The Klown\nWeather Vane\nRegional News\nDoug Edwards News \u2022\nGiant Step *\nU.S. Steel Hour *\nArthur Godfrey \u2022\nThe Millionaire \u2022\nI've Got A .Secret\nSong Shop\nMagna-Power '\nMark Saber\nThe Late Show\n8:40\n8:45\n8:55\n9:00\n9:30\n10:00\n10:30\n11:30\n12:00\n1:00\n1:45\n2:00\n2:30\n3:00\n4:30\n5:45\n6:15\n6:45\n6:55\n7:00\n7:30\n7:45\n8:00\n8:30\n9:00\n9:30\n10:00\n10:30\n10:35\n11:05\nKHQ TV - Channel \u00ab\nTest Pattern\nColor Test Pattern\nBible Reading\nTic Tac Dough *\nIt Could Be You *\nDing Dong School *\nHome *\nTenn. Ernie Ford *\nMatinee Theatre  **\nQueen For A Day *\nModern Romance *\nI Married Joan *\nPrice Is Right '*\n\"Within These Walls\"\nMr. Engineer and\nLittle Rascals\nWillie\nTrouble With Father   '\nWeather Wise\nThe Front Page **\nNewspaper of The Air\nBig Ten Highlights   \u2022\nEddie Fisher\nNBC News *\nAdventures of Hiram\nHoliday *\nFather Knows Best *\nI Led Three Lives\nHighway Patrol\nThis Is Your Life *\nNews Desk\nAll Star Theatre\nMr. and Mrs. North\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n11:45\n12:00\n12:15\n1:25\n1:30\n2:55\n3:00\n4:30\n5:00\n6:00\nTest Pattern\nStoryland\nFeaturama\nNews\nFeaturama\nNews\nFeaturama\nPopeye\nMickey Mouse Club\nBuffalo Bill, Jr.\n6:30 Newsroom\n6:40 Weather\n6:45 John Daly \u2022\n7:00 Wednesday Night Fights\n7:50 Hank Weaver's Corner *\n8:00 Disneyland \u2022\n9:00 Crunch and Des   ...\n9:30 Ozzie and Harriet \u2022\n10:00 Ford Theatre \"\n10:30 Channel Two Theatre\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing  Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver  Lodge   _\t\nBralorne        \t\nCariboo Gold\t\nGiant Mascot\t\nGranduc       _\t\nHamil  Sil    \t\nJaokson Mines \t\nKootenay Base Metals\nNational  Ex\nPac Eastern Gold  _\nPioneer Gold     \t\nPremier Border \t\nQuatsino \t\nReeves MacDonald \t\nSheep Creek\t\nSilback Premier    ;..\nSilver Ridge\nSilver  Standard    \t\nSunshine Lardeau   ....\nTrojan    _\t\nUtica    \t\nOILS\nAltex   .  . \t\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary & Edmonton ....\nCharter       ,.\nDel Rio _\t\nHome    _\t\n.25\n4.00\n.47\n.23\n4.10\n.03\n.10%\n.02%\n.37\n.10\n1.40\n.08\n.43\n2.00\n.80\n\u2022 11 %\n.08%\n.35\n.29\n.30\n.03\n.24\n.39\n23.00\n1.66\n4.20\n12.00\nMetal Prices\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014Spot prices\nLead, N.Y., .16\nZinc, East St. Louis, .13%\nSilver, N.Y., 91%\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nNew Gas Ex   \t\nOkalta Com  \t\nPacific Pete    \t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite     _\t\nSparmac  \u201e \t\nUnited  _\t\nVanalta  .v\t\nVantor _\t\nVulcan        \t\nYankee Princess \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers     ..,\t\nAlberta Distillers Vt \t\nB C Forests \t\nB C Power  \t\nB C Telephone         ,\nCrown Zeller (Can) \t\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas  _\nLucky Lager \t\nMacM & Bloedel B \t\nMid Western   \t\nPowell River    \t\nWestminster Paper  \t\nWestern Plywoods \t\nUNLISTED\nAuwon      \t\nBluebird     \t\nMidwest Copper \t\nWestern Mines _^\t\nWoodbury    \u201e\t\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal  \t\nCan. Bank of Com\t\nImperial Bank of Canada\nRoyal Bank of Canada ...\nFUNDS\nBalanced Mutual  \t\nCan. Inv. Fund       \t\nCommonwealth  Int\t\nGrouped Income    -....\nInvestors Mutual  \t\nLeverage   \u201e  _.\t\n1.05\n2.25\n14.75\n8.70\n16.25     |\n.16%\n1.70\n.30\n1.08\n.40\n.06\n1.40\n1.35\n12.00\n40.50\n44.00\n21.00\n5.12%\n6.12V*\n4.25\n31.50\n3.10\n43.00\n22.00\n16.00\n.08\n.02\n.69\n.47\n.05\n50.00\n53.00\n51.00\n63.00\n5.81\n9,53\n8.03\n4.1!\n10,52\n5.80\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC\nWEDNESDAY,\n:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News\n:05\u2014March of Truth\n:10\u2014Farm Fare\n:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Sports News\n^O-1-Wake-Up Time,\n:50\u2014Rise 'n Shine\n:00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n:15\u2014Closing Markets\n:20\u2014Musicale\n:55\u2014Entertainment World\n:00\u2014News\n05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n45\u2014The Word of the Lord\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Story Parade\n15\u2014Women's World\n:30\u2014Christmas Cavalcade\n:00\u2014Novelty Time\n:10\u2014Sports News\n:20^News\n1240 ON THE DIAii\nSTAMHARrj T|ME\nNOVEMBER 28, 1956\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:30\u2014Fiona Brown Show\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matine*\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Children's Program\n4:45\u2014Legends of India\n5:00\u2014Notre Dame Presents\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Closing Markets\n5:25\u2014Musicale   *\u25a0\n5:35\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Talk\n6;30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014CBC Wedensday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Recital\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD  TIME-\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2.9, 1956\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's  Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Morning Music   -\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014News \u00bb\n9:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Composers in -Modern\n11:00\u2014Radio Theatre\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:00\u2014The Listening Glass\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Along Olympic Road\n4:45\u2014Songs of the Sea\n5:00\u2014News\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Sports\n5:30\u2014Jazz Workshop\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Olympic Reporter\n6:30\u2014Designed for You\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n8:00\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n8:30\u2014Citizens Forum\n9:10\u2014Citizens Forum News\n9:15\u2014Chamber Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Elephant Shoot\n10:30\u2014Eventide\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n24.God-\n6. Hair clasps\n7. A U. S.\nPresident\n8. Tear apart\n9. German\nriver\n12. Half ems\n14. Maise\n18. Science\nof rocks\n19. Metal\ncontainer\n20. Pulpy\nfruit\nJl. Tattered\ncloth\n22. Skill\n23. Jumbled\ntype\no&\nmWaIm]\nAN\nIf\ni\nOf\nhealing\nI Norse)\n27. Prov.\nince\nI Can. I\n30. Orient\n31. Capital\n(Switz.)\n38. Goddess\nof\nharvests\n(It.)\n33. Knocks\n34. Arab\nkingdom\n36. Frigid\nIJ3L1J   CIHDDHJ\n\u25a1!ii.jHb sasss\naaaaaE hwhb\nasnaraa\nman    Htaraaap\nUESHHH  QaJlWD\nBflGMEi Eiaaar.\naaabw uhhi^b\nVrstcrday's Answer\n. 37. Cavity\n36. Fresh-wait*\ntortoise\n42. House of\nCommons\nI abbr. I\n(Program* subieci  to change  by  stations  witimui  nn'ir-\nACROSS\n1. Award\n6. Unadorned\n10. Flowers\n11. River (It.)\n13. On tiptoe\n14. Cowardly\n15. Netlike\nfabric\n16. Ear shells\n17. Belgium\ncommune\n19. Circulating\n22. Simian\n25. Cease\n(Naut.)\n26. Gateway\n(Jap.)\n38. Scold\npersistently\n29. Come back\ninside\n31. Brag\n32. Bay\nwindows\n35. Dull pain\n39. Brightly-\ncolored bird\n40. Chamber\n41. Straight\n(colloq.)\n42. Steep\nt3. Part of yoke\nfor oxen\n44. Put into\nsymbols\nDOWN\n1. Child's\ncarriage\nJ. Method of\nlearning\n3. Egyptian\ngoddess\n4 Light\nbreezes\n5. Compass \u2022 u'1&\npoint (abbr.)\nDAILY CltYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Ht\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another   In this sample A is useo);\nfor the three L's. X for the two O's. etc.   Single letters, apos-j\ntrophes. the length and formation of the words are all hmls\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nWMS    LB-HXVVSQ    QSOWBtl     H V X LL\n...    XUS     ZBW    QOLMBZSLW   OSHXPLS\nWMSJ    XUS    GZ     QSO'W-HVSRSVXZQ.\nYesterday's Cryptoqiiote: THIS WORLD IS NOT SO BAD\nA WORLD AS SOME WOULD LIKE TO MAKE IT -\nMICHAEL  BECK.\nDistributed by King Fealutes Syndicilt *\n1\nl\n3\ni\n5\nf\n6\nI\na\n1\n^\/A\n10\n%\n11\nll\n13\n%\n14\n15\n%\n16\n%\n%\n%\nn\nl&\ntt\nV^\nV^\n19\nJO\n21\nffi\n'K\nIV\n24\n15\n\\%\nlb\nV\nis\n%\n29\n30\ni\n%\n|\n3i\n%\n%\nty\n31\n33\n3*\n1\n35\nla\n37\n30\n39\n%\netb\n4-1\nI\ne,Z\nu\n43\nty,\neVl\n -\u2014:\t\n ; \" \" ;\n&oS\\\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -    LARGE\nThat's the Want Ad Story   -\nBIRTHS\nGROCHOWICH - To Mr. and\nMrs. Steve Grochowich of Kaslo,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital November 26, a son.\nTARASOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs\nJohn Tarasoff oi Thrums, al Kootenay Lake General Hospital \u2022November 26, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nJOIN AN    ai\nHISTORIC UNIT\nEnjoy 3 years ot adventure and\ncomradeship_in The Queen's\" Own\nRifles, lhe oFdesI rifle regiment in\nJanada. As a member of The\nQueen's Own   Rifles you  will .\n\u2022 travel   Widely   in   Canada   \u2014\nPerhaps Overseas\n\u2022 Learn To Handle and Lead Men\n\u2022 Meet and Serve With Men From\nAcross Canada\n\u2022 Develop   Strength   and   Character\n\u2022 Get Finest Medical and Dental\nCare\n\u2022 (let 30 Davs  Paid  Holidays A\nYear\n\u2022 Have  Pensions   and   Excellent\nOpportunities for Promotion\nAfter these 3 great years, return to\ncivilian life better prepared, or\nbuild a lifetime Army career.\nYou are eligible if you are between\n17 and 40 years old. have at least\nGrade 8 education, and'can meet\nArmy test requirements.\nMail the coupon below, 'phone or\nvisit your nearest Army Recruiting\nS -':'v-i\nARMY   RECRUITING  STATION\nTHE'AMOURIES.\nNELSON. BC\nPlease send me. without obligation, full information on Army\ncareers.\nNAME       .._._\t\nADDRESS     \t\nCITY \/TOWN    _\t\nPROV - -\t\nTELEPHONE  \t\nDo You Have Security?\nLEARN RAILWAY\nTELEGRAPHY NOW\nI WANT'TO TALK TO 10\nMEN 18-40 WHO ARE INTERESTED IN TRAINING AS\nRAILROAD TELEGRAPH OPERATORS AND STATION\n* AGENTS.\nWE TRAIN YOU\nDoes not interfere with your\npresent job. If sincere, ambitious\nand in good health write Columbia Business Institute. Portland,\nOregon, Box 6242, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWHOLESALE COMPANY OPEN-\ning branch in Nelson January 1\nhas opeining for warehouseman.\nWe desire a young man 23 to 35\nwho can be trained for sales position. This position therefore\nhas tremendous possibilities for\npromotion for the right man\nManager will be in Nelson for\ninterviews in several weeks.\nApply giving full particulars to\nBox 4635, Nelson Daily News.    *\nIMMEDIATE OPPORTUNITY \u2014\nFor 1st class mechanic. Steady\nemployment, $1.85 per hr. Tune-\nup experience desirable. Supply\nreferences, Well equipped shop,\nHealth Plan, available housing.\nApply Castlegar Co-operative\nTransportation Society, Drawer 1114, Castlegar, B.C.\nDRAFTSMEN ARE IN GREAT\ndemand Train by home study\nln,spare time for these well-oaid\nJobs. Diploma awarded Free\nfolder Primary School of Drafting, Dept G. Box 123. Station\n\"Q\". Toronto.\nMEN\" WANTED \u2014 NATIONAL\nconcern expanding its operation\nIn the Kootenays require 3 men,\nwith cars. For appointment\nphope 442 - F Creston or write\nP.O. Box 1160 Creston.\nWANTED \u2014 SALESMAN TO\nwork locally. Good job for right\nparty. For , appointment apply\nbefore 10:30' a.m, Room 21,\nRoyal Hotel.\nWAN T E D - 'EXPERIENCED\nmillwright for sawmill main-\n\u00abnance Steady work. Apply\nColumbia Cedar Limited, Box\n718 Revelstoke or phone 3-X-l.\nHELP  WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING\nWoman wanted, greater Opportunity     Better    pay     Pleasant\n\u25a0ork. Catalogue free \u2014 Write:\nMARVEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n326 8th Avenue, Calgary.\nBranches:   Winnipeg,   Regina,!\nSaskatoon and Edmonton.\nCanada's National  System.\nAPPLICATIONS FOR THE PO-\niition of stenographer will be\nreceived by the Clerk 6f the\nCorpdfatlon of the Village of\nCreston up to November 28th,\n1956. Please state age, marital\nStatus, qualifications and salary\nexpected, and give references\nReply to P-0 Box 128, Creston.\nB.C.\nSTENOGRAPHER FOR RADIO\nStation office, must be good typist. Apply Box 4621, Nelson\nDaily News.\nI I CANT STAND )\nTO SEE A X\nMAN CRY )\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNGMARRIED MAN WOULD\nlike position as warehouse man,\noffice work, or similar positions.\nWilling and fully exoerienced.\nApnly Box 4616 Daily News.\nTON    TRUCKS     FOR    HIRE\nHour or contract   Phone 1757-R\nFOR     HANDYMAN     JANTTOR\nand   repairs   nhone  25S-R\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\"the corporation of the\ncity of nelson\n\"municipal elections\"\nPUBLIC NOTICE is hereby\ngiven to the Electors of th,e Municipality of the City of Nelson that\nI require the presence of the said\nelectors at the City Clerk's office,\nCity Hall. 501 Front St., Nelson,\nB.C., on Thursday, the 6th, day of\nDecember, 1956, at ten o'clock a.m.,\nfor the purpose of electing persons\nto represent them as Aldrmen and\nPolice Commissioner for the City\nof Nelson, and School Trustees for\nthe City Area of Nelson School\nDistrict No. 7.\nThe mode of nomination shall\nbe as follows:\nThe candidates shall be nominated in writing; the writing shall\nbe subscribed by two electors of\nthe Municipality as Proposer and\nSeconder, and shall be delivered\nto the Returning Officer at any\ntime between the date of this notice and twelve noon of the day of\nnomination; the said writing may\nbe in the form numbered 3 in the\nSchedule of the \"Municipal Elections Act\" and shall state the\nnames, residence and occupation\nor description of each person proposed, in such a manner as sufficiently to identify such candidate; and in the event of a poll\nbeing necessary, such poll shall be\nopened Thursday, the 13th, day of\nDecember, 1956, from 8 o'clock,\na.m., to 8 o'clock, p.m., in the Old\nPost Office Building, 403 Ward\nStreet, Nelson, B.C.. of which\nevery person is hereby required\nto take-notice and govern himself\naccordingly.\nGiven under my hand at the\nCity Hall, Nelson, B.C, this 27th,\nday of November, A.D. 1956.\nC.  W.  R.  HARPER,\nReturning Officer\nNOTE:\nRequired to be elected:\n3. Aldermen\n1. Police Commissioner\n3. School Trustees.\nDeal   with   confidence   with\nthe  Largest  New  and  Used\nCar'Dealer in the Interior of\nBritish Columbia.\nSave $50 to\nRENTALS\nAPARTRMENT FOR RENT, CAB-\ninet kitchen, nook set, electric\nstove, large living room, large\nbedroom, pembrooke bath and\nshower, steam heat, lots of\nclosets. Available Dec. I. Adults.\nPhone 841 -L after 5:30.\n5-ROOM UNFURNISHED COT-\ntage, 3 min. walk from Nelson\nferry on North Shore. Very\ncheap rent for winter months.\nCon Cummins, phone mornings\nor e.venings.\nwhen you buy from us\n1957 Chev. Belair Sedan\n1957 Chev. Deluxe Coach\n1956 Chev. Coach \"\n1956 Ford  Fairlane Coach\n1956 Ford Custom Sedan\n1956 Olds Super Sedan\n1955 Plymouth Sedan\n1955 Zephyr Sedan\n1954 Mercury Sedan\n1954 Buick 2-door Hardtop\n1954 Olds 98 Sedan\n1954 Consul Sedan\n1954 Austin Sddan\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Ford Convertible\n1953 Chev. Cooch\n1952 Chev. Sedan\n1952 Plymouth Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1951  Plymouth Sedan\n1951   Ford Sedan\n1951 Chev. Sedan\n1950 Ford 'Sedon\n1950 Chev. Sedan\n' Dickup\n1955 Pontiac Sta'n Wagon\n1954 Austin Station Wagon\n1954 Vanguard Sta'n Wgn.\n1954 Austin Pickup\n1952 Studebaker Pickup\n1952 Fargo Pickup\n1952 Austin  Sta'n Wagon\n1951 Mercury Pickup\n1951  Studebaker Pickup\n1950 Ford Pickup\nSee the new\nCHEVROLET\nnow on display\nTERMS - TRADES\nFOR RENT - NORTH-SHORE. 3-\nbedroom house and 3 room cottage Both winterized. 2Vt miles\neast of Nelson Ferry. Phone 156.\nNelson.\nPLEASANT. FURNISHED 2-RM.\nheated suite, Vernon Apartments. 523 Vernon St, downstairs, reasonable. Phone 982-X.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nroom furnished Gas stove, frig,\nautomatic heat Weekly or\nmonthly rates.  171   Baker\n3 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE \u2014\nand 2 room suite, both heated,\nclose in. Phone 839-R.\nFOR KENT-SMALL CE\"NTRAL^\nly located unfurnished apartment, $45 per month. Ph. 933-X.\nHEATED CABINS,' REASON-\nable winter rates. Lakeside Auto Court, phone 864.\nROOM HOUSE FOR RENT 1\nblock from Roger High-. Phone\n1271 - X. after 3.\nBIG MODERN 2-BEDROOM UN-\nfurnished apt. for rent immediately. Phone 946-L.\nFURNISHED 4-ROOM APT. ON\nground floor. Call at 140 Baker\nSt, or phone 491-L.\nNORTH SHORE MOTEL\u2014 RENT-\nals, singles, doubles   Ph. 1684\nHEATED   HOUSEKEEPING   RM\nfor two. Phone 405-L.\nSUITE  FOR  RENT.  APPLY 920\nEdgewood.\nHOUSE  FOR  RENT. -  PHONE\n1991 - R.\nFOR RENT\u20144-ROOM COTTAGE\nin Fairview. Phone 1287-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS FOR\nrent. Apply 606 Front St.\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nLower Fairview. Phone 276-X.\nTROOM  HOUSE,  UNFURNISH-\ned. Available Dec. 1. Ph. 1263 - V.\nMotors Ltd.\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE\n323 Vernon St.       Phone 35\nWELL KEPT 1949 PONTIAC SE-\ndan in excellent mechanical\ncondition, owned by mechanic,\n$600. Phone Appledale 1-J.\nFOR SALE - 1950 MORRIS OX-\nford, heater and anti-freeze.\nPhone 223-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 USED '49 AUSTIN\nparts. Apply 24 Ymir Rd. or\nphone 1363 - L - 2.\n1950 GMC %-TON TRUCK -\ngood condition, very cheap Ph\n1668-Y-l\nMACHINERY\nEquipment\nI \u2014FORDSON\nMAJOR DIESEL\nCrawler tractor, angledozer.\nwinch.  1953 model.\nI\u2014D-4 CATERPILLAR\n,TRACTOR\nAngledozer, winch, canopy.\n1947 model.\nAll units may be seen and\ninspected upon request.\nLTD\ncabin Tor rent, iy4 miles'   MACHINE   brIUP\nfrom ferry  Phone 1027.     m Vernon St Nelson B.C\nSMALL  FURNISHED  SUITE  -I                   PHONE 693\n\u201e vacant. Phone 343-Y. \u201e\u201e,_\u201e\t\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPACKAGE\nINSURANCE\nWe have both Dwelling and\nMercantile Package Policies\nInquire now and save up to\n20% on your insurance\npremiums\nMcHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\n'.eal Estate and Insurance\n135 or Evenings 1065-X\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAVERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   W1DDOWSON * CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St   Nelson\nH   S   El.MES   ROSRI.AND \"BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEVOR8\nG   W   BAERG   BC\nLAND SURVEYOR\nBox 34. Fruitvale. and ,\n373 Baker St.   Nelson. BC.\nBOYD C AFFLECK. M E I C\nBC Land Surveyor  P Eng rCivllJ\n218 Gore St    Nelson   Phone I23B\nMACHINISTS\nBF.NNETTS LIMITED\nMachine    Shop    Acetylene    and\nelectric   welding,   motor   rewind\ntng   Phune 593       324  Vernon St\nDAIRY FARM FOR SALE - ALL; SEWING MACHINE REPAIRS\nmodern buildings fully equip-; Sewing Machine Repairs to all\nped with machinery. Price, acre-1 makes of machines. Work guaran-\nage   and   full   particulars   will   leed   Custom Sewing Centre. 580\nbe given if requrested. William   Baker St.. ph  1653\nWinstanley. Crescent Valley.      |\nTIMBER   CRUISING\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT, __ \u201e E g T    RECONNAISSANCE\nor   sale,   good   location   in   200      Co   Bn\u201e 666 Ca__ __ m_\nblock on Victoria St  Ph   1558-R '\nWANTED  MISCtLLANtOU;\nROOMING HOUSE FOR QUICK\nsale, low down payment. Ph. 172.\n' j WANTED   ro   BUY\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS!    and  oush   land   ,n\nDEALERS IN AH TYPES tit\nur\u00bbd equipment: mill mine ano\nlogging supplies, new and user\nwire rope pipe and fittings\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron St Metals Ltd.. 2511\nPrior St. Vancouver B C Ph\nP.Viflr \u00ab\u00bb\n-    TIMBER\nvicinity   oi\nKoolen^ Lake   Apply Box 273B\nNeisun Dally News      u\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c lb\ndelivered to The Daily News\nROOM AND BOARD\nFOR SALE \u2014 BOYS\" RALEIGH\n3-specd bike, good condition;\nboys' skates, size 5; also hockey\npants, pads and socks for 12 or\n13 year old. Phone 222 or call\n910 Davies St., Nelson.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman, close in. Phone 277-R.\nROOM AND BOARD. $70.00 PER\nmonth. 210 Vernon St.\nROOM      AND     BOARD     FOR\nyoung gentleman Phone U79-X\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY\nNO FARM SUPPLIES   EfC\nPLACE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR\nFall Chicks, and have eggs next\nsummer when prices are high\nAll popular breeds and cross\nbreeds and Ames In-Cross Hybrids for layers, and Pilch's\nWhite Rocks for meat. Rump\nand Sendall Ltd., Langley, B.C.,\nVernon, B.C.\nONE MILK COW, HEAVY MILK-\nproducer, gentle Freshened one\nmonth ago, looking for a home.\nApply Philip Podovinikoff, Slocan Park, B.&.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - BETWEEN 600 BLOCK\non Josephine and Baker St.\ndiamond ring, reward. Phone\n1882.\nNi'lamt Hathi Nphib\nCirculation  Dept   Phone  1844\nSubscription Rates\nPrice per single copy Cc Monday\nto Friday.  10c on Saturday\nBy carrier per week\nin advance , 35c\nBy Mall in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month $ 1 25\nThree months            $ 3 50\nSix months . ..        $ 6 50\nOne year $12 00\nBy mail Ho United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month $ 175\nThree months          $ 5.00\nSix months             $ 9 50\nOne  year $18 00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFoi Delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook   phone   Mrs   Wm.   Stevely.\nIn Kimberley Mr  G  A   Bate;\nIn Rossland Mrs  Ross Saundry;\nand\nIn Trail Mrs  Syd Spooner.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. ^8, 1956\nCalgary Livestocks\n11\nmon 8-11.50; good cows 9-9.50, rae-\n. dium 8.25-8.75. common 7-7.75, can-\nCALGARY (CP) - Receipts on j ners and cutlers 4.50-7; good bulls\nthe Calgary public stockyards up] 9-10, common to medium 7-9.\nto 11 a.m.; 2050 cattle, 475 calves. Good feeder steers 15-16.50; good\nMonday's sales: 1629 cattle, 230 | st0clt steers 15-16, common to me-\ncalves, 215 hogs, 86 sheep. I r\\\\_m 10-14.50.\nChoice steers 19-19.75, good 17.50\n-18.75, medium 15-17, common 9-\n14,50; choice heifers 17-17.50, good\n15.50-16.75, medium 12-14.50, corn-\nGood butcherweight heifer\ncalves 13.50-15; good to choice veal\n15-16, common to medium 10-14.\nGood lambs 17.50-18.15.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nLight\nI\nOUCh IN STARTING\nMEW McClMOCH DIRECT-DRIVE l!ln_ft_ll\nYou'll be pleased as can be with\nthe smooth performance of the\nMcCulloch tlirecl-drive D-44 \u2014 Ihe\nonly chain saw that starts wilh a\nlight touch!\nA touch of Ihe choke control, an\neasy pull of the large rewind starter\nand presto.,.. the D-44 is ready\nto cut.\nFor all types of woodcutting\nwhere a speedy, lightweight saw is\ncalled for, the D-44 is tops\n... it easily outperforms all\nother direct-drive saws!\nNow on Display\nSfee\nH. 'Fritz' Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or\nAlex McDonald .\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A wavering stock market closed irregularly lower but showed improvement late in the session.\nExcept for shipbuilding shares\nwhich took sharp losses on profit-\ntaking after their recent big gains\nprice changes among key issues\nranged about a point or so either\nway.\nAmong Canadian issues on the\nNew York Stock Exchange, International Nickel lost 1%, Aluminium was up vb and Granby Mining\nwas l's lower.\nTORONTO (CP) - Losses outnumbered gains four-to-one on the\nstock market as prices fell freely\nin the market's ninth decline In\n10 sessions. It was the sharpest\nsetback in a week and one of the\nbiggest losses of the month.\nTrading increased on the decline and the final volume of 3,-\n501,000 shares was the heaviest in\nmore than a week. .*       |\nMAC\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT CO., LTD.\n014 Railway St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 1402\nSECRETARY-TREASURER Required\nFOR SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 11 (TRAIL)\nThe Trail School District enrolls 5200 students\nwith 207 teachers; operates 10 school buses, has a\nMaintenance and Janitor staff of 45. The 1956\nBudget is $1,496,000.\nThis position offers a good starting salary with\nregular annual increments. Other benefits Include\nannual holiday, group life insurance, sick leave and\nMunicipal superannuation.\nThe Trail District possesses all the amenities for\npleasant family living.\nApplications should state age, experience and\neducation.\nAddress application! to Secretary-Treasurer, School District\n. No. ,11 (Trail), 1145 Cedar Avenue, Trail, B.C.\nAll applications must be received by\nnoon Monday, December 3rd, 1956.\nI\nBUY DIRECT FROM THE MILL.\nLumber, plywood, doors, build-\ning supplies. Write for complete\ncatalogue Vancouver Sawmills\nLimited. llll E, 7th Ave.. Vancouver 1?. B.C\nFULLER BRUSHES \u2014 CHRIST-\nmas shop the easy Fuller way.\nFor sales and service. Ph. 292 - L\nGerry Kohnke, 415 Robson St.,\nNelson.\nSACRIFICE - 1 COMMERCIAL\ngas triple deck oven as new. and\none electric pie making machine\ncomplete with moulds. Apply\nBox 6138, Nelson Daily News.\nAPPROXIMATELY 3000 \"USED\npotato sacks, assorted, no holes\nor damage. 100 in a \/bundle at\nlie a piece. Columbia Trading\nCompany.\nSOLID OAK SCHOOL DESKS\u2014 I\nwith adjustable top and drawer!\nunder seat. Ideal  in children'sj\nroom for home work. Each $6\nColumbia Trading Company.\nFOR SALE \u2014 HOT POINT ELEC- j\ntrie range, $20; Singer sewing\nmachine with motor attachment, $25. Phone 1110-R.\nGURNEY COMBINATION COAL\nand electric range, $100; 1 pair\nboys' ski boots, size 5, $2.00. \u2014\nPhone 720-Y.\nDRY FIR WOOD\u20141 FT. LENGTH\nfor kitchen and fireplace, cord\n$16. lty cord loads only. Phone\n1757-R.\nFOE SALE - 5-PCE. BEDROOM\nsuite. Beauty Rest mattress, slat\nsprings. Phone 289-Y-3.\nAPPROX    40.000   B M    2x4.   2x6\n. 1x8. 1x6 lumber. $30 per 1000 S\nKudra. phone 1757-R\nFOR SALE BED CHESTERFIELD I\nand chair, also kitchen step lad-!*\nder chair. Phone 600.\nSPANISH GUITAR WITH CASE,\nelectric waffle iron, corner shelf,\nelectric iron. Cheap. Ph. 421-L.\nFOR \"SALE - WESTINGHOUSE\ncombination coal and electric\nstove Phone 1743-Y-2.\nBALED ALFALFA HAY FOR\nsale. William Winstanley. Crescent Valley.\nBED SPRING AND SPRING-\nfilled mattress, 6' 6\" x 4' 6\". Ph.\n1392-X.\t\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE FOR\nsale. Phone 172 - Rm. 23,\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE'OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies St\n1  MASCO DUAL TRACK TWO-\nspeed tape recorder. Ph. 431-R.\nLARGE QUEBEC HEATER WITH\npipes. Phone 2081 -L.\nDRY SLABWOOD, 4' OR lVVPrT.\n330-L.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 oi Phone .366-R\nTHE ALMER HOTEL OPP CPR\nDepot. Vancouver B C 1001!.:\nfireproof. 24-hour elevator ser\nvice Clean quiet and comfort\nable Reasonable rates Citj\ncentre ;\nPH8nY_1844~f6r   CLASSIFIED\nSelling\u2014Renting\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\ni\ni\nFIRST LIN!\nJICOND LINI\nTHIRD UNf\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH UNI\nPut one word in each space.\n(bach group ot numbers or letters count as one word )\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Una\n1 Insertion    ___\n2 Consecutive   Insertions\n1 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive  Insertions\n$ .20\n.33\n.43\n.SO\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add lie for lox Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates If payment h\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of tha low six time rate\nIon Consecutive Insertions 204 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run _____\n    \u25a0       Bill Me\t\nYOUR   MAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nehon, BC.\n-J\n  -\u00ab\u25a0\n-..\t\n(        .11.\n mm\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., NOV. 28, 1956\nAnd Don't Forget\nIn Spite of All the Hustle and Bustle\nof the Christmas Season\nMANN'S\nDISPENSARY\nIs ready at all times to serve you\nPromptly and Efficiently.\n#\n_\\^ytidX\u00bbm\\\nlaJrii.:*.C*Jmalt\nDRUGS LTD.\nMews of the Day\nRATIK-Mo Hno, 40o line,blaok face typo; larger type ratet on\nroquoct Minimum two llnw. 10% discount for prompt payment\nTHREE AND A HALF YEARS AGO, little Dorothy Wright,\nof Dundas, Ont., could not have seen the teddy-bear she Is holding here because she was blind. Today she can see It and her\nrecovery from blindness has been credited to the prayers said\nby her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Wright. Doctors have no\nexplanation for what has happened. They say the child was born\nwith vita! \"discs\" at the back of the eyeballs dead. Such cases\nmeant certlan, unending, blrth-to-deaht darkness. \"It's a mystery,\nbut a miracle,\" says her mother who three months ago noticed that\nthe youngster appeared to be blinking while playing with a light\nswitch in her home, Since then every day has been an adventure\nfor the child, as she ventures forth into world of color and light.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nQuilted Silence Cloth, 2.90 yd.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nWaited Church Clothing Aid\nopen today, 2-4 p.m.\nDON  ELDER 8TUDIO\nMS Hall St Phone 1308\nBest materials only used on your\n(how at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS\nOIL BURNER SERVICE, PH. 385\nAll Makes Service.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8 P.M,\nPrises: Hams and Turkeys\nSADIE  HAWKINS  DANCE\nProcter, \"Friday, November 30.\nRefreshments, Free Ferry.\nReduced prices on Ladies\nWinter Coats.\nEBERLES ON  BAKER ST.\nTop Wool Brands- for Indian\nSweaters, your choice of Mary\nMaxim or Polar yarn.\nAll  your   knitting   needs   at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nLarge selection chesterfield chairs\nand lounges.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES FOR\nU8ED   FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, PH. 1569    '.\nNELSON   COMMERCIAL\nTRAINING 8CHOOL\nShorthand, Typing and\nAccounting.\nVACANCIES  FOR  SIX  PUPIL8.\nPhone 392 - R.\nLOWEST PRICES ON CHOICE\nQUALITY FOOD FOR YOUR\nLOCKER OR HOME FREEZER\nINQUIRE AT THE LOCKER\nPLANT, 611 FRONT ST., PHONE\n1218, NEL80N.\nCanada, Country of Five Nations,\nImpressed Visiting London Editor\nFairview United Church Christ-\nmas Tea and Bazaar, Today, Nov. j\n26 from 2 to 6, Redeemer Hall.\nCITY DRUG i\nREXALL PHARMACY\nOPEN UNTIL 6:30 P.M. TODAY\nClare Jewel, kitchen pil range,\nwhite enamel, complete with cy-\nclos blower and tank. $124.50.\nWE  PAY CASH   FOR  USED\nFURNITURE AND  ANTIQUES\nBIRCH'S  FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST. \u2014 PH. 47\nBazaar and Tea \u2014 Lutheran\nLadies Aid, corner of Silica St.\nand Stanley. Sat. Dec. 1st, 2:30 to\n5:0Q p.m.\nFive Velveteen in 10 popular\nshades, 36\" wide. Fast pile.\nYd. $2.50.\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOODS\nPlywoods of all kinds.\nFull sheets or cut sizes.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.    Nelson\nPatients In Kootenay Lake General Hospital can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 1844, Circulation Department, Dally News.\nNOTICE\nKaslo - Nelson Coach lines-will\nbe leaving Nelson at 6:40 a.m.,\nstarting Dec. 3, 1956. Phone 1B07\nfor information.\nFor All Your Baking Needs Try\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe flavor Is right On Sale at\nYour Grocers, or P\/rtorttt 238.'\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nIN MEMORIAM\nSTREET \u2014 In loving memory\nof  a  dear husband   and   father,\nFrank, who passed away Nov. 28,\n1965.\nOne year has passed since that\nsad day,\nWhen one we loved was called\naway. \u25a0\nGod took him home, it was His\nwill,\nBut in our hearts he liveth still.\nSadly missed by his wife Judy\nand children.\nCARD OF THANK8\nWe wish to thank the Sisters and\nStaff of Mt. St. Francis for the\nkindness  shown  to   our   father,\nMr. Nimsick, during his stay there.\nThe Family.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 A British\nnewspaper man whose specialty\nis on-the-spot study of industry\nand economy says he feels Canada has a great opportunity to\nhelp in Commonwealth development.\nRonald F. Avery, industrial editor of the New Commonwealth a\nLondon quarterly, has just completed a five-week trip throughout\nCanada. He travelled 15,000 miles,\nvisiting main industrial centres\nfrom the Maritimes to Kitimat\nand Whitehorse.\nWhat he  saw  and  heard convinced . him   that   the   Canadian\neconomy \"is like the launching of\na gigantic operation.\"\nBIQGER SHARE\n\"At the rate of the Canadian\neconomic development, the time\niwhen Canada can share more of\nj Britain's traditional role of f inanc-\n! ing Commonwealth development\nmay not be far off,\" he said in an\nj interview,\n\"The requirements of manpower\njby Canada and Britain are the\nisame. They both need scientists\ni and specialists in various categories. One solution to the scarcity\nmight be the development of more\nAnglo - Canadian exchanges of\nmanagement and 'technological\nteams, both in production and\n! marketing fields.\"\nI Mr. Avery found Canada \"a\nj country of five nations\u2014the Mari-\n| times, Quebec, the Prairies, Brit-\n' ish Columbia and the north.\" The\n'only obstacles to  developing the\nNatal Show Aids\nSpringhill Miners\nNATAL \u2014 A film showing here\nbrought proceeds of $66.35. which\nwill be sent in aid of the Springhill miners in Nova Scotia who\nsuffered in the recent mine disaster. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Henriet\nof Sparwood, who operate the\nonly show in the vicinity, co-operated in the money-raising venture.\nDropped Match Said\nCause of Big Fire\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Fire officials said Tuesday a three-alarm\nfire which swept through a dozen\nsuites of a four-storey apartment\nblock Sunday was started by a\nteen-age boy.\nHe dropped a lighted match\nwhile looking for magazines in\nthe basement, said Chief Fire\nWarden Louis Mulligan. The boy,\nnot a tenant, fled whence accidentally dropped the match but\nreturned to give the alarm.\nnorth were communications and\nmanpower, and both were steadily\nbeing overcome.\nRecord Loans\nReported In\nBank Statement\nMONTREAL \u2014. Shareholders'\nfunds were enlarged by the addition of $6,500,000 to the rest ac\ncount or reserve fund, the Bank\nof Montreal's annual statement\nreveals, A. R. Burnie, Nelson manager, said Tuesday.\nEarnings, likewise, increased\nmoderately. Total resources, however, are at a slightly lower figure \u2014 $2,783 million compared\nwith $2,796 million in. 1955. Quickly available resources, at $1,427\nmillion, represent 54 per cent of\nall public liabilities.\nGovernment and other public\nsecurities, not exceeding market\nvalue, stand at $916 million \u2014 a\ncontraction of $298 million from\nthe 1955 level.\nTotal loans rose by $325 million\nto reach the record figure of $1,-\n383 million, representing an increase of 30 per cent. The enlargement in loans is to be seen\nin all .categories, with the amount\nof NHA mortgage loans increasing 100 per cent since 1955.\nTotal deposits are almost unchanged from the 1955 level,\nwhich was the highest :.. the\nbank's history at $2,591 million.\nThe 1956 figure is $2,589 million,\nmore than half of which is the\npersonal savings of individuals.\nEarnings for the year, after provision for taxes at $7,795,000,\namounted to $8,975,940 \u2014 up $933,-\n794 from a year ago.\nThe bank had a balance at the\nend of its fiscal year, October 31,\nof $6,910,155. from which it made\na transfer of $6,500,000 to the rest\naccount, or reserve fund, leaving\nthe final figure of undivided profits at $410,155.\nHB Co. Seeks Charter To Permit\nCanadians on Directors' Board\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The Hudson's\nBay Company Tuesday agreed to\npetition the Queen for a supplemental charter to allow Canadians\nto sit on the board of directors.\n\"This is a momentous meeting,\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nIhe Liquor Control Board or by ths Government of British Columbia.\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty  Culture\nand Cold Waves\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nPhone 1922 Ste. 211\nHelen McCallum, Prop.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\nft CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 235\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical   Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\nf       LIMITED        \u2022*\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE III\nsaid W. J. Keswick, governor of\nthe world's oldest trading company. For, the occasion an extraordinary general court was sum^\nmoned by the Governor and Company of Adventurers of England\ntrading into Hudson's Bay.\nForty of ihe company's 15,750\n\"proprietors\" attended. P. A.\nChester, managing director, came\nfrom Winnipeg to sit with other\ndirectors. '.\nBRIEF MEETING\nThe court lasted less than 15\nminutes.\n\"I apologize for the boredom of\nthi\u00a3,\" said Keswick, as he moved\nthe adoption of 13 resolutions\u2014all\naccepted without question by the\nfew proprietors who turned out\nfor the meeting.\nThe main purpose of the\nchanges is to increase the membership of the board of directors\nfrom nine to 14. This will permit\nmembers of the Canadian committee to join the board, thus\nchanging their status into a Cana-\ndian committee of the board.\nUnder the present charter, the\nCanadian committee members do\nnot necessarily have to be direct-,\nors. Only two -are directors at the\nmoment.\nPHONI 1S44  FOR  OLAS8JIMID\nOdds...\n\u00ab** Ends\n...byU. D. B.\nI. notice a B.C. town ia rebuilding a heavily travelled road by\n\"punching shale into the old surface with a spiked roller:\" This I\nfound quite interesting, for the\nroad was reported improved after\nthe treatment. I was thinking\nabout the scar down Cottonwood\nStreet where the school storm\nsewer was laid, and wondered If\nthis treatment might help there.\nDuring the summer heat the\npatched area got decidedly soft\nand rippled badly \u2014 apparently\nbecause there was too much tar\nand not enough crushed rock in\nthe mix used to fill it in. Perhaps\nfinely crushed rock rolled into\nthis soft surface would enable the\npatch to be smoothed out level\nwith the rest of the street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nI read somewhere recently that\nsomeone or other was arrested for\nusing foul language in a public\nplace, and I cried, \"Bravo,\" for\nsuch action is long past due. I\nspeak with my ears still hot frdm\nhearing such things as vain use\nof the Lord's name in some of\nNelson's restaurants and snatches\nof vulgar conversation on Baker\nStreet.\n.   .   a\nWhen you hear a nondescript\nwaitress saying to a besideburned\ncharacter, \"Gechur mindoutatha\ngutter,\" you begin to wonder what\nsort of a dive you have managed\nto get into. This is mild compared\nto some of the profanity with\nwhich your- ears are assaulted in\nsome of these \"hash houses.\" Not\nall Nelson's restaurants are in this\ncategory, but some of them would\ncertainly leave a nasty taste in a\ntourist's mouth to say nothing of\nthe regular citizens.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nWhat I would like to know is\nwhy we have to put up with such\nplaces, why must you sit down at\na dirty table because the waitress\nhas not bothered to wipe it ofi\nafter she has cleared it and then\nnot wipe it off half the time unless\nyou ask her. I know these places\nare regularly inspected by the\nhealth inspector but surely there\nshould be standards of service in\nthese places as well.\n\u2022 a    a\nI know I can expect arsenic m\nmy coffee tomorrow after this\ntirade, but at lekt I got It ofl\nmy chest.\nMarooned Hunters\nRescued At Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Two Vancouver ' hunters, marooned since\nlast Saturday when their small\ncabin cruiser burned to the water\nline, were rescued early Tuesday\nfrom the mainland northwest of\nAnvil Island, about 50 miles northwest of here.\nTed Beatty, 31, and Norman\nKirby, 31, were found asleep in a\nsmall tent on the rocky shoreline\nafter a tugboat skipper spotted\ntheir signal fire.\nThe men were rescued by the\ntug Kirsten A. under Capt. Larry\nGisbourne of Vancouver.\nCapt. Gisbourne, in a radio report back to the RCAF search\ncentre here, said:\n\"Their boat was just a shell.\"\nThe signal fire was sighted by\nCaptain Don Berven of the tug\nRandy. He was unable to leave\nthe barge he was towing and notified Point Grey radio station\nWhich relayed the message to the\nKirsten A.\nHospital Railway\nCar Heads North\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 A railway\ncar fitted up as a nursing station,\nthe only one of its kind in Canada,\nagain has headed north with the\nChurchill train to serve residents\nalong 350 miles of the Hudson Bay\nRailway. It was here for repairs.\nThe Red Cross nursing services\ncar has been in operation since\n1953, working in the area between\nCormorant and Gillam in the remote wilderness of Northern\nManitoba. In that time 712 children have ' been examined at\nschool, 1230 patients have been\nvisited at home and another 2392\nhave visited the car for treatment\nor advice.\nThe car is provided by the Canadian National Railways and the\nDepartment of Health and Public\nWelfare and the Red Cross operate\nit.\nCOMMANDER Morton L, Lewis and Lt.-Comander Malcolm\nD. Ross (left) are shown as they entered the U.S. Navy's plastic\n\"Sky Hook\" balloon at Rapid City, S.D., for a flight which set a\nworld's record height of 76,000 feet. The two naval officers made\nan emergency landing In tbe sandhills near Brownlee, Nebraska,\n140 miles from their take-off point, when the aluminum gondola\nsuspended from the balloon hegan to spin out of control and\ncontinued to rise. They were picked up by a navy helicopter\nwhich had tracked the \"space laboratory\" balloon during Its four-\nhour trip. The flight was aimed at getting data to Improve flying\nsafety at high altitude rather than to attempt a record.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHoward Green'Defends\nAnglo-French Tactics\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A veteran Progressive Conservative said Tuesday no two countries have done\nso much to preserve the democratic way of life as Britain and\nFrance, yet they found themselves\ntreated as \"aggressors\" by Canada\nHoward Green, Vancouver\nQuadra, .said in the Commons that\nBritain and France have never\nbeen aggressors. And they were\nnot aggressors when they moved\ninto Egypt.\n\"Yet the prime minister has the\neffrontery to compare British and\nFrench Middle East action with\nthe action ot Russia in Hungary.\"\nBig Program By\nBell Telephone\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Bell Telephone Company of Canada plans\nto spend $170,000,000 on its 1957\nconstruction program\u2014the largest\nyear's program in its history\nThomas W. Eadie, the company's\npresident, said Tuesday night in\nan address to the Toronto Junior\nBoard of Trade.\nIn the  10-year period 1946 to\n1955 the company had spent $780,-\n000,000 on construction and accounted for one-quarter of all the\nequity financing carried out In\nCanada. And it expected to spend\na similar sum in the five years\n1956 to 1960.\nNO CURLERS VISIBLE\nSpeaking of the recently-invented picture-phone, by which\nthe telephone would carry the\nspeaker's voice, and a picture of\nhis head and shoulders, Mr.\nEadie commented:\n\"One thing I will assure you \u2014\nany picture-phone we install in\nthe years ahead will carry an on-\nand-off switch of the utmost reliability, so that you'll never find\nyourself 'on the air' when ypu'd\nrather not be.\"\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG (CP) '\u2014 Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices: \u25a0\nOaSs, No. 1 feed, 76%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.05%.\nCoast Inspectors\nCheck Tree Lights\nVICTORIA (CP) - City electrical inspectors have started\nchecking stores for a type of\nChristmas tree lights described as\n\"very dangerous.\"\nThe sets, of 36 tiny bell-shaped\nlights on a continuous string, lack\nCanadian Standards Association\napproval. Sale of electrical goods\nwithout the CSA safety approval\nlabel is prohibited.\nAccording to Vancouver electrical inspectors, 10,000 sets of the\nJapanese-made lights are believed\nto have been brought into the\nprovince.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker Street\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 Front St\nPhone 63\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThit advertisement is not published or displayed by tbe\nliquor Control Bond ot by the Covernmenl of British Columbia\nThis brought Prime Minister St.\nLaurent to his feet.\nHe said heatedly that Mr.\nGreen's statement was a flagrant\n\"misconstruction\" of what he had\nsaid in the debate Monday night.\nGREEN\u2014P.M. TANGLE\nMr. Green retorted that Mr. St.\nLaurent's statement was obviously\naimed at \"cutting off free discussion.\"\nFor 10 years Canada curried\nfavor with the United States. The\ngovernment was \"the U.S. chore\nboy.\" If Mr. St. Laurent wanted\nto visit DEW (distant early warn-\ning) radar line sites in Northern\nCanada he would have to get\nWashington clearance.\nMr. St. Laurent interjected:\n\"The honorable gentleman knows\nthat is absolutely false.\"\n\"The prime minister is in the\nsame kindly Uncle Louis mood\nthat he was in last night,\" Mr.\nGreen remarked, referring to Mr.\nSt. Laurent's speech Monday.\nMr. St. Laurent again stood up\nbut his words were drowned out\nand he sat down as Mr. Green\nlaughed and flapped his arms in\nmock distress.\nLater External Affairs Minister\nPearson said the situation \"is far\ntoo serious to be dealt wth from\na purely partisn point of view.\"\nBut he took a crack back at Mi'.\nGreen and said the government\nnever has and never will play the\nrole of U.S. chore boy, and added:\n\"It's equally bad to be a colonial chore boy running around\nshouting: 'Ready, aye, ready'.\"\nThat brought thunderous desk-\nbanging from Liberal members.\nGREEN CRITICAL\na Russian buildup of arms in the\nMr. Green said there had been\nMiddle East long before the\nEgyptian-Israeli action flared up.\nNow it came out that the Russians also were building up arms\nin Syria.\nBritain' and France had a \"perfect right\" to occupy the Suez\nCanal zone when the canal was\nthreatened.\n\"The prime minister's whole attitude toward Egypt has been unbelievably soft.\" The man ln the\nstreet was asking why Canada led\nin \"the attack on her friends.\"\nMr. St. Laurent retorted that\nMr. Green was imagining many\nthings which never took place.\nNoranda Profits Up\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Noranda\nMines Ltd. reports net profit for\nthe nine months ended .Sept. 30 of\n$14,890,000 or $3.32 cents a share.\nThis compared with $9,906,000 or\n$2.21 a share for the same period\nlast year.\nOperating profit for the nine\nmonths was $8,512,000 compared\nwith $7,779,000 in the same period\nlast year.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nski\nPajamas\nHo will be happy in a pair\nof those  Interlock Knit\nPajamas by Stanfield's er\nHarvey Woods.    ,\nNylon reinforced\nneckband, waist and\nankles. No buttons, no\ntie strings.\n' $4.50 to $7.50\n.PMORY'Q\n^     LTD.      U\n\"The Man's Store\"\nBOX 100\nPHONI 11\nNormal Medical\nTests Not To\nDelay Refugees\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The flow of\nHungarian refugees to Canada il\nnot to be delayed by normal medical requirements for Immigration\nto this country. Immigration Minister Pickersgiil said Tuesday.\nHeplying to a Commons question by Gordon K. Fraser (PC-\nPeterborough), he said taking of\ntuberculosis X-rays will not be allowed to delay acceptance of Hungarians.\nIf there was time, the X-rayl\nwould be taken overseas. If there\nwas not, the refugees would be\nsent to Canada with a note to arrange with provincial authorities,\nunder whose jurisdiction TB\ntreatment comes, to treat refugee!\nsuffering from the disease.\nThose found to have had the\ndisease before heading for Canada\nwould be allowed in as quickly as\npossible. Some active cases could\nnot be brought to Canada with\nother refugees for fear of spreading the disease, but arrangements\nwould be made for these personi\nto come as soon as the necessary\nprecautions could be taken.\nSays Bank Action\nNot Responsible\nFor Interest Hike\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Finance Minister Harris said Tuesday he wanti\nto dispel any impression the Bank\nof Canada consciously raised interest rates in this country.\nIt was not through action by the\ncentral bank that interest rates\nhave risen, he said, but as a result of a greater demand on Canada's money supply. The Bank of\nCanada rate only reflected interest rates generally.\nReplying in the Commons to\nquestions from several opposition\nmembers, Mr. Harris said it is\nBank of Canada policy not to\nhave its interest rate lower than\nthat for short-term borrowings by\nthe federal government from tha\nchartered banks and other financial institutions.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nJohn Labatt Ltd. 30 cents, Jan.\n1, record Dec. 14.\nB. Greening Wire Co. Ltd.'I\ncents, Jan. 2, record Dec. 15.\nShawinigan Water and Power\nCo, common 45 cents, Feb. 25,\nrecord Jan. 15.\nTaylor, Pearson and Carson\nCanada Ltd. 25 cents, Jan. 2, record Dec. 14.\nFor HER Christmas Give\nELIZABETH ARDEN\nGIFTS\nAsk for the Elizabeth Arden\nChristmas Catalogue.\nPrices Start at $1 to $25\nSee Our Window\nFor Gift Displays\nCity Drug\nCompany\nYOUR REXALL PHARMACY\"\nBorrow with Confidence from HFC\nOver half a million Canadian families every year\nborrow with confidence from HFC, because HFC\nis Canada'soji\/yconsumerfinancecompany backed\nby 78 years experience. Household Finance\nspecializes in providing loans from $50 to 51,000\nin one day, and in privacy. This prompt, dependable money service is available to yon... today.\n0USEH0LD FINANCE\nG. Al. C\/ir\/fon, Alcintiger\n60B Baker Street, sacond floor, phone 1890\n- NELSON, B.C.\nIT MtANCHi 430 Howard Stmt, ph\u00abW IU IH1I\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1956_11_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430024","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1956-11-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1956-11-28 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\/1.0430024"}