{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-04-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1957-12-13","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430120\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Nelson's  Record\n1926 days\nTraffic Fatality Free\nVol   55\netu0\n'D\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Variable cloudiness.\nWind south 20 in a few valleys,\notherwise light. Low and high at\nCranbrook, 20 and 35; Crescent,\nValley, 25- and 40.\n%%7\nMORNING, DECEMBER 13, 1957\nNot mors  Than  Co  Daily,  10c Saturday\nNo. 198\nTom Shorn iouse Elected Mayor\nMcNaughton Urges\nImmediate Action\nOn Columbia Power\nIJC Chairman Would Divert1 Kootenay\nInto Columbia, Columbia Into Fraser\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Canada should proceed immediately\nwith power development of the Kootenay-Columbia-Fraser\nRiver system in British Columbia, Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton,\nchairman oi the Canadian section of the International Joint\nCommission, said Thursday.\nHe said before the Commons external affairs committee that unless this is done Canada may lose these power\nresources to the United States for all time.\nHe also said power development on the Frasfer would\nbe worth 100 times as much to British Columbians and\nCanadians as the salmon fishery on that river.\nGen. McNqughton's proposal is for diversion of the1\nKootenay River into the Columbia and of the Columbia\ninto the Fraser through a tunnel under the Monashee mountains. Cost of 'storage and power dams for such a project\nhas been estimated at around        \"\"'\"\n$1,000,000,000.\nGen. McNaughton said it is'\ntime the salmon interests in British Columbia \"sat back and took\na look at the real interests of\nBritish Columbia and Canada.\"\nThe people of Vancouver now\nwere paying for whatever the\nsalmon fishing industry was\nmaking. They were paying twice\nas much for power as consumers\nin the U. S. Pacific Northwest.\nGen. McNaughton said U. S.\npower interests are exerting,\nstorage dam at Murphy Creek on\n\"tremendous pressure\" to get\nCanada to permit construction of\nthe Columbia River system just\nnorth of the international border.\nSuch a dam, he said, would be\na benefit to the U. S. But it\nwould be a disadvantage to Can-\n-ada in trying to store water farther north on the Columbia to develop power for Canadian use.\nTWO ALTERNATIVES\nThere were two alternatives\nfacing Canada, in development of\npower on the Kootenay-Columbia-\nFraser system.\nStorage dams could be built on\nthe Columbia and the water fed\ndown to U. S. power plants as\nneeded; or the Columbia could be\ndiverted into the Fraser for\nstrictly. Canadian power development.\n\u2022 Assuming the U.S. would return\nto Canada half the power generated\nfrom use of Canadian water, this\ncountry would get 8,500,000,000 kilowatt hours a year.\nBut if Canada developed its own\npower dam it would get twice this\namount \u2014 17,000,000,000 kilowatt\nhours a year. Southwestern B.C.\nwould be supplied with cheap\npower for three decades. '\nLINE UP TO TREATY\nGen. McNaughton said the American members of the Interna-'\ntional Joint Commission refuse'\nto discuss the Columbia - Fraser\ndiversion. However, it was clear\nCanada had the right under the\n1909 Boundary Waters Treaty to\nmake such a diversion.\nThe U. S. \"crammed this\ntreaty down our throats\" and\nnow must live up to it, he,said.\nThe general said \"certain people\" in the U. S. are promoting\nthe objections of Canadian fishing interests to the Columbia-\nFraser diversion because they do\nnot want Canada to go ahead\nwith the project.\nThe U. S. was anxious that\nCanada commit itself on the\nMurphy Creek project. But storage dams at Mica Creek and\nLuxor on the Columbia would be\n20 times more valuable to Canada than Murphy Creek.\nNot only that, but a Murphy\nCreek dam would raise the level\nof the Arrow Lakes, a widening\nof the Columbia, by 44 feet above\nflood level.\nOn the other hand, there would\nbe no flood danger from dams on\nthe Fraser, even with water from\nthe Columbia diverted into it.\nGen. McNaughton stressed that\nCanada would not want to proceed \"ruthlessly\" and withhold*\nwafer from the U. S. American\ninterests could be safeguarded\nadequately but Canada had to\nlook after itself first. Reasonable\nagreement could be reached and\nincorporated into a special treaty\ngoverning the power uses of the\nColumbia which flows through\nboth countries.\nBut unless the U. S. changed\nits attitude, not much progress\nwould be made.\nGen. McNaughton also said\nthere is no conflict of interest between the International Joint\nCommission and Swedish financier Axel Werner-Gren who pro-,\nposes a big industrial develop-\nharnessing of the Peace River\nfor power.\nMIXED REACTION\nOutside the committee there\nwere mixed reactions from B.C.\nCommons members to Gen. Mc-\nNaughton's statement.\nJames A. Byrne (L\u2014Kootenay\nEast) said that if agreement cannot be reached with the U.S. on\nAmerican p a v m e n t of downstream benefits for Columbia\nRiver waters \"we have no alternative but to go ahead with diversion.\"\nH. W. Herridge (CCF\u2014Kootenay West) declined to comment\non the diversion aspect of Gen,\nMcNaiighton's statement or the\npossible effects on the Fraser\nfishery, but said he is \"particularly delighted\" by the general's stand that development of\nthe Columbia is urgent.\n\"We can lose .our rights by not\ndeveloping,\" Mr. Herridge said.\nOther proposed developments to\nthe north on the Peace and Liard\nrivers could be postponed. They\nwere entirely within Canadian\njurisidction.   .\nMr. Herridge also said the\npublicly-owned B.C. Power Commission should seize its \"great\nopportunity\" by developing the\nColumbia and not leave it to private interests.\nOnly in four Kootenay-Boundary cities were mayors elected\nin Thursday's municipal voting,\nand in two of those cities the\nchief magistrates retained their\npositions.\nMayor Robert E, Sang won reelection in Cranbrook, where his\nonly opponent was George Haddad\nwho had been a member of his\nCouncil. Counting had not been\ncompleted by press time in the aldermanic race.\nA mayoral upset, however, was\nscored in Grand Forks by Archer\nDavis who beat out long-time\nmayor Ora Stephenson by a considerable majority.\nRoy Green retained the position\nof mayor of Kaslo, squeezing past\none opponent, Charles Lind.\nAt the same time, however, Kaslo indicated that he will be the last\nmayor. Voters decided by 148 to 52\nthat the municipality will change\nits status from that of a city to a\nvillage. A three-fifths majority was\nrequired and obtained for this\nCouncil-advocated measure.\nFruitvale experienced the heav-\nlament\nThursday\nBy The Canadian Press\nProgressive Conservatives and\nmost Liberals voted down 70 to\n30 a CCF amendment to reduce\nthe auto excise tax to five per cent\nfrom 10.\nFinance. Minister Donald Fleming said the only result of government acceptance of this unprecedented amendment to a tax-cut\nbill would be \"financial chaos.\"\nThe Commons approved by a\nvote of 175 to 0 the principle of\nthe government bill to cut the\nauto excise tax to TA per cent\nfrom 10.\nSocial Credit Leader Low suggested that the Peace River region, with most of its crop snowed\nunder, be declared a disaster area.\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 3-16 lower Thursday at a premium of 2% in terms\nof U.S. funds; a week ago 3 5-32\nper cent premium. Pound sterling\nwas U-32 higher at $2.80 21-32.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U.S.\ndollar Thurs, closed at a discount\nof 2 per cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, unchanged. Pound sterling\n$2.73 9-16, up 3-16.\nNew Mayor for G* Forks;\nCranbrook, Kaslo Re-Elect\nCanada Council\n\u00a9rants To Coast\nOTTAWA (CP) - Grants totalling $165,000 have been awarded\nby the Canada Council to 11 Canadian organizations in the fields of\nmusic, art and drama, it has been\nannounced.\nThe grants were allocated by the\ncouncil at a meeting in Ottawa last\nweek.\nAmong those receiving grants\nand amounts approved:\nVancouver .Festival Society \u2014\n$25,000 toward establishment of\nfh'e project and $25,000 for the 1958\nfestival.\nVancouver Symphony Orchestra\n\u2022 $20,000.\nCalgary Philharmonic Orchestra\n- $10,000.\nEdmonton Symphony Orchestra\n- $10,000.\nCanada Folf Music Society \u2014\n$10,000 to assist in meeting costs\nof holding the meeting of the International Folk Music Council in\nCanada in 1959 or 1960.\nThe Community Arts Council of\nVancouver \u2014 $10,000.\nCalgary Allied Arts Council \u2014\n$10,000 to continue its extension\nwork in sending art exhibitions\nthrough,Western Canada and other\nprojects', '\nNational Federation of Canadian\nUniversity Students \u2014 $5000 to help\nmeet costs of a national study\nseminar for students at Canadian\nuniversities to be held in September, 1958.\nStriking Motormen\nDemand Amnesty\nNEW YORK. (AP) _ Striking\nsubway motormen Thursday night\ndemanded full amnesty as their\nprice for ending a four-day walkout. They also insisted on a voice\nin collective, transit bargaining.\nThey asked Mayor Robert F.\nWagner to meet with them as soon\nas possible to discuss the proposal.\niest vote in its municipal history.\nOf the 287 eligible voters, 173 turned out to cast ballots. One ballot\nwas rejected.\nIn neighboring Salmo, slightly\nmore than half the eligible voters\nwent to the polls \u2014 142 out of 273,\nreturning officer Frank Flood reported.\nFair attendance at the polls was\nnoted at Greenwood where 198\nballots were cast out of a possible\ntotal of 330, two ballots being re-\njected. The winners were three aldermanic candidates seeking re\nelection. Edward Cooke was re-\nturned as mayor by acclamation\nDecember 2, the deadline for nom-\n(nations.\nAt Castlegar 818 persons were\nentitled to vote, but only 323 did.\nEight ballots were rejected in the\ncount for chairmanship, and 12\nballots each on the two-year and\none-year commission seats.\nIn the city of Fernie, the vote\nfor aldermen only represented\n62 per cent. Of a possible 1074, 667\nballots were cast of which 18 were\n\u25a0rejected.\nThe results follow. An \"x\" fol\n.lowing a person's name indicates\npresent incumbency.\nCASTLEGAR (Village)\nCommission chairman;\nJ. E. Kraft (x> 175.\nE. A. Lewis 140.\nCommissioners   (two  seats  for\ntwo-year terms):\n,   R. C. Maddocks (x) 223.\nG. C. Pettitt (x) 203.\nM. A. McPherson (x) 135.\nW. E. Harris 40.\nCommissioner (one seat for one-\nyear term):\nMrs. Elizabeth Rysen 156.\nEarl Bradford 155.\nCHAPMAN CAMP (Village)\nCommisisoners (two seats for\ntwo-year terms):,.. . ......\nG. S: Fisher (x) 125.   \"'  ' ' '\u25a0\nJ. B. Yuill (x) 103;\nJ. E. Dietrich 71.\nCommissioner (one seat for one-\nyear term): \u2022\nW. R. Young (x) 116.\nHarold W. Stone 38.\nCRANBROOK (City)\nMayor: .\nR. E. Sang (x) 681.\nGeorge Haddad 514.\nFERNIE   (City)\nAldermen (three seats):\nFrank Butaia (x) 437.\nJohn Sweeney (x) 389.\nJohn Minton 383.\nFrank Britney (x) 349.\nFRUITVALE (Village)\nCommission chairman:\nCarleton Haines (x) 117.\nPatrick Rochford 56.\nCommissioners (two, seats):\nAustin Olson 115.\nOlio Schewe 95.\nHugh McCutcheon (x) 86.\nRaymond Beaubien 34.\nGRAND FORKS (City)\nMayor:\nArchie Davis 305.,\nOra Stephenson 165.\nAldermen (two seats):\nC. F. Wolfram (x) 264.\nA. W. Downey (x) 237.\nY. Sugimoto 235.\nGREENWOOD (City)\nAldermen (three seats):\nH. H. Summersgill (x) 171.\nW. E. McArthur jr. (x) 139.\nA. F. Cudworth (x) 126.\nE. M. Holf 94.\nRuss Send Warning\nNotes to UN Members\nLONDON (AP - The Soviet\nUnion \u2014 stepping up its letter\nwriting campaign \u2014 said Thursday night it is sending notes to\nall United Nations members warning that \"the danger of nuclear\nwar has greatly increased.\"\nThe announcement by Radio\nMoscow coincided with a UN debate in New York on a Soviet call\nf o r p'eaceful coexistence and\ncame four days before a NATO\nsummit meeting in Paris.\nThe broadcast said the new,\nnotes declared \"action must be\noaken at once to prevent a war\nand improve relations between\ncountries,\"\nWord of the mass distribution\nof new notes came hard on the\nheels of a flurry of letters from\nSoviet Premier Bulganin to Western government heads. Recipients of the letters included President Eisenhower, Prime Minister Maemillan, French Premier\nFelix Gaillard and West German\nChancellor Konrad Adenauer.\nThe messages generally have\ncovered the same Soviet proposals for renouncing nuclear weapons and tests and other actions\nas steps toward peace.\nThe letters to Gaillard and\nMaemillan were made public\nThursday night.\nBulganin told Gaillard the\nNATO meeting was called \"to accelerate war preparations\" of the\nwestern alliance and urged France\nto try to. influence other NATO\nmembers to consider Soviet proposals.\nThe letter to Maemillan said it\nis \"either irresponsible or downright provocative\" for U. S. planes\nto carry hydrogen bombs on patrols from British bases. It declared that countries where American\nplanes are based were put in a\n\"very dangerous situation.\" .\nBulganin's   letters   have   been\nviewed in the West as Soviet efforts to influence the NATO meeting opening in Paris Monday.\nINVERMERE (Village)\nCommission chairman:\nA. E. Erickson (x) (2.\nW. Roy Lake 35.\nCommissioners (two seats):\nCorbin Mitchell 66.\nE. J. Lambert (x) 66.\nRudolf Hecher (x) 62.\nKASLO (City)\nMayor:\nR. E. Green (x) 129.\nCharles Lind 116.\nAldermen (two seats):\nJ. D. Morris (x) 145.\n' J. V. Humphries 135. ' ,.\nJ. W. Hand (x) 105.\nW. V. Drayton 72.\nSchool Board (one seat):\nW. J. Hend'ren (x) 129.\nMrs. Catherine Tyers 118.\nReferendum\u2014Are you in favor of\na change of status from city to\nvillage: Yes 148, no 52, affirmed.\nKIMBERLEY (City)\nAldermen (three seats):\nMark Beduz (x) 617.\nJ. Davis (x) 504. '\nDavid Ure 410.\nViolet W. Burrin 370.\nD. F. Lane 282.\nEdward Blundell 215.\nFrank Pohl 190. (\nBylaw\u2014$82,000 for road construction, for 549, against 314, approved;\nMARYSVILLE (Village)\nCommission chairman:\nS. V. Higgins (x) 129.\nH. L. Nielson 82.\nCommissioner (one seat):\nEdward Elliott (x) 110.\nH. C. Ordway 101.\nMONTROSE (Village)\nCommissioners (two seats):\nK. A. Manton (x) 111.\nR. S. Webber 82.\nJ. R. Luke 61.\nJohn Barne 46.\nNELSON (City)\nMayor:\nT, S. Shorthouse 1005.       \t\n\u25a0Joseph'Kary XX) 550.\nj:\"W. McUlelland 336.    '\nC. F. BlBteman lit\nAldermen (three seats):\nDr. C. H. Bradsliitw 1034.\nB. C. Affleck 972.    -\nMrs.-W. J. VanMaarion 8^7.\nC. J. Hughes 712.\nFrank Beresford 620.\nL. G. Peerless 481.\nGeorge Latta 450.\nH. H. Hinitt 378.\nROSSLAND (City)\nAldermen (three seats):\nJ. C. Miller (x) 496.\nDavis Shaw (x) 415.\nWilliam Keane (x) 415.\nJ. G. Flanagan 264.\nPaul Lowden 174.      \" \u25a0\nSALMO (Village)\nCommissioners (two seats):\nDennis Powers 93.\nMurrel Bush (x) 92.\nKenneth Henderson 49.\nOliver Smith 34.\nWARFIELD (Village)\nCommission chairman:\nHarry Simpkinson (x) 232.\nC. E. Fenton 213. .\nCommissioners (two seats):\nE. C. Romano (x) 219.\nD. F. Griffiths 187.\nStuart Metcalfe 164.\nR. H. Lawrie 123.\nF. W.' Collingwood (x) 112.\nL. G. Smith 49.\nSukarno to Leave\nIndonesia for\n\"Rest Cure\"\nBy JAMES WILDE\nJAKARTA (AP) - President\nSukarno is leaving Indonesia soon\nfor what officially is termed a rest\ncure. Premier Jjuanda asked Parliament to swear in Parliament\nSpeaker Sartono as acting chief\nexecutive Dec. 20.\nSartono, 56, regarded as a moderate nationalist, already has declared his readiness to take over\nthe affairs of this nation, now in\na period of crisis over ousting the\nDutch. .\nIndonesia had had no vice-president since Dr. Mohammed Hatta,\na Moslem leader of pro-western\nleanings, resigned a year ago.\nSukarno was reported invited by\nthe government of \"a friendly\nneighboring country to recuperate\nther?.\" It was learned the chief\nexecutive may go to India or to\nEgypt next month.   \u25a0\nDisclosure of these plans came\nafter the Indonesian army cancelled all leaves Thursday and\nordered its .troops to remain at\nhand in their barracks.\nA Dutch radio network broadcast a report of rumors in Jakarta\nthat Sukarno was a prisoner of the\narmy and said \"he is supposed to\nfly to India very soon, which In\nfact, means he will bs in asylum\nthere.\"\nMAYOR-ELECT SHORTHOUSE\nBradshaw, Affleck\nVan Maarion Win\nPiling up more than half- the total vote, ThomaB S.\nShorthOiise swept to victory in Nelson's mayoralty contest\nin Thursday's civic election, in the second largest poll in\nthe city's history.-\nThe electors also chose Dr. Chester E. Bradshaw,\nBoyd C. Affleck and Mrs. W. J. VanMaarion in that order,\nas aldermen.\nfust over 75 per cent of the voters turned out, rolling\nup 2022 votes, compared to 2112 in 1951, when the turnout\nwas. nearly 80 per cent.\nMAYOR J. KARY, RunneriUii\nThe counts, completed at 10:22\np.m., follow:\nFOR MAYOR\nT. S. Shorthouse 1005.\nMayor Joseph Kary 550.\nAid. J. W. McClelland 336.\nAid. C. F. Blakeman 114.\nRejected ballots 17.\nFOR ALDERMEN\nDr. C. E. Bradshaw 1034.\nB. C. Affleck 972.\nMrs. W. J. VanMaarion 847.\nC. J, Hughes 712.\nF. A. Beresford 620.\nL.. G. Peerless 481.\nGeorge Latta 450.\nH. H. Hinitt 378.\nRejected ballots 21.\nThe mayor-elect took the lead\nfrom the moment, the sorting of\nbailots began. Two boxes were\ncounted and the first gaye Mr.'\nShorthouse. a count of 675, compared to 362 for Mayor Kary, 235\nfor,Aid. McClelland and.67 for Aid.\nBlakeman. ,\n\"I am overwhelmed with the\nresults  of  this  election,\"   said\nj  Mr. Shorthouse after the result\nbecame known.  \"I promise to\n!  implement as quickly as possible\n' the planks of my election platform.\n1 \"To 'Messrs.' Kary, McClelland\narid Blakeman,, who have served\nthe city.so'well on behalf of the\nNelson   citizens,   I   extend   my\nBlanks'.\n\"I congratulate the newly elected\naldermen,and solicit, their support?\n\u2022DR. C. E. BRADSHAW\nB. C. AFFLECK\nMRS. W. J. VANMAARION\nalong with that of the remaining\nmembers of the council. The confidence placed in me demands that\nI carry the responsibilities of Nelson's highest office without prejudice and in the best interests of\nthe Queen City of the Kootenays.\"\nPROTEST VOTE\n\"A very decisive victory for Mr. j\nShorthouse,\"   said  Mayor   Kary,\n\"and   definitely   a   protest   vote\nagainst my administration.\"\nHe extended best wishes to the\nnew councillors and offered his full\ncooperation in helping to bring\nabout the new hotel-office tower\nproject.\nThe newly-elected mayor was\nlast a candidate in the heavy 1951\nvote, when he ran third against\nMayor Kary and Aid. Alex Sutherland. Before that he had been an\nalderman from 1946 to 1950 following four years as police commissioner.\nWINS MOST VOTES\nMost votes were given to Dr.\nBradshaw, who headed the aldermanic count with 1034. It will be\nhis first experience on city council, although he has served on the\nschool board, the police commission, the Civic Centre Commission\nand the Municipal Library Board.\nMr. Affleck has had council experience, serving as alderman from\n1945 to 1948 and he was city engineer from 1927 to-1934. Mrs. Van\nMaarion is also a newcomer to the\ncivic administration field.\nRuoridation Vote\nGets Slim Majority\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Voters\nhave approved by a slim margin\nthe \u2022 Budridati.on of Vancouver's\nwater supply,, the. first roadblock\nto be cleared in this controversial\nissue.\nA plebiscite, one of four voted\non in the civic election Wednesday,\nwas adopted by a 55.8.per cent\nmargin. The vote was: For, 53,284;\nagainst, 42,135.'(See also story\npage 12.) ,\nVancouver City is a. member of\nthe Greater Vancouver Water\nBoard which- takes in 13 surrounding municipalities, all getting supplies from the same source, -the\nCapilano watershed. Treatment\nwith fluorides Would affect all\nequally.\nThe next step is to seek approval\no( the other municipalities for a\nmetropolitan fluoridation program.\nFinal approval would have to come\nfrom the British Columbia legislature.\nA plebiscite is only an assessment of public opinion, an indication of the people's wishes.\nMedical, dental and civic offi\ncials supported fluoridation, but\nmany other groups have campaigned against it over the years.\n\"Now it is up to civic and provincial officials to allow the people\nto have the benefits of such a\nhealthy measure,\" commented Dr.\nJack Lewis, chairman of the fluoridation committee of the B.C. Dental Association.\nHealth associations and the Parent-Teacher Association supported\nfluoridation-. , \u25a0\u25a0:\u2022\",\nSix To Be Added to\nUN Steering Group\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)-\nThe United Nations .General Assembly Thursday adopted a resolution calling for an increase of\nsix members in its steering committee.\nIt adopted an Afro-Asdan resolution 49 to 1, with 27 abstensions,\nincluding Canada. China cast the\nonly negative vote.\nThe measure would increase the\nnumber of five\u2014presidents to be\nelected by the assembly to 13 from\nseven.\nAnd in This Corner....\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Henry Ferrle Sadley reported Thursday that\ngetting your face tattooed Is no way to win back a girl friend\u2014\nunlcsr, maybe you are'a Hottentot.\nFerrle, a 38-year-old janitor, recently had a spat with his\nsteady, Tilly Farrell, 40. Explaining to a reporter what happened\nnext, he said:\n\"I once told her 'Tilly,.If you ever leave me, I'll have my\nwhole face tattooed so that no other woman will ever look at me.' \"\nFerrle went out and had a butterfly tattooed on his nose, a\ntree on his forehead, a colled snake on his left cheek and a flying\ndragon on his right cheek. Then he went to see Tilly.\n\"I thought he had taken leave of his senses,\" she said. \"I'm\nafraid It Is all up between us.\"\n\"Tho tattoos are permanent,\" said Ferrle, \"so I think I will\nget a Job with a circus to help me forget,\"\nHe opened his shirt collar, revealing a tattoo across his throat\nlaying \"Out here.\" ,\nLINDSAY, Ont. (CP)\u2014A couple of days in a cell wasn't too\ngreat an inconvenience for westerner Ross Stewart. Police let him\ntake along his guitar.\nStewart was picked up when his wife in Brandon, Man., charged\nnon-support. For two days the station corridors echoed to Stewart's\nwarbles.\nThe concert ended Wednesday when Magistrate R. I. Moore\ntold Stewart he was free as a- prairie breeze. His wife had dropped\nthe complaint.\nThe happy ending: radio station CKLY in this town 18 miles\nwest of Peterborough tape-recorded Stewart's croonings and put\nthem on a program. Stewart has been offered a job in the area.\nKITCHENER, Ont. (CP)\u2014The stork called three times to\nKitchener-Waterloo hospital Thursday to deliver bundles each\nnamed Martin. All three are girls and are from the same area\nnorthwest of  Kitchener\u2014but none  are  related.\n. VANCOUVER (CP)\u2014-Squirrels here are tough. One of them\nattacked a policeman.\nConstable R. R. Ginler went Into the zoo hospital at Stanley\nPark to get some meat for the police dogs.\nThe squirrel, a convalescent, hopped onto his shoulder and bit\nhim on the ear. Const. Ginter was treated for a bad bite,\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 19.57\nTHE LOVER OF\nLIFE AND\nLUXURY WHO\nSMASHED AN\nASSASSIN ARMY!\nHe blazed across\nthe world like\na fiery comet-\nfor love flf\nK forbidden girl!\n7.00\n9.00\nioooooo^oooooooooo^o^o\nSTARTING  TODAY\n\u25ba^ vistaVisiom*\ncmc\nA FAMOUS\nPLOVERS\nTHEATM\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\n2 Shows Nightly. Starting 6:45\n\"THE    AMBASSADOR'S\nDAUGHTER\"\n(Cinemascope)\nOlivia De Havllland, John Forsythe\nNEWS-CARTOON\nS. R. POPE\nRITES HELD\nFuneral service for Sidney Richard Pope, 63, who died Tuesday\nIn Nelson, was held Thursday from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home. Interment was in Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nRev. H. R. Whitmore officiated,\nand pallbearers were Roland Anderson, Bunt Ogllvie, Vivian Rowley, Ed Serres, Jack Hobden and\nWilliam Donaldson.\n\"The Twenty-Third Psalm\" and\n\"Unto The Hills Around Do I Lift\nUp My Longing Eyes\" were sung\nwith organist Mrs. W. A. Manson,\nI wish to take this\nopportunity\nof thanking all those who\nsupported me at the polls\nend I shall endeavor to\nmerit this trust.\nC. I. BRADSHAW\nCANMORE\nBRIQUETTES\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL & TRANSFER\nPremiere  Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nTONIGHT  and. SATURDAY\n\"HOT BLOOD\"\nTechnicolor-Cinemascope\nJane   Russell,   Cornell   Wilde\nGravel Company\nRent Lowered\nMayor Joseph Kary and city\nclerk C. W. R. Harper were authorized Wednesday night to sign\nan 'agreement amending a 1954\nlease to Premier Sand and Gravel\nCompany for rent of land near the\ncity asphalt plant. The lease is\nretroactive to January 1, 1957.\nThe agreement, which is for. five\nyears, provides that rent will be\ndecreased to $600 per year from\n$1100 per year. The city will have\nto rebate $225, amount of overpayment so far this, year, to the\ncompany. Reason for the reduction\nis that the original lease covered\nland and crushing equipment, but\nthe machinery has been useless\nsince 1955. The company now has\nits own equipment.\nWay has been cleared for the\ncity to sell the machinery and remove an old building on the\ngrounds. Works superintendent E\nE. Olson' said the machinery could\nbe sold for scrap.\nSum of $180 per year, also retroactive to January, 1957, will\nbe paid by the city to the company\nfor free and uninterrupted use of\npart of the land described in the\n1954 lease for the asphalt plant.\nThe city is to remove rocks and\ngravel unearthed from excavations\nof pit-run gravel on the lands.\n' This lease is renewable.\nOffice Established\nBy Nelsonite Bums\nA former Nelson boy, Denis A\nBoyd, Sunday night saw an office\nhe established at Medicine Hat,\nAlta., destroyed by fire in a business section fire.\nUnderwood Ltd. branch office,\nof which Mr. Boyd was manager,\nan electrical store and apartrtjents\nin an upper storey were burned\nout, A large stock of typewriters\nand office supplies were lost and\ntwo families in the apartments lost\nall they owned.\nDenis Boyd is a son of Mr. and\nMrs. J. J. Boyd of Nelson. He has\nbeen with'the Underwood company\nsince the war, first In the Lethbridge branch and then at Medicine\nHat, where he established Jtfie office several years ago.\nTo all those who supported me\nat the polls yesterday,\nThanks Very Much.\nFRANK BERESFORD.\nEspecially for\nHER  CHRISTMAS\nCiro\nEsscent $3-$4.75\nMist   $3.75\nDanger,   Reflexions\nNew Horizons,\nSurrender\nDu Barry\nBeauty Case\nBeautifully   Fitted\nEvery Lady\nDeserves Ono\n$8.50\nUgr        Du Barry     ^\nM7 Dusting   Powder\nHj   Gift Package $2.50\nIH     Gemey  Dusting\nIH&       Powder $2.00\nEflk      Gift Boxed'       ,\nhv          Gemey       ^B8\nV   WK         2-Piece Sets    .^H\nH      Toilet Water    W\nH          (Or  Cologne)        H\nand Talc            j 1\nBBk           $2.95           B\nSjSk      Gift Package   jHL\nWe Carry a\nDuBARRY\nComplete Line of\nPREPARATIONS\nNELSON PHARMACY\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\n433 Jonephine SI.        Phone 1203    Res, 394-L       Nelson. B.C.\nKiwanis Turkey\nShoot Begins\nSeveral local residents Thursday\nnight attempted to get turkeys for\ntheir festive tables at opening night\not Nelson Kiwanis Club's turkey\nshoot in Nelson, Armoury. The annual event will continue until Saturday. -\nFiring was on the downstairs\nrange, with an JtCMP officer as\nrange judge. There was a winner\nfor each 30 targets. Each person\ngot two shots, with only the nearest one to the target being considered on score.\nAbout eight turkeys were given\naway. Club officials said the first\nnight crowd was not too good.\nUpstairs, other people were trying their luck at bingo and other\ngames.\nOverall chairman was . A. J.\nHamson; John Hogg was chairman of bingo, J. S. Livingstone\nwas chairman of other games, and\nE. W. White was chairman of the\nturkey shoot. Other Kiwanians assisted.\nThe Weather\nNelson   31 37 \u2014\nToronto   o 16 \u2014\nRegina  26 39 \u2014\nSaskatoon    17 40 \u2014\nCalgary   35 45 \u2014\nEdmonton  32 43 \u2014\nKaslo  30 38 .12\nGrand Forks   26 35 \u2014\nKamloops  28 37 Tr\nPenticton    37 39 \u2014\nVancouver   42 48 \u2014\nVictoria   43 50 \u2014\nWhltehorse  15. 19 \u2014\nSan Francisco  40 51 \u2014\nSpokane \t\n33   43\nFish Population Must\nBe Guarded-Finlayson\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Deane Finlayson, Progressive Conservative leader in British Columbia, said\nThursday night that \"regardless\nof the dollars and cents involved,\nwe cannot make a move that is\ngoing to deplete the fish population of B.C.\"\nMr. Finlayson was commenting\non a proposal by Gen. A. G. L.\nMcNaughton of the International\nJoint Commission that the Kootenay and Columbia rivers in B. C.\nbe diverted for hydro-electric development into the Fraser river.\n\"Conserning the diversion, ... .\nat the present time the best information indicates a real possibility\nit would have a harmful effect on\nthe salmon population,\" Mr. Finlayson said,\nIn any, event, Canada could not\nmove unilaterally since \"we have\ngot to respect the United States\ninterest in this matter.\" The Columbia originates in Canada but\nflows through the U.S. northwest.\n\"We must give them the same\nconsideration as if the position\nwas reversed, notwithstanding the\nfact  that   the   boundary   waters\ntreaty act of 1909 unquestionably\nleaves Canada free to divert the\nColumbia if it wishes.\"\nURGES MICA DAM\nThere was no compelling urge\nto develop all of the rivers involved\nat once. The Columbia should be\ndeveloped through the Mica Creek\nproject\u2014the building of a $250,,\n000,000 project at Mica Creek,\nB.C. \u2014 where \"you don't need to\ndivert anything.\"\n\"There will be no conflict with\nthe U.S. if you do that.\"\nMr. Finlayson challenged Gen\nMcNaughton's statement that the\nWenner-Gren project for central\nB.C. development did not conflict\nwith the proposed diversion.\n' \"The best and most realiable in,\nformatio. indicates that the devel-\nopment of the Columbia and Peace\nRiver systems .simultaneously will\nleave us for a period of time with\na surplus of power, and it will not\nbe economic to develop them both\nat the same time.\n\"One will have to precede the\nother by at least five and probably\n10 years.\"\nChristmas Postal Business\nSlower So Far This Year\nChristmas business in Nelson post office has been slow\nthis year up until Thursday*\ncompared to last year, stated\nPostmaster W. G. Hall on\nThursday afternoon.\nVictoria Has\n27 PaC. Vote\nVICTORIA (CP) - Three of four\nincumbent aldermen were returned\nto their seats on city council here\nThursday night on the first final\ncount of the civic election.\nThe only loser in the six-way\nrace for the four seats was J.\nDonald Smith, Social Credit MLA\nfor Victoria.\nHe was beaten by Capt. D. J.\nProudfoot, a former Liberal MLA\nfor Victoria who polled 3145 votes\nto Mr. Smith's 3037.\nOnly 27.5 per cent of the eligible\nvoters turned out, the second lowest on record since 1927.\nThe incumbent aldermen returned to office were Mrs. Lily Wilson,\n3775; Geoffrey Edgelow, poll leader with 4205, and Millard Mooney,\nsecond with 3981.\nRecreation Director\nSaid \"Indispensable\"\nEmployment of a recreation director cannot be compared with\ngeneral civic employment since the\nperson hired should be of professional calibre, Robert Stangroom,\nregional consultant, Community\nProgramme branch, said in a brief\nto City Council dealing with position classification and salary for\nthe director.\nCouncil, recreation commission\nand the director should \"have a\nclear conception of what the work\nentails and the responsibilities of\nthe position,\" and a salary 'schedule is desirable \"so that the City\nof Nelson and its citizens will have\nthe benefit of and be able to retain competent professional recrea,\ntion leadership.\"\nStarting salaries paid in other\nCanadian cities all exceed the salary now paid Nelson's recreation\ndirector, the brief said. Along with\nother recreation information it was\nfiled for study, by the 1958 council.\nCIVIC RESPONSIBILITY\nRecreation is more a civic than\nprovincial or federal government\nresponsibility, although these governments also recognize its im-\nportance, according to the brief.\n\"Essentially recreation is informal education and every \u2022 recreation agency is an informal school.\nThe leader is as necessary to the\nrecreation program as the teacher\nIs to the schpol. Today it k especially true, for the conditions which\nmake playgrounds and recreation\ncentres a necessity have also made\nthe recreation leader indispens\nable.\"\nCorrect estimate of the status of\nrecreation here means revising the\nposition classification and salary of\nthe recreation director, the brief\nsuggested.\n\"The' City of Nelson has been\nmost fortunate in the last few\nyears to have Enjoyed the services\no ftwo men who could properly\nbe   called   recreation   directors,\nTHANK   YOU\nto all my friends for\nsupporting me at the\npalls.\nCECIL J. HUGHES\nmen of sound professional knowledge, wide experience in recreation and a great deal of ability and\ninitiative.\n\"Lack of vision and adequate\ncommunity recreation policies, together with administrative and salary inconsistencies, had much to\ndo with the departure of one of\nthese men, and, though the second is still with the city, it is obvious to this commission that he\ncan ill-afford to waste his time and\nabilities in Nelson under the present\nsystem.\" .    .\nThe weather, which has\nbeen somewhat unChrist\nmaslike, may have had\nsomething to do with the lack\nof Christmas rush so far,\nHowever, the mail has been\n.coming through regularly\nand there has been no holdup in deliveries.\nIt is expected that there\nwill be a noticeable increase\nin both incoming and out'\ngoing mail shortly.'\nMonday, December 16, the\npost oflice will be closed as\nit is regularly.\nBoy Released\nFrom School\nRelease of a Sons of Freedom\nDoukhobor boy from New Denver\ndormitory school was ordered\nThursday by juvenile court judge\nWilliam Evans. The boy is now 15\nyears old, age at which children\nmay be released from the school.\nTwo Fined\nTwo Nelson men were fined\ntotal of $40 and costs this week\nafter being found guilty by provincial court Magistrate William\nEvans on driving charges. Both\npleaded not guilty.\nJ. H. Harris was fined $25 and\ncosts for driving, without due care\nand attention December 1. J. A,\nBrookes was fined $15 and costs\nfor crossing a North Shore intersection without giving right of way\nto a car approaching from the\nright.\nFined $25\nLaurence Simpson of Nelson was\nfined $25 and costs Thursday by\nprovincial court Magistrate Wil\nliam Evans on a charge of failure\nto answer-a demand for tax deduction information.\nSimpson pleaded not guilty earlier, but changed the plea to guilty\nand received the minimum fine.\n\/ Wish to Thank\nMost Sincerely\nAll those Who Supported Me\nat the Polls.\nMay You Never Regret\nthe Confidence\nYou Have Placed in Me.\nEdith VanMaarion\nTHANK YOU\nFor Your Support\nat the Polls\nand to all those who helped me in\nso many ways in my campaign.\nI wish to congratulate mayor-elect\nT. S. Shorthouse and the successful\naldermanic candidates and wish\nthem well in their terms of office.\nJOE KARY\nSki Club Auction,\nTonight, Saturday\nAny who are addicted to auctions will be present tonight and\nSaturday afternoon at the Silver\nKing Ski Club auction when $2000\nworth of merchandise will go on\nthe block. Proceeds will go toward\nthe Centennial Fund. Auctioneering will take place-at the former\nColeman Electric store, 327 Baker\nStreet, and one of the auctioneers\nis to be Mayor Joseph Kary.\nMerchandise has been supplied\nby wholesalers of Nelson merchants and includes almost everything imaginable, \"from bromo-\nseltzers to lawn mowers\", clothing,\nshoes, clocks, lawn furniture, and\nother miscellaneous items. Premises will be open from two o'clock\nuntil nine o'clock both days.\nHeavy Voting in\nB.C. Elections\nBy The Canadian Press\nVoting in civic elections throughout British Columbia was heavy\nThursday.\nOhe of the biggest turnouts was\n84 per cent at Tofino on the west\ncoast of Vancouver Island.\nAn upset appeared to be shaping\nup in Burnaby, a suburban municipality of Vancouver.\nReeve Charles MacSorley, a nonpartisan association candidate was\ntrailing Alan Emmott 1486 votes to\n929 after 15 of the 35 polls had\nbeen counted. Emmott is a member of the newly-formed Burnaby\nCitizens Association which also had\nfour candidates leading for four of\nthe five council seats formerly held\nby the NPA.\nA $1,000,000 hospital bylaw was\ndefeated by voters in Langley\nmunicipality.\nCanadian Dollar\nSlides Lower\nNEW YORK (AP) - The Canadian dollar skidded Thursday to its\nlowest level in more than a year.\nIt was quoted at $1.0244 in terms\nof the U.S. dollar, off about 1-5\nof a cent from Wednesday's close\nOf $1.0256 and its lowest since October, 1956.\nAs recently as Nov. 21 the Canadian dollar was selling at a four-\ncent premium over the U.S. dollar\nand on Aug. 21 it reached an all-\ntime high of $1.0614. \\\nDealers attribute the drop to a\nlack of Canadian borrowing in the\nU.S. in recent months, hesitancy\nof some European investors to put\nmoney into Canadian securities\nand to some selling of Canadian\nstock by interests outside Canada.\nEIGHT-YEAR SENTENCE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - John\nChernesky, 49, found guilty of manslaughter in the Sept. 30 death of\nhis landlord was sentenced Thursday to eight years in the B.C. Penitentiary.\nThe unemployed laborer was\nconvicted Wednesday in the death\nof William Ostashek, 59.\nIn his sentencing Chernesky, Mr.\nJustice J. V. Clyne told him:    <\n\"You killed a man. I have no\ndoubt you were so drunk you did\nnot know what you were doing.\"\nTHANK   YOU\nto all my friends for\nsupporting me at the\npolls.\nJ. W. MCCLELLAND\nEight Killed in\nSpokane Air Crash\nSPOKANE (AP) - A giant B-\n52 ^ jet   bomber   crashed   shortly\nFreedomites\nSuing Mounties\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Sons of\nFreedom Doukhobor farmer and\nhis nine-year-old- son are suing\nfive RCMP officers for assault and\ntrespass.\nThe trial opened Thursday in\nSupreme Court before Mr. Justice\nJ. O. Wilson. The plaintiffs, John\nSavinkoff and his son Peter of\nPassmore. allege RCMP officers\nentered their home June 1, 1956,\nto apprehend the boy because he\nhad not been attending school.\nSavinkoff is suing the policemen\nfor $200 damage to his home and\nthe boy is claiming unspecified\ndamages for assault. They say the\nboy was assaulted when police, attempting to remove him from a cellar where he had taken refuge,\npoked at him wilh sticks and gave\nhim a cut forehead and bruises.\nThe defendants are Cpl. Alexander Borodula of Nelson. Staff Sgt.\nW. J. McKay of Trail, Cpl. T. R,\nTobiason of Kelowna, Const. Robert\nR. Miller of Penticton and Const.\nBrian Bowron of Kimberley.\nMrs. Lucy Savinkoff, the boy's\nmother, was the first witness called by thi defence, being conducted by Vancouver lawyer John T.\nSteeves. She took the oath on the\nDoukhobor symbols of bread, salt\nand water.\nMrs. Savinkoff testified the five\nofficers entered the house with\nblackjacks in their hands and produced a search warrant.\nWhen she refused to call the boy\nfrom the cellar, the officers said\nthey would break her house and\nstarted pulling timbers off, she\nsaid.\nTrial of the suit is expected to\noccupy two days in Supreme Court\nDO YOU THINK ?\nShe Deserves a New\nFIECTROLUX\nCleaner and Polisher\nFOR CHRISTMAS\nCall Clint Thompson, 1108\nTHANK YOU\nto ail my friends for\nsupporting   me  at\nthe polls.\nL. G. PEERLESS\nafter takeoff Thursday from Fair-\nchild U.S. Air Force bace about\n15 miles west of Spokane.\nEight crew members were reported killed. The tail gunner survived a low-level ejection from the\nplane and was not injured.\nStaff Sgt. Elmer E. Clark of\nDallas, Tex., a member of the\nemergency crash crew, said five\ncrew members apparently jumped\nfrom-the plane, but only one survived. The other four died in the\nwreckage, he said.\nOfficials said the B-52 was on\na routine training flight.\nMan To Face\nCar Theft Charge\nRCMP are bringing from Victoria a man wanted here in connection .with a three-year-old\ncrime. He will probably be in court\nMonday.\nT. R. Thompson, address unknown, had been the object of a\nsearch since he and a car belonging to Nelson-Lardeau Mines vanished August 4, 1954. He was apprehended recently in Victoria.\nO. W. AASLAND\nTAXIDERMIST\nServing You With the\nFINEST IN TAXIDERMY\nP.O. Box 361 Phone 946!\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abw\u00ab\u00abWf.iM<giai<.w\u00abW(.i\u00ab>\u00ab>;\u00ab\ndis. fan, OJsjoJl  ',}\nThere is nothing nicer\nthan a\nSweater\nf We are showing long\nsleeve fully fashioned\nV-necks \u2014 sleeveless V-\nnecks \u2014 button vests \u2014\ncoat styles.\nE At least a dozen colors to\na choose   from,   carrying   the\n!. \"TONY DAY\" or \"WARREN\nM KNIT\" label.\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\nr\n>l\u00bb\u00bb^\u00bblfck&afe.K\u00bb3l\u00bb!\u00bblMtM!i_'.\nNOTICE\nKootenay Lake Ferry\nAdditional Service Dec. 16th-Jan. 3rd, 1958\nDuring the period December 16th, 1957 to January\n3rd, 1958 ONLY, M.V. Balfour will operate on a 5-\nday week (Monday to Friday) schedule, weather permitting. This is an addition to the regular schedule\nmaintained by M.V. Anscomb.\nADDITIONAL SCHEDULE AS FOLLOWS:\nLeave Balfour Leave Kootenay Bay\n., (Pacific Standard Time)\n9:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.\n11:00    \" 12.00 noon\n1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.in.\n3:00    \" 4:00    \"\nA. L. FREEBAIRN'\nDistrict Engineer\nNelson. B.C.,   Dec. 11, 1957.\nWe're Over Stocked f\nwith Sylvania T.V.1958 *\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\nYou Want One for Christmas I\nMAKE US A DEAL\nEasy Terms\nSpecial\nDiscounts\nThis Is Your Beit Chance Because We Just Have to Have the Room\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC\nCorner of Front and Lake Street\nPHONE 2055 NELSON, B.C.\nli*\u00bbl8l\u00bbl>l\u00bbl\u00bblJr>l2l^Jl\u00bblJ1\u00bbiai)t.*\u00bbl\u00bbl\u00bbl\u00bb***\u00bblMl9l\u00bb)\u00bbl\u00bbl*\n 32%\u00b0|\nColor and Pageantry to Reign\nAt Cranbrook Fete July 1 to 4\nCRANBROOK \u2014 ' Chairman of\nthe Cranbrook and district Centennial Committee planning the 1958\nEmerald Curling\nSlate Elected\nEMERALD MINE - The new\nexecutive of the Emerald Ladies'\nCurling Club was introduced by\nretiring president Mrs. G. Carr at\na recent meeting.\nThose introduced were Mrs. T.\nAllen, president; Mrs. T. Smith,\nfirst vice-president; Mrs. A. Jennings, second vice-president; Mrs.\nG. Sutherland, secretary; and\nMrs. 0. Mathers, treasurer. Committee members are Mrs. W.\nClayton, Mrs. Carr and Mrs. I.\nWeightman, ways and means;\nMrs. C. McGowan and Mrs. R. Duthie, prizes, and Mrs, T. Sanford,\nMrs. R. Stevens and Mrs. R.\nRowe, draws.\nCleaning and redecoration of the\nclub room was arranged.\nTo See the World,\nTo See the Life,\nSee Globe Agencies\nIt Says\n\"SEE THE VIPONDS\"\nGlobe\nAgencies\nLIMITED\nFor\nAll Travel Requirements\nby Land, Sea, or Air\nand\nGeneral Insurance\n1146 CEDAR AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nPhone 2345 Anytime\ncelebration of the province's birthday, W. A. Burton reports plans\nadvancing well. Cranbrook has selected July 1 to 4 as its special celebration period.\nUnveiling of a memorial plaque\nto  David  Thompson  on  Moyie\nLake at a point along the highway mentioned by the explorer\nin his early 1800 expedition  in\nthis area will be prelude on June\n30, under sponsorship of the east\nKootenay Historical Association.\nA parade,  Senior  Chamber  of\nCommerce open track meet, children's sports, highland dancing and\na costume ball are arranged for\nopening \"day. July 2 will feature\nloggers sports and a pioneer reunion.\nA citizenship ceremony and program, and arts, crafts and hobby\ndisplays on an international basis\nwill be. featured July 3. Climax\nJuly 4 will be the two-hour \"From\nWilderness to Wonderland\" pageant with local cast, and an evening barbecue and dance will conclude the celebration.\nMr. Burton also reports for the\ncentennial year many special provincial events which will include\nCranbrook in the itinerary. The\nApril 27 opening day will be marked by three beacon fires in the\nchain'across  the province.  Van\ncouver symphony and the \"Cen-\nturam'a\" variety show will visit\nin May. July feature will be the\nRCMP musical ride. In August the\nhistorical caravan will spend two\ndays here and the centennial play\nby Lister Sinclair will be presented,\nand in September Mart Kenney\nand the Western Gentlemen will\nappear.\nWyciiffe Bridge\nOpen Again\nCRANBROOK - Repair and replacement of stringers, cross-ties\nand deck of the Wyciiffe bridge on\nthe Cranbrook-Kimberley section of\nthe Kingsgate-Radium highway is\ncomplete and the route is now fully open to traffic again. The highway department crews under district engineer W. M. Sproul completed the job in half the estimated\ntime.\nThis wooden bridge' over the St.\nMary's river will be given an asphalt surface in the general highway surfacing program next year\nas a measure for remedying the\nslippery surface which occurs in\nfrosty weather.\n$1 Million'Business ...\nYule Tree Harvesting\nOver for This Year\nCRANBROOK - The annual two-\nmonth Christmas tree industry has\nwound up its season with yards\ncleared and shipments over at a\ntally of somewhere between one\nand a half million and two million\ntrees,, distributed all over the\nNorth American continent. The\nharvest represents close to one\nmillion dollars paid to people all\nover_ the district for trees and\nlebor in preparing them for railway loading.\nCranbrook East and Cranbrook\nWest B.C. Forest Ranger Districts\nreport a total of 707,742 trees cut\nthis season, slightly behind t h e\ntotal for last season, while figures\nfor the Elko Ranger district where\ncut is also heavy are not available.  Invermere and Canal Flat\nNakusp Legionnaires\nGo To New Denver\nNEW DENVER - New Denver-\nSilverton branch of the Canadian\nLegion was host to members of the\nNakusp branch when they delivered the travelling gavel.\nTwenty-five Legionnaires came\nfrom Nakusp for the social evening.\nRanger Districts totalled roughly\n900,000 trees, and shipment of 200\nrailway cars.\nRadium Hotel\nWorker Dies\nRADIUM\u2014Stanley J. Fremack,\n49, clerk and bookkeeper at the\nNational Parks Hotel, died in Invermere hospital early Wednesday\nmorning. Police said death was\nfrom natural causes.\nIt was reported Fremack collapsed in the hotel kitchen, and\nwas taken to hospital by car on\nadvice of a doctor. He died shortly\nafterwards.\nFremack came here about November 2 from Saskatoon, where\nhe had worked in a hotel for about\n17 years. During his life Mr. Fremack had been a bellhop, accountant, clerk, and assistant manager,\nand also practiced Swedish massage.\nSingle, he is survived by a\ncousin in Winnipeg and two brothers in Saskatchewan.\nu}piDtnq4\nIn Jewellery \u2014 for Qifts\nRHINESTONE NECKLETS\n'\/2 price values $15.00 to $30.00\nDRESS STONE-SET RINGS\nLadies' and Gents'  10K gold\nLess 1\/3 OFF\nLADIES' and GENTS' WATCHES  .\nLongines, Wittnauer, Cyma, Tavannes and Hofer\nLess 1\/3 OFF\nDIAMOND RINGS\nUp to $100. Less 25% OFF\nHOLLOW WARE\nSilver-Plated less 25% OFF\nFOUR-PIECE TEA SERVICE\nOne Only\nCroydon 1881   Rogers. Regular $96.50.\nSpecial $72.40\n3-PIECE CHROME DRESSER SET\nOne Only\nRegular $29.75. Special $21.75\nCIGARET CASES and LADIES' ELEC. RAZORS\nValues to $17.50, less 25%\nFLATWARE SETS\nThree only 34, 42, and 43 piece\nValues to $89.95, less 1\/3%\nMUSICAL JEWEL CASES\nRegular values to $16.50. Special $10.95\nSILENT BUTLER\nOne Only\nRegular $9.50. Special $6.35\nMany more items with similar reductions.\nWe Invite you to come  In and see for yourself.\nStretch  your  ChrlstmaB  dollars  further.\n, BETTER BUYS AT BUTTERFIELDS\nH. ButterE ield\nPhone 333\nJEWELLER\nNelson, B. C.\nPREPARING for ski season at\nKimberley, highlights of which\nwill be the Northwest intercollegiate skt meet -and the Canadian ski championships in February during Snow Fiesta Week, Is\nNoel A. Walilnger, caretaker for\nthe season at North Star Ski\nLodge. His grandfather, N. A.\nWallinger, well known in the\nEast Kootenay, was assayer at\nthe North Star mine, about a\nmile from the Ski Lodge site,\nfrom 1895 to 1905.\u2014Charles Wor-\ninington photo.\nWould Make\nPeace River\nDisaster Area\nOTTAWA (CP) - Social Credit\nleader Low suggested Thursday\nthe Peace Riwr region, which\nhas suffered a crop failure, be\ndeclared a disaster area.\nMr. Low told the Commons that\npayments under the Prairie Farm\nAssistance Act will fall far short\nof averting widespread suffering\nin the region.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker replied that necessary action will\nbe taken in co-operation with\nAlberta to alleviate confusion\nthere.\nHe said the federal government\nrealizes the situation of \"grave\ndiscomfort and worse1' to people\nliving in the area. A full investigation would be made in cooperation with the Alberta government? and necessary action\nwould be taken to meet the situation within the confines of federal responsibility.\nBert Leboe (SC \u2014 Cariboo)\nasked whether this would apply\ntion of the Peace River area.\nMr. Diefenbaker said wishes of\nthe B.C. government would have\nto be considered.\nCranbrook\nBraces For\nPost Office\nMail Rush\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Sale of unemployment insurance stamps at\nCranbrook post office rose sharply\nin November to $6608.38, compared with $5112.10 the month before\nand was fourth highest total for\nthe year. However it was lower\nthan last November's total of\n$6951.13. The sale appears to indicate a fairly satisfactory level\nof employment.\nPostmaster R. E. Fennessy reports for November the volume\nof business at the .post office was\n$89,636.96, highest total for any\nmonth so far in 1957, and highest total ever reported for any\nmonth at the post office.\nRevenue from postage stamps\nand meters wac $5457.69, compar\ned with $3860.83 for the same\nmonth last year. The post office\nissued 3988 money orders and paid\n836 money orders compared with\n3753 issued and 843 paid during the\nsame month last year.\nFIRST TIME\nThe post office is stressing the\nFernie Concert\nAids Organ Fund\nFERNIE \u2014 A large crowd enjoyed the Knox United Church\nconcert held in the School Auditorium Monday night in aid of the\nchurch organ fund. The concert\nconsisted of two one-act plays and\nseveral musical numbers.\nThe program opened with a piano\nsolo by Stewart Dicks. Next was\na vocal solo by young Ronald\nLetcher. The Junior Girls accompanied by Mrs. A. Wyman, sang\ntwo selections.\nThe first play, a comedy'entitled\n\"If Men Played Cards as Women\nDo,\" brought gales of laughter as\nthe performers, an all male cast,\nwent through the various antics\nof trying on hats, polishing nails,\nadmiring clothes and gossiping\nwithout getting one game of cards\nplayed. Those in the cast were Jim\nMorris, Jack John, Eric Domke\nand Jack Wilson.\nNext was a vocal duet by Donald\nMcRitchie and Peter Johnson with\npiano accompaniment by Mrs. A.\nWyman.\nThe second play, a drama,\nentitled \"The Late Miss Cordell\"\nwas a sombre play with a ghostly\nbackground interspersed with\nsituation comedy. Those taking\npart'were Eileen Edgar, Ida Marie\nLittler, Betty Banek, Estelle Shilling, Jean Colleaux and Rev. G.\nJohnson.\nThe plays were directed by Celia\nMorgan. The prompter was Ernest\nGibson. Bob Lees and James Ryley\nwere the stage managers.\nKootenay Support\nSought For UBC Drive\nTRAIL - When the $7,500,000\npublic appeal for funds for the\nUniversity of B.C. begins in January, campaigners in the Kootenays will be ready to start. A\nlarge group of committees has\nbeen organized to cover territory\nfrom the Alberta border to Midway. General co-ordinating chairmen for this section of the province is R. D. Perry, the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company's vice-president and general\nmanager. Sectional chairmen are\nC. E. MacKinnon of Cranbrook for\nthe East Kootenay, and Dr. C. H.\nWright of Trail for the West Kootenay.\nCommenting on the drive, Mr.\nPerry said about half of the students of UBC are from outside\nGreater Vancouver, but the campus can house only 1184, mostly\nin\" old army huts. The accommodation problem extends to other\nfacilities as well. Classes are\ncrowded and held in unsuitable\nhuts, alboratory sessions must run\nuntil late at night, library space is\nat a premium, and expensive\nequipment is installed in very\nmakeshift quarters. The heavy\nenrolment, which will continue to\nincrease, is a factor which makes\nthese and other problems very critical. Normal development of the\nUniversity was hindered by the\ndepression and the Second World\nWar which, combined with postwar needs, has produced the situation of today.\nUp to 1965 it is anticipated that\napproximately $30,000,000 will be\nneeded for buildings. It is estimated that $5,000,000 will be available from the Canada Council. The\nProvincial Government has agreed\nto provide the University with\n$10,000,000 over the next 10 years\nand will match dollar for dollar\nmoney, donated and pledged by\nbusiness and industry, the general\npublic and alumni. A public subscription of $7,500,000 matched by\nthe Government will therefore\nrealize the full total required of\n$30,000,000.\nMr. Perry expressed confidence\nthat people of the Kootenays will\ngive their share to UBC as an\ninstitution which is extremely vital\nto everyone, and at the same time\nacknowledge their interest in good\naccommodation and  facilities for\nstudents who are far from their\nhomes.\nIn the Kootenays local chairmen\nare: J. G. Acres, Grand Forks;\nL. S. Gansner, Nelson; W. K.\nGwyer, Trail; R. F. Mitchell, Rossland; W. T. Waldie, Castlegar; F.\nT. Middleton, Salmo; H. F. H. Miller, Nakusp; Norman Brooks,\nKaslo, New Denver and Slocan\nCity; D. S. Campbell, Riondel; C.\nE. MacKinnon, Cranbrook (and\nEast Kootenay chairman); R. M.\nCooper, Creston; K. N. Stewart,\nFernie; D. A. Gilmour, Golden;\nand W. H. R. Gibney, Kimberley.\nAlumni associations in many Kootenay communities are working\nclosely with the campaign chairmen.\nRITES HELD\nFOR WYNNDEL\nFRUITGROWER\nWYNNDEL \u2014 Friends who knew\nand liked him for his whimsical\nhumor and ready greeting paid\nfinal tribute in St. Paul's United\nChurch here to George Elmer Lowden, 75, who died in Trail-Tadanac\nHospital.\nRev. B. A. Knipe officiated and\npallbearers were J. Firth, E. A.\nHackett, Lewis Abbott, Whitfield\nAbbott, George Lowery and Ad.\nHagen.\nMr, Lowden was born in Ben-\nbrooke County near Hamilton, Ont.\nin 1882. He came west and home-\nsteaded in the Pincher Creek-Mac-\nleod area, where he remained until 1940 when he decided to try\nfruit farming and moved to Wynndel. Mr. Lo\\yden loved the land\nand was a farmer all his life. In\n1910 he married Sarah Elizabeth\nHewitt and they had three children, Leila, Mrs. G. Bustard of\nBrocket, Alta., George W. Lovyden\nof Red Deer, Alta., and Mabel,\nMrs. M. Carter of Sacramento, Cal.\nThere are three grandchildren, Karen Bustard and Larene and Bonnie Carter and three step-grand-\nchlidren, Mrs. Jean Hart, Darlene\nand Drew Helme'r and a great\ngrandson Paddy Hart. Mr. Lowden also has three brothers, Lafy\nette, Emerson and Ernest and a\nsister, Mrs. Bertha Lowden, all in\nOntario.\nneed for public co-operation in the\nannual Christmas mail rush which\nis now under way, intensified this\nyear as the first Christmas under\nthe new truck carrier mail conveyance. The permanent staff of\n14 people will be more than doubled during the pressure season,\nwith extra trucks carrying the\nmail in addition to scheduled\ntrucks and special railway reefer\ncars for parcel post between Medicine Hat and Nelson daily.\nSpecial receptacles have been\nplaced in the post office lobby, one\nfor local and one for out-of-town\nChristmas cards travelling on two^\ncent stamps, and use of these is\nstrongly recommended for quicker\nservice. The post office reports\ngood public co-operation, except\nfrom people who are putting first\nclass mail into them.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nFIREMEN BUY\nEQUIPMENT\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Purchases\nto be made with $250 voted to the\nfire department by ratepayers\nwere decided on at a meeting of\nfiremen. The money will be used\nto buy several pieces of equipment\nincluding 200 feet of one and a\nquarter inch hose, an electric lantern, first aid kit, fog nozzle, etc.\nFire drill will be held at Mount\nSentinel high and elementary\nschools once a month.\nThe firemen also discussed plans\nfor holding a smoker after Christmas to try to create more interest\nin the brigade.\nCranbrook Lumber\nWorker Reinstated\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Immediate reinstatement of Bernard Chevous to\nhis job as planer feeder at the\nCrestbrook Timber Ltd. plant at\nCranbrook has been ruled by R.\nJ. S. Moir of Vancouver, with payment of wages since his dismissal\nNovember 22.\nThe company in dismissing him\nalleged neglect in performance of\nduties, which the International\nWoodworkers of America denied\non his behalf. Mr. Moir was chairman of the arbitration board which\nheard the dispute Monday, with\nL. J. S. Rees of Penticton on the\nboard representing the company\nand Joe Madden of New Westminster the union. Ben Murgatroyd of\nCranbrook presented the company's case, and Clayton Wells of\nKelowna the union's case, and Mr.\nMoir ruled that the dismissal of\nMr. Chevous was without proper\ncause.\nLegion Sponsors\nTurkey Shoot\nNEW DENVER - Fat gobblers\nwent to several marksmen at a\nturkey shoot sponsored by the New\nDenver-Silverton branch of the Canadian Legion.\nJ. L. Irwin, W. Ward, W. Gregory, C. Gregory, M. McQuair, E.\nPakula and D. Roberts each won\ntwo turkeys and J. A. Greer, one.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 \u2014 3\nCASTLEGAR KIWANIS\nTO HONOR BEST CITIZEN\nCASTLEGAR\u2014The Castlegar Kiwanis, feeling that recognition be\ngiven for outstanding community\nservice, has decided to make a\n\"Best Citizen Award\" for 1957.\nAn initial list of candidates for\nthis award has been presented for\nconsideration, as follows: Lloyd\nGroutage, Lawrence Grunrod, Ma-\nWould Improve\nCity Approach\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Junior' Chamber of Commerce request to the\ncity for beautification of the South\nVan Home Street approach to the\ncity has been referred back by city\ncouncil, which pointed out that\nthe area in question is outside city\nlimits. The Jaycees' complaint\ndealt with the swamp area between\nthe street and railway tracks.\nAbout 20 years ago an early Jaycee group planted leaf trees along\nthis route, and those that survived\nhave improved the location, but\nmost of the trees planted near the\nhighway entrance to the city died.\nThe Salvation Army was granted\ncity permission to have its kettle\nset up at Tenth and Baker Street\ncorner to solicit contributions for\nthe Christmas help it extends.\nTenders will be called by the\ncity shortly for supply of all its\noil, diesel'fuel and gasoline needs\nfor 1958.\nNecessary readings were given\na streets and traffic bylaw amendment which will forbid U-turns on\nTenth Avenue at First Street.\nWilliam Street Heads\nWindermere Farmers\nINVERMERE -William Street\nof Windermere was elected president of the Windermere District\nFarmers' Institute for a second\nterm and N. M. Marples of Invermere was elected honorary president. Vice-presidents are K. M,\nMarples and Hubert Statham and\nthe appointments of secretary and\ntreasurer will be made shortly.\nDirectors are George Annis, Ewan\nMcintosh, Capt. J. R. Ogilvy-Wills\nand Michael Hollybow;\njor John Moll, Mrs. Evedyn Burrows, Sandy Sanderson, William\nReed, Lou Korody, Steve Jankola\nand Rennie Mitchell.\nThe club is anxious that no\nworthy candidates be overlooked,\nand is asking the public and all organizations in the area, including\nKinnaird and Robson, to co-operate\nby making nominations for the\naward. All nominations made will\nreceive careful consideration. Ki-\nwanians are not eligible.\nThe presentation will be made at\nthe Kiwanis annual meeting and\ninstallation.^ officers January 24.\nSPEEDWAY\nSERVICE  &  GARAGE  LTD\nSales and Service\nMercury    Lincoln     Meteor\nCedar and Farwoll Sts.        Trail\nPHONE 834\nFIBERGLAS\nREINFORCED PLASTICS\nFor Boats, etc.\nWrite tor full information ta\nM. E. OBAL\nSASH   &   DOOR   CO.   LTD.\nPhone 2065   Trail, B.C.   Box 122\nNew NORGE\nAutomatic Dryer and Washer\nMODERN ELECTRIC\nPHONE 133\n1632 Bay Ave. Trail, B.C. .\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationery. Toiletries, Books\nTrail, B.C.\n943 Spokane St.,      Phone 11\nLOWEST PRICED SEWING\nMACHINES\nIn the Kootenays\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1510 Bay Ave.. Trail - Phone 208O\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHINCl\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave. Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.\nSPECIAL\nON  LUBRICATION AND OIL CHANGES\nWe will pay toll on all lubrication and oil changes\non presentation of toll receipts.\nTractionizing Only $2.00 Wheel\u2014All Four $7.00\nOpen 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. {very Day\nExcept Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.      ,\n\"MECHANICS ON DUTY ALL HOURS\"\nNorth Shore Service\nJUST ACROSS THE BRIDGE\nPhone  1841 North Shore\nATTENTION FATHERS!!\nPLYWOOD\nIs Inexpensive...\nCHOOSE YOUR TAKE HOME PANELS NOW!!\nASK US ABOUT THE MANY PLANS\nWHICH CAN BE CUT OUT OF\nPLYWOOD\nsuch as Santa and Reindeers, Christmas Trees, etc.\n1\/4\" GIS\n!\/2\"GIS\n3\/4\"GIS\n24\"x36\" ....\n24\"x48\" \t\n24\"x60\" \t\n36\"x36\" \t\n36\"x48\" \t\n36\"x60\" \t\nPHONE\n1180\n$ .90 24\"x36\" ,\t\n1.20 24\"x48\"\t\nl.SO 24\"x60\" \t\n1.3S 36\"x36\" \t\n1.80 36\"x48\" ,\t\n2.25 36\"x60\" \t\n$1.56 24\"x36\"\n2.08 24\"x48\"\n2.60 24\"x60\"\n2.34 36\"x36\"\n3.12 36\"x48\"\n3.90 36\"x60\"\n$2.10\n2.80\n3.50\n3.15\n4.20\n5.25\nBURNS\nLumber Company\nPHONE\n1180\nPHONE,      \"Everything \/or Ihe Builder\"\n118(r        602 Baker St.    Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE\n1181\n Established April 32, 1902.\nInferior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Malt, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ot all n\u00abw\u00a7\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nFriday, December 13, 1357\nB.C. Trade Mission Practical Idea\nCanadians are re-discovering Britain and Europe in large numbers and\na surprisingly large number of the\nyounger ones are making their homes\nin London. This may appear as most\nunusual to those Canadians who have\nalways believed that no one could be\ntempted to live outside of North\nAmerica.\nAn increasingly large number of\nour younger actors and actresses are\ngoing to England and establishing\nthemselves there, largely because they\nare received with a sympathy and\nunderstanding which enables them to\ndevelop their abilities.\nThis is all to the good. We need a\ngreater mixing and a greater knowledge of one another. We have not yet\nentirely divested ourselves of our colonialism and are apt to think that no\ngood thing can come out of Europe.\nThe truth is, as the Russians have\nmost unfortunately demonstrated, that\nthe Europeans are not backward\npeoples. Europe's many races are\nmade up of virile people, highly\nskilled in manufacture, inventive and\ncultured and with all the amenities of\nlife.\nIt is therefore not unexpected   to\nfind that the .trade mission from\nCanada to Britain is finding much to\nadmire in the factories of Britain, and\nthat there are hopes that more will be\nbought from that country.\nTrade missions usually set out to\nsell but this one set out to buy. It is\nan innovation with much to recommend it. It says much for the economic\nvision of the provincial government\nthat it realized that Britain could not\nbe expected to buy our'apples unless\nshe could also sell to us, and it says\nmore for their practicality that they\ndid something about it.\nThe mission has received a rousing welcome in Britain, mostly we like\nto think, because Canada has a special\nplace in tfie affections of Britons. The\ninter-change - of ideas between the\nmission and its hosts must be highly\nbeneficial to both, and the knowledge\nof British products which the mission\nwill bring back will enable our,importers to enlarge the range of goods\nthey purchase from Britain. This is by\nno means an unimportant thing. There\nare many things produced not only in\nEngland, but in the rest of Europe, in\nadvance of those on this continent.\nSovereignty Is Irrelevant\nDiscussions of joint Canadian-American\ndefense arrangements is often a little unreal\nwhen it touches on sovereignty. Full national\nsovereignty in military matters is becoming\nobsolete; it has already ceased to exist for\ncountries in Canada's position.\nCanada and the U. S. recently decided to\nset up a single command for North American\nail defense. This is obviously a sound proposition, in the present state of the world: and\nIt's no doubt equally sound, in view of disparity of strength, that an American general\nMotl-\ntiers\nReadjustment\nHalf of a woman's life Is lived after\nher youngest child goes to school, and one-\nthird after the youngest child is married,\naccording to Canadian Home Journal.\nMany women find this fact hard to take.\nIt means a readjustment of their lives, without their children. This readjustment is\nlargely an emotional one, and if not dealt\nwith maturely, may result in a serious problem for both mother and children.\nAfter years of motherhood, a woman\nmust take stock of her assets\u2014and subtract\nher children. For some women, this second\nweaning is an unhappy experience, for some,\na serious trial\u2014and for some, an impossibility.\nDr. Paul Popenoe, director of the American Institute of Family Relations, says, \"Her\nover-mothering may be due to a misnlaced\nsense of duty, a false feeling of virtue, an\nattempt to live her life over again. Or it\nmay be due to an overpossessive nature, a\nlack of imagination and inner resources. It\nmay also be due to neglect by her husband.\"\nA different life for a newly independent\nmother need not overtax her imagination\nin this day and age. Exciitng jobs, hobbies,\ncourses, travel, community service, neglected old friends and stimulating new ones are\nall there for the asking.\nShe has her children loo, but as peers,\nnot dependents. If she will let herself, she\ncan now enjoy her children more than ever\nbefore, as people and companions. And at\nthe same time, she can begin to realize\nthose \"someday\" dreams, that the pressure\nof raising a family never allowed her.\nshould head the organization, with a Canadian as his deputy.\nBut in Ottawa the other day Opposition\nmembers asked: Had Canada handed over\npart of its sovereignty without Parliament's\nconsent? Had the U.S. or a U.S. officer acquired the right to send Canadian forces into\nbattle without consultation?\nThe Conservatives, who took a strong line\non Parliament's rights and on undue American influence when they were in the Opposition, must now expect to be challenged\non these issues themselves when the occasion\narises. They are likely to be questioned again\nabout the defense agreement since their recent answers were not entirely clear.\nThere will be no harm in this. Within\nsafety limits, it's right and proper that the\npublic should know how the single command\nis going to work and be assured that the\nprotocal is in order. But there's not much\npractical value left in scruples about military\nsovereignty in the present context of world\naffairs.\nFor better or for worse, Canada and the\nU.S. are now bound in a defensive partnership that's far stronger than any mere alliance. The North American geographical\nunit is also, necessarily and irrevocably, a\nmilitary unit in the atomic-ballistic era.\nThere's an excellent chance that a third\nworld, war will not happen. If it does, Canada\nand the U.S. will inevitably be in it together\nfrom the first day, hour or five minutes, with\ndue regard, one may hope, to each other's\nnational dignity bpt absolutely without delay.\nCanada's military independence would\nthen be wholly irrelevant for the duration;\nthough it's reasonable to hope that Canadian\nviews on the conduct of hostilities would\ncarry some weight.\nThere are fields of policy in which Can-\nad 's separate national rights need to be\nasserted, but at the present time defense\nIsi.'t one of them. Canada in this sphere of\naction, has surrendered some .of its freedom\nof action. So, of course, have its allies. Sacrifice of this kind will probably have to continue, even to the point of global co-operation\nin the control of arms, if the world is to become safe again. Wholly new ideas about the\nust or rather non-use of weapons may be\nessential for human survival.\n\u2014Financial Post.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot '\nparoono asking quoctlons will not be\npublished. There ia no charge tor this\n\u2022ervlce, QUESTIONS WILL, NOT BE\nANSWERED BV MAIL except where\nthere ti obvloup necessity tor privacy\nM. M. L\u201e Nelson\u2014Would you please give me\ninstructions for making papier maclie?\nThe following are the ingredients necessary to make a lump of papier mache a little\nlarger than an ordinary baseball: Wet paper\npulp (dry paper, one ounce; water, three\nounces), four ounces avoirdupois; dry plaster\nof paris, eight ounces avoirdupois; hot glue,\nhalf gill, or four and one-half tablespoonsful.\nWhile the paper pulp is being prepared melt\nsome best Irish glue in gluepot and make it of\nthe same thickness, and consistency as that\nused by cabinetmakers. Measure different ingredients to be used until the result teaches\nyou what good papier mache is like, and after\nthat you can be guided by your own judgment\nas you proceed. On taking the paper pulp\nfrom the water give it a gentle squeeze, but\nby no means squeeze it as dry as you can.\nNow put it in a bowl, put over it three table-\nspoonsful of your hot glue, and stir mass into\nsoft and sticky paste. Next add plaster of\nparis and mix in thoroughly. By the time you\nhave used about throe ounces of the plaster\nthe mass should be so dry and thick you can\nhardly work it. Now add remainder of glue,\nwork it up until it becomes sticky again, then\nadd the rest of the plaster. Squeeze vigorously\nthrough your fingers to thoroughly mix the\nmass and work it until it is free from lumps,\nis finely kneaded, and is sticky enough to\nstick fast to the surface of a planed board\nwhen you rub a bit on it by firm pressure of\nthe finger. If it is too dry to stick fast, add a\nfew drops of either glue or water (It makes\nlittle difference which), and work up again.\nIn using, the lump should be kept moist by\nmeans of wet cloth laid over it. When rubbed\nupon a pane of glass Ihe papier mache made\nas above stuck tightly and dried hard in\nthree hours without cracking, and could only\nbe removed with a knife. When spread thin,\nas paper, it dried hardenougli in 18 hours to\nwax. and, without 'cracking, was as hard as\nwood.\nM. 0., Slocan Park\u2014Where should one apply\nfor employment as janitor or fireman for\nsteam heating at the new hospital in\nNelson which is being built?\nApply at the National Employment Offices, Gray Building, Vernon Street, Nelson.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of\ngenuine Interest are welcome if they are\nbrief, goourate and fair. No letter will be\ninserted In whole, or In part, except over\nthe signature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nSuggest Wage Rates\nCut Winter Employment\nTO the Editor:\nSir\u2014In reference to your editorial of\nNovember 26 which states that doing the\njob now will reduce unemployment, I would\nlike to say that there are a lot of elderly\npeople who would like to have jobs done for\nthem if they could afford to pay the wages\ndemanded nowadays. The man who is out\nof work is prevented from taking a job at\na lower rate than that set by his particular\nunion, and fears that what he receives may\nbe deducted from his unemployment insurance.\nElderly people of limited incomes, pensioners or those unable to do these jobs for\nthemselves, cannot pay $20,. a day for a\ncarpenter, or the present rates demanded\nby plumbers, paintors, etc. There was a\ntime when men saved part of their Summer\nwages to tide them over the Winter. That,\nunder present circumstances, is next to impossible.\nWith so many things offered for sale on\nthe installment plan, the high cost of living\nis blamed for high wages. It Is also a fact\nthat we live too extravagantly, buying from\nhand to mouth. We are constantly offered\ntemptations to buy goods in packages which\ncontain premiums intended to deceive us\ninto thinking we are getting something for\nnothing, forgetting that the price of thi\npremium reduces Ihe value of the article\nbought.\nCHARLES BEBBINGTON\nNelson, B.C.\nTo love life through labor is to be intimate with life's inmost secret.\n-KahlH Gibran.\nThey'll Do It Every Time       .\u00bb-.\u00ab,..,-,       By Jimmy Hatlol\nIOOCSK4TE, THE\nBUYER, IS VERy\nCONSIDERATE OF\nTHE SALESMEN \u2022\u2022>\nHE SETS ASIDE\nAH ALLOTTED\nTIME TO SEE\nTHEM ALL-'\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nI have learned in whatsoever\nstate I am, therewith to be Content. Pliilllppliui.n 4:11.\nSome measure happiness and\ncontentment by the satisfaction of\ntheir appetites. Paul kopt his body\nunder and his soul dominant.\nfluni dtsL\nThen just at\nthe appointed\ntime all the\nbrass barge\nin,and the\nSALESBOys\nHAVEN'T GOT\nA CHANCE \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb\nOkawt ANO A TIP OF THE\nhatuoh\/ittosam~\\\\\nAlexander.,,\nIZ6B.LMST,\nHAUTTODIZ,.\nCotw.^ jf,\nOur old car is like my old hat.\nIt's still gat 1 lot of service in ft,\nbut It's quit makin' me feel respectable.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2014\u2014By Frame* Drake\u2014\u2014\u2014\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook Is, according to the stars,\nFor Saturday, Dec. 14, 1957\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Generous Influences encourage\nartistic skills, delicate matters,\nhome decorative activities. Avoid\nirritability ahd carelessness, however,\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nEncouraging rays for personal\nmatters; also for gain in your occupation or business. You will\nattain quicker advancement if you\nkeep disposition cheerful and move\nwith decisiveness, however.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nThis day invites vigor and enterprise. Be your skillful self and you\nIt's Up To Ike\nSays Senator\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Senator\nMike Mansfield said Thurs. President Eisenhower faces the job in\nParis of making NATO into a\n\"going concern\" instead of \"a\nsymbol of defence.\"\nMansfield, assistant Democratic leader from Montana and\na member of the Senate foreign relations committee, returned from a European survey\nwith the convictioft that the North\nAtlantic Treaty Organization is\ndisintegrating.\nSenator Theodore Green, chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, took a different\nview Wednesday. He said his observations in Europe indicated to\nhim that NATO is not falling\napart. But Green said Eisenhower ought to provide some dramatic demonstration of leadership at the.Paris conference to\ngive the alliance new life.\nMansfield said he thinks Eisen-\nower's presence is likely to spur\nthe forthcoming NATO summit\nconference to greater efforts than\notherwise might have been made\ntoward unifying and expanding\nthe West's defences. But Mansfield said in an interview the job\nof making NATO effective Is\ngoing to be difficult.\nTIME FOR ACTION\n\"The president still *has a\ngreat amount of prestige in Europe,\" Mansfield said. \"But he is\ngoing to have to get down to bedrock with our allies. NATO can't\ncontinue to exist as a symbol of\ndefence and not a shield.\n\"The president has got to see\nthat it is made a going concern.\nHe has got to see that it becomes\na really mutual defence organization.\"\nEisenhower will fly to Paris\nFriday.\nMansfield expressed the hope\nthat at, that conference Eisenhower \"will insist on the establishment of a NATO scientific\npool \u25a0which will bring together the\ncollective talents of the Western\nnations as the first step in remaking the organization.\"\nMansfield said he believes Eisenhower can count on the support\nof Congress if any legislation is\nneeded.\nBefore Eisenhower can promise to give other NATO nations\ninformation on the actual 'fabrication of nuclear weapons, Congress will, have to change restrictions in the present law.\nteer D$mpe\nSEATTLE (AP) - Deer are\ncausing extensive damage to Ea-\ncific Northwest timberlands but\nit can be effectively prevented,\na forester told delegates to the\nWestern Forestry Conference\nhere Thursday.\nF. Dave Dobbins, forester for\nBOoth-Kelly Lumber Co., Springfield, Ore., said his own firm estimated its annual loss of young\ntrees damaged by deer at $200,\n000.\n\"Somewhere along the line\nMother' Nature or we as forest\nand wildlife managers have allowed a cog to slip in the delicate balance between trees and\nanimals.\"  Dobbins said.\nSpeaking before more than 500\nAmerican and Canadian lumbermen, Dobbins said the \"secret\"\nOf preventing deer overpopulation\nappears to be the killing of an\nadequate number of deer before\nthe animals' range is depleted.\nAmong other talks today was\none by E. G. Marples of Powell\nRiver Co, Ltd., Vancouver, who\nurged a research program be\nconducted to develop insecticides\nstrong enough to exterminate\ntimber-killing insects and non-\nttxic to fish life.\nHe said research groups on\nboth sides of the border should\nco-operate in such a project.\n\"If we don't find an answer,\nmisinformed public opinion, fostered by minority pressure\ngroups, may seek legislation preventing spraying of insects,\" he\nsaid.\nshould succeed in worthwhile activities. Some tasks may puzzle\nyou a bit but you will enjoy working them out successfully.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancerl-\nCapitalize on talents, creative\nideas, Have faith in your ability.\nGo forward with sound determination, consistency.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nWhatever your schedule, things\nwill move more smoothly if 'you\nare diplomatic, serene, and cheery.\nA fine period for self-expression,\nartistry, family matters. Don't\novertax yourself, however.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 New gains likely now.\nDon't be stymied by being too\nreserved or by lack of faith in\nyour own ability. Make some time\nfor rest and relaxation.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 A happy outlook for\nheart interests, domestic matters,\nthe arts, music, reading, intellectual pursuits. Be up-to-the-minute\nin thoughts, objectives, effort. Good\nhumor important, too.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 A resolute heart never\nrejects good counsel or doubts the\noutcome of earnest endeavor. Day\nhas booth advantages and disadvantages. You be the wise judge.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 A sensible\nthought for today: Contradiction\nshould awaken attention \u2014 not\nanger. Be your most gracious self\nand you will w\/n.\nDECEMBER 22 tO JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Though charity begins at home, don't let it end\nthere. Spread it around; others\nwill be better off and you will be\nthe richer for it. Also be steadily\nattentive to duties.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Speed up necessary\ntasks, thereby earning more leisure time. Participate in a healthy\nsport, a hobby, a do-it-yourself\nproject. Watch out for careless\nmistakes, however, and be alert\nagainst schemers.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Gentleness and tolerance (both innate assets of yours)\nwill aid you tremendously during\nthis challenging period. Finish\nroutine tasks and take some time\nfor pleasant diversion. Avoid\nworry.\nYOU BORN TODAY are cheerful, initiative, generous. You are\noften humorous and are generally\nwell liked because of your practical, sympathetic nature. But your\nquality of frankness can get you\ninto some tight spots if you let\noutspokenness outweigh discretion.\nVersatility is high in this sector\nand, with your industriousness\nadded, there should be no limits to\nyour achievement \u2014 in more than\none direction, too. Keep your head\nwhen sympathies are aroused, and\ndon't let your, great energy turn\ninto over-zealoiisness. Birthdate of:\nTychj Brahe, Danish agronomer:\nGeneral James Doolittre, noted\nU.S. flyer.\nKing Features\nBritish Paper Backs Pearson\nLONDON \u00abJP) - The News\nChronicle supports the call by\nL. B. Pearson, former Canadian\nexternal affairs minister, for a\nfresh initiative in international\naffairs.\nThe Liberal newspaper, which\ngives prominence to Pearson's\nspeech in Oslo Wednesday, says\neditorially it \"agrees\" with the\nNobel Peace Prize winner that\nallied statesmen have concentrated too much on rockets and\nnot .enough on economic aid, too\nlittle on diplomacy and too much\non divisions.\n\"What is wanted in the West,\"\nsays the paper, \"and especially\nhi Washington, is a reawakening\nof the imaginative spirit of the\nimmediate post-war years when\nthe Marshall Plan saved western\nEurope from collapse and communism.\"\nPearson waS expected in London on his way back to\nCanada. He and Mrs. Pearson are\nto stay for a few days at the official residence of the Canadian\nhigh commissioner George Drew.\nIT'S ALL COUGH-FIGHTING\nMEDICATION\nB\nUCKLEY'O\nMIXTURE 0\nTop Qualify....\nDOG FOODS\nGive Your Dog a Treat . . .\nDr. Bollards New\nBURGERBITS\nA meatier dog food. Provides all essential food elements\nyour dog normally needs to keep happy and healthy.\n2 Ib. package     .42\n25 Ib. bag          4.10\nNew Instant THRIVO Pre-Baked\nDOG FOOD CRUMBLES\nThe complete food \u2014 for all dogs.\n5 Ib. package  :  .85\n10 Ib. package   $1.50\n25 Ib. bag     $3.20\nBuckerfields\nHomogenized Dog Meal Crumbles\n\"The food of champions.\"\n5 Ib. pkg 60     10 Ib. pkg 1.17\n25 Ib. bag  2.60    50 Ib. bag   4.90\nKeep your dog healthy and happy by feeding this\nECONOMICAL,   HANDY   and   PROVEN   DOG   FOOD.\nICE\nWorks 30 times faster than salt.\ngoes a long way. 10-lb..bag \t\nCHASER\nA little\n$3.49\nWorpt Plastic Window Materials\nHold in heat. \u2014 Keep out cold.\nUnaffected by great temperature extremes.\n8ISALGLAZE \u2014 Clean, flexible, strong. Q\u00a3Llf'\n36\" wide. Lineal yard  *    jOt\n42\" wide. Lineal yard   $1.12\nGLASS-O-NET \u2014 *5Q^\n36\" wide. Lineal foot  _   JL S'r'\nFLEX-O-GLASS \u2014 *> Qlt\n36\" wide. Lineal foot  _   A,\/!*\nWYR-0-GLA8S \u2014 CQ\u00abt\n36\" wide. Lineal foot  _    3\/r\nSNOW SHOVELS\nD-Handle \"King\", black iron   $3.70\nD-Handle,  aluminum     $4.50\nLang Handle \"Prince\"   $3.18\nNelson Farmers Supply\nLIMITED\n524 Railway St. \u2014\nOPEN    MONDAYS   TILL   NOON\nPhone 174\niO HOME FOR    1\nvia GREYHOUND\nfor savings and safety!\nSettle back in a well-heated Greyhound bus\n... and enjoy the passing Christmas scenery\nas one of the world's finest chauffeurs drives '\nyou homel Remember, National Safety\nCouncil and Greyhound records prove you\nare 54 times safer by Greyhound than by car!\nBARGAIN CHRISTMAS FARES\nfrom NELSON to:\nOne Way Round Trip\nCalgary   .$12.25 $22.05\n^enficton _,~     7.75 13.95\nVancouver \u00ab.. 13.15 23.70\n{|' For full information contact the Greyhound Bus\nDepot, 686 Baker Street, Nelson, or Telephone\n800, or see your local Greyhound Agent.\nGREYHOUND\n\\  Today's Best Buy ut, Ck\/&fy*as \/\/otiday 7ta4>vC \/\n\\\n\\,\nillllimmmiimiimiii\nAlUlinUimimiiulllUllU'\n 2>3\u00b0i\nL\nA bout-the Town\nPHONE 1844\nA miscellaneous shower honoring\nMiss Barbara Brown who is to\nbe married lo William Lees Beatty\non Saturday, December 28, was\nheld at the home of Mrs. H. M.\nWhimster, 407 Third  Street.  Co-\nMrs. Sinclair\nHeads Group\nThe Fellowship Study Group of\nthe First Presbyterian Church held\nits annual meeting Wednesday at\nthe home of Mrs. L. Johnson, 309\nHall Mines Road. Mrs. A. G. Sinclair was reelected as president\nfor the new term, and those chosen\nto assist her were vice-president,\nMrs. R. McCreight; secretary, Mrs.\nJ. Klein, and treasurer Mrs. A.\nEuerby. Committee conveners will\nbe, study, Mrs. A. Peters, sewing\nMrs. M. Terry and visiting, Mrs.\nL. Johnson. At the close of a very\nsuccessful year plans were made\nfor projects to be undertaken in\n1958.\nYULE PARTY\nTO BE GIVEN\nSALMO GUIDES\nSALMO \u2014 Arrangements for a\nChristmas party to be sponsored\nagain this year for Guides and\nBrownies were made by members\nof the Salmo Guide Association at\ntheir monthly meeting at the home\nof Mrs. C. M. Esche.\nThe Association will also donate\nfunds to the girls for the purchase\nof handicraft materials. A discussion took place in regard to the\nannual mother and daughter banquet to be held in February.\nMembers decided to send o 1 d\nclothing, left from a rummage sale,\nto a factory to be made into a\nsleeping bag which will be offered in a contest in the spring.\nhostesses were Mrs. G. B. Arnesen,\nMrs. G. C. Arnesen, and Miss\nMolly Arnesen.\n* *  *\nRev. and Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson,\n504 Mill Street, have returned from\nthe Coast where they visited their\nson in Vancouver and their daughter in Victoria.\n* #  * .\nThomas Hunt of Lethbridge, who\nspent several weeks in Nelson\nwhile with, the RAF during the\nwar years, was in the city Thursday renewing old acquaintances.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. Robert. Phillips\nand small son, formerly of Vancouver, have taken up residence at\n410 Richards Street. \u2022\n* *   * .\nGeorge Green, 556 Ward Street,\nleaves today to visit his sister in\nSan Mateo, California.\nEDGEWATER LA\nTO IMPROVE\nV-^'ON  HALL\nINVERMERE - Mrs. Monty\nTegart was elected president of\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary to Edgewater\nbranch, Canadian Legion, at the\nannual meeting. Vice-president is\nMrs. T. Romane, secretary-treasurer, Mrs. B. Neilson, and serg-\neant-at-arms, Mrs. D. Tegart.\nExecutive members are Mrs. R.\nW. Beamish, Mrs. E. Hanson and\nMrs. G. Lutz. Standard bearer is\nMrs. F. Neraasen,\nThe presidents report included\ndonations to the Girl Guides, to\nthe Edgewater Clinic, the Edge-\nwater Community Hall, the Edge-\nwater PTA scholarship, Legion\nZone Council, Shaughnessy Military Hospital, Essondale and\nTranquille.\nThis year the group will concentrate on the Legion hall as a\nproject.\nMrs. Beamish presented the\npast president's pin to retiring\npresident, Mrs. E. Bolinski.\nQUEEN ELIZABETH carefully scrutinizes a statue of herself which has stirred a contorvcrsy in London art circles. Now\non exhibition at the 228th exhibition of the Royal Society of British\nArtists, the work is that of a Nigerian artist, Benedict Enwonwu.\nOne critic Insisted that he felt \"a distinct Africanization of the\nfeatures.\" ..\nf\u00abf<t<f<t<c<<<ttctecttt<wctg!ctftc!ftct<tftf^\nat-home fashions\nshe'll love\nJust about the nicest way's we\nknow of to wish her a happy\nYuletide . . . these lovely, love-\nable at-home fashions \u2014 pants\nand jacket duos as comfortable\nto lounge in as they are good to\nlook at! $| J  Q c\nPriced from       13.V2\nRobes - Dusters\nRobes as festive as the holiday season, as\nwarm as your holiday wishes, and as fash-\nji, iooable as he tould wish for.\n.\u00ab.      NYLON   DUSTERS\n.IT^   from  \t\n|\\      '  QUILTED DUSTERS\n\u00bb*       from   \t\nROBES\nfrom   ....\n8.98\n1K95\n14.95\n*s\ni\u00ab!gi\u20ac!\u00abte<ei\u00abnti\u00ab'si\u00ab-i\u00abi\u00abisie\u00abiai8ieiEisiaieia<t<si\u00abi\u00abiirI\nI SPECIAL TO MALES!\n{ Special assistance in solving your\n| problems and Gift Wrapped too\n_Mtk\u00bbitiMiMMiMMlM)iMtKMi>*MiBili>^\nSlips\nJust about the nicest ways\nwe know to wish her a happy\nYuletide. A slip is always\nwelcome. ^   OC\nPrices from     3.SJ\nWl Elects\nMrs. Brewster\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Election oi\nofficers was the main business of\nthe annual meeting of the Women's\nInstitute held in the hall here.\nHonorary president is Mrs. J. D.\nYeatman, honorary vice-president;\nMrs. Kenna^gh of Nelson; president Mrs, N. Brewster; vice-president, Mrs. H. E. Dahlquist; treasurer, Mrs. Axworthy; secretary,\nMrs. C. M. Murray and director,\nMrs. Baker, Sr.\nThe institute will sponsor a drive\nto collect clothing and comforts\nfor the Nelson Hostel for Aged\nMen.\nThe secretary reported a successful year with all commitments\nmet.\nChristening Held\nFor Boswell Children\nBOSWELL\u2014A double christening\nceremony was performed here by\nRev. R. N. S. Craig of Creston.\nThe daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nN. E. Bainbridge was given the\nnames Carol Elizabeth. Her godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Bainbridge and Mrs. E. Whitney. The\nyoung son of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nHewitt received the names Donald\nLawrence, and those named as\ngodparents were Mr. and Mrs. Roy\nKoch and W. Hewitt. Later Mrs.\n#ainbridge and Mrs: Hewitt were\njoint hostesses at a christening\nparty at the Hewitt home.\nBoswell Man Weds\nIn California\nBOSWELL-Of interest to Boswell is the marriage in California\nof Richard D. Embrec of Sacramento and Boswell, and Alicia Sue\nDaishi of Los Angeles.\nThe newlyweds expect to spend\na weeks at Christmas' time at the\nhome of the groom's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Embree of Boswell.\n'%udbi\u00a3Aa#L\nPRACTICAL GIFT\nCapture this butterfly with your\ncrochet hook. The plain filet crochet is set off by touches of the\nlace stitch.\nPattern 609; crochet directions\n[or chair back 1214 x 16 inches, arm\nrest 6 x 12\u2014in No. 50 cotton. Use\nfor scarf ends, buffet sets.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\ntor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Frpnt St., W., Toronto\n6nt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatlrens for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book, plus dozens of\nother new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery, iron\nons, novelties. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book NOW \u2014\nwith gift pattern printed In itl\n*i\u00bbk>ii!tJiSiSi\u00bbi:\nTALK ON FAITH GIVEN\nTO PYTHIAN SISTERS\nAt a well-attended meeting this\nweek, Mrs. Olive Jansen, district\ndeputy grand chief, paid her official visit to Nelson temple, Pythian Sisters. The theme for her inspiring address was \"Faith and\nFriendship.\"\nNew officers were elected for the\ncoming term. Installation will take\nplace in January.\nMrs. James Bereau reported on\ntWfe financial assistance for physiotherapy being given to a cerebral\npalsy-child at Krestova.\nHostesses for the meeting were\nMrs. L. Ott and Mrs. Laura Kirby.\nPresbyterian Bazaar\nHas Festive Setting\nWith a bowl of white chrysanthemums and red carnations centering the tea table, and sparkling\nlittlerChristmas trees and bouquets\nsetting off the guests' tables, the\nRefrigerator\nDesserts Among\nEasiest To Make\nBy MARGARET CARR\nCool and lusciously rich, refrigerator desserts are easier to make\nthan many desserts. Best of all,\nthey can be made well ahead of\ntime.\nToday's two new recipes you\nwill want to keep in your card\nfile. Both use cereal as a crust\nor a crunchy topping. If you have\nshied away from cereal desserts,\nreconsider \u2014 although similar' to\ngraham cracker crusts, the cereal\nis flavorful and delicious as well\nas' extra good in nutritional value.\nCrust\nCHOCOLATE MOUSSE PIE\nOne-third cup butter, melted;\nIVi cups crushed sugar-coated\ncereal, 2 tablespoons sugar.\nMix all ingredients. Press evenly\ninto 8 or 9-inch pie pan. Bake at\n375 degrees F. for,8 to 10 minutes.\nChill. Fill with chocolate mousse,\nFilling\nOne tablespoon unflavored gelatin, 3 tablespoons water, 1 cup\nchocolate syrup, 2 cups whipping\ncream, M. cup sifted icing sugar\nVi teaspoon salt.\nSoften gelatin in water and dissolve over hot water. Stir into chocolate syrup. Combine cream, icing\nsugar, salt in chilled bowl and whip\nuntil stiff. Fold into chocolate mixture. Pour into pie crust. Chill 3\nto 4 hours.\nLEMONDOWN FANCY\nOne-quarter cup butter, 1-3 cup\nbrown sugar (packed), 114 cups\nwheat flakes, 1-3 cup chopped nuts,\n3 egg whites, Vi cup sugar, 3 egg\nyolks, 1 cup whipping cream, grated rind of 1 lemon, juice of 1\nlemon (4 tablespoons).\nMelt butter in saucepan. Blend\nin brown sugar. Cook over low\nheat, stirring constantly to \"crack'\nstage, 250 degrees F. (temperature\nat which a small amount cracks\nagainst side of cup when dropped\nin cold water). Take from heat.\nAdd wheat flakes, nuts. Stir until\nwell coated. Spread mixture thin\non baking sheet. Cool.\nBeat egg whites until stiff. Gradually add sugar. Beat egg yolks\nuntil thick and lemon-colored; fold\ninto meringue. Mix the whipping\ncream, lemon rind and juice and\nbeat until stiff. Fold into egg mixture. Butter -8-inch square pan or\n7 x 10-inch refrigerator,tray. Crum\nble nut crunch .'mixture into small\npieces. Sprinkle half into pan. Pour\nin filling and sprinkle rest of nut\ncrunch mixture on top. Freeze\nquickly until firm. Cut into squares\nor slices. Serves 9 to 12.\nhall of the Trinity-St. Paul's\nUnited Church had a festive air for\nthe Presbyterian Church Christmas\ntea and bazaar on Wednesday\nafternoon. The tea, which was well\nattended, was convened by Mrs.\nW. A. Manson. Mrs. D. T. Heddle\nreceived the guests.\nPouring were Mrs. G. Sinclair,\nMrs. A. R. Peters, and Mrs. N.\nWinlaw. Serving the tea were Mrs.\nW. F. Cox, Mrs. B. McCreight,\nMrs. Jackson, and Mrs. F. Selby.\nAt the bake table, goods were\nsold by Mrs. E. C. Douglas and\nMrs. Crimmond. The work table\nwas attended by Mrs. R. Wallace\nand Mrs. F. J. Klein. At the candy\ncounter, Mrs. W. Grainger and\nMiss Mary Heddle sold candy\nwhich had been made by the Sunday School girls and their mothers.\nIn charge of the tea and refreshments were Mrs. R. McCreight,\nMrs. H. H. Currie, and Mrs. A.\nEuerby.\n\"Baby Doll\nPyjamas\nBecause the lady you have\nin mind likes to feel pampered ... Gifts from our lingerie\ndepartment \u2014 so pretty, yet\npractical. Baby\nDoll Pyjamas\n>i\u00bbftifia^\u00bb.>I'.!:>.3:JJ.a_!,.!'.S,5A!>rJi\u00bblgl\u00ab*\u00bbt\u00bbS)Jf\u00bb3iS!,feaj,\nANDREW'S\n8LIPPER SALE\nIt Is not too late to take ad.\nvantage of the outstanding\nvalues offered at Andrew's during our Christmas Slipper Sale,\nWe have quality slippers that\nyou will be proud to give as a\ngift, at prices that you really\ncan afford. For example, our\nDaniel Green slippers are all\npriced at $5.95 and these were\nall originally $7.95 to $9.96,\nThere are corduroys In green,\nyellow, red, black and satin\nnumbers In pink and light\nblue to choose from,\nWo have hundreds of other\nquality women's slippers which\nare priced from $1.95 to $5,50\nwhich have all been reduced\nIn price for this event.\nOur children's seleotlon of\nslippers have been reduced to\n$1.00 to $2.95.\nThe boys' slippers are now\nplrced from $1.95 to $3,95.\nThe men's slipper section has\nreal values to offer. Our prices\non the men's slippers start at\n$1.95 to $8.95. We have top\nquality men's kid leather opera\nslippers which have been reduced over $2.00 a pair. The\n$1.95 lines were erlglnally $4.95,\nWe also have Gift Certificates which can be used for\nall members of the family. We\nhave special certificates for\nNaturallzer shoes which Include a miniature shoe box containing a tiny shoe. We also\nhave gift certificates for Hartt\nmen's shoes so that the man\nIn your life can rr)ake his own\nselection  later on.\nThis year give a gift that Is\nremembered all year, SLIPPERS.\nOur Square Dance Shoes\nhave Just arrived, Black or\nwhite kid Inathor. This Is the\nregulation shoe worn In Vancouver,\nANDREW'S\n679 Bakor St. Phone 633\nPYTHIAN SISTER\nSLATE NAMED\nSALMO \u2014 Officers were elected\nat the annual meeting of Twin\nTemple, Pythian Sister. Mrs. C.\nFletcher is past chief pro tern,\nMrs. C. Morris, chief; Mrs, R.\nPiper, senior; Mrs. I. Esche, junior; Mrs. M. Peters, manager;\nMrs. V. Ponti, guard; Mrs. F.\nPapeau, protector; Mrs. F. Henderson, secretary; Mrs. ,M. Dixon,\ntreasurer, and Mrs. Motley, pianist.\nMembers decided to accept an\ninvitation from the Knights of\nPythias to hold a joint installation\nin January. Mrs. M. John was\nelected as installing officer, with\nMrs. V. Gibbon and Mrs. B. Harris as her assitants.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 \u2014 S\nMinister Speaks\nTo Church Circle\nRev. K. Imayoshi was guest\nspeaker when the Dorothy Franklin Mission Circle held its December meeting at the home of Mrs.\nFrank Aikins, 301 Beasley Street.\nThree members of the senior\nmission circle were welcomed as\nvisitors. Mrs.. B. J. Hoskins and\nMrs. W. J. Haldane were in charge\nof the devotional \"period.\n0HLL lip, With.\nWcudan. WlaAiitL\nPrinted Pattern\nFOR HALF-SIZERS\nRows of tucking soften the neckline of this printed Patern for half-\nsizers. The skirt has an easy flare\nthat is fashionable, graceful. Proportioned to ' fit \u2014 no alteration\nproblems.\nPrinted Pattern 9084: Half Sizes\n14V4, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22V4, 24%.\nSize 16% requires 4% yards 35-\ninch fabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c) In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please\nprint plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.\nToronto, Ont.\nART FESTIVAL\nVancouver's first annual arts\nfestival starting July 19 is among\nfeatures of British Columbia's 1958\ncentennial.\nLast Two Days\nof Our\n22nd Birthday Sale\nFREE TURKEY WITH ALL BELOW\nChesterfield and Lounge Suites\n2 Chairs, Sofa, 2 Step\n$299.00\n$169.50\n6 pc. Sofa Suite in plastic\nTables, Coffee Table.\nFREE TURKEY -..._\t\n2 pc.   Lounge Suite in hard wearing freize. Chair\nis Rocker.\nFREE TURKEY\t\n3 fie. Sectional Suite in a very attractive green\nfreize and d*0\u00a3A CA\nFREE TURKEY     $007.DU\n2 pc. Sofa Suite covered in your choice of chocolate\nor beige Mohair freize. d\u00bbOOA CA\nand FREE TURKEY _'_ $OoV.DU\n2 pc. Suite, airfoam cushions, smart looking lovely\ngreen freize and FREE TURKEY.\nAnd Many Other Birthday Values With a\nFREE TURKEY\nBedroom   Suites\nBeautiful 3 pc. double dresser suite in Desert Sand\nFREE TURKEY   _ $279.50\nTerrific value in this Three-Piece Suite in gorgeou*\nSand Mahogany.\nand FREE TURKEY\t\nEastern    Hardwood\nMahogany.\nFREE TURKEY\t\n$179.50\nSuits   In  glowing  Cordovan\n $279.50\n3 pc. Suite in.glowing Tanbark Mahogany, all Eastern hardwood construction. (tO^ft OO\nand FREE TURKEY $ JOt.OO\nFrench Provincial at its best. This lovely suite is In\nfine mellow Cherrywood. & Af\\ft AA\nand FREE TURKEY $4U7.UU\nAbove Are a Few ef the Many\nOUTSTANDING VALUES IN OUR GIANT\nBIRTHDAY SALE\nSAVE ON YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS\nFROM THE STORE\nWHERE YOUR DOLLARS BUY MORE\nJhssmw\/iL\nSanta To Visit\nWindermere Party\nINVERMERE - The annual\nWindermere District Women's Institute Christmas party for all\nchildren of the district will be\nstaged here Tuesday. The highlight\n\u25a0will be the visit of Santa Claus\nFAMED EXPLORERS\nFirst white men to visit the site\nof Winnipeg were Sieur de la\nVerendrye and two of his sons in\n1738.\nwhich will follow a program of\nchildren's films. Convener of the\nevent is Mrs. Charles Osterloh.\nIRENE'S\n569 Ward St\nMILLINERY AND\nDRESS  SHOP\nPhone 50\nPre-Christmas\nDress Clearance\nGroup 1\nValues  to $12.93\nOnly\n$5.95\nGroup 2\nValues to $19.95\nOnly\n$9.95\n++       Friday Night Special       ++\n10% OFF WINTER COATS\nPractical.. . . Sure to Please\n\u00a3nsi\nw\nFOR   HER\nSlippers\nSkates\nPurses\nDress Shoes\nSki-Boots\nSnow-Boots\nCurling Boots\nFeaturing the famous\nKen Watson Curling Boot\nTHE     WHOLE     FAMILY\nFOR   HIM\nSlippers\nDress Shoes\nSki-Boots\nSkates\nSnow Boots\nRipons\nfor the Children\n+    SLIPPERS *   COWBOY BOOTS\nSKATES\nRIPONS\nENGINEER BOOTS\nPARTY SHOES\nThis year choose a practical, welcome gift- \u2014 from the\nlarge stock at Lyons, , . , Something tor every member\not the family, be It for Mom, Dad, Sister, Brother.\nALL GIFTS EXCHANGEABLE\n411\nBaker  St.\nPhong\n1114*\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957\nMACMILLAN'S\nGRANDCHILDREN\nENJOY WESTERNS\nLONDON (CP)-Prime Minister Maemillan, a proud grandfather, has a ready-made group\nfor children's parties during the\nChristmas season.\nHis grandchildren\u2014all 12 of\nthem\u2014are in the age range for\nyuletide revels.\nThe festivities started Wednesday with a tea party at 10 Downing Street, the premier's residence and a most unlikely spot\nfor high jinks.\nBut  after  the   tea   and  sand-\nTOYMAKE11S GET RAISE\nLONDON (Reuters) - British\ntoymakers today won an early\npresent for their own Christmas\nstockings. The 30,000 men who\nfill Santa Claus's sleigh were\nawarded pay raises of up to nine\nshillings and fourpence ($1,311 a\nproved by Labor Minister Iain\nweek, in a labor agreement ap-\nMacledd.\nwiches \u2014 Lady Dorothy Macmillan's idea\u2014a western film put\nthe youngsters in a mood for\ncowboys and Indians.\nDowning Street inlormants  report the noise was terrific.\nWhat has age to do\nwith borrowing money?\nAge in a company spells experience.\nBecauBe HFC is backed by 79 years'\nexperience, you may borrow with confidence. You get prompt attention,\nrepayment terms tailored to your needs,\npeace of mind about money matters. Do\nas two generations have done, Borrow\nwith confidence from Household Finance.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nCM\/rttd&M rf Ccuuuto>\nS. G. Bernard, Manager\n608 Balcer Street Telephone 1890\nNELSON\nlew York's Resiles* Millions\nSuffer From Strike Results\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNEW YORK (CP)\u2014A complete\nstall of this city's subway system could be almost compared\nto a blocked artery in the brain.\nSudden paralysis would result.\nNew    York's    restless    millions\nwould have no  way  to get between their homes and their jobs,\nto say nothing of their other pursuits.\nPerhaps no other city is so\nmuch at the mercy of its transit\nsystem as New York, especially\nthe island borough of Manhattan,\nwhich swallows hordes of humans daily, then disgorges them\nto the sister boroughs. and suburbs each evening.\nThe 238-mile subway system\ncarries 4,500,000 persons daily\nand 3,548,333,000 annually\u2014more\nthan all the railways of the\nUnited States put together.\nSWEARED AT, PRAISED\nThe three subway companies-\nintegrated since 1940 into one\nmunicipaliy-owned system \u2014 is\ncriticized, and even cursed, by\nits patrons, who- nevertheless\nswear that it is the fastest and\nsafest way known to get around.\nIn Brooklyn alone, the biggest\nof the five boroughs wilh a population of 2,800,000, the subways\ncarry an estimated 1,200,000 per\nsons each working day. New\nYork's total population is 8,000,-\n000.\nThe Transit Authority says a\n10-car train carries about 2,500\nat the rush hour. Rocking along\nin the narrow tunnels, the trains\ngive the impression of reckless\nspeed, but the limit is set at 50\nmiles an hour.\nOTHER TRANSPORTATION\nBesides the subway commuters, many thousands of folk converge on Manhattan each day by\nmeans of the New York Central\nRailway, the Long Island Railroad, buses and their own cars.\nBut many of these, including\nNew York Central passengers\nfrom wealthy Westchester County\nto the north, depend on the subways to get them from the rail\nterminal to their offices.\nThe Transit Authority operates\nmany bus routes\u201469 in Brooklyn and 32 in Queens\u2014but, these\nare concerned mostly with getting passengers to subway stops.\nBuses are unable to cope with\nthe inter-borough crowds.\nThe Long Island Railroad, trying to take up the slack in the\nsubway strike in Queens and dozens of Long Island towns, put all\navailable gear into .'service. But\nit could not match the service of\nsubway trains which were scheduled for every three minutes.\nmmmsm\n\\................ j\nEXTRA...\nthe gasoline that stops both\ncold weather stalling and gas\nline freezing is available\nonly at the pumps of\nImperial Esso Dealers.\nCanada's first gasoline\ndesigned specifically\nto overcome these common\nhazards, it has been used\nand approved by hundreds of\nthousands of motorists\nsince it was introduced\nthree years ago.\nGet trouble-free driving all winter-\nfill up today with ESSO\nalways LOOK TO IMPERIAL for the best\nIMPERIAL\n\u00a3sso\nDEALER\nChristmas Trade Low\nFor Powell River\nPM To Protest Boost In\nU.S. Lead-Zinc Tariffs\nPOWELL RIVER, B.C. (CP) -\nThe first pinch of an economic\nslump resulting from closure of\nthe world's largest newsprint mill\nis being felt at this British Columbia coastal town.\nThe mill, operated by the Powell\nRiver Company and employing\n1800 of the. town's 10,000 residents,\nhas been idle for a month through\na strike of B.C. pulp and paper\nworkers. With the drying up of\nthe company's $800,000 monthly\npayroll, smaller businesses fear\nthey also may be forced to close.\nEstimates of the business slump\nrange from 20 to 75 per cent, depending: on the type of business.\n\"Business is bad,\" says Jim\nMavis, president of the board of\ntrade and part owner of an oi! distributing firm. \"Everything was\ndependent on the mill. The strike\ncould' break us,\" '\nHOTEL LAYS OFF 40\nAcross the street from the mill,\nwhich produces five per cent of\nthe newsprint supply, is the town's\nsecond largest business \u2014 the\nHotel Rodmay. Owner Charlie\nMantoani is slinging beer himself\nafter being forced to.lay off 40 of\nhis 70 employees. \"I've never\nknown anything so tough.\"\nChuck W. Harrison, owner of\na furniture store, looks ruefully\nat the stock he laid in for Christmas. There is no Christmas trade.\nHe has cut his staff to five from 11.\nHerb Entress, owner of Cranberry Motors, had six employees'\na year ago. Now only he is left.\nHis brother, a part owner, is pulling out.\nPowell River is 75 miles up-\ncoast from Vancouver. The mill\nis one of nine throughout B.C., was\nclosed Nov. 14 by a strike of 6000\nmembers of the International\nBrotherhood of Pulp and Sulphite\nWorkers and the United Paper-\nmakers and Paper Mill Workers.\nThe.unions are demanding a 12\nper cent wage increase. They rejected an offer by the seven companies involved of VA per cent.\nFEW LEAVE TOWN\nMurray Mouat, president of\nLocal 76 of the pulp-sulphite\nworkers, says the morale of the\nstrikers is good. Only 3d or 40\nmen have left town and \"we are\nquite satisfied with the situation\nat the present time.\"\nBut the union is apparently taking no chances. A strike bulletin\nadmonished \"a number of dissenters within our ranks\" and one\nbusinessman said:\n\"I.have to watch what I say. If\nI criticised the union I wouldn't\nhave any business.\"\nMany merchants, however,_ are\nhelping the strikers. A ba'kery\nsupplies doughnuts to a canteen\nset up for pickets outside the mill.\nA barber gives free haircuts. A\ntaxi firm offers to take expectant\nmothers to hospital free of charge.\nThe strikers, who get union\nstrike pay of $10 a week if they\nare single and $15 plus $1 for each\ndependent if they are married, are\nmaking their own contributions.\nVENISON IN STORAGE\n, A record number of deer were\nshot during the season and much\nof the venison is in deep-freeze\nstorage. The men are repairing\nbroken toys for the children of\nneedy families.\nThe welfare committee of Local\n76 is planning a Christmas party\nfor the children of its 1500 members. As usual, there'll be Santa\nClaus, a tree, and candy for the\nyoungsters. But this year, there'll\nbe no gifts.\nOTTAWA (CP)-Any move by\nthe United States to increase\ncustoms tariffs on lead and zinc\nwill meet with representations\nfrom the Canadian government,\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker said\ntoday.\nHe was replying in the Commons to a question from James\nByrne (L\u2014Kootenay East), in\nwhose British Columbia riding\nbase metals are smelted.\n\u25a0 Mr. Byrne said a New York\nTimes story had indicated that\nthe tariff on nickel Was to be reduced to \"mollify\" Canadians for\na prospective boost in the U.S.\nduty on lead and zinc. He\nwanted the government to, inform the U.S. state department\n12th Series Bonds\nfa* A'l-TSe His!)\nOTTAWA (CP) - Finance Minister Donald Fleming announced\nin the Commons Thursday that the\n12th series of Canada savings\nbonds reached an all-time subscription peak of $1,169,421,000 by\nDec. 10. The issue will be withdrawn from sale Dec. 31.\nHe said payroll-deduction subscriptions also reached the peak\nof $215,000,000 with 700,000 employees  participating.\nthat a e rdctuion in the nickel\ntariff; would not compensate for\nboosts on lead and zinc.\nHe. also asked that the Canadian government warn the U.S.\not \"drastic retaliatory action\" in\nthe event of lead-zinc increases.\nTOO SPORTY\n, FT. DIX, N.J. (AP) - The U.S.\nArmy is investigating reports that\nsome spit 'n' polish soldiers are\ngoing so far as to shine the bottoms of their shoes. A statement\nissued here Wednesday emphasized that this is not army1 policy.\nPrice Spreads\nCommission May\nOpen February\nEDMONTON <CP) - Dr. Andrew Stewart, chairman of the\nnewly - appointed royal commission on price spreads, said Thursday the commission may begin\nhearings in February.\nDr. Stewart, president of the\nUniversity of Alberta, returned\nhere Wednesday from Ottawa,\nwhere appointment of the seven-\nman body was announced Tuesday by Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nThe commission will investigate the spread of prices received\nby producers and prices paid by\nconsumers.\nDr. Stewart said he hopes a\npreliminary meeting of commission members can be held early\nin January to discuss plans for\nthe hearings.\nPublic hearings probably\nwould be held in . every , region\nacross Canada, if. not in every\nprovince.\nHe said no deadline has. been\nset by the government for completion of the report.\nDrives Good\nOil Bargain\nTOKYO (Reuters)\u2014A Japanese\noil company has formally signed\na contract with Saudi Arabia giving the Red Sea kingdom a 56-\nper-cent cut of all potential oil\nprofits, it was announced Thursday.\nKeen competition from Western\noil companies forced the Japanese to abandon their original 50-50\noffer of a profit split, a spokesman for the Japan-Arabian Oil\nCompany said.\nThe 40-year contract, signed in\nRiyadh Tuesday, allows the Japanese 44 per cent of all their future oil profits from exploration\nof the Persian Gulf off the neutral zone between Kuwait\" and\nSaudi Arabia.\nRENTAL PLUS BONUS\nFor this the Japanese company\nwill pay a yearly rental of $3,-\n000,000. If oil is found, the company will pay an annual bonus\nof $2,000,000 to Saudi Arabia from\nthe time exploration started.\nTaro Yamashita, chief Japanese negotiator who signed the contract, has left Riyadh for Kuwait\nto sign another contract with Kuwait authorities.\nThe Japanese spokesman said\nhis company first sought a\n50-50 profits split following the\npattern of. arrangements concluded between the United States\nand Venezuela.\nBut the Saudi Arabian authorities insisted on 56. per cent of the\nprofit?,   he   said,   which   they,|\nclaimed was applicable to  contracts with European nations.\nBritons View\nToronto Play\nLONDON (CP) - For the second time this year, a play with\na Toronto setting opened in London's West End Wednesday night.\nLike its predecessor, J. B.\nPriestley's The Glass Cage,\nwhich opened a month's run here\nlast April, the new production\nemanates from Toronto's Crest\nTheatre. But Be My Guest? is a\nTorontonian's view of her native\ncity. .\nMary Jukes,- a Toronto Globe\nand Mail columnist who worked\nfor the consumer relations\nbranch of the prices board during\nthe i Second World War, was in\nBritain last October to launch her\nfirst play on a six-week, provincial tour at Brighton.\nIn a sense, Be My Guest? is a\ncomedy version of the recent\nBroadway thriller, The Desperate\nHours, depicting the invasion of\na home in Toronto's Rosedale\ndistrict by a pair of crooks. The\naccent is on intrigue rather than\nmenace.\nUnlike The Glass Cage, which\ncame over from Canada with its\noriginal Crest Theatre cast, Be\nMy Guest? has been freshly\nstaged by British producer Anna\nDeere Wiman, who acquired the\nplay after seeing it performed in\nToronto.\nIts only Canadian actor is Winnipeg-born Gordon Tanner, who\nhas been in Britain since 1948.\nNEW TRANS-PORTABLE RADIO\nadds a new measure of listening pleasure to\nOLDSm\nMusic in the car...\nor wherever\nyou are!   ,\nOldsmobile's new Trans-\nPortable Radio serves as\nyour regular car radio, but\ncan also be unlocked and\nused as a lightweight, 160-\nhour-battery-powered\nportable!\n.   'Optional al extra etti\nNOW! SEETHE FEATURES OF THE FUTURE AT YOUR\nAUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER'S!\nHooray! Buffet-\nwith Seven-Up!\nNothing does it like Seven-Up!\n 32^3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 \u2014 7\nSLEIGH LOADS\nOF CHRISTMAS\nPrices\nEffective\nTo\nDec. 21st\nYOUR OVERWAITEA STORE\nTo Get the Finest\nTURKEY\nORDER\nTOBAt!\nSwift's Butter Ball Grade 'A' Eviscerated---Ready for\nThe Oven\nTURKEYS\n20 Ibs. and Over\nib. 5 5\n16 to 20 lbs.\nib. 57'\n10 to 16 Ibs.\nIb.\n1\nBuy Your Turkey From Overwaitea and Get a FREE Chance On\nThe two winners will be asked a simplt\nqualifying question. Draw noon Dec. 24,\nTwo Panda Dolls-Value $4.75 Each.The *winne,s \"i\"be asked',impU\nFresh Pork Riblets\nEconomical Spore Ribs;\nFinest Select Quality\nMIXED NUTS\nFresh Sausage        3!bs\nHomemade. Our own recipe. H.C.     VAw.\nRound Bone Roast Ik lO\nGrade \"A\" Red   I U\u00ab  4#   AT\nDelicated. Grade \"A\" Red.\nCube Steak      |h 59c\nNo Fat \u2014 No Sinew.\nGIFT SUGGESTIONS\nENGLISH BISCUITS in beautiful tins of every shape and size,\nBOXED CHOCOLATES, Moir's, Lowney's, Ganong's, ere,\nCIGARETTES in fancy Christmas wraps, JAPANESE ORANGES\nas family gifts, and ASSORTED CHRISTMAS FOODS to make\nup gift parcels. Our selection is the best ever. We invite you to\ncheck it over.\nOverwaitea\nMARGARINE    % Ib. pkg. 5 9\n2ib<85\nKing Oscar. .\nSardines     2,ins57e\nvaitea\nSalad Dressing*- 69c\nBrilliants and Ribbons\nHard Mixed Candy 2\u00bb\u00bb69c\n1957 BONUS PLAN WINNERS\nThe following had their names drawn, answered the qualifying questions\nand were awarded large $10.00 grocery hampers.\nNov. 30\u2014Mrs. J. C. Taylor, 224 Innes St., City.\nDec.   7\u2014Mrs. M. R. Burills, 1303 Robertson Ave., City.\nOverwaitea\nNOVEMBER     Mrs.E.Marza, ,     \u25a0\nTotal ji\u00bb\n912B-6th St.     Value $\nCity. of Award. _\nJUMBO\nWINNER\n36\n59\nCHRISTIE'S\nChristmas Napkins: 2 pkgs. Z7i\nRitzBiscuits 21c 3 9C\nChocolates \u00a3*-\"\u25a0 \u2014 2,\/2 |b' b\u00b0x $2-19\np EAS tAC\"::- - \u2014 -    2tim 4 3c\nGrand Forks Gems\nPotatoes   25 lb. bag 89c\nFree Parking at OVERWAITEA\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957\nNew Funeral Home, Opens in Nelson\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nWindsor, Ont. \u2014 Professor Ernest Wilby, 89, one ot North\nAmerica's most distinguished architects.\nLondon, Ont.\u2014Dr. William Joseph Tillmann, 8i, physician for\n60 years and specialist in obstetrics and children's illnesses.\nHemmingford, Que. \u2014 Dr. Arthur Henry Egerton, 66, one ol\nCanada's outstanding music scholars.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Lt.-Col. George Edward Cole, 78, former director of\nthe Manitoba mines branch.\nWhite River, South Africa\u2014Col.\nJames Stevenson-Hamilton, one of\nthe. world's greatest authorities on\nAfrican, wild life.'   .-.- '\nNORWEGIAN TREES\nSeventy-five per cent of Norway's forests consist of evergreen\nspruce and pine.\nBEST WISHES ,\nTo The\nNelson Funeral Home\nAND AMBULANCE SERVICE\nSpokane Casket Company\nBox 1255 Spokane, Wash.\nCongratulations\nTo The\nNelson Funeral Home\nand Ambulance Service\nIt Was Our Pleasure To Install The\n\"Lennox\"  Heating  System\nIn This Magnificent, New Funeral Home.\nBENNETTS LTD.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 VERNON ST.     NELSON, B.C.     PHONE 593\nAttractive Building\nHas Latest Equipment\nOne of several modern new buifdings to rise in Nelson\nduring 1957, Nelson Funeral Home and Ambulance Service\nopens its doors Saturday. :. .\nIts owners, Frank Richardson and. K. W. Rigby, well\nknown Castlegar men, describe it as one of the modern\nfuneral homes in southeastern British Columbia.   .\nThe building, at the corner of Ward arid Silica Streets,\nwill be open to public inspection all day Saturday,and\nduring the evening.\nBuilt at a cost of about ;$34,000 during a three-month\nperiod, the funeral home features effective use of carpeting,\nacoustic tile, drapes and ceil\ning and floor lighting.\nMr. Richardson, who will be\nmanager, is a Kootenay resident\nof about 20 years, and Mr.' Rigby,\nwill be in charge of the ambulance\nservice, has spent all his life in the\nKootenays. An employee, Walter\nArnsdorf, is well known in Nelson\nwhere he learned the undertaking\nprofession during the last seven\nyears.\nIn connection with the ambulance\nservice, the two owners and Mr.\nArnsdorf all have first aid and oxy.\ngen therapy certificates, and when\ndesired, arrangements .will be\nmade to have a registered nurse,\nespecially on longer trips. Application has been made for two-way\nradio sets, giving fast communication for protection of patients.\nOne vehicle will be completely\nequipped, including stretcher, oxygen equipment, siren and red\nflasher light for exclusive use as\nan ambulance, and other vehicles\ncan be converted to ambulances\nif necessary.\nEntering the home from Ward\nStreet, one comes upon the office\nand waiting room. Beside a door\nto the chapel is a drinking fountain\nfor the convenience of those attending services. The chapel will\nseat about 200 persons on wicker-\ntype settees. At the back is a foyer,\nwhich can be used, to seat overflow crowds.\nA three - dimensional, electrically lighted picture of \"The Prince\nof Peace\" is in front of the chapel\nfacing a cross. The family.room\nis situated so that the' family \"will,\nbe able to hear the service and see.\nthe congregation, yet remain apart,\nTones of an electric organ will\nadd to the beauty and dignity of\nthe chapel and service. The organ.\nof Nelson,'will be located beside\nthe family room, out of view of\nminister and congregation, with\naccommodation there for a soloist.\nWhen he enters the chapel, the\nminister will press a switch. An\nelectric-light flashing on the organ wiil indicate, the beginning of\nthe service.\nOne unusual feature of the building is the curved driveway-garage\nbeside the chapel. This will permit a family to leave the service\nprivately and comfortably, no matter what the weather.    ..\/...'.\nOne door of the garage opens\non Silica Street, one on Ward\nStreet. Off-street parking is provided for about 25 cars. \u25a0\nGolden spruce trees, grown in\nNelson, have been planted outside\nthe home for added effect.\nTwo reposing rooms have been\nprovided where family members\ncan spend time. These and the\nfamily room, seating about 25, are\nfurnished with hostess chairs, and\nare wired for telephones.\nDownstairs; one of the largest\nselection rooms in B.C. will feature caskets from Vancouver, Spokane and other centres. The company will also supply grave\nplaques.\nAlso downstairs are the preparation room, storage room and furnace room, using gas and forced\nair heating. A freight elevator has\nbeen installed.\nCremations will be by a Spokane\nfuneral home with modern, scientific equipment, and arrangements\ncan be made for services at the\nCrematorium.\nContractor was Laurence Simpson of Nelson and cinder blocks\nfor exterior construction were\nfrom Korpack Cements Products\nof Trail. Greer's Electric of Castle-\nto be played by Mrs. R. Percival gar was electrical contractor.\nFoot's Approach\nPleases Cypriots\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) -\nCyprus' new British governor.\nSir Hugh Foot, Thursday amazed\nthe local populace by walking\nthrough the streets of Nicosia\nwith only a couple of plaincloth-\nesmen.\nIt was the first time in years,\nand certainly during the two-\nyear-old emergency, that a British governor has gone around on\nfoot. The walk took place as rioting throughout the island went\nipto its sixth successive day.\nPolice fired at demonstrating\nstudents in the West Cypriot town\nof Polemi, w o u n 1 i n g a schoolboy and narrowly missing\nthe school headmaster.\nDuring his walk, Foot paused\nto talk to the people and at one\nspot near the no-man's land that\ndivides the Greek and Turkish\nsectors of town he listened while\na Greek vendor pointed out the\ndaipage done to his store by\nTurks.\nOccasionally Cypriots stopped\nto shake his hand. Most of\nthem expressed mazement at his\ncourage in walking through the\nstreets without a heavy military\nescort.\nCypriot students also stoned police and security forces at two\nother Cyprus villages but\nwithout any casualties, a communique said.\nAt Kharacha, North Cyprus,\nboys and girls twice stoned security forces and at one stage they\nused an iron bar.\nFour women were injured by\nstones. Later a number of persons, including girls, were arrested.\nAt Lefkara village, south oi\nNicosia, students stoning the police shut themselves inside the\nvillage church when reinforcements arrived.\nPolice waited outside and when\nthe pupils started to come out\nthey arrested a number of them\nOther security forces were\nstoned by youths in Yialousa vil\nlage in the island's northeastern\nPanhandle Peninsula.\nThe youths erected a roadblock of chunks of rock and\nstoned- the troops when their vehicle halted. They were dispersed\nwithout force.\nOur Best Wishes and\nCongratulations Are Extended to the\nNELSON FUNERAL HOME\nand\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nOn the Completion and Opening of\nTheir New Premises\nBurns Lumber Co.\nSuppliers of\n\"EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER\"\nCanada has about 27,000 firefighters, including 7000 professional\nand 20,000 volunteers.      \u25a0    \u25a0\nBest Wishes\nTtfThe\nNelson Funeral Home\nAND AMBULANCE SERVICE\nWe are proud to have had a part\nin the construction of this new and\nbeautiful Funeral Home.\nGreer's Electric\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nYou Are Cordially Invited to Attend the\nOfficial Opening of the New and Ultra-Modern\nNELSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nand\nAmbulance Service\nOn Saturday, December 14 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.\n\u00bb\u00abte*\nWe wish to extend our thanks and appreciation to the. contractor, sub-contractors and suppliers\nfor their splendid co-operation during the period of construction\nMrs. R. Percival\nOrganist\nMr. W. Arnsdorf\nAssistant\nFAMILY ROOM\nThe capable and courteous management and staff are\nbacked by years of experience and are proficient in their\nservices with the utmost consideration to the families\nconcerned.       ,   ,\nCHAPEL\nThe above photograph shows the beautiful chapel with a seating capacity of approximately 200 and is furnished with modern furniture designed especially for\nth* utmost in beauty and comfort.\nRECEPTION ROOM\nThe Nelson Funeral Home is designed with a spacious and\ncomfortable reception room.\nA large family room capable of seating up to thirty persons\nis also provided for the immediate family and relatives\nassuring them of personal attention and privacy.\n Favors TV Link\nFor (anada-U.K.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The News\nChronicle Thursday viewed the suggestion for a television link between Britain and Canada as a\nmeans of strengthening a bond\nwithin the commonwealth and a\nstimulation of the desire to buy\nBritish.\nCharles Stanley, chairman of\nthe Pye group of radio and television companies, had urged the\nBritish government to lay a\ntransatlantic television cable to\nboost British-Canadian  trade.\n\"Reception of American television programs has probably\ndone more to swing Canadian\ntrade away from Britain towards\nAmerica than any other single\nfactor,\" he saicl,\nRussia Says Fate of Peace\nMay Be in Hands of U.S. Airmen\nBy PAMELA MATTHEWS\nLONDON (Reuters) - Soviet\nPremier Bulganin told Britain in\na message published Thursday\nnight that the fate of peace* in\nEurope and elsewhere might well\ndepend on an \"individual American airman.\"\nThis situation, he said, results\nfrom U. S. plane patrols over'\nBritain with hydrogen bombs.\nBulganin's letter to Prime Minister Maemillan was one of sev-'\neral personal messages he forwarded to Western heads of government only a few days before\nthe Paris summit conference.\nThe letter is similar to the one\nforwarded   to   President   Eisen-\nCongratulations\nTo The\nNelson Funeral Home\nAND AMBULANCE SERVICE\nThe Top Quality Pipe and Fittings\nUsed in the Construction of This\nModern Funeral Home\nWERE SUPPLIED BY\nColumbia Trading Co.\n902 Front St.\nNelson, B.C.\nhower. It varies mainly in its references to the American H-bomb\npatrols and Britain's \"vulnerable\" geographical position in the\nevent of war.\nEXPLOITS LABOR CONCERN\nThe Soviet premier exploited to\nthe full British Labor party concern over the H-bomb patrols.\nOnly a few hours earlier, Maemillan faced another Socialist\nbarrage of questions on the subject in the House of Commons.\nMaemillan told questioners U.S.\nbomber pilots are under specific\norders not to fuse H-bombs for\nacition except in case of war.\nOn this issue, Bulganin said:\n\"It can not be denied that flights\nby American planes carrying atom arid hydrogen bombs\ncreate a situation where the fate\nof the peace in Europe\u2014and not\nonly in Europe\u2014depends to a\nlarge extent not only on any\ngiven commander, but even on\nany individual airman.\"-\nSoviet leaders have expounded\nthis idea previously in speeches.\nCAN'T UNDERSTAND\nBulganin added:\n\"I must say, Mr. Prime Minister, without beating about t h e\nbush, we find it diffipult to understand what leads the government\nof a country like Britain, which\nis not only in an extremely vulnerable position by reason of its\ngeographical situation, but which\n\u2014as its official representatives'\nadmit\u2014has 'no effective means of\n.defence against modern weapons\nto participate in the carrying out\nof such a policy.\n\"There can not indeed be any\ndefence against such weapons.\"\nBulganin reminded Britain that\nin his visit here in April, 1956,\nBritish leaders. joined in a joint\nAnglo-Soviet declaration support-\nCONGRATULATIONS\nNelson Funeral Home\nand Ambulance Service\nWe wish to compliment the management of the\nNelson Funeral Home on their excellent choice of\nfurnishings.\nWe are proud to have been the supplier of these\nbeautiful furnishings.\nCongratulations\nand\nBest Wishes\nTo The\nNelson Funeral Home\nAND AMBULANCE SERVICE\nFrom the\nMANAGEMENT AND STAFF\nof\nTHE CHAMPION CO.\nSpringfield, Ohio,\nU.S.A.\ning peaceful coexistence.\n\"If we are to base ourselves on\nthe interests of world peace, we\nmust in our opinion, see with\ncomplete clarity the situation\nthat has arisen in the world today where there exist capitalist\nand socialist states,\" he said.\nDJRE CONSEQUENCES\n\"We must all bear in mind that\nany attempt to change this situation by force from outside, to violate the status quo, any attempt\nto impose any territorial changes\nwould have> catastrophic consequences.\"\nBulganin also said any attempt\nto link NATO with the Baghdad\nand Southeast Asia defence pacts\nin a global military grouping\nwould amount to renunciation of\nUnited Nations principles.   .\n\"Realization of such a plan\nwould shake the foundations of\nthe United Nations and do serious\nharm to the cause of peace,\" he\nsaid.\nThe Soviet premier warned\nagainst extending the NATO principle of interdependence to West\nGermany. Britain^nd other\nNATO members, he said, have\n\"more than once had personal\nexperience of what the German\nmilitarists' appetites are like\nwhen they have control of a sufficiently - powerful military machine.\"\nBLASTS AGREEMENT\nBulganin blasted the Maemillan - Eisenhower agreement to\nprovide American missiles\nto Britain and efforts to introduce these weapons on the European continent.\nAs in his letter to Eisenhower,\nhe repeated proposals to halt nuclear tests for two or three years\nand to create an atom free zone\nin Central Europe. s\nAn important difference in the\nletter as compared with the one\nto Eisenhower is the absence of\nany proposal for the conclusion\nof a bilateral friendship treaty.\nA Soviet-Amfrican treaty is proposed by Bulganin in his letter to\nEisenhower.\nThe former Anglo \u2022 Soviet'\nFriendship Pact of May, 1942,\nwas denounced by the Soviet government because Britain ratified\nthe Paris agreements of October,\n1954, permitting West German\nmembership in NATO.\nBulganin also omitted the proposal for an East - West summit\nconference in his letter to Maemillan.\nA foreign office spokesman\nsaid Maemillan will answer Bulganin's letter \"in due course.\"\nCanada, Norway,\nDenmark Join\n'n Cvorus Issue\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP\nCanada, Denmark and Norway\nagreed Thursday to sponsor a compromise on Cyprus in the hope\nof avoiding a showdown on a\nGreek \"self-determination\" resolution.\nThe compromise would amend\nthe Greek proposal which would\nhave tHe UN affirm the right of\nCypriots to determine their own\npolitical future.\nIt is understood to have run\ninto strong opposition from\nGreece,\nThe amendments would delete\nall reference to the question of\nself-determination, and instead\nwould express regret that private\nnegotiations so far had made\nlittle progress and would call for\nnew negotiations.\nMercury Down\nAcross Canada\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nWinter gripped Central Canada\nThurs., with the mercury down to\n37 degrees below zero at Armstrong in Northern Ontario and\nheavy snow in Montreal.\nTemperatures across Ontario\nduring the night were the lowest\nthis season. It was 34 below at\nWhite River, 19 below at North\nBay and 16 below at Port Arthur.\nIn Montreal, three inches of\nsnow had fallen in the early\nmorning and more was expected.\nTraffic was snarled and poiice reported scores of minor accidents.\nIn Toronto, the mercury fell\nto a zero during the night, the\nlowest this season. The mercury\nwas expected to climb to 20 during the day and fall again at night\nto 10.\nBy contrast, the Maritime\nprovinces  reported  balmy  overnight.  But wintry weather was\nexpected Thursday njght.\nCOOL IN WEST    '\nTemperatures in the 30s were\nrecorded in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In Alberta, the mercury was in the 40s during the\nnight.\nBritish Columbia faced another\nstorm. Rain and strong winds are\nexpected along the northern coast.\nPrecipitation was reported light\nduring the night. In Prince George\nthe temperature was down to 32.\nVancouver had a tow of 43.\nThe heavy snow at Montreal brought to eight inches the\ntotal snowfall in the last two\ndays.\nIn Toronto, the public weather\noffice said \"very cold air now\ngrips the entire eastern part of\nof the continent.\" Moderation is\nexpected Friday \"as a developing storm now over Saskatchewan and Alberta moves into\nNorthern Ontario.\" Snow is expected in most Ontario regions\ntomorrow.\nHeavy Frosts\nHit Florida\nTAMPA, Fla. (AP) _ The\nworst freeze in 10 years struck\nFlorida Wednesday night and\nThursday, damaging its farms and\ngroves.\nMore freezing weather is in\nstore for the state tonight.\nWhat was left of the winter,\nvegetable crop in the truck growing section around Plant City\nappeared to be wiped out. Strawberries in this area which calls\nitself the winter strawberry capital of the world were badly hurt.\nD. H. Storms, co-ordinator for\nvocational agriculture education\nin the Plant City region, said the\nofficial temperature was below\n30 degrees for more than six\nhours.\nRipe oranges will begin to\nfreeze in one or two hours of 27\nor 2D degree weather.\nIce was a common sight in the\ncentral and northern sectors of\nthe widespread citrus belt.\nAt Lakeland there were lows\nrunning between 22 and 24 degrees with outlying sections even\nlower.\nThe weather bureau said Thursday night it was severe again with\ntemperatures ranging from 22 to\n25 degrees in the northern interior to 32 to 36 in the southern\ninterior.\nEarly morning temperatures\nranged from 18 degrees at Crest-\nview to 29 at Tampa, 35 at Miami and 50 at Key West.\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nCongratulations\nto the\nNELSON FUNERAL\nHOME\nand\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nWe are happy to have taken part in\nsupplying materials\nfor the construction of this\n,;   modern building.\nW.W. Powell\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nNotion, B.C.\n2>3AS\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 73, 1957 \u2014 9\nCanada Concerned Over U.S.-Russ\nStalemate, Plans for NATO Meet\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer'\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada will\npress for East-West exchariges. of\nview on world problems at the\nNATO summit meeting in Paris\nnext week, it was learned Thursday.\nOfficials here have expressed,\nconcern at the stalemate in negotiations between the Western\npowers and Russia, particularly\nin the disarmament field.\nExternal Affairs Minister Sidney Smith has said twice in the\nlast week that Russian proposals\nshould not be rejected out of\nhand and .'he has deplored what\nhe said was Washington's tendency to do this.\nMr. Smith left Thursday night\nfor London where he will confer\nwith Canadian ambassadors from\nEuropean capitals in advance of\nthe Paris conference which opens\nMonday. \u2022\nMAIN POINT\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker,\nhead of the Canadian delegation,\nDefence Minister G. R. Pearkes\nand Finance Minister Donald\nFleming will leave tonight.\nOther matters expected to be\ndiscussed by Canada at Paris\nare:\n1. Increased economic co \u2022 operation among the 15 NATO\nmembers. Mr. Diefenbaker has\nindicated this likely will be the\nmost important point Canada will\nhave to make.\n2. More exchange of scientific\ninformation within the alliance to\nreduce, duplication of effort.\n3. The possibility of stockpiling\nAmerican nuclear warheads in\nCanada for anti-aircraft defence.\n4. Re-equipping of the 300-plane\nRCAF air division -in Europe,\npossibly with guided missiles.   ,\n5. The Middle East. Canada\ncontributes the largest contingent\nto the United Nations Emergency\nForce in Egypt.1\nSAME POLICY'\nIt mil be the first time that\nthe new Progressive Conservative government has spoken for\nCanada at a NATO council meeting.\nBut there _is every indication'\nthat Canadian policy will be unchanged from what it was under\nthe Liberal administration of Rt.\nHon. Louis St. Laurent.\nThe Liberals, for instance, were\nalways interested in impressing\non the- NATO council's ^European\nmembers that defence of' North\nAmerica is just as' important to\nNATO as the defence of Europe\nitsell.\nThe new Conservative government has contended that the joint\nCanada-United States air defence\ncommand' at Colorado Springs\nColo., is, in effect, a NATO command and Mr. Diefenbaker and\nhis colleagues want to soliBify\nthis position during the Paris\nmeeting. \u25a0\"\nMUTUAL PROGRAM\nThursday a private ;roup, in\ncluding members of Parliament,\nbusiness, church and labor leaders, asked Mr. Diefenbaker in a\nwritten submission . to propose\nthree matters to the NATO meeting:\n1. A mutual program for lowering tariffs and freeing currencies.\n2. Pooling of scientific knowledge.\n3. Consultations leading to\nesSablishment of a supranational\nauthority for the Atlantic community.\nThe private group was formed\nin 1954 and issued a \"declaration\nof Atlantic unity.\" One of the\nsigners of this declaration was\nMr. Diefenbaker himself.\nThose making the  submission\nincluded CCF Leader M. J. Cold-\nwe 1; Claude Jodoin, president of\nthe Canadian Labor Congress\nRev. J. M. Belartger, director of\nthe school of political, economic\nand social sciences, University of\nOttawa; Lester B. Pearson, former external affairs minister;\nSenator Wishart Robertson, honorary president f the NATO parliamentary conference; George\nHahn, Social Credit member of,\nParliament for New Westminster\nand Paul Martin, former health\nminister.\nNORTHERN GATEWAY    .\nThe Pas, Man., 475 miles northwest of Winnipeg, is the start of\ntlie Hudson Bay railway to the\nseaport of Churchill.\nCongratulations\nto\nNelson Funeral Home\nand Ambulance Service\nAnother moSern building\ngracing the City of Nelson\nmade possible with the use\nof Korpack Cinder Blocks\nKORPACK\nCEMENT\nPRODUCTS\nCO. LTD.\n154 Wellington St., Trail\nPhone 2105\nOur Best Wishes\nand Congratulations\nTo The\nNelson\nFuneral Home\nand\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nWe are proud and honored to have been the\nGeneral Contractor in the construction-of\nthis new and modern Funeral Home which is\none of the most up-to-date in Western Canada, and a credit to the City of Nelson.\nLAURENCE SIMPSON\nGeneral Contractor\nBOX 470\nNELSON, B.C.\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957\nStudents Sound Call\nTo Arms In Jakarta\nJAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters)\n\u2014Indonesian student and veteran\ngroups Thurs. were reported mobilizing throughout this 3000-island\nnation in preparation for a military\ncampaign to oust the Netherlands\nfrom West Irian (Dutch New\nGuinea).\nIn the capital, student clubs\nagreed to set up a \"supreme command of student fighters of Jakarta.\"\nKBandjarmasin, South Borneo\n1000 veterans were reported to\nhave registered for a volunteer\nbrigade to fight in Dutch New\nGuinea.\nBut as the call to arms sounded,\na Masjumi (Moslem) party member warned that the Indonesian\nCommunist party, which dominates\nthe populous island of Java, plans\nto make Indonesia \"into a second\nKorea.\"\nRIGHTS TRAMPLED\nKia Isa Anshary, Moslem chairman of the Indonesian \"anti-Communist front,\" said here Wednesday night he was greatly concerned with the present situation\nin Indonesia where \"fundamental\nhuman rights are being trampled\nOn.\" i\nThe Communist plan is \"In line\ntrith the Moscow manifesto of\nNov. 19 signed by 65 representa\ntives of Communist parties\nthroughout the world,\" he said.\n' The Indonesian' Army meanwhile announced all its men have\nbeen \"confined to barracks.\"\nArmy spokesman Maj. Harsone,\nrefused to give-any explanation.\nIn Melbourne, the Australian\ngovernment issued a statement\nurging' the Jakarta govern;\nment not to do anything which\nwould impair democracy in Indonesia.\nHUNGER SAID NEAR\nIn Jakarta observers pointed to\na number of economic factors,\nwhich, they said, could become\n\"quite explosive,\" in the continuing crisis. The chief of these was\nthe continually rising price of rice,\nthe staple diet of Indonesia.\nObservers said the chaos in the\ninter-island shipping situation following the seizure of some Dutch\nships could mean hunger, poverty\nand hardship for many Indonesians.\nThe ships belonged to the confiscated Dutch KPM shipping\ncompany. More than 30 of the'\ncompany's ships now are at anchor in Singapore and Penang,\nMalaya.\n, The rubber market in Indonesia,\none of the most important in the\nworld, also has been almost paralyzed by Indonesia's anti-Dutch\nreprisals, observers said.\nTIPPI, a miniature Dachshund who suffered paralysis of her\nhind quarters more than a year ago, moves about In New York\non plastic roller skates attached to a linlil harness, provided by\nher owner,' Roy Porter, a florist. She has regained partial use\nof her affected legs and may be able to use them again.\nDistillery Workers On Probation ., .\nAFL-CIO Expels Bakery,\nLaundry Workers Union\nATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)-\nThe AFL-CIO Thurs. expelled the\nLaundry and Bakery Workers\nUnions for corrupt practices, and\nkept the Distillery Workers Union\non probation pending promised\nreforms.\nThese actions at concluding\nsessions of the AFL-CIO convention further demonstrated the\nfederation's   tough   attitude   in\nunion-fund  thievery\nracketeering   influ-\ndealing with\nand labor's\nences.\nAt the same time, the convention adopted a series of resolutions carrying out positions\nworked out in debate at earlier\nsessions condemning congressional rackets investigators\nfor alleged one-sided attention to\nlabor corruption without equal\nspotlighting on business.\nAnother resolution said the\nAFL-CIO will accept legislative\nproposals to help labor clean out\ncorruption but will fight any\nmoves to enact laws pretending\nto correct labor abuses but designed to cripple unions.\nMEMBERSHIP DROPPING\nFinal ouster actions against the\nlaundry and bakery groups\nstripped the AFL-CIO of another\n200.000 members. This, along with\nearlier expulsion of the giant,\n1,500,000 - member Teamsters\nUnion, reduces AFL - CIO membership to about 13,500,000.\nThe ousted unions have denied\nany move to combine in a rival\nfederation, or join with unions\nalready outside the AFL-CIO.\nThe convention adjourned after\ndelegates unanimously re-elected\nGeorge Meany to a new two-year\nterm as president and William\nSchnitzler as secretary-treasurer.\nEXPULSION . . . ,para 3-114\nAID FOR TRAFFIC\nLONDON (Reuters) - The\nHouse of Commons Wednesday\nnight approved a y.4,550,000 plan\nto speed traffic at Hyde Park\ncorner, London's busiest intersection. It gave the London County\ncouncil authority to build 10 passenger subways and a 330-yard\ntwo-lane traffic underpass between Piccadilly and Knights-\nbridge.\nTandem Mines Announce\nNew Iron-Ore Process\nTORONTO (CP) - Tandem\nMines Ltd. of Toronto have announced a new iron-ore smelting\nprocess which, the company\nstates, may turn into commercial ore large deposits of iron\nore now considered valuless because of their titanium content.\n\u25a0 The process is the invention of\nDr. Roya A. Halverson of Detroit.\nFollowing laboratory tests carried out at the University of Wisconsin he was granted a United\nStates patent on the \"process in\nMay. It is stated that patents\nnow are pending in Canada, the\nUnited Kingdom and other countries.\nAnnouncement of the process\nwas made here Wednesday at a\nmeeting attended by about 100\nrepresentatives of the mining and\nfinancial community, and the\npress.\nMETHOD  DESCRIBED\nA press release, describing\ntests made by Tandem Mines,\nsaid:\n\"Ore from the Madoc area of\nEastern Ontario was treated in\na large cupola furnace under\nconditions as close as possible to\ncommercial operation.\n\"The ore contained 50 per cent\niron and between six and nine\nper cent titanium.\n\"Six successive tests on this\nyielded iron with only an unimportant trace-rl-10th bf one per\ncent \u2014 of titanium. Analysis\nshowed that all other titanium\nhad been freely floated off in the\nslag, which was extremely fluid\nand did not contaminate the furnace.\n\"By substituting common salt\nfor part of the limestone it Is apparent that ores high in impurities, such as titanium, phosphorus and sulnhur, may be successfully handled.\n\"The process Involves the introduction of an alkali flux in the\nform of salt into the oxidizing\nzone of the reducing furnace in\ncontrolled' nuantities, by compressed air.\"\nControl recentl\" chan\u00b0ed hands\nand Donald A. Keith, its president, says the company plans a\nreorganization and to proceed,\nas soon ,as possible, with financing.\nIts aim would be to go into production of commercial pig iron,\nlt would also consider licensing\narrangements with other companies.\nDr. Halverson said he thought\nthe process would have particular application in Canada, because of Canada's growing economy and the presence of ore\nbodies suitable for Its use.\nSUDDENLY  VALUABLE\nWalter Sharpe, president of\nSliarpe Geophysic Surveys Ltd.,\nToronto, was quoted as saying\nthat several deposits of iron ore\nof vast tonnage\u2014of high grade\nbut containing impurities\u2014would,\nunder the Halverson process, become extremely valuable commercially.\n\"One such deposit,\" he said,\n\"exists in Ontario's Rainy River\ndistrict and is estimated to contain 760;000,000 tons of 46-percent iron and four-per-cent titanium. Other deposits are located\non the north shore of the St.\nLawrence River, in the Red Lake\narea, in the St. Joseph Lake area\nof  Quebec  and  ip  southeastern\nCnleiorv Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - Cattle offer,\nings of 2000 cattle and 300 calves at\nthe Calgary yards were about\nevenly divided between good and\nchoice butcher steers and heifers,\nand medium to good replacement\ncattle. Trade was active.\nChoice butcher steers continued\nto meet good American and Canadian demand at steady prices.\nMedium to good kinds a shade\neasier.\nGood and choice heifers also met\ngood demand at strong rates. Common and medium grades fully\nsteady.\nAll classes of cows were In keen\ndemand. Prices were strong to a\nshade higher with odd sales up to\n12. Bulls steady.\nAll classes of replacement steers\nmet keen demand from U.S., eastern and local buyers \u2014 prices were\nsteady at the week's advance.\nStock, steer calves also met keen\ncompetition from the same sources,\nat prices fully steady at the week's\nadvance, with odd sales up to 22.10.\nAll classes of butcher calves\nsold steady at the week's higher\nlevels.\nChoice butcher steers 13.50-19.50:\ngood 17-18.50; medium 15.50-16.50:\ncommon 13-15; choice heifers 17.25-\n18; good 16-17; medium 14-15.50;\ncommon 10-13.50.\n'Good cows 11-11.75; medium\n10 25-10.75; common 9.50-10; canners and cutters 6-9.50; good bulls\n12.50-13.50; common to medium 8-\n12.\nGood feeder steers 17.50-18.50;\ngood stock steers 16.50-17.50; common to medium 12-16; good stock\nsteer calves 20-22.\nGood butcherweight heifer calves\n17.50 - 19; medium to good veal\n18-19.50.\nTwo loads of hogs sold Wednesday at 18.70 liveweight rail grades\nto apply; a few sold at 24 A grade;\nsows 50 cents higher at 13.50-16.60,\naverage 14.85 liveweight.\nLambs steady; good lambs 18.75-\n19.50.\nMARGARET HONORED\nLOtfDON (API\u2014Princess Margaret became an honorary fellow\nof the Royal Society of Medicine\nWednesday. Lord Evans, one of\nQueen Elizabeth's phxsiciuns,\nawarded the diploma ind praised\nMargaret's contributions to medical welfare during her overseas\njourneys.\nU.K. Press Holds Mixed\nViews On Russia's Letter\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Some\nBritish newspapers Thursday urged\nthe West to negotiate, with Russia\non some of the proposals made\nby (Premier Bulganin in letters\nto. the Western Big Three leaders\nand Chancellor Konrad Adenauer\nof West Germany.\nFrench political commentators,\nhowever, treat the Soviet premier's diplomatic offensive as an\nattempt to exploit cracks in the\nAtlantic alliance.\nThe London Times believes the\nletters are designed to back up\nthe ,Russian thesis that NATO is\nobsolete and aggressive.\nAfter drawing attention to Bulganin's idea of a zone in Central\nEurope free of nuclear weapons,\nThe Times adds:\n\"Nothing would do more to\ncast doubts on the West's sincerity than to give the Impression\nthat it fights shy of an idea simply because it is echoed in Russia.\"\nFOLLY TO IGNORE\nThe Daily Herald (Labor) comments: \"It will be tragic folly if\nthe West dismisses Russia's\nmove as propaganda.\n\"There is danger of rival H-\nrocket bases being established in\nthe two halves of Germany.\"\n\"The most urgent talks of the\nalliance is to agree\u2014quicker than\nrockets\u2014on a common policy for\nnegotiations. The West must be\nready for talks with Russia.\"\nThe Manchester Guardian\n(Liberal)' believes that with  the.\nRussians renewing the warning\nto the Germans and others that\nto become a base for the new\nU.S. ballistic missiles is to invite\nthe worst devastation in wartime, the nerves of NATO are\nagain being tested.\n\"There is no reason to believe\nthat they will be any mote frail\nthan those of the Norwegians and\nthe Turks were during the last\nround of notes.\"\nFIGARO VIEWS\nThe diplomatic correspondent\nof the Conservative Paris newspaper Figaro writes:\n\"Soviet diplomacy is quite naturally exploiting the hesitations\nof the European partners of the\nalliance before the perspectives\nopening for Ihem from the necessary reorganization of the de\ntensive system of NATO notably\nby the installation of platform!\nfor intermediate range rockets.\"\nIn the right - wing radical\nAurore, Maurice Ferro writes\nthat \"this epistolary debauche''\nis more than propaganda. It is\npart of a long-term strategic operation to isolate the United\nStates politically and militarily\nand assure a Soviet sphere of Influence in Western Europe.\nHe said it is an \"imperious\nnecessity\" that NATO modify ils\nmilitary and political structure to\nallay fears that installations of\nmissile launching sites and stockpiling nuclear weapons in Europe\nwill expose Europe to Soviet reprisals.\nGary Cooper and Family Find\nFun in Underwater Explorina\nfore   nails   were   manufacture.\nround.\nNOT A GALLEON\n\"No, I don't think it was a\nSpanish ship. More likely one ol\nthe boats that brought the forty-\nniners up from the isthmus to\nSan Francisco.\"\nThe actor \u2022 diver said he ha.-\n\u00bb210,0P0?\n$-7^\n*125,O0o\u00ab?\npoo?\nsiso.ooo*?\n$100,OOOT\u00bb\n$270,000?\n$150,000?\nHow much will\nyou earn in the\nnext 20 years?\nLet's say that you earn $5,000 a year. In twenty\nyears you will have earned $100,000 \u2014 without taking into account any future increases.\nWhatever the exact figure, you will have earned\na sizeable fortune.\nHave you ever stopped to figure out just how\nmuch you can save for your family or your retire-\n' ment years ?\nBy its very nature, life insurance can help you to\npreserve a part of that fortune. For, with the payment of one premium, life insurance automatically\ncreates an immediate estate to guarantee income to\nyour family in the event of your death. At the same\ntime, life insurance can be building a fund to provide you with a lifetime income for your retirement\nyears if you survive.\nYour Sun Life agent will be glad to\ndiscuss this important point with you\nand explain in greater detail how part\nof your own personal 'fortune' can be\npreserved through life insurance.\nSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA\nH. A. Shannon, Branch Manager\nWest  Kootenay  Bldg., Trail,  B.C.\nJ. D. Forbes, Unit Supervisor\nSalmo, B.C.\nJ. ft. Fleming, Nelson; II. E. Yolland, Nakuip; R. S. George, Trail;\nA. H. Pisapio, Trail; A. R. Olson, Fruitvale; 0. P. Larsen, Salmo.\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Looking\nfor something the whole family\ncan do together? Try underwater\nexploration.\nThe Gary Cooper family does\nit, and they have the time of their\nlives.\nCoop, his wife and their daughter took it up at Antibes last\nsummer* on a European vacation.\nNow they're exploring the southern California coast..\nCOOL WATER '\nYou'll find them on weekends\noff the coast of Palos Verdes or\nCatalina Island. And in water\nthat is a chilling 60 degrees on\nthe surface and as low as 45 degrees below.\n\u25a0 \"But you don't notice the cold,\"\nhe explained. \"You wear rubber\nsuits that cover you completely\nand keep the cold out.\"\nCooper explained that his family got their training for diving\nat the bottom of a swimming\npool.\n\"There are several steps you\nmust learn,\" he said. \"How to\nempty your mask of water when\nyou are beneath the surface.\nHow to take off the mask underwater and put it Back on again.\nHow to remove the breathing\ngear in case of emergency. How\nto tell when your air supply is\ngiving out.\nGRADUATION EXERCISE\n\"The graduation comes when\nyou get a bunch of people to sit'\nin a circle at the bottom of the\nswimming pool. Each one takes\noff his breathing gear and hands\nit to the next person, who puts it\non himself.\"\nHaving graduated, the Coopers\nnow are plying the Pacific waters. Just two weeks ago, they\ncame across the remains of a\nwreck off the Palos Verdes cliffs.\n\"It was scattered all over the\nocean bottom,\" he ' related. \"I\nbrought up a long nail from it,\nand the thing was square shaped,\nindicating it had been made be-\nbeen down as low as 60 feet, bv<\nprefers to remain at around 41\nfeet because of sensitive ears. Al\nany depth, he said, the diver is\ninclined to lose track of time and\nspace.\n\"You've got to keep track of\nyour distance from the boat,\" he\nremarked, \"or you might surface and. find yourself a half-\nmile away. You should wear a\ndepth guage and watch, too. then\nyou can tell how much longer\nyour air supply will last and\nwhether you'll have time to sur-%~\nface.\"\nSajs Sputnik\nMONTREAL (CP> - Russia';\nSputniks are outstanding engineering achievements, but the scientific\ntheory behind them was developec\nalmost three centuries ago, Dr.\nHenry F. Hall, principal of S i i\nGeorge Williams College, said\nWednesday night.\n\"Nearly 300 years ago Keppler\nand Newton worked out the scientific, principles and mathematical\ndata as to how high and how fast\na rocket must go to reach outer\nspace,\" he told members of the\nTemple Emanuel Brotherhood.\n\"Newton even drew a rough but\naccurate sltetch of a rocket similar to the one launched by the\nSoviet Union.\"\nCANADIAN OIL\nCanadian production of oil\namounted to 66 per cent of the\ndomestic demand in 1956, against\n9.4 per cent in 1946.\nWater  Reveals\nWater (plain or sparkling) is your most reliable\nguide to the whole truth about any whisky. Water\nadds nothing, detracts nothing, but reveals a\nwhisky's true natural flavour and bouquet.\n\"83\"\ntStatU&M <Z&tee, fSS\/\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by Ihe Government of British Columbia.\n 32Po\nViews\n'      from the\nNews Front\nBy ED  SIMON\nCanadian Press. Staff Writer\nIt has become almost part of\nthe rules of the game for an aggrieved party with a complaint on\nthe United Nations agenda to engineer an outbreak of violence in\nthe area under discussion as a\nprelude to the debate.\nThe new wave of riots that began in Cyprus last weekend after\nmonths of quiescence obviously\nwas timed to influence members\nof 5he UN assembly. But in a\nsmall and emotionally charged island there is always the danger\nthat organized disorder may slip\nfrom the control of its sponsors\nWith the arrival-of Sir Hugh\nFoot, a civilian known for his liberal views, to replace Gen. Sir\nJohn Harding as governor of the\nBritish - held island, there were\nwidespread hopes of renewing negotiations on the future status of\nthe strife \u2022 ridden colony. If a\nsolution for the conflicting claims\nof its Greek and Turkish residents was not yet in sight, the\natmosphere, at least, had cooled:\nDUBIOUS SOLUTION\nNow violence by the EOKA extremists, dedicated to union wiUi\nGreece, has been met by violence\nfrom the Turkish community,\nwhich demands partition into national segments. British, troops\nhave received and caused casualties in their efforts to curb the\nriots.\nPartition of an area smaller\nthan Cape Breton Island and with\nthree times its population is a dubious solution, complicated by the\nmingling of Greek and Turkish\nsettlements throughout the colony.\nBut the turbulence of the last few\nyears has done little to convince\nthe 20-per-cent Turkish minority\nthat it would benefit from Greek\nrule.\nInflaming the relationships of\nthe Cypriots is the political emphasis on the dispute in Turkey\nand Greece, both with governments which feel their hand\nforced by an aggressively nationalist Opposition.\nDEFENCE FACTOR\nBritain's reliance on Cyprus as\na Mediterranean bastion has been\nreduced in recent defence plan-\nri\"\". but it remains an imoortant\nfactor in the North Atlantic\nTreaty framework. More important, a solution of the island's\nproblems is vital to Britain to\ncounteract unfavorable reactions\nabtoad.\nDiscussions at next week's\nNATO summit c o n f e r ence in\n' Paris, where the disputants can\nget down to cases in private after\nthe exchange of propaganda\nblasts in the UN Assembly, may\nrelieve the situation at least temporarily.\nBut Sir Hugh Foot's ultimate\ntask of bringing the parties together has not been made easier\nbv the rekindling of old grudges\nwilh fresh bloodshed.\nMAKARIOS  ROLE\nA likely first step would be the\nreturn of Archbishop Makarios.\nthe ' Greek Cypriot leader, who\nW>s exiled by Harding nearly two\nyears ago, and a relaxation of restrictive emergency regulations.\nEOKA leaders insist that Makarios must represent them in any\ntalks on the island's future.\nOnce negotiations started, Brit-\nsin would try to work out a plan\nfor eventual self-government with\nguarantees of minority rights and\na nrovision for maintenance of the\nIsland's defence installations by\nBritish or NATO forces.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 \u2014 IT\nMARKET TRENDS\nBest Days Lie\n-Drew\nIONDON (CP)\u2014George Drew,\nCanadian high commissioner to\nthe United Kingdom, said Thursday\nthat the greatest days of both\nBritain and Canada may lie\nahead if the two countries exploit to Ihe full th'e possibilities\nof  their  \"natural  partnership\"\nSpeaking at a Royal Empire\nSociety luncheon, Drew said Canadians believe in the \"power, endurance and expansion\" of the\nUnited Kingdom and that \"there\nIs a natural association, quite\napart from sentimental ties\" between the two countries which\ncould lead to a decisive moment\nIn history.\n\"The things we have are\nreeded for industrial prodctoiun\nIn the United Kingdom. This becomes a natural partnership . . .\nour raw materials are waiting to\nbe taken and used.\"\nDrew, who accompanied Canada's Sfi-man trade mission on\nIts month-long tour of British industrial centres, said an important part of its purpose was to\nconvince Britons of the greatness\nef the growing market available\nlo them in Canada, which had\npotentialities unrealized even by\nmost Canadians.\nHe said every member of the\nCanadian mission is returning\nhome convinced that British\nplants are as efficient as any in\nthe world and'that (heir rate of\nproduction is as high as in the\nUnited States, Germany or anywhere else.\nNEW YORK (AP)-Rail stocks\nenjoyed an unusual burst of popularity Thursday, speeding ahead\nfractions to 2 points or more\nwhile the rest of the market\nturned in an irregular performance.\nSuch major groups as rubbers,\nchemicals, metals and motors\nended mixed with gains and losses ranging from fractions to\nabout 1 point. In a few cases\nprice changes ran beyond the 1\npoint mark.\nSteels were mostly a bit higher,\nrallying toward the finish, while\naircraft-missile firms ended definitely lower.\nIn The Associated Press average of 60 stocks, which closed\n90 cents higher at $156.70, the rail\nsection boomed $4.40. Industrials\ndeclined 30 cents and utilities advanced 10 cents.\nExcept for the activity in the\nrails trading was rather slow. Volume totalled 2,330,000 shares compared with 2,240,000 Wednesday.\nCanadian gainers on the New\nYork exchange included Aluminium Ltd., up % on 9,500 shares;\nCanadian Pacific and Mclntyre\nPorcupine, Vt. Losers included International Nickel, off 1% on 4,100\nshares; Walker - Gooderham, Va;\nHudson Bay Mining, %, and Dome\nMines, 'A.\nFargo Oil, up 1-16 on 2,500\nshares was one of the few Canadian gainers on the American exchange. Losers included Shawini-\nSan off %, Canadian Marconi.\n'A; Preston East Dome, V6 and\nScurry-Rainbow Oil, down 1-16\non 6,000 shares.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket Thursday closed mixed\nto lower after 5'A hours of slow\ntrading in which few interesting\ndevelopments occurred.\nBase metals had the biggest index - change, down more than\nthree-quarters of a point. Industrials were one-quarter of a point\nlower while western oils had little change. Golds were narrowly\nhigher.\nBrokers said most investors\nseemed to be more concerned\nwith outside interests, such as\nChristmas shopping and year-end\nproblems, than they were with\nthe market because of a lack of\nencouraging news from the financial world.\nInternational Pete lost 2\npoints at 39.\nMines and western oils were\nthoroughly mixed on average although senior base metals had a\nmajority of losses. Most declines\nwere confined to fractions or 20\ncents. A few gains of 15-30 cents\nwere recorded among lightly-\ntraded stocks.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The Montreal and Canadian stock markets\nThursday moved generally lower\nin light trading. Losses extended\nto two points.\nUtility stocks led the decline.\nInternational Utilities dropped 2\npoints to 22.4 and Calgary Power,\nselling  ex-dividend,  VA  to  S5'A.\nIn a mixed refinery group\nTrans - Mountain Pipeline lost a\npoint at 65 and McColl Oil gained\nXA at 55'\/z. Newsprints and banks\nwere. mixed. International Paper\nadvanced a point to WA and\nFraser slipped 'A to 23. Hudson\nBay lost '4 in a fractionally'\nmixed base metal group.\nIn the mines and oils section\nCampbell Chib gained 10 cents at\n5.10 and Opemiska Copper five\ncents at 6.30..\nIndustrial   volume   was   37,300\nshares; mines and oils 332,600.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nDalex Co.' Ltd. pfd. $1.76 \u2022 Jan.\n1, record Dec. 20.\n.Aluminium Co. of Canada Ltd.\n1st pfd. 25 cents, March 1, record\nFeb. 7, 2nd pfd. 56 cents Feb. 28,\nrecord Feb. 7.\nImperial Bank of Canada 35\ncents Feb. 1, record Dec. 31.\nP. L. Robertson Mfg. Co. Ltd.\ncommon 20 cents, $1 pfd. 25 cents\nJan. 2, record Dec. 20.\nWood Alexander Ltd. 30 cents,\nDec. 31, record Dec. 18.\nThe first post office in Canada\nwas established at Halifax in 1755.\nReporters Greet\nL. B. Pearson\nLONDON (Reuters)' - L. B,\nPearson, former Canadian external affairs minister, arrived\nby air Thursday on his way home\nfrom Oslo after receiving the\nNobel Peace Prize.\nTalking to repoHers at London\nwould be a good thing if we in\nNorth America recognized that\nthere are certain problems in the\nworld that cannot be solved satisfactorily without the participation of Soviet Russia.\"\nBritain, he said, is a country\nof great wisdom and experience\n\"acting as a mediating influence\nbetween the United States and\nthe European countries, and\nthose behind the Iron Curtain.\"\nLONDON (CP)^-A British firm\nis 'to make a 2OJ,000-square-mile\nphotographic survey of Burma by\nair at a cost of \u00a31 per square mile.\nThe survey will take five months.\n'goif 7 p.m.\nSPECIALS\nLIMITED QUANTITIES\u2014PERSONAL SHOPPING\nON SALE AT 7 P. M. SHARP\nReg. .69 Women's\nBriefs\nFancy rayon briefs, printed\nand plain. ^ ft|\nSizes S-M-L. .... L for   T I\nBaby Blankets\nSoft, fleecy flannelette baby\n, blankets, size 30 x 40, with\nwhipped ends. Slight imperfections that should not affect wear. Ci\nPink or yellow    *^ I\nReg. 2.98 and 3.98\nBedjaekets\nSnuggledown bedjaekets \u2014\ncosy and warm. Attractive\nstyles in pink or blue, they\nmake a wonderful | AA\ngift. Sizes M-li    I \u20227 7\nReg. 12.95\nLanerossi Sport Shirts\n19 Only of these fine quality\nwool and Fiocco sport shirts\nmade by Canada's leading\nmanufacturer. Assorted patterns and colors, m QQ\nSizes S-M-L-XL.    \/ \u2022 73*\nMen's Leather\nDress Gloves\nBrown only. Wool lined slip-\non style. Sizes >% aa\n8 to 10%    'Jm'eWJW.\n.99\nReg. 1.90 Angora\nBonnet and Glove Sets\nColors of white, red, blue\nand pink. Sizes S- | iJQ\nM-L. Boxed   I .03'\n\u25a0 aun\n3\n7 V J&L\nuteon'* Dau (lo\n'I.'\".OlO.CiAllO    -\u2022\u25a0   \u2022\"  M.V.\nGIVE HER HOOVER THIS CHRISTMAS\nand you give Her the Best\nin Cleaners and 2-Brush Polishers\nPRE-CHRISTMAS SPECIAL \u25a0\nNOW ONLY\n10 Only, Reg. 97.50\nSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY TRADE-INS AT\n82.50\nINCORPORATED   2*? MAY 1670,\nReg. 1.35 China\nCups and Saucers\nImported English bone china\n\u2014new floral patterns. By\nColclough, mm q\nEach     \u00ab \/ *\nReg. 8.95 Bissell\nCarpet Sweepers\nFamous Beverly model featuring full width Bissell action. A gift C QQ\nfavorite   J \u202273'\nReg. .69 - .79 - .89\nMillends\nFlannelette pastel and novelties, cotton prints in geometries and plains. itm\n36\". Per yard   .T\" \/\nReg. 1.39 Child's\nFelt Slippers\nEnglish  felt,   rubber   soles.\nOne strap with button. Pompom trim. Sizes\nto 10 only\t\nCLEANS ALMOST\nTlVJCf THE\nAREA OF ANY\nOTHER CLEANER\nJust set your Hoover down \u2014 and clean 15 feet in\nany direction with its double-stretch hose and swivel\n. top. Put it at the foot of the stairs and clean all the\nway to the top. New Hoover hose stretches twice\nits own length, yet compresses for storage \u2014 and\nit's completely flexible, never kinks. New Hoover\nnozzle gets more dirt with 'A less work. New throw-\naway bog \u2014 largest in any tank or canister, easier\nto change. Complete with new set of Hoover tools.\nSee it to believe it! '\nShop Friday's 9 'til 9\nfor Sheer Delight...\nNylons!\nBoys' Anklets\n.89\nTrim fitting socks In\nbright colours and a wide\nchoice of patterns.\nMen's  Stretchies\n$i\nThese are Ideal if you're\nnot sure of his size I\nHandsome patterns, colours.\nMen's Wool Socks\n1.50\niott ond fine wool knit\ngives solid comfort and\nreal warmth. All sizes.\n51 Gauge\n30 Denier.\n1\n50\nShe always looks forward to receiving nylons at Christmas! Buy\none or two pairs as an extra gift\n\u2014 she'll be delighted! We have\nher favourite sheer and everyday\nweights in new shades. Let us\nhelp you choose her correct size!\nOther popular styles and weights available from\n1.19 to 1.50\nSlippers are Giftworthytool\nSlipper Socks\n2.98\nWoman'*\n1.98\nChildren'!\nCoziest Idea for Winter\n. , . gay designs. Sizes\nfor the whole family.\n\"Foamtreads\"\n.3.98      2.98\nWomen's Children'!\nA really comfortable type\nof slipper for ths men,\nwomen or children.\n\"Moccasins\"\n1.49 to 4.95\nPretty, fur-trimmed moccasins ore so comfortable\nand warm. Lovely colours.\nMen's Operas\n3.98\nHe'H appreciate a pair\nof slippers that are made\nfor real comfort.\nMen's Romeos\n5.95\nLong a favourite. Good\nsupport with the comfort\nof a real lounge slipper.\n4.98\nMEN'S\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.        '\n 1 mumrn\n\u2022pWHtSMW\"!^\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, PEC. 13, 1957\nCAKE FOR THE CORPS- Famed French pastry\ncook Pierre Franchlolo looks over the (riant cake he made In\nParis for 182nd birthday anniversary of the I). S. Marine Corps.\nNehru Urges Get Together\nNEW DELHI (Reu ter si-\nPrime Minister Nehru Thursday\nurged East and West to get out\nof their cold war rut and adopt\na new mental approach to the\nproblems of peace in the nuclear\nage.\nSpeaking In the upper house,\nNehru said it had become obvious that \"policies of toughness,\nthreats and brandishing of the\niword\" do not lead anywhere.\nNehru also gave India's support to Indonesia's claim to\nDutch-held West New  Guinea.\nNehru said the United Nations\nassembly'a failure to approve a\nresolution urging negotiations between the Netherlands and Indonesia \"was a great blow to the\nIndonesian people.\"\nQUOTES OPINIONS\nNehru referred to recent proposals by George Kennan, former\nU.S. ambassador to Moscow, and\nBritish socialist leader Hugh\nGaitskell for an attempt at \"disengagement or detente\" by with\ndrawing troops from foreign\nbases.\nHe said the world situation was\nnot improved by the Sputniks,\nwhich opened the possibility of\neven more destructive weapons.\nThoughts such as these, he said,\nmade him issue his recent appeal to United States and Soviet\nleaders for a \"new approach\" including the suspension of atomic\ntests.\nSoviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin sent Nehru a reply to this\nletter last weekend in which he\nreaffirmed Russia's willingness to\ndrop tests if the United States and\nBritain did the same.\nNehru said he was grateful to Bulganin for this suggestion.\nNehru urged an international\n\"coming together.\"\nCoast Voters Give Sunday\nSport Overwhelming Support\nRUSSIAN FISHERIES\nProduction from the Soviet\nUnion fisheries in 1956 reached\n2,617,000 tons, compared with Canada's 1,077,000 tons.\nVANCOUVER- (CP) - Supporters of Sunday sport have put\nfour plebiscites before civic voters here in the last seven years.\nTheir fourth effort indicates that\nsuccess may be at hand.\nAsked whether they favor professional sports between 1:30\np.m. and 6 p.m. on Sundays, 62,-\n043 voters Wednesday cast \"for\"\nballots while only 34,446 were opposed.\nTwo years ago the same issue\ndrew a total of 75,000 votes with\nonly a 2,000 margin in favor.\nThe plebiscite is only an assessment of public opinion but\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner\nsaid Thursday the B. C. government will do its part to grant\nVancouver professional Sunday\nsport.\nTEST VALIDITY\n\"If the City Of Vancouver requests a city charter change as a\nresult of this plebiscite, confined\n5o this narrow issue, I am prepared to recommend a bill to the\ngovernment to give effect to the\nplebiscite,\" he said.\nAny bill agreed to by the government would only be a \"proclamation measure and will be\nsubmitted to the courts to test '\nthe constitutional validity prior to\nbeing proclaimed.\"\nThis spring the B; C. legislature defeated 33 \u25a0 12 an amendment to a bill revising Vancouver's charter to include Sunday\nsport. \u25a0\nIn 1951 and 1952 civic voters\nrejected plebiscites which would\nhave permitted operation of theatres, dance halls and horse races\nas well as baseball and other\nsports.\nRECORD VOTE\nUnder the Lord's Day Act of\n1907, the ban on commercialized\nSunday sport is Canada-wide but\nenforcement is left to the attorneys-general.\nThe Sunday\/ sport plebiscite\nwas one of four put to voters\nWednesday. All were passed.\nThey fanned interest in the election which saw 98.344 voters cast\nballots, 23,000 more than the previous high in 1955\u2014another Sunday sport plebiscite year.\nMayor Fred Hume's position\nwas not at stake as his two-year\nterm is not up until December,\n1958.\nA bylaw authorizing the spending of $72,500,000 in the next five\nyears   got  70-per-cent   approval.\nThe school board's bylaw for a\n$18,500,000 three-year school construction program won 75 per\ncent.\nThe five-year-plan received 42,-\n191 votes favoring it and 17,966\nagainst. The school construction\nprogram was approved by 42,025\nvoters and turned down by 15,049.\nOnly 55.8 per cent voted in favor of fluoridation of city water\nsupplies in the first plebiscite on\nthis controversial issue here.\nThe B. C.legislature must pass\nenabling legislation if fluoridation is to become effective in the\nVancouver metropolitan area.\nDOMINATION BROKEN\nThe 20-year domination of candidates run by the Non-Parlisan\nAssociation in the aldermanic\nrace was broken when two candidates backed by the Civic Voters Association tormed the poll in\nthe 19-man race for six seats.\nHigh school principal Tom Alsbury and Evelyn Caldwell, Vancouver Sun columnist who uses\nthe pen-name Penny Wise, polled\n57,932 and 53,739 votes respectively. Both were new highs fotr\nvotes polled In aldermanic contests.\nFred   Rowell,   who   managed\nOverseas Wheal\nClearance Up\nOTTAWA (CP) - Overseas\nclearances of Canadian wheat in\nthe week ended Nov. 27- totalled\n7,379,000 bushels, up from 4,634,-\n000 bushels in the corresponding\nweek a year ago, the bureau of\nstatistics reported today.\nShipments during the first four\nmonths of the current crop year\nwhich started Aug. 1 were 5.1 per\ncent lower than last year at 85.-\n875,000 bushels compared with\n90,496,000.\nDeliveries from prairie farms\nwere 6,827,000 bu s h e 1 s, down\nfrom 8,145,000 bushels in 1956.\nThe cumulative total for the current crop year was 76,435,000\nbushels, a sharp drop from the\n102,165,000 delivered a year ago.\nVisible supplies of wheat in all\nNorth American positions at Nov,\n27 totalled 366,705,000 bushels,\nroughly four per cent more than\nlast year's total of 352,542,000\nbushels.\nCanada's 1948 Olympic team and\nalso the entry in the 1954 British\nEmpire Games, made his first\nbid for civic office a winning one.\nHe ran fourth in the five - man\nrace for four school board posts,\nThe two-to-one majority in favor of professional sport \"tickled to death\" the president of\nVancouver,Mounties of the Pacific Coast Baseball League.\n\"The majority should force the\ngovernment to take action,\" said\npresident Nat Bailey.\nEarlier this year his club was\nfined $50 on each of the three\ncharges under the Lord's Day\nAct for playing baseball on Sunday last spring.\nSAYS CAR TAX CUT\n'EXERCISE DUDNIK'\nOTTAWA (CP) - Don Brown\nL-Essex West) Thursday described\nthe excise tax reduction on new\ncars to VA per cent. from 10 as\nan  \"abortion\"  and \"a crumb.\"\nMr. Brown, who represents the\nautomobile-manufacturing city of\nWindsor, Ont., said in the Commons that the reduction was an\n\"excise dudnik\" fired by Finance\nMinister Donald Fleming. There\nwas a lot of fire and smoke but\nit fell flat.\nIt was of no help to the auto\nindustry or in putting unemployed back to work.\nStanley Knowles (CCF\u2014Winnipeg North Centre) said he was\namazed the reduction was so\nsmall after the government's\nfanfare.\nMr. Knowles also said Mr:\nFleming was being \"dishonest\nwith Parliament in not presenting a budget and thus giving a\nfull financial accounting of where\nCanada stands.\nMr. Fleming demanded that\nMr. Knowles withdraw the word\n\"dishonest.\"\nHenri Courtemanche, deputy\nSpeaker, said he didn't believe\nMr. Knowles meant to Insult the\nminister.\nMr. Knowles agreed and said\nIhe remark was not a personal\nreflection  on  Mr. Fleming.\nMr. Fleming said the remark\nwas unparliamentary and that\nMr. Knowles couldn't \"skate\naround\" the meaning of the word\n\"dishonest.\"*\nAt that point, Mr. Courtemanche called the 1 p.m. adjournment for lunch.\nFuture Holds More Power\nFor Women-Fairclough\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Secretary\nof State Ellen Fairclough Thursday\npredicted the next 10 years will\nsee \"great changes in the acceptance of women in responsible\nposts.\"\nCanada's first woman federal\ncabinet minister told the Empire\nClub's \"ladies day\" luncheon\nmost of Canada already has\nadopted equal pay for equal work\nlegislation. But the principle 'of\nequal opportunity for women had\nnot yet generally been accepted.\n\"It is my opinion that women\nthemselves must show their willingness to accept responsibility to\na greater degree than they have\ndone heretofore.\"\nSome women had hesitated to\noffer themselves for election to\nprovincial legislatures or the\nHouse of Commons because of the\ndistance they must travel to discharge their  duties.  But about\nConvicted on\nElection List\nPadding Charges\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Bernice Price,\n27, one of five persons charged in\nalleged padding of voters' lists in\nthe Toronto riding of St. Paul's for\nthe June 10 general election,\nwas convicted on 17 charges\nof forgery, uttering and violating\nthe Canada Elections Act.\nMagistrate T. S. Elmore reserved\njudgment on an 18th count, that\nof forgery, until Dec. 17 so that\nMiss Price could be released on\n$1000 bail.\nMrs. Kathleen Vollum, 50, was\ncommitted for trial on six charges.\nMrs. Nora Gamble, 44, was remanded to Dec. 17 for preliminary\nhearing on 17 charges.\nRemanded until Dec. 18 were\nGeorge Ewing, 57, who faces. 12\ncharges: and Thomas Middleton,\n48, on 32 charges.\nMiss Price pleaded not guilty on\nall 18 charges and refused legal\naid.\nShe testified she signed names\narid addresses to election forms\nused for making additions to voters'\nlists. She said she did so at the\nrequest of Mrs. Gamble.\n\"I didn't know I was doing anything wrong,\" Miss Price testified.\n\"I guess I just trusted Nora too\nmuch.\"\nPOLEBROOK, England (CP) -\nWilliam Tinman, 90, of this Cambridgeshire town, still appears\nevery Sunday wearing the same\npair of black boots in which he\nwas married 60 years ago.\n1,200 worn <m now served on municipal governments. More were\ncontributing through non-elective\nnational and international organizations. .\nReasons often given for not admitting women to certain groups\nincluded the plea that men some-\nlimes talked in \"rather rich language\" and that women tended\nto monopolize conversations.\nSpeaking from 12 years' exper-\nince in elective posts\u2014often as\nthe lone woman in a group of men\nwho \"pulled no punches\"\u2014Mrs.\nFairclough assured her audience\n\". . . in that whole period I never\nlearned one new word.\"\nShe made a crisp \"no comment\" to the second allegation.\nThe statements were included\nin a text of the speech issued to\nthe press before delivery.\nJapanese Pigeon\nOwner Proud Man\nTOKYO (AP) - The Japanese\nowner of a pigeon that travelled\n10,000 miles from Japan to New\nJersey in 4.4 years was the\nproudest man in Japan Thursday.\n\"Atta boy! I am so proud of\nit,\" said beaming Masao Otsuka,\n33, a high school gymnastics\nteacher.\nOtsuka said lie was a sad man\nwhen the bird disappeared alter\nit was released at Ominato, Ao-\nmori, for a 4O0-mile race to\nTokyo May 5, 1953.\nH. Warner Doremus, a Madison, N.J., lawyer, recently discovered the pigeon in his flock,\nits identity band on its right leg.\nPORT HOPE, Ont. (CP)-Gov-\nernor-General Massey is holidaying at his family home. He will\nremain here until after Christmas, except for a brief return to\nOttawa for the annual Government House -staff part.\nFREE!\nTO\nTRUCKERS\nFor Further Details\nDrop in to\nALGAR'S\nWin a 13-day all-\nexpense - paid trip\nto Oslo, Norway, to\nsee Whitby\nDunlops\nPlay World Championship Hockey.\n\"NO  MOUNTING  CHARGES   EVER\"\n5% DISCOUNT FOR CASH\nDUNLOP!\nkjTIRES\nPhone 252\nALGAR'S\nTIRE SERVICE\nand Retreading Ltd.\n\"We Carry a Complete Line of\nDunlop Summer and\nWinter Tires\nNelson, B.C.\nDesigned and Built by Thor   \u2022\nWASHES FINEST FABRICS\n\u2022 THOROUGHLY       \u2022 SAFELY\n\u2022 CLEAN \u2022 GENTLY\n\u2022 FAST \u2022 ECONOMICALLY\nBuilt For Years and Years of\nOustanding Performance.\nOUTSTANDING VALUE AT\n$\n169\n50\n\/ :   Purchase  Now  For Christmas\n4$-    and Receive $20.00 Worth of\n*\nToys of Your Choice\nFREE\nChristmas Sale\nPRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL AND INCLUDING DEC. 18\nBetter Buys for Everyone\nCHECK THESE OUTSTANDING VALUES\nGive her the Gift of a Lifetime and we give you,\nyour gifts for the children\nLIMITED QUANTITY SPECIALS\nSunbeam\nMix Master\nLess juicer.\nReg. $54.50\nSpecial $44.50\nEVER BRIGHT ELECTRIC\nFRY PANS\n. With lids\nReg. $19.35\nSpecial $14.95\nHostess Chairs\nRegular $23.95\nSPECIAL\n$21.95\nSunbeam\nPop-Up Toaster\nReg. $39.50\nSpecial $32.95\nSunbeam Electric\nFRY PAN\nRegular $24.90\nSpecial $19.95\nSunbeam\n\/MASTER\nJunior\nReg. $22.95\nSpecial $19.95\nDanby Electric Deep Fat\nFRYER\nReg. $29.95\nSpecial $17.95\nFIRE SCREEN\nBrass and Black\nREG. $15.95\nSpecial $13.95\nDINETTE SUITE\n5 Piece\nReg. $79.95\nSpecial $69.95\nAll Major Appliances and Furniture Features a Low, Low\nPrice Plus a Generous Gift Certificate for Toys of Your Choice\n21  INCH\nHALL1CRAFTER\nTELEVISION\nThere is no finer Big Picture, Big Value TV with 21-tube\nperformance with handy top-tunlng.\n$\n279\n50\nAnd You Receive $20.00 Worth of\nToys of Your Choice\nFREE\n SPORTS\njiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nSoccer Team Goes To Dogs\nBLACKPOOL, England (Reuters)\u2014Blackpool's police\nsoccer team Thursday credited its 3-2 victory over the\nNomad club to a dog.\nThe police were behind 2-0 Wednesday when a\nGerman shepherd dog ran on the field and sank its teeth\nln{o the right thigh of the rival team's star. With the\nstar forced out of the game, the police squad romped to\nvictory.\nA police officer said Thursday it is \"unlikely\" the\ndog's owner will be prosecuted.\n4lllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllli.iiillllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllll.illlllll\nHabs, Wings Topple\nRangers, Beantowners\n23Fft.\nBy The Canadian Press\nMontreal Canadiens scored th?ir\nfirst victory of the National Hockey\nLeague season over New York\nRangers Thursday night, a 3-2 verdict chalked up on Montreal ice.\nAt Detroit, Gordie Howe scored\ntwo goals and assisted on another\nas the Red Wings edged Boston\nBruins 3-2. It was Detroit's first'\ntriumph on home ice in eight\ngames.\nThe league - leading Canadiens\noutshot Rangers but needed the\nfirst-period goals by Don Marshall,\nBernie Geoffrion and Marcel Bonin to scrape through.\nHEAVY SHOOTING\nBill Gadsby counted for New\nYork in the first period after Mont\nreal had taken a 2-0 lead' and Dean\nPrentice scored for the Rangers in\nthe second period.\nCanadiens poured 48 shots at\ngoalie Marcel Paille of Rangers\nwhile Jacques Plante of Montreal\nfaced 26.\nThe Ranger loss left them in\nsecond place, trailing Canadiens\nby nine points.\nDon McKenney put Boston In\nfront in the second period but Howe\nevened it up 25 seconds later. Howe\nand Norm Ullman gave Detroit a\n3-1 lead before Allen Stanley narrowed the gap in the third period.\nJean Beliveau of Montreal was\ntaken to hospital after the game\nwith what was reported to be a\nrib separation suffered sometime\nin the third period.'\nFLAM, SEIXAS\nTOP BELGIANS\nIN FIRST ROUND\nBRISBANE (AP) - A comeback\nvictory by Herbie Flam and a\nworkmanlike straight-set sweep\nby veteran Vic Seixas sent the\nUnited States into a 2-0 lead over\nBelgium Thursday in. the interzone\nDavis Cup tennis finals.\nThe U.S. can clinch the round\nby winning Friday's doubles event,\nmaking the final twp singles mere\nformalities.\nFlam, whose bouts of mental\ndepression made his appearance\non the court uncertain until the final moments, won a marathon\nfrom Belgium's'\" Jackie Brichant\n6-3, 4-6, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3. Then Seixas,\nplaying the 55th Davis Cup match\nof his career, smashed the classy\nPhilippe Washer into quick submission 6-0, 6-3, 6-4.\nSeixas and 44-year-old Gardnar\nMulloy will face the seasoned\nteam of Washer and Brichant in\nthe doubles.\nTwo hours before the match\nFlam was visited by a doctor and\nU.S. team captain Bill Talbert was\ncontemplating a request that he\nbe permitted to substitute Mulloy.\nWoner Recovered\nTAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Paul\nWaner, member of the baseball\nhall of fame, was to be released\nfrom a tuberculosis hospital Wednesday\u2014recovered.\nWaner, who -gained baseball\nfame with his hitting for Pitts-\nburgh Pirates, entered hospital\nSept. 4. For several years he has\nbeen with Milwaukee Braves, serving as batting instructor for the\nminor league teams.\nLo-Llfes\n(outside beams)\ngive 50 feet '\nmore visibility I\nHi-Lifes\n(all four beams)\ngive more light\nin an Improved\npattern I\nReduce glare\nfor greater night\ndriving safety 1\nNOW! SEE THE FEATURES OF THE FUTURE AT VOUR\nAUTHORIZED\nOLDSMOBILE\nQUALITY DEALER'S!\nTODAY and TOMORROW\nSilver King Ski Club\nPUBLIC\nAUCTION\nBARGAINS GALORE I\nToday \u2022-'Dec. 13th Comm. 7 pan.\nSaturday ~Dec. 14th Comm. 2 p.m.\n$2500 Brand New Merchandise\nDonated by manufacturers and wholesalers\nfrom across Canada.\nHELP~\nAt 327 Baker St\nSmokies Whip Warriors 4-1\nTo End Six-Game Loss Skein\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail Smoke Eaters\nerupted with a solid two-way performance here Thursday night to\nshatter a six-game losing streak\nand move within two points of\nRossland Warriors in the battle for\nthird place in the WIHL.\nGarth Hayes potted two goals in\nthe 4-1 victory over Rossland in\nwhich Trail was never headed with\nAdolf Tambeilini and Gord Robertson adding singles.\nNimble Norm Lenardon, hard -\nseating Rossland rightwinger combined with Alex Birukow and Leo\nLucchini to ruin the shutout bid\nof Smokies' ace netminder Seth\nMartin.\nMartin kicked out 27 shots, including 12 in the second period,\nwhile Rossland goalie Reno Zanier\nblocked 29. In the first stanza, Reno\nwas forced to stop 13 shots. He had\nlittle chance on the goals that\neluded him.\nSmoke Eater coach Gerry Thomson, desperate to end the losing\nstreak that dropped Smokies from\na three-way tie for second place\ninto sole possession of the cellar,\njuggled his lines and wound up\nwith Tambeilini at centre between\nHa^es and Cal Hockley. The formation took charge whenever it\nappeared on the ice and figured in\nevery goal.\nSmokies, in direct contrast to\ntheir recent games, failed to panic\nunder pressure, with Ray Hamilton, in particular, steadying the\ndefence. Late in the game, Hamilton launched a tremendous check\nat Warrior forward Steve Chorney\nand decked him cleanly behind the\nnet.\nRobertson's tally, the eventual\nwinner, came as Gord trailed Hockley and Hayes into the Warrior\nzone and converted a pass in front\nof (he net with a quick-slap that\ngave Zanier no chance.\nOnly six penalties, four in the\nsecond period. Warriors, a well-\ncoached aggregation that is always\ntough to beat, drew three.\nRossland\u2014goal: Zanier; defence,\nLofvendahl, Kraiger, Ferguson,\nMcCabe; forwards; Lenardon, Birukow, Lucchini, Andrews, Turik,\nDesrosiers, Mclntyre, Demore,\nJones, Chorney.\nTrail\u2014goal: Martin; defence, Ro-\n.. .your Centennial project.\n... yourself to a real bargain.\n... make Nelson a better community.\nFormer Coleman Electric Store\nAnderson, Cooper\nStop Fraser, Rose\nMELBOURNE (AP) - Mai Anderson and Ashley Cooper Thursday defeated their main rivals in.\nsingles to boost their chances of\nrepresenting Australia in the Davis Cup challenge round later this\nmonth.\nAnderson, young Queenslander\nwho won the United States tennis\nchampionship, eliminated left\nhanded Neale Fraser 7-5, 6-3 7-9,\n6-4 in the semi-finals of the Victorian tennis championships.\nCooper, Australian champion,\novercame Mervyn Rose, another\nsouthpaw, 1-6, 64, 9-7, 6-4 in the\nother semi-final. The final will be\nplayed Saturday.\nHawks Call Barkley\nTo Replace Vasko\nCHICAGO (AP) - Chicago\nBlack Hawks of-the National Hockey League Thursday called up dft\nfenceman Doug Barkley from their\nBuffalo Bisons' club in the Amer-\nican Hockey League.\nBarkley will replace injured Elmer (Moose) Vasko and will join\nthe Hawks in time for their match\nagainst the Maple Leafs at Toronto Saturday.\nThe 20-year-old Barkley is a native of Lethbridge, ^lta., and was\nassigned to the Bisons last fall.\nbertson, Conn, Andre, Hanillton;\nforwards, Tambeilini, Penner, Rypien, Hicks, Hayes, Hockley, Godfrey, Bursaw, Cook.\nFirst period\u20141, Trail, Hayes\n(Tambeilini, Hockley) 4:05; 2,\nRossland \u2014 Lenardon (Birukow,\nLucchini) 17:14; 3, Trail - Robertson (Hockley, Hayes) 18:16.\nPenalty\u2014Ferguson 8:30.\nSecond period\u20144, Trail\u2014Hayes\n(Hockley, Hamilton) 10:15, 5, Trail\n-Tambeilini (Conn) 17:01.\nPenalty\u2014Godfrey 12:58.\nThird,period\u2014No scoring.\nPenalties\u2014Andre 12:08; Kraiger\n18:55; Lofvendahl 18:55; Rypien\n19:29.\nBarnes Seeks\nBig Guarantee\nSYDNEY (AP) - George Barnes\nof Australia, British Empire welterweight boxing champion, wants\na $6000 guarantee to fight in the\nUnited States in the world title\neliminatoin series.\nBarnes said Thursday night he\nalso will ask the International Boxing Club for return fares for himself and his manager, Jim Barker.\nBarnes was one of six welterweights named to participate on an\nelimination\" tournament. Isaac Logart of Havana defeated Gaspar\nOrtega of Mexico last Friday in\nthe first match.\nVince Martinez of Paterson,\nN.J., and Gil Turner of Philadelphia are paired Jan. 15. Virgil\nAkins of St. Louis and Barnes are\nthe other two men.\nSPT\u2014Milwaukee Monopoly 2-42T\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nQUEBEC LEAGUE\nTrois - Rivieres   0,   Shawinigan\nFalls 3\nMontreal 4, Quebec 3\nOHA-NOHA\nSudbury 2, Soo 8\nKitchener 6, North Bay 8\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nOttawa-Hull 4, Hamilton 3\nSt. Catharines 0, Peterborough 2\nTHUNDER BAY JUNIOR\nPort Arthur North Stars 2, Fort\nWilliam Hurricanes 4\nSASKATCHEWAN JUNIOR\nFlin Flon 3, Melville 3\nLions Advocate\nHolding Game in\nMiddle of Year\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia Lions will suggest at the\nCanadian Football Council's annual meeting in Winnipeg January that the Shrine East-West all-\nstar game be played at the midway point of the Wetstern Interprovincial Football Union and Big\nFour seasons.\nDespite rumors that next year's\ngame will be played in July or\nAugust to escape the aquatic conditions that have plagued the\nShrine's three December games,\nLions manager Herb Capozzi favors the mid-season date,\nI think it has fewer disadvantages than a pre-season game,\" he\nsaid. \"It will certainly be discussed at the CFC meeting.\"\nCanadiens Get\nTop Salaries;\nHawks Lowest\nTORONTO (CP) - Montreal is\nthe highest paid team in the National Hockey League and Chicago the lowest, Milton Mound,\ncounsel for the NHL Players As-\nspciation, said Wednesday.\nHis statement was' based on a\nrecent report on organized professional team sports; prepared by\nan antitrust subcommittee of the\nUnited States House of Representatives.\nThe findings were based on testimony furnished Aug. 8 by league President Clarence Campbell, James D. Norris of Chicago\nBlack Hawks and players Ted\nLindsay and Doug Harvey.\nSalaries for the 1956-57 season\nwith the average for each player\nin brackets:\nMontreal $192,000 ($10,670); Detroit $180,750 ($10,040); Boston,\n$161,250 ($8960); New York $155,\n000 ($8,640); Toronto, $152,000\n($8,440); Chicago, $151,500) ($8,-\n420).\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1937 \u2014 IS\nBraves' Monopoly\nMay Last Long Time\nSki Slants\nBy Sitzmark\nNames will not be mentioned In\nthis column any more. It is difficult to remember and give credit\nto everyone who helps us on the\nski lift project. And it has b e e n\nbrought to my attention that it is\nunfair to mention one and'not another.\ni So we wish to say \"thanks\" to\neveryone who has helped us, as\nwell as those who will help in the\nfuture.\nWe were very elated the first of\nthis week when our upper bull-\nwheel arrived and we expect to\ntransport and instal it this weekend. We were deflated, however,\nwhen we discovered two bearings\nwere missing. There is nothing we\ncan do now about installing the\nwheel until the bearings come.\nHowever, this will give us a\nchance to finish off the bottom\ndrive-shed and the cabin.\nDuring the week, quite a lot of\nclearing has been done and now\nwe have a swath cleared from the\nbench above the California Road\nabout 100 to 150 feet wide.\nRemember, there's still plenty\nto do down at the lower shed and\ncabin, -so let's see you there Sunday morning to give us a hand.\nFarenholtz, Harvey\nAdvance Past Foes\nIn Thursday night's play at the\nNelson Curling Club, Frizt Far-\nenholtb, winner of section A, beat\nArt Waters, winner of section C,\n10-4. In section B playoffs, J. Harvey beat A. Jeffries 12-4.\nWalter Wait beat J. Harvey 8-4\nin section B tie playoffs. Friday\nnight Wait meets Harold Moore at\n7 p.m., with the winner of that\nmatch playing against Farenholtz\nat 9 p.m. in the first competition\nfinal.\nMAY POSTPONE TITLE SCRAP\nLONDON (AP) - South African lightweight Willie Toweel, seeking a world title shot at Joe Brown\nof the U. S,, has signed to meet\nOrlando Zulueta of Cuba at London's Empress hall Jan. 14. Toweel\nis the British Empire champion.\nThe fight will be at 137 pounds\nover 10 rounds.\nHarry Levene who is trying to\nline up a world heavyweight title\nfight for Britain in June or July,\nwill promote the Toweel-Zulueta\nfight.\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Joe Spieser,\nbrother - manager of light-heavyweight Chuck Spieser, said Thursday the title bout between champion Archie Moore ahd Spieser will\nbe postponed at least until .late\nFebruary.\nLocal independent promoters\nhave had difficulty lining up television coverage and raising money\nfor the fight that originally was\nannounced las,t October and scheduled for late January in Detroit,\nSpieser said Wednesday that the\nInternational Boxing Commission\nhad blocked two tentative deals to\ntelevise the fight. An IBC spokesman in New York denied the\ncharge.\nSpieser also said the promoters\nDAVE  STEWART\nSENIOR\nHOCKEY\nSATURDAY\nCivic Arena\n8:00 p.m.\nReserved Seat Sale\nKootenay Stationer!\nTODAY\n10 a.m. -5 p.m.\nReserve $1.28\nAdults $1.00 .\nStudents 35\u00ab\u00a3\nSPOKANE vs. NELSON\nFLYERS\nMAPLE LEAFS\nwere about $35,000 short of the\n$100,000 guarantee given Moore,\nJack (Doc) Kearns, one of Moore's\nmanagers, ' indicated Wednesday\nthat the promoters would be given\nmore time to try to raise the\nMoney, saying that Moore was\n\"anxious\" that the fight be held.\nBy BEN OLAN\nNEW YORK (AP) - The Milwaukee Braves have been baseball's champions of the world for\nonly two months and already the\ncry is being sent up: \"Break up\nthe Braves.\"\nTime was when they said t h e\nsame thing about the New York\nYankees. But the apparent\nstrengthening of the Chicago White\nSox and several other American\nLeague clubs in recent trades has\ncut short the clamor.\nLast week's deal that moved\npitchers Bob Rush, Don Kaiser\nand outfielder Ed Haas from Chicago to Milwaukee served to\nstrengthen the Braves' chances of\nwinning the 1958 National League\npennant and, for that matter, could\nresult In their monopolizing the\ntitle for many years to come.\nVice - president Buzzie Bavasi\nof the Los Angeles Dodgers was\none of the first to admit the situation for the rest of the senior circuit teams looked ominous.\n\"Let's face lt,\" he said. \"It\nmakes it that much tougher for\nus next year.\"\nthe Philadelphia Phillies, chipped\nin with, \"Guess I'll have to go to\nwork and do something now. But\nPERU REFUSES\nTO MEET ISRAEL\nLIMA, Peru (AP) - The Peruvian Soccer Federation Thursday\nrefused to take part in a drawing\nto choose a national team to meet\nIsrael in the World Soccer Cup\nchampionship eliminations.\nThe federation said it will send\nthe International Soccer Federation (FIFA) an explanation.\nArab nations pitted against Israel in the regional eliminations\nfor next year's world championship refused to play the Israelis.\nRather than have Israel, which has\na weak team, win by default, the\nFIFA arranged a draw to pick\nelimination - round opponents for\nIsrael. The draw would have Included a number of Latin American teams which lost in the preliminary rounds.\nThe Peruvian federation said the\nconditions for participation in the\ndraw were too difficult. It added\nthat the FIFA has broken standing\nregulations in trying to pick new\nopponents for Israel.\nProceedings\nPlease Frank\nShaughnessy\nMONTREAL (CP) - Frank\nShaughnessy, president of the International Baseball League, said\nThursday the major leagues \"have\nhad the green light so far in rulings by the U.S. department of\njustice but now tha green light\nmay turn against them.\"\nShaughnessy was pleased over\nmoves that may block the majors'\nplans for televising Sunday games.\n\"Now lt looks as if we're getting somewhere,\" he said in reference to Washington reports that\nrepresentatives Celler and Keating may take anti-trust action as\nheads of a congressional committee.\nShaughnessy led opposition to\n[the majors' plan at the resent\nbaseball meeting in Colorado\nSprings.\nNHL STANDINGS\nBy The Canadian Press\nP W LT FAPts\nMontreal 26 17   5  4 94 52\nNew York .... 29 12 12  5 67 66\nBoston  27 12 12  3 75 69\nToronto  27  9 12  6 71 73\nDetroit 27   9 13  5 52 79\nChicago 26  8 13 5 46 66\nGames Saturday, Dec. 14:\nBoston at Montreal\nChicago at Toronto\nNew York at Detroit.\nPhils Buy Philley\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) -The\nPhiladelphia Phillies Wednesday\nannounced the purchase of Dave\nPhilley from the Detroit Tigers\nin a straight cash deal. The price\nwas not disclosed.\nGeneral manager Roy Hamey\nsaid the Phils wanted Philley as\na pinch-hitter as well as utility\nI guarantee you that I won't let the\nBraves catch me in that vise of\ntheirs.\"\nMany other baseball men also\nfeel the transaction which sent\npitcher Taylor Phillips and catcher\nSam Taylor to the Cubs for Rush\nand the others was one-sided.\nAt any rate, the other clubs\nhave a lot of catching up to do.\nCOURSE RECORD\nFALLS TO MOSEL\nSANFORD, Fla. (AP) - Dan\nMosel, a 25-year-old transplanted\nTexan, shattered tha competitive\ncourse record Thursday with an\neight-under-par 62 and opened up\na wide lead in the first round of\nthe Sanford open golf tournament.\nMosel was never over par while\nbagging six birdies and an eagle\nfor his record 33-29\u201462.\n. The previous mark of 68 was\nset in 1955 by Don Fairfield of\nCasey, 111., and equalled by last\nyear's winner, Mike Fetchick of\nYonkers, N.Y.\nAl Balding of Toronto, 1955 winner and a pre-tournament favorite, had 35-35-70.\nJay Hebert finished late with a\n66, good for second place.\u00bbThere\nwas a four-way tie for third at 68\nand seven others in the field of 146\nfinishers shot one-under-par 69s.\nThe 68 shooters were Ed Fur-\ngol, former U.S. national open\nchampion from St. Andrews, 111.;\nBernie Boros of Mid Pines, N.C.;\nand Gay Brewer of Cincinnati,\nOhio.\nBOXER'S WIDOW DIES\nCLEVELAND (API-Mrs. Irene\nKilbane, 69, widow of Johnny Kil-\nbane, former world featherweight\nboxing champion, died at St. John's\nhospital Thursday. Her husband,\nwho was featherweight champion\nfrom 1912 to 1923, died here last\nMay 31.\nDiering, Besana\nTo Association\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver\nMounties made room for two more\nplayers on their PCL baseball roster Wednesday, shipping a couple\nof \"expendables\" off to Louisville.\nDeparting to die American Association club are outfielder Chuck\nDiering and pitcher Fred Besana.\nThe veteran Diering, whose home\nis in St. Louis and who wasn't\nanxious to return to the coast, batted .271 in 65 games with the\nMounties last summer.-\nBesana, an erratic lefthander,\nhad a 1-13 mark with Vancouver to\n1956. He finished last season with\nthe Class A Knoxville club after\nfailing to make the grade here in\nthe spring.\n\"That leaves us room to maneon-\nvre,\" said general manager Cedri*\nTallis of the Mounties.\nThis advertisement ir. not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n 14\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThs Daily News doei not hold  itself responsible in the event\nof an error in the following lists,  .    :.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices')\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium\t\nAnacon Lead\t\nAnglo Rouen\t\nAumacho\t\nBase Metals\t\nBibis Yukon\t\nBroulan \t\nBrunswick \t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCampbell C \t\nCan Met\t\nCassiar      \t\nCentral Patricia\t\nChimo\t\nCons Denison\t\nCons. Discovery \t\nCons Halliwell    \t\nCons Mining & Smelting . .\nCon Sub\t\nConwest     \t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man\t\nD'Aragon\t\nDonalda  \t\nEast Amphi\t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nFalconbridge  \t\nFaraday     \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel. \t\nGlen Uranium\t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerals \t\nHeadway  \t\nHollinger  \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration \t\nInt. Nickel \t\nIron Bay\t\nJoliet Que\t\nJonsmith    \t\nR JJowsey\t\nKerr Addison \t\nLabrador        \t\nLake Lingman \t\nLakeshore  ' :\t\nLexindin       \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLorado    \t\nMacassa    \t\nMacDonaW \t\n14.37%\n.49\n.22\n.WA\n.58\n2.80\n.06.4\n5.10\n1.65\n6.00\n.71\n.45 .\n10.25\n2.40\n.28V4\n17.3714\n.51\n2.65\n.24\n.08\n.1114\n.07 <4\n.07\n1.55\n1.89\n22.50\n1.25\n1.34\n8.15\n3.95\n.12\n13.25\n.09\n.37\n21.00\n45.50\n.42\n69.50\n1.95\n.20\n14.3714\n15.25\n.06 V4\n3.90\n.04.4\n1.47\n.54\n2.32\n.25\nFIRST COAL MINE\nThe first regular coal-mining\noperation in Canada was near\nGlace Bay, N.S., in 1720.\nl.f\n.58\nijftle 6\"*\n\u2022* ' Take home\nChristmas Family Packs of\nrefreshing, delicious\nWrigley's Spearmint Gum.\nIt's a treat the\nwhole familywill enjoy.\nMadsen R. L\t\nManeast\t\nMaritime Mining\t\nMcLeod  88\nMilliken    '.     1.86\nMining Corp   10.50\nMogul 46\nNew Alger .! 06 '\nNew Bidlamaque 05\nNew Delhi 37\nNew Fortune  ll'\/z\nNew Highridge      .12\nNew Harricana  13\nNew Jason 07i4\nNew Lund  16\nNisto  05\nNoranda New    35.6214\nNorgold  05\nNormetals       2.75\nNorpax   \u201e 29.4\nNorth Can     1.02\nNorth Rankin  45\nOpemiska        6.40\nPickle Crow 98\nPlacer Devel     8.00\nPreston E. D     4.55\nQuebec Lithium     6.50\nQuebec Metallurgical 76\nQuemont      7.50\nRadiore   39\nSherritt Gordon     4.45\nSilver Miller  26\nSullivan Con      1.95\nSylvanite     1.05\nTeck Hughes      1.35\nTemagami       1.20\nThomp-Lund  75\nTombill  19\nVentures     22.75\nVicour  04.4\nViolamac       1.32\nWaite Amulet     6.35\nWiltsey Goglin  16\nWright Hargreaves ....:     1.27\nYale  10\nYellowknife Bear  75\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc \t\nBanff Oils      1,\nBailey Selburn     7\nCalgary and Edmonton ....   20\nCdn Atlantic   ....         4\nCanadian Collieries      4\nCanadian Devonian     .5\nCan Decalta \t\nDuvex\t\nHome A      15.\nLiberal Pete      1.29\nLong Island Pete  08\nMidcon 52\nNew Continental  24\nOkalta       1.33\nPacific Pete    19.50\nPonder       .25\nProv Gas      2.72\nRoyalite      14.00\nSpooner  1714\nStanwell Oil 80\nTriad     4.80\nUnited Oils     2\nYank Canuck \t\nWestern Pacific \t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian\t\nB.C. Electric 4s\t\nB.C. Electric 4%s\t\nB.C. Forest      \t\nB.C.- Packers A\t\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A\t\nBurrard A\t\nCanadian Breweries \t\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCan Chem Co\t\nCan Oil  \t\nCanadian Pacific Rly....\nCan Packers B\t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas \t\nDist. Seagram\t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium\t\nDom. Steel Ord.\t\nDom. Stores  ',.\nDom. Tar & Chemical.\nFamous Players \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel ...\nAluminum\nArgus 2nd pfd ...\nAtlas St\t\nB.A. Oil\t\n49\n.07\n.18\n26Y4\n23.4\n29%\n45\n17\n36'\/4\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n9:00 Good Morning\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n9:45 Guiding Light * .\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n10:15 Love of Life\n10:30 As The World Turns *\n11:00 Beat The Clock *\n11:30 Houseparty *\n12:00 Big Payoff \u2022\n12:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n1:00 Brighter Day **\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edge of Night \u00bb\n2:00 Garry Moore *\n3:00 Fun At Home\n3:30 Strike It Rich *\n4:00 The Early Show\n5:30 Song Shop\n6:00 The News\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 Leave It To Beaver *\n7:00 Trackdown *\n7:30 Zane Grey Theater *\n8:00 Mr. Adam and Eve \u00ab\n8:30 Men of Annapolis\n9:00 The Line Up \u00bb\n9:30 Sheriff of Cochise\n10:00 Jane Wyman Theater\n10:30 The News\n10:35 The Late Show\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n10 Color Test Pattern\n12 Test Pattern\n25 NARTB .     \u2022\n26 Bible Reading\n29 Program Previews\n30 O-Tunes\n00. Tic Tac Dough *\n30 It Could Be You *\n00 Arlene Francis Show *\n30 Fun To Reduce\n45 Your Own Home\n00 Price Is Right *\n30 Bride and Grootfl *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n00 Queen For a Day *\n45 Modern Romances *\n00 Blondie *\n30 Truth or Consequences <\n00 Matinee On Six\n\"Married Bachelor\"\n.00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"Junior Miss\"\n30 Woalherwise\nThe Front Page   .\n; 45-NBC News *\n:00 Cavalcade of Sports *\n:45 Decorating Ideas\n:00 Court of Last Resort *\n:30 Life of Riley *\n:00 M-Squad *\n:30 Thin Man *\n:00 Silent Service\n:30 Lale Movie\n\"Night Must Fall\"\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\nLiberace\nAmerican Bandstand *\nDo You Trust Your Wife '\nAmerican Bandstand *\nPopeye\nBuccaneers *\nMickey Mouse Club *\n76 Sports Club\nNewsroom\nWeather Sketch\n6:45 Phillips World News\n6:55 Sports Spotlight\n7:00 Kit Carson\n7:30 Rin Tin Tin *\n8:00 Jim Bowie *\n8:30 Palrice Munsel Show *\n9:00 Frank Sinatra Show *\n9:30 Dale With The Angels *\n10:00 Colt .45\n10:30 Command Performance\n614\nItVs\nsm\n8'A\n13'\/4\n38Y4\n5%\n7\n25'\/i\n13%\n14%\n\u2022 5\n27'4\n23 'A\n33V4\n8V4\n2914\n2SYs\n25\nSVi\n18%\n49V4\n10\n15\nFanny Farmer    1714\nFord A  70\nGatineau   28>\/i\nGypsum Lime  27\nImperial Oil   42     }\nImp. Tobacco  11H'\u00bb\nInt. Pete .'. : 39 I *\nLaura Secord   19.4\nLoblaw A   2114\nLoblaw B :... 2114\nMassey Harris      6%\nMcColl Frontenac ..'  5414\nMont. Loco. ..'.  1514\nMoore Corp  6414\nNat. Steel Car   21%\nPage Hershey   10714\nPowell River  32\nRuss. Industries          714\nShawinigan   23\nSicks Brew  20\nSimpsons A   18\nStandard Paving  3314\nSteel of Canada   46\nTaylor Pearson         814\nUnion Gas of Canada  6914\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC  STANDARD TIME)\nFRIDAY, DECEMBER 13,  1957\n55\u2014Farm Fare\n00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Opening Markets\n20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n55\u2014Morning Devotions\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Story Parade\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n: 45\u2014Tex and Jinx\n55\u2014News\n: 00\u2014Christmas Cavalcade\n:30\u2014Seven Come Eleven\n: 00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n15\u2014Sports News\n:25\u2014News\n: 30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n31:45\u2014Rocking With Boate*\n4:45\u2014Round About\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantoyani\n6:30\u2014Christian Science\n\u25a0 6:45\u2014After Dinner Music\n6:55\u2014Bob Bowman\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Tapestry In Music\n8:00\u2014A Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014Songs for You\n8:15\u2014Piano Music\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC   PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD  TIME)\nSATURDAY,\n7:00\u2014Marine  Weather\n7:05\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News, Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Saturday March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Stu Davis\n8:30\u2014Program Resume\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saturday  Serenae\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Kerry Wood\n10:00-Postmark U K\n10:30\u2014World Church News\n10:45\u2014News and Weather\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n2:30\u2014Don Messer\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\nDECEMBER 14,  1957\n3:30\u2014Now I Ask You\n4:00\u2014Presenting Pozy\n4:30-This Week\n4:45\u2014Sports College\n5:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n5:25\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Hockey\n7:00\u2014Organ Music\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Western  Roundup\n8:00\u2014Saturday Night Date\n8:15\u2014Armdale Chorus\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Music from Montreal\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n10: Oil-News\n10:1!>\u2014Parade of Choirs\n10:45\u2014Satellite Serenade\n11:00\u2014Hot Air\nll:57-News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nDOWN\n1. Satellite\ncarrier\n2. Molding\nedgn\nS. River\n(S.A.)\n4. Esdtipo\n' (slang)\n5. Faint\n6. Disembark\n7. Halt ems\n8. Beetle\n11. Couch\n13. Browns\n15. Flying aloft\n18. Story\n19. Gold\n(Sp.)\n20. Dumped\nin\nBoston\nHarbor\nS3. Old\nNorse\nwork\n24. Merriment\n25. Writing\nfluid\n28. Food\n(slang)\n27. Wolfish\n29. \"A .\nAngel\"\n30. Capital\n(Nor.)\n32. Assistants\nansa asaa\naaauia hqqqc\nannus hhhci.=\naQH raata nan\n3n aantaH\nhqhh Hssasi?\nHBIIBH   KHEJiK\naaaniEiH hhhbi\naara Eian ana\na suns a HErsafs\naatinra stasias\nOaUEl   HHHB\nta-i\u00bb\nYesterday's Annuel\"\n33. Valley of\nthe moon\n35. Plunge\ninto water\n38. Girl's nam* *\n39. Leg joint\n40. Poem\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Means of\ntravel\nii. Killed\n8. The\nkiller\nwhale\n10. Diminish\n11. Beat it!\n12. Beginning\n1-1. Iroquoian\nspirit\n15. Turf\n16. Veterans\nAdministration (abbr.)\n17. A garland\n20. Metal\n21. Near to\n22. Constellation\n23. Lampreys\n24. Sen.\nSmather'g\nstate\n26. Adhesive\n28. India (poet.)\n29. Buddha\n(Chin.)\n31. Flow\n32. Turkey's\ncapital\n(poss.)\n34. Overhead\n35. Excavate\n36. Sick\n37. Divided into\ntwo equal\nlobes\n39. A shout\n41. Hub of\nwheel\n42. Not\nworking\n43. Potato\nbuds\n44. End of\na hammer\nDAILY CHYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work itt\n1 AXYDLBAAXR\nis LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.   Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\n' Each day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBLEUAXRT    XR    BPU    FLRSXIURFB\nLS     BEURBN-LRU \u2014 DLPRKLR.\nYCBtcrday's Cryptot|iiot\u00ab\u2014EVERY ONE THAT FLATTER!'\nTHEE IS NO FRIEND IN MISERY\u2014BARNFIELD.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\n1\n\\\n2.\n3\na\n1\ns\n6\nr\n6\nU\n%\ny\n%\n10\n%\nII\n%\n11\n13\n14\n%\n'^\n15\n%\nlb\n\"7\n18\n19\n%\n2o'\n21\nk\n21\n|\n23\ni\n%\n24\n25\"\n%\n%\n26\n27\nm\n25\nf\/,\nv>\n3\u00b0\n51\n|\n31\n33\n^\n3i\n%\n%\n3f\n61\n30\n1\n35\nAO\n1\n41\n1\nAr\n%\n%\n43\n%\nw\"\n%\nI\n2-13\n 2^01-\nSMALL INVESTMENT  -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  \u2014  PHONE   1844\nHELP WANTED\nFOR EXTRA CASH INCOME -\nwrite for details about easy\nstarting plans for selling Raw-\nleigh's famous line of household\nnecessities. Full time city districts and rural localities also\navailable. W. T. Rawleigh Co.\nLtd., Dept. KK-153, 589 Henry\nAve., Winnipeg 2, Man.\t\nWANTED - SALESMEN-AGENTS\n50% profit on direct selling or\nmail order item on Personalized\n\"BLITZ-SHAVE\". No brush, no\nlather. Every shaver a prospect.\nFull year's supply only $1. Free\ndetails and samples of literature.\nNo obligation. Apply Box 8289,\nNelson Daily News\nEXPERIENCED SEWING MACH-\nirie salesman for Nelson and vicinity. Apply Box 9307, Daily\nNews.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nACCOUNTANT AND STENO-\ngrapher of 16VI years experience\ndesires position. Highest credentials. Apply stating salary to\nBox 9222, Daily News.\nFOR HIRE - TANDEM DUMP\ntruck, 10 yd, capacity. Phone\n1757-R.\nFOR   ANY   ODD   JOBS   PHONE\nh-^'-mrn. 256-R\nRENTALS\nTHREE ROOMS JOHNSTONE\nBlock. Stove and fridge supplied,\nheated, $55. Four-roomed furnished apartment, two bedrooms,\nown furnace, $50. Three bedroom family home Lower Rosemont, exceptionally large living\nvoom and dining room. Large\ndeep-freeze In basement, o i 1\nfurnace, $65 per month, immediate occupancy. T. D. Rosling\nand Son Ltd., 568 Ward St.\nFOUR ROOM SUITE NEAR Hospital High Street. Gas piped in.\nImmediate occupancy. A p o I y\nFerguson and Ferguson, 1-373\nBaker St.\nGROUND FLOOR APT. LARGE\nliving room with fireplace. Dinette, kitchen, l bedroom. Fridge\nand stove only. Heated. Phone\n542-R.\nMODERN 2-B.R. APT. WOULD\nshare with business lady. Away\nweekends and holidays. Phone\n1216-X. 519 Silica Street:       ,\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminal BIdg. For p a r t i c u-\nlars phone 77.\nHOUSE FOR RENT. SUITABLE\nfor Nelson workers. Low rent.\nApply M. Cunningham, Crescent\n9\"      Valley. Phone 206,\nhuu^i<;kc;i';ijiN(; or sleeping\nrooms, furnished, weekly oi\nmonthly rates Allen Hotel. 171\nB?'.er Street\t\ntJNFURN. DUPLEX, 5 WARM\nrooms, beautiful view, self contained. Gas stove. Adults. Phone\n335-X.\nWARM, LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING\nroom for young man. Corner of\nBaker. 526 Josephine, ph. 321-R,\nFOR RENT - UNFURNISHED 5-\nroom apt., $55 per month. Available immediately. Phone 231.\nFOR RENT - MODERN 3-RM.\napartment, heated. Adults. Apply 1019 Latimer.\nPartly furnished 2 bedr.\nhouse. S. P. Pond, 1019 Fall St.,\npr phone 1421-Y.\t\nA HOME AWAY FROM HOME-\nBrad's Auto Court. Winter rentals. Phone 1680.\nDELUXE MODERN 3-RM. APT.,\n1 BR., ground floor, self - con-\ntained. Phone 130.\nLARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM,\nheated, fully furn., and fridge,\nfor 1 or 2. 171 Baker Street.\nAPT. 3 RMS. AND BATH. PART-\nly furnished. 210 Vernon Street.\nFOR RENT - CENTRALLY Located unfurn, apt. Phone 933-X.\nDOUBLE AND SINGLE UNITS.\nNorth Shore Motel   Ph. 1684:\nSOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. 606 Front St.\n2   RM.   SUITE,   PARTLY   FUR-\nnished. Phone 1341-X\nPETS, CANARIES,  BEFS\nFOR SALE - GERMAN SHEP-\nherd pups. Phone 964-R,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\n. H   S   ELMES,   ROSSLAND. B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nM C. McCORQUODALE. B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752. Office Mgr\u201e Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-Sth St., Nelson.   Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (CivilI\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118\nINSURANCE\nWawanesa Mutual Insurance Co.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.,\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\n MACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding  Phone 593.      324 Vernon St.\nWATKINS PRODUCTS\nWATKINS QUALITY PRODUCTS.\nPhone 469-Y.\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\nS\nPUBLIC NOTICES^\nTENDERS WANTED\nBids will be received up to 3 p.m,\nFriday, Dec. 13th, 1957, for a hot\nwater boiler as is and where is.\nMay be seen at the Nelson Civic\nCentre, 719 Vernon St.\nThe highest or any bid not neces\nsarlly accented.\nJack Morgan, Manager,\nNelson Civic Centre,\nNelson, B.C.\nI, ABRAHAM ADRIAN, OF\nGrand Forks, B.C., will not be\nresponsible for any debts made\nby my wife, Mrs. Joyce B.\nAdrian, before or after this date,\nDec. 10, 1957, at Nelson, or anywhere else.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nSpecials\nTRACTIONIZING\nTIRES,  CHAlMS\nANTI-FREEZE\nAFTER HOURS\nBy Appointment\nOnly 7 Brand New\n'57 PICKUPS\nAt o Discount of\nIf Trade Involved We Are\nGENEROUS\nOLDS. -CHEVS.\nTHE   LARGEST\nBODY AND FENDER SHOP\nIN THE INTERIOR\nWheel Balancing\nand Wheel Alignment\nA-l CARS in A-l\nCondition-All Makes\n.    SPECIALS\n1957 Chev. Station\nWagon\nWith.Positraction\nPre Christinas\n1953 Pontiac Deluxe\nVolkswagen  1955\nAustin   1955\nZephyr  1955\nBorg Ward ...... 1957\nNash Met. Hard Top\nCoupe   .  1957\ne\nLtd.\nPhone 35\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\"\nUsed parts for 1949 to '52 Austins, '49 to '51 Hillamns, '50 to\n'51 Morris Minor, '47 Studebaker,\n'47 Pontiac. For sale, '53 Austin.\nCottonwood Wreckage Service,\nph. 1363-L-2, Box 382, 24 Ymir\nRoad, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - PARTS FOR '47\nFord. Phone 1885-L-2,\n(Continued in Next Column)\n.   AUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nHi Value\nUsed\n1956 I.H.C. S182\nSteel Lumber Dedt.\n190-inch wheelbase.\nAs new condition.\n1952 I.H.C. L180\nCab and Chassis.\n172-inch wheelbase.\n\u25a0 1953 Willys Jeep Pickup\nFour Wheel Drive.\nGMC Tandem Flat Deck\nWith Boom and Winch.\nI.H.C.  KBS8\nWith Trailer, Logging Bunks.\nWhite WB 22\nWith Trailer, Logging Bunks.\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone  1810- 100\n'49 MERC. HALF TON PICKUP\nwith built-in box. R & H. New\ntires and battery, $275. Phone\n1581-R-2. .\n1949  FORD  - LOW   MILEAGE,\ngood condtion. Phone 1841.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\n.used equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipo and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357\nFOR SALE - KENMORE WASH-\ner and Kenmore' propane gas\nstove. Both 1 yr. old. Also small\nbaby crib. Phone 352-L.\n2 GOOD USED OIL SPACE HEAT-\ners, 32,000 BTU, $30; 45,000 BTU,\n$50. Columbia Trading, 902 Front\nStreet.\nCOMB. GAS AND COAL STOVE\nwith gas tank heater, $95, Lloyd\nbaby carriage as new, $25. Ph.\n1245-R.\nBEAUTIFUL ELECTRIC TRAIN\nset. Remote control switches.\nRemote coupler station, etc. Ph.\n1121-R.\n1 SUNSHINE RANGETTE IN\ngood order. Can be seen at 531\nBaker St. W. Beet, ph. 241-X-2.\nFOR SALE-TWO LETTER-SIZE\nsteel filing cabinets. Phone 747-L\n9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or evenings.\nPOTATOES, NO. 1 GEMS, $2.50;\nj Turnips, $3.25 per 100 lbs.. R.\nKosiancic, Crescent Vallev\nPROPANE GAS RANGE, COM-\nplete. Can be converted to nat\nural gas. Phone 1280-X.\nCHRISTMAS TREES, 3 MI. WEST\nGranite Rd. Open to 10 o'clock.\nRight beside highway.\nLAMONTE CLARINET, $45. LIKE\nnew. Can be seen at 509 Latimer\nor phone 1596-R\nFOR SALE - 4-BURNER ELEC-\ntrie range in good condition. Ph.\nMr. Trottier, 686.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags, 10c per lb. Nelson Daily\nNews.\nHEALTH  FOOD CENTRE OPEN\ndav and evening  924 Davies Si\nFQR SALE - 51,000 BTU COLE-\nman oil heater: Phone 2146.\nTHOR GLADIRON,   AUTOMATIC\nironer. Phone 1854-L.\nTRAILERS\nKOOT^NEE\nMobile Homes\nCa6tlegar, Phone 2701\nCr\u00bbnbrook, Phone JU-6-2270\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nTHE ALL NEW \"REX\"\n10 ft. wide, 45 ft. long.\nMany Other Models on Display\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nEXTRA\nHOME VALUE\nVIEW LOCATION\nNewly well-built Cape Cod 2-\nB.R. home; except your choice\no\u00a3 interior finishing, convenient kitchen, lull basement,\nlaundry facilities. Landscaped\nlot, 60' x 120'. CgOOO\nAmazing price  *r\nTRY YOUR OWN\nDOWN PAYMENT\nREADY TO  OCCUPY\n3   BLOCKS  FROM\nBAKER STREET\nNewly decorated 3-B.R. home.\nNew Duroid roof and siding.\nWell planned kitchen wifli\ntile floor; also living room.\nBasement and laundry facil-\ni&   *6900\nDown payment $1890.\nMonthly Payment $35   per\nmonth, plus 6%\nHOME WITH A FUTURE\nRebuilt 2-B.R. home. Sylvaply\nplanter divider of living room\nand dining room. Family\nkitchen. Insulated. Full basement with extra bedroom. Lot\n37.y x 120'.        stsQnn\nSelling price .......   \u2022P0{'\u00abu\nConvenient terms.\nFAMILY HOME\nView location. Compact 4-B.R.\nwell-planned home. Features\ndining area, fireplace L.R., also\nfireplace in rumpus room. 2\nbathrooms, smartly appointed\nkitchen   and   B.   nook.   Full\nnaofsPto\"    $17,500\nREASONABLE TERMS.\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS\nPhone 99 - Eves., 1821-L\n3-BEDROOM MODERN BUNGA-\nlow, over 1500 sq. ft. plus large\nattached garage and sundeck.\nBroadloom carpet, colored\nplumbing, two fireplaces, gas\nhot water heat, finished, rumpus\nroom, 80 x 130 ft. landscaped\nlot in new district. Ph. 1739-R.\nLAND FOR SALE BY THE ACRE\nat 6 Miles, 'North Shore, on Blk.\n41, good garden land, overlooking city of Nelson. Apply Box\n9312, Daily News.\t\nWANT A REAL BARGAIN? 5-RM.\nhouse, lights, water, 2 lots, fruit\ntrees, garden, in Slocan 0 i t y,\n$1500. E. Maher, Genesee, Alta.\nTWO ACRES ON ROSEMONT -\nPhone 185-R-l.\t\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS A N oFY M O U S.\nFridays. Ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nGREY HAIR TROUBLING YOU?\nUse Angelique Grey Hair Restorer to return natural color,\nbeauty, to your hair. $1.50 at\nMann Drugs Ltd., Nelson, and\nall druggists.\t\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-YOUNG PUPS, SMALL\nbreed; also hamsters. Please\nquote price. Write Box 9211,\nDaily News.\t\nBABY CRIB WITH DRAWER,\nand double dresser, good condition. Box 1265, Daily News.\nNelamt iatlti Nana\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday.. 10c oh Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin  advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson;\nOne month            $ 1.25\nThree months       $ 3.50\nSix months   $6.50\nOne year               $12 00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month            $ 175\nThree months     $ 5.00\nSix  months     $ 9.50\nOne year $18 00\nWhere extra postage Is required\ni above rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook phone Mrs. Wm Stevely;\nIn Kimberley A. W Brown;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner    t\nand\nIn. Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry\nMACHINERY\nPOWER UNITS\nWith\nPower Take-Off and Skids\nDIESEL UNITS\nCat. D17000, 170 h.p. $4750\nG.M. 6:71, 150 h.p. $3900\n\u2022G.M. 4:71, 100 h.p. $3200\n\u2666Int. UD18A, 115 h.p: $3500\nBuda 1879, 260 h.p. $5700\nHercules DFXE $3500\n170 h.p.\nHercules DJXC, 75 h.p. $750\n\u2022Ford R45279, 40 h.p. $995\nBuda 6DC844, $2900\n150 h.p.\nMurphy ME66, $7500\n165 h.p.\nGAS UNITS\n\u2022Buda 326, 70 h.p. $850\n\u2022Minneapolis-Moline  2834A,\n65 h.p. $745\nG.M.C. 270, 65 h.p. $695\nLIGHT PLANTS\nKholer $325\n1500 Watt, 115 Volt, D.C.\nG.E. $2950\n20 KW, 110\/220 Volt, A.C.\nSingle Phase, Diesel Powered\n\u2022Onan $595\n3 KW, 115 Volt, A.C.\nLister Diesel $745\n3 KW, 110\/220 Volt, A.C.\nNorth lite\n5.5, 10, 12, 18, 20 KW, A.C, Dual\nVoltage, Single or Three Phase,\nDiesel Powered, for Instant Use\n\u2022 Enclosed  Units\nAll Units in Guaranteed\nCondition        ,\nWRITE - PHONE - CALL\nNorthern Engine\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n10330, 63 Avenue, Edmonton, 393947\n24 Hour Continuous Service\nEquipment\n1955   INTERNATIONAL\nTDM\nI.H.C. direct lift angledozer,\n6-roller track frame, logging\nwinch,   operator's   guard.   \u2014\n%l mm\n1955   INTERNATIONAL\nTD9\nHydraulic angledozer, logging\nwinch, operator's guard. Only\n1100 hours. Like new condi-\n^son-\u00b0:b: $9200\n1949   INTERNATIONAL\nTD9\nBucyrus-Erie front end shovel,\n6-roller track frame, bulldozer\nblade attachment. Good condi-\nK:\u00b0*: $6000\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1957 \u2014 15\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices) [Silver Ridge \t\nMINES | Silver Standard\t\nSunshine Lardeau ...\nTrojan \t\nOILS\nAltex\n3eaver Lodge \t\nBralorne \t\nCanusa \t\nCariboo Gold\t\n.12\n4.45\n.02\n 47\nFarwest Tungsten\nGiant Mascot\t\n.08\n 11\nGranduc \t\nHamil Sil\t\n1.20\n.02\nHighland Bell\t\nNational Ex \t\nPioneer Gold    \t\n1.10\n.15\n      1,02\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino          \t\n.04\n 28\nSheep Creek    \t\n 32\nSilback Premier \t\n 04l<,\n\u25a0 TRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone   1810-100\nUSED CHAIN SAWS\nEZ HOMELITE - HM IEL\nD44 McCULLOCH\n73 McCULLOCH\nSee\n\u2022 H.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S V-.\nWelding & Equipment Co.\nLtd. \u2022'\u25a0\nPHONE 1402\n614 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.\nBUILDING   SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Specializing In Plywood Contrac\ntors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders coIIpcI 3000 E Has-\n. tings SI . Vancouver, B.C., GLen\nburn 1500.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar.\nWILL YOU .BE OUR GUEST\nwhen in Spokane, Washington?\nCity centre, parking one block.\nComfortable rooms w'wo hath at\nlow, low rates   Colonial Hotel.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED - BOARD AND ROOM\nfor young man. Apply Box 9203,\nDaiy News.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen. Phone II79-X\nLOST  AND  FOUND\nLOST t- GOLD PENDANT, PUR-\nple stone. Vicinity Ward and\nBaker Sts. Phone 1552.\nLOST - TURQUOISE PENDANT\nwith pearls, vicinity Hume Hote.1\nPlione 1007-Y.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED TO TRADE:' WHEAT,\noats, crush, oats, laymash, for\ncattle and pigs. Apply Box 9212,\nDaily News.\n.01\n.1214\n.\\2Vt\n.18%\n.17\nCalgary and Edmonton    19.50\nHome   14.50\nNew Gas Ex     1.30\nPacific Pete     19.25\nPeace River Gas 44\nSparmac  12\nUnited       2.45\nVantor      1.25\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers         1.30\nAlberta Distillers Vt     1.10\nB C Foresls      8.37M.\nB C Telephone           38.00\nCrown Zeller (Can)     14.12.4\nInt Brew B      3.85\nInland Nat Gas      7.62.4\nLucky Lager      . .: 4.25\nMacM & Bloedel B     23.50\nMid Western        1.40\nPowell River    31.25\nTrans Mtn    65.00\nWestminster Paper    21.50\n'\"   '        10.25\nAsk\n25.75\n66.00\n27.25\nWestern Plywoods\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk ..\nTrans Can Com ..\nTrans Mtn Unit ..\nWestcoast Com ..\nAnuwon    .\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can\nRoy Bank of Can\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund ..\nCommonw'lth Int.\nGrouped Income..\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage \t\nTrans Can \"C\" ..\nBid\n12.75\n25.25\n65.00\n26.75\n.03\n40.00\n41.00\n43.00\n58.50\n7.81\n6.46\n3.15\n9.04\n4.28\n4.75\n41.00\n42.00\n45.00\n60.00\n8.57\n7.10\n3.44\n9.78\n4.70\n5.15\nRAIL DISPUTE SETTLED\nOTTAWA (CP)-A disputi between the Algoma Central and\nHudson Bay Railway , and the\nBrotherhood of Railroad Trainmen has been settled. Details of\nthe settlement, involving 65 employees, were not available here.\nSEE...TEST DRIVE\nThe   New\nAUSTIN for \u00bb58\nWith\nFULLY AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION\n,-    and Overdrive\nBe sure to see and test-drive this amazing\n1958 Austin A-95 Custom.\nAT\ncElroy Mptors\nAUSTIN - MORRIS SALES and SERVICE\nBaker and Hendryx St. Phone 2000\nPope Praises\nHunters' Assoc.\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters)-\nThe Pope Thurs. praised members\nof an International Hunters Association for their aim of \"protecting and multiplying\" game\nthroughout the world.\n\"It has, unfortunately, happened that unrestrained and wild\nhunting has exterminated certain\nkinds of animals and birds, whose\ndisappearance is regrettable, not\nonly from the naturalists' point\nof view, but also because it\nbreaks the harmonious balance\nbetween fauna and flora in various regions,\" the Pope told a delegation from the International\nHunters Council.\nWith their work, members of\nthe council contributed to ths\n\"conservation of this precious\npatrimony of humanity,\" Ui\u00ab\nPpe concluded.\nPEEBLEi\nTODAY'S BARGAIN\n1952 VANGUARD SEDAN\nMotor Overhauled.\nRegular $450.00 Value\nTODAY $333\nPEEBlti\nGive You\nMora\nFor Your Money\nSimple, rugged, durable.\nThe only Sheave Block\nwith manganese s r e e I\nsheaves and side frames\nfor toughness, shock resistance and long life.\nSizes 6\", 8\", 10\" and 12\"\n8 Models.\nSold and Serviced by\nMachinery\nCo. Ltd.\nP.O. Box 230 Phone 18\nNELSON, B. C.\nHaldane Motors\nNew and .Used Cars\n301 Vernon St.\nPHONE 2135\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 2136\n1957 CHEVROLET 1\/2-TON\n1956 METEOR RIDEAU SEDAN\n1955 BUICK SEDAN\n1955 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n1955 PONTIAC SEDAN, Special $1785\n1955 PONTIAC COACH\n1953 FORD SEDAN\n1953 CHEVROLET COACH, Special $985\n1952 FORD SEDAN\n1951   FORD \/2-TON PANEL, Special $450\n1951   PONTIAC SEDAN\nYOUR   MERCEDES-BENZ   DEALER\nIra for a\nGuaranteed 45 miles to a gallon.\nSee the UNIMOG Diesel-Operated 4-Wheel Drive.\n 16 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DEC. 13, .1957\nDelightfully Fresh\nie Crunchy  Nut .  ir Smooth: Creams\nif Tasty Ginger      ir Nippy Peppermint\n\u25a0 <   '   if Luscious Liqueurs\nIn The\nChristmas\nBoxed Chocolates\nYou Get at MANN'S\nin\n\u2022 MOIR'S \u2022  NEILSON'S\n\u2022 SMILES 'N' CHUCKLES\n\u2022 URNEY (New.Irish Chocs)\n\u2022 CADBURY'S\n\u2022 ROWNTREE\n\u2022 GANONG\nYUMMY...YUM . ..YUM\n(s*\u00bb&>y\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nFiremen Answer 13 Calls\nNelson Fire Department during.   Increased attention to the elim-\nNovember   answered\n13 alarms,\none of them to a house outside the\nCity.\nChief E. S. Owens said the lone\ncall outside of the boundaries was\n_ to the,Ymir Road, where a home\n' owned by S. Skok was destroyed.\nThe fire was caused by overheated\nstove pipes, resulting in $4000\ndamage. Mr. Skok was assessed\n$250 for the call, the report said.\nThere were no actual losses in\nthe 12 City alarms, which called\nthe trucks to properties wojth a\ntotal Of $58,400.\nination of dwelling, mercantile,\nand industrial hazards was \"one\nof the most gratifying in the local\nfield of fire waste reduction,\" tlie\nreport continued.\nThe department was carrying on\na home fire prevention campaign,\ninvolving a fire fighter telephoning\n\"every home in Nelson\" and presenting a fire prevention message,\nthe report said.\nVenezuela has four climatic\nzones \u2014 tropical, moderate, cool\nand cold.\nNAVY RUM\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\u201eby the Government of British Columbia\nSUGGESTS COUNCIL NAME\nCOMMISSION MEMBERS\nMembers of the recreation commission \"may feel they're more\nobligated\" if they were appointed\nby City Council rather than asked\nby the commission chairman to\nserve, recreation commission\nchairman A. D. Schneider said\nWednesday.\nHe' also thought. the Council\nrepresentative should chair the\ncommission, as under the original\nsetup, and hoped Aid. George\nMermet would continue as city\nrepresentative.\nTerms of Mrs. G. V. Frederiksen and B. B. Crawford expire this\nyear, and recreation director J. Rr\nJohnson said Len.Cutler and L.\nM.. Johnston have agreed to act.\nHe thought the school board should\nbe represented on the commission.\nThe commission has been a\n\"heartbreaker\" to Mr. Schneider,\nsaid Aid. Mermet, looking for improved recreational facilities.\nA \"very good number\" of people\nhad taken part in recreational programs considering the number of\nother civic events and television,\nMr. Schneider thought, adding the\nrecreation director \"should have\nsomething to look forward to in the\nyears to come\" in the way of increased renumeration, because the\nprogram \"can't improve with a\nnew director every year or two.\"\nREPORTS RECEIVED\n. Several reports were received,\nand council voted to place them\non record for study and refer to\nincoming councillors.\nStatistics place the population of\ngreater Nelson at 11,000, including\n2543 under six years of age, 1540\nsix to 12 years old, 1372 13 to 18\nyears old, and 6000 over 18 years\nold. Number of recreation participants was enumerated as follows:\n(number of adults is given first,\nthen number of children): hockey,\n120, 350; curling, 225, 32; badminton, 80, 88; keep-fit, 65, none;\ntumbling, 10, 40; judo, 20, six;\nbasketball, 50, 320; bowling, 250,\n50; senior citizens, 30, none; skiing, 78, 180; businessmen's club,\n250, none; snooker, pool, and billiards, 200, 100.\nSquare dancing, 130, 30; brownies, three, 102; guides, five, 84;\nfigure-skating, one, 52; sea cadets,\nsix, 40; army cadets, four, 45;\nair cadets, nine, 45; Canadian Girls\nin Training, six, 65; teen town,\none, 100; explorers, two, 24; cubs,\nfour, 149; scouts, two, 160.\nMayor Joseph Kary observed\nthere \"just isn't too much enthusi\nasm ^towards recreation.\"\nAccording to figures, there is one\ntelevision set for every three Nel\nson homes.\n\"WORKED HARD\"\nDuring his 18 months here, Mr\nJohnson had worked day and night\nto build up the program, Mr.\nSchneider said. It was stated he\ncould begin teaching here and had\nbeen offered positions elsewhere at\nmore than his present salary. Before coming to Nelson, Mr. Johnson had six years teaching in Scotland and one year in Canada, and\nwas a navy recreation director,\nReport that Mr. Johnson has not\nasked for or taken any holidays\nsince being here caused Mayor\nKary to remark city employees\nshould always take holidays. Mr.\nJohnson had received time off to\nreturn to Scotland last year, also\n^espoR\nip\nSKIS\nFor All Ages\nSki Poles,\nHarness, Waxes,\netc\nFlying Saucers\nTime Is Short!\nGet Yours Now!\n$4.75\nto travel with soccer teams and on\nrecreation commission business.\nAid. Mermet agreed tlie director\n\"has worked hard.\"\nCouncil's desire for a \"good\nrecreation program\" and their\nknowledge of Mr. Schneider's\nproblems were voiced by Mayor\nKary. Aid. Mermet thought teachers and students over 18. who take\npart in recreation programs might\nbe included on the commission.\nToys, mechanical and pull, games for young and old, dolls, doll prams, wagons,\ntricycles, bicycles, hockey games, table tennis sets, fishing equipment, figure and\nhockey skate outfits, hockey sticks and equipment, sets of boxing gloves, roller\nskates, etc.\nSpalding Badminton SLEDS\nReeguets \u25a0 . .._...\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .   *;    .  *?,\nSteel Shafted ,   \u00ab,>wM    ufifitiffiSfa,\n47\"\u2014$6.95\n$8.50 - $9.95\n$17.50\nSpalding Blue\nStreak Shuttlecocks\nil TOBOGGANS\n4-foot\n5-foot\n6-foot\n$ 6.95\n$ 8.95\n$10.95\nMARSHALL-WELLS STORE\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n395 Baker St.\n(Owners)\nNelson, B.C.\nPOWER PLANT\nFIGURES UP\nNet output at Bonnington power\nplant last month was 3,513,350 kilowatt hours', against 3,372,300 KWH\nfor November, 1956, according to\na report read at City' Council\nmeeting.\nTotal KWH generated was 3,-\n523,200. Other figures, with November, 1956, comparisons bracket-\nted, were: station service KW,\n10,050 (9200); average load KW,\n4879 (4684); peak load KW, 8500\n(8100); minimum load KW, 2320\n(2100); 30-minute average load\nKW, 8325 (7933).\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nMary Maxim Sweater Wools.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFOR ELECTROLUX SALES\nand service, phone 1108.\nFisherman's  Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C.\nFLEURY'S DRUG STORE\nOpen until 9 p.m. Tonight.\nBINGO\nEAGLE  HALL TONIGHT.\nAnnual Kiwanis turkey shoot this\nweek, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, in the Armoury.\nGas or oil heating, sold, installed,\nserviced. Licensed, bonded gas\nfitter. Norm Bowcock, ph. 385.\nGlass Shelves and Brackets.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156   101 Hall St.   Nelson\nYour family allowance cheque is\nworth 10% more at\nTOT 'N* TEEN SHOP\nLadies Winter Dresses\nSmart new styles for Christmas.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nCocktail Party Hats in creations\nyou will adore.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\n2-piece new davenport and chair.\nReg. $199.50, Special $179.00.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\nKINAUCTIONS\nCapitol Theatre box office will be\nopen today, 2 to 5, 7 to 9, Saturday,\n2 to 5, for payment of raffle and\nmerchandise tickets.\nHand-carved Purses and Wallets,\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nEAGLE HALL .FOR RENT FOR\nDANCES, PARTIES, ETC. PH. 288\nOR 1088-L.\nCanadian Legion Children's\nChristmas party, Sat., Dec. 21.\nPlease register children up to 12\nyears with secretary, phone 546.\nREMEMBER general meeting of\nJohn Howard Society, Nelson\nbranch, Silver Room, Hume Hotel,\n12:15 Today. Luncheon $1.25.\nBeautiful Eiderdown Comforters\nin gold, rose, blue, green,\n$34.50 to $39.95.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nSi permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSic \u25a0\u25a011   Phone 1922.\nFLEURY'S\nPharmacy\nenjoy   \\\nthe feeling\nthat goes\nwith giving\nShearferS\nWHITE DOT\nSNORKEL PEN\nPhone 497\nStatesman\nEnsemble, S22.7S\nModern filling,\nnothing to take apart\nor dismantle.\nGive the world's finest pen\nfor years of smooth, writing\npleasure. Come in and see\nour large model, color and\nprice selection.\nFLEURY'S\nPharmacy\nPHONE 25\nNelson, B.C.\nNo shopping problem when you\n\"Say It With Flowers\" from\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 962.\nOdds...\n\u2122* Ends\n...by M.D.B.\nSWEATER CLEARANCE\nREGULAR $8.95 \u2014 SALE $3.95\nREGULAR $5.95 - SALE $.95\nIRENE'S MILLINERY\nSmart new togs make the most\nappreciated Christmas presents\nfor style - conscious youngsters.\nFor the smartest in town, make\nyour Selections now at\u2014\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nIT'S HERE\nA mobile dream home\u2014for modern\nspacious living. A warm welcome\nis extended to all to inspect our\nnew \"Rex\" 10-ft. wide. Koot-Nee\nMobile Homes, Castlegar, B.C.\nFrance Warned\nBy Bulganin\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 Government\nsources said Thurs. Soviet Premier\nNikolai Bulganin has warned\nFrance against joining in an Anglo-\nSaxon \"policy of force.\"\nThe warning was contained in a\n19-page letter from Bulganin to\nPremier Felix Gaillard. Government sources said it was an attempt to split France from its\nallies on the eve. of the North Atlantic alliance summit meeting.\nWhy thee call it casting your\nballot is more than I can figure\nout. Do you figuratively toss out\nyour line and hope for a good sized\nfish to nab it? I do know if you\nsame out of a polling, booth and\ntried to toss those slips of paper\nin the ballot box you wouldn't have\na chance. Why all year round I try\ntossing cores from the rolls of\nteletype paper into the wastepaper\nbasket as practice for fair time\nwhen they have those ring-tossing\nand coin-tossing games, It never\ndoes any good, though, I never win\na thing so you can see what chance\nI'd have if my vote only counted\nif I managed to toss the ballots\nin at say 10 paces.\n* *  *\nNevertheless, I went and marked\nmy four Xs (sounds like a bakery\nad) and may the best men win\n(this includes the one feminine candidate). This was at 3:30 p.m. and\nMr. Draper, custodian of., the .ballot boxes, said the voting hhd been\nsteady since eight o'clock with all\nthe booths filled and people waiting\nat times.\n* *  *\nAs we talked he was kept busy\ndirecting people as to which ballot\nwent in which box and he said he\nhad the hardest time with the men,\nthey simply wouldn't put them in\nthe right boxes. He said he thought\nsome of them must be color blind.\nEven while I was there a man\ncame out with his ballots'unfolded,\nand all the world might have seen,\nbut no one looked while he folded\nthem so they could go in the boxes.\n* \u2666 *\nOf course, by the time you read\nthis we will all know who got thfeir\nChristmas presents early this year,\nbut right now everyone is dying of\ncuriosity. No one around the office\nwould lay his money on any of\nthem and as, one shopper said, I\nthink I'll have to play tick-tack-toe\nwhen it. comes to voting for aldermen.\n* \u2022  *\nWe all figured it would be a\nmighty close race, but who knows,\nperhaps when the last ballot is\ncounted the vote may prove quite\ndecisive. I for one hope so, I like\nto see candidates go in with flying\ncolors and it must give them quite\na boost too.\nHoward Society\nPublic Meeting\nPlanned Today\nThe John Howard Society Nelson\nand District branch is inviting the\ngeneral public and service clubs to\nattend a luncheon meeting at the\nHume Hotel today at noon.      . .\nProblems met with in the course\nof their work in the Society will\nbe discussed by members, and it\nis hoped to interest more residents\nof Nelson in the tremendous task\nof combatting juvenile delinquency,\nassisting in rehabilitation and ajl\nrelated problems.\nThe need for the establishment\nof a branch of the society in Nelson\nwas realized fully after its organization in November, when the\nvarious committees began to function. The John Howard Society is\na citizens' committee, and whatever success it achieves is reflected in the community, officials\nstated. \u2022\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nOutput of Christmas cards in\nBritain alone reaches an estimated\n700,000,000 a year.\nMISSIONARY\nFROM JAPAN\nTO SPEAK HERE\nRev. R. N. Savary, an Anglican\nmissionary in Japan now home in\nCanada on furlough, will visit\nNelson Sunday in the course of a\ntour of part of, the Diocese of\nKootenay. ,\nHe will address the congregations of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral\nand Church of the Redeemer.\nAt one time during his ministry,\nhe served at New Denver. A native\nof Kingston, Ont., he served the\nchurch in Japan before the Second\nWorld War and returned afterwards. For the last five years he\nhas been the only foreign missionary on Sh'ikoku Island, one of the\nfour main islands of Japan. At\nTokushima, with his Japanese colleagues, he has built up one of the\nstrongest self-supporting congregations in Japan.\nHUGE EXPORT\nVenezuela's oil exports reached\na total value of $2,200,000,000 in\n1958.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nS76 Baker St\nPhone 327\nHave The Job Done Right\nUIC GRAYEC\nA \"        LIMITED        **\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nfor a\nwhite\nChristmas\nA welcome gift indeed ;. \u2022\nForsyth White Shirts... easy-\nfitting masterpieces with all\nthe famous Forsyth points of\nsuperiority . . . taper-curved\ncollars . . . full fit . . . non-\nravelling cuff . . . custom\ntailoring ... and a freedom\nand comfort he'll appreciata\nevery day of wear. Come in.\nChooseyour Forsyth Gift now.\ngive.\nNo one ever te&tetted\nbuying Quality\"'-reg'D\nEMORY'S\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nTime to Stock Up on\nRoyal Crown\nDerby\nWe Have Various Patterns\n2451\u2014Blue' Mikado.\nPosy\u2014Dresdon Flowers\nWe Invite You to Look\nThem Over\nSold at\nYour Rexall  Pharmacy\nCity Drug\ni\nFACTORY  PARTS\nComplete,Expert\nTRANSMISSION REPAIR\nw\n'55 FORD RANCH WAGON\nDark Blue, Heater, Automatic\n'55 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR\n'55 PONTIAC SEDAN\n'55 METEOR FORDOR\n'54 MONARCH FORDOR\n'53 PONTIAC 4-DOOR\n'50 PONTIAC 2-DOOR Fleetline\n'54 CHEV. '\/2-TON\n'53 FORD i\/2-TON\nTO   CLEAR\nNEW '57 METEOR\nFordor Ranch Wagon\nNEW '57   MERCURY\nFordor\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nMERCURY - LINCOLN - METEOR\n701 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONE 578 OR 579\nAUTO ACCESSORIES\nGenuine Ford Parts and Accessories\nFACTORY  PARTS\nTRAINED MECHANICS\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_12_13","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430120","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1957-12-13 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-12-13 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\/1.0430120"}