{"@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":"1957-10-26","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430185\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" SATURDAY I01TION\nwith COMICS- 10c\nVol. 55\nStrikes Add\nTo French Crisis\nMollet Strives to Form Cabinet\nAs Workers Protest Living Costs\nBy STANLEY JOHNSON\nPARIS (AP)\u2014French workers walked off their jobs\nFriday to protest skyrocketing living costs and government\nshilly-shallying. \u2022    .'\nLosses to industry were estimated in the millions of\ndollars as factories closed and transport ground to a halt\nall across France. But basip utilities\u2014gas, electircity, water\nand telephone\u2014continued to operate, thus blunting the effect\nI of the strike on the lives of\nordinary Frenchmen. -     , .\nWith the life of the country largely paralyzed, Socialist Guy:Mollet continued his efforts to fbrnj a\nnew cabinet and end a crisis that\nhas. left France without a government for 26 days.\nThe strike redoubled the senje\nof frustration that has gripped\nFrenchmen since this latest demonstration of governmental'instability. This one apparently has\nshocked them as none of the preceding 23 post-war cabinet crisis\ndid.\nIn fact, most observers felt this\nsense of frustration was largely responsible for-the strikes, the first\nmajor ones ever during a governmental crisis.\nFew of the strikers have formulated definite wage demands,\nand if they had they are well aware\nthere is no government to deal with\nthem. The newspaper Paris Presse\nsummed, up in an eight-column\nbanner headline \"France without\ntrains (except 44) without subways\n(85 out of 390 trains) without buses,\nwithout mail deliveries and without ministers <26th day of crisis).\"\nThe Citroen, Renault and Pam\nhard auto plants had about 10 to\n30 per cent of their workers out.\nThe proportion was about the same\nin! other industrial plants. Orly and\nLe Bourget airports closed. International air traffic will be resumed\nSaturday.- ,\u2022   ,\nThe London-Paris-Nice luxury\ntrain Bleu got only as far as Avignon but pthep cross-channsl services and some international lines\noperated. '_ \u2022\u25a0 ,; riv.'-r1\"\nThere was almost no suburban\nrail traffic, Thfe ftii&t anpy instituted emergency bus Service with;\nsoldier-rnahned trucks.\nThe sweets were piled, with un>\ncollected garbage cans. 'Social security offices closed, leaving many\nfamilies strapped for cash.\nAll was quiet in St. Nazaire,\nwhere striking shipyard workers\nbattled police Thursday.in a bloody\nriot, leaving one dead; The whole\ncity shut down as a sign of mourning \u2014 'Shops, offices, industrial\nplants'\u2014 but. there was no \u2022violence.,'.\nWEATHER FORECAST\n'Kootenay: Variable cloudiness.\nLight winds. Low-high at Cranbrook 30 and 40; Crescent Valley\n35 and 45.\nSunday outlook \u2014 Cloudy with\nshowers.   .\nCANADA-SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 26, 1957\nNot more' Than 6o Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 159\nGUY  MOLLET\n. , trying to. form\ngovernment\nMobsters Kill\nGang Leader\n.    By ARTHUR W. EVERETT\nNEW. YORK (AP)-Albert Anas-\ntasia, the cold-blooded executioner\nof the.old Murder Incorporated\nmob', was assassinated Friday in\na barbefs chair-iii a midtown\nhotel. It was the same remorseless,\ngangland fate he had decreed for\nscores of others.\n\"He was taking over the mob,''\nsaid a ranking police officer, who\nasked that his name not be used.\nThis spokesman said two masked\ngunmen who shot. Anastasia and\nthen escaped\u2014apparently by sub-\nway\u2014were professionals, hired to\nthwart Anastasia's lust for greater\nunderworld power;\nAnastasia, 53, had beaten five\nmurder raps. He was one of the\nfew men who ever came back alive\nfrom the Sing Sing prison death\nhouse. Convicted of murder in 1921\nand sentenced to the electric chair,\nhe, won a new trial on a technical-.\nity. But when the state was ready\n\"to retry him, it was discovered that\nkey witnesses had been slain in\nthe interval. The charge was\ndropped. I\nHe always managed to escape\ntrial in the subsequent murders\nattributed to him by the score.\nimFlafs\nRuss in UN\nBy LLOYD McDONALD '\"\"\"\"      '\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)\u2014The United States Friday made one of its strongest diplomatic attacks ever\ndirected in the United Nations against Russia for its part in\nthe Syrian-Turkish dispute in\nthe Middle East\nHenry Cabot Lodge, chief U.S.\ndelegate, to the UN assembly, labelled the Soviet government as\nan \"arsenist group\" and a \"lawbreaker.\"\nLodge, in his 20 \u25a0 minute denunciation of Russian policy in the\nMiddle East, defended at the same\ntime his own government's efforts\nin that direction.\nMAIN DEVELOPMENT\nThat was the main development\nin the resumed assembly debate\non Syria's, complaint that Turkey\nis planning an invasion of h e r\nterritory after Sunday's Turkish\ngeneral election is but of the way.\nAssembly President Munro of\nNew Zealand shortly afterwards\nadjourned the debate for the weekend. -, .\"\nMost delegations\u2014even' friendly\nto the U.S. and ,the Western side-\ndo not anticipate any crisis situations arising out $ the dispute.'\nSyria, after Lodge had made\nhis no - punches - pulled speech,\nwithdrew a request to address the\nassembly Friday, presumably to\nhold further, conferences with the\nhome government in Damascus -\nLabor Union\nBacksCCF\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The B.C.\nfederation-of Labor endorsed the\nCCF as its political arm in this\nprovince by a four-to-one vote Friday. \"\u25a0','    '\nThe vote by 350 delegates attending the group's second annual convention followed a two-hbyr debate.\nFederation president Bill Black\nsaid! that \"the CCF yarranjs the\nsupport of the workers of B.C. as\nthe best -means of presently obtaining their legislative aims,\"\nParliament\nr Friday\nRy The,, Canadian Press\nThe 'Commons spent the day\nexpressing support for pension increases but made no progress on\nthe government's proposed legislation.\nClaude Ellis (CCF \u2014 Regina)\nsaid old age pensions should have\nbeen boosted to $75 monthly, instead of to $55 from $46.\nHon Paul Martin (L \u2014 Essex\nEast) said thousands won't get\nhigher, old age assistance - payments because six provinces\ndon't share their costs.\nHon. Jean Lesage (L \u2014 Mont-\nmagny - L'Islet) accused the government of forgetting family allowance recipients in its program\nof social security boosts.\nFinance Minister Fleming said\nCanada plans to undertake new\ntariff negotiations at Geneva on\nsteel products, pipes and tubes\nand zinc items.\nLabor Minister Starr said possible extension of the benefit period for unemployment insurance\nis being studied by the insurance\ncommission.\nVICTORIA POLICE\nSET STRICT\nHALLOWE'EN RULE\nVICTORIA (CP) - Sale of fireworks in Greater Victoria will be\nstopped sharp at 6 p.m. this\nHallowe'en.\nCity Police Chief John Black-\nstock announced Friday new shopping hour restrictions contained\nin the Municipal Act will' be\nstrictly enforced. Fireworks are\nnot included ijl the commodities\nwhich may be sold after that\nhour. s   .\nOfficials of Saanich-Esquimalt\nand Oak Bay' issued similar\nstatement following the announcement.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMM\nSoup and Fish for PM\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A blast on the bagpioes and a larder of fish,\nbeef and French-Canadian pea soup Friday night stopped Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker short in the middle of a speech.\nThe prime rniriister, who briefly attended a dinner for delegates\nto the Canadian Tourist Association before meeting Prime Minister\nMaemillan of Britain, had just started to speak when he was interrupted by the bagpipes.\nThe prime minister then resumed but was again cut off when\nTom Hill, Saskatchewan's deputy minister of travel and information, jumped up in front of the head table and announced, he was\nfrom Saskatchewan. He then presented,Mr. Diefeiibaker with two\n25-pound lake trout, a 20-pound pike and a nine-pound pickerel.\nFollowing Saskatchewan's lead, representatives of the other\nnine provinces then gave the prime minister offerings of their\nnative fare. ,\nManitoba gave a 17-pound lake trout, British Columbia a 25-\npound salmon, Newfoundland a 60-pound cod, Nova Scotia-six-\nthree-pound mackerel, New Brunswick a live lobster, Prince Edward Island two dozen malpeque oysters and Ontario three live\npickerel.\nQuebec's offering was a piping hot silver bowl of French-\nCanadian pea soup, while Alberta, retaining its ranching traditions,;\npresented a 700,-pound side of beef. .   '\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'llllllllllllllllllllllll\nB.G. Briefs\nPENTICTON (CP) - Highways\nMinister P. A. Gaglardi has confirmed the reconstruction of the\nhighway between Krueger Hill and\nKaleden will not be done this\nwinter.\nGISCOMBE. B.C. (CR) - Fire\ncaused ah estimated $500,000 damage, at the Eagle Lake sawmills at\nthis central interior lumber town\nFriday, putting 300 men out of\nwork.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Robert\nStrachan, provincial CCF leader\nand leader, of the opposition in the\nB.C. legislature, says the recent\nincrease in doctors' fees points up\nthe need for socialized medicine.\nCOURTENAY (CP) -Three\njuveniles were fined $150 each and\nplaced on-probation for'two years\nwhen they appeared in open court\nhere Friday on charges of causing\nmore 'than $7000 damage to six\nlogging trucks.\n- PENTICTON (CP) - Bill Street\nof Vancouver, retiring president of\nthe B.C. Young Liberal Association, said Friday the party will\nnot go through a period of recession following defeat of the Liberal\ngovernment in this year's federal\nelections.\n\"I have never felt better about\nthe future of the Liberal party\nthan I do right how,\" he said in\nan interview.\nand probably the Russian delegation here as.well.\nSTRONG PROSPECTS\nThe prospects remained strong\nthat the idea of Secretary - General Dag Hammarskjold making a\npersonal visit to the area in dispute would be pursued in the assembly when open debate resumed\nMonday.\nLodge called for the floor on the\nright of reply to! Russia's speech\nlast Tuesday by Foreign Minister\nAndrei Gromyko.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiimiimii\nSputnik Spins,\nBut  No  Beep\nLONDON (AP) - Sputnik\nhas lost its beep.\nScientists tracking the Soviet baby moon said it still is\nzipping through outer space\nright on course. But radio\nmonitors said it no longer\nsends out its signals.\nApparently batteries powering the radio emission have\ngone dead.       *\n\"The Russians said the\nsatellite's batteries would last\nfor three weeks, and it is exactly three weeks to the day,\"\nsaid a' scientist at the radio\nobservatory at Cambridge.\u25a0\n\"The signals have lost intensity over the last week\nand were 100 times weaker\nlast night, which probably\nmeans that the satellite will\nnow be unobserved unless it\nis done by radar,\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n54 HOLD SWEEP\nTICKETS IN B.C.\nVANCOUVER, (CP) - The wife\nof a German immigrant who last\nJune's Irish Sweepstakes has\n-draym' a \/ticket' oh'\"a :h6rse scheduled to-run in the. Cambridgeshire handicap Wednesday.\nMi's. Edith Gehrens is among\n54 ticket-holders in B.C.\nLdst June her husband, Gunter,\nheld a half interest in a ticket\nwhich won second prize of $56,-\n000. Her horse, Mosterton, is\nlisted as a likely starter but isn't\nthe favorite.\nNATO Summit Talks Mooted\nBy Maemillan, Eisenhower\nIdea of National Self-Sufficiency\nOut of Date, Say U.S., U.K. Leaders    .\n\"*'  :     ByjOHNSCALi\n\u25a0    WASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 A call for a special NATO\ncouncil meeting\u2014possibly to include the heads of NATO-\nmember countries\u2014was issued Friday by Prime Minister\nMaemillan and President Eisenhower.\n: The prospect was disclosed in a final communique\nsumming up three days of talks between Maemillan and\nEisenhower on moves to meet Russia's stepped-up scientific\napd political challenge to the West.\nThe 1500-word statement calls for a meeting of \"special\ncharacter\" by representatives of the 15 NATO nations in\nmid-December.\n\"The arrangements which the\nnations of the free world have\nmade for collective defence and\nmutual help are based on the recognition that the concept of national self-sufficiency now is out\"\nof date,\", the Eisenhower-Macmil-\nlan .statement said.\n\"The countries of the free\nworld are interdependent and\nonly in genuine partnership, by\ncombining their resources and\n'sharing tasks in many, fields, can\nprogress and safety be found. For\nour part, -we have agreed that\nWitness Fears\nBeing Killed\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Vancouver industrial psychologist\nwanted as key witness by the Senate rackets Committee in Washington has told the story the committee wanls to hear.\nBut Dr. Louis Checov refuses to\ngo to Washington to tell it.\nIn an interview Thursday, Dr.\nChecov admitted his anti-union\nwork to keep unions,out of. the\nMarion, Ohio, \"plant of Whirlpool\nCorporation . appliance. manufacturers .\"prob_ahly.i. viqlafed.(s,o.m.e\nsectioiis of the, Taft-Hartley Labor\nLaw.\" ',.'\u25a0* '-.'\u2022\u25a0'' .\nHe said: \"If ,1 went to Washington and testified I might get\nkilled. These people play seriously. I'd like to help but they don't\nmake it easy for me.\n\"I committed no crimes, b u l]\nwould they give me some protection? They gave me no guarantee\nof immunity.\"  . .\nStrictly Canadian\nUnions Urged\nCharges Against\nPolice Shock\nBrighton\nBRIGHTON, Eng'. (Reuters) '-\nThe chief constable of this south\ncoast resort was arrested Friday\nin a bribery case unprecedented\nin British policy history.\nScotland. Yard detectives from\nLondon arrested Charles Ridge,\n57, and charged him with conspiracy and corruption.\nAlso arrested were the deputy\nchief of. Brighton's criminal investigation department, \"Detective\nInspector John R. \u25a0 Hammersley,\nand tavern owner Anthony Lyons.\nAll three appeared,in court on\ncharges of conspiring with other\npersons unknown to \"solicit and\nobtain rewards\" in return for\nfavors.\nNews of the police chief's arrest shocked Brighton's 200,000\ncitizens.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - B.C. So-]\ncial Crediters were asked Friday\nto support a move to abolish international labor unions and replace1 them with distinctly Canadian bodies:.\nThe suggestion tp the annual\nconvention of the B.C. Social\nCredit League was made by Salmon Arm constituency.\nThe resolution upheld the principle that \"empolyment may be\ndenied to the man without a union\ncard\" but added that reports of\nlabor bosses exploiting union\nmembers for their own advantage\n\"are too numerous to be discredited.\" .       -\nIt is unfortunate that the head\no f 1 c e s of these, international\nunions were in the United States\nwhere the membership is overwhelmingly in the majority.\nThe resolution asks the provincial government to urge parliament to make the change.\nThree constituency associations\nsponsored a resolution proposing\n\"a program of education which\nwill expose the danger inherent in\nbank manipulation of credit.\"\nVancouver East suggested the\nconvention request the provincial\ngovernment \"to press for a nation-wide transferable, industrial\npension - plan which will embrace\nevery employer, lprge. or small,\nand cover every worker, on a con\ntributory basis.\"        t\nThe proposal said 'flie present\nsystem of industrial pensions\nleaves many things to be desired.\nFort George constituency proposed B.C. give equal consideration to all applicants for government positions, regardless of political affiUation.\nA request for a form of Hansard\nreport was made by Delta constituency. It asks that all speeches\nmade during sessions ,of the legislature be reported verbatim in a\nweekly bulletin.\nour two countries will henceforth\nact in accordance with this principle.\"\nPresidential Press Secretary\nJames C. Hagerty and C. Peter\nHope, Macmillan's press, aide, issued' the joint communique which\nfollowed four, private talks between the leaders lasting nine\nhours.\nMaemillan then left by plane\nfor Ottawa. He said he was \"very\nsatisfied\" with Eisenhower's\nprorrtise to keep \"close and fruitful collaboration\" between American and British atomic scientists.\nEisenhower and, Maemillan\nsaid they would seek to forge a\nBritish - American partnership\nwhich would serve \"as an example which we believe can and\nshould spread among the nations\nof the free world.\" \u2022\nThe joint statement frankly\nlinked the need for thisi partnership to Russian advances during\nthe last few months in the missiles and satellite fields.\nMAIN POINTS\nThese main points were set\nforth:\n1. Eisenhower will ask Congress\nto change the 1946 Atomic Energy\nAct in order to permit more secret information to be traded with\nBritish scientists1 and, those of\nother friendly\" nations.\n,-2.- Russia's \"threat^, directed\nagainst Turkey\" give \"solemn\nsignificance\" to American-British\nNATO treaty pledges to help this\nNorth Atlantic Pact ally repel\nany aggression.\n3. As long as Russia rejects\nWestern terms for disarmament,\nthe defehce forces of allied countries must be reinforced \"with\nthe deterrent and retaliatory\npower of nuclear weapons.\" Tljis\nwas believed to be a reaffirmation of ,an American promise to\n|\u00bbsend medium - range missiles to\nBritian and other key allies in\nlirje with pledges already made\nthrough the NATO defence council.\n4. Russia's \"repudiation\" of a\n1955 pledge to permit German\nunification through free elections\nis \"a folly arid a danger,\" as is\nits continued suppression of freedom in Eastern Europe.\n5. Free world countries must\nback up their joint defence programs by \"co-operative economic\naction.\" This reference was vague but noted there should be \"a-|\nsteady and significant increase\"\nin the living standards in underdeveloped areas around the globe.-\nLONDON (AP) - British officials said Friday night that a\nsummit meeting of the heads of\nthe 15 NATO' nations\u2014tentatively\nset for December in Paris\u2014is\nnow under discussion among all\nthe Atlantic allies'. I\nThe proposal for a December\nNATO council meeting of \"special character\" was called for\nFriday by President Eisenhower\nand Prime Minister Maemillan at\nthe conclusion of their talks in\nWashington.\nHAROLD  MACMILLAN\nDWIGHT EISENHOWER\nCCF Presses Gov't\nFor Higher Pensions\nOTTAWA (CP) - All parties\nsupported the government's proposed pension increases as t h e\nCommons spent most of Friday\ndebating them without taking any\nfinal action.\nBut the CCF said the boosts\nshould be higher. About $75 a\nmonth instead of the proposed $55\nwould be1 closer to the minimum\non which an old . age pensioner\ncould Uve under present high living costs, CCF spokesmen said.\nSocial Crediter F. D. Shaw, Red\nDeer, Alta., said the $9 monthly\nincrease in old age and other pensions amounts to a federal' payment to those 70 and over of 30\ncents a day. It would be less for\npersons in other categories.\nINCREASE APPRECIATED\nCertainly; the increase wai -appreciated. \"But I am not going\nFURTHER INDICATION of the boon the new West Arm Bridge will be to Nelson-\nNorth Shore traffic was given Friday when the building shown above, which served\nas contractor's office during bridge construction, was transported across the bridge.\nIt has been purchased by a North Shore resident. The bridge is to be officially opened\nNovember 7.\u2014Daily Newf photo.\nEducation Urged\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Free university education for all has been\nadvocated by delegates attending\nthe B.C. Federation of Labor convention here.\nThe convention passed a resolution Thursday which stated that\n\"the high cost of education has\ndenied thousands of workers' children the opportunity for a higher\neducation.\"\nJohn Hayward of the Street Rail-\nwaymen's Union said:\n\"I'd gladly'help pay the university, fees of the millionaires' sons\nif it meant that university education could also be made available\nto the children of the working\npeople.\"\nGeorge Hobbs of the Brotherhood\nof Lpcomotive Firemen and En\nginemen condemned \"provincial\ngovernment stinginess\" in failing\nto provide adequate facilities for\nstudents at the University of B.C.\nHe termed living quarters for\nstudents at UBC a \"disgusting\nshack-town\" and urged the provincial government to spend more\nmoney for this purpose \"even if it\nmeans cutting back on the road-\nbuilding program.\"\nThe convention went formally on\nrecord as favoring more government help for the university to\nfinance building construction.\nA resolution calling for expansion\nof Victoria College, Victoria, to\nuniversity status was also passed\nby the convention.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 3-32 higher at a\npremium of 4 1-16 in terms of\nU. S. funds; a week ago 3 11-16\npercent premium. The pound sterling was 3-32 lower at $2.80 1-32.\nso far as to agree that it is sufficient to provide a decent stand-'\nard of living\" for persons dependent on the old age pension alone.\nAdding- Liberal support to t h e\nmeasure, Hon. Paul Martin, i MP\nfor Essex East and former Liberal health minister, said \"many\nthousands of people in this1 country\" won't benefit from' the increases because some provinces\nare not holding up their end of\npension benefits available.\nHe referred specifically to old\nage assistance payments to. needy\npersons between 65 and 70. Cost\nof the payments is split between\nthe federal and provincial governments and federal contributions\nare made only to the extent the\nprovince is willing to match, them.\nMr. Martin said only four provinces \u2014British Columbia, Alberta^\nSaskatchewan and Newfoundland\u2014-\nnow share this program. ;; \u2022\n^\"But in the case, ot Ontario, j\nQuebec, New Brunswick, Nova.\nScotia, Prince Edward Island and\nManitoba . . . the provincial1 governments are not - bearing . their\nshare of the costs of assisting the\nelderly people of this coufitt^;\"'\nHe urged Prime Minister Diefenbaker and Health Minister\nMonteith to attempt to persuade\nprovinces to take up thie responsibility.\nBENNETT STAKES\nGOV'T ON DEAL\nVANCOUVER (OP) - Premier .\nBennett staked the future of his\nSocial Credit government on the\nproposed Wenner-Gren development for the northland of British\nColumbia at a Social Credit convention here Friday.\nEarlier, R. D. Jorgenson, Alberta's minister of public wel-'\nfare and perennial guest at B.C.\nSocial Credit League conventions,\nsaid:\n\"We owe a responsibility to the\ngovernment ... we elect people\nand say we hold them accountable\nto us. But this is not .a one-way\nstreet.\" \u25a0   :\nNo Labor\nRacketeering\nSeen for Canada\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Claude\nJodoin, president of the Canadian\nLabor Congress, says he is confident the type of labor racketeering which has been exposed in the\nUnited States won't spread to Canada.\nHe warned in an interview\nThursday that the CLC will take\nstern action against any racketeering which might develop.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nTIMMINS (CP)\u2014Two bright young housewives were busy\nshopping In a Timmins store Thursday. One said to the boy packing\nthe groceries: \"Julst pit them 'a in the yin bag, laddie,\"\nThe boy looked puzzled, Then his face brightened and he said;\n\"I'm sorry, lady; I don't speak French.\"\n\"Neether dae we,\" was the rejoinder from the ladles frae Fife,\nnewly arrived to Join their husbands here.\n'\u25a0PENTICTON (CP)\u2014Thursday, was a bad day for Vancouver\ntruck driver Albert Kaluk.\nWhile he was on his way to Kelowna with apples the load\nin his Canadian Canners semi-trailer shifted and half of it was\nstrewn over the highway near. Pin Cushion Bay north of Peach-\nland. That was about 5:15 p.m.\nAt about *11:30, when he was four miles north of Pentcifein on\nhis return, trip, his load of empty boxes broke loose and scattered\nfor more than 100 yards.\nThree cars following the truck all were damaged in their drivers'\nefforts to avoid hitting the boxes and one another.\nDUBLIN,. Ireland (AP) \u2014 John McCann asked the judge to\ndouble hit seven-day Jail sentence for'drunkenness. \"I've got the\nAsian flu,\" the 69.year-e!d defendant explained, \"and I want to be\nsure I'm over It before the warden throws me out.\" The court\nobliged with a revised sentence of 14 days.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 26,.1957\nfCECU.B.DEMlLLE'S\nI-kTen\ncommandments\na .juuMoum ncivu _i vuiaviuon a-3-item _coto_\n2   Performances.\nat 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.\nMat.-90e - 75c - SOe\nEve. $1.25 - 75c - 50e.\nCinic\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE - IN\nClosed For\nThe Season\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"MIDNITE STORY\"\n(Tech \u2022 Cine)   ,\nTony Curtis, Messa Pavan\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"TALL MAN RIDING\" In Color\nRandolph Scott, Dorothy Malone\n- Plus \u2014\n\"PRIZE OF GOLD\" In Color\nRichard Widmark, Mai ZiSttcrlinB\nOne Showing 7:30 p.m.\nFall Assizes\nStart Monday\nThe 1957 fall assizes are scheduled to start Monday in Nelson\nbefore Mr. Justice A. M. Manson\nof Vancouver,\n. On the criminal list are two\nrape charges, against Gerald Lan-\nigan of Nelson, and a charge of\ncriminal. negligence against Richard A. Gregory of Ymir, as a result of a highway death a few\nmonths ago.\nA suit by A. C. Waldron against\nKootenay Forest Products and\nPeter Peters, an employee, will\nalso be heard. The plaintiff claims\n$3000 damages as a result of alleged negligent operation of a tractor by Peters in October, 1955,\ntMrs. Backman\nDies Here at 73\nA. resident of the Kootenays for\n47 years and of Nelson for 27 years\nMrs. Pauline Emma Backman, 73,\ndied Friday at her home, 709 Vernon Street.\nMrs. Backman was born and educated in Sweden, coming to Canada and Nelson in 1910. Five years\nlater she moved to Trail and Rossland, returning to Nelson in 1935.\nShe belonged to the Pythian Sisters, Crystal Chapter LOBA, Trail\nand Nelson, Twilight Club and was\nan active member of Mission Covenant Church and Ladies' Aid.\nSurviving is one son, John Victor Bernard Nelson in Kinnaird.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT-   \u25a0\n2 Shows Nightly at 6:45 p.m.\n\"HELEN OF TROY\" (Color)\nRossana Podesto, Jack Scrnos\nNEWS and CARTOON\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nFirst Show 6:45 p.m.\nThe Girl in the Red Velvet Swing\n- (Cinemascope)\nRay Milland, Joan Collins\n- 2nd Hit -\n\"THE RAIDERS\" (Tech)     '\nNatural Qas Turn-Ons\nStarted in Nelson\nAbout 40 Nelson residents were using natural gas\nby 5:30 p.m. Friday, R. L. McElroy, West Kootenay district\nmanager ior Inland Natural Gas, reported.\nTurn-ons started Thursday morning and urgent cases\nare being looked after iirst, after which other customers will'\nbe hooked up. Crews are presently working 12 to 14 hours\na day and expect to catch yp to installations in about two\nweeks' time.\nNew Train Service\nIn Effect Sunday\nTug Tows Ferry\nThe North' Shore ferry limped\nback and forth with the aid of a tu{\nFriday night while mechanics o!\nthe B. C. department of highways\nrepaired a broken valve.\nThe breakdown occurred about\n8 p.m., and repairmen said they\nhoped to have the damage fixed\nin about three hours.\nRehabilitation\nProject\nAdvances\nSteps taken towards formation\nof a committee, to co-ordinate the\nwork of organizations and individuals in the rehabilitation of disabled persons were outlined to Kiwanis Club, at the Hume Thursday\nnigKt.\nA film telling the story of ah imaginary committee that undertook\nsuch a task was shown by D. M.\nDisney, district manager of National Employment Service at Nelson, and Rev. E. Donovan Jones,\nchairman of a pilot committee\nformed recently.\nMr. Jones, said his committee\nwould have a short-time life and\nhad a short-time objective, that of\nproviding to organizations and individuals a directory of information\non this work.\nThe booklet would contain a resume of the work done by organizations and opportunities made\navailable by provincial and federal governments, services available\nand the names of persons who\nshould be called upon for information.\nIt would also Indicate by in-\n.ference any gaps and overlapping\nthat now existed.\nLater, the committee would call\non recipients of the booklet to attend a public meeting at which\nthe pilot group would be dissolved\nand decision made on further implementation of these plans.. The\nvarious groups that had already\nseen the film had responded enthusiastically, he said.\nMr. Disney explained the film\nhad been produced by the National\nFilm Board in co-operation with\nthe Department of Health and\nWelfare, Department of Veterans\nAffairs and the special placements\nbranch of NES.\nNelson branches of the health\nand social welfare \u2022 departments,\nmedical men and Ministerial Association members had seen the\nfilm before the pilot committee\nwas formed.    .\nThe film showed how a number\nof disabled men and women were\nmade useful citizens again through\nthe rehabilitation program. ,.\u2022\nThe Weather\nNELSON    37   45    -\nTalented Silver Spurs\nPerform Here Tonight\nThe Silver Spurs, a talented\ngroup of 20 teenagers from Spokane who have won acclaim whenever Ihey have performed, will, set\nthe pace for an exhibition and\ndance tonight in Civic Centre.\nTheir leader and instructor is\nE. S. (Red) Henderson, consultant\nModern\nPrescription\nService\nPrompt, Courteous\nDespatch on Pickups\nor Deliveries\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\non physical education to the Spokane school system and a recognized dance authority.\nThe Silver Spurs know about 250\ndances, counting rounds, mixers\nand squares, and carry with them\ncostumes valued at $30,000. Each\ngirl and boy wears about a dozen\noutfits on tour. Each year they\ntour the United States, presenting\na two-hour professional show.\nBeside cowboy squares, the\nyoung dancers perform Mexican\ndances, continental and American\ndances in which waltzes . figure\nprominently,' and early American\nand English dances such as the\nLancers.\nPictures and stories on the group\nhave appeared in many leading\npublications and they form the subject, of a filrrt circulated by a\nleading oil company entitled \"The\nDancing Silver Spurs.\"        ,\n$7.95 CLEANED $7.95\n\"{N   YOUR HOME\"\nWe will clean any 9x12 Rug. Oct. 21 to 26\nFOR ONLY $7.95 \u25a0> '\nDURACLEAN SERVICE\nCALL 446-R\nFaster Canadian Pacific Railway\nservice between Vancouver, Kootenay points and Medicine Hat will\nbegin Sunday.\nEastbound train No. 46 will leave\nVancouver at 1:50 p.m., Grand\nForks at 3:20 a.m., Castlegar at\n5:50 a.m., Nelson at 7 a.m., Cranbrook a't 11:35 a.m., Crow's Nest\nat 3:20 p.m. (Mountain Time), Fort\nMacleod at 4:55 p.m., Lethbridge\nat 6:15 p.m., arriving Medicine Hat\nat 8:20 p.m.\nWestbound train No. 45 will leave\nMedicine Hat at 10:20 a.m., Lethbridge at 1:30 p.m., Fort Macleod\nat 2 p.m., Crow's Nest at 2:50 p.m.,\nCranbrook at 5:45 p.m., Nelson at\n10:30 p.m., Castlegar at 11:24 p.m.,\nGrand Forks at 2:12 a.m., arriving\nVancouver at 3:40 p.m.\nThere will be a 10-minute'stop\nat Crow's Nest both ways. East-\nbound the train will stop one and\none-quarter hours at Lethbridge,\nand westbound it will stop there\none hour and five minutes.\nThe Vancouver-Nelson trip will\ntake 17 hours and 10 minutes, the\nNelson-Medicine Hat trip 14 hours\nand 20 minutes, making the entire\ntrip 30 hours and 30 minutes. Pres\nent times are 22 hours to Vancou\nver, 18 hours and 55 minutes to\nMedicine Hat and 40 hours 55 min-\nutes for the complete trip.\nAir-conditioned coaches will be\nused, and each train will have a\nlocomotive, baggage car and first-\nclass coach. Dining cars, sleeping\n425 Attend   .\nStudent Dance\nStudents' Night at the Civic Cen-\ntre, featuring rock and roll, was\na resounding success Friday night.\nCivic manager Jack Morgan re-\nported 328 attended the guys and\ndolls skating session and over\n425 took part in the student\ndance with Fred Boates of CKLN\nas master of ceremonies.    .\nThe dance saluted Notre Dame'\nCollege with college students as\nguests. A rock and roll demonstration was given by Dave Barrett\nand Diane Stallwood and rock and\nroll contest was held. Dancing in\neluded \"everything from the grand\nmarch to the weirdest conception\nof rock and roll.\"\nRestrictions\nIn Effect on\nWarfield Hill\nTRAIL (CP) - District High\nways engineer P. B. McCarthy of\nRossland said Friday winter re\nstrictions will go into effect Mon\nday on the upper Warfield hill to\nPalerson and the Cascade Highway.\nMr. McCarthy said anyone travelling on these roads without winter grip tires or chains will be\nprosecuted. People travelling without chains .or with summer tires\nare a menace to their own safety\nand the safety of other motorists\nhe said.\njThe restriction, started last\nyear, is being put into effect earlier this year because of the heavy\nsnowfall this week.\nFILM PROGRAM\nCHANGES MADE\nChanges in today's children film\nprogram at Hume School have\nbeen made necessary, it was announced Friday night, the first\ntime in five years this has happened. ;\nMain feature \"Ichabod Mr.\nToad\" may be replaced by \"Hansel and Gretel.\" If ,the latter\ndoes not arrive, several short\nfilms will be substituted. Short\nfilms would include \"Children's\nSafety Film,\" \"Ukrainian Winter Holiday\" and Walt Disney's\n\"Silly Symphony\" cartoon.\nFiltered\nDry Cleaning\nDyeing - Alterations \u2022 Repairs\nAlso Agents for House of Stone\nMade-to-Measure Suits\nEmpire'\nDry Cleaners\n327 Baker St. Phone 288\nWE CALL AND DELIVER\ncars and express .cars are eliminated under the new setup.\nThis is the second phase of a\nchangeover from the familiar Kettle Valley Express and Kootenay\nExpress'to self-propelled dayliners,\nexpected to arrive next month\nFirst step was changing mail and\nexpress from trains to trucks.\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Minor\nchanges in arrival and departure\ntimes of trains here were announced Friday by the Canadian Pacific\nRailway.\nThe Canadian, trans-continental\nstreamliner, will arrive here at\n10 a.m. daily, fefective Oct, 27. It\narrives now at 9 a.m.\nThe Dominion, second crosscountry train, will continue to arrive at 7:15 a.m. The Canadian will\nleave for the east each evening\nat 8:04 (PST).     \u2022\nThe Kettle Valley train to Medicine Hat, Alta., will leave' daily at\n1:50 p.m. The return train will\narrive here at 3:40 p.m.\nThe new Kettle Valley train is\ndesigned to cut 10 hours from the\npresent schedule.\nNew CPT\nBuilding\nUnder Way\nA new building to house Canadian\nPacific Telegraphs repeater equipment and certain non-public Canadian-Pacific offices is being constructed on the CPR flats. Contractor for the one-storey 70' x 40'\nbuilding is Louis Maglio. -\n' The building Will house repeater\nequipment now in the ,CPR city\noffice at Baker and Ward Streets,\nbffices of the district freight agent,\nnow in the Medical Arts Building,\nand of the inspector of communications, now at 450 Baker Street,\naccording to C; W. Bailey, inspector of communications. It will not\nbe open to the public. Cost of the\nbuilding was not stated.\nIt is hoped to start moving t_\\e\nequipment into the new building\nabout February, Mr. Bailey said.\nMoving will take about six months\nsince equipment is used 24 hours\na day.\nThe basement will be used for\nstorage, repairing equipment and\nwill'house a storage battery plant\nin case of power failures.\nPresent CPR city offices in the\nMadden Block must be vacated\nby next year since the building1 is\nto be taken over by Woolworth\nStores.\nThe ticket office, telegraph agent\nand clerical staff will move to another uptown location, Mr. Bailey\nstated.\n'Flu Vaccine\nAvailable\nA small stock of Asian 'flu vaccine is available in Nelson for the\ngeneral public, it was learned in.\nNelson Friday.  \u25a0\nPeople interested in obtaining\nimmunization may enquire of their\nown doctors. ,.*\nBetty Allen Presents\nOutstanding Concert\nWith an outstandingly beautiful\nand vibrant voice, Betty Allen,\nmezzo-soprano thrilled Overture\nConcert Series members Friday\nnight in the performance of a\nwonderfully well chosen program.\nHer dignity and warm personality were immediately transmitted to the audience and the presentation of such songs as Dvorak's \"Zigunerlieder\" known as\n\"Dvorak's Cycle,\" the \"Paban-\nera\"\/from \"Carmen\".by Bizet,\nand. \"The, Life of Christ,\" a series of spirituals by Roland Hayej.\nwere received with pleasure by\nthe audience:\nBetty Allen was accompanied oi\nthe piano by Dorothy Swetnam\nHare, whose performance was delightful to see ahd hear. The accompaniments provided a finely\nexecuted background for the\nsinger's vivid presentation of the\nprogram.\nEvidence of the singer's wonderfully controlled soft singing came\nin her first song, \"Eviva Rosabella\" by Galuppi. \"Amarilli\" by Cac-\ncini, the second presentation, was\na beautiful song sung with the\nwarmth ahd emotional quality evident throughout the program. The\nnext three pieces were madrigals,\n\"Come Again, Sweet Love\" by\nDowland, \"Faire, Sweet Cruell,\"\nby Ford, and \"Come and Trip it,\"\nby Handel.\n\"Zigeuneriieder,\" by Dvorak, or\n\"Dvorak's Cycle\" is a series of\nseven songs in varying moods of\nclassical type. These were sung\nwith beauty and sympathy. The\nrichness of Miss Allen's voice and\nher remarkable range made her\npresentation of this piece most enjoyable. -._\u25a0>\u2022.\nThe next \"portion of the program\nincluded \"Air Vif,\" by Poulenac,\nand \"C'est le Joli Printemps,\" by\nthe same composer. A song with\na lilt of a dance to it, \"Invito Alia\nDanza\" by Respighi was sung\nwith a delightful air of beauty\nand was followed by a sombre\npiece, \"Nebbie,\" by the same\ncomposer. \"Carillon\" by Persico,\nwas enchantingly sung and with\na wonderful piano accompaniment\nstimulating the sound of the carillon.\nMiss Allen's performance of the\n\"Habanera\" from the opera\n\"Carmen\" by Bizet was one of\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\n410   Kootenay'St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1630 Nights 544-R\nthe highlights of the program.\nShe preceded her performance\nof the aria by mentioning that\nher main objection to singing\narias, was that the mezzo-soprano\nparts in operas usually fall into\nthree categories: \"First,\" she\nsaid, \"they may be cast as an\nadolescent boy, or secondly, an\nelderly lady, usually extremely\nunattractive, or. thirdly a supposedly young and beautiful lady,\nwith a slightly dubfous reputation.\nIt is as this last type that -I sing\nthis aria.\" The power of her voice\nwas evident in this aria, and she\nwas called back on stage at its\nconclusion. To the delight of the\naudience, she then sang the same\naria in a different vein, this time\nfrom \"Carmen Jones.\"\nAfter a short intermission, Miss\nAllen presented four excerpts from\n\"The Life of Christ,\" 12- songs\nabout the life of Jesus, some telling of real happenings, and some\nof imaginary ones. These are spirituals, by Roland Hayes, a contemporary composer.\nThree contemporary songs followed \u2014 \"The Birds of the Wilderness,\" by Horman,\/,_\/'The\nCloths of Heaven,\" by Dunhill,\nand \"Love's Philosophy,\" by\nQuilter.     \u2022       . ' .\n. Miss Allen was applauded with\ntremendous enthusiasm by the\naudience and..with Miss Hare re-\nShe came out onto the stage with\nturned to the stage several times,\na final presentation, a spiritual,\n\"You Can Tell the.World About\nThis\" arranged by Margaret\nBonds. This is a piece sung in\nthe way the people who live on\nan island off the Maryland coast\nsing their spirituals, and is a\ntrifle more inclined to _the jazz\nrhythm than some other spirituals. In Miss Allen's rich voice,\nit was a most enjoyable encore.\nQUESTION:. Will you\ntell me something about\na household policy\nwhich covers all kinds ot\nrisks ?\nANSWER: There are various multiple coverage policies. A representative of\nthis office will gladly dlscuBS\ndetails.\nHave you an insurance prob-.\nlem of your own? Come in\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nhelp you without charge or\nobligation of any kind 1\nm\n|  456 W\nRobertson -\nlliard, Cattell\nWard St.     Ph. 1912-1913\nRETIRING ROY POLLARD1 is shown receiving a presentation made to him Friday at the Court House by His Honor Judge E. P. Dawson, right, on behalf of fellow\ngovernment employees, In centre is Mrs, Pollard. (See story below.)\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nRoy Pollard Retiring\nRoy Pollard retires at the end\nof this month as district engineer\nfor the Water Rights Branch of\nthe B.C. Department qf Lands\nand Forests. Presentations were\nmade to Mr. and Mrs. Pollard on\nbehalf of fellow government employees Friday.\nMr. Pollard, whose work has\nmade him well known in all parts\nof East and West Kootenay, has\nbeen more than 31 years with \"the\nWater Rights Branch, all of that\ntime in Nelson. He was appointed\ndistrict engineer in the spring\nof 1945.\nHe and his wife plan to travel\nto England in the coming months,\nbut where they will settle permanently is Still indefinite.\nIn Nelson, Mr. Pollard has been\nactively associated with a number of organizations and community projects. Currently he is\npresident of the Nelson unit of\nthe B.C. Cancer Society arid president of'the Nelson Overture Concert Association. He is a Rotarian\nalso, and a member'of the Professional Engineers of B.C.\nBoth Mr. and Mrs. Pollard have\nfor many years taken a great\ninterest, in local, endeavors in\nmusic and drama. They worked\nsteadily for the Little Theatre,\nfor music'festivals, Mr. PoUprd\nbeing a past vice-president of the\nKootenay Musical Festival Association, and gave consistent help\nwith organizational details of\ndrama festivals. \\\nA son Derek lives at Riondel,\nand there is one grandson.\nAt a reception marking Mr\nPollard's retirement at the Court\nHouse Friday afternoon, Mrs. Pollard was given a mohair blanket\nqnd  Mr.  Pollard was  presented\nwith a pair of binoculars.\n\"DEAN OF WISDOM\"\nGovernment agent K. D. Mc-\nRae said Mr. Pollard was probably the dean of provincial government employees in Nelson\n\"and truly the dean in wisdom.\nHe can look back with pride on a\njob well done.\" Mr. McRae read\na letter from the 'legal staff of\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting Company expressing best\nwishes.\nHis Honor Judge E. P. Dawson,\nwho made the presentations, said:\n\"We all know his department was\nrun efficiently and with courtesy.\nHe fulfilled his office .extremely\nwell, an office requiring technical\nskill, diplomacy and sagacity.\"\n-In expressing thanks, Mr. Pollard gave a brief resume of his\nwork from the time he began it\n32 years ago. He introduced his\nsuccessor, J. P. Riley, who has\nbeen in Nelson since June.\nTea was served following the\npresentations.\n$180 Damage\nIn Car Fire\nDamage of approximately $180\nto a car owned by Alec S, Zarikoff\nof Blewett resulted from a fire\nabout 11:45 p.m. Thursday. The\nrear seat and back support of the\nvehicle, parked in the 400 block\nVictoria Street,, were partially\nburned.\" ,   : :.\nCity police noticed the car on fire\nand summoned the fire department. The blaze was quelled in\nshort order.\nIOOF GRAND\nMASTER VISITS\nHERE MONDAY\nJ. H, Blackstock of Haney, grand\nmaster of the jurisdiction of Brit- ,\nish Columbia, Independent Order\nof Oddfellows, will address Kootenay Lodge No. 16 and the Rebek-\nahs on Monday night in the IOOF\nhall.\nMr. Blackstock is making his\nofficial visit to this 'area. There\nwill be a dinner for Oddfellows and\nRebekahs, followed by a special\nLodge meeting, then the combined\nmeeting. ....\nBRAMBLE\nTWIST\nThe perennial suit favorite of well - groomed\nmen.\nBramble Twist\nHas just the right combination of wool and\nworsted plus the correct\namount of twisting.\nBramble Twist\nSuits ore 'for \"around\nthe clock\" wear.\nPriced at\n$72.50\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\nNew Faster\nPassenger\nTrain Service\nVANCOUVER - PENTICTON - TRAIL - NELSON\nLETHBRIDGE-MEDICINE HAT\nEffective:\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1957\nCONDENSED   SCHEDULE,  TRAINS 45 and 46\n(Formerly Trains 67 and 68)\nREAD DOWN\nTIMES   SHOWN 'ARE\nREAD   UP\nTrain 46 Daily\nSTANDARD   RAILWAY  TIM'E\nTrain 45 Daily\n1:50 p.m.\nLv.\n.._._, VANCOUVER\t\nAr.\n3:40 p.m.\n6:58 p.m.\nLv.\n   PRINCETON \t\nLv.\n10:32 a.m.\n9:30 p.m.  -\nLv.\n...     .:\u201e PENTICTON \t\nLv.\n8:10 a.m.\n3:20 a.m.\nLv.\n GRAND FORKS\t\nLv:\n2:12 a.m.\n5:50 a.m.\nLv.\n   CASTLEGAR  :..\nLv,\n11:24 p.m.\n7:00 a.m.\nLy.\n_\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0      NELSON      \t\nLv.\n10:30 p.m.\n11:35 a.m.   -\nLv.\n ... CRANBROOK   \t\nLv,\n5:45 p.m.\n2:10 p.m.\nAr.\n P.T. CROWSNEST P.T.....\n. Lv.\n2:50 p.m.\n3:20 p.m.\nLv.\n.... M.T. CROWSNEST M.T. ...\nAr.\n3:40 p.m.\n4:55 p.m.\nLv.\n FORT MacLEOD\t\nLv.\n2:00 p.m.\n6:15 p.m.\nLv.\n    LETHBRIDGE    \t\nLv.\n\u25a0 1:30 p.m.\n8:20 p.m.\nAr.\n MEDICINE HAT ._\t\nLv.\n10:20 a.m.\nEquipment \u2014 Air-Conditioned Coaches\ni Connections at Medicine Hat with The Canadian.\nConnections at Lethbridge to and from Calgary and Edmonton.\nConnections at Castlegar to and from Trail.\nDaylight service befV\/een\nVancouver-Pentlcton and Nefson'Lethbrldge-Cfllgary-Medlclne Hat,\nFor Full Information and Tickets, Consult Your Canadian Pacific Agent.\n $500 Built Silverton Church,\nWhich Marks Diamond Jubilee\nSILVERTON\u2014A church that was\nbuilt for $500, four-fifths of the\nmoney having been subscribed beforehand, is 60 years old here.\nSilverton memorial hall was at\ncapacity for the diamond jubilee\nobservances of Zion United Church.\n\u25a0 The Ladies' Aid sponsored a potluck supper and concert.\nMaster of ceremonies Rev. R. M.\nBooth dug into the past with excerpts taken from the pioneer Kootenay newspaper the New Denver\nLedge.\n, One of these, dated July 22, 1897,\nread: \"The site for the Silverton\n.church was decided on last week.\n'It js to be on Alpha Avenue on\nthe east side of Lake Avenue. The\nfollowing have been appointed a\nbuilding committee and the contract for building will be let im\nmediately: Messrs. McRobie, Sinclair, Roper, Sickling, Craig, Powell, Holtz and J;. Horton ...\"\nHere are some of his other excerpts which brought back the\nearly days to a number of residents present: \u25a0\n\u25a0 July 14, 1898: \"All aboard for\nthe 22nd! Arrangements are made\nfor the S.S. Picnic. The S.S. Slocan\nwill make an early morning trip\nfrom Silverton (this boat was the\nfir^t on Slocan Lake and was built\nand owned by William Hunter of\nSilverton, later M.P. for the district) making connections at Rose-\nbery with the train from Sandon,\nand will proceed to the head of\nthe lake where grounds, swings,\netc., will be prepared beforehand\nfor the children. Speeches will be\nmade by the various ministers and\nmusic will be furnished by the\nNew Denver Band. Everything\npossible has been done to make\nthe affair as complete success. The\nfare from Silverton fon the round\ntrip is 75 cents; from New Denver,\n50 cents; from Sandon, $1 and from\nThree Forks, 75 cents. Children under 12 years free and the various\nclasses will be under the supervision of their teachers.\"\nApril 7, 1898: \"The Selkirk Hotel,\n! Silverton, is a new three-storey\n; hotel situated near the wharf. The\nhouse is plastered and the roorgs\ni are furnished in a manner calculated to make travellers call again.\nMining and commercial men will\n:- appreciate the home comforts of\nthis hotel. Brandon and Barrett.\"\ni    July 29,1897: \"The Victoria Hotel\nopened for business on Tuesday\n! under the management of Mrs. E,\n1 McConnell and Miss M. Purcell,\n' This hotel will be a credit to the\ncountry,   with   its   40   plastered\nCrown Ule'i\n\u2022 Gitm tour fcrniiu prolecMm\niftheynecSiC-l\n\u2022 Giw von t>H your montf back\nol 6'S iftliey cion't.'\nPlus a profitable return \u00bb\nfour meetmentl\nDon't buy any life iniurenei\nuntil m\u00bb IntmStk <** net\ntenni\nFamily Income Plans, Juvenile\n.Education, and Mortgage Consultation Policies\u2014Group, Life, Ac-\neldent and 8lekness, Group\nAnnuities.\nAND  NOWII\nLife Income Bonds\n100%  Deductible for\nIncome Tax Purposes\nALBftT MAIDA\n*_#. ftx*\"\"*\nEm.\ny        Phone 82 and 685-Y\n(38 Baker St, Nelson\nrooms, elegant furniture and all\nmodern improvements.\"\nAlso: \"Floss and McDonnel have\na force of 100 men at work on the\nfour-mile wagon'road and clearing\nhas been made for nearly two\nmiles. They expect to complete the\ncontract in 60 days.\"\nRev. D. R. Stone of Trail was\nguest speaker for the anniversary,\ntaking as his text \"Where havfe\nyou come from and where are you\ngoing?\"\nThe program opened with a\npiano duet by Sandra Fairhurst\nand Mrs. J. Steele. Other items\nwere a solo by Lome Wright accompanied by Mrs. Thomas Leask,\na violin, accordian and piano trio\nby H. Miller, and Mr. and Mrs.\nS. R. Dewis, a solo by Mrs\". Janet\nGraham accompanied by Mrs.\nLeask, a recitation by Mr. Steele,\na junior group square dance, six\nboys playing selections, a story by\nMr; Booth,, a piano solo by Mrs.\nSteele and a square dance by the\nsenior group.\nMrs. J. B. Scaia ahd Mrs. J.\nRichards were in charge of entertainment, Mrs. Scaia, Mrs. J. Fairhurst and Mrs. Leask looked after\nthe tables, and pourers were Mrs.\nW. Nelson and Mrs. J. Richards.\nMr. and Mrs. James Draper, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. R. Campbell and Mrs.\nM. Kirkwood came from New Denver, Mr. \u25a0 and Mrs. Stone from\nTrail, and Mr. and Mrs. Booth and\nJJr. and Mrs. E. C. Johnson from\nNakusp. Silverton old-time guests\nof honor and United Church members, present were Mr. and Mrs.\nT. Harry Wilson. *\nThe church was built to serve\nall denominations and also to serve\nas a school. Through the ups and\ndowns of 60 years of services, the\nLadies.' Aid has continued to func-\ntipn.\nKASLO SENIOR CITIZENS'\nCLUB IS ONE YEAR OLD\nKASLO \u2014 Its first anniversary\nas a club for old folks of the district was celebrated by the\nSenior Citizens' Club here.\nThe diairman, in addressing\nthe large gathering, extended\ngreetings from the Women's Institute which played a prominent\npart in founding the organization. When the club room was\nopened last year there was some\napprehension  as  to  how. plans\nOne Crown\nServes All\nCommonwealth\nOTTAWA (CP)-George Hahn\n(SC\u2014New Westminster) asked in\nthe Commons Friday whether, in\nview of Queen Elizabeth's position as Queen of Canada, any\nconsideration is being given to\nproviding a \"crown of Canada\"\nfor her visits here.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker replied there is no crown of Canada. There was a crown that covered all parts of the Commonwealth. It was \"divisible and yet\nindivisible.\"\nMOTHER DIES\nCRANBROOK\u2014Mrs., Mary Ma-\ndelina McFadyen, 76, of New Westminster, mother' of Malcolm McFadyen of Cranbrook, died Sunday\nand will be buried today in Vancouver.\nAlso surviving are one grandson\nand several nieces and nephews.\nwould work out, but the venture\nhad proved entirely successful,\nhe said.\nF. H. Wilson\nComplimented on\nWork for Blind\nCRANBROOK - A blitz drive for\nmemberships and donations Nov.\n6 was set at the annual meeting\nThursday night by the Cranbrook\norganization of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind. The\nvisiting speaker was J. C. Hemb-\nling, the institute field representative for the B. C. Interior, who reported on the work done on behalf\nof the blind in prevention, treatment and rehpbilitation, education\nand services in the area during 'the\npast year.\nHe also extended to W. H. Wilson\nthe thanks of the Institute for his\n12 years of excellent service .as\nCranbrook chairman, a post from\nwhich he has now resigned.\nThe Lions Club and other service\nclubs will provide the 50 canvassers necessary for the drive. Last\nyear's contributions largely through\nthe blitz canvass came to approximately $1400 in this area.\nThe meeting elected new chairman Eric Dunn, with Mr. Wilson\nremaining as director and drive\nchairman, Val Meshwa, vice-pres\nident, Mrs. Allan Grant, secretary-\ntreasurer, and directors Robert\nBarr, D. R. Little, C. T. Spence\nRev. R. H. Woollam and Miss Ar\nlene Sims.\nNews 0\/ the Day\nRATES: 30c 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\u2014BALFOUR, B.C.\nBabies - Weddings - Portraits\nVOGUE STUDIO *- PHONE 1552\nPythian Sisters' Tea and Bazaar\nSat. Nov. 16th at the IOOF Hall.\nDolls\u2014Schools, Dress me, Rag.\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nSpecial \u2014 Plastic Shower  and\nCurtain Sets at $2.95\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nSpecial for today!\nBaby Mums - $1.00 fiunch\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nSalmo Kindergarten opens Nov. 1.\nQualified teacher in charge. Enquire Mrs. L. Leadbeater, ph. 73-M.\nCHICKEN MANURE\n$3.50 yd. del. $1.00 sack. Also top\nsoil. Ph. Amsden 559-X-3.\nFIFTH NELSON CUBS NOW REORGANIZED. MEET TUESDAY,\n6:45 P.M.  SCOUT HALL.\nRUMMAGE SALE\nat the Capitol Theatre TODAY.\nLadies Aid of First Baptist Church\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging.  R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nSkates in all sizes\n$1.00 pair ahd up\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE - PH.\nGas or oil heating installed and\nserviced. Licenced, bonded gas fitter. Norm Bowcock. phone 385.\nReserve Nov. 6th and 7th for\nAnnual Parish Bazaar in Cathedral Hall.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n& permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 211. Phone 1922.\nFlowers . . . The cheeriest way\nof all to say . . . Get Well.\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nPhone 962\nJ. M. Glaze Coat Ceiling Panels,\n12\"xl2\",  16\"xl6\",  16\"x32\".\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.    Nelson\nThe \"Well Baby Clinic\" on the\nNorth Shore will in future be held\nin the new community hall on 1st\nFriday morning of each month\nfrom 10 - 11 a.m.\nBRIDGE OPENING BANQUET\nNOVEMBER 7TH - TICKETS $2.00\nAvailable to citizens of Nelson and\ndistrict. Limited supply. Pick up\ntickets by November 5th at\nChamber of Commerce and\nFleury's Pharmacy.\nVisit Grand Master October\nSupper for IOOF and Rebekahs at\n6:30 p.m. Special meeting Koo\ntenay Lodge 8 p.m. Joint meeting\nIOOF and Rebekahs 8:45 p.m.\nATTENTION\nComing Soon\nKin Auctions of the Air over CKLN\nNov. 26 and 29\nDec. 5 and 6\nDonations and merchandise gratefully accepted. Phone 204.\nProceeds to polio and Kin charities.\nNorth Shore School May Soon Be\nNecessary, Procter Meeting Told\nPROCTER \u2014 Twelve ratepayers 000 ahd the balance is raised by\nturned out, to the meeting in the taxation\nProcter School to hear the school\nboard's annual report read by its\nchairman, F. N. Emmott, and to\nelect a school area representative\nfor the Procter area. B. J. Fitchett\nchaired the meeting. Also present\nwas Nelson Allen, school.inspector.\nIn the report, Mr. Emmott\nstressed the increase and the expected increase in the number of\npupils in School District No. 7. This\nterm there are 3143 pupils enrolled,\nwhich is 200 more than last term.\nThese are taught by 118 teachers,\nfive more than previously. Of these\nstudents 600 are attending the L. V.\nRogers High School in Nelson and\n700 are at the Junior High.\nAt the rate of enrolment increase\nanticipated in the next year or\ntwo it seemed apparent that the\nsenior high will have to be enlarged or a new junior-senior high\nbuilt somewhere along the North\nShore, Mr. Emmott thought. This\nsuggestion led to a lengthy discussion after the conclusion of the\nreport. The general feeling seemed\nto be that the school should be\nlocated at a site supplying the most\nbenefit and convenience to the\nmajority of the pupils affected.\nMr. Emmott warned that three\nnew elementary schools are imperative and if a bylaw sanction-,\ning their construction is denied a\nshift system will have to be devised\nto accommodate the children.\nFinal item in the report was the\nfinancial standing. Costs for schooling in 1957 is listed at $960,000, of\nwhich the government pays $560,-\n(CF To Mark\nFounding\nWith Banquet\nTORONTO (CP) - The 25th an\nniversary of the founding of the\nCCF party will be marked with\na banquet in Toronto Dec. 7. Ontario CCF officials said similar\ncelebrations will be held in a nurtf-\nber of other Ontario cities, including ' Ottawa, Hamilton, Windsor,\nLondon, Port Arthur and Timmins.\nFarm Prices'\nIndex Higher\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The composite\nprice index of commodities and\nservices used by Canadian farmers' advanced fractionally between Aptil and August, rising to\n241 from 240.6, the bureau of\nstatistics said Friday.\nThe August figure, however,\nrepresents a gain of five points\ncompared with the corresponding\nmonth of 1956 when the index\nstood at 236. The index is based\non 1935-39 prices equalling 100.\nThe index of farm wage rates\nrose in August to a record 526.4\nfrom 523.9 in April and 512.5 in\nAugust a year ago. The eastern\nindex advanced to 503.4 from\n498.6 in April while the western\nindex fell to 559 from 559.0.\nThe index for farm equipment\nand materiald declined to 209,7\nfrom 212 in April, mainly reflecting lower prices for feed and\nseed. However, there were increases in prices of hardware,\ncompounded fertilizer and farm\nmachinery.\nThe all-Canada farm family living component advanced 1.2\u00bbper\ncent to 216 from 213.5 in April.\nIt now is 4.8 per cent above the\ncorresponding figure of 206.2 in\nAugust, 1956.\nDuring the April-August period\nthere were advances in prices of\nclothing, household equipment,\nhealth maintenance and miscellaneous items. The tendency towards higher prices was more\npronounced in the east than the\nwest.\nPUBLIC MEETING\nof qualified voters of Attendance\nArea for .Blewett will be held in\nthe Blewett School on Monday,\nOctober 28th at 7:30 p.m., Taghum\nArea in the Community Hall on\nMonday, October 28th at 8:30 p.m.,\nBonnington Area at the Home of\nMrs. A. P. Jacobson on Monday,\nOctober 28th at 7:30 p.px\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBACKMAN \u2014 Funeral service\nfor the late Mrs. Pauline Back-\nman will be held on Monday at 2\np.m. at the Mission Covenant\nChurch. Rev. Reuben Swanson will\nofficiate and interment will be\nin Nelson Memorial Park.\nSUNDAY DRINKS\nCARDIFF, Wales (CP) - Cardiff council has expressed support\nfor a proposal to amend the Wdsh\nlicensing' laws to permit drinks\nwith hotel meals for non-residents\non Sundays. Taverns in Wales are\nclosed on Sunday.\nDry Spell Hits\nPanama Watershed\nBALBOA, Panama Canal Zone\n(Reuters) \u2014 The watershed upon\nwhich the Panama.Canal depends\nfor its existence is experiencing\nits driest spell since 1890, 24 years\nbefore the canal was opened.\nAs a result, the canal is about\n2'M feet below its average of 85\nfeet above sea level.\nA spokesman for the Panama\nCanal Company has said that but\nfor precautions in force, the canal\nlevel would be six feet lower than\nit is. This would pfevent the\ntransit of many passenger liners\non the New ^Zealand-Britain run.\nThe spokesman listed among\nthe precautions the drastic limitation of water for generating hydro-\nelectricity and the practice of\ndouble lockages. This system of\nputting two ships through at once\nif they will fit into one lock chamber usually is limited to the latter\npart of the dry season. Now, it is\nbeing continued right through the\nrainy season.\nCZECH COMPOSER\nFredrich Smetana, the Czechoslovak opera composer, lived from\n1824 to 1884.\nNEW BUS CONSIDERED\nThe dire overcrowding of the\nbuses servicing the West Arm\ncame in for scrutiny. Although in\neffect the buses do not carry more\nthan the load capacity, the pupils\nare packed in quite tightly and\nespecially now when they are wearing Winter clothing, the discomfort\ncan be very trying on a twenty-\nmile trip twice a day, it was said.\nMr. Emmott assured those concerned that plans for the purchase\nof an additional bus were being\nconsidered by the board.\nMr. Fitchett was unanimously\nre-elected as school area representative for his sixth consecutive term and received the appreciation  of the Procter residents for his efforts on behalf\nof the school there.       ,\nMr.  Allen  spoke briefly,  commending Gordon Sargent for his\nuntiring efforts as school trustee.\nMr. Sargent and J. S. Livingstone,\nschool board secretary, were unable, to attend. The inspector noted\nthat this term the school district\nhad employed a teacher-consultant,\nMiss Palmer, whose duty it is to\ngive helpful advice to teachers,\nespecially those who have lately\nreturned to the profession after a\nlapse.\nMr. Allen urged that parents try\nto influence at least \"one child in\nthe family to become a teacher.\nHe'went on to say that the .teacher\nshortage would become more and\nmore acute if other \"fields with\nhigher pay continue to attract the\nhigh school graduates.\nOLD-TIMER OF\nNAKUSP PASSES\nNAKUSP - Rev. R. M. Booth\nconducted the funeral service in\nRobertson Memorial United Church\nfor Robert Gordon Mann, who died\nat his home at Telegraph Bay two\nmiles North of here.\nPallbearers were George Woods\nRoland Jordan, Charles Jansen, N.\nA. Herridge, Amos Burling ahd\nHarry Maxwell. Interment was in\nthe local cemetery.\nMr. Mann, born April 1, 1865, in\nCampbelltown, N;B., was a vkeran\nof the First World War. He came\nto B.C. in 1920. None of his immediate family survives him. Several nieces live in Eastern Canada\nand one nephew Benn Mann in\nVancouver.\nSgt. Matheson\nOf RCMP Retires\nAt Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Superannuated\nafter 23 years of consecutive service with the B. C. Police and RCMP, Sergeant Malcolm Matheson\nwas presented with a long-service\naward in a ceremony here by Nel\nson subdivision inspector E.S.H.\nBatty, Thursday. Sgt. Matheson\nwas with the Glasgow Police in\nScotland prior to joining the B. C.\nPolice. Accompanied by Mrs. Matheson and family, he has left for\nthe coast to make his home,\nPending permanent appointment\nof his successor, Corporal D. H.\nPye is officer in charge of Cranbrook detachment.\nNot Sputnik Seen\nHere-McAllister\nAstronomer R. D. McAllister of\nRossland questions that Kootenay\nresidents have seen the Russian\nearth satellite Sputnik.\n\"The bright object in the southwest at twilight is the \"Evening\nstar\"\u2014the planet Venus. Also visible at the same time due West is\nthe first magnitude star in the\nconstellation of Bootes\" says Mr.\nMcAllister who is a member of the\nRoyal Astronomical Society.\n5^39\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1957 \u2014 3\nCranbrook Building\nTotal Up to $386,000\nCRANBROOK\u2014City building permits for 1957 reached ah estimated\nvalue of $385,959 last month when\npermits were taken out for a total\nof $86,750, including one large commercial building project. Total in\nestimated value of permits for the\ncorresponding month last year was\n$262,840. Report to the city council was by building inspector James\nGordon.\nMunicipal tourist camp revenue\nto the end of last month, was $17,-\n454, camp manager S. T. Craig reported, more than 20 per cent higher than the total of $14,869 for the\nsame period last year.\nTwelve new water connections to\nthe city system were made by the\nwater department during the\nmonth, Works Superintendent Emil\nErickson reported. Pressure in the\ncity water system reached the\nyear's peak average during the\nmonth at 103 pounds, showing the\nbenefits of the new supply main\nopened in July from the city reservoir.\nSidewalk construction program\nlast monlh covered 2822 feet of new\nfive-foot concrete sidewalks, unclf.\nlocal improvement bylaws, and\n1347 feet of new four-inch water\nmain was installed by the department during the month. , .\nThe month's electricity consumption by the city system at 1,082,940\nkilowatt hours was up 22 per cent\ncompared with the corresponding\nmonth last year, and addition of\n18 electric meters to the city system brought the total gain for the\nyear to a net 90 meters.\nFor Frigid Weather\nORDER COAL TODAY!\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL AND TRANSFER\n526 Stanley St. - Opp. The Bay\nSn*\\-5\n--:.   _'.,^-_\ni.'=.B\"\nUS\natures\nare\njust\ni___K___V_I\n(firs\nw\nner.~\nNo\none\n\"Any object that can be viewed\nfor five minutes in one part of\nthe sky is certainly not Sputnik,'\nthe star-gazer stated. \"At 18,000\nmiles an hour, Sputnik would cross\nthe sky from horizon to horizon in\nless than five minutes.    ,\n\"To find Sputnik, an observer\nmust know exactly when and where\nto look; otherwise a sighting will\nbe pure chance.\" |i\n\\ knows when the thermometer\ni)        will drop. Don't be caught un-\nft \"'prepared!    Order   Utah   KING\n()'<.     COAL now\u2014the size especially\n'\u2022___!      prepared for  your  hoot\naj)   ing equipment.\nUtah W\nKING COAL\n[WASHED   \u2022  DRIED   .   SIZED   \u2022   BLENDED   \u2022   OILED!\n\u2022 -   \u25a0  *^Jr> Js  .,1\n'Hardware\nis my Business\"\n\"To me  the satisfaction of supplyl\npeople  with quality merchandise  and ^\\S-\nservice is the outstanding reward of\nrunning a hardware store. There are high industry standards for the\ntools, appliances and supplies that I handle, and in selecting merchandise\nfor my customers, I make sure that my stock meets these rigid requirements.\nTo keep people reminded of my store and services and to announce\nnew merchandise, I use newspaper advertising regularly. It's an\neffective way to send the news about my store to the people in this community.\"\nAll businessmen are aware of the standards\nof quality, weight and measure that are used in\nevaluating the merchandise which they buy\nand sell. It is also possible to buy newspaper\nadvertising on the basis of definite standards,\nnamely, the information in the reports of the\nAudit Bureau of Circulations.\nThe   A.B.C.   is   a   cooperative,   nonprofit\nassociation of 3,575 publishers, advertisers and advertising agencies.\nIts purpose is to provide\nadvertisers with audited\ninformation about the cir-\nThi_ newspaper is a member of\nthe Audit Bureau of Circulations.\nculation of its publisher members.\nAt regular intervals the A.B.C, of which this\nnewspaper is a member, sends an experienced\ncirculation auditor to make a thorough inspection and audit of our circulation records.\nThe FACTS thus established are .published in\nan A.B.C. audit report which tells you: How\nmuch circulation we have; where-it goes; how\nobtained; how much people pay\nS E \u00b0 * for our paper; and other FACTS\nthat you need in order to\nKNOW what you get for\nyour advertising money.\nAdvertisers are invited lo ask for\na copy of our latest A.B.C. report.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nC.  REPORTS-40   YEARS   OF   FACT-FINDING   ANDFAC T.VR_=:r6 ;R T l-N G\n Sfotaim Satlij Npiuh\nEstablished April 22.  1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED. 268 Balcer Street, Nelson, British Columbia v\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Uttnwo\nMEMBER Of   THE  AUDI!   BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Ot   l'HE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use foi republication' of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nSaturday, October 26, 1.57\n\"Qet Above Underground Politics\"\nCitizens would do well to give serious reflection to Rev. John Allan's\nadvice in his farewell speech to the\nNelson Chamber of Commerce.\nHis words bear repeating:\n\"When people use others to their\nown advantage and cause others to be\nexposed to taking undeserved blame,\na dishonorable situation exists.\n\"Why then not get above underground politics and devious influences\nand have each and every one stand\nup and be counted for what his true\nopinion is? When you have men and\nwomen in fear of one another and\nwhen hatred Is abroad, you sap the\nlife of the city and, thereby, the country, and are in the dishonorable position of the destruction of individual\npersonality.\"\nTo a city wracked for years by the\nwork of the underground politicians,\nthey come none too soon, and from a\nftan beyond reproach.\nTo watch the \"destruction of individual personality\" is a terrible thing.\nThis newspaper, with more than\nhalf a century's devotion to the cause\nof progress for Nelson and all the\nKootenays, knows perhaps more than\nany other the tragedies that follow\nsuch destructive work.\nA target of the abuse Itself, the\nnewspaper still has honestly and consistently  attempted  to  be  fair  and\nabove board in its presentation of the\nlocal news. The criticism we can take,\nbut the hounding of the men and\nwomen set up by the voters to serve\nus is something else again, This is not\nto Say they are beyond criticism, but\nlet it be constructive, fair and honest.\nThis situation is not new to Nelson.'\nIn our years of close contact with\nthe people given the thankless job of\nrunning city affairs, we have seen\nmore than one mem go down under\nthis heartless form of attack.\nOne of our late mayors, a pioneer\nwho helped to build the city, went\ndown under the merciless punishment\nthat is handed out by unthinking\ntongues. He came to this newspaper\noften for advice, but puzzled and perplexed by the goading and taunting\nthat even shattered the peace of his\nhome life, he became a bitter, heartbroken man.\nThis is the kind of thing that has\ncaused thinking men to ask what is\nwrong, many of them men who have\nfound themselves caught in the vicious\ncircle, and who are trying to extricate\nthemselves, with little success from the\nnest of intrigue.\nThey well may ask, what is wrong\nwith Nelson. But if they heed the advice, of Mr. Allan, they will:\n\"Conserve Nelson, develop Nelson\nand make her the Queen City.\"\n. ' '-Enlarged Heart\nRestricts Activity\nA person with an enlarged heart cannot\nlead an active, normal life in the sense of\ndoing everything without restriction, according to an article , in the current issue of\nHealth Magazine, official publication of the\nHealth League of Canada.\nThe enlargement of the heart is only one\nof the aspects, as there is always some other,\nmanifestation of disease as well. The function of the heart is impaired to a greater or\nless degree; and the enlargement alone does\nnot determine the amount of activity in\nwhich one may safely, or comfortably, indulge. -   :\nA good rule is not to do anything that\nget? one Out of breath, but this is very\napproximate. It is best to find out, with the\nhelp of one's doctor just how much activity\nis Safe, and build one's life accordingly, without repining over the things one can't do.\nThis, of course, is the essence of rehabilitation\u2014to do the things -ybu oan do\nwell and not to fret trying to do the things\nyou can't.\nQive the School Kids a Chance\nWe are all accustomed to seeing\nchildren rush out of school and tear\nhome, but one has only to stand on\nthe corner by the t Central School to\nsee how that habit persists into later\nlife. For five or ten minutes after the\nnoon whistle has blown there is a\nsteady, hurrying procession of ears up\nthe hill which gives the impression that\nthe drivers were poised ready for the\nrace.\nOf course there is no real reason\nfor this hurry. They have ample time\nand a little reflection would assure\nthem that their dinner is seldom on the\ntable when they arrive home. But in\nthis haste they are concerned only with\nthemselves. They look straight ahead\nand see only the rear of the car ahead.'\nThey are not consciously discour\nteous for they do not see the children\non the sidewalk anxious to cross, and\nthe root of many of our driving accidents is not so much discourtesy as\nthe failure fo think of others. Probably\nthe drivers, if they thought of it, would\nnot only agree that it is unpleasant for\nchildren to have to wait for five minutes or more in a cold wind while they\nwent by in comfortable cars, but would\ndo something about it. It would only\ntake a moment of t_\\eir time to stop\nand let them cross.\nNelson has a great many careful\nand considerate drivers and we are\nsure the request from the Chief of\nPolice that school children be given\nconsideration will meet with an instant\nresponse. Why not? We all like children.\nHorsepower and Safety on Our Highways\n1940 model with  only 60\nFrom 1946 to 1950 when there was practically no horsepower increase in automobile engines, the average road speed increased only three miles per hour\u2014from 47\nto 50. In the years 1950 to 1653, when horsepower rating practically doubled, the average road speed increased only two miles per\nhour,' from 50 to 52.\nA statistical survey, based on road observation, disclosed that there does not appear to be any relationship between horsepower and the speed driven. What, then, is\nthe cause Of the increase in highway traffic\naccidents?\nThe most obvious answer is the human\nelement, the sensible, courteous, conscientious driver will drive in a safe and sane\nmanner regardless of the horsepower of his\nengine. Likewise, the careless, irresponsible\ndriver will be a traffic hazard whether he\ndrives a 1957 car with a 300 horsepower en-\nMeeting Seed\nAn American churchgoer had been investigating the use of what was called \"meeting seed\" in days gone by. ,\n\"Meetings\" were frequently held in rural\nareas by generations gone by, and great occasions they were for the community for\nmany miles around. There are occasional\n\"meetings\" still; in fact we saw a notice-\nboard about a Methodist \"meeting\" in Mus-\nkoka a year or two ago. Great numbers of\npeople turned out for these religious gatherings in tents or the open air, and people revelled in the all-day and evening singing and\npreaching. But people did fall asleep sometimes, and so they munched \"meeting seed\"\nto help keep awake. The Investigator finds\nthat the seed was generally caraway or anise.\nAn old New England book tells of a woman\nwho grew fennel, dill and caraway seed, all\nof which were sold as \"meeting seed.\"\n\u2014St. Thomas Times-Journal.\nFiction Choices At\nLibrary For Autumn\nA number 6f new novels with a wide range of Jsack-\ngrounds are available for kits fall anjl winter reading at\nNelson Municipal Library,\n\"By Love Possessed\" by James\nGould Cozzens, is the first novel\nby this author since his Pulitzer\nPrize winning \"Guard of Honor\"\nin 1948, The story covers two days\n61 a man's life. Tha reader is given\ninsight into his mind during these\nhour-, learns of his remarkable\nqualities, his interests, friendships\nand affections as he passes through\na series of critical tests of his\nprivate and professional existence.\n\"Fairoaks\" by Frank Yerby is\nthe story of Guy Falks, Southern\naristocrat who, without knowing it,\nlived a lie So successfully that in\nthe end he made it come true,\n\"Fairoaks\" is the plantation\naround which the Story revolves,\n\"Below the Salt\" by Thomas\nCOStain goes back 700 years to the\nmomentous times in England and\nEurope that led to Magna Carta,\nIt is in the style of Costain's previous popular historical novels.\nIn \"The Poctor's Husband,\"\nElizabeth Seifert again draws i\nsharp picture of human conflicts\nHere she has created two likeable\nand strong-willed characters, and\nsurrounded them with constantly\nWisdom\nThe discussions about the dangers of\natomic fallout, and the possibility of mankind living in peace with the atom reminds\nus of a curious dispute which took place\nsomewhat over a hundred years ago about\nthe dangers of railway travel to mankind.\nThe medical faculty of the University of Munich was asked to prepare a report on it, with\nspecial attention to the effect of such travel\non passengers. They concluded solemnly that\nrailway travel was downright suicidal, as\nto die of extreme vertigo. They recommended\npassengers and even' onlookers were certain\nthat high fences be built alongside all railway tracks, to preserve the eyesight of those\nwho might see a train whizzing by.\nWhich proves that men whom the world\nregards as wise may, sometimes, be mistaken.\u2014Peterborough Examiner.\nchanging aspects of a hospital and\na New England town.\n\"The Gift and the Giver\" by\nNeliS Gardner White is describe!)\nas a novel of pride and loneliness\nconcerning a possessive woman's\nunwitting domination of people\nshe loves.\n\"Street of Riches\" by Gabrielle\nRoy takes its name from Rue\nDeschambeault, stretching through\nthickets of wild rose down to trolly\ntracks that gave access to frontier\nlifeain Manitoba. Among those who\nlived there was the girl who tells\nthis story, affectionally known as\nPetite Misere.\n\"Nor the Moon by Night\" by\nJoy Packer has a South African\nsetting. The action takes place\nduring a trek across a wild life\nsanctuary by a young English\nnurse who has. flown there to\nmarry a game warden.\nMajor and Mrs. Palmer in \"Mc-\nBain's Brier Rose\" were gardeners\nof no mean ability. Their enthusiasm extended to the employment of\na gardener, Duncan McBain, who\nstood for no nonsense from weeds,\nbugs or the Palmers. That's the\ngist of this humorous story By\nCanadian author Helen Dickson\nReynolds.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\n.no Only Nows Dom not nolo Itaalt responsible In the ivont\noi on error In, tho following lisle.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nClosing Prlcei\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium      .07\nAlgom Uranium    15.00\nAmal Larder\t\nArgus 2nd pfd .\nAtlas St \t\nB A Oil\t\nBathurst Power\n40\n1644\n36.ii\n42\nAnacon Lead\nAnglo Rouen ..\nAtlin Ruff \t\nAubelle \t\nAumacho\t\nAunor\nA. V. Roe Chairman Urges\nCanada To Produce More\ngine or a 1940 model  with  only  60  horsepower.\nIt is interesting to note the major automobile manufacturers recently agreed to\neliminate from their advertising all reference\nto the speed potential of their new models.\nInstead, they will concentrate on built-in\nsafety features. This is assuredly a step in\nthe right direction, but until the drivers also\nhave built-in safe driving features they will\nhave to be protected from themselves.\n\u2014Kamloops Sentinel.\nPress Comment\nBILLINGSGATE\nIs its chief glory destined to forever depart from Billingsgate?\nThe glory'was.not that of being the\nlargest and most famous fish market in the\nworld, but of being a purveyor ^>f language\nlurid beyond compare.'\n\"So famous has the fishmarket talk become, that \"Billingsgate\" has become an\naccepted synonym for picturesque invective.\nThe Billingsgate fish market is located\non the banks of the Thames under the\nshadow of the tower of London.\nThis reputation for lurid language does\nnot hold good today. There are no longer any\nfishwives working in Billingsgate Market.\nAnd in the past it was the fishwives, rather\nthan the porters, who were responsible for\nthe market's peculiar linguistic repute.\n\u2014Port Arthur News-Chronicle.\nSELLING TO MINORS\nThe liquor laws of Ontario would be held\nin greater respect if the option of fines for\nsupplying liquor to minors was removed from\nthe statutes. A mandatory jail term would\nact as a greater deterrent to those tempted\nto contribute to juvenile delinquency by making liquor available to teen-agers.\u2014Woodstock Sentinel-Review.\nPISTOLS IN PASTEL\nPistols in pastel shades are1 available for\nthe ladies. But for a Mother's Day present,\nthey come with lace slipover for the handle\nand exude a fragrance of lavender.\n\u2014Hamilton Spectator.\nIt doesn't matter too much who develops\nCanada's iron ore, thinks the Ottawa Citizen,\n\"as long as it is done under Canadian rules,\nIt is inconceivable '< that Krupps'1 commercial\ninterest here will give him any political influence, any more than it h--\u00abs given American investors much political weight. Moreover, if Krupp does not get iron ore from\nCanada, he will get it elsewhere, and Canada\nwill have gained nothing,\"\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n\u2022nk-ml U. 1 hNes Mlfa.\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n[he college band does its stuff\nbetween the halves... but who sees'em?\nEVERYBODY IS OUT PUTTING ON TOE\nFEED BAG...\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nI will give unto him that Is\nathlrst of the water of life freely.\nRev. 21:6\nWe can cultivate a desire for\ninjurious things. They are costly\nalways. The finest things of this\nlife and the one to. come are free.\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nTORONTO (CP)-A nation-wide\n\"do-it-yourself\" program in industry and manufacturing was\nrecommended by the chairman\nof A. V. Roe (Canada) Ltd.\n\"You have only to glance at\nCanada's staggering trade, deficitj\nwith the United States,\" Sir Roy\nsaid in an address to the Roe annual meeting, \"to see where opportunities lie.\"\n\"This represents a serious\nproblem for Canada but it also offers a rare opportunity to Canadian industry.'\nMUST PRODUCE MORE\n\"In that vast deficit (of more\nthan $1,000,000,000 annually)\nthere must be many millions of\ndollars worth of products that\ncan and should be made in this\ncountry.\n\"Canada must produce more of\nthe products which she uses and\nwhich she now imports. Your population is increasing by 1,000,000\nevery 30 months\u2014one of the highest rates of growth in the world.\nIf this is to be maintained, and\nit must be if Canada Is to grow,\nthen more and more>new jobs\nmust be found.\"\nGROUND FLOOR\nCanada, Sir Roy said, is \"the\nfastest growing economy in the\nworld,\" and this was why. the\nHawker Siddeley Group of Britain, parent company of A. V. Roe\ndecided to get in on the \"ground\nfloor\" of this growth.\nA. V. Roe, which started out as\nan aviation company with virtually no assets in 1945, now was\na widely diversified industry and\nin  its  most  recent  acquisition,\nowned some 73 per cent of Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation Ltd.\n\"One thing we recognized,\"\nsaid Sir Roy, \"and that is that it\nis no good trying' to do things in\nCanada in what I call 'the English way.' This Is a Canadian\ncompany run by Canadians. I\nthink I am the only Englishman\nin the organization in an executive capacity and I am not doing very much.\n\"As far as I know, there is not\nanother of my countrymen even\nrunning a department. There are\nsome fellows who used to be English but they have now, or are\nin the process of becoming Canadians.\"\n.11%\n.55\n.26\n.24\n.05\n.12\n1.70\n,31\n.14\nErlander Gov't\nTo Resign Today\nSTOCKHOLM (Reuters)-Pre-\nmier Tage Erlander said Friday\nhis government will, resign Sat.\nurday.\nHis coalition government was\nsplit Thursday when the Centre\nAgrarian party quit office, leaving the Social Democrats as a\nminority government.\nThe cabinet held its normal\nweekly meeting with the king in\ncouncil today, and afterwards Erlander stayed behind in private\nconference with King Gustaf.'\nSources close to Erlander said\nhe believes the outcome will be\na Social Democrat minority government under his leadership.\nfltwl dfaL\nNo mater how much a man\nknows, it don't impress his wife.\nShe's heard it so much that she\nknows it too.\nTELEVISION\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\n1:00 Good Afternoon\n1;30 Western Roundup\n2:30 The Lone Ranger\n3:09 Western Roundup\n5:30 Wild Bill Hickock\n6:00 Theater\n6:30 Lone Wolf\n7:00'Starlit Stairway\n7:30 Dick and the Duchess \u2022\n8:00 Gale Storrp Show *\n8:30 Have Gun Will Travel \u25a0*\n9:0(1 Gunsmoke *    ,\n9:30 Perry Maspn .\n10:30 Late Show\nSUNDAY\n12:15 Good Morning\n12:30 Oral Roberts\n1:15 Professional Preview *\n1:30 Professional Football *\n5:00 Mickey Rboney\n5:30 Annie Oakley\n6:0(1 News and Commentary\n6:30 You Are There *\n7:00 Lassie \u2022\n7:30 Bachelor Father *\n8:6o Ed Sullivan Show *\n9:00 General Electric Theater \u2022\n9:30 Alfred Hitchcock *\n10:00 $64,000 Challenge *\n10:30 What's My Line *\n11:00 Errol Flynn\nFOR TODAY\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\nSATURDAY\n9:10 Color Test Program\n9:13 Test Pattern\n9:25 NARTB\n9:26 Bible Reading\n9:30 Gumby *\n10:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n10:30 Howdy Doody *\n11:00 FUry *\n11:30 Western Theatre\n1:15'PCC Hl-Lites\n1:45 Pacific Coast Football *\n4:15 Short Sijbjects\"\n4:30 Trouble With Father\n5:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n6:00 I Led Three Lives\n6:30 Western Marshal\n7:00 Frontier\n7:30 People Are Funny *\n8:00 Perry Como (C) *\n9:00 Club Oasis *\n9:30 Giselle Mackenzie *\n10:00 What's It For *\n10:30 Hit Parade (C) *\n11:00 Late Movie \"See Here,\nPrivate Hargrove\"\nSUNDAY\n2:00 Christopher Series\n2:30 This Is The Answer\n3:00 Travel Film\n3:36 Men Toward The Light\n4:00 Wide Wide World *\n5:30 Price Is Right\n6:00 TV. Theatre\n7:00 Ted Mack Amateur Hour\n7:30 Sally _\n8:00 Steve Allen (C) \u00bb\n9:00 Chevy Show *\n10:00 Loretta Young *\n10:30 O. Henry Playhouse\n11:00 All Star Theatre\nBase Metals  \t\nBaska Uranium \t\nBoymar' 09%\nBrilund  13\nBuffalo Ank  :, '3\nBuff Red Lake    ,05%\nCampbell C     3.95\nCampbel R L      4.75\ncan Met     2.20\nCassiar      5.90\nChimo  -      .47\nChromium  .     2.75'\nCons Denison   1. .00\nCons Discovery     2.55\nCons Halliwell 28\nCons Howe     1.45\nCons Mining & Smelting ..  19.12%\nCons Red Pop  11\nCon Sanorm  ...      .05\nCon Sub 65\nConwest       2.35\nCopper Man  09\nD'Aragon  13\nDonalda   10\nEast Amphi  06\nEast Sullivan      1.80\nFalconbridge      E2.75\nFaraday     1.41\nFrobisher      1.35\nGeco      7.70\nGeo Scientific Pros  2514\nGiant Yel     4.10\nGoldale  13\nGoldcrest  08%\nGolden Manitou 36\nGunnar Gold    12.6214\nRarminerals  -.....'.     .11\nHasaga    14\nHeadway 41\nHollinger      19.00\nHudson Bay i   45.75\nInspiration  36\nInt Nickel   67.25\nIron Bay     1.55\nJoliet Que 22\nJonsmith 08\nR J Jowsey _      .37\nKenville .'. 05\nKerr Addison   14.50\nLabrador    13.25\nLake Lingman 09\nLakeshore      4.35\nLexindin  _ .      .05\nLittle Long Lac .    1.35\nLorado 70\nMacassa     2.25\nMacDonald 32\nMadsen R L ..:     1.66\nMalartic G F .-.     1.19\nManeast  16\nMaritime Mining _.     .55\nMart McNeely  11\nMcLeod      1.13\nMcMarmac 08\nMcKenzie R L 16\nMilliken     2.15\nMining Corp   11.00\nMogul       .42\nMulti Mins - 54\nNew Alger 06\nNew Bidlamaque 0514\nNew Delhi _     .45\nNew Highridge  '  .12\nNew Harricana  10\nNew Lund \u201e 17\nNipissing       1.02\nNoranda New    36.25\nNorgold     .   .08\nNormetals  , 2.40\nNorpax  _...     .35\nNorth Can      1.10\nNorth Rankin  \u2022     .59 \u25a0\nOpemiska     6.00\nPickle Crow      1.00\nPlacer Devel ....'.     8,25\nPreston E D   , 5.50\nQuebec Copper        34\nQuebec Lab  0714\nQuebec lithium     5.50\nQuebec Metallurgical     1.00\nQuemont     8.05\nRadiore    48\nRayrock _ 99\nE_t_lM-_ V -. Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n2:00 Adventures of Gene Autry\n3:00 Saturday Sh6wcase\n4:3d KREM Cartoons\n5:60 Kit CirsOn\n5:30 Lone Ranger *\n6:00 Championship Bowling\n7:60 Majer Fights\n8:00 Country Music Jubilee\n9:00 Lawrence Welk \u2022\n10:00 Mike Wallace Interview *\n10:30 Million Dollar Theatre\nSUNDAY\n1:06 Gene Autry\n2:00 TelecOurse\n2:30 Faith For Today\n3:00 Sunday Matinee.\n4:30 Paul Winchell *\n5:00 Tales of Texas Rangers'\n5:30 Kit Carson\n6:60 Ray Milland Show\n6:30 Frankie Laine\n7:00 You AskedFor.lt *\n7:30 Maverick *\n8:30 Bowling Stars *\n9:00 Sunday Spectacular\nBell Telephone ... 38%\nB C Electric Wit - \u00ab7\nB C Forest      9\nB C Packers B  12* ,\nB C Power A  35%\nBurns A -     9%\nCanadian Breweries   2414\nCanadian Canners  12%\nCanadian Celanese  13%\nCan Cement  22%\nCan Chem Co -480\nCanadian Dredge   15 ,-'\nCan Malting    22%\nCan Oil  26   .\nCanadian Pacific Rly  25 (\nCockshutt  ,8   .\nCons Gas  - .  2714\nDist Seagram  24%\nDom Foundries  2414\nDom Magnesium  10^\nDom Steel Ord .  18\nDom Stores ... 4314\nDom Textiles .-. _.     714\nFamous Players  14%\nFanny Farmer  1714\nFord A  '. - 79*\nGatineau   -  28\nGatineau 5% pfd :  9514\nGypsum Lime    28\nImperial Oil  - 2814\nImp Tobacco  11%\nInt Pete  38\nLaura Secord  _  1814\nLoblaw A   18\nLoblaw B  20 \u2022\nMassey Harris       5'\/\u00ab\nMcColl Frontenac _ 51\nMont Loco  14\nMoore Corp  59\nNat Steel Car  20\nPage Hershey  - 100\nPowell River \u2014. 32%\nPower Corp  -.  51\nShawinigan  -  2214\nSicks Brew  21\nSimpsons A _ 15%\nStandard Paving  32%\nSoutham       42\nSteel of Canada !.  48%\nUnion Gas of Can  54%\nUnited Steel  12\nVancouver Stocks\nClosing Prlcei\nSan Antonio\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Miller \t\nStadacona \t\nSteep Rock \t\nSlocan Van Roi .\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\n.53\n4.55\n.35\n.18\n10.62 V.\n.05\nSullivan Con     1.95\nSylvanite     1.28\nTeck Hughes     1.40\nTemagami      1.30\nThomp - Lund 65\nTomblll    45\nUnited Keno     3.40\nTrans Cont Res  1314\nUpper Canada  .: 59\nVentures    22.12%\nVicour    05%\nWait* Amulet      5.75\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne  \t\nCanusa  \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nFarwest Tungsten\nGiant Mascot\t\nGranduc j\t\nHamil Sil\n.12%\n.     .51\n.      .03\n.      .08\n.    1.50\n.02%\nHighland Bell ..;.     1.19\nNational Ex  -     .20\nPioneer Gold -    1.20\nPremier Border      .05\nQuatsino  32\nSheep Creek  36\nSilback Premier  -     .04%\nSilver Ridge       .02\nSilver Standard 14%\nSunshine Lardeau       .11\nTrojan 23\nUtica    02\nOILS\nA P Consolidated      .38\nCalgary & Edmonton  22.25\nCharter    1.85\nHome  15.25\nNew Gas Ex      1.35\nOkalta Com      1.55\nPacific Pete   26.25\nPeace River Gas 84\nRoyalite   13.75\nSparmac 13\nUni(ed        2.35\nVanalta      .18\nWiltsey Goglin\n.14\nWright HargreavSs     1.35\nYale\nYellowknife Bear\nOILS\nAmerican LedUc ..\nfianff 0116\n.15\n.90\n.20\n1.84\nBailey SelbuM      8.86\nBata Petroleum \t\nCalgary and Edmonton .\nCan Admiral\t\nCdn Atlantic     \t\nCanadian Collieries\n.06\n22.00\n.36\n5.20\n4.25\nCanadian Devonian      5.05\nCentral Explorers     1.80\nDuvex   13\nHome A    16.00\nLiberal Pete       1.16\nLong Island Pete 16\nMarigold   1214\nMidcon   45\nNat Pete     2.60\nNew continental Si\nNew Gas Expl     1.33\nOkalta            1.65\nPacific Pete  20.25\nPetrol   48\nPonder  40\nProv Gas     2.38\nRoyalite     14.06\nSpooner   21.06\nStanwell .Oil\nTriad        \t\nUnited Oils \t\nYank Canuck ....\nWestern Pacific\n.84\n4.66\n2.40\n.0614\n.1514\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   24%\nAlgoma Steel  14\nAluminum \u2014 30\nLIS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\n1.25\nAlberta Distillers Vt\n1.16\nB C Forests\t\n9.00\nB C Power \t\n35.75\nB C Telephone\n37.75\nCrown Zellar (Can)\n14.60\nInland Nat Gas , ..,\n6.87%\n3.96\nMa'cM & Bloedel B\ni\n25.60\n1,65\nPowell River\t\n22.66\nTranS Mtn \t\n59.56\nWestminster Paper\n26.66\nWestern Plywoods ,\n16.66\nUNLISTED\nBid\nAsk\nAlta Gas Trunk\n13.25\n13.25\nTrans Can Com ....\n20.25\n20.75\nTrans Mtn Unit ....\n63.00\n63.00\nWestcoast Trans ....\n84.00\n85.50\nBANKS\nBank of Mont\n40.00\n42.00\nCan Bank of Com ....\n39.06\n41.06\nImp Bank of Can ....\n44.66\n46.60\nRoy Bank of Can ....\n57.06\n60.00\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund\n7.59\n8.33\nCommenwealth Int\n6.26\n6.88\nGrouped Income ....\n3.16\n3.39\nInvestors Mutual ....\n8.79\n9.51\nLeverage *\n4.15\n4.56\nTrans Can \"C\"\n4.75\n5.13\nGreen Reminds\nBuilders of\nLoan Program\nOTTAWA (CP)-Works Minis-'\nter Green said Friday that British\nColumbia and the Maritimes may\nlose out if builders there don't\nsoon take greater advantage of\nthe federal government's $150,-\n066:660 program for small leans.\n\"There isn't a great deal loft,\"\nhe said as he reported to the\nCommons that loans totalling\nmore than $112,660,666 had been\napproved or were pending under\nthe program at Oct. 18. The government had provided $156,000,-\n000 in lending money,\nin loans had been approved for\n5,046 units. None had been approved1 in Newfoundland\nor Prince Edward Island. In New\nBrunswick and Nova Scotia together, $430,000 in loans had been\napproved for 50 units and in British Columbia $1,292,600 in loans\nfor 150 units.\n \u00a3R5|\ni About the Town\nPHONE 1844\nMrs. J. B. Gray of New Westminster, formerly of Nelson, spent\n- a day in Nelson renewing former\nfriendships. She is at present visiting her daughter, Mrs. E. H.\nGautschi of Tadanac.\n-.\u2666'\u25a0*.*\nDr. and Mrs. W. C. Murphy, 320\nHall Mines Road, have -had as\nguests Mrs. Murphy's father ahd\nmother, Mr. and Mrs. R. J.\n\u25a0Thompson of Toronto. Mr. and\nMrs. Thompson have,now left for\ntheir home in the East.\nA. former resident of Nelsbn, Mr.\nV. W. R. Hudson, food company\nsalesman, formerly of Nelson, is\nstaying in the city for a short time.\nAt .present residing in Vancouver,\nhe expects to move with his family to Winnipeg in the near future.\nWhile in Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.\nHudson (Doris) and family have\nresided on Falls Street.\n*   .   *\nMr. an* Mrs. W. J. Hipperson,\nBevanne apartments, have returned after spending two weeks\nin Vancouver.\n%\nwnie Jo Ci\u00abu\nna.lll.       - SERMON-\n\"Goodwill - A Church\nMan's Sin - The Churches\"\nSunday School at 9:45 and 11 a.m,\n7:00 p.m.\n\"At The Organ\"\nI Mr. Merlin R. Bunt, Playing a half hour recital\nof requested selections on the organ for the\nenjoyment of those arriving before \u2014\n7:30 p.m.\nThe Fourth Evening Event\n\"OPEN FORUM\"\nWhen the minister will answer the\nquestions submitted by one and\nall.  Layman's panel will  be\nchaired by Mr. J. Steed. An\ninformative and very different\nSunday evening event.\n\u00a7f. paitl's-iEnttttij Ittit^h\nCorner Josephine and Silica Streets\n\"A QUjurrlf ffittlf a Challenge\"\nMinister Music\nREV.   DONOVAN   JONES MERLIN R. BUNT\nB.A.,  B.D.,  Th.M. Director,  278-L\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nRector: REV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG, B.A., L.Th.\nSunday, October 27, 1957\n19TH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY\n(National Layman's Sunday)\n8:00 a.m.-HOLY COMMUNION.\n(Corporate Communion and Breakfast follow\nfor men of the parish.)\n9:45 a.m.-FAITH FORUM FOR TEENERS.\nIn the chapel.\n11:00 a.m.-ALL DEPARTMENTS OF THE\nSUNDAY SCHOOL.\n11:0.0 a.fti.-MATTINS and HpLY BAPTISM.\nMonday, Oct. 28\u2014 (The Day of S.S. Simmon and Jude.)\n7:00 a.m.-HOLY COMMUNION.\nWednesday, Oct. 30\u2014Holy Communion, 10:00 a.m.-\n.Mattins Daily 9:00 a.m.\nFRIDAY, Nov. 1\u2014(All Saints Day) Holy Communion 7 a.m.\nSAINT PAUL'S\nEVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH.\nStanley and  Silica Streets \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\n(Thfe Friendly Church With a Friendly Welcome)\nThe Rev. Ernst H. Nygaard, B.A., B.D., MST.\nPastor \u2014 Phone 1855-R\nSunday: 11:00 a.m. \u2014 \"The Man With The Book.\"\nReformation Sunday.\nLUTHER LEAGUE at 7:00 p.m.\n(Yearning for Christ)\n\"Sunday is the core of our civilization, dedicated to thought\nand reverence. \u2014 It invites to the noblest solitude and to the\nnoblest society.\" \u2014 Emerson.\nWE INVITE YOU TO WORSHIP\nCorner of Fifth and Elwyn Streets\nREV. H. R. WHITMORE, Minister\nOrganist: Mr. Angus Fraser\nSERVICE IN THE NEW CHURCH\nElwyn St. Entrance.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Subject: \"Jesus Speaks To Us.\"\nGirls' and Boys' Choir in- attendance.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop. 3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter.\nNo Evening Service Until Further Notice.\n613 Victoria St.\nLieut, and Mrs. G. GHce\nSUNDAY\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nto!\nPri-sbijtprtatt\n(Eljttrrlj\nMinister\nREV.  J.   N.  ALLAN,  B.A.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday  School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\nSacrament of\nBaptism.\nThe Minister Will Preach\nSouth Slocan WA\nSets Meeting Days\nSOUTH SLOCAN-Future meetings will be held on Mondays twice\nmonthly, St. Matthew's Anglican\nChurch Women's Auxiliary decided\nat its meeting at the home of Mrs.\nR. McFadden of Corra Linn.\nA tea and sale of work to be\nheld November 27 was planned.\nCards of sympathy were sent to\ntwo members, Mrs. J. D. Yeatman and Mrs. W. Rogers, in their\nrecent bereavements.\nClassified Ads Bring Returns!\n' first iajittat\nGUjttrrfj\nCottonwood and Fourth Sts.\nMinister: REV. K. IMAYOSHI\nRes. Phone 1420-L\nChurch Phone 1880\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Welcome to Sunday\nChurch  School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Family Service.\n(Junipr Choir)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"Let Us Reason\nTogether.\"\n8:45 p.m.\u2014Young People's\nWEDNESDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible   StU\"dy   and\nPrayer\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Church Meeting.\n\u00a9abfntarlf\n708 Baker St.\nPhone 886-Y\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\n-Service.\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nand Prayer.\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Yourtg People's.\nSUNDAY:\n5:45 p.m.\u2014Bethel Fireside\nHour.\nRev. Ii. Swanson extends an\ninvitation to all.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1957 \u2014 5\nMR. AND MRS. HANS LUDWIG AHRENS\ni \u2014Aikman photo.\nKimberley Newlyweds\nTo Live In Edmonton\nfirst (Hljurdj af\nGttjriBt ^rtimtiHt\nA Branch ot the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ\nScientist In Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"PROBATION\nAFTER DEATH\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting-3:00 p.m.\nReading Room 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily from\n2:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nFAIRVIEW\nCanon W. J. Siiverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc,\nRector\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and\nBible Class.\nll:00.a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n'7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer.\n3:30 p.m.\u2014South Slocan.\nSt. John's\nLutheran   Church\nThe Church of\nThe Lutheran Hour\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St.   Phone 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School'\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Thank God For\nThe Gospel.\nYou Are Cordially Invited!\nlltaatnn\n(Emrcttattt (ftttitrrij\n803 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning   Worship .\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Service\nTHURSDAY\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer  Meeting\nFRIDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young   People's\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF  LATTER  DAY  SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.r__.\u2014Sunday   School\nEagles Hall, 641 Baker St\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President, Phone 762-R\nSALMO\nHILLCREST\nPhNTECOSTAL   CHURCH\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Service\nPastor: Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\nKIMBERLEY - Sheila Catherine Byrne, eldest daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. L. J. Byrne, was the\nlovely bride of Hans Ludwig\nAhrens, in a wedding ceremony\nperformed in Sacred Heart Church\nhere by Rev. Father J. J.\nCheevers.\nThe groom, tne son of Mr. and\nMrs. H.. L. Ahrens of Red Deer,\nAlta., is from Edmonton where\nthe couple will make their home.\nMauve, yellow and white chrysanthemums and red and white\ncarnations decorated the church.\nMiss Gladys Smith was the\norganist,, and Mr. William Faulds\nsang \"Ave Maria,\" \"On This Day\nO Beautiful Mother\" and \"Sweet\nSacrament Divine.\"\nThe bride, whose father gave\nher in marriage, wore a full length\ngown featuring a hoopskirt of\nnylon net over taffeta,'with lace\npanniers, a lace bodice, lily point\nsleeves, a high neckline edged with\ntiny seed pearls, and tiny satin\ncovered buttons extending from\nneckline to waistline'at the back.\nHer three-quarter length veil of\nillusion net, lace edged, fell from\na brimmed caplet embroidered\nwith sequins and mother of pearl.\nShe carried a cascade bouquet of\nred roses, and wore a jewelled\ncross and.earrings, gifts, from the\ngroom.\nThe attendants were the bride's\nthree sisters, maid of honor Miss\nRosemary Byrne, bridesmaid Miss\nLouise-Byrne and flower girl Miss\nColleen Byrne. The maid of hpnor\nwore a mauve cocktail length\ndress of nylon net over taffeta and\na mauve picture hat, and carried\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\nIsrael had assembled at She-\nchem to crown and honor Solomon's son Rehoboam. The people\nhad just one request to make\nease the' burden of taxes and\nforced labor which your father laid\non us lately. Rehoboam consulted\nthe aged counselors of the court\nmen grown wise in God's Word and\nwill through the years, and didn't\nlisten to them. He chose his young\ncompanions' advice and offered the\npeople dire threats in answer to\ntheir moderate plea. The result\nwas that Israel was split and forever after divided. 2 Chronicles\nreports the prime reason for Re-\nhoboam's disastrous folly: \"He did\nevil because he prepared not his\nheart to seek the Lord.\"\nThere is counsel here for. young\npeople.. There are old fools as well\nas young ones, to be sure. Nor is\nage a safeguard against folly. But\nthe experience of parents and\nmasters who have grown in the\nwisdom of God's Word and its application to life through the years\nis given to us to be followed and\nused.\nBy opposites Rehoboam offers a\nlesson for churah life. Our flesh\nlikes novelties;' it despises \"the\nold theology.\" But Scripture bids\nus listen to the \"old men,\" the\npious lathers ; of. the church, who\nby much deep study of Holy Writ\ngrew wise in the \"old\" and unchanging truth. \"Remember them\nwhich have the. rule over you, who\nhave spoken unto you the Word of\nGod, whose faith follow.\" And\nGod's call to disloyal, dying Judah\ncomes to: us in order that we may\nescape like folly and hold fast the\nWord of Christ, who makes us wise,\nrighteous and holy:, \"Ask for the\nold paths, where is the good way,\nand walk therein, and ye shall find\nrest for your souls.\"\n,      REV. CARL J. HENNIG\na colonial bouquet of yellow and\nwhite chrysanthemums centred by\na jewelled ornament. The bridesmaid was in a ballerina-length\ndress of green nylon net over\ntaffeta, tiny rosebuds being embroidered on her matching cha-\npeau. Her colonial bouquet was\ncomposed of yellow and white\nchrysanthemums. The flower girl\nwas in a short full-skirted dress of\npolished cotton in a delicate pink\nshade, with which she wore a\nmatching floral hat. Yellow and\nblue were the colors in her colonial\nbouquet.\nMr. Dan Lawrence of Pine Lake,\nAlta., was best man, and Mr.\nRobert Lees of Edmonton and Mr.\nArthur, Lamb of Red Deer ushered.\nPINK, WHITE THEME\nThe families and close friends\nattended a wedding luncheon at\nUnion hall, where the bride's table\nfeatured a three-tiered cake embedded in pink tulle, with crystal\ncandelabra, pink candles, crystal\nvases and pink and white carnations forming t h e decoration\ntheme. Father Cheevers proposed\nthe toast to the bride. At an evening reception and dance, Mr. W.\nFaulds was master of ceremonies,\nand proposed the bridal toast.\nCongratulatory telegrams were\nread by the best man, and came\nfrom Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria and Palm Springs. Mr. Faulds\nsang \"God Will Remember\" and\n\"I Believe.\" Mr. R. Leggett, playing his electric organ, provided the\ndance music.\nThe bride's mother wore a charcoal and blue tweed dress, with\nwhite angora bands at the neckline and three - quarter length\nsleeves. She wore- rose pink accessories and a corsage pink roses.\nThe groom's mother was attired\nin a dark green knitted suit, with\nwhich she. wore a beige hat and\nred rose corsage.\nBefore the newlyweds. left for a\nhoneymoon at Trail, Nelson, Salmo,\nand United States points, the bride\ndonned a grey wool tailored suit\nwith evening, blue accessories and\na corsage of red roses.\nThose from out of town attending the wedding were Rev. Father\nF. Monaghan of Nelson, Mrs.\nAhrens and son and daughter of\nRed Deer, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence,\nMr. and Mrs. Lees, Mr. Lamb,\nMiss Audrey Mills of Calgary, Mr.\nMorley Hyatt of Vancouver and\nMrs. Haynes of Cranbrook.\nIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIf\nRECIPE-OF-THE-WEEK\nBy MARY MOORE\nAb you can see by \"Reader\" 's letter elsewhere on page, she\nwould like a meat loaf that-sllces nicely when cold.\nOn the day before Thanksgiving Day in a feeble effort to balance the budget since the turkey cbst $10.80, 1 made a meat loaf\nfor Sunday's dinner that pleased us. It meets \"Reader\" 's requirements to a T.\nSUNDAY MEAT LOAF (hot or cold)\nAsk the butcher to put through the grinder together 1% lbs.\nstewing beef and Vi lb. each stewing veal and pork. When you get\nthem home mix them in a big bowl with 2 slices of stale whole\nwheat bread which have been soaked in hot water and squeezed\nout, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon salt, % teaspoon each celery salt and dry '\nihustafd, 1 small onion grated and 2 teaspoons Worcestershire\nsauce. Mix well. Shape into loaf and place on baking cjish. Mix together Vi cup each catsup and water and spread over top. Bake\nat 400 deg. F. 1 hour.\nNOTE: I put large potatoes in to bake at 450 deg. F. 15 minutes before the meat loaf went in the oven, then I reduced the\nheat to 400 deg. F. for 1 hour. It was a delicious, easy, hearty, -\ninexpensive dinner. The loaf sliced neatly both hot and cold.\nThe, slices with the red rim of catsup were very pretty when\nserved overlapping on the dinner plates.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nMary Moore\nHas Trick For\nHallowe'en\nBy MARY MOORE\nPUMPKIN FACE TARTS:- One\ncupful stewed or canned pumpkin,\n1 egg, beaten light, 1 tablespoonful\nflour, Vi teaspoonful salt, '__ tea-\nspoonful ginger, % teaspoonful\ncinnamon, V4 teaspoonful nutmeg,\n1 cupful sugar, 2 cups milk. Bring\nmilk to a boil, add egg to pumpkin;\nand beat well, add dry ingredients\nand then pour in the boiling milk.\nPour into unbaked pastry-lined\ntart tins, and bake in a moderate\n(375 degrees Fahrenheit) oven until\ndone, about 30 to 35 minutes.\nPASTRY: Two cupfuls flour, 1\ncupful shortening, Vi cupful ice\nwater. 1 teaspoonful salt.\nNOTE: About 1 tablespoonful\nfinely chopped candied ginger is a\ngood addition to the filling if\ndesired.\nTo make \"faces\" of these pump\nkin tarts, after they are cool, use\ncurrants or raisins for eyes and a\nnose, and a saucily cut strip qf\ncitron peel for a laughing mouth,\nThis will delight children from two\nto 82.\n\"You Wanted\nTo Know...\"\nColumn\nPlan   Now   For\nChristmas I\nA CHAIR for Dad!\nA LAMP for Mum!\nA CEDAR CHEST for the\nOne You Love!\nA Deposit Holds for Christmas\nDonations Made to\nOverseas Parcels\nMissionary overseas parcels\nwere donated at a rcent meeting\nof the Women's Missionary Council of Bethel Tabernacle, when\nmembers held their Fall display of\narticles for the parcels.\nThe service was under the direction of Mrs. T. Dunstan and was\nparticipated in by the Junior\nGroup of girls, who also displayed\ntheir work. Musical numbacs were\npresented and a special speaker,\nMiss Jean Pennoyerof Castlegar,\nchose as her topic, \"Why Are We\nHere?\"\nRefreshments were served in the\nbasement of the church at the\nconclusion of the service.\nCHINESE COAL\nCoal deposits in\nbeen estimated at\n244,000,000,000 tons.\nChina\nmore\nhave\nthan\n..28. .**S?\nWilliam Pearson,\nBride In Nakusp\nNAKUSP, \u2014 Newlyweds Mr. and\nMrs. William Pearson of Edmonton were in town visiting relatives.\nMr. Pearson -is the son of Mr.\nand Mrs. B. H. Pearson of Nelson\nand the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.\nG. H. Gardner of Nakusp.\nThe young couple were married\nin Edmonton at Robertson United\nChurch.\nThe bride is the former Anne\nHeath. She chose the traditional\nwhite for her bridal gown and\nveil. Her bouquet was a crescent\nof white gardenias and pink roses.\nHer attendants chose tangerine\nand champagne colored gowns and\naccessories to carry out the\nautumn color scheme used for the\noccasion. Miss Jane Pearson of\nNelson, sister of the groom, was\none of the bridal party.\nAttending the wedding were the\ngroom's parents and sister, and\nhis aunt, Mrs. Stanley Williams of\nNakusp.\nFREIGHTER  GETS  FREE\nSTE. ANNE - DES - MONTS,\nQue. (CP)-T-ie Bore VII, a 7,-\n000-ton Finnish freighter which\nran aground \u2022 ere Monday, was\npulled free late Wednesday and\nheaded upriver for repairs.\nTWO IN ONE\nTwo different filet - crochet\nsquares in one pattern, Alternate\nthem or repeat the same one\nthroughout. Use for large or for\nsmall articles.\nCrochet Pattern 824: directions;\n2 squares, each 10 inches using\nstring; 6J\/_. in No. 50.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you-two wonderful\npatterns, 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 it,\nConducted by MARY MOORE\nQUESTION.    Enjoy    reading\nyour   column   every   time . . .\n. could you possibly have a recipe\nfor lemon pie made with a soda\nbiscuit crust?  I saw one In a\nhotel the other day. It was something  different,   but   have   not\nbeen able to find a recipe for\nsame . . . Mrs. Neva R.\nANSWER:  There are so many\ncooks, young and old, who have\nconverted to crumb crusts for pies\nthat I am glad you asked-this\nquestion. Here is the rule:\nCRUMBS CRUST FOR\nPIE SHELL\nOne and one-half cups fine\ncrumbs (see below), Vi cup sugar,\n% cup melted butter or margarine. Mix crumbs and sugar and\nstir in butter. Line pie plate with\nmixture by pressing it firmly and\nevenly in place, being sure it is\nnot thin at the edge. Chill for 20\nminutes or bake in oven of 350\ndegrees F. for 10 minutes. Cool.\nVARIATIONS: (1) Use crumbs,\nvery finely ground or rolled, of\nchocolate cookies, graham crackers, cereal flakes, soda crackers\n(biscuits), gingersnaps, very dry\nbread, vanilla wafers, zwieback,\n(2) Omit crumbs and butter and\nuse 1 2\/3 cups Brazil nuts, ground\n(this is delicious with lemon or\nvanilla filling). (3) To bread or\ngraham crumbs \"\/_ teaspoon cinna\nmon is a good addition.\nLemon frilling for this is usually\nreferred to as \"magic\": 1 can\nsweetened condensed milk, % cup\nlemon juice, grated rind 1 lemon,\n2 egg yolks, 2 egg whites, 2 table-\nspons sugar. Blend first 4 ingredients well. Beat whites with the\nsugar until stiff.' Fold in. Pour into\nbaked shell. Chill. Regular Lemon\nPie filling may be used too.\nQUESTION: I have been asked\nto do some baking for a golden\nwedding anniversary, could you\nsend me something that would\nbe  dainty  and  pretty  on   the\nplates? Am making \"Maraschino\nBalls\" but would like something\nin a date bar decorated or something tasty and moist as well as\npretty . . . Mrs. N. S.\nANSWER:   I  have  some  pineapple fingers which I believe will\nplease you more than the date\nbars you mention.\nPINEAPPLE FINGERS\nOne and one-half cups sifted all-\npurpose flour, 1 teaspoon each\nbaking soda and salt, % cup\nchopped nuts, 214 cups uncooked\nquick-cooking rolled oats, IVi cups\nlight'brown sugar packed, l'cup\nbutter or, shortening melted. Combine flour, soda, salt, nuts, oats\nand brown sugar. Mix well. \"Add\nmelted buter. Mix. Press half of\ndough firmly into greased 12 x 8 x 2\ninch baking pan. Spread with\nPINEAPPLE FILLING: Mix to\ngether in saucepan 6 tablespoons\nsugar, 4V_ teaspoons cornstarch,\nVA cups crushed pineapple. 1\ntablespoon lemon juice. Simmer,\nstirring, until thick. Cool before\napplying to bottom layer. Cover\nwith remaining dough and pat\ndown firmly. Bake at 350 degrees\nF. 25 to 35 minutes. Cool in pan.\nCut into bars or fingers 1x2-\ninches, or into small diamonds.\nWhile warm top each, if desired,\nwith thin slice from small wedge\nof candied pineapple, or green\nglace cherry. NOTE: Ordinary\ndate filling as for date squares\nmay be used instead of pineapple\nfilling.\nQUESTION: I won a number of\nprizes at the local fair, some of\n' them on your \"Marianne's Banana Cake,\" foolproof fudge,\nmarzipan strawberries, believe\nyou had a cherry pie in which\njuice of cherries was cooked and\ncherries added, always use\nfrozen cherries . . . would like\nthis recipe if possible. Have you\na good recipe for meat loaf that\ncan be served cold? ... find if\nallowed to cool grease forms\naround edge ... Reader.\nCHERRY PIE FILLING\n(Using frozen cherries)\nTwo 15-oz. tins fresh frozen\nMontmorency cherries (20% sugar)\n2 tablespoons cornstarch, Vi cup\nwater, Vi teaspoon salt, Vz teaspoon almond extraot, % cup\nsugar. Follow directions carefully: In top of double boiler mix\nthe cornstarch, salt and water and\ncook stirring, over' boiling water,\nuntil thick. - Add frozen cherries\nand juice all at once and gently\nHusband, Wife\nRivals as\nDesigners\nNEW YORK (AP) - Does a woman dress to please men or for\nthe benefit of other women?\nAnswer, by Simonetta. young,\nbeautiful , and successful Rome\nfashion designer: \"A woman\ndresses for herself and for other\nwomen, because a man never\nknows what she _S wearing anyway.\"\nAnswer No. 2, by Fabiani, young,\nhandsome and successful Rome\n'ashion designer and husband of\nSimonetta: \" I know exactly what\nyou are wearing at all times, my\ndear, down to the last ruffle.','\nThis exchange took place as the\ncouple were preparing to return\nto Rome after a visit to New\nYork.\nThe two run rival couture houses\nin Rome, turn out completely different kinds of clothes. Simonetta\nwas asked if she ever wore Fabiani clothes.\n\"Never!\" she declared. \"He\nmakes beautiful clothes, but they\nare not for me.\"\nChurch Club Meets\nThe St. Saviour's Mothers' Club\nmet in .the Mary Robertson Memorial room in Memorial hall Thursday afternoon. Mrs. F. Phillips and\nMrs. J. R. Bailey were tea\nhostesses.\n(Dasaa. lip, U)Ml\nPrinted Pattern\n\"PRINCESS\" LINES\nSew - easy jumper in a lovely\n\"princess\" silhouette; flattery as?\nsured for every figure! Pair it\nwith its companion blouse, all your\nsweaters, blouses. Easy to sew\nwith our Printed Pattern.\nPrinted Pattern 9262: Misses'\nSizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16\njumper takes 4y_ yards 39-inch\nfabric; blouse 1% yards.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE   NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St.,\nW. Toronto, Ont.\nstir until thawed. When filling is\nthawed and blended and thickened\nthroughout remove from heat, add\nsugar and almond extract and\npour into pastry-lined pie shell,\nhaving fluted edge. Cover with\nlattice topping, neatly, finishing\nends. Bake at 450 degrees, F. 15\nminutes, reduce heat to 425 for\nanother 20 minutes.\nPlease see elsewhere on page\nrecipe for Meat Loaf particularly\ngood sliced cold.\nECZEMA?\nPSORIASIS7\nRASH?\nPIMPLES?\nFOR OUICK DESULTS\nUSE\t\n2&?7)\n\u00abF\n\\wM7M\n,,OINTM__T.    1\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. ti, 1M7\nSkiers Readying Hill for Coming Season\ni\nINDUSTRIOUS SKI CLUB members are Bpendlng\ntheir weekends making Improvements to the ski hill in\nwhat they hope will eventually make It a major skiing\ncentre. Above, left, a metal cross arm is shown being\nbolted on one of ths Intermediate pole towers by Bob\nSmith ana Fred McKim while Vletus Germain looks on.\nThe ski lift, Nelson's Centennial project, will be of the\nT-bar design, each T-bar taking two skiers at a time.\nTotal length of the ski lift will be 2510 fept. in the centre\npicture, hard at work Is Danny McKay, president of Silver\nBAKER-FUNK\nSNOW  PLOWS\nFor Truoki\nBe Prepared \u2014 Order Now\nStateless Man\nReturns To U.K.\nOTTAWA (CP) - Immigration\nMinister Fulton said Friday that I\nJan Wojfala, self-styled stateless\nperson, was sent back to Britain\nat his own request.\nHe made the statement !n '.lie\nCommons after Hon. J. W. Pick\nersgill, former Liberal immigration minister, said that according to a Vancouver report Wo]-\ntela was being flown back to\nPoland, via England.\n\"It is now the practice of the\ndepartment to deport persons to\ncountries behind the Iron Curtain?\" Mr. Pickersgill asked.\nMr. Fulton said it is not. WoJ-\ntala had held a British travel document and was being returned to\nBritain at his own request.\nMr. Pickersgill said this treat\nment was different from that\ngiven George Christian Hanna.\n(Hanna, a stateless wanderer\naboard a Norwegian vessel, won\nthe right to enter Canada last\nspring after a court fight in\nwhich he was opposed by the immigration department under Mr.\nPickersgill). '\nMr. Fulton said the main reason for the different treatment\n\"is that there Is a different government In office.\" Wojtala had\nbeen treated more considerately.\nr\n\u00ab\nHis good work\nearns him money\non top of\nhis pay-cheque\nHe it an employee and shareholder of Imperial Oil.\nHis company helps him buy the stock\nthat pays that dividend.\nIn addition, he can look forward to a liberal\nretirement income.\nImperial has one of the most generous employee benefit\n'plans in Canadian industry.\n98.6 per cent of Imperial employees who have been\nwith the company a year participate in this \"Thrift Plan\"\nOut of 14,000 employees, 9,000 are shareholders.\nAnd there are many other good things at Imperial, such\nas: earnings above the Canadian average\u2014steady\njobs\u2014survivor benefits and group life\ninsurance\u2014sickness benefits\u2014medical and\nsurgical benefits\u2014university scholarships.\nAnd all these are reasons...\n... why people say\nIMPERIAL\nis a good place to work\nKing Ski Club, McKay and Bob Weaver of the city works\ndepartment spent a good part of a day drilling and\nblasting out this particular hole because of the rocky\nfoundation. Doing a man's work are the three girls in\npicture at right. From left to right are Lillian Hickey,\nIris Hooker and Miml Sturgeon. They are three of some\ntwenty-odd volunteers who showed up on the ski hill last\nSunday and helped clear away and burn brush. The\nSki Club Is appealing for more volunteers for this Sunday as there are few weekends left before the snow flies.\n\u2014Daily News photos.\nTeamsters' Suspension\nHas No Effect On CLC\nOTTAWA (CP)-The AFL.CIO\nsuspension of the huge International Teamsters Union will have\nno automatic effect on the relationship between the union and'\nthe Canadian Labor Congress,\nCLC executive vice - president\nGordon Gushing said today,\nThe teamsters were suspended\nat Washington Thursday until\npresident-elect James R. Hoffa\nand other allegedly corrupt officials are evicted from the union.\nThe teamsters have 33,000\nmembers in Canada, making\nthem one of this country's largest\nlabor groups.\n\"We see no reason why the\nCanadian membership of the\nunion should be penalized for\nsomething that Is happening in\nthe United States,\" Mr. Gushing\nsaid.\n\"If there were the slightest indication of improper practices on\nthe part of any Canadian ranking officer of the union, then we\nwould very definitely be concerned, but there has been no\nsuch suggestion.\"\nThe ranking Canadians In the\nteamsters are \"international representatives I. M. Do'dds of Windsor, Ont., Harry Bonnell of Vancouver and Armand Jolicoeur of\nMontreal.\nFULLY AUTONOMOUS\nThe Canadian Labor Congress,\nwhile associated closely with the\nAFL-CIO, is fully autonomous\nand is not bound by AFL-CIO actions affecting unions belonging\nto both central bodies.\nFor'instance, the CLC this year\nsuspended the International Association of Machinists for raiding\nin Canada, while the'machinists\nremain In good standing in the\nAFL-CIO.\nConversely, the International\nLongshoremen's Association is\noutside the pale of the AFL-CIO\nin the United States for alleged\nracketeering by U.S. leaders,\nwhile its Canadian branch is in\ngood standing in the congress.\nSwedish Prince Accused\nIn Extortion Charges\nSTOCKHOLM (Reuters)-\nPrinee Carl Bernadotte of the\nSwedish royal family Friday was\naccused of complicity In an $65,-\n000 extortion case.\nThe 46 \u25a0 year - old prince, first\nmember of Sweden's royal family ever to stand accused in a\nSwedish court of law, told the\nopening session of the trial in a\nquiet voice: \"1 deny having committed this crime.\"\nPrince Carl', brother of the late\nQueen Astrid of Belgium and first\ncousin Of Swedish King Gustaf\nAdolf, asked to be Indicted so\nthat he could clear himself. If\nconvicted, he faces a maximum\npenalty of four years' imprisonment.\nAccused with him is Berl\nGutenberg, who formerly managed huge estates in southern\nSweden owned by Miss Florence\nStephens, 76, a millionaire spinster of British origin.\nGutenberg pleaded not guilty to\ncharges of fraud, embezzlement\nand extortion against the wealthy\nwidow.\nA BAD MEMORY?\nBefore the hearing opened, it\nwas announced that the court had\ndecided to have the prince examined by a psychiatrist to determine whether he suffers from a\nbad memory.\nPrince Carl Gustaf Oscar Fred-\nrik Christian Bernadotte renounced his Swedish title and\nroyal rights of succession when\nhe married a Swedish commoner,\nElsa von Rosen, in 1937. Later,\nhis brother-in-law, former King\nLeopold of Belgium, granted him\na Belgian title of prince.\nCarl was a first cousin of Count\nFolke Bernadotte, United Nations\nPalestine mediator who was assassinated in 1946.\nTINY COUPLE\nThe famous English dwarf\ncalled General Tom Thumb married another dwarf, Lavlnia Warren, In 1863.\nIMPERIAL\n0    I    L\nLIMITED\nPeace Seems\nTo Reign On\nTurkish Border\nTHE TURKISH-SYRIAN BORDER (AP)-The border the world\nis worrying about is full of soldiers, sunshine and business as\nusual.        . \u00bb\nSix divisions of Turkish Infantry\nand armor are bunched in a position near the frontier.\nTents, trucks and tanks line the\nwinding roads. Highways are\nbusy with military traffic and\ntanned, tough Turkish soldier*\nstand guard In fields and villages.\nBut here, where the Russians\nsay world war could start, life\ngoes on at Its age-old pace in the\nwarm autumn sun.\nThere are sheep in the fields as\nwell as soldiers, and farm trucks\non the roads.\nNormally Turkey patrols her\nsouthern border lightly with a few\nelements of her 2nd army.\nWATCH RED BUILDUP\nBut in Ankara the government\nwatched anxiously the mounting\nevidence of a Soviet buildup in\nSyria. Last. August, when leftists\nseized control of the Syrian arftiy\nand the Red buildup increased in\npace, Turkey moved more of her\narmy tb the border.\nThe army is here, Turkey Insists, on manoeuvres. But ner-\nvolis Syria and threatening Russia have claimed the Turks are\nmassing for aggression.\nTalks with Turkish and other\nmilitary sources indicate now that\nTurkey may actually be testing\nher defensive potential In this\narea In light of the new Soviet\u2014\nnot Syrian-threat in the south.\nFor the Turks have no fear of\nbeing overthrown by the Syrians.\nThey are concerned about the\nRed arms buildup south of the\nTurkish border and about the possibility the Russians themselves\nmight one day use those arns\nagainst Turkey.\nA visit to the border bears out\nthese reports. The Turkish units\nappear.placed in defensive positions. There Is no talk of aggression here.\nC\nh.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nMost asphalt roofs look\ngood. But to be sure\nyours^ good, look for\nthe CRP EMBLEM on\n' every bundle of roofing.\nCANADA    ROOF    PRODUCTS    LIMITED\nVANCOUVE(.|viCTORIA|EDMONTON|CAt-GARY\nmanulaclu. ero SI CRP products\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR C.R. PRODUCTS      '\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\n602  BAKER  ST.\nPHONE NELSON 1180-1181\nOglow Brothers Building & Supply Co. Ltd.\n625  COLUMBIA  AVE.\nPHONE   3351\n SPORTS\nNo. 1 of a Series...\nKnow Your\nWhen Nelson Maple Leafs began\nlaying their plans for the 1956-57\nWestern International Hockey\nseason, the name of Ernie Gare\nwas conspicuously missing among\nthe list of favored prospects.\nBut Ernie wound up playing regularly\u2014and well\u2014on the defensive\nbrigade.\nWhen Nelson Maple Leafs began\nlaying their plans for the 1957-58\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague season, the name of Ernie\nGare. was conspicuously missing\namong the list of favored prospects.\nSound familiar? It should; it's\nthe story of Ernie's athletic life\nduring the past three or four years\nhere.     >\nErnie is, and admits It, a borderline hockey player. Never brilliant,\nonly occasionally outstanding, even\nfor brief periods, Ernie -is the type\nof player which enriches any club\nwhose uniform he dons.\nHe loves the game,, and his small\nstature means only that he is subject to injury. It doesn't indicate\nhe runs when the going gets tough.\nQuite the contrary, the 5! 10\",\n155-pounder has drawn a reputation\nas one of the WIHL's most-respected battlers. Last season, Ernie led\nthe league in penalties by a sizeable margin over such renowned\n\"bad men\" as Bill Warwick and\nHarry Smith and Yogi Kraiger of\nTrail, Larry Plante and Tom\nHodges of Spokane, and George\nFerguson of Rossland.\nErnie's career is dotted with adversity. He has broken several of\nhis ribs, his nose, his thumb, has\ncracked a hip and wrenched his\nknee so badly that it still bothers\nhim. And for all the injuries, he\nhas received, he is surprisingly unconvinced of his brittleness.      '\n\"Too small\" is his explanation of\nthe# imposing list of injuries. \"Maybe'l play too rou'gh.\"\nBetting in certain quarters is\nthat Ernie does, indeed, play \"too\nrough,\" but chances are he won't\nstop.\nHe doesn't know how.\nLocal fans can be sure of one\nthing. Although Ernie is an intellt-\ngent man who surrendered many\nopportunities for further education\nto continue playing hockey, he is\nnever sorry. He loves the game,\nTEEN TOWN\nSkating\nParty\n8 to 10 p.m.\nTONIGHT\nAdmission 35 C\nERNIE GARE\nhe derives pleasure from playing\nit, and he may never quit until\nhe's too old and decrepit to lace\nhis own skates.\nPerhaps it sounds trite to put it\nso bluntly, but hockey is a better\ngame because men like Ernie Gare\nplay it. He was late learning to\nskate, because as a youngster he\nlived for several years in San Francisco.\nHis size was a handicap, too,\nand still is. Invited to a tryout\ncamp conducted several years ago\nby Toronto Maple Leafs, Ernie left\nearly, convinced of his inability to\ncompete successfully against such\nprospects as Ron Stewart, Tim\nHorton, Hugh Bolton and Jack\nMackenzie, considered by many to\nbe the best amateur hockey player\nin Canada. \u2022\nNow 28; \"Tennessee\" was born\nin Govan, Sask., to a family of\nnewspaper folk. He played no official Junior \"A\" hockey, which is\nnowadays tantamount to athletic\nsuicide, but vowed to become a\nhockey player.\nHe did, and he also became a\nfamily man. Married, Ernie is the\nfather of three children, and as\nhe said Friday night, \"There's another on the way.\"\nErnie has been in Nelson eight\nyears, since the first y&r of Eddie\nWares' tenure as coach. If he has\nhis way, and his bones hold together long enough, Ernie will be\naround \u2014and active \u2014for another\neight.\nHere's hoping.   ,\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nGilchrist's Service\nAinsworth, B.C.\nIMPERIAL GAS AN OILS\nATLAS   TIRES\nOpen Sunday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn   Nelson-Kaslo   Highway\nCIVIC CENTRE\nSUNDAY\nADULT SKATING\n2:00 - 4:00 p.m.\nEskimos Due To Set Records\nAlmost Every Time They Move\nBy The Canadian Press\nThis is record night for Edmonton Eskimos. They'll set a new\nWIFU mark almost every time\nthey get hold of the ball in their\nhome game tonight against British Columbia fions.\n\u2022 The Esks* have already cracked\nfive WIFU team and two Individual records. Tonight their Tennessee terror, Jackie Parker, is gunning for the individual scoring\nmark.\nFor the Lions, battling for a\nthird-place playoff position in the\nfive-team league, the outlook is\ndiscouraging. Not only are they up\nagainst the rampaging Esks but\ntheir lippes may go glimmering in\nan afternoon game at Regina between Calgary Stampeders\ntail-end Saskatchewan Ratfghrid-\ners. A Calgary win would\/give the\nStamps third spot and\/put them\nin the playoffs ahead o\/ the Lions.\nSCHEDULE NEWS Ei\nEdmonton has already \u25a0 clinched\nfirst and Winnipeg seco:\nStampeders will wind I up their\n16-game schedule, Monday night at\nWinnipeg. The schedule' ends next\nSaturday when Edmonton is at Regina- and Winnipeg, at Vancouver.\nEskimos already have established the ove.r-all yardage - gained\nfrom scrimmage record with a net\n6138 yards passing and rushing; the\ntotal first-downs mark with 355; the\nscoring record with 423 points; the\nrushing record of 3907 yards; and\nthe first downs rushing mark of\n246. '\nSET SIGHTS\nFullback Johnny Bright holds\nthe league's individual rushing record of 1501 yards and can increase\nit every time he carries the ball.\nEnd Joe Mobra also has an individual FbxrA, his 46 point-after-\ntoacbdown Klek| surpassing the\nprevious mark o:\nAnnis Stukus.\nTonight's action also could see\nParker resume the scoring leadership and conceivably surpass the\nleague record of 110 points held by\n\u25a0former Calgary end Bob Shaw.\nParker now has 91 points, nine behind Gerry James of Winnipeg.\nOn this point, coach Frank Ivy\nNELSON. JTOSSLAHD VICTORIES\nWOUITDEADLOCK FOUR SQUADS\nNelson Maple Leafs haven't\nwon a game in Spokane Coliseum\nagainst the defending-champion\nSpokane Flyers for more than\ntwo years.\nTonight, they have a two-fold\nreason for wanting a victory. In\nthe first place, a victory will tie\nthem with the Allan Cup finalists,\nwith four points each. Trail\nSmoke Eaters, facing Rossland\nWarriors in the other Western\nInternational Hockey League test,\nhave a chance to move in front all\nWhitby Coach\nReceives Vote\nOf Confidence\nWHITBY, Ont. (CP) - A petition suggesting former coach Bus\nGagnon replace Wren Blair as\ncoach of Whitby Dunlops, Canada's representatives in the 1958\nworld hockey championships, was\ncirculated here last weekend.\nBlair, also Dunlops' manager,\nFriday confirmed the petition was\ncirculated and said jt had 61\nnames on it. He said It was not\nrepresentative of the majority of\nWhitby fans who are solidly behind club management. Blair said\nthat since presentation of the petition, the club's board of directors,\na players meeting and the team\nsponsors, have all given him a\nvote of confidence.\nThe Dunlops, formed three\nyears ago, won the Allan Cup last\nyear. They leave Canada Jan. 29\nfor a European exhibition tour\nfollowed by the world hockey\nchampionships in Oslo.\nForm Club Ends\nTribe Agreement\nFARGO, N. D. (AP) - The\nFargo - Moorhead Twins of the\nNorthern League have ended\ntheir working agreement with the\nCleveland Indians farm system.\nThe affiliation, which had been\nrenewed in 1952 after a seven-\nyear stretch from 1934 through\n1940, produced three pennant winners for the Twins, in 1934, 1953\nand 1954.\nTermination of the agreement\nwas announced Friday by Ken\nBlackman, general manager of\nihe Fargo-Moorhead club.\nBlackman declined to say\nwhether the affiliation was ended-\nbecause of the unsettled condition\nof the Cleveland club, which dismissed its general manager,\nHank Greenberg, last week, or\nwhether a new tieup has been arranged. .<alg0|\nr.loilorn hoatlnp unite, vilil.hnnltofo. mom\noffitlont uu 6f fuol. do not allow anOuOh\nheat to enter th, chimney to keep waste\niases Hot until thev reach the outside air.\na a result harmful condensation, tar and\naoot forms, cracking and clogging conventional chlmneya.\nTha Selkirk Chimney is superior to a convention,.! chimney because Its insulated\nconstruction allows it to be heated quickly\nfrom furnace to the outside air.\nIn addition the Selkirk Chimney ia more\ndurable, more compact, weighs less and is\nfareaslertoinstall.\nThe Selkirk Is a modern chimney designed for Modern Heating.\nSELKIRK METAL M PRODUCTS LTD,\n6_5WallStr__t, Winnipeg\n97. Victoria Street, Kamloops\nalone with six, but' if Rossland\nwins, each of the four teams in\nthe circuit will have totals of\nfour points.\nLeafs' second reason for seeking victory is that of vengeance.\nSeveral players have gone on record as believing Flyers were fortunate to win 5-4 at Civic Arena\nWednesday night.\nLeafs will be shorthanded, as\nhas been the case for their last\ntwo games. Garth Lipsack has\nnot yet recovered'from the twisted ankle he picked up Wednesday; Lee Hyssop reported after\npractice Friday night with a\nbothersome cold; playing-coach\nPat Egan has a pair of badly-\nblistered hands, but will play.\nWith Lipsack out Shorty 'Malacko will be transferred to left\nwing beside Egan and rookie\nCliff Shockey. Shockey, less than\na roaring success in his debut\nWednesday, will be switched to\ncentre, with Egan patrolling the\nright side.\nMarsh Severyn will make his\nfirst appearance of the regular\nseason on defence to replace Malacko.\nof Eskimos says Parker could\nhave set a scoring mark long ago\nif he was not such an unselfish\nplayer.\nMcNeil Earns\n2-0 Whitewash\nFor Rochester\nfirst\nLopez Rated\nTop Manager\nNEW YORK (AP)-AI Lopez of\nthe-Chicago White Sox, who was\nout of a job at this time a year\nago, Friday was named American\nLeague manager of the year for\n1957.\nLopez performance overshadowed those of Casey Stengel of\nthe pennant-winning New York\nYankees and Paul Richards of\nBaltimore Orioles in the opinion\nof the Baseball Writers' Association of America who participated\nin the Associated Press annual\npoll.\nEighty-three of the 180 voters\nfelt that Lopez' direction of the\nsecond-place White Sox was the\nmost oustanding. Richards was\nnamed on 70' ballots and Stengel\non 25. Frank (Pinky) Higgins of\nthe third-place Boston Red Sox\nreceived two votes.\nThe showing of the White sox\nwas one of the big surprises of\nthe American League Season.\nWith admitted weaknesses at several positions and little reserve\nstrength, Lopez kept his charges\non the heels of the Yankees until\ntheir elimination from the pennant fight' in the final week of the\ncampaign.\nLopez, 49, was hired to manage\nthe White Sox last Oct. 29 following his resignation as pilot of\nCleveland Indians, whom he had\nled 'for six years.\nMinor Hockey\nSchedule\nMonday: 5 to 6 \u2014 Canadian\nBantam practice.\nTuesday; 7 to 8 \u2014 Warriors vs\nHornet midgets; 8 te 9\u2014Juvenile\npractice.\nWednesday; 5 to 6 \u2014 Open\nPee Wee practice.\nFriday: 5 to 6 \u2014 Rangers vs\nBruin Bantams.\nSaturday: 1:30 to'2': 30 \u2014 Bantam Pool; 2:30 to 3:30 \u2014 Hawks\nvs Canadien bantams; 3:30' to\n4:30 \u2014 Open Pee Wee practice.\nFORMER CHAMP PASSES\nHAMILTON, Ont. (CP) - Justine (Red) Campbell, 60, onetime\nCanadian amateur middleweight\nboxing champion, died Friday.\nBorn in Hamilton, Campbell\nwon his championship in 1922 by\ndefeating Charlie McDalton. He\nlost it the next year to Larry\nGains, who later became British\nempire heavyweight title holder.\nThe Canadian Press\nMcNeil turned In the\nutout of the American\niy League.season in Roches-\n'riday night when the Americans beat Providence Reds 2-0,\na win which boosted the Amerks\ninto a tie for second place with\nthe Reds.\nAt Cleveland, the Barons exploded for four second' - period\ngoals\u2014three within 75 seconds\u2014\nand' scored a .6-1 victory over\nSpringfield Indians.\nRochester's two goals were\nscored by Ab McDonald and Ed\nMazur, the latter scoring with 27\nseconds left in the game.\nCleveland's big line of Fred\nGlover, John McLennan and\nJimmy Moore led the winning attack with four goals. Moore bagged two and Glover and McLel-\nIan got one each. Gordon Vej-\nprava and .Bill Needham scored\nCleveland's other goals.\nTony Schneider tallied the lone\nSpringfield marker in the ' first\nperiod.\nClaim Dodgers\nPlan To Move\nPCL Franchise\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - The Ex.\naminer says it has learned the\nDodgers plan to mpve their Pacific\nCoast League franchise from\nLos A n g e 1 e s to nearby Long\nBeach. The information came\nfrom \"an authentic Long Beach\nsource.\"\nThe PCL franchise in Los Angeles was acquired by the Dodgers\nearly this year from the Chicago\nCubs. Now that the Dodgers have\nmoved here from' Brooklyn themselves, they must relocate the\nPCL Club if they want to keep it\noperating\u2014and they say they do.\nThe Examiner -said the plan\nwould be to have the team play\nin Long Beach only when the\nDodgers are on the road. ,^\nFresco Thompson, Dodger vice-\npresident said \"no decision has\nbeen made.\"\nJewel's Reward\nRace Favorite\n' CAMDEN, N.J. (AP)-The accent was on greenbacks, fast\nhorses and, the two - year - old\nchampionship as a field of 13 was\nentered Friday for the fifth running today of the Garden State\nStakes.\nAlthough there was one late\ncomer, a long shot named Fairfield, Jewel's Reward remained\nIhe favorite to win the world's\nrichest horse race and clinch the\n1957 juvenile title.\nJewel's Reward, winner of four\nstakes for the , Maine Chance\nFarm of Mrs. Elizabeth N. Graham, is the 2 - 1 choice for the\nmile and one sixteenth race that\nwill gross $277,150 if all go to the\npost. \u25a0\nMisty Flight, from the Wheatley\nStable of Mrs. H. C. Phipps and\ntrained by Sunny Jim Fitzsim-\nmons, is second choice at 3 _, with\nthe Claiborne Farm's Nadir and\nMr. and Mrs. George Lewis' entry\nof Music Man Fox and Martins\nRullah next at 6-1.\nLos Angeles \u2014 Charley Black,\n160, Los Angeles, knocked out\nChebo Hernandez, 159, Juarez,\nMexico, 7.\nAmericans-Owned\nFairy Stone is\n100-9 Favorite\nLONDON (AP) - Britain's top\nbookmakers Friday night made\nAmerican-owned Fairy Stone the\nrunning of the Cambridgeshire\nHandicap.   - ,\nStephanotis and V el eta, formerly joint favorites with Fairy\nStone,' slipped to 100-8 and 20-1 in\npre-race betting announced from\nLondon's Victory Cup.\n\u00abThe Cambridgeshire is one of\nthe last big betting races of the\nBritish flat season. The final\nIrish Sweepstake of the year will\nbe based on it. There are 39 probable starters for the big race,\nfirst run in 1839.\nThis was the betting caljover\nfor 25 of them: 100-9 Fairy Stone;\n100-8 Stephanotis, Heritiere and\nPrimera, 100-6 Loppylugs; 18 \u25a0 1\nVariety King; 20 - 1 Veleta and\nWestmarsh, 22 - 1 Pundit, roll\nAway and Water Snake; 25 - 1\nPrecious Heather; 33-1 Rose Petal, Meldon, Mosterton and Sun\nFlight; 40-1 Cash and Courage,\nTudor Jinks and Repetition; 50-1\nKing's Coup, Fuel, Colours and\nMonterey; 66 - 1 Corinthian and\nVenus Slipper.\nFlyers Delay\nOSHL Dispute\nOver Male\nEdmonton Flyers, owners of\nNegro forward Johnny Utendale,\nFriday put a temporary end to a\ndispute between two Okanagan\nSenior Hockey League teams over\nthe services of the former Edmdn-\nton Oil King Junior.star.\nUtendale has been given a three-\ngame trial, which was scheduled\nto start last night, because Flyer\nstar Don Poile, brother of Bud\nPoile, Flyers' general manager,\nhas been retained by the parent\nDetroit Red Wings.\nKelowna Packer Coach Jack\nO'Reilly said Friday that Kelowna\nhas been negotiating with Utendale, and has correspondence to\nprove it. He charged that Utendale\nwas assigned to Penticton Vs, and\nclaimed first-call on the left-winger\nbecause Packers made first contract.\nUtendale is the second hockey\nplayer to have failed to show up at\nKelowna this season. Brian Whittal, now of Spokane, is the other.\nLeo Atwell, registrar of the\nBritish Columbia Amateur Hockey\nAssociation, said here Friday that\nunless .Utendale signed a contract\nor accepted money, Pacjcers have\nno claim on him.\n6R33\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1957 \u2014 7\n11111 \u25a0 111111 r 111 \u25a0 i ] i\u00ab\u25a0 ] \u25a0 i [ i \u25a0 11 \u25a0 11 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 [ 1111 r i i r t i r 11111111111: i \u25a0 f n i \u25a0 111111 \u25a0 \u25a0 e p\nPCL PRESIDENT REQUESTS\nCHECK OF SPOKANE AREA\nSPOKANE (AP)\u2014The president of the Pacific Coast'\nLeague asked baseball leaders here Friday to check\naround town to see whether Spokane would be interested in a PCL franchise next year.\nCurt Haggerty, former president of the community-\nowned Spokane Indians of the Class B Northwest League,\nsaid he would start checking businessmen immediately.\nLeslie O'Connor, the PCL president, relayed his request through Dewey Soriano, business manager of the\nSeattle Rainiers. Soriano called Haggerty to say PCL\nofficials feel Spokane is one of the most likely cities for\na franchise in the realignment necessitated by the western transfer of the Giants and Dodgers.\nHIIIIIIII IIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nConsistent Find Rated\nChoice in \"Canadian\n\/\/\nTORONTO (CP) - Alfred\nGwynne Vanderbilt probably will\nbe $44,900 richer this afternoon\nbecause he owns Find, a seven-\nyear-old gelding. At. least, that's\nwhat the form charts say.\nFind is everybody's choice to\nrun away with today's $60,000 Canadian Championship, the country's\nrichest .horse race, at New Woodbine. Eleven other horses, including seven Canadian - owned, are\nentered.\nThere was a flutter of excitement the other day when Pink\nVelvet, a three - year - old filly\nDressen Said\nLeaving Nats\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nEvening Star says Charley Dressen will resign his front office job\nwith the Washington Senators to\nhook up with the Los Angeles\nDodgers or another club.\n\"I can't do a Jod tor the Washington club and I don't want to\ntake their money,\" the Star quoted\nDressen as saying from his home\nin West Los Angeles. He said the\nlast-place Senators would not put\nout enough money to rebuild.\nCalvin Griffith,, president of the\nAmerican League team, reported\nearlier Dressen asked permission\nto talk with the Dodgers, a club\nhe previously managed .to . two\nNational League pennants.\nLake and canal waterways in\nFinland are navigable for 3000\nmiles.\nBusso Sppils Debut\nOf Substitute Kerwin\nNEW YORK (AP) - Favored\nJohnny Busso of New York spoiled\nsubstitute Gale Kerwin's big time\nboxing debut Friday night by outpointing the Ottawa lightweight in\na bristling television lo-rounder at\nMadison, Square Garden. Busso\nweighed 138%, Kerwin 139.4.\nPromoted from the semi-final\nafter first Paolo Rosi and then\nErnie (Sonny Boy) Williams were\nstricken by the flu, Kerwin was\nleading until he ran into a \"flashing left and right ot the chin that\ndropped him for a nine:Count in\nthe sixth rouna..Tlie more experienced Busso, ninth ranking lightweight contender, then kept his\nrally going to win the unanimous\ndecision. ,\nThe officials decided the fight\nin this way:\nJudge Jack Gordon voted 6-3-1\nand judge Bill Recht 3-4-1 for Bus-\nso. Referee Teddy Martin went five\nrounds for each but six points for\nBusso and five points for his opponent. The knockdown, the referee\nsaid, was the \u25a0 deciding influence.\nKerwin, a 22-year-old Ottawa\nnative, was a 13-to-5 underdog and\nhe had most of the thin crowd of\nabout 1000 rooting for him by his\ngallant stand. The wiry youngster\ntook the play from his 23-year-old\n\u25a0rival in the first half of the scrap\nArgonaut Win Would Wrap\nUp Title for Tiger-Cats\nBy The Canadian Press\nHamilton Tiger-Cats could clinch\nfirst place in the Big Four Football\nUnion today, but it depends on victories by the same teams that won\nlast Saturday. .    '  \u2022\nShould Hamilton beat Montreal\nAbuettes in Montreal and Toronto\nArgonauts win over Ottawa Rough\nRiders at Ottawa, the Ticats will\nbe assured of top spbt for the first\ntime since 1953 when they tied with\nMontreal, and took first spot in a\nplayoff. \u25a0  >\nTicats' four-point lead over Montreal and Ottawa would be sufficient\nto give them the bye in the finals.\nKitchener -Waterloo    Dutchmen\ntackle Sarnia Golden Bears in an\nOntario   Rugby   Football I Union\ngame.\nGOOD SHAPE\nThe Lords, leaders by a point\nover Kitchener, are idle.   ,\nThe University of Western On\ntario Mustangs, whose defensive\nunit has allowed only 13 points in\nthree Senior Intercollegiate League\ngames, move into Toronto against\nUniversity of Toronto Blues.\nQueen's Golden Gaels meet McGill Redmen at Kingston. Western\nleads the league with a two-point\nmargin over the' Redmen.\nHamilton, whose defensive unit\nwas largely responsible for last\nweek's 18-15 victory, are counting\non the same men today.\nThe Ticats are reported in good\nshape and .will be missing only\nguard Art Darch. The Als, harassed by the flu bug, are quoted as\nsix-point favorites, their shortest\nhome odds in years.\nFlu victims Herb' Trawick, Tom\nHugo, Joel Wells and Norm Hamilton were all out at practice Friday and are expected to be in the\nlineup today.\nwith his thumping left hooks to the\nbody and head.\nThe victory was Busso's 31st\nagainst five defeats. Kerwin, a\npro only 3% years, suffered his\nfifth defeat. He has won 24.\nowned by Bill Beasley of Toronto\ngalloped IVi miles in 1:51.1. The\nhubbub soon died down and the\nfinger was put on Find to take it\n\u00a3,11.\nCOSISTENT WINNER\nThe -reasoning is simple. He Is\none of the most consistent horses\nin North America. He has piled\nup more than $650,000 for Vanderbilt, in \"32 starts and has finished\nworse than third only twice in his\ncareer.\nFind drew the No. 2 post position Friday when Vanderbilt and\nthe owners of 11 other horses deposited the final $500 acceptance\nfee for the race. Pink Velvet, a\n$60,000 winner this year and com\nsidered Canada's best chance,\ndrew the rail spot.\nOwners of horses finishing' second, third, and fourth will find\nsome consolation in the payoff.\nPlace money is $10,000, the show\nis $5000 and fourth $2500.\nPointing for the big payoff besides Find are Wise Margin, Spinney, Clermont, the South American horse racing his first year in\nNorth America for owner Paul\nButler of Hinsdale, HI., and Sunday Star, owned by John H.\nClark of Lexington, Ky.\nThe other Canadian - owned\nhorses besides Pink Velvet are\nMarshall Ney II, Kitty Girl, Grand\nCanyon, Ocean Lane, Flying Trapeze and Mythical II.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nFamily\nSkating\nTODAY\n10:00 to 11:45 a.m.\nTODAY\nNelson Civic Centre\nfun for A everyone\nSQUAREfcDANCE\nEXHIBITION\nand\nDANCE\nFeaturing\nSPOKANE\nSILVER\nSPURS\nDance Club\nEvening  Performance\n8:00 p.m.\nAdmission 50c\nMatinee Performance\nAdults 50c\nChildren 25c\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEW,S, SATURPAY, OCT. 26, 1957\nL\n,A\nB\nN\nE\nR\nL\nO\nN\nE\nW,,._.1...IM_IU,U J\nHAS VO'FORGOTTEN?\nSINCE MRS. PHOG-\nBOUND DONE\n\u2022 CLIMBED THEM\nGOLDEN STAIRS,\nLAST SPRING-\nIT OEST COME OVER   \\ WflB,\n\u25a0 \u25a0MEtf-SADIE HAWKINS   ] ' '7*ly\/>\nDAV IS UNHOOMIN,   *\"> '      '-\nUN HEALTH1., AN' UNAMERICAM.)\nir GOTTA BE\n.ABOLISHED.?\nAs Trey serour in ssabch of\nTHEIR PARTNERS, THE 10NE\nRANSEP ANP OtP UJCKV LANS\npont sysPEcr\u2014\nDETROIT   (AP)   -   Accused\nburglar Francis Drury, 54. testified at his , trial Wednesday that\nhe was hired by the United Auto\nWorkers Union to steal the membership list of another union. He\nis charged with breaking and entering the national headquarters\nof Mechanics Education Society\nof America (AFL-CIO). A UAW\nspokesman here . called Drury's\nstory \"nopsense,\"\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAM^ 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC  8TANDARD  TIME)\nSATURDAY,\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News -\n8:15\u2014Market Review\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05-7-Musicale\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Outdoors\n10:00-Post  Mark   U.K.\n10:30\u2014Juke Box\n10:55-Weather\n11:00\u2014News\n11:02\u2014Jukebox Part 2\n12:00\u2014Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Dance Time\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\nOCTOBER 26, 1957\n1:00\u2014Jazz Time\n2:00\u2014News\n2:10\u2014Cdn. Weekly News Review\n2:15\u2014Rhythm Pais\n2:45\u2014Don Messer   .\nSilSr-Speaker's Choice\n3:30\u2014Old Country Sports\n3:45\u2014Sports College\n4:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n4:25\u2014News\n4:30\u2014Hockey\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Musical Interlude\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Agostini\n8:25\u2014Musical Interlude\n8:30\u2014Prarie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Scored by Hyslop\n9:25r-Musicale\n9:30\u2014Winipeg Pops Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News '\n10:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:30-Sign Off\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1957\n10:55-Sign On\n11:00\u2014St. Paul's-Trinity\n12:00\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n12:15\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n1:00\u2014Canadian Scene\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014N.Y. Philharmonic\n3:30\u2014News\n3:45\u2014In Retort\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014Ed McCurdy Sings\n4:30r-Littie Symphonies    .\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:40\u2014World Church News\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Weekend Review\n6:20\u2014Special Speaker\n6:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n7:00\u2014Pacific, Playhouse\n7:30\u2014Music Diary\n8:00-CBC Stage\n9:00\u2014Butling Presents\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15-Talk\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC   PROGRAMS\n( (PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1957\n8:00\u2014News\n8:15\u2014CBC News\n8:18\u2014Random Hour\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00-B.C. Garden & Weather\n10:15\u2014Impressions in Music\n10:30\u2014In His 'Service,\n11:00\u2014Chamber Music\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n12:00\u2014Music\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n1:00\u2014Canadian Scene\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n3:30\u2014CBC News\n3:35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:42\u2014Weather Forecast\n3:45\u2014In Reply\n4:00\u2014UN on Record\n4:15-Ed McCurdy\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Toronto Pop Concert\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary ,\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00-CBG  Stage\n9:00\u2014Wpg. Symphony Orchestra\n10:00\u2014The Dream of Gerontius\n10:15-Talk\n11:00\u201420th Century Masterpiece\n12:0O-CBC News & Marine Weath\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1957\n00\u2014B.C. Fishman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n40\u2014Morning Devotions\n55\u2014Musical March Past  .\n00\u2014News\n10-SportNews\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014CBC   News\n35\u2014Anything Goes\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014Morning Concert '\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n45\u2014Pages From Life\n00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n15\u2014Theme and Variation\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014Five to One\n:0O\u2014Afternoon Cone\n1:30\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Nursey Rhymes\n4:45\u2014Story Man\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014This Man's Music\n6:30\u2014Musical  Interlude\n6:35\u2014ROving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-^Parker \"57\n8:00\u2014Marine Investigator\n8:30\u2014Farm Forum\n9:00\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Oriental Interlude\n10:3O\u2014University of the Air\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n11:57-CBC News\nDAfLY  CROSSWORD,\n2. Granada's     20.\npalace\n8. Chamh-i       21.\n-5. Open (poet)\n5. Northeast\n(abbr.)\n\u00ab. Baptized      22.\nT. Depart\n8. Young ool     25.\n9.A___rht\n10. Headland      26.\n14.Fish\n16. Sailing to     29.\nthe\nwind- 30.\nward 31.\nof\n18. Wreath        33.\n(H.I.)\nSun\ngod\nHeadache\napplicators\nHispid\n(Dot.)\nPut\non\nFour\n(Rom.)\nBirds as\na class\nCity (Ala.)\nLong\nnail\nShinto\ntemples\nUBIUJIH   UBHP-K\nGQB      aatSHHE,\nHHHaas \u25a0'\nhu Hana hb@\nKaHaH nuns\u2122\nubh raiaoB r.<i.\nostium E_n____n.\nrjiBiuta aiaaiaei\n'HHHHH   QIHIHS\nYc-terd&j. o Aninor\n34. Brilliant\ndisplay\n35. Girl's nam*\n37. English\ntavern\n39. Exclams.\n- tion\nACROSS\nI. Nobleman\nO. Unsoiled\n11. Run away\nand marry\n12. Ax handle\n13. Foot\ncovering\n14. National\nLeague\nchamps\n15. Knave of\nclub., (loo)\n16. Relinquishing acts\n17. Type\nmeasure\n18. Smaller\n19. Side by side\n21. Exist\n28. Venomous\nsnake (Ind.)\n24. Decree\n27. Samarium\n(sym.)\n28. Queen\nVictoria's\nline\n30. Man's name\n32. Jumbled\ntype   \u25a0\n83. Pierced,\nas fish\n35. Loiter\n86. Town\n(OWa.)\nST; Gambling\ngame\n88. Wild sheep\n(Asia)\n89. Envelopes\nof fruits\n40. Straight\n(colloq.)\n41. Degrade\nDOWN\nI. Foretells\nDAILY CKmOQCOTE \u2014 Here's how to work its\nAXYDLBAAXR\nU LONGFE LIOW\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 ot the words ara all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOQJF  KftCFWJ  XPUJVL  KCF  WXY*\n_TZ    RZBJ,    -PXU    JCUMPZIJ    PBKI\n-OJOVJM,\nYesterday's Oryptoqootw PAINS OF I_OVB BB SWEETER\nFAR THAN ALL OTHER PLEASURES ARE - DRY DEN.\n\u00abHsWtmt\u00abd by King Fwlurw Syndfcata\n1\n2\n3\n4\nsr\nfA\nT-\n8\n9\n10\nIt\n%\nFT\"\n.\"\n%\n#\nB\nfA\nit,\n17\n^\nIS\nft\nft\n19\n20\n%\nw\n21\n22.\n23\n%\n2*\n2S\n26\n27\n%\nf<\n20\n25-\n^A\n^\njo\n31\n'^\n33\nA\n%\n35\n36\n%\n37\nW\nt{<\n39\n4\u00b0\n7\/<\n41\n1\n>2b\nCLASSIFIED\nDeadline roi Classified Ads \u2014 5 p.m.\nBIRTHS\nDAKU \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nStephen Daku, Ymir Road, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, October 25, a daughter.\nDAVIDOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nMike Davidoff of Slocan Park, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOctober 25, a daughter.\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING\nWomen wanted,   greater 'opportunity.   Better   pay.   Pleasant\nwork. Catalogue free \u2014 Write\nMARVEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n326 8th Avenue, Calgary.\nBranches:  Winnipeg, Regina,\nSaskatoon and Edmonton.\nCanada's National System.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED - ODD J8BS. ANY\ncarpenter work, roofing, cabinet\nmaking, or remodelling. Phone\n585-L-2.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's' Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd\u201e or phone\n186-X-3.\nYOUNG, WOMAN WITH 2 CHIL-\ndren de'sirks a job as housekeeper. Box 1042, Daily News.\nWILL CUT YOUR WOOD WITH\nchain saw. Phone 663-Y-l.\nHANDYMAN WANTS ODD JOBS,\nPhone 256-R.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFall\nClearance\nReconditioned\nWinterized\nPriced To Clear\nUsed Cars\n1957\nPlymouth   Plaza\n1956 Volkswagen\n1955\nChevrolet Bel-air\n1955\nChevrolet Deluxe\n1954\nMeteor  Niagara\n1953\nPontiac Sedan\n1953\nHenry J.\n1952\nChevrolet Deluxe\n1952 6.M.C. Pickup\n\/ 1952 Austin Countryman\n1951\nVanguard\n1951\nConsul\n1948 Fargo Pickup\n1947\nUniversal  Jeep\nLTD.     '\nVolkswagen \u2022 Rambler\nVanguard  3\nSales and Service\n323   Nelson  Ave.\nPhone 1454..\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice \u2014 Used parts for '47, Olds,\n'50 Willis, '47 Pontiac, '62 Somerset, '52' Ford, '46 Meteor, Mercury, '37 Ford, '46 Plymouth, '47,\n'50, '51 Austin, Hillman, Pr.efect,\nVanguard, Morris Minor cars.\nFor sale, '53 Austin; 2 - wheel\ntrailer. Phone 1363-L-2 or write\nBox 382, Ymir Road, Nelson.\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777, and save.\nFOR SALE - 1955 TU-TONE\nDodge (hardtop), radio, white-\nwall tires, all accessories, low\nmileage. Excellent condition,\n$1550 or nearest offer. Can be\nfinanced. Contact W. Bluber,\nSalmo, B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE\nRegulations \u2014 Pursuant to\nThe \"HIGHWAY ACT\"\nRossland-Trail Electoral District\nThe undersigned, being a person authorized by the Minister\nof Highways, in writing, to exercise the powers vested in tha\nsaid Minister in Part II of the\nHighway.Act hereby makes the\nfollowing Regulations under Section II pursuant to the Highway\nAct, effective from 12:01 on the\nmorning  of  October  28th  1957\nuntil further notice.\n\"All vehicles which   are  not\nequipped with chains, or adequate winter tires are prohibited from being driven or operated on the following Highways.\"\n1. The Southern Transprovindal\nHighway No. 3, between the\nupper Warfield Railway\nCrossing and the Junction of\nthe Southern Transprovindal\nHighway No. 3, with the Christian Creek Laurier Highway\nNo. 395 at Christina Lake,\notherwise known as the Scho-\nficld Highway, the Rossland\nArterial Highway and the\nRossland-Cascade Highway.\n2. Rossland-Paterson Highway\nbetween its Junction with the\nS o u t h'e r n Transprovindal\nHighway No. 3 and the International Boundary.\nDated at Rossland,\nBritish Columbia, this\n23rd day of October 1957.\nP. B. MacCARTHY\nDistrict Engineer\nDepartment of Highways\nNOTICE\nTENDERS    in    DUPLICATE\nwill be received by the undersigned up to 5:00 p.m. NOVEMBER 8th, 1957 for the purchase\nof   a   Standard   55   passenger\nSchool  Bus.  Specifications  for\nwhich shall conform to the standards laid down by the Government of British   Columbia for\nconstruction   of   School Buses.\nExtras: The Bus shall be equipped with the following extras:\n, (1) Tow Hooks on Front Bumper.\n(2. Spare wheel   and   Tire in\ncarrier.\n(3) 12 Volt Electric System.\n(4) Heavy duty Shock Absorbers front and rear.\n(5) Mud Flaps-Front and Rear.\nThe approximate delivery date\nmust be noted on tender and the\nlowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.  ,   '\nPLEASE NOTE:   Tenders\nmust be in DUPLICATE.\nJ.  S.  LIVINGSTONE,\nSec. Treas. S.D. No. 7,\n544 Stanley Street, \u2022\n       NELSON, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nTHE   NEW\n\u2022 Heater,\nis your answer for low cost\nautomatic forced afr gas\nheat.\nThis heater makes an attractive installation in any room.\n\u2022 Baked enamel .finish.\n\u2022 Only Protrudes 4 to 5 inches\n\u2022 No unsightly pipes.\nDON'T DELAY - ORDER\nYOURS RIGHT AWAY.\nFree Estimates\nDo It Yourself and Save\nEnquire\nFOR SALE - LF-192 INTERNA-\ntional \u25a0 tandem truck in good\ncondition. $3500. Also 13-ton Freu-\nhorf tandem logging trailer $1200.\nEast Kootenay Eqdpment,\nCranbrook, B.C.\n'55 PLYMOUTH SEDAN IN Excellent condition. Will take %-\nton with 4-speed transmission as\npart payment. Apply G. Riggs,\nHunter Trailer Court, Castlegar,\nafter 4 p.m.\n\"57 PLYMOUTH POWER FLIGHT,\nSierra grey, Boston brown. Only\nused 2 mo. SSVe $800. Ph. 84-Y\nSalmo after 5 p.m.\nMUST SELL - 1950 HILLMAN,\nnew clutch and transmission recently overhauled. Clean car.\nPhone 1945-R.\n1948 CHEVROLET TORPEDO -\nradio, heater, new paint job. A-l\ncondition, $395. Phone evenings\n2008-L.\nFOR SALE - 1 INTERNATIONAL\ntruck, 1952 model 162 series. Bill\nAnderson, Box 17, Slocan City.\nFOR SALE-4-TON DUMP TRUCK\nwith job. A. M. Jmaiff, Perry\nSiding.\n1956   VOLKSWAGON  -  PHONE\n1910.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD $70.00 PER\nmonth. 210 Vernon Street.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone 1179-X.\n.    LTD.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St.     Ph. 593\nNelson, 6. C.\nAtom Arc, Arcaloy, CX-\n100 and Ni-Rod Electrodes,\nMiller Welders.\nHplmets, Goggles, Gloves, Holders, Wire Brushes, Chipping\nHammers, Cable Hose, Torches\nand Regulators.\nAltem Super Bronze, Hercules\nIron, Aluminum, and Stainless\nGas Rods and Silver Brazing\nAlloys. ,\nOxygen and Acetylene Gasses.\nStevenson\nMACHINERY  LIMITED\n708 Vernon St.\nPHONE 97\nNelson\nFOR SALE - TD-9 WINCH ANC\nbulldozer. Geo. Kanigan, Tag\nhum, B.C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nBLACK WALLET LOST BE\ntween CPR station and diese\nshop. Finder please Ph. 566-R.\n1\n SMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  ~  PHONE 1844\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n\" Revenue Duplex\nOne Block Junior High\n1\u2014Completely   modernized   inside and out. On landscaped\ncorner lot with double garage.\n5-ROOMED SUITE\nL. room, one bedroom, bath;\nlarge kitchen with ample dining area, and small utility\nroom on main floor, with two\nbedrooms upstairs. \u2014 Electric\nrange included.\n3-ROOMED SUITE\nL.  room  with fireplace,  one\nbedroom,   bath;   and  kitchen,\nelectric range included.\nBasement, with new oil furnace.\nExcellent proposition for two\nfamilies in teaching profession.\nZS.%.   $^,500\nSTANLEY STREET\n1\u2014Extra large living room with\nhuge fireplace. Dining room,\nden (with garden entrance).\nBath; three bedrooms and a\nnew Youngstown Kitchen \u2014\nALL ONE FLOOR. Basement\nwith hot water heating plant\n\u2022 and registers in all rooms. \u2014\nSpace for large rec. room and\nspare bathroom. Nice corner\nlocation. Terms. ${6,800\nFull price ...\u25a0 \u2022\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb>\u00bb\nHIGH STREET-'\nI\u2014Six rooms and bath. Base-\nmerit  and   hot  air   furnace,\n\u00a3_#&. ... $8500\nSILICA STREET\n4\u2014Four bearooms, large family\nhome, on two nice lots. Basement and hot air furnace. \u2014\nTe\u2122t f0r..ranBe: $8750\nSIXTH STREET\n8\u2014Four rooms and bath, on two\ncorner lots. Wired for range.\nImmediate occu-     (RAftf)\npancy. Terms.     . 4>\u00b0U\u00abU\n\u2022 UPHILL\n5\u2014Three bedrooms, L.R., large\nfamily kitchen, utility room\nand bath. Very nice condition. FIVE GARDEN LOTS.\nBasement and .furnace. Also\n.?\u00a3_\u00a3rented'   $7900\nHIGH STREET\nT\u2014Multiple    Listing.  \u2014  Three\nrooms and bath, on two nice\nlots. Basement;      \u00a3\/inf_ft\nno furnace. 3>WVV\n.   Terms.   _\n, .HIGH  STREET\n8\u20148 bedrooms, L.R. (fireplace),\ndining room (fireplace), kitch-.\nen  and  bath;  basement  and\nhot water heating throughout\nOntlyfl0OrS'.TermS'$5850\nAPARTMENT HOUSES\nREVENUE BLOCKS\nSMALL BUSINESSES\nAUTO COURTS\nFARMS.\nMortgage Monies Available\nTO BUY' OR SELL, CALL\nMcHardy  Agencies\nLtd.\nPhone 135 or Eves., 1065-X\nTODAY'S SPECIAL\nA splendid 4-B.R. home, located on 3 well-developed lots.\nHouse has good-sized L.R. and\nB.E. with French doors between, and both rooms have\nH.W. oak floors. Fine K. and\nwell cupboarded; also small\nbuilt-in pantry. Modernistic\nbathroom, 2 large bedrooms\u2014\nwith large clothes closets. One\nvery large B.R. upstairs besides one smaller one. Large\nroom upstairs could be used\nas rumpus or game room. \u2014\nHouse is wired for range. H.W.\ntank and also TV. Full basement and coal hot air furnace.\nAlso drive-in garage. This fine\nproperty   may   be   nurcliased\nX $10,500\nReasonable terms to\nresponsible parly.\nWe still have a few splendid\nbuilding sites. Ask about these.\nReal   Estate  and  Insurance\nAgency   -\nPHONE 68       532 WARD ST.\nIf Listed at a\nFAIR  PRICE\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY\nG. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.'\n' Box 26 Phone 269\n421 Baker St.. Nelson. B C.\n3-BI_DR00M MODERN BUNGA-\nlbw, 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.\nFOR SALE-82 ACRES OF FINE\nland al Queens Bay, 9 acres\ncleared. S. P. Pond, ph. 1421-Y.\nGIVEMETHEHALP\nDOLLAR, I'LL GIVE\nM3U THE DIME,ANP\nWEtL SPLIT THE\nStrike Authorized\n, NANAIMO (CP) - A strike\nvote among pulp and paper worker! here has been authorized by\nLabor Minister Wicks.\nThe referendum will be conducted next week at the request of\nthe International Brotherhood of\nPulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill\nWorker's and the United Paper\nMakers of America whose membership rejected a conciliation\nboard majority report recommending a 7<_-per-cent wage boost and\nincreased vacation benefits.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\n1\u20142-storey, 4-bedroom house.\u2014\nCut stone foundation, full\nbasement, furnace, wired for\nrange. Garage; 2 garden lots.\n' gSS $7900\n2\u2014ATTRACTIVE HOME, two\nbedrooms upstairs. Ground\nfloor: nice kitchen, wired for\nrange, also piped for gas:\nlots of cupboards; good bathroom, living room and den\nor sewing. room. Cut-stone\nfoundation. Full basement\nwith cement floor (furnace).\nA really lovely garden, several fruit trees (apple, apricot, cherry, etc.), lawns and\nflowers. Good        $7500\nWe figure this is one of our\nbest listings.\n3\u2014\nIDEAL FAIRVIEW LOCATION\nVery Smart 2-Bedroom Bungalow\nBright Kitchen\nLots of Cupboards\nAttractive Living Room\nWith Fireplace\nOak Floors In Mam Rooms\nPolished Coast Fir Bedrooms\nGlassed-in Front Porch\nExcellent Full Basement\nAutomatic Oil Furnace\nBasement Garage\nAttractive Corner Property\nGood Garden\n$12,500\n4\u2014Recently completed attractive 2-bedroom bungalow on\nlevel lot near highway at\nSix-Mile. Nice nlan; includes\nutility porch. Plenty of cupboards. Fully insulated. Oil\nfloor furnace heats econom-\nwee\"- Terms .. $8500\n\u2022ANY   OF  ABOVE\nON VERY POOD TERMS\nMay We Show You Today?\nPhone for Full Details\nCar Insurance and Package\n-v Policies a Specialty\nC. W. Apoleyard\n-  & Co. Ltd.\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX;,26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.      Nelson. B.C.\n\u2022 OWNER TRANSFERRED\n\"\u201e;:r      Must   Sell\n:.-.'\"   Modern\nTwo Bedroom,House\nNewly decorated. Oil and\ngas heat. Two thousand\nwill handle.\nPhone 1196-X\nLARGE COMPANY WOULD LIKE\nto establish ' warehouses 'within\n5 miles of Nelson. We require\nland and atcess for buildings\nand preferably with resident as\ncaretaker and trucker. Apply\nBox 11036, Daily News.\n.38 , ACRE ON NORTH SHORE\noverlooking city. Power and water to properly. 82 ft. road frontage. Terms could be arranged.\nPhone 692-R-l\nLOT 50 BY 250 GRANITE\nRoad, l'A miles from town\nTaxes $1.75 a year. Very rea-\nsonable price. Ph  1757-R.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\n300 - GALLON PROPANE GAS\ntank. Ph. 1607-R or write Box\n8439.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W   WIDD0WSON _ CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine SI., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND,   B C.\nAssayer Chemisl Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nM. C McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph 2752 Office Mgr., Ray Johnson. B.A.Sc,\n1015 _.h St., Nelson, Phone 144-R\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P  Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG. B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric! welding, motor rewind\ning. Phone 593      324 Vernon St\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\n RENTALS\t\nSMALL SUITE, FULLY FURN-\nished, gas stove, frigidaire,\nautomatic heat. Private, en-\ntrance, parking. Suitable for\ncouple, 171 Baker St.\t\nFOR RENT-SELF CONTAINED,\nunfurnished half of duplex, Suitable for couple only. Stove and\nfridge supplied. $60 month. Ph'.\n933-X. .\t\nNICELY  APPOINTED  2-3  BED-\n- room bungalow. Central. No\nhills. Wired for TV. Adult family. Available Nov. 15. $75.00 per\nmonth. Box 1034, Daily News,\nBEAUTIFUL TWO BEDROOM\napartment with dining room and\nautomatic oil heat. Available\nNov. 15. Ph. 575-Y evenings.\nA 1-BEDROOM HOUSE ON ,OUT-\nskirts. Some furnishings if required. $40 per month. Box 6488,\nNelson Daily 'News.\t\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly oi\nmonthly rates. Allen Hotel, 171\nBaker Street.\t\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars,\nphone 77.   \t\nFURNISHED 2 CLEAN, WELL\nheated rooms in quiet home.\nSuit working couple. Phone 13$\nor 1065-X. .\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE IN FAIR-\nview with option to buy. Phone\n606-L-2. \t\nA HOME AWAY FROM HOME.\nBrads Auto Court. Winter rent-\nals. Phone 1680.     '\nUNFURNISHED MODERN 3 RM.\nsuite, 1 BR., stove, frig., tiled\nbath. Phone 130.\t\nFURN. LAKESIDE COTTAGE.\nClose in. Adults. Box 11117,\nDaily News. \t\nFOR RENT - 2 - ROOM APT.\nAvailable Nov. 1. Ph. 44-Y-3.\nFURNISHED HEATED APART.\nAdults. Box 11118, Daily News.\nONE ROOM FOR RENT. \u00ab20 VIC-\ntoria Street. Phone 450-Y.\nONE FURNISHED ROOM FOR\nrent. Phone 547-L.\t\n2 ROOM.SUITE, PARTLY FUR-\nnished. Phone 1341-X.\t\n3 RM. SUITE, FURNISHED AND\nheated. Phone 2075.\t\nNORTH   SHORE   MOTEL   NOW\nopen for winter rentals. Ph. 1684\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE .ON CROSS-\nley Ave. Phone 681-R after 5.\t\nWEEKLY   AND'  MONTHLY\nrates now in effect. Civic Hotel.\n2-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT. 614\nVictoria St.\t\nHOUSE FOR RENT IN HARROP.\nS. P. Pond. Phone 1421-Y.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS,\nFridays. Ph. 366-R or 483-R,\nWILDER'S STOMACH POWDER\noffers fast, effective, economical'\nhome treatment for heartburn,\nexcess acid, sour stomach. Recommended by druggists everywhere^^ \u25a0\nUSE LLOYD'S CORN AND CAL-\nbus Salve and Pads for painlui\ncorns and callouses \u2014 prompt\nrelief. Salve 50c, Pads 25c at\nFleury's Pharrflacy, Nelson;\nSalmo   Drugs,  Salmo,   and   all\n. druggists,\t\nUNWANTED HAIR\nVanished away with Saca-Pelo.\nSaca-Pelo is different. It does\nnot dissolve or remove hair from\nthe surface, but penetrates and\nretards growth of unwanted hair.\nLor-Beer Lab. Ltd., Ste. 5, 679\nGranville St., Vancouver 2, B.C.\nBUILDING  SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD.\nfor all Building Supplies. Specializing in Plywood. Contractors enquiries solicited. Phone or\nwire orders dollect. 3600 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C., GLen-\nburn 1500,    \u25a0       :\nSJr lamt Satlij Netus\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\n'., to Friday.' 10c on 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  ,     $ 1 75\nThree months     $ 5 00\nSix months         $ 9.50\nOne year        $18 00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor Delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook phone Mrs   Wm  Stevely;\n'   In Kimberley A  W  Brown;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs  Ross Saundry\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd\nPhone 871\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope,  pipe  and    fittings,\n- chain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph\nPAcific  6357.\nCHESTERFIELD, WALNUT SET\n(china cabinet, table, chairs),\nwalnut bed, mattress, spring,\nmatching dresser; rocker; Morris chair; Ozite- underpad for\nrug; vacuum cleaner arid misc.\nstraight chairs. Phone 1574;\nPLASTIC STORM WINDOW KIT\n(enough for 10\/windowsl.with\ntape\u2014$2.65.   Columbia   Trading\n. Co., 902 Front St.\nCOLEMAN OIL HEATER, DRAFT\nregulator, barrel pump, vent and\noil pail $35.00; also dining room\nsuite. Phone 1971-L.\nOIL BURNING KITCHEN STOVE\nwith barrels in good condition.\nPhone 158-L.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening  924 Davies SI\nLUMBER SALE - $35.00 PER M.\nAll dressed stocks. Kudra 1757-R.\nCOAL AND WOOD RANGE AND\noil heater. Cheap. Phone 945-L.\nSIZE 12 WINTER COAT. NEARLY\nnew. Phone 1839-R.\nWATKINS QUALITY PRODUCTS.\nPhone 469-Y.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nRAISED PULLETS - BUY NOW\nraised pullets of good breeding\nfrom our farm. Leghorns, Hamp-\nshires, \\ Hamp-Leg crosses. We\nhave over 30 years experience\nwith poultry. Apply our agent\nNelson Farmers' Supply, Nelson or write direct to New Siberia Farms, R.R. 3, Chilli'\nwack, B.C.\nFOR SALE-YOUNG BEEF.COW\nP. M. Blo'odoff, Passmore, B.C.\nFOR SALE-CALVES SIX WEEKS\nold. Phone 1916-R.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nTHREE CHIHUAHUA MALE\npups, one 10 mos. old. Mrs, H.\nBird, Blueberry Creek.\nGERMAN SHORTHAIRED POIN-\nter pups. Male. $15.00. Phone\nFruitvale 3099.\nWANTED - GOOD HOMES FOR\n3 kittens. Phone 1572-Y.\nMONARCH\n.oinatic, Self-Prim\nConvertible\nPiumps\nAutomatic, Self-Priming\nConvertible\n\u25a0      \u2022      \u2022    \u2022 , \u25a0    .\nTHE BEST ALL-PURPOSE\nLOW COST SYSTEM ON\nTHE MARKET\n\u2022   >\nEasily converted from shallow well to deep well at no\nextra cost\n: * * ,,\nWith horizontal or vertical\ntanks in all sizes.\nSold and Serviced  by\nCo.; Ltd'\nP.O., Box 230     Phone 18.\nNelson, B. C.\nTRAILERS\nLTD.\nCranbrook, JU-6-2270\nCastlegar, Castlc-2701\nWe offer the finest Canadian   and   American-built\nmobile   hoi-ies.   Complete\nService.,\nBARRETT TRAILER SALES, 745\nKipling St., Trail and Fruitvale\ncutoff road. Direct factory distributors for Flamingo Mobile\nHomes, Terry and Aljo Travel\nTrailers.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the VOLNEY\nHOTEL, Spokanei 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 bath al\nlow, low rates   Colonial Hotel,\nATOMIC  CLEANUP\nmen in heavy protective clothing\nwent in Wednesday to clean the\ncrippled Windscale atom plant of\n\u2022its excess radioactivity. The. major repair job is aimed al restoring Britain's atom bomb fuel output to normal level following, a\nrunaway reaction Oct. 10 which\nreleased some radioactive' uranium dust.\nClassified Ads Got Result!.\nNE^McCULLOCH\nIRECT-DRIVE\nD-44\nAT\nREDUCED AGAIN!\nNow Only\n(18\" Blade)\n\u2022 Ideal   tor cutting  firewood\n\u2022 felling and bucking\n\u2022 lending wood lots\n\u2022 Starts with a light touch\n\u2022 Extra light weight' <\n\u2022 -lastly   outperforms   all   othei\nDirect-Drive saws.\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholti\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING   & . EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n814 Railway St       Nelson. B.C.\nSale Sale Sale\nMaking Room for 1958 Models\n'56 Ford Pickup\nC82077  ( :\nWas $1975\nNOW $1295 '\n'54 Ford Sedan\n297196\nWas $1495\nNOW $1195\n'53 Ford Tudor\n307-910\nWas $1300\nNOW $975    .\n.\u25a0'.': \u2022 ' :'.\n'53 Chev. Sdn. Dely.\n.  .C-82378 ,   '\nWas $1400\nNOW $1095\n'55 Volkswagen\n, Yi-Ton\nC85017    \"--\nRadio. Was $1200\nNOW $795\n'56 Chev. Pickup\nC81428\nWas $1975\nNOW $1595\n'53 Ford Pickup\nC85.102\nWas $975      \u2022\nNOW $750\n'53 Mercury\n3-Ton\nC81436\n' Was $1600\nNOW $795\n'50 Ford Panel\/\nC69-080\nWas '$400\nNOW $249..,\n'51 Consul Sedan\ni94-505\nWas $425 '\nNOW $295\n'51 Chev.\nPickup\nC83-373\nWas $595,\nNOW $295\n'57 Chevrolet\n.    Hardtop V-8\nFully \u00a3quipped\n.Was $3670\nNOW $3170\notors' Ltd.\nPhone 35\nNelson, B, C.\n323 Vernon St\npes\nNELSOtf DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1957 \u2014 9\nTODAY'S\nSPECIALS\nMeELRGY'S'\n^ 1957\nPLYMOUTH 2-DOOR SEDAN\nWhjtewall Tires, Chrome Discs,\nBeautifully 2-Toned.ln Cherry Red and White.\nJL-   1956 AUSTIN  4 POOR SEDAN\n\" 7100 Miles. 60-Day Warranty.\nif 195.\n_\nj'g  PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN\n. Custom Radio. 9100 Miles.-60-Day Warranty.\nFORD 4 DOOR SEDAN\nFairlane Automatic. Radio, Safety\nEquipment. 2-Tone Paint, Whitewall Tires.\nPLYMOUTH BELVEDERE\nV8 Motor, Custom Radio. Low Mileage.\nMust Be Seen To Be Appreciated.   .\nAUSTIN 4 DOOR SEDAN\n*   19-^4 F0RD 4 D00R SEDAN\nJL J> U>T_   custom Radio. Immaculate Inside and Out.\n3   USED RANCH WAGONS IN STOCK\n*   \u2022.  \u2022\nWE PAY CASH FOR YOUR GOOD USED CAR\nAUSTIN \u2022 MORRIS SALES AND SERVICE\nBaker and Hendryx St. Phone 2000\nFord\u2014Edsel\nUSED CAR M)T\n(OPPOSITE: THE CIVIC CENTRE)\n1957 FORD FAIRLANE TUDOR\nRadio.   Automatic.\n1957 FORD CUSTOM 300 TUDOR\nLow Mileage.\n1956 FORD FAIRLANE SEDAN\n' 1955 FORD SEDAN\n1954 MONARCH HARDTO P\n1953 DODGE CORONET SEDAN\nSPECIAL\n1956 PLYMOUTH TUDOR $1895\n1955 DODGE SEDAN $1495\nCleanout on Older IV\n1941   Pontiac Sedan $125\n1947 Monarch Sedan $145\n1,936 Chevrolet Sedan $75\nLicensed.  Running.\n1946 Plymouth Tudor $155\n1950 Vanguard Sedan $295\n1956 Ford-Pickup\n1955 Ford Pickup\nSPECIAL\n1955 International Pickup $895\"\nBRAND. NEW 1957 FORDS\nBrand New 1957 FORD RANCHWAGONS\nOnly 2 Left.     ,\nBrand New 1957 FORD PICKUPS\nOnly 3 Left.\nLtd.\nPhone 1744\nCarlot Phone 1135\nEC J EL:\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY\/OCT. 26,1957\nKILLERS\nOF CHILDREN\n. Diphtheria:. 1. mastoiditis-, .\".scarlet fever... pneumonia ! These vVere some.of the big diseases \u2014- the\nbig killers of ?children-^a':guar;ter-century ago.. But\ntoday, we rarely hear 'pf: anyone dying from one\nof these diseases. The explanation? These diseases\nhave been conquered by; new drugs *- drugs that\nwere unknown 25 years ago \u2014 but are now' found\nin every drug store., ' ...\n_:\nToday's Prescription\nIs the Biggest Bargain in History\n\u00a3\u2022**&_\u25ba'\" \u25a0\nfn..._4.C  '\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nSays Farmers' Problems\nNot Solved by Advances\nEDMONTON (CP)-Two Prairie Farm Union leaders said>\nThursday they approve in principle the federal government's\nplan for cash advances for farm-\nstored grain. . , \u25a0'\nJames McFall, secretary of the\nAlberta Federation of Agriculture, said the advances will aid\nin meeting present bills \"but in-\nthe long pull they will not meet\nthe farmer's problems.\"\nJ. N. Galonsky, president of the\nManitoba Farmers! Union, said\nthe plan appears to favor the\nwheat grower more than the\nfarmer \u25a0 who produces coarse\ngrains.- i '\u25a0 -\nThe leaders were commenting\non an announcement in Ottawa\nby the government of a $150,000,-\nDon _ Miss The Big\nWIND - UP\nDnntE\nPlaymor Tonight\nBringing to a close another\nsuccessful dance season at\nthe Kooteiiays' favorite dance\nspot..;\n9-1    Roeotones\nHIT PARADE TUNES\n2 Large Open Fireplaces .\nfor Cheerful. Cozy Comfort.\n.000 program to provide Prairie\nfarmers with interest-free, cash\nadvances on a portion of their\nfarm-stored grain,\nThe scherrte would provide\nfarmers .with 50 cents a bushel\nfor wheat, 35 cents for barley and\n20 cents for oats, up to a maximum for the three grains combined of six bushels for each\nspecified acre.\nSEES INEQUALITY\n' \"Many of the farmers of Manitoba,\" Mr. Galonsky said, \"grow\nnothing but coarse grains and the\nsix-bushel-an-acre limit is a decided advantage to the wheat\nfarmer.\" the coarse grain\ngrower should be treated equally\nwith the \\vheat farmer.\nMr. McFall said the prime\nproblem facing farmers is the\nspread, between the cost of producing wheat and what farmeis\nreceive for their product.\nA. M.' Wilson, Alberta's field\ncrops commissioner, compared\nthe advances to a \"checking account\" against what the farmer\nwould normally receive for his\nwheat. He said there is no doubt\nfarmers will welcome the measure.' ;,:\u25a0.\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n576 Baker St. \"\nPhone Si-\nHave The Job Done Right\nyiCGRAvfcc\n'.'\"'       LIMITED        \u2022*\nPHONE 815 -\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nsee 4 countries\n\"EUROPE\njust\nRound Trip Tourist\nvia the\nPOLAR\nROUTE\n'  Fly to\" \"4 fun-filled- holiday in\nHolland, England, Belgium, France! Enjoy\nluxury International Service all the way on\n* the famous Polar Route. See your Travel\n' Agent for details :oh Canadian Pacific's low\nFamily Fares\/ the Pay Later plan and\neconomy 15-day Excursion rates.\nAIRLINES\n-.:_.- HUME HOTEL\u2014204\nVV,|NQB    OH -T-H E ' WO R LHJ.J \u00ab!.|ATE ST    TRAVEL' SYSTEM\nOdds... '\n\u2122d Ends\n...byM.D.B.;\nBritish To Use Vulcan and Valiant J6ts... ' '\nRAF, U.S. Air Forces To Join in\nSimulated Nuclear Attack Oct. 30\nAfter giving you a few gliinpses\nof a European holiday, my'.iriend\nphoned and said she hadn't'realiz!\ned I would be mentioning it in\nthe column. (My friends', are almost afraid to talk to me anymore\nand i are always cautiofiihg me)\n\"now this isn't for the,,paper.\"')\nHowever,, she said there was something that she hadn't told me that\nwould certainly be of great interest to a goodly number of people\nand she kindly jotted down a few\nnotes concerning the Vimy Memorial and the, Villers Cemetery near\nArras where so many of Canada's\nwar dead have found their last\nresting place.   . \u2022\n* *  * .\u25a0\"\nThe inscription on this1 tremendous memorial\u2014two pylons 140 feet\nhigh with figures representing the\nspirit of \"Sacrifice, Peace, Justice;\nHonor and Faith, standing at their\nbase, reads: \"To the valour of\ntheir countrymen ih.the Great War\nand in memory of their 60,000 dead\nthis monument, is raised by' the\npeople of Canada.\" There are 20\nsculptured figures, on-and around\nthe platform, each double life size;\nand on the eastward wall stands\nthe figure of a \"cowled wdman,\nCanada, mourning over the graves\nof her dea'd.\n, *  *  *\nVisiting her'father's grave in Villers Cemetery, my friend found\nthe 1600' graves beautifully tended.\nIt reminded her of a verse from\nCorinthians\u2014\"Let all things be\ndone decently and in order.\" The\ncemeteries are really parks, she\nsays, with trees and lawns making them truly \u25a0 beauty spots. At\nArras th'ey met Brig.'W. P. B. Ash-\nton there', to visit the graves of\n67 of his comrades .who fell while\nunder his.command, who told her\nthat on Armistice Day and other\noccasions school children andother\nbodies of people visit the cemeteries and place flowers on the\ngraves.   '\u25a0''\u2022_.\u25a0'\n' '  *  *  *\nA row of Canadian maples lines\none. side -of Villers cemetery,\nwhich, with the Cross of, Sacrifice\nand the Stone of Remembrance,\ninscribed, \"Their Name, Liveth for\nEvermore,\" represent the splendid job done by the Imperial War\nGraves Commission to honor Canadian fallen.\n* .\u00ab  *\nShe said she felt she must mention this, for it might bring comfort to those who have sons, fathers,, relatives or friends buried\nin-a cemetery in France, knowing\nthat though far from here, their\ngraves like their memory, are kept\ngreen and beautiful.\nKhrushchev Buys\nLatest Fashion\nROME (AP) - Nikita Khrushchev may well become the best\ndressed man in the Communist\nworld. He's getting a new suit\nwith the trim continental fit\u2014including cuffs on the pants.\nAngelo Litrico, Sicilian proprietor of a Rome tailor shop, says\nhe got the order for Khrushchev's\nnew. look while visiting Russia\nlast, month as a member of an\nItalian fashion delegation.\nLitrico brought along an overcoat as a gift for the Soviet Communist party boss.     \u2022     .\n'.'He was so delighted with the\ngift that he asked me\u2014through\nhis private secretary\u2014to make\nhim .two more coats and the suit,\"\nthe tailor reported. \"'\nLitrico said he will charge\nKhrushchev the equivalent of $160\napiece for the overcoats - and $136\nfor the, suit.\nLitrico said Khrushchev's mea-'\nsutements were supplied by the\nsecretary who negotiated the deal\nand that he himself didn't meet\nthe Russian leader.\nBut in the best fashion tradition he declined to reveat his distinguished client's exact dimensions.\nMystery Webs\nFall On N.M.\nPORTALES, N.M., (AP)-Cob-\nweb-like strands up to; 50 feet\nlong are falling from the'sky\naround this eastern New Mexico\ncity, festooning telephone lines\nand becoming a nuisance in corn\nand cotton harvesting. -\nExplanations of the. nature of\nthe strands have ranged from the\nRussian earth satellite to giant\ncobwebs. They apparently are\nfalling from a great height.\nAn Albuquerque engineer \u2022 said\nhe had heard of similar phenomena in California valleys around\nFresno and Bakersfleld which\nwere attributed to dust.        .   .\nDust particles In\" the atmosphere rub together creating a\nstatic charge which causes the\nparticles to cling together in the\nform of gossamer strands.\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n.-WASHINGTON (CP) - Vulcan\n'jets and Valiant bombers of Britain's RAF will join with the .U.S.\nAir Force in bringing three great\nAmerican cities \u2014 St. Louis, Kansas City and Atlanta \u2014 under simulated nuclear attack for six days\nbeginning Oct. 30.-\n. The RAF was invited by the\nU.S. Strategic Air Command. to\ncompete against its B-52s and\nB-47s in the 1957 annual bombing,' navigation and reconnaissance competition.\nDespite handicaps of flying over\nunfamiliar 'territory and flight\nres'ultations which .differ slightly\nfrom the European norm, the British crews will compete on an equal\nbasis with the Americans.\nBut'there are only four British\njet : bombers to compete against\n86 U.S. planes, The RAF will be\nrepresented by crews from two\nbomber .groups., Forty-three- SAC\nwings will enter two aircraft\napiece. ,.'\u2022\u25a0.\nTWO MARITIMERS'\nThe RAF team will be headed\nClaims Schools\nHave Warped\nTORONTO (CP)-Dr. M.E. LaZerte, dean of the faculty of\neducation of the University of\nManitoba, said Thursday night\n\"children would think more accurately if they had never attended school.\"\nDean LaZerte told the annual\nmeeting of the South Peel public\nschool teachers:. \"School has\nwarped children's methods ot\nthinking. They have become intellectual delinquents.\"\nHe blamed the emphasis no\nmemory work in Canadian\nschools.\nCanada was dropping behind\nthe United States and Britain in\nteaching standards.\nIn the U.S., 31 states requ;r\u00bbd\na college degree to teach public\nschool. Canada used grade XI\nstudetits with training of six\nweeks to six months.\n\"The department. of education\nshould eliminate short courses\nand shortcuts in training of its\nteachers,\" he said.\nby Air Chief Marshal Sir Harry\nBroadhurst, air officer command-\ning-in-chief, RAF bomber command. Three Canadians serving in\nthe RAF are on his team, Group\nCapt. Wilfred J. Burnett, Frederic-\nton, N.B., Fit. Lt. Verne Montgomery, South Mountain, Ont., and\nFit. Lt. Bert Perowne, Kingsburg,\nN.S. - \u2022\nThe British air command brings\na new note into the competition\nwith its jet transport cargo squadron, the world's first military jet\ntransport -unit.\n: Equipped with four jet engines,\nthe British Vulcan jet is the\nlargest delta wing aircraft in the\nworld and employs a crew of five.\nThe -BAF considers if a medium\nrange bomber. The Vickers Valiant, a four-jet .medium homber\nused both in bomber and' reconnaissance roles, carries a six-man\ncrew.\nON PAR WITH BEST\nAmerican observers regard the\nBritish planes and their crews as\nbeing on- a par with the best in\nthe Strategic Air Command. Their\nnavigational and radar equipment,\na British trademark since the early\ndays of aviation, has - kept. pace\nwith modern-day developments.\nOnly a few points generally separate winning crews from the rest\nof the field.\nTop prize is a trophy for the\nbest over-all wing. Other awards\nwill go to wings and individual\ncrews scoring highest in bombing,\nnavigation and reconnaissance.\nRocket Signals\nReceived After\nNew Tariff Plan\nRouses Comment\nOTTAWA (CP)-Canada plans\nt6 undertake new tariff negotia-.\ntions at Geneva on a. group of\nsteel products, pipes and tubes\nand zinc items, Finance Minister\nFleming informed' the Commons\nFrMa;.\nHis announcement drew criticism from Liberal and CCF\nmembers.\nJames Sinclair, former Liberal\nfisheries minister, said tariff\nboosts would make it more difficult for Britain to sell such\nitems in Canada. How could the\ngovernment reconcile this with\nthe suggestions of Prime Minister Diefenbaker that he would\nlike to divert 15 per cent of Canada's - imports from the United\n3t\".e's to Britain?\nTo this, Mr. Fleming replied\nthat the steel tariff review had\nbeen ordered by the previous Liberal administration.\n\"Why was this reference directed to the (tariff) board in the\nfirst place? To waste the board's\ntime?\"\nMr. Sinclair replied that references to the, tariff board are\nmade in accordance with the law\nbut there is no, need for the government to accept the board's\nrecommendations.\nCCF Leader Coldwell said tariff\nincreases at this time would be\n\"against the public interest.\"\nThe whole matter should be discussed in the House because he\nwould1 infer from Mr. Fleming's\nstatements that if negotiations at\nGeneva are successfully .'concluded, the Progressive Conservative administration would be\nprepared to implement tariff\nboosts.\nMr. Fleming said that there\nmay be as many tariff decreases\nas increases negotiated at Geneva' under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nMontreal \u2014 Jean-Marie Morin,\n43, well-known education writer\nfor'the Montreal Daily la Presse,\nof a cerebral hemmorrhage.\nLondon, Ont. \u2014 Watson H. Porter, 67, managing editor of. the\nFarmer's Advocate and Canadian\nCountryman, and outstanding conservationist, of afieart attack.\nToronto \u2014 Benjamin Conacher,\n90,' father of the famed athletes\nRoy, Charlie and the late Lionel\n(Big Train) Conacher, of a cerebral hemorrhage.\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Scientists received radiodata from\nProject Far Side's high flying\nrocket for 75 minutes* after it\nwhooshed up from its balloon\nplatform, the project director reports.\nDr. Morton Alperin told reporters Thursday night that the instrument package in the rocket\nreached a speed of 17,000 miles\nan hour, but burned up when it\nre-entered denser atmosphere..\nHe declined to tell the exact\naltitude reached by the rocket.\nThe U.S. Air Force announced\nWednesday that two experimental Far Side rockets\u2014designed to\nreach up to 4,000 miles \u2014 had\nbeen successful.'\nBALLOON  LAUNCHING\nThe rockets were launched\nfrom balloons 100,000 feet over\nEniwetok Island.\nThe 3^-pound instrument pack:\nage sent back information on cosmic radiation and magnetic field\nvariations, Dr. Alperin said.\nThe four-stage rocket, using\nsolid pfopellant fuel, was in vertical position when fired. The\nrocket 'had a corkscrew spin' of\n\"ive revnlutions a second, he said.\nDr. Alperin said that \"with\nwhat < we have learned I would\nlike to redesign the. rocket vehicle and the balloon\" for possible future operations.\n\"In my opinion,\" he said, \"if\nthe right people thought it could\nbe done we could send a rocket\nto the moon within a year.\" The\n\"right people,\" he said, are high\ngovernment officials.\nHansel. Seeks\nInformation\nOn National Flag\nOTTAWA (CP)-The controversial question of a distinctive national flag for Canada has been\nplaced before the new parliament\nby Rev. E. G. Hansell, <SC\u2014Macleod).\nMr. Hansell has placed a question on the Commons order paper\nasking whether the new Conservative government has considered\nthe recommendation of a Commons-Senate committee in 1946\non a design for a Canadian flag.\nIf there has been consideration,\nMr. Hansell wants to know\nwhether the government, plans\nlegislation to implement the committee's recommendation.\nThe 1946 committee studied 2,-\n695 flag designs. It recommended\na red ensign, with the Canadian\ncoat-of-arms being replaced by a\ngold maple leaf in a bordered\nbackground of white.\nThe. report of the committee\nwas never moved for adoption in\neither the Commons or Senate.\nCanada at present has no official national flag. However, an\norder-in-council passed in 1945\nauthorized that the Canadian Red\nEnsign be flown on public buildings when a distinctive Canadian,\nflag was required. The ensign\nhas the Canadian coat-of-arms in\nthe fly and the Union Jack in the\nmasthead corger.\nIn 1934 Parliament also passed\nlegislation authorizing Canadian\nmerchant ships to fly the Red Ensign. Wherever Canada is represented at international conferences the Red Ensign is flown\nalongside flags of other nations.\nThinks of New\nWay To Draw\nU.S. Tourists\n' OTTAWA (CP) - A Winnipeg\nradio station owner' Friday suggested that the Canadian Tourist\nAssociation offer 99-year leases\non one-acre plots of Canadian\nland' through radio and television\ncontests in the United States.\nJack Blick, a CTA director and\nowner of CJOB in Winnipeg,\nbacked up his suggestion at the\nCTA convention here with an offer of 4,000 acres of land in Manitoba in good hunting and fishing\nareas.\nMr. Blick said he had been assured by the Manitoba government that the land would, be\nmade available for 2,000 U.S.' TV\nand radio stations to award as\ntax-free prizes to contest-program\ncould be of any type as long as\nCanada was promoted in some\nway.\n\"Canada would get\" $2,000,000\nworth of advertising,\" Mr. Blick\ntold delegates.\nMr. Blick said he was asking\nthe CTA to take over the project\nbecause he wanted it to be a national scheme. Other provinces\nalso could donate land and enter\nthe plan.\nHe said the Manitoba government was prepared to go ahead\nwith the project on its own if\nother. provinces did not want toi\nenter.   '.;.\u25a0<\u25a0\nThousands of visitors would\nflock to Manitoba to see their\nwinnings and would bring tourist\nmoney with them, he said.\nErnie Saron of Calgary earlier\n.suggested Canada sponsor a television program in the U.S. The\nprogram would be a quiz on Canada with winners getting paid\nvacations in this country.\nNon-Operating\nRail Workers\nTo Submit Terms\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canada's\n140,000 nonoperating railway employees are to submit new collective agreement demands by Nov.\n12, it was disclosed Friday.\nChairman Frank Hall of the\njoint negotiating committee of 14\nunions said the .committee will\nmeet here next Tuesday to put\nthe demands in writing. A three-\nday meeting earlier decided that\n\"substantial\" wage increases will\nbe sought, plus improved vacations, an eighth statutory holiday\nand a review of a contributory\nhealth-welfare plan begun last\nJan. 1.\nMr. Hall said, the details probably will be made public \"about\n,the same time\" they are submitted to the railways. ',\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nSimpsons Ltd. YlVz cents Dec.\n16, record Nov. 15. \u201e\nPato Consolidated Gold Dredging Ltd. 10 cents Nov. 22, record\nNov. 1.\nWalter M. Lowney Co. Ltd. 25\ncents Jan. 15, record Dec. 16;-\nModern Containers Ltd. class A\n25 cents Jan. 2, record Dec. 20.\nCochenour Williams Gold Mines\nLtd. five cents Nov. 29, record\nNov. 13.\nTHE    .\nI ';\u25a0'\u25a0.>  -J\nSuit Buy\nOF THE YEAR\nFREE\nEXTRA PANTS\nFor a limited time only W. R.\nJOHNSTON have put their entire range of samples on sale.\nNow is your chance to get that\nnew suit made to measure for\nChristmas with an Extra Pair\nof Pants FREE.\n' EMORY'S LTD.\n\"THE MAN'S- STORE\"\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - The stock\nmarket settled back gently in a\nleisurely adjustment to the wild\ndownward and upward swings of\nprior sessions this week.\nModerate losses taken by leading stocks put the average back\nto exactly where it closed last\nFriday.\nVolume dwindled to an about-\naverage 2,400,000 shares compared\nwith 4,030,000 Thursday,\nClosing prices were well above\ntheir lows of the day.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks dipped 50 cents to\n$156.70. with the industrials down\n90 cents, the rails down 80 cents\nand the utilities unchanged,\nDistillers-Seagrams 'and Dome\nMines, each up %, were among\nthe few Canadian gainers on the\nNew York Exchange. Lower were\nMclntyre Porcupine, off 1 on 300\nshares; Hudson Bay Mining, %\nand Aluminium' Ltd., %,\nAmong Canadian issues on the\nAmerican exchange Sapphire Petroleums resisted the downward\ntrend with a gain of 1-16 on 21,700\nshares. Jupiter Oils lost 5-16 on\n4800 shares and Preston East Dome\nwas down V_.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket drifted lower amid the\nslowest trading in eight sessions.\nProfit-taking was the main reason\nbehind the narrow decline.\nThe western oil index lost 114\nGomulka Would\nOust Corrupted\nParty Officials\nWARSAW (Reuters) \u2014 Communist party chief Wladyj|aw Gomulka called for a purge of corrupted officials from the party in\na speech released here Friday.\nHe addressed a session of the\nPolish United Workers (Communist) party at a closed session).\nGomulka said the party, nura_\nbering 1,300,000, has gftfurx too\nbig and would be more fffective\nwith half that number provided\nthey were conscientious, '(bilitant\nCommunists. .       ,\nOne large group within \" tfte\nparty, he said, has joined' out of\nSelf-interest rather than devotion\nto communism.\nGomulka said newspapers have\nthe right to criticize t_e government, but that those who took ai\nanti-Socialist position since la:\nOctober had tried to undermine\nPoland's policy of friendship with\nRussia.\nGomulka said this effort, coming from some periodicals, must\nbe stopped. ;\npoints and industrials eased slightly more than IVi points. Golds and\nbase .metals each lost a bit more\nthan three-quarters of a point.\nTrading slowed down in the afternoon .as the number of bargain\nhunters, cashing in on their profits\nfrom Wednesday's big rise, diminished; Final volume was 2,716,000\nshares compared with 4,285,000\nThursday. '\nIndustrial losses ranged to nearly\ntwo points and most of the losen\nwere the issues which scored the\nmajor gains Wednesday.\nA few small gains appeared In\nthe western oil list late in the session but losses held a two-to-ona\nedge at the close.\nIndex losses: industrials 1.32 to\n401.85; golds .82 to 6.90; base\nmetals .81 to 149.11; western oils\n1.53 to 132.77.\nMONTREAL (CP) - A late-\nafternoon rally failed to push the\nMontreal and Canadian stock\nmarkets from the downside Friday\nand losses ranged to two points at\nthe close. Trading was light. '2\nTrans-Mountain finished wJBl >\nloss of 2 to 61. Great Lakes Paper\ndropped 2 to 31.\nMcColl Oil lost 1% at 5oy\u00bb, Canadian Bank of Commerce Vk at\n39Vi, Hudson Bay 1% at a new\nlow of _5'\/s and Imperial Oil at\n37%, Royal Bank at 58 and Industrial Acceptance at 23% each\nslipped i<4,\nInternational Petroleum gained\nWz at 37^ and Canadian Husky %\nat 12%.\nHigher priced oils were mixed.\nHome Oil B at 1514 gained % and\nPacific Petroleums' lost % at 20.\nPenny issues were mostly down.\nIndustrial volume was .66,50.\nshares; mines and oils 407,700:\nLAST\nDAY\nTODAY\nORIGINAL\n|\\v\/i:ii:;ial!EHWlffilf!f\n\u00ab BUYS TWICE AS MUC\n\"Rexall Pharmacy\"\nCity Drug\n(XtDcnM.MA.Lau. Se&uvifc&d (\n\\\nCANADA SAVINGS BONDS\nCanada's safest investment\nwith an average yield of 4.46%.\nDenominations $50, $100, $500,\n$1,000 and $5,000. (Individuals\nmay buy up to $10,000.) Can be\ncashed at full face value\nanytime plus accrued interest\nDominion Securities (oepn. Limited\n456 Granville St., Vancouver\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_10_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430185","@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":"1957-10-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-10-26 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\/1.0430185"}