{"@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":"2023-04-12","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1958-11-27","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0431014\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2014_______\n~T_. , -\t\n\u25a0  , -I  TIT .11     -I  .'\nNelson's Record\n2274\nTraffic Fatality-Free Days\nVol. 56\n303^\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Clear with a few\ncloudy periods. Continuing cold.\nLight winds. Low-high at Cranbrook 15 below and 15 above, Crescent Valley 0 and 25.\nNELSON. B. C, CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 27, 1958\nNot More Than lo Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 184\nRailways, Unions Sign Contract\nProvinces\nAppeal\nTurned Down\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-The federal cabinet has averted the\nthreatened Dec 1 general\nrail strike by letting the rail-\nway-'hmre a \"freight rate in- operating   railway   workers\ncrease  amounting  to  some Wednesday night signed ,a\nIN A NEW YORK police station. Patrolman Robert Crowley\nexamines a 20 mm. cannon, one of two seized In raid on a Bronx,\nN.Y., home. Crates bold some other weapons uncovered. Police,\nacting on a tip by Crowley, who was Investigating school children\nhaving live ammunition, raided home of Henry Barrett, 51, and\ndiscovered cache of arms ahd ammunition which they say was\nIntended for smuggling to the Illegal Irish Republican army.\nThree Acquitted\nBy Vernon jury\n; \/ .\nSam and Alex Konkin Still On\nTrial in Bomb Conspiracy Case\nVERNON (CP)\u2014Three of five men oh trial here on\nbomb conspiracy charges were acquitted Wednesday after\nMr. Justice Arthur Lord told the assize court jury \"there is\nno evidence on which you can convict.\"\nFreed were John Antifaeff, 24, John Nazaroff, 22, and\nGeorge Woykin, 21.\nStill on trial, charged with four\ncounts on conspiracy to mane an\nexplosive substance and io cause\nserious damage, and aiso charged\nwith being unlawfully nn possession ot an explosive substance are\nSam Konkin, 20, and his brother\nAlex, 26.\nWhen crown prosecutor John\nAikins Of Penticton conciuucu tne\ncrown's case early Weunesuay\nafternoon, aefenc? counsel harry\nDean and Patrick Hooa, botn ot\nVancouver, applied for dismissal\nof charges aeoiusc Antiiaeu, nazaroff and Woykin.\nThe crown prosecutor said he\ndiu not consent to the application,\nbut did, not actively oppose it,\nTurning to the Jury, Mr. Justice Lord said: \"1 instruct you\nto bring in a verdict of acquittal.\" The jurors agreed immediately and the three young men\nwalked out of the prisoners box,\nand into the public galleries as\nonlookers.\nEarlier, the crown's final witness, Cpl. G. G. van Dusen, with\nthe RCMP crime detection laboratory in Regina, testified that\npieces of wire found in a time\nbomb at a Vernon hotel and\npieces of wire found in the ashes\nof a stove at the Konkin home\nat Winfield' could have come\nfrom the same or a similar\nsource.\nHe also testified that two large\nfragments of metal found near\na blasted power pole near Armstrong in June were partly of galvanized pipe and that the threads\nstill visible on the fragments\ncould be the same as that on a\npiece of two-inch pipe purchased\nat Kelowna.\nCpl. van Dusen also gave evidence that a piece of metal found\nnear the scene of an explosion\non the Kettle Valley Railway\ntracks near McCulloch was once\na portion of a two-inch black pipe\ncap that screws into the end of\ntwo-inch pipe. \u201e  :\nUnder crossrexamination, Cpl.\nvan Dusen said it was not possible to make a positive identification on the wires or the pieces\nof pipe.\nWitnesses called for the defence before Tuesday's adjournment al! testified that the Konkins worked long hours at their\ntimber limit at Beaver Lake,\nabout 25 miles south of here.\nLogger Gordon Parker of\nOyama testified that during June\nthe Konkins worked at their logging operation from daylight until sometimes after dark.\nIt was in June that a rash of\nbombings and attempted bombings occurred in the Okanagan.\nAgreement\nWorth\n$60 Million\nBy ROBERT RICE\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nMONTREAL (CPj\u2014Railway\nofficials   and   union   negotiators for some 130,000 non-\n$60,000,000 a year.\nIt refused Wednesday to allow\nan appeal against a 17-per-c e n t\nincrease filed by eight provinces,\nthus giving the railways enough\nmoney to sign agreements with\nunions representing 130,000 non-\noperating employees.\nThe cabinet's decision was announced hy Acting Prime Minister Green five days from the\nstrike deadline, coupled with a\nwarning that this mav be the last\ntime the cabinet will permit a\nfreight rate boost in advance of\nthe railways actually signing an\nagreement.\nFEDERAL INVESTIGATION\nAt the same time he announced\nthat the federal government is\nlaunching an investigation into\nrailway problems generally.\nAn immediate objective would\nbe to remove \"discrimination\" in\nfreight rates in some parts of the\ncountry, one of the main complaints of the eight appealing\norovinces, all except Ontario and\nQuebec.\nThe acting prime minister.. also\nsaid in a statement that the federal cabinet does not intend to\noav for wage increases out of the\nfederal treasury, as had been\nsuggested by the provinces at\nhearings here on Monday.\n\"We do not intend to embark\nupon a policy of subsidizing wa^e.\nIncreases.\" Mr. Green said.\n\"There would he no end to dej\nmands.. on all governments' if\nsuch a policy were adopted.\"\nSERIOUS INEQUITIES\n\"It is, however, recognized by\nthe government that there are\nserious Inequities in the nresent\nfreight rate structure which have\nboth contributed to, and been aggravated by, the system of horizontal (percentage) rate increases ...\n\"Representatives of the provinces made it clear that their\nchief request is for a complete\nrevision of the freight rate structure.\n\"Obviously, this could not be\nundertaken in the circumstances\nof the present appeal , . .The\ninterim increases have accordingly been snowed, although this'\ntvne of freight rate increase' is\nnot in accord with' the government's long range plans.\"\nHEADED BY MINISTER\nA study is being undertaken;\nMr. Green said, to. work out\nmeasures of relief against freight\nrate inequities. For a start, a\ncabinet group would be headed\nby\" Veterans Minister A.J. Brooks\nNew Brunswick's representative\nin the cabinet.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canadian\ndollar up % at $1.03 13-32 in terms\nof U.S. funds; a week ago $1.03%\nPound sterling unchanged at $2.8(\n.13-32.\nShotgun Murder Trial\nOpens in Victoria\n16-Year-Old Boy in Prisoner's Dock\nExchanges Closed\nHoliday Dates\nTORONTO (CP) - The Tor-\nonto, Montreal and New York\nstock exchanges will be closed\nDec. 25 and 20 for Christmas and\nBoxing Day.\nThe Canadian exchanges will\nclose at noon Dec. 24 and reopen\nDec. 29. New York will be open\nall day Dec. 24.\nTOKYO, Thursday (Reuters) \u2014\nJapan abandoned a 2600-year-old\ntradition today when the imperial\nhousehold council approved the\nimperial household council approved the crown prince's betrothal to\nthe first commoner ever to marry\ninto the royal family.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014A slight, sallow-faced boy of 16, with long\nblond hair and sideburns, went\non trial in assize court Tuesday\nfor the shotgun murder of his\nfoster father.\nMatthew John Till is accused\nof slaying Charles F. Mudge, 38,\nat their Metchosin home Sept. 13,\nThe courtroom gallery was\njammed with spectators \u2014 mostly\nwomen.   The   accused's   mother,\nMrs. Marie Ann Till, 48, a Ganges\ncleaning-woman, was present all\nday. At the end of the session she\nchatted briefly with her son before\nhe was taken from the prisoner's\nbox.\nTill, who had been living with\nthe Mudges for about four months,\nwas captured on the Port Renfrew\nroad the day after the slaying.\nAlso slain on the Saturday afternoon of horror in the Sylvan rural\ndistrict was 71-year-old John Bland,\nMudge's father-in-law.\nCharles and Phyllis Mudge took\nthe young government ward into\ntheir home early last May. And\nhe soon was like a member of the\nfamily, going hunting and fishing\nwith his foster father and working\naround the home, neighbors testi-\nfield.\nThe killings first came to light\nwhen Mrs. Phyllis Mudge, badly\nbeaten, stumbled into the living\nroom of her next-door neighbors,\nMr. and Mrs. William Neil, the\nnight of Sept. 13.\nTuesday in court the Nells and\nMrs. Joan Harvie, Mrs. Neil's sister-in-law who was-visiting her at\nthe time, told how they heard a\nnoise\u2014\"a kind of child's babbling\"\n\u2014at the door and what they saw\nwhen Mr. Neil opened the door.\nThey said a woman, wearing\nonly a coat and shoes, stumbled in.\nAlthough they all knew Mrs. Phyllis Mudge, they didn't recognize\nher until she spoke.     ,   .\n\"Johnny's gone crazy and shot\nChuck and my Dad, she said. \"Put\nthe li\"hts out and lock the door\n. . . He's got a gun . . . get the\npolice.\"\nThe bloody shambles that was\nthe Mudge home at 3460 Metcoshin\nRoad was recreated by Const. Gordon S. Irvine of the RCMP.\nHis description of the gory state\nnf .both the basement and the main\nfloor of the neat little bungalow\nwas bolstered'bv approximately 30\noolice photographs. Pictured also\nwas the bodv of Mudge, shown\nMiere he wasv found in a pool of\nblood on the basement floor; also\nthat of Mr. Brand, slain while sitting in the den.\nThe trial resumes today at 11\na.m. in the Victoria courthouse.\nPresiding is Mr, Justice J. G.\nRuttan. Lloyd McKenzie is crown\ncounsel\nnew two-year master contract\nworth about $60,000,000 : and\nthe unions promptly withdrew\ntheir threat of a rail strike next\nMonday.\nWith the master contract signed,\nthe officials sat down for an hour-\nlong task of signing a \"multitude\nof copies\" needed for the: 15\nunions, .six railways and one railway express agency.\nThe new contract, retroactive\nto Jan. 1, 1958, provides for wage\nincreases of about 14 cents an\nhour plus other benefits for the\nnon-operating workers.\nJustTiefore the negotiators began signing the agreements,\nannounced that the strike call\nunion spokesman Frank H. Hall\nwould be rescinded \"sometime\ntonight.\"\nSTRIKE IS OFF , - \u25a0\u25a0\n\"The strike is off,\" he said.\n\"All we have to do is notify our\nmembers.\"\nAgreement to call off the strike\ncame 514 hours after the federal\ncabinet in Ottfjjja decided\nagainst upsetting a i7-per-cent\nincrease in railway\" freight rates\nauthorized by the Board of\nTransport Commissioners.\nThe railways had sought the\nfreight rate boost-actually they\nwanted 19 per cent\u2014to cover the\ncost of settling with the non-op\nunions and extending the same\ncompensation to; some .33,000\nother 'railway worms-.' ' ;-i\nTOTALS $8?jWO,000 \"*'\u2022' '     \", \"\nThe total cost was estimated\nby the railways, at $67,800,000-\n$41,500,000 for the CNR and $26,-\n300,000 for the CPR:\nA few minor points Involved in\ntlie new non-op agreement are to\nbe discussed later, but the major\nwage and holiday issues were\nsettled without difficulty.       \u2022\n\"There are one or two points\nremaining for clarification.. said\nCNR -Vice-President W. T. Wilson. \"But they are minor.\nMr. Wilson also said the railways will be in touch immediately with representatives of\nother railway unions who have\nwage disputes oending.\nTHREE OTHER UNIONS\nThree other unions\u2014representing \"locomotive firemen, engineers and \u25a0\u2022' railway. ^traittmen-haVe\ncontract negotiations in abeyance\nwith the railways. They had\nsought wage increases ranging\nfrom 18 per cent to 25 pet cent,\nbut had suspended their contract\ntalks until the non-op dispute had\nbeen settled.\nThe new npn-op agreement provides for two retroactive wage\nincreases, a four per cent hourly\nboost going back to Jan. ,1, plus\na three per cent hike as of Sept.\nThe contract is to expire Dec.\n31. 1959, which faces the railways\nwith the possibility of another\nround of wage demands about a\nyear from now.\nFREIGHTER FREED\nHAMILTON, Bermuda (CP) -\nThe Swedish freighter Ivan Gor-\nthon, stranded on the reefs about\nfive miles northeast \"of Bermuda\nsince early Tuesday, was refloated\nWednesday. She came off the reefs\nunder her own power at high tide\nafter attempts by tugs to pull her\noff earlier had failed.\nThe freighter was bound from\nLiverpool to Bermuda, Nassau and\nHavana.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGAY   BLADE\nBISON BACK\nIN  CAPTIVITY\nCHESTER, England (Reuters) \u2014 A romantic bison\ncalled Ferdinand escaped from\nChester zoo and spent the night\nin a field nearby with 42 Ayrshire cows.\nHe seemed to have enjoyed\nhis night of freedom. So, apparently, did three of the cows\nbecause they followed him to\nthe wagon that took Ferdinand\nback to the zoo.\nNow, however, farmer J. W.\nCheers, owner of the cows, and\nzoo officials were involved in\na delicate situation:\nCheers was quoted as saying\nMohday that if any calves with\na bison's hump are born he will\ntake legal action.'\n\u25a0 He added; \"We don't know\nhow friendly the bison was \u2014\nbut at least two cows are in\ncalf.\n\"We shall not know if the\nbison was responsible until\nthey calve in J ,pe.\"        .\nSaid a zoo official: \"The poor\nbison looked the picture of happiness surrounded by the cows,\nbut he came quietly. . . . and\nhas settled down hi captivity.\"\niiMiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBrawl\nGreets\nBennett\nVICTORIA (CP) - Five hundred\ncollege students threw a riotous\nbrawl Wednesday to greet Premier\nBennett in defence of government\npower policies.\nIt war the biggest demonstration\nso far since What is becoming\nknown as the \"Briggs controversy'\"\nfirst broke two weeks ago.\nThe premier, making, a special\nvisjt to Victoria College for a noon\nspeech at the students' request,\nwas greeted with placards, hisses\nand boos.\nHis effigy was hanged from a\nbalcony of the college auditorium\nand lunch bags,, some not empty,\nwere thrown from the balcony to\nthe main floor.\nThere was a banner on the chest\nof the effigy: \"Hang down your\nhead, Bennett.\"\nPREMIER HECKLED\nThe students heckled the premier and -gave three cheers for\nHr Lee Briggs, former general\nmanager of the British Columbia\nPower Commission whose criticism of government financing and\npower policies resulted in his dismissal. ,\nFew of the students seem to\nhave come armed with questions\nbased on material provided by\nMr. Briggs on Tuesday during a\nsimilar speech to the college students. ,\nThe premier kept smiling most\nof the time. At one point, his\nvoice gave way under strain from\na cold and Attorney-General Robert Bonner took over.\nThe students booed and hissed\nhim from the speakers' dais when\nhe attempted to read a list of prepared questions and answers which\nthe premier said had been collected from newspaper queries.\nJet Bomber\nBurns\nA-V\/eapon Aboard,\nBut No Harmful\nNuclear Radiation\nLAKE CHARLES, La. (AP) -\nThe commander of a B-47\nbomber carrying a nuclear\nweapon was killed Wednesday\nand the navigator Injured when\nan explosion started a fire on\nthe aircraft.\nOfficials at nearby Chcnnault\nAir Force Base did not identify\nthe men.\nWASHINGTON (AP) - A U.S.\nAir Force B-47 medium jet bomber\nburned at Chennault Air Force\nBase, La., Wednesday with a nuclear weapon aboard.\nThe air force, announcing that\nthe plane carried an atomic\nweapon, added: \"There was no\ndanger of a nuclear explosion and\nno harmful nuclear radiation is\npresent.\" .\nThe brief air force statement\nsaid that \"well established procedures for handling such mishaps\nwere carried out as a matter of\nroutine.\"\nPERSONNEL EVACUATED\nAll persons on the base, except\nthose actively engaged in fighting\nthe fire, were ordered from the\narea, the air force said.\nThe medium bomber, one of the\naircraft of the Strategic Air Command, burned while parked on the\nflight lirie.\nThe fire apparently started, the\nair lorce said, when a racket assist\ntakeoff battle exploded.\nOther planes in the area were\nmoved as a precautionary measure\nagainst the possibility of fuel explosion.\nFire fighting units brought the\nblaze under control after the alert\nhad been sounded to clear the\narea.\nOfficials at the base called off\nthe alert and lifted roadblocks\nafter the fire was extinguished.\nTORONTO (CP) - The Cana\ndian Red Cross announced its 1959\nnational campaign objective will\nbe $6,128,630.\nC. D. Shepard of Ottawa,\ntional campaign chairman, said\nWednesday the figure was the lowest campaign objective since 1956\nand is a decrease of $103,469 compared with last year's target.\nProvincial   objectives   include\nBritish Columbia, $690,000.\nSays Adenauer\nIn Favor 01\n\"Tough Line\"\nBAD KREUZNACH, West Germany (Reuters) \u2014 Konrad Adenauer and Charles de Gaulle agreed\nWednesday on the importance Of\nkeeping the West in .Berlin.\nA communique outlining their\nstand was issued after the West\nGerman chancellor and the French\npremier conferred about the divided city and- Other world problems\nat this small resort town.\nDe Gaulle flew home and Adenauer headed, back to Bonn following the one-day session.\nTQUGH LINE-FAVORED \u00ab\nAdenauer was reported to have\ntold'de Gaulle that WesF Germany favors a \"tough line\" on\nBerlin in the light of the Soviet\npropaganda campaign urging an\nend to its four-power rule. He said\nthat the Bonn government hoped\nthe Western Big Three would refuse to accept any transfer of\nauthority from the Russians to\nCommunist East Germany, conference sources said.\nA communique issued after the\ntalks said only that de Gaulle and\nAdenauer \u2014 who last met Sept. 14\nin France \u2014 examined Berlin's\nsituation and confirmed the importance they attached to this\nproblem.\nMEET IN BERLIN\n\u25a0 BERLIN (Reuters) \u2014 Soviet\nForeign Minister Andrei Gromyko\nhas had talks in East Berlin with\nEast German Premier Otto Grotewohl, the official East German\nradio announced today.\nThe broadcast gave no indication\nwhen the talks took place.\nThe surprise news of Gromyko's\ntrip to East Berlin follows the\nrecent Soviet proposal to end the\nfour - power rule of Berlin.\nInquest Waived.\nHearing to Open\nLeonard E. Matthews, 31, was charged with murder\nWednesday in connection with Monday night's shotgun\nslaying iii Nelson of George James Alexandria Crate, 43.\nChief of Police Robert Harshaw said the decision to\ncharge Matthews was made after completion of investigation by police. Matthews was arrested an Baker Street about\nnoon and is being held in cus\ntody,\nChief Harshaw said Matthews\nwould appear in city police court\nthis morning, but would be remanded to sometime next week\nfor the preliminary hearing.\nPermission to waive the coroner's inquest, scheduled to be\ncompleted Saturday afternoon, was\ngiven by Attorney-General Robert\nW. Bonner. Originally, it had been\nexpected no action, if any, would\nbe taken until the coroner's jury\ngave its verdict, but police decided\nto act after completing interviews\nwith a number of Nelsonites who\nwere in the vicinity when Crate\ndied.\nCrate slumped to the snow just\na few feet within the city limits\nunder a streetlight at the corner\nof Pine and Morgan Streets. Just\nSreviously, passersby said the:\neard two men shouting at eacl.\nother as they came down the hill\ntowards the intersection.\nNearby is the two-storey home\nat 206 Morgan Street in which both\nfamilies lived. The Matthews family lived in the lower storey and\nthe Crate family above.\nMatthews, a welder, had worked\nfor several Nelson garages. For the\npast 10 days he had been employed\nby Sinnerud Truck and Tractor\nLtd. A former prairie boy, he had\nlived in Nelson for some years,\nreceiving most of his schooling\nhere. His parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Matthews, were operators\nof the Strathcona Hotel in which\nsix people lost their lives when\nit was destroyed by fire In May,\n1955.\nCrate, a mechanic, was a native\nof North Portal, Sask;, and had\nlived in British Columbia for about\nsix years. He had worked in various parts of the province, including Terrace, the Coast, Nelson and\nSalmo.\nHe was struck In the head by\nthe shotgun blast. The coroner's\ninquest opened Tuesday morning,\nwhen the body was viewed, and\nwas to have continued Saturday\nafternoon. f\nThird Candidate\nIn Vancouver\nMayoralty Race\nVANCOUVER (CP.) - A third\ncandidate threw' his hat into the\nmayoralty - ring| shortly. \u25a0 .before\nnominations' iiiosid Wednesday for\nVancouver's Dec. 10 elections.\nArchie Proctor, 46, who was unsuccessful in attempts in 1952 and\n1954 to gain the mayoralty after\nserving as alderman from 1948 to\n1951, is running as an independent.\nHe will be opposed by Mayor Fred\nHume, seeking re-election with\nsupport of the Civic Non-Partisan\nAssociation, and Civic Voters Association candidate Tom Alsbury.\nThirteen candidates are seeking\nfive two-year aldermanic terms\nand four are after the one-year\nterm left by Mr. Alsbury when he\nresigned from council to contest\nthe mayoralty.\nTen candidates filed papers for\nfour vacancies on the parks board\nwhile there are 10 contestants for\nfive two-year school board terms\nand two candidates for a one-year\nterm.\nAlaska Voles\nDemocrat\nJUNEAU, Alaska (AP)-Denv\nocrats made, a clean sweep Wednesday of every major national\nand state race In Alaska's first\nelection aa the 49th state.\nThey captured the two U.S.\nSenate seats, the single congrea-\ntional seat and the governorship.\nDemocrats ; completed their\nmassive landslide of Tuesday's\nelection by gaining overwhelming control of the 60-member\nfirst Alaska state legislature.\nFormer Governor Ernest Gn_\nenlng eliminated the1 Republicans' last chance te prevent a\nshutout when he took an insurmountable lead over ex-governor\nMike Stepovich In the battle for\none of the U.S. Senate seats.\nGOVERNOR 13 TEARS\n. The 71-year-old Gruening, who\nserved as Alaska's appointive\ngovernor more than 13 years, had\ntrailed Stepovich by 5700 vote*\nIn Alaska's statedhood referendum in August. He was governor\nfrom 1939 to 1953.\nReturns still were coming ta\nfrom Alaska's two largest cities.\nAnchorage and Fairbanks, and\nfrom the far western regions' \u2014\nbut the new tabulations only con?\nfirmed. as massive Democratio\nsweep.\nB.C. Commission Not Pledged\nTo Buy Peace River Power\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A. E.\n(Dal) Grauer, president of the British1 Columbia POwer Corporation,\nsays neither the corporation nor\nits subsidiaries have pledged to\nbuy energy from the Peace River\nDevelopment Company.\n\"The utility company remains\nfree to meet its needs from the\ncheapest possible source,\" he said\nTuesday in the corporation's letter\nto stockholders.\nMr. Grauer said \"a year or so\nmore of detailed engineering remains to be done\" before firm\nconclusions can be reached on the\nfeasibility of developing power\nfrom the Peace River.\nHe predicted B.C. Electric's development at Bridge River and the\ncontracting for a firm supply of\nnatural gas for the Burrard thermal plant will, on the basis of a\n10 per cent growth in demand,\nmeet additional requirements  of\nthe lower mainland and southern\nVancouver Island \"through to the\nmid-1960s\".\n\"However,\" he said, \"you corporation cannot wait until then to\ndecide how the growing demands\nafter that time are to be met.\"\nReferring to a proposal to develop power on the Columbia\nRiver, Mr. Grauer said the situation is \"complicated\" and hopes of\ngetting energy from this source\nby the early 1960s \"proved illusory\".\nBecause \"there is no telling how\nlong the solution of these various\n(Columbia. River) problems will\ntake . . . only the Peace River''(is)\navailable for engineering study\nnow ...\"\nIf the Peace River project is\neconomically feasible, he said,\nconstruction can proceed to have\npower available when it is needed\nin the mid-1960s.\nAnd in This Corner ...\nOSLO (AP)\u2014The cab driver didn't believe the old lady when\nshe told him he was getting a $4000 tip for being \"extremely helpful, polite and cheerful.\"\nBut Eilert Rognerud, 46, now has the legal documents making\nhim owner of an acre of mountain resort property, a good cottage\nand outbuildings.\nRognerud made four trips with his 70-year-old fare from the\ncentre of Lillestroem, near Oslo, to the outskirts of the town.\nOn ihe last trip she paid him in advance for a trip to a mountain\nregion the next day. When they got there, she showed him the\nproperty and said it was his.\nIt took the local sheriff to convince Rognerud the property\nreally was his.\nMIDLAND, Tex. (AP)\u2014Kiwanis Club President Phil Jonsson\narose at an annual banquet Tuesday night to present awards to\nmembers with perfect attendance records for the year.\nThe first five members he named were absent.\nHUGE RADAR antennae mounted inside\nthese airships make them airborne radar stations\nfor the Arctic early warning lines. Now ready fit\nduty, they are the newest and largest of the U.S.\nnavy's non-rigid airships. They have completed\ncheck-outs at Akron, Ohio.\nJACKSONVILLE BEACH, Fla. (AP)-Sailors were mightily\nImpressed when pretty, dark-haired Linda did a snake dance in a\nnight club here.\nThat is, they were until they compared notes and found that\nanyone who had a date with Linda woke up with a lump on his\nhead.\nSo police took into custody Linda and Mike Fustanio and said\nthey admitted Linda lured sailors to a dark spot to rob them and\nthat Fustanio did the slugging. .        ....\nThey put Fustanio in the men's section of the jail and Linda in\nwith the girls\u2014until Fustanio told police, \"Linda should be in with\nthe boys.\nThe police blotter was corrected to read: Robert Donahue, 30,\nno address: business: Female impersonator.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\nThe Best-Seller That Electrified 7 Million Readers!\nTHI\nF AlMFlWCUrFROBERrMN-RAYMONDMASSEY\nTONIGHT THRU SAT Complete Shows 7:00 - 9:20\nCIVIC\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\nBoris Karloff, Bev. Tyler\nCo-Feature;\n\"PHARAOH'S CURSE\"\n(ADULT)\nCity Old-Timer\nW.J.Brodie Dies\nWilliam James Brodie. 85, an\nold-timer of Nelson, died In Kootenay Lake General Hospital Wed\nnesday night.\nBorn in Cornwall; Ont, he came\nto Nelson in 1896 and worked as\nteamster for district mines for\naeveral years. From 1921 to 1943\nhe was employed, by the city of\nNelson in various capacities.\nHe had been in retirement since\n19\u00ab. '\nHe li lurvived by his wife, Hie\nformer Henrietta Lane; four\ndaughters, Mrs. Isobelle Smith of\nNelson, Mrs. Thomasie Szabolcsi\nof Duncan, Mrs. Esther Waller of\nCreston and Mrs. Mary-Dey Dudas\nof Vancouver, one sister, Mrs. Ida\nMcGregor of Carwright, Man., and\n12 grandchildren.\nHILLARY YORK\nKINNAIRD\nSOCRED HEAD\nTRAIL\u2014At the annual meeting\nand election of officers of the Kinnaird Social Credit group, Hillary\nYork was re-elected president.\nHerb Bruch, MLA for Esquimau.\nDon Brothers, Social Credit candidate, and Walter House from Nanaimo attended.\nMr. Bruch discussed government\npolicies and programs and explain\ned the actions taken regarding\nlabor and compensation legislation\nHe emphasized that while there\nhas been much criticism there had\nbeen few concrete suggestions, one\nof the few exceptions being from\nthe mine-mill union. Some of their\nrecommendations have been implemented and others are still under\nconsideration.\n\"We don't mind criticism,\" said\nMr. Bruch, \"but we like to have\nconstructive criticism. We have\nconsistently asked for suggestions\nand cooperation from the labor\nmovement. If this is forthcoming,\nfurther beneficial legislation to the\nworking men and women of this\nprovince will be possible.\"\nArrangements were completed\nby the group for a telephone committee, scrutineers and transportation for election day.        \t\nRegional Planning Board Given\nBacking by District Communities\nTRAIL \u2014 Thirty representatives\nfrom West Kootenay communities\nmeeting in Trail city council chambers voted unanimously to adopt\nin principle the formation of regional planning board and to. set\nup a fact finding committee. Civic\nofficials from Trail, Rossland,\nKinnaird, Castlegar, Warfield, Tadanac, Nelson, Fruitvale and Montrose attended the meeting.\nAid. F. E. DeVito, representing\nTrail and district, is to he chairman of the fact finding committee.\nAid. B. C. Affleck was appointed\nto represent the Nelson area; R.\nSeminar To\nBe Experiment\nFor Province\n\"Living ln\" will be one of the\nfeatures of the Nelson School of\nFine Arts seminar to be held at\nthe Hume Hotel this weekend.\nThe idea behind this type of seminar is to permit the student to become acquainted with the instructors, and talk over any of the points\nthat are brought up. During each\nsession, rhe chief lecturer will talk\non his particular subject, followed\nby' a linking of the subject with\nthe other arts by the additional\nlecturers and a discussion by the\nstudents! and lecturers.\nThis is an experiment on the part\nof the Extension Department of\nthe University of British Columbia\nto determine whether this type of\ninstruction will be suitable for use\nin other parts of the province.\nSalmo Seeks\nLibrary Books\nSALMO \u2014 Salmo ls going ahead\nwith its plans to start a community library.\nArrangements for an immediate\ndrive for memberships and donations of books were made Wednesday at a meeting in the Legion\nhall, called by the Ladies' Auxiliary to Salmo branch of the Canadian Legion apd attended by 17\npersons representing nearly all the\norganizations in Salmo.\nA temporary board was nomin\nated consisting of R. F. Mattson\nMrs. Carl Gradine, Mrs. Fred\nMiddleton, Charles Freeman, John\nHolden and Mrs. William Partridge, to act until a permanent\nboard in elected in January.\n\"Prospects for a library look\nVery good,\" Mr. Mattson said.\nBesides books received in the\ndrive, books will also be received\non loan from Victoria.\nAccording to plans made to date,\nthe library will be open on Tuesdays from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. and\nFridays from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. in\nthe Legion hall basement.\nMorny\nToilet Soaps\nFrench Fern\u2014June Roses\nSandal Wood\nLily of the Valley\n(Boxed for Gifting)\n85c to $2.00\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.,    Phone 1203\nMANY ATTEND\nLINDSTROM RITES\nThere was a large attendance\nat the funeral service in- Salmo\nKnights of Pythias hall Wednesday\nafternoon for Edward Lindstrom of\nthe Pend d'Oreille, who died at\nthe age of 77.\nRev. James Davenport of Fruitvale officiated. \"Lead, Kindly\nLight\" and \"Abide With Me\" were\nsung, with Mrs. W. Milburn as organist.\nPallbearers were Douglas Gibbon, Archie Gray, James Fraser,\nW. Wilde, Bernard Feeney and W.\nMcLaughlin.\nGraveside services at Salmo\ncemetery where interment took\nplace were conducted by Salmo\nlodge, Knights of Pythias, of which\nMr. Lindstrom was a member. Officiating were acting chancellor\ncommander M. J. Bush, vice-chancellor M. Smith and prelate R. E.\nDilling.\nMINING WAS THE TALK of the annual. dinner meeting of the Chamber oi\nMines of Eastern B.C. Those engaged in conversation hero are J. E. Merrett, inspector\noi mines at Nelson; W. Roy Hunter, and E. W. Florendine, secretary. The Chamber is\nasking the provincial government to consider establishing a mining school in Nelson,\nmodelled on the Ontario School of Mines at Haileybury.\n,  \u2014Daily News photo by Gerry Stevens.\nIndenture of 1793\nPrized by Nelson Man\nWhenever R. D. Pettet, 1324\nHendryx Street, hears of someone\ncompleting a trade apprenticeship,\nhe can't help thinking of earlier\ntimes.'\nMr. Pettet owns an indenture received by his great grandfather, a\nshipwright, when he became a fully\nfledged tradesman and freeman of\nthe City of Rochtester, England, in\n1793, after seven years' apprenticeship.\nThe document has been handed\ndown in the Pettet family, which\nproduced a long line of shipwrights\nand jailors.\nPrinted in Old English, the paper\nreads:\n\"The oath of every, freeman of\nthe City of Rochester. : t ,\nYe shall swear, that ye' shall\nbe true and faithful to our Sovereign Lord George the Third, and\nto the Heirs of our said Sovereign\nLord the King, obeysant and obedient shall ye be to the Mayor and\nMinisters of this City. The Franchises and Customs thereof ye\nshall maintain, and this City keep\nharmless in that that in you is. Ye\nshall be contributary to a. manner\nof Charges wthin this City, as\nSummons, Watches, Contributions,.\nLot and Scot, and to all other\nCharges, bearing your Part,-as a\nFreeman ought to do. Ye shall implead or sue no Freeman out of\nthis City, while ye have Right and\nLaw within the same City. Ye shall\ntake no Apprentice for any less\nTerm than for seven years, without\nFraud or Deceit; and within the\nfirst Years ye shall cause him to\nbe enrolled, or else pay such Fine\nas shall be reasonably imposed\nupon you for, omitting the same.\nAnd after his Term end, within\nconvenient Time (being required)\nye shall make him free of this\nCity, if he have well and truly\nserved you. Ye shall also keep the\nKing's Peace in your own Person,\nye shall know no Gatherings, Conventicles, nor Conspiracies made\nagainst the King's Peace, but ye\nshall warn the Mayor thereof, or\nlet it to your Power. All th\nPoints and Articles ye shall well\nand truly keep, according to the\nLaws and Customs of this City, to\nyour Power: So God you help. God\nsave the King.\n''William Goodall, shipwright,\nwas admitted to the Freedom of\nthe said City the third day of June,\n1793.\"   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nThe paper is signed: \"William\nSpice, Esquire, then Mayor.\"\nr\n;Join the thousands of stoker owners who prefer\nI KING ***** COAL\nklNEciAL<0\nWASH. D*-DRIED ..SIZED \u00ab  BLENDED \u2022 - OltED i\nISLAND STRIKE\nSTILL IN EFFECT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - MacMillan and Bloedel said Wednesday\nnight that what it termed \"the illegal strike\" is still in progress\nin three of its Vancouver Island\nlogging camps.\nCompany president Ralph Shaw\nsaid in a statement representatives\nof the firm and the International\nWoodworkers of America met Wednesday but \"the situation remains\nunchanged\".\n\u25a0 About 825 employees of MacMillan and Bloedel logging camps at\nFranklin, Sarita and Sproat Lake\nare involved in the work stoppages, result of management-union\ndisagreement over travelling time\nto work sites.\nThe company says the men\nshould report at marshalling yards\n45 minutes before the start of'their\nactual work day in order to allow\nfor travel time. The union says\ntravel should be on company time.\nMr. Shaw's statement said company officials advised union officers that the company was prepared to .resume operations on the\nsame terms as existed before the\nstoppage.\nThe company was also prepared\nto \"discuss and negotiate any\nproblem in accordance with the\ngrievance procedures contained in\nthe contract\".\nTwo Flyer\nTeams Tie;\nRoyals Win\nEDMONTON (CP) - Murray\nOliver's goal with eight seconds to\ngo in the third period gave Edmonton Flyers a 2-2 tie with the Spokane Flyers in a Western Hockey\nLeague game here Wednesday\nnight before 2607 fans. Neither\nteam could score in overtime.\nEdmonton increased its lead in\nthe Prairie Division to seven points\nover second-place Calgary Stampeders. Spokane moved into a\nthird-place tie with Victoria, two\npoints behind Vancouver Canucks,\nin the Coast Division.\nArt Hart and Al Johnson scored\nfor Spokane. Jerry Melnyk scored\na goal and assisted on Oliver's tally\nfor Edmonton.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\n(CP) \u2014 New Westminster Royals\nran roughshod over visiting Victoria Cougars to take a resounding\n11-3 victory in Western Hockey\nLeague action before 1200 fans here\nWednesday night.\nRoyals, who led 2-0 at the end\nof the first period, and 5-2 after\ntwo periods, went goal-crazy in the\nfinal frame to outscore the Cougars\n6-1.\nThe game was a personal\ntriumph for New Westminster's\nrookie centre, Wally Boyer,\nbrought in as a replacement when\nRoyals had four men on the injured Ust, The Toronto-owned player\nscored his first goal in pro hockey\nWednesday night, then added two\nmore for a. hat-trick.\nRoyals others goals came from\nrookie Gene Ubriaco, with two, Pat\nHannigan with two, Armie\nSchmautz, Art Jones, Gord Fasho-\nway and Hugh Barlow. Defence-\nman John Yanchuk scored his first\npoints of the season with two assists.\nVictoria's goals were scored by\nAl Nicholson, Dave Rimstad and\nDoug Anderson.\nRoyals poured 42 shots at Mar\neel Pelletier. The Cougar goalie\nwas trying for his third straight\nshutout. Rookie Don Campbell at\nthe other end stopped 19 ot 22\nshots.\nOnly four penalties, were called\nby referee Ross Valliere, all to\nCougars. New Westminster's power\nplay used the extra man to advantage, scoring a goal each time the\nCougars were short-handed.\nThe win was Royals' fourth\nstraight on home ice but did not\nlift them out of the league cellar.\nRoyals have 15 points, Spokane and\nVictoria 17 each, Vancouver 19 and\nleague leading Seattle 25.\nChildren Meet\nAfter Long Parting\nThen Say Farewell -\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Norma\nMerrill, 8, and her seven-year-old\nbrother Lenny, 7, met in a hospital corridor in their first reunion\nin 16 months. It was also a farewell.\nBoth children have been stricken\nwith a serious heart complaint.\nNorma has just completed surgery\nand a long convalescence. Lenny\nis to be admitted to the same hospital for similar surgery.\nThe children come from Decker\nLake, in north-central British Columbia. Their mother, Mrs. Lyman\nMerrill, arrived here Monday with\nLenny and learned the next day\nthat Norma would be going home\nwith her, \"almost back to normal,\"\naccording to hospital authorities,\nTh\u00bb children are suffering from\na hole in the heart called a ventricular septal defect. In addition,\nNorma has had treatment for a\ndisease of the hip joint\nREPLACING Dr. Donald\nSoule among lecturers at\nthe Nelson School of Fine\nArts winter seminar Friday,\nSaturday and Sunday will\nbe Miss Dorothy Somerset,\nabove, head of the department of theatre. University\nof B.C.\nThe Weather\nKiwanis Turkey\nShoot Offers\nNew Contests\nC. Maddock, Castlegar area; and\nAllan John, Beaver Valley and\nFruitvale.\nMayor L. A. Read, welcoming\nthe delegates, said that it was encouraging to see so much interest\nin the formation of a regional planning board, the study of which was\nstarted in a limited degree in 1952.\nThe city of Trail, he said, fully\nrealized the importance of planning.\nJ. W. Wilson and D. Naumann\nfrom Vancouver lower mainland\nregional planning board, addressed\nthe meeting.\nMr. Wilson said that all factors\nof regional planning and feasibility\nof forming a board should be considered. It was not a thing to be\nrushed into without complete study\nand contemplation of all angles.\nIn a lively question period a representative from a small community wanted to know what guarantee there was against being rail\nroaded into some course of action\nby a larger community. It was\nanswered that according to the\nMunicipal Act each locality in the\nregional planning area had but one\nvote regardless of population.\nA reply to a question as to\nwhether one locality could refuse\nto join the regional area was that\nthe government defined the boundary.\nIt was pointed out that a great\nnumber of localities were not incorporated, and such places should\nbe properly represented. It was a\nproblem which will be considered\nby the fact finding committee.\nOn what costs should be provided\nby provincial government through\ngrants, Mr. Wilson said in his own\ndomain they had tried to establish\nit at one-third. Mayor Read then\nposed the question as to who should\nshare the other two-thirds. According to the act it is shared on a\npopulation basis.\nNelson Kiwanis Club opens its\nannual three-day Turkey Jamboree\nat the Armory tonight and announced new rules will give all\ncontestants equal chances at bagging the popular birds.\nTurkeys will be awarded for the\nbest target of a group, and there\nwill also be a \"hidden target\", consisting of a dot on the back of the\ntarget. The shot that falls closest\nto this dot on each 'day will win\na turkey for the shooter. This\nchange in the rules has been made\nto give the less experienced shooters a chance to win.\nAlso included in the shoot will\nbe the McClelland Cup Competition. This competition will be open\nto any person who has won a turkey, and will consist of an annual\ncup and a replica which the winner\nkeeps. The marksmen will be given\none sighting shot, and five shots to\nbe added together for the highest\nscore. It is hoped that the cup competition will create interest and\nkeen competition.\nAlso included as part of the turkey shoot will be various games\nof skill.\nMagsaysay Award Winner\nWas Kootenay Visitor\nNELSON \\    13\nPenticton^......,. -,...  U\nVancouver   22\n25.   _\u2022!\nMl? -\nUnion Does\nNot Share\nGibson Views\nVANCOUVER-The Retail Food\nClerks Union does not share the\nviews of Douglas Gibson, union\nbusiness agent, when he charges\nthat supermarkets are \"sweat factories.\"\nGibson made the charge at a\nmeeting of the Vancouver Labor\nCouncil, but he was not sneaking\nfor the union, W. W. Wells, business manager of the union, stated.\n\"We are quite satisfied with the\nworking conditions and have been\ntreated well in wage negotiations,\"\nWells said. Contracts negotiated by\nhis organization had brought B.C.\nretail clerks higher wages in the\ngrocery business than anywhere\nelse in Canada, he said. He knew\nof no supermarket that \"is a sweat\nshop factory\" as outlined by Gibson.\n\u2022iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiinii\nChops Yule Trees\nAt   Record   Pace\nINVERMERE - A Christmas tree cutting record may\nhave been made by Kenneth\nTegart, Invermere, whose tabulations show that during the\npast 14 seasons he has cut\n1,400,000 trees.\nHe has cut some years for\nJ. Hoffert Ltd. and some years\nfor Kirk Ltd.\nIlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllll\nUrges Building\nOf Secondary\nIndustries\nTRAIL \u2014 The West Kootenay\nbranch of the Chemical Institute\nof Canada heard the president of\nthe institute, C. E. Carson, speak\non \"new horizons in Canada's\nchemical Industry,\" here Wednesday.\nHe also urged Canadian manu\nfacturers to exnort less ore, pulp\nand natural gas and Concentrate\non building secondary industries\nfor these materials. This would\nenable Canada to export finished\nproducts instead of raw material,\nand would keep industry more\ncompetitive.\nMembers of the Institute of Mining and Metallurgv, the Engineering Institute of Canada and the\nAssociation of Professional Engineers also attended the meeting.\nDr. Mary Rutnam, 85, of\nColombo, Ceylon, who has become the first woman to receive the Ramon Magsaysay\naward for public service, visited the Nelson area about five\nyears ago.\nThis was learned Wednesday\nfollowing publication by The\nDaily News of a Canadian\nPress story announcing that\nshe had received the award.\nThe former Mary Irwin, Dr.\nRutnam is a sister of the late\nDr. W. W. Irwin of Mirror\nLake. Her sister-in-law. Dr.\nMarion Irwin, is a present resident of the Kootenay Lake\ncommunity.\nThose who met Dr. Rutnam\non her visit to the district recall her as being a charming\nwoman having an extremely\nvital personality.\nShe joined a medical mission-\nat Jaffna in Northern Ceylon\nin 1896, founded Women's Institutes in Ceylon, worked as a\ndoctor in Colombo and became\nits first woman municipal councillor.\nThe award, named for the\nlate Ramon Magsaysay, president of the Philippines, is presented to persons in Asia\n\"exemplifying the highest type\nof democratic leadership.\"\ntmlMt, to tin^SZTm^\nSix Gold Medals\nTRAIL \u2014 Six gold medals for\nmen who have worked for the company for 40 years will be presented\nThursday night in annual presentations of the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company.\nTwo employees at Kimberley, L.\nC. O'Brien and G. Sie?a, and four\nat Trail, F. Casler, C. Stainton, G.\nTognotti and S. J. Meredith, will\nreceive the medals at the banquet.\nLater they will go to the hockey\ngame between Nelson and Trail.\nFifty of the 40-years service medals have been presented by Cominco to date.\nFormer  Cranbrook\nCouole  C^lflkrete\nGolden Wedding\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nWalter G. Fanning of Vernon, for\nmerly of Cranbrook, celebrated\ntheir golden wedding anniversary\nTuesday.\nMarried in Chicago Nov. 25,1908.\nthey came to Canada in 1912, settling in Cranbrook, their home for\nthe subsequent 34 years.\nIn June, 1946, Mr. and Mrs. Fanning went to Vernon to reside.\nThey have four children: a\ndaughter, Mrs. Charles J. McDowell of Vernon; and sons, Sqdn. Ldr.\nPaul of Trenton, Ont.; Walter, with\nthe RCMP in Cranbrook, and\nHarry of Trail; 14 grandchildren,\nand five great-grandchildren.\nTheir son-in-law and daughter,\nAid. and Mrs. C. J. McDowell of\nVernon Were \"at home\" honoring\nMr. and Mrs. Fanning Tuesday.\nHines Recognition\nGiven Nelson\nEstablishments\nTwo Nelson eating and lodgini\nestablishments have received national recognition in the 1959 editions of \"Duncan Hines Adventures\nin Good Eating\" and \"Lodging for\na Night.\"\nThey are the Lord Nelsin dining\nroom and the Bluetop Bungalow\nCourt.\nThey are included among 8099\nselected eating and lodging estab-\n'ishments recommended bv D-tn-\ncan Hines out of a total of half a\n\u2022million in North Amcriia\" The new\n\"Adventures in Good Eiting\" lists\n3500 of the best olaces to eat, and\n'he new \"Lodging for a Night\" lists\n4500 top lodgini; places.\nINVERMERE - Windermere\nParent-Teacher Association has reorganized after a period of inactivity. Roy Clement is president,\nhonorary president is Dale Speaker, vice-presidents are Mrs. Sepp\nWenger and Mrs. Tony Luyendyk\nand the secretary-treasurer is Mrs.\nRobert Swindell. Program chairman is Mrs. Alfred Tegart, membership chairman Mrs. Ray Clement, and social convener Mrs. Hal\nBavin. .\nMrs. Alfred Davidson, a former\npresident of the Windermere District PTA, addressed the meeting.\nBROKENSHIRE\nat\nFRUITVALE\nLegion Hall\n8 p.m.\nThurs., Nov. 27th\nPUBLIC MEETING\nEVERYBODYH WELCOME\n-   Guest. .Sneaker:\nPETER DEWDNEY\nInserted by Rossland - Trail\nConservative Association\nCALMING WATERS\nBREMEN (Reuters) \u2014 East\nGerman rocket experts have perfected an oil-spraying rocket to\nhelp calm heavy seas. The rockets,\nfor life-saving boats, fly about 900\nfeet and have enough oil to cover\nan area of 90.099 square feet.\nfor a happier Christmas\nbring them home by train\n-mail them a Canadian Pacific\nRailway \"GIFT TICKET\"!\nfitr information, reservations, phviu\nNelson \u2014 tell 209\nGMUu&ftKfoe^c\nBuy it on out\neasy budget plant\n,,tc7^r5ff?$9995\nGEORGIAN GADR00N*\nWM. A. ROGERS*SttVERWARE\nBY ONEIDA LTD.\nfor yourself, tor a favorite Mile\nEnriched more by time and long use, Wm. A. Rogers sil vt rpl ated\nhollowware costs so little ... gives so much\u2014in- sentiment, io\nwarm hospitality, years of good living.\n\u2022Trade-mark! ef Onilda ltd.\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY LIMITED\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nBusiness Est. Since 1897\nPhone 120        Nelson, B.C.        561  Baker St.\n ,\n^031\nKimberley Sportsmen\nB.C.'s Strongest\nKIMBERLEY - Kimberley\nRod and Gun Club, with a membership now of 666 was reported\nlargest in the B. C. Federation of\nFish and Game Clubs by Federation president Ted Barsby of\nNanaimo at a Kimberley Club\nexecutive meeting here.\nThere are 108 clubs in the Federation whdse membership totalled 12,000 of the province's\n270,000 licence holders. He also\nsaid the Kimberley Club was the\nmost active in the province in\nparticipating in Uie general conservation program, and in looking after sportsmen's interests.\nA new big game area in East\nKootenay, termed by resident\ngame biologist Glen Smith as\nhome of the best big game animals on the continent, has been\nopened this season with construction over the past two years of a\nforest development roa, of about\n20 miles to White Swan Lake, formerly accessible only by aircraft\nand pack trail. The road project\nis continuing and will make available new timber stands yin tbe\nKootenay Public WorkingNSrcle..\nPossibility of future restrictions\non public use of this road when\nlogging operations begin there is\nalready being considered by the\nKimberley Club which will seek\nto establish sportsmen's rights to\nits use on holidays, week-ends\nand non-working hours. Several\ntrophies from this area over the\npast 20 years retain international\nBoone and Crockett records.\nThe meeting went on record as\nsupporting a Game Commission\nproposal for a flat $5 game licence.\nPresent scale is $7 for resident licence for birds and big game, $4\nfor birds and deer resident licence,\n$12 for resident-alien licence and\n$25 for non-resident. Only the last\nlicence would be kept under the\nproposed scale.\nMr. Barsby reported failure of\nthe  Federation  to  secure  legis\nlation allotting it 10 cents fbr\neach hunting licence sold in tbe\nprovince to carry out its conservation work, but said a grant of\n$7,500 for the annual Federation\nand the Federation's secretary-\nmanager payment had been made.\nThe annual Club Hunter's Ball\nhas been set for December 12 at\nKimberley when presentations will\nbe made to winners of the season-\nlong fish derby and big game competition.\nGRAND FORKS\nWOMAN DIES\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Mrs. Ellen\nFrances Heaven of Vancouver, formerly of. Grand Forks, and the\nwidow of Claude C. Heaven, has\ndied at the Coast,\nThe family was extremely well\nknown in the Grand Forks area.\nSurvivors are three sons, R. C.\nHeaven and W. A. Heaven in Ross-,\nland and H. C. Heaven in Grand\nForks; three daughters, Mrs. D.\nG. Borland and Mrs. R. J. Sand-\nover in Vancouver and Mrs. E. G.\nMcMynn in Salmon Arm; 14 grandchildren and 17 great grandchildren.\nThe funeral will be held today\nin Holy Trinity Anglican Church at\nVancouver, Rev. Gordon E. Bratt\nofficiating, and cremation will follow.\nAthalmer Church\nBrightened   Up\nINVERMERE \u2014 The Church of\nthe Canadian Martyrs at Athalmer\nbas been re-decorated in colors\nwhich enhance its simple beauty.\nThe walls are finished in a pastel\nblue, the ceiling in light grey and\nthe sanctuary in yellow.\nThe decorating was this-years\nproject of St. Martha's Guild.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c Une black face' type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nMen's Wool Gloves\u2014Half Price\nJACK BOYCE\nSuit Sale Continues.\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S WE Ml\nFor your LATEST HAIR STYLES,\nCharm Beauty Salon. Phone 1922.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n, 512 Richards St., phone 1108.\nS31\/3% off all our stock of Scarves\nJACK BOYCE\nICE  CHASER\n\u25a0 Just arrived, new sheers in dacron and nylon. Colors and white.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nLadies' Auxiliary to Canadian\nLegion Tea, Bake Sale and Bazaar,\nFri. Nov. 28. 2:30 to 5.\nMary Maxim wools and patterns\nfor Indian-type sweaters.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nWarm Rubber Overshoes for Girls\nand Boys, $3.95 and $4.95 at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nNew shipment of small skates\njust in.\nEDEY'S SPORT SHOP\nBeautiful  new   Crinoline  Slips,\nJust in at\u2014\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nSnow shovels, sidewalk scrapers,\nke chisels, for easy snow removal.\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nNew shipment Budgies and Canar\nies at . . .\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n: Insoles of all kinds. Shoe grease,\nshoe polishes, shoe brushes and\nSock Savers.\nMAX KASPER SHOE SHOP\nLIVE IN AND LEARN\nSeminar at Hume Hotel\u2014UBC music, art, theatre, faculty lectures.\nAccommodation at hotel. Single,\ndouble rates.\nCentennial Cups, Spoons, Souvenirs\nHOBBY SHOP-OPP. BUS DEPOT\nCafeteria opening in Vi's Grocery, Monday, Nov. 17. Light\nlunches.\nKootenay West (Federal) Pro.\ngresslve Conservative annual meeting Sat,, Dec. 6, 2:30 p.m., Palm\nRoom, Trail. E. J. Broome, MP,\nVancouver South, will be speaker.\n,    \u25a0\" \u25a0     \":    \u25a0\nNEW PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE at the comer\nof Fifth Street and Eleventh Avenue in Cranbrook will\nhave eeating for between 500 and 600 people. The church\nhas been erected almost entirely by volunteers, led by\nthe minister. Rev. C. Fawcett, who installed plumbing\nand wiring himself.^-Daily News statt photo, j\nTruck Hits Pole, Disrupts Power\nINVERMERE - A truck acci-\ndent near Athalmer, Radium, Windermere crossroads Tuesday night\ndisrupted power service briefly\nfrom Golden to Bow River;\nAr, flat deck truck' driven by\nGale Atsma of Edgewater crashed\nint. a power pole of ,the ,B. C.\nPower Commission, smashing it\ncompletely. Broken wire snapped\nback into a volt transmission line\nand cut off power through \u25a0 the\nColumbia Valley and the grid joining the B. C. Power Commission\nline with the East Kootenay\nPower system.\nLight bulbs blew in Windermere\nand radios were damaged.\nThe driver was taken to Win\ndermere Distriot Hospital suffering bead injuries. It is presumed\nthat the truck skidded on the\nicy road.\nLARGE FISH\nHalibut, a common food fish in\nthe Atlantic, sometimes reaches a\nlengtth of seven or eight feet.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958 \u2014 3\nContract Awarded for\nCastlegar RCMP Building\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Columbia Builders Limited of Castlegar has been chosen from among 12 tenderers to build a\nnew RCMP building in Castlegar, the federal public works\ndepartment said Wednesday.\nThe company's tender was for $44,592. It should be\nadvised Wednesday or today of the contract, a departmental\nofficial said.    ,\nCity lo Call Fuel Tenders\nCRANBROOK - Tenders will\nbe called in Cranbrook district\nby the city Shortly for all its\ngasoline, fuel oil and diesel oil\nrequirements for 1959 on a competitive basis. Royalite contracted for this during 1953.\nList of proposed winter employment city projects under the fed.\neral-municipal equal sharing Of\nlabor costs will be submitted to\nthe federal government for consideration. These include repair\nat the sewage disposal plant, filling and excavating of a new city\npark area, and construction of a\nroad to fee proposed new city\ndump.\nA new city trade licence bylaw\nis being thoroughly discussed by\nCity Council in preparing for its\nformal consideration. It lists 104\ntrade .licence categories instead\nof the existing 23 categories.\nThe city has decided to exercise\nits rights under the Municipal\nAct to waive voter signing of a\npoll back-at tfae coming municipal\nelection.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nRHEUMATIC\nPAIN\nT\nHf^Mii\n[jlHG OF HUrf3\nDON'T MISS IT!\nTONIGHT'S THE NIGHT!\nKIWANIS TURKEY JAMBOREE\nAND BINGO,\nNELSON ARMOURIES\nTWIN-SEAL INSULATING GLASS\nYou cut fuel cost, banish drafts,\nreduce noise when you instal Twin-\nSeal Insulating Glass. Call\u2014\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156-   101 Hall St.    Nelson\nFINE ARTS SEMINAR at Hume\nHotel, Nov. 28, 29; Messrs. Pearce,\nMarquis, Soule on Art, Music,\nTheatre. Fri., regis'n 5 p.m., dinner 6, session 8. 3 sessions Sat.\nApply City Drug.\nA Gift that is sure to please \u2014 a\nKALIMAR 35mm Camera, only\n$23.95 complete with everready\ncase. A precision camera reasonably priced.\nCUSTOM CAMERAS\nStanley St. opposite \"The Bay\"\nPrizes awarded on Nelson Hockey\nBooster Club Grey Cup award:\nFirst prize \u2014 Rod Munroe, ticket\nNo. 1810; 2nd prize\u2014A. H. Sinclair\nand Privie, ticket No. 360; third\nprize\u2014Mrs. J. Tedesco, ticket No.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBRODIE \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late William James Brodie will\nbe held at St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral today (Thursday) at 2 p.m\nRev. Canon G. W. Lang will officiate and interment will take place\nin Nelson Memorial Park. Friends\nare requested to please omit flowers. Thompson Funeral Service,\nNOTICE\nMaple Leaf Store\nCrescent Valley\nwill be\nCLOSED\non Saturday, Nov. 29, 1958\nFor Completion of Renovating,\nand the New Modern\nMAPLE LEAF STORE\nWill Re-Open on Monday, Dee. 1,1958\nFREE BALLOONS AND ICE CREAM\nfor children accompanied by parents and a limited\nnumber of free food hampers with every ten dollar\ncash- purchase of groceries.\nThis Offer Limited to\nMonday, December 1 Only\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nUltra-Vision T.V.\nHere is a beautiful model, finished in dark walnut, unmatched for quality in sound and picture reproduction.\nRegular Price       $339\nSALE *279\n95\ntmmjmmmk%tj\n*P    \u25a0 i m  \u25a0   m\nEasy Credit Terms\n^*mm*mJm \u2014   I \u00ab   i   ii\nZONE WASHER\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nWASHERS and DRYERS\nWasher  __\nLess Trade\nYOU PAY ONLY\nPLUS FREE DAILY DIPPER\nTWO WASHERS IN ONE\n\"Quick-Clean\" washing action complete with timing. Years ahead styling, long skirt plus a host of work\nsaving features that will help you\nwhiz through wash days. One control wringer, powerful pump, 10 lb.\ncapacity, Permadrive mechanism\nregulator.\n $299\n      60\n$169\nFOR   $248.95  VALUE\nDAILY  DIPPER,  FILLER and\nDRAINER KIT\nAUTOMATIC WASHER\nWith Filter-Flo washing system.\nModel SWA 650\t\n'389\n00\nFREE\nFits inside your\nG. E. washer,\nsolves your small\nwash problems.\nUnique 2% gallon\n\"Tiny Tub\" saves\nhot water, soap,\nsaves time on\ndaily diapers,\nsaves work on in-\nbetween   washes.\nft $19.95\nGENERAL!\nSmall\nAppliances\nMake\nWonderful Gifts\nELECTRIC\nG. E. MIXETTE\nReg. $1Q.95\n24.95    1^\nG. E. TOASTER\nRefl. $lQ-95\n24.95.-...   *y\nG.E. COFFEE MAKER\nReg. %>%A.9S\n29.95. tirt\nG.E. STEAM IRON\nReg. $1*7.88\n21.50.    I I\nG.E. ELECTRIC\nBLANKETS\nS44.W\nFrom     \u25a0   \u25a0\nG. E. Automatic\nFry Pan.      $1 \u00a3.95\nFrom  :_     I  \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nG.E. Woffle $14,-98\nIron. From ..   IT\nG.E. CLOCKS\n$\u00a3.95\nFrom\nG.E. RADIO\n$7A.45\nFrom   ttm\\J\nG.E. STAND MIXER\nReg. $3 \"7-95\n39.95 3*\nELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYER\n$2g9.oo\nWith high-speed drying system.\nModel SDA 620 i.\nPAIR FOR\nONLY .  .\n$\n610\nBUY\nHOW\nPAY NEXT\nYEAR\nNelson Electric Co. Ltd.\n574\nBaker Si.\nGENERAL '-'7-, ELECT.RK\n\u2022WiMIMTBT\nPhone\n260\n wmmm^\nHrl.\u00ab\u00bb Oailii Hruta\nEstaKhched Aoril 22 1902\nInterior British Columbia s Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail Pqst Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER,- OF THE AUDIT-    'READ OF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER OC THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to tbe use tor republication of all news\ndlsritches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news - -Mishad therein.\nThursday, November 27, '1958\nPlan to Encourage Students\nWorthy of Study Across Canada\nWhen the need conies, Canadians\ncan rise to the occasion ahd now that\nthey are convinced that their future\nwelfare depends upon the thorough\ntraining oi their best young minds,\nthey are bending every effort towards\nthe encouragement of brilliant students.\nThis ls as it should be though it\ndoes not, as yet, seem to have percolated to the student level. If reports\nare true, there is still not the awareness there should be of the importance\nof learning. This is something in which\nparents can help by expecting the\nbest from their own children. It is probable that the late prevailing attitude\nof students to \"squares\" was occasioned at least in part by talk heard at\nhome, and any change in this will\nCome from opinion in the home.\nThere has been a considerable increase in the number of scholarships\nand bursaries of late and while this is\ncommendable, these aids to the student are usually too small. Their help\nis valuable but does not go far enough,\nsince university education is expensive\nin these days.\nThese bursaries and scholarships\nhave been made available haphazardly and at the instance of individuals,\nwith no attempt at organization of the\nwhole tp encourage the definitely better students. It has remained for the\nUniversity of Toronto to study the\nmatter of the encouragement of the\nbrilliant student and to issue a report\ngiving its conclusions.\nThe report suggests that free tuition\nbe given to all who secure first class\nhonors in Grade XIII and free tuition\nthroughout their course so long as\nthey maintain their honors standing,\n(Tuition ls anything from $250 up and\nis constantly rising), but it Is also proposed that these students should receive bursary aid in accordance with\ntheir requirements and not restricted\nio arbitrary amounts,\nFor second class honors students,\nit is not proposed to pay their tuition\nfees but to give them the same aid\nthrough bursaries, ahd both first and\nsecond class honors students would be\ngranted loans for emergency fin*\nancing.- \u25a0 .   .'\nThe cost of the scheme would be\nsubstantial, around one and a half\nmillion dollars for the University of\nToronto, but if adopted in the University of B.C., the cost would be consider-\n'ably less. Since It definitely sets out\nto encourage the best students it is\nWorthy of study everywhere.\nIf'Nelson should be successful in\nobtaining the right to operate a Junior\nCollege some similar scheme would\ndo much to raise and maintain its\nacademic standards.\nLetters To The Editor\nLetters may be published over a nom de plume, but the actual name of the writer must\nhe given to the Editor as evidence of good faith. Anonymous letters go into the waste-\npaper basket.\nEngineer Sees Lack of Efficiency\nIn Application pf Fluoridation\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014In view of the Imminence of our\nmunicipal plebiscite on the fluoridation of the\nNelson water supply, I have recently been\nlooking rnto the matter from an engineering\nstandpoint and I believe that you and your\nreaders may be interested in some figures\non the subject.\nIt is generally agreed that a moderate\ndosage of fluoride is beneficial in preventing,\nor lessening, tooth decay in children up to\nthe age of eight. No benefit is claimed by\nanyone for anyone beyond that age. While\nmany well-informed-people argue that fluoride Is often definitely harmful to allergic,\nailing and aged adults, I do not propose to\ntouch on the medical aspects of the question.\nNor will I discuss the threatened evil of mass\nmedication under which sick and well alike\nmay be dosed by grandmotherly officials for\nany 111 from corns to constipation.\nThe following figures are estimates only\nand subject to correction when, and if, actual\nstatistics become available. Ten thousand\npeople are served by the Nelson water system and they average 100 gallons.of water\neach per day, or a total of 1,000,000 gallons.\nOne-quarter of these people are children\nunder eight years of age and they each consume one quart of water per day, or a total\nof 625 gallons,, or .000625 of the total fluoridated supply, leaving 99.9375 per cent of the\nfluoride wasted or, its. opponents say, worse\nthan wasted..\nI very much doubt if there are actually\n2500 children under eight years of age, or\nif they actually average one quart of water\nper day, but use your own figures if you\ndon't like mine. The result will reveal an\nF. B. Pearce...\n.. .Writes\nIt took me some time to discover that\nwhy so many people told me that they liked\nmy column with reference to the school\ntrustees was because they thought I was\npoking fun at that august body when I said\nwe should have to start them at Grade 6.\nAs a matter of fact, I was not. I was\nsimply thinking of myself and that basically\nall that I use except reading Is the stuff\nI learded In grade school. I'm quite sure the\nmajority pf people could not do a percentage\nsum to save their, lives and how many could\ntackle a square root sum? So take back, all\nthe laughs you had at the trustees.\nAccording to one of my school principal\nfriends, we should watch the rise of Trail\nas the leading educational district in the\nprovince. When I asked him why, he said\nthat it was due to the fact that It has an\n\u2022 exceptionally high type of trustee. According\nto him seven of them were men with university degrees.\nSuch highly educated men have a real\nappreciation of education. To them cost is\nnot the finst thing. They are prepared to pay\nhigh salaries to get the men they want and\nto head their teaching staff they lured an\noutstanding man from the university at a\nmuch higher than normal salary. They are\nquite.willing to pay an extra $500 or $1000\nto induce a man to join their staff,\nJust now they are looking around for a\ndoctor of science to head their science staff.\nThey propose to pay him as high a salary\nas he would get in industry and hope he will\nstay with them.\nI was struck with the brief the, Trail\ntrustees presented to the Royal Commission\non Education. It was an outstanding example\nof a well-thought-out,. scientifically correct\nand well presented brief. All of its provisions\nhad to do with factors Involving the pupil and\nwhere originally I thought it must have been\nthe work of an Inspector, I now believe If\nwas a matter of collaboration among the\ntrustees.\nFrankly I believe Nelson has reached a\nlow point in its attitude towards trustees.\nOften when an! election comes along it is a\nmatter of going but on the street and asking\nany individual if he will stand. Obviously the\ncity cannot get even a mediocre board if\nIt regards trustees so lightly. If we are to\ngive the people of this city the best in education it cannot come from such an unfortunately haphazard way of choosing trustees.\nWe may not have so many people with\ndegrees resident in this city, but we should\ncertainly look around for those individuals\nwho are as well educated as possible. As can\nreadily be seen, the higher educated trustees\nare more Willing to pay well for good\nteachers.\nIt is true that no one wants their taxes\nraised. Many people with fixed incomes find\nth?t their money is shrinking. It is most unfortunate, but nothing can be done about It\nand looked at dispassionately the individuals\non pensions and on fixed incomes cannot be\nallowed to control the wa\u00bbes of others. There\nwould be no progress if that were to be\nallowed. ...\nThen, too. If we are to have a junior col-\nlege we must have men of more than ordinary education who are able to understand\nall that pertains to hHher education. The\nelection is SOon. Let us'get the best trustees\npossible.\nappalling lack if efficiency in the proposed\nmethod of aoplyin? fluoride to children's\nteeth. As well mieht a hunter use a ten-\ngauge shotgun to shoot a mosquito.\nVery much greater efficiency can be\nachieved, at a nominal cost, by the use of\ntablets containing the optimum. daily dose\nof fluoride, to be given in a glass of water,\nor by the use of a stock solution in which\nthe required dose is a teasooonful, administered daily by the interested parents. In\nthis way none of the fluoride would be wasted\nand only those benefitting would receive It.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\ni\u00bb\u2014.       By Jimmy Hatlo\n7.    At LE4ST MXCRE      \"W     WHO NEEDS\nGETTO*. _ GOOD REST IN  V CHEERING UP-.WM Y -SUE TOLD\nHERE-I'M JUST\/ILL W-I   \\ OR HER? I THINK   1THE NURSE Olff-\nHAOTO TAKE THE MINUTEST!SHE'S SORE 6EOUSE SIDE HE'S NOT\nTHE LADIES7 GUILD MEETING   HE DIDN'T ASK HER \/ TO HAVE xWV\nTOOdy-TONIGHT'S MY\" NIGHT) IP HE COULD HAVE\nTO HAVE THE BRIDGE CUJ8\"i4N ACCIDENT\u2122\nAKO THIS HOSPITAL IS SO\nOUT OP THE WAY- DID THE ,\nINSURANCE COMPANV PAY\/\nVOU ANVTHlNG YET? ..\nVISITORS\" SHE\nWOULDN'T WANT,\nHER SOCIETY\nFRIENDS TO\nSEE HIM IN\nAN ORDlNARy\nWARD\nSHE ASKED THE LAWYER\nHOW MUCH TH6VU\ncollect ot< Cheddar's!\nHEADER-THEN. SHE\nWENT OUT PRICING\nMINKS\nSHE SURE MUST MISS\nHIM AROUND THE HOUSE-\nSHE ONLV HAS THE DOS\nAND THE PART-TIME\nMAID TO PICK ON\nNOW\n' ,0II  . Writ Feihim 8.  ditiU. li.TVorl.1 rl,H,\n-ISTENIN6 TO THE\nR4T1ENTS FSAU CO\nINTO HE!? CHEER-UP\nROUTINE-\nTtumimniiooft \/(,\nWE H4TU) WT TO      o\\\nWRRy guCKSTON .4\nHarm. RoyaiTON,\nWawWBK.N.V.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nWhy eateth your master with\npublicans and sinners?\u2014Matthew\n9:77.\nBigotry is not religion.\nOiwLdkL\nJane .ain't as deaf as she makes\nout. She makes you holler if it's\nsomethin' she don't want to hear,\nbut she can hear a whisper if it's\nnone o' her business.\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nW'lSH BONES   1* EACH '\u25a0 'I\nUSE IT PO.   WiSHl'N, OR J\nMAKE^-SLl'NS SHOT.\nBank Reports\nRecord Year\nA record-breaking year with new\nhighs ln most major areas of the\nbank's business is reflected ln the\ngeneral statement published by\nThe Canadian Bahk of Commerce.\nAn increase of over $435,000,000\nbrought total assets up to $3,016,-\n792,000, the first time in the bank's\nhistory that \"the three-billion-dollar\nfigure has been attained. Total\ndeposits show a corresponding\ngrowth and at $2,819,399,000 are tip\nover $411,000,000 from last year's\nrecord high. Personal savings deposits, up approximately $145,000,-\n000 from last year, are now ln excess of $1,311,000,000 while other\ndeposits by the public, up $215,000,-\nooo from, a year ago, now total\n$1,271,038,000.\nThe bank's Investment portfolio\nreveals substantial increases in\nGovernment of Canada securities,\nwhich now total approximately\n$771,871,000, up. $268,000,000 from\na year ago, and In other securities,\nincluding municipals, which at\n$255,815,000 are up $78,000,000 from\nlast year. Mortgage loans made\nunder the National Housing Act\nare again up from the previous\nyear and now total $140,215,000, a\nnet increase of over $43,000,000.\nCommercial and other loans at\n$1,011,352,000 are down $49,000,000\nfrom last year while day-to-day,\ncall.and short loans at $174,65. .000\nare also down $44,000,000 from a\nyear .ago.\nCash resources amounted to\n$523,286,000, while quick assets increased by $425,000,000 during the\nyear to a total of $1,774,000,000.\nNet profits increased $1,65(1,101\nto $10,212,347 after provision of\n$9,950,000 for income taxes. Dividend payments totalled $7,198,544\nand the balance of undivided profits, after transferring $4,000,000 to\nrest account .stands at $1,167,084.\nGrauer Says\nBriggs Attack\nUnprovoked\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The president of the British Columbia\nElectric Company has accused\nH. Lee Briggs of an \"unprovoked\nattack\" on his company and officers, calculated to undermine\npublic confidence\" in the company and its management,\nA. E. (Dal) Grauer was replying to an \"open letter\" from Mr.\nBriggs, former general manager\nof the publicly owned B. C.\nPower Commission, in which Mr.\nBriggs warned Mr. Grauer that\nrcpiarks made against him may\nbe dangerous and that he wanted\na public japology.\nrMr. Grauer made no apology\nin his repiy Wednesday.\n\"BF. CAREFUL\"\n\"Be careful,\" warned Mr,\nBriggs in his letter of Tuesday,\n\"there are laws to deal with\nlibel and character assassination.\"\nMr. Grauer replied: \"I am\namazed that you should regard\nyourself as the- injured party.' I\nam sure that any unbiased person would regard me as the injured party.\"\nMr. Briggs was dismissed from\nhis power commission post after\nhe accused the government of\njuggling the commission's financial structure to relieve the province ' of debt by 196. He also\nmade attack's on the B.C. Electric Company and others.\nMr. Grauer described Mr.\nBriggs' original statements as a\n\"hodge podge of faulty reasoning, innuendo and unsupported\nStatements.\"\nClassified Ads Get Results\nE. J. UMPIIREY, left, vice-president and\ndirector of sales of General Motors of Canada,\nreceives a scroll of tribute from Emile Dubois\nof Hamilton, one of 600 dealers from coast to coast\nwho gathered ln Toronto to honor Mr. Umphrey's\n38 years of service. John F. Gordon, president\nof General Motors Corporation, R. S. McLaughlin, chairman of the board of GM of Canada, and\nE. H. Walker, president of GM of Canada, Joined\nIn honoring Mr. Umphrey, 57-year-old native of\nManitoba.\nCanadian Exporters Advised\nTo Take Nothing For Granted\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\n\"Any exporter who has a market the way he likes lt for 10\nyears is lucky.\"\nThe comment Is from an' observer who has studied markets\nat first hand in many parts of\nthe world. It emphasizes ihat ln\nselling to other countries you\ncan't take anything for granted.\nAnother exporter puts it this\nway: .   .   \u2022\n\"The surest thing in this business is change.\"\nBIG IMPROVEMENT\n' The Canadian  Bank of Commerce commented recently:\n\"On the whole, world tr.;;kmW\nappears to be established on a\nmore healthy basis than at anx\ntime since 1913.\"\nExporters   tell   many   stories\nabout  how  unexpected  markets\nmay be gained and how quickly\nothers may be lost.\n\"OUTWARD LOOK\"\nHowever, there are indications\nthat Canadian manufacturers are\ntaking a new \"outward look\" in\nregard to exports. One evidence\nis the way they.responded to the\ncoming January trip to the Brit-\nChamber of Commerce,\nish West Indies by the Canadian\nOpinion on export may be\nAcuities and those who think the\nchiefly concerned with the dif-\nroughly divided between those\ndifficulties are outweighed by the\nopportunities.\nFollowing, in \"problem and\nanswer\" form are some of the\nmatters, often discussed:\nProblem: All countries are trying to become industrialized and\nto buy less from others.\nAnswer, from the Canadian\nBank of Cofnmerce: \"Trade\nbetween Industrialized countries\nhas grown much more rapidly\nthan trade between industrialized\nand non-industrialized. The proportion of world trade represented by commodities\u2014food and\nraw materials \u2014 has declined\nsteadily, and the proportion represented by manufactured goods\nhas risen.\"\nTRADING BLOCS\nProblem: The world is dividing\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0 \u25a0  -By FraacM Drake\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes, and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor Friday, November 28,1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\nHow you get along with co-workers\nand folks at home will greatly determine whether you will be happy\nabout the outcome of this day. Be\nconsistent.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Some minor matters\nyou may not consider important\nmay be just the things that should\nbe handled most carefully now.\nDetermine everything with a\nthought to the future. Influences\nare better than they may seem at\nfirst.\nNOVEMBER 23 to, DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 This is the sort\nbetween industrialized countries\nroofs, n 1957 this had dropped\ninto large trading blocs, What opportunities are there for Canada\nin that situation?\nAnswer, from Trade .Minister\nFayat of Belgium: \"If we look at\na world map' we are bound to\nrecognize that big geographical\nunits with their large populations,\nand consequent large internal\nmarkets, are going to be the\nfoundations on which world economic progress will be based.\"\nOthers add that If formation of\nthe blocs results -in raising the\nstandards,. of. living of their\npeoples, increased trade opportunities are bound to follow, even\nthough there will be dislocations\nof current trade.\nProblem: Trade is bedevilled\nby artificial monetary and quota\nrestrictions.\nAnswer, from Dr. O. J. Firestone, economist of the department of trade and commerce:\n\"Governments of the Western\nworld have continued to pursue\nenlightened international and national policies even in times of\ndomestic difficulties.\"\nProblem: Russia is offering\ncommodities \u2014 including aluminum, - asbestos, tin, lumber\u2014at\nuneconomic prices, perhaps for\nthe purpose of disrupting the\nwestern -economy.\nAnswer, from various sources:\nThis is a problem we must face\nup to. Perhaps Russia will become more amenable to economic co-operation, f not, we shall\nhave to take steps to meet the\nthreat.\nCOSTS BIG FACTOR\nProblem: Canadian production\ncosts are high, making it difficult\nto compete in world markets.\nAnswer: Canadian costs have\nbeen high for some time and we\nstill export. Costs are also rising\nin other countries. But we must\nkeep Our costs in reasonable proportion to world prices, if we are\nto retain our markets, and we\n\u2022must be efficient producers.    \u25a0\nEroblem: The United Staed,\nthrough quotas on such things ss\nnil, lead and zinc, and through\nthe \"Buy' American\" Act and\nother measures, is continually\nthrowing up barriers.\nAnswer: Nevertheless the\nUnited States renewed the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act,\nand its administration and a\nlarge body of American opinion\nfavors freer world trade. The barriers raised are In response to\nextreme local pressures and perhaps they are a passing phase.\nThe United States has come a\nlong way from the high - tariff\ndays of the early 1930s. In the\nend, they will need our products'\nanyway.\nProblem: Canadians lose their\nchances at millions of dollars\nworth of foreign orders for capital goods - because Canada has\nno institution to back long-term\ncredit, such as other countries\nhavem\nAnswer: The government is\nconsidering this problem, and.recent indications have given\ngrounds for hope that something\nwill, be done, decision is expected before long.\nADVICE TO EXPORTERS\nExporters give the following-\nadvice to potential exporters:\nExports help take up slack\nwhen home markets weaken.\nThey can mean the difference between operating a plant five days\na week instead of four.\nExport is not an in-and-out business. Build it in good times and\nensure steady supply, no matter\nhow heavy the demand of the\nhonife' market. Success depends\non quality, continuing supply,\nfair pricing, service, and prompt\nand efficient delivery.\nTravel \u2014 visit your customers\nand prospects regularly. It is easier to close a contract if you talk\nwith a man. A small difference\nin price, for instance', may be\neasily solved. It is surprising how\noften he will buy even if your\nprice is higher than a competitor's.\nEstablish brand names so\npeople will ask for your product,\neven when the going gets rough.\nGood intentiors are not enough\nto start With. Study the market\nand whether your   products   Is\n|-suitable'for it.\nH ,U> AVAILABLE\nThe Canadian Exporters' Association offers a wide service to.\nits members. A recent typical\ntwo-week period at the association's Montreal headauarters saw\nletters of inouiry from Denmark,\nGreece, Spain. TrHdad, Portugal, taly, India, Formosa and\nSaudi  Arabia.\nSince the September Commonwealth trade conference in Montreal, inquiries from the United\nKingdom have soared.\nThree Professors Threaten\nTo Resbn Over Crowe Case\nYou may have to work against, of day that challenges disposition\nodds or faced with unforeseen situations. However, you can not only\nhandle all capably but make yourself felt as a stronger, more responsible person. Start planning\nnow for next week.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nDisposition and general carefulness\nwill be important now. You may\nreceive unexpected gains as a\nresult of past efforts, kindnesses\nyou have rendered and forgotten.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (CancOr)-\nStart purposefully and go through\nthe day determined to achieve as\nmuch as you can without misgivings \u2014 and . despite possible opposition. Think carefully before\nvoicing opinions.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nWhat you should do must be done\nin a cheerful way if you would\nreally * accomplish and maintain\nharmony. Even if others rush\naround, you keep your poise; be\nrelaxed inwardly. Be careful about\ndetails.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Combine common sense,\nvigor and Virgo's inborn practicality to make this day a highly\nprogressive one, Give and take \u2014\nboth in a smooth manner.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 There are times when\nthe best seems none too good;\nother days when no matter what\none does, it seems to backfire.\nKeep going; stress Libra's fine\njudgment backed by courage, \"and\nall will be well.\nWINNIPEG    (CP)   - Three\nUnited   College   professors  have\nthreatened  to  resign  in  protest\nover the board nf regents'  dismissal of Prof. Harry Crowe.\nThey are:'\nDr. J. H. S. Reid, chairman of\nthe history department;\n... ....     ,    Dr. K. W. K. McNaught, asso-\nas well as talents. So make up ciate professor of history; and\nyour mind you won't let Uttle or|    Dr.   R.   M.   Stingle,   assistant\nbig things stymie your best efforts  professor of English.\nan_P _!_;,_     '      ....,,\u201e     I   Thev told The Tribune Wednes-\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20, iav their resignations will t=ke ef-\n(Capncorn) \u2014 A.steady stand and! --et next fa'l if th\u00bb H'e*\u00bb do \u00abs not\ncalm disposition will carry you] reverse the action it took a'ainst\nthrough the day's rough spots, es- prof, Crowe. Drs. Reid and Mc-\npenalty in the a.m. Don't be one Na\"\"ht stated further thev would\nto make up your mind before con-j resign if the present administra-\nditions are thoroughly understood.\nAvoid tension.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Note how others are\ndoing, and whether you can improve your methods to match those\nof the successful. Your geniality\nand know-how will help.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Try to be especially\nconsistent and agreeable since this\nday has its snags and \"thin edges.\"\nYOU may be the deciding factor\nbetween success and \"not quite\nmaking it.\" Have confidence!\nYOU BORN TODAY have many\nvaried talents. Among your fine\nassets are straight thinking, general ability, talent for knowing how\nto-assist people and causes without\nprevious training. A practical person in your daily living, you are.\nnevertheless, able to transport\nyour thoughts into the realm of\nmystery and science, and visualize\nfuture possibilities. You are endowed with unusual power, purpose,   mental   ability.   Don't   let\ntion   of   the   college   does   not\nchange.\nTheir letters of resliM\"tLnri\nwere sent to Dr. W. C. Lockhart,\nUnited C .lege orincioal, before\nthe Cana .an Association of University Teachers' report was\nmade public. ,\nCRITICIZE REGENTS\nThe report criticized the re-\n\"ents for their dismissal of Prof\nHarry Crowe after a letter sent\nby him to a colleague was delivered 'to Dr. Lockhart. Prof.\nCrowe was an associate professor in the arts faculty.\nDr. W. C. Lockhart, asked to\ncomment on the threatened resignations, said he had no state-\nTribune:\n\"In the interests of the student\nyiflv a-d teacher relationships. I\nhad not intended to make this\n(letter of resignation) public until the sprin . In the present circumstances I was shock\"d bv Mie\nboard's immediate condemnation\nhaste, extremism or driving n-weri rf th\u00bb CAUT reoort before IJie\nget out of hand. Birthdate of: Wil-j mpqjhWs of the h\u00bbard cou'd pos-\nliam Blake, poet, painter. ' sibly have read the report.\" -\nIn his letter to Dr. Lockhart,\nProf. McNaught said he had protested to Dr. Lockhart that he\ncould not support any action\ntaken against a man on the basis of his private correspondence,\nand had urged that the photostats Dr. Lockhart made of Prof.\nCrowe's letter be returned to\nProf. Crowe.\nONLY FAIR\n\"Since the administration\nseems to.be completely adamant\nin its position I feel that it is\nonly fair to advise you that I\nwill be unable to return to the\ncollese in Sent. 1959 unless the\ndecisions with resnect to the\ndeanship and with resnect to the\ndismissal of Prof. Crowe are\nrevoked,\"\nDr. Reid saidl in part:\n\"My conviction .that a wrong\nhas been done to Prof. Crowe Is\nonly one of s\u00bbveral reaspns for\nmy decision. The ccmoletely unfounded charges that have been\ncirculated about my own action\nin protesting that wong (the\ncharge that I . . . threatened\n(o instizate a student strike, for\ninstance) constitute, another\nreason.\nProf. Sting'e said, he was\n\"profoundly distressed\" hy the\nboard's action.\n\"That the board sees nothing\nwrong in its action would seem\nto b\u00bb indicated in its appointment\nof Dr. (Gordon) Blake as dean\nof arts and science. Dr. Blake\nhas been militantly active asainst\nOne of his colleagues' academic !\nfreedom ard tenure,.\n\". .   .   if   tho  lamnntable   In-\ninstice aeainst Prof.. Crn\\vo is lo\nremain as it now is. I s-haU be\noblieed to seok another position '\nfor next year.\"\n 303R\nfibouL ihjL JowrL\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\nPHONE 1844\nWilliam Forsyth, manager of the\nNelson branch of the Bank of\nMontreal, accompanied by Mrs.\nForsyth, leaves today for Montreal to attend the annual general\nmeeting of the Bank. On their\nreturn Journey, Mr. and Mrs. Forsyth will visit Ottawa and Pembroke, Ont., returning home in two\nweeks' time.\n\u2022 \u00ab *\nRotary Ann executive members\nentertained at the home of Nelson\nRotary president J. H. Argyle and\nMrs. Argyle, 415 Observatory\nStreet, Monday night in honor of\nWillard E. Ireland, provincial archivist, following his address at\nthe annual Nelson Rotary Club\nLadies' Night. Guests included Rotary past presidents, honorary members, life members, and\ntheir wives, and guests of the Rotary Ann executive, Pouring at the\nreception were Mrs. H. D. Harrison and Mrs. J. H. Coventry and\nassisting were Mrs. William Forsyth, Mrs. G. R. Norris, Mrs. R.\nJoudvuL\nLViJtk\nmaqk.\nOur beautiful Blouses\nby Original are Christmas ornaments to wear\nthe year 'round. Opaque\nor sheers in nylons, cottons, with dainty lace\nand saucy bows, a wonderful gift.\nPRICED FROM\n$3.98 to $8.98\n(bask\nLADIES' APPAREL\n\"The Fashion Centre\"\nPh. 775       Nelson, B.C.\nA. Munro, Mrs. C. W. R. Harper,\nMrs. E. T. Bodard, Mrs. Jack\nMcDonald, Mrs. K. R. Yal<?, Mrs.\nK. D. McRae and Mrs. W. L. Clark.\n\u2022  * .*\nA demonstration of hair styling\nby a local hairdresser was given\nmembers of the Kinette Club Tuesday night when they met at the\nhome of Mrs. T. E. McNary, 286\nBaker Street. Mrs, R. A. Hanson\nwas model. Final plans were made\nfor the Kinette bake and novelty\nsale to be held December 13, with\nmembers discussing progress of\npillow cases, copper pictures, crocheted doll dresses, felt Christmas\nstockings and other novelties. One\nmember displayed Christmas party\nhats made from old Christmas\ncards which she is making.\n\u00bb  \u2022  \u00ab\nGuiders of the N e 1 s o n District\nGuiders Association meeting at the\nhome of Miss Florence Moss, 514\nVictoria Street, discussed the impending visit of a Girl Guide from\nCreston, who is working on her\nGold Cord challenge. The visit is\npart of the Guide's training. Other\nprograms planned were a coffee\nparty December 6 at the Scout\nHall to be convened by the First\nNelson Guide Company with proceeds to be used towards purchase\nof a World Flag for the Nelson\nGuides, and the annual spring tea.\nGuiders were invited to attend the\nnext meeting of the local Guide\nAssociation.\nOut-of-town guests attending the\nHopkins-Calbick wedding held in\nNelson recently, who are relatives\nof the bridegroom's mother, Mrs.\nA. E. Hopkins, 815 Fourth Street,\nand his aunt, Mrs. A. H. Hopkins\nof the North Shore, were Mr. and\nMrs. Percy Groves and Mr. and\nMrs. Bert Lane of Vancouver; Mr\nand Mrs. T. E. Christensen, Betty\nand Eon of Rossland, Mr. and Mrs.\nRoy Easton, Gail, Marcia, Lucille\nand Jerry of Trail; Mr. and Mrs\nH. W. Schorlemer and Brian and\nMrs. D. MacMillan, Patricia and\nSusan of Kimberley.\nTHE FISHPOND is an attraction at the Fairview\nUnited Church tea and bazaar held Wednesday afternoon in the church hall. Pictured in a moment of suspense while fishing are Jimmy Stewart, 6, and Karen\nCrawford, 5. Story of the bazaar and tea will be published Friday.\u2014Daily News phofo by Ian Brown.\nLegion LA Plans Bazaar,\nTea, To Be Held Friday\nTea Planned In\nTrail For\nMrs. Bennell\nTRAIL \u2014 A tea has been planned\nhere in honor of Mrs. W. A. C.\nBennett, wife of the premier, when\nthe couple visit die riding in December.\nPremier Bennett Is to speak Dec.\n13 when campaigning in the Dec.\n15 byelection draws to a close.\nPouring at the tea will be Mrs.\nL. A. Read, wife of Trail's mayor;\nMrs. Harold Elmes, wife of Rossland's mayor; Mrs. Donald Bro\nthers, wife of the Social Credit\ncandidate for the Rossland - Trail\nseat in the Legislature; and Aid.\nEdith Van Maarion and Mrs. Richard Palmer of Nelson.\nINSURANCE DIRE\nNECESSITY TO\nMOVIE COMPANY\nBy BOB THOMAS\nPALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)-\nA star dies in the middle of a\npicture. A big wind blows down\nan expensive movie set. A star's\npregnancy causes a $400,000 delay in shooting.\nWhat happens to cost-pinched\nproducers when troubles Uke this\noccur?\nIn most cases, they are covered by insurance. If they can\nprove damage, they are compensated swiftly and in full.\nRowland V. Lee, who is substituting the American desert for\nthe Biblical lands of his movie\nepic, The Big Fisherman, has\nbeen shooting here for two weeks.\nA high wind ruined expensive\ntents and 'other props to the tune\nof if40,000. The schedule had to\nbe juggled to film elsewhere\nwhile the sets were being rebuilt.\nInsurance is a big item on every movie's budget. Each company is insured against damage\nto sets, injury to workers or bystanders, etc. The producer is insured against loss of services of\nimportant members of the cast.\nObservers believe Edward\nSmall will get back the money\nlost on Solomon and Sheba because-of Tyrone Power's death.\nWhether Marilyn Monroe's absences from Some Like It Hot\nwill be paid for is another matter. Much depends on whether or\nnot she is pregnant. She Won't\nconfirm it.\nIn the case of The Big Fisherman, Lee has the cast insured\nfor $2,500,000. The picture itself\nwill cost at least $4,000,000. .The\ninsurance runs 75 cents a thousand, which by rough calculations comes to $18,750.\nThe Canadian Legion L a d i e s'\nAuxiliary fall bazaar and tea progress report was given at this\nweek's meeting of the Auxiliary,\nconducted by president Mrs. F. F.\nDay.\nTea arrangements for the event\nto be held Nov. 28, were reported by Mrs. B. McCreight of the\nways and means committee. The\ncatering committee report given by\nMrs. A. O. Allen indicated a busy\nmonth past and another ahead.\nOther reports included the hospital visiting committee report by\nMrs. Harvey Moir and Mrs. A. J.\nCherry, given by Miss Evelyn\nForbes, who told of 149 visits and\ndistribution of 134 treats during the\npast month, also visit of a delegation, headed by Mrs. Day, to Mount\nSt. Francis Infirmary, November\n11-\nHospital auxiliary representative, Mrs. G. E. Thompson, gave\na short history of the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital as a resume\npf hospital administrator R. H,\nProcter's talk to the hospital auxiliary, highlighting points of interest to the LA members. She also\nspoke of the report of Mrs. H. E,\nDoelle, president of the Nelson\nHospital Auxiliary, who was representative at the recent annual\nconvention of the Auxiliaries Division to the BCHA in Vancouver.\nOther reports were \u2014 Mrs. R.\nMcCreight for the sick committee\non cards sent out, and Mrs. Norman Brown for the house committee, reporting purchase of more\narticles for the catering cupboard.\nMrs. Day announced a nominating committee had been chosen,\nconsisting of Mrs. Allen, Mrs. Leslie ..and Miss Forbes. Gifts will be\nexchanged at the next meeting.\n\"Acknowledgements were received of the Auxiliary's gift to Hycroft, with greetings sent from\nMrs. Digby, convener of Hycroft\ncommittees, also from Prime Minister Diefenbaker's office in reply\nto the LA letter containing an invitation tb have the Queen.visit\nNelson next year.\nCastlegar District meeting and\nprovincial executive meeting reports were read. It was decided to\nsend the usual donations to Hycroft, the Pearson TB Hospital,\nShaughnessy Military Hospital and\nEssondale Mental Hospital.\nMra. Fred Castle's tea committee consisted of Mrs. O. Hanson,\nMrs. K. H. Wickens, Mrs. L. W.\nBicknell, Mrs. R. McCreight and\nMrs. N. Cole.\nMAMMOTH   SUBMARINE\nLargest of U.S. nuclear-powered\nsubmarines, the triple-decked Triton displaces 5,450 tons.\nJcufolL . . .\nAnother Shipment Now in of the\nSPECIAL TABLECLOTH\nn.39\n51\" square. Regular $2.29.\nEach\t\nWABASSO FLANNELETTE\nIn a great variety of Stripes\nand Florals. 36\". Yard\t\n69*\nJaijl&iL 0Juf SooiiL\nPhone 1485\n624 Baker St.\nTJTjUad^ fashions\nNovember SALE of\nCoats and Car Coats\nCONTINUES\nPrepare for the Festive Season.\nUse Our Lay-Away Plan\nFor Party Dresses and Gifts.\nSlim Jims in Size 20.\nROLLS, MUFFINS\nARE A CHANGE\nHere are recipes for refrigerator\nrolls and apple sugar muffins, both\nrecipes from the Church of Redeemer Service Club cook book,\nREFRIGERATOR ROLLS\n1 package yeast, Vt cup lukewarm water, 1 teaspoon sugar, Vt\ncup shortening, Vt cup sugar, VA\nteaspoons salt, 1 cup boiling water,\n4 cups flour.\nDissolve yeast in lukewarm water, add 1 teaspoon sugar. Put\nshortening (cut up), sugar and\nsalt in bowl. Pour boiling water\nover. Let cool. Then add 1 beaten\negg and yeast mixture alternately\nwith flour. Mix and put in refrigerator until ready to use. Knead\nand form in rolls. Let rise until\ndouble in bulk. Bake in 425\"degrees\nfor 20 minutes.\nAPPLE SUGAR MUFFINS\n4 tablespoons butter, 1 egg beaten, 3% teaspoons baking powder,\n1 cup chopped apple, Vt cup white\nsugar, 2 cups flour, Vt teaspoon\nsalt, 1 cup milk, Vt teaspoon vanilla. Cream butter and sugar, add\negg. Sift and add dry ingredients\nwith milk. Add lastly the apple.\nMix as little as possible. Bake in\nmuffin tins and before you place\nin the oven, sprinkle with sugar\nand cinnamon.\nRECENTLY elected Noble\nGrand of the Queen City\nRebekah Lodge, Mrs. I. C.\nTaylor of 224 Innes Street is\npictured here. Past Noble\nGrand is Mrs. H. Bentham.\nInstallation of officers will\nbe held in January. Others\nelected were Mrs. C. A.\nPeters, Vice Grand, Mrs. Elsie Christiansen, recording\nsecretary, Mrs. A. tulloeh,\nfinancial secretary, and\nMrs. M. I. Terry, treasurer.\n\u2014Daily News phofo by Ian\nBrown.\nWoman lo Have\nSisler \"Rest\nIn Peace\"\nCHELMSFORD, England (CP)\nA stubborn Essex housewife has\nrouted the combined forces of\nLatin syntax and the vicar of her\nparish. At her insistence, die inscription on her sister's tombstone will read \"Rest in Peace.\"\nThe vicar, Rev. R. A. D. Heath,\nhad refused to permit the use of\nthe offending words in his churchyard on the grounds that they\nwere a perverted translation of\nthe Latin \"Requiescat in pace,\"\nwhich means \"May he (or she)\nrest in peace.\"\n\"It turns a prayer into a eom-\nmand,\" the vicar explained, adding that he would permit the correct translation, the abbreviation\n\"R.I.P.\" or the original Latin.\nThe housewife, Mrs. Lily Cox,\nappealed to a consistory court of\nthe diocese of Chelmsford, where\nthe vicar defended his decision on\nthe -grounds that the English\ntranslation changed the mood of\nthe Latin ierb from the subjunctive to the imperative.\n\"Who was to be held to be saying 'rest in peace?'\" he demanded. The petitioner was leaving God out. It appared that the\nwords were being addressed to\nthe departed by the living and\nthis went \"even beyond what the\nChurch of Rome permits.\"\nThe chancellor of the diocese,\nSir Ernest Roberts, upheld Mrs.\nCox. He suggested that the word\n\"rest\" is not intended as an imperative and that the pious nature of the expression is commonly understood.\nHe quoted a similar example,\n\"Good morning.\" an expression\nWidelv' used although lt is accepted that \"the goodness of the\nmorning is in no sense in the\ncontrol of the bidder.\"\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Here to attend the funeral of Mr. W. Lister\nwere Mrs. Lister's sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. A. Knudsen of\nVancouver and Mr. Lister's daughters and their husbands, Mr. and\nMrs. M,. Atcheson of Edmonton and\nMr. and Mrs. A. M. Macintosh of\nCranbrook.\nConstable Bruce Davis of the\nRCMP Is home for a three-week\nvacation after spending eight\nmonths training and touring the\nprovince and southern United\nStates with the RCMP Musical\nRide. His parents are Mr. and Mrs.\nD. J. Davis of South Slocan.\nVisiting their son-in-law and\ndaughter and infant grandson are\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Earle of Whitehorse, Y.T. They left for home\nWednesday after spending two\nweeks here.\nGREAT MOVEMENT\nMore than 20,000,000 emigrants\nfrom the British Isles went to\nplaces beyond Europe between\n1815 and 1914.\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL - Herb Webb of Edmonton, who has been spending\na vacation in Boswell to enjoy the\nfall fishing, has returned to his\nhome.\nREGISTRATION UP\nMONTREAL (CP) - Registration for the current school term\nin Jewish schools of the United\nTalmud Torahs reached 2,300 students, highest in 62 years, it was\nannounced Tuesday. Ben Neutel,\npresident of the system, said 10\nschools are operated, including\nschools in six synagogues.\nSANTA CLAUS\nIs Here!\nYes!   Santa   will  be   in   our\nSecond Floor Toyland\nFriday Afternoon\n2:30 to 3:30\nMother \u2014 Bring the children\nin and Santa will be happy\nto meet them and greet\nthem with a gift of candy\nand balloons.\nFreeman's Pre-Christmas\nSale Saves You $ $ $\nUpholstered Furniture\nRegular SALE\n1 Only\u2014La-z-boy Chair, soft green wool frieze  139.50 99.50\n1 Only\u2014Electronic Vibrator Recliner Chair. Tan and beige... 149.50 109.80\n2 Only\u2014Two-Piece Sofa Suites. 20-year guarantee.\nNylon viscose coyer \\  449.50 389.50\n2 Only\u2014Two-Piece Sofa Suites. One blue, one beige. Up to   319.50 279.80\n2 Only\u2014Two-Piece Lounge Suites. In nylon; coral or brown. 319.50 279.80\n2 Only\u2014Two-Piece Lounge Suites. Viscose cover. Beige\nand wheat. Up to \u00bb.  299.50 259.80\n1 Only\u2014Two-Piece Lounge Suite. Viscose in choc, brown. 199.50 169.80\n1 Only\u2014Three-Piece Grouping. Wrought iron with\nwhite plastic cover (sofa, love seat and armchair). 251.50 199.80\n1 Only\u2014Recreational Bar and Two Stools  223.50 184.80\n3 Only\u2014La-z-boy Chairs. Green, Chocolate and Grey,\nwith matching stools  149.50 134.80\n1 Only\u2014Drop-Side Couch. Cretonne cover.   37.50 29.98\n2 Only\u2014Scandinavian Occasional Chairs. Tangerine linen. 79.50 64.80\n1 Only\u2014Pull-Out Studio Couch. Beige  89.50 79.80\n1 Only\u2014Cape Cod Colonial Armchair.  78.00 88.00\n1 Odd Chesterfield Chair. Ice blue  99.50 49.80\n1 Odd Wedge Sectional Piece. Chocolate  96.00 49.80\n1 Only\u2014Occasional Chair. Blue leatherette    44.95 34.98\n20 Only\u2014Occasional or Dining Side Chairs  20% Off\nCorner, Coffee, Step\nand Occasional Tables\n1 Only\u2014Mahogany Deilcraft Step Table   59.95 49.98\n1 Only\u2014Bassett Walnut Step Table  44.95 34.98\n1 Only\u2014Natural Finish Step Table   18.50 13.80\n1 Only\u2014Deilcraft Corner Table. Autumn Leaf Mahogany. 62.75 49.98\n1 Only\u2014Drum Top Table, Walnut  49.50 29.80\n1 Only\u2014Walnut Corner Whatnot   47.00 37.00\n1 Only\u2014Lane Picture Window Table, Limed Oak   73.50 49.95\n1 Only\u2014Record Cabinet, Mahogany  69.50 84.98\n1 Only\u2014Deilcraft Mahogany Step Table  64.50 84.80\n1 Only\u2014Limed Oak Bookcase or China Cabinet   79.00 89.80\n2 Only\u2014Mahogany Arborite Coffee Tables  29.95 24.98\n1 Only\u2014Fruitwood Coffee Table  44.50 34.80\n1 Only\u2014Mahogany Liquor Cabinet With Glassware     99.50     89.80\n2 Only\u2014Snyder Amber Corner Tables, alcohol resistant\nfinish      57.50    47.80\n2 Only\u2014Snyder Amber Round Coffee Tables, resistant\nfinish  49.50 39.80\n3 Only\u2014Snyder Amber Bookshelf, resistant finish  38.50 32.80\n4 Only\u2014Snyder Amber Step Tables, resistant finish  43.50 36.80\n1 Only\u2014Snyder Amber Cocktail Table, resistant finish  57.50 44.80\n1 Only\u2014Walnut Telephone Table, pull-out seat  42.50 29.80\n1 Only-Limed Oak End Table With Shelf   39.95 29.98\n3 Only\u2014Limed Oak Coffee Tables, Glass Top   29.95 21.98\n1 Only\u2014Damaged Coffee Table, Mahogany  44.50 34.80\n1 Only\u2014Damaged Coffee Table, Mahogany  39.95 29.98\n1 Only\u2014Damaged Coffee Table, solid elm, walnut    29.95    22.95\nDining Pieces\n2 Only\u20145-Piece Metal Dinette Sets, Arborite, Copper and\nWhite Glitter.   129.50 99.98\n1 Only\u2014Vilas Rock Maple Dinette Set  143.50 129.98\n1 Only\u2014Chrome and Copper Set, yellow top. .'.  169.50 140.00\n3 Only\u2014Chrome and Copper Sets, yellow, grey, chartreuse. 119.50 89.80\n3 Only\u2014Chrome and Copper Sets, coral, chartreuse, yellow. 99.50 69.50\n1 Only\u2014Wrought Iron With Inlaid Arborite top, chartreuse,\nchairs. 5-piece set   224.50   149.50\n1 Only\u20146-Piece Walnut Dinette Set, Scanda style  359.50   279.50\n1 Only\u20146-Piece Teak Dining Room Suite 618.00   518.00\n1 Only\u2014Limed Oak Drop-Leaf Extension Table, Seats 14. .. 159.50   109.00\n1 Only\u2014Foldover Console Table, Swedish walnut  119.00    99.50\nALL Occasional Dining Chairs  20% Off\nBedroom\n3-Piece Walnut Double Dresser Suite  199.50 179.50\n5-Piece Walnut Double Dresser Suite   459.50 399.50\n3-Piece Solid Elm Double Dresser, factory marked  314.50 279.50\n4-Pc. Colonial Double Dresser Suite by Imperial. Night Table. 383.00 343.00\n3-Piece French Provincial Suite by Fitton-Parker   449.50 399.50\n3-Piece Desert Sand Mahogany, Bookcase Bed   229.50 179.50\n3-Piece Cherry Mahogany by Fitton-Parker   329.50 279.50\n2 Only\u20143-Piece Double Dresser Suites. Flamingo or walnut. 239.50 199.50\n3-Piece Solid Elm Triple Dresser Suite  379.50 339.50\n10% OFF Any Mattress and Box Spring Unit with above suites.\nCedar Chests\nBEAUTIFUL CEDAR CHESTS BY HONDERICH\n3 Only\u2014Mahogany, Limed Oak or Sahara Mahogany.   109.00 94.50\n1 Only\u2014Light Walnut    79.50 69.50\n1 Only\u2014Scandinavian Walnut    99.50 89.50\n1 Only\u2014Seamist Mahogany. ..:  109.00 94.50\n1 Only\u2014Waterfall Top in Walnut    79.50 69.50\n1 Only\u2014Plank Top in Walnut    89.50 59.50\nAppliances\nDeluxe 40\" Beach Electrie Push-Button Range  434.00   299.50\nDeluxe 30\" Beach Electric Range   369.00   285.00\n21\" Economy Model, full thermostat \u201e    189.50   149.50\nStore-wide Clearance Will Save You Money This\nChristmas.... Shop at\n639 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 115\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\nVJtoVJUL ^OA&ifL...\nHitherto Unknown Girl Teams\nUp With Four Hollywood Stars\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)-Producer\nStanley Kramer has passed up\nHollywood's big names to team\nan unknown with four top stars\nin On the Beach.\nShe is Donna Anderson, a\npretty, 19-year-old dancer whose\nsuccess story is an unusual one.\nOn Jan. 1, she will fly to Aus-\ny tralia to join Gregory Peck, Ava\nGardner, Fred Astaire and Tony\nTkedlacAagL,\n\u00a3y. sXauAa. LVhadsA\nNEWS ABOUT BABY\nMother's delight now \u2014 a cherished memento for baby and it's\nfun to embroider.\nPlease the entire family with\nthis pretty baby sampler that\nhas all the Important data. Pattern 792: transfer of panel 12 x 16\ninches; color chart. Easy!\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nN.D.N., 60 Front St. W., Toronto.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nA new 1959 Laura Wheeler\nneedlecraft book, just out, has\nlovely designs to order: embroidery, crochet, knitting, weaving,\nquilting, toys. In the book is a\nspecial surprise to make a little\ngirl happy \u2014 a cut-out doll and\nclothes to color. Send 25 cents\nfor this book.\nPerkins in Kramer's production\nof the Nevil Shute novel.\nKramer has faith in her. In fact\nhis faith has extended for the four\nyears in which he has kept her\nunder personal contract.\nNOTICED AT DANCE SCHOOL\nHere's how it all happened:\nDonna was a 15-year-old dance\nstudent at one of Hollywood's ballet schools. She took part in a\nrecital to which Kramer and his\nwife were invited by choreographer Eugene Loring. It's reported the producer was impressed with Donna.\n\"I think Mrs. Kramer was impressed,\" she corrected. At any\nrate, she was invited with her\nmother and grandmother to visit\nthe studio, where Kramer advised dramatic lessons for Donna.\nWhen it appeared that the\nfamily couldn t afford such expense, he decided to put the\nyoung girl under exclusive con-\nINTENSIVE TRAINING\nIt was the first time he had\never done so, though he sparked\nthe careers of Kirk Douglas\n(Champion), Grace Kelly (High\nNoon) and Marlon Brando. Cme\nMen.)\nThen followed four years of intensive training, with dramatic\ncoaches as well as dance teachers.\n\"The break came when I tested\nfor a role in a TV show at Desilu\nstudios,\"' she said. \"I didn't get\nthe part, but Mr. Kramer saw\nthe test and I guess he liked it.\"\nHollywood may have a new\nstar in this brown-haired beauty.\nMiner's Widow\nSues WCB For\n$20,001)\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mrs.\nPearl Murray of Zeballos, B.C.,\nhas asked the provincial government for permission to sue the\nWorkmen's Compensation Board\nfor $20,000, it was learned Wednesday.\n. Mrs.  Murray,  57,  claims her\nminer husband died of Silicosis.\nThe board denied that silicosis\nwas the cause of his death and\nhas refused her claim\u2014although\nit paid Mr. Murray a disability\npension for silicosis for 10 years.\nMrs. Murray's lawyer, John\nStanton, has accused the government of stalling on the case and\ncharges \"unfair dealings\" in its\nfailure to reply to her petition,\nRobert Murray, 61, died in 1955\nin Kimberley Hospital. An autopsy indicated his death was\ncaused by silicosis and three\ndoctors supported the claim.\nPrairie Papers Call for Govt\nSpending Cut to End Inflation\nBy The Canadian Press\nSharply - reduced government\nspending \u2014 and higher taxes if\nnecessary \u2014 are urged by two\nSaskatchewan daily newspapers in\na campaign to end inflation in\nCanada.\nThe Regina Leader-Post and\nSaskatoon Star-Phoenix have been\nfront-paging a series of 10 articles\nseeking re-establishment of conditions warranting Canaidans to\nlend their savings to the government in amounts sufficient to\nfinance its operations without resort to \"printing press\" money.\n\"These correctives,\" says the\nseries of Robert Moon, the papers'\nOttawa correspondent, \"will be\npainful but they are absolutely\nnecessary to save our dollar and\nour savings from ruination.\"\nDEBT INCREASING\nThe articles say:\n\"Canada's gross national debt,\nwhich stands at $900 for every\nman, woman and child, ls increasing rapidly once more. It now\nstands at $16,000,000,000 and It's\ngoing up.\n\"the new increase shows every\nsign of producing another inflationary round of cost and price increases just as it did during the\nSecond World War. This time,\nhowever, the result can be much,\nmuch worse.\n\"To the extent of $1,500,000,000\nin the last 13 months our government has added to its debt obligations by creating new 'printing\npress' money \u2014 that is, by selling\nbonds to the banks who pay for\nthem by creating new deposits for\nthe government to spend. It now\nseems that our government's present spending policies will result in\nmore money being created, or\n'printed,' and spent, to add further\nto the inflationary spiral.\"\nThe increase in debt, the articles\ncomment, might have taken place\nregardless of what government\nWas in power, for both major\nparties were committed to extensive spending programs. Both\nnewspapers are independent Liberal.\nCURRENT DEFICIT\nReferring to the current year's\nlarge federal budgetary deficit,\nand indications that deficits will\ncontinue, the articles add:\n\"The Conservative administration last year formed a minority\ngovernment which sought re-election 10 months after Its initial elec-\ncause \"medical information on\nfile does not confirm death was\ndue to the condition for which\nhe was receiving compensation.\"\nMurray's autopsy report\nshowed the miner had also been\nsuffering from cancer of the left\nIqng for six months prior to his\ndeath.\nThe report said this contributed\nto the death, \"but was not related to the disease or condition\nBut the board disputed it be-  causing it . . . silicosis.\"\ntion. In that 10-month period all\nparties sought election by promises\nto cut taxes and increase spending\nwhich would have made deficit\nfinancing inescapable. The victor\nat the polls found its financial difficulties compounded by an economic dip.\"\nIt is crucially important, they\ncontinue, that Canadians should\nbe constantly informed of what\ngoes on, and what is involved in\nnational monetary policy. It It\nwithin the power of government,\nthrough its handling of the national debt, to speed up or slow\ndown inflation. But the articles\nadd:\n\"Our government will require\npublic understanding, pressure and\nsupport if it is to act effectively.\nIt will need moderation in the demands from people for policies\nwhich will add fresh fuel to inflationary fires.\nCAN CALL A HALT\n\"If the working of the democratic system has led to higher\nand higher governmental expenditures, the people also have the\npower to call a halt.\n\"They should insist that on average the government live within its\nmeans without resorting to the\nartificial creation of money and\nthat all expenditures are justified.\n\"There are no easy answers to\ncontrolling inflation. An informed\nand aroused public must know\nthat there is no ple-ln-the-sky and\nmust give its political support only\nto governmental financial policies\nand money practices that maintain the purchasing power of the\ndollar.\n\"The trouble is, authorities always meet with a great deal of\npublic resistance when anyone\nsuggests shrinking tbe money supply. The public simply does not\nunderstand the ultimate danger\nand damage to the purchasing\npower of the dollar.\n\"It Is only a year ago that many\npeople decried so-called 'tight\nitioney,' when aU the government\nand the Bank of Canada were trying to do was to stop the money\nsupply from expanding, not trying\nto reduce it.\"\nSometimes, the articles comment, governments \"print\" money\nbecause they wish to avoid the\npolitically unpopular action of\nraising taxes to cover a deficit.\n\"The terrible fact,\" they add,\n\"is that in seeking to avoid a\npolitically unpopular action an\nextremely harmful economic force\nls set in motion.\"\nAustralian Artist Appeals\nAgainst Jail Sentence\nName-Impr\nCHRISTMAS\nCARDS\n\u00abiA_T'\u00ab   Kmmmmmm\nMAKE YOUR\nSELECTIONS\nNOW!\nSEE OUR HUGE\nVARIETY OF\nEXCITING NEW\nCARDS!\nThis season, Christmas Cards are more\nbeautiful, more expressive than ever before.\nYou'll find just the right one to reflect\n\/our sentiments \u2014 serious or humorous \u2014\ntor personal, business, or family use! Each\n:ard will be printed with name and address\njnd your message. Plan to make your\n\u2022election as soon as possible.\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\nBy LOUIS LECK\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nSYDNEY, Australia' (CP) -. A\ncurious human tragedy is near-\nins its climax in the supreme\ncourt of dusty Alice Springs, unofficial pa pital of the desert\n\"dead heart of central Australia\nwhere Stone - Age aborigines\ndwell.\nThe court is about to hear an\nappeal by Albert Namatjira, 59,\nan astonishly successful aboriginal artist, against a six - month\njail sentence for supplying liquor\nto another aboriginal, a ward of\nthe state,\nsince Europeans first settled\nAustralia 170 years ago, there\nhas been no other story quite like\nthat of the black artist. It has\ntouched the conscience of many\nwhites, aware of past blunders\nand inhumanity toward the aborigines.\nJUSTICE ON TRIAL\nn many ways the white man\nfeels that he and his system of\njustice\u2014and not Namatjira\u2014are\nare on trial.\nNamatjira symbolizes the problems of his people, who not so\nlong ago lived by hunting kangaroos, snakes and lizards and\nby collecting grubs practically inedible to white men.\nIn Namatjira's time the tribesmen have lived mainly on white\nman's food, usually supplied by\nmissions or by the government,\nwhile white Australia's cattle\nroam the best of the old hunting\ngrounds.\nNamatjira probably never\nwould have been heard of outside his tribe\u2014the Aruntas\u2014had\nhe not once watched a visiting\nartist, Rex Battersbee, at work.\nHe asked to try his hand and\nBattersbee. astonished at his talent. tau.it him all he could.\nThe   Namatjira   canvases, be-\n(Dama. lAp. WUtk\nWhvrfan. TJtaAiut\nPrintBlPillern\nEDUCATIONISTS MEET\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A group of\nCanadian nursing educationists\nopens a three-day meeting here\nThursday on education facilities\nfor nursing students. The Canadian Association's nursing education committee is sponsoring the\nmeeting. Hazel B. Keeler, director of the University of Saskatchewan's school of nursing, will\nact as meeting chairman.\nFIREMAN'S AID \u2014 Pattern is formed by water\ncoming from hose with a special nozzle which fans water\nout so firemen can get closer to the flames. Noiz e was\ndemonstrated at a flremanshlp school In Cedar Rapids, Ia,\nToronto Writer Wins\nChildren's Book Award\nLONDON, Ont. (CP) - Walter\nD. Jackson, 72, general-manager\nof the Western fair for 33 years\nuntil his retirement last January\nas the \"dean of Canadian fair\nmanagers\", died Tuesday in hospital. At Chicago in 1951 he was\nelected president of the International Association of Fairs and.\nExpositions.\nVISITING VANCOUVER A\n| Special rate* t commercial or     ^m\n\u25a0 family. Located in tho heort    \u25a0\n. ot    \"miracle - tttilo\"   shopping    \u25a0\n\u25a0 oreo   acrou   from   Simpsons-    \u25a0\n\u25a0 Sean. Write or phone for details . .\n.'-CARAVAN MOTEL\t\n!    4875 Kinjlwoy   HEmlosk 3-B2BI\n\"Friendly atmosphere & central locotloflf*\nA DREAM TO SEW\nChoose your favorite length \u2014\nBaby Doll, dress, or long \u2014 for\nthis divine dream of a nightie!\nSnappy - sew \u2014 no waist seams,\nfew pattern parts. Make one, two\nor three versions so thriftily in\nrayon, cotton, Dacron or nylOn.\nPrinted Pattern 9175: ' Misses'\nSizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16\ntakes VA yards 39-inch fabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please\nprint plianly SIZE, NAME ADDRESS, STYLE  NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N DN, 60 FrOhtSt\u201eW\nToronto, Ont.\ncame a sensation although seme\ncritics said they were poor in\ntechnique, that there were no human figures in the landscapes\nsimply because the artist didn't\nknow how to represent them. .\nUNQUE VISION\nYet it was undeniable that Namatjira saw something in his\nOwn harsh, weirdly beautiful\ncountry that no one else had\nseen. The prolific artist's pictures\nsoon were selling for as much as\n$900 each and he became a national celebrity.\nThe Australian government\nmade him a . full citizen, lifting\nhim from the status of ward. For\none th|ng, Namatjira now was allowed to buy and drink alcoholic\ndrinks\u2014but not give alcohol to\nhis aboriginal friends,\nNamatjira became, until October, a man of two worlds; the\nartist'earning $18,000 a year, and\nthe \"old man\" or acknowledged\nleader of a group within his\ntribe.\nHe spent much of his time with\nthe natives in a cheap camp he-\nside a dry watercourse called\nMotis Soak, commuting to the\n\"pther world\" by taxi. Some\ncalled him the \"white man with\nthe black man's face,\" and others said tribal leaders had\n\"pointed the bone\"\u2014put a curse\n-on Namatjira. He laughed at\nsuch stories.\nBut it was certainly true thst\nNamatjira gathered a big tribal\nretinue, which lived on his\nbounty. There was talk pf wild\nnative drinking bouts. Namatjira was a witness at an inquest\nwhen a magistrate said he may\nhave indirectly contributed to a\nwoman's death.\nOLD LIFE ENDS\nThen both Namatjira's worlds\ncollapsed about him. He let an\naboriginal friend drink some of\nhis rum, and was charged under\na law framed to prevent one of\nthe worst forms of exploitation:\nThe supply of liquor to aborigines by unscrupulous white traders.\nNamatjira protested that he\nhad merely left a bottle open,\nthat he didn't know his friend\nwould drink. But he received a\nsix-month sentence artyway and\nserved several days before being\nreleased on bail.\nTwo state premiers pleaded for\nclemency for Narfiatjira and Australian Territories Minister Paul\nHaslqck declared:\n\"The way is wide open for Albert to appeal. If any sentence is\nnecessary, he will serve it in the\nopen, in his own country, and in\nconditions ipost likely to help\nhim regain his own grip on life.'\nNamatjira's lawyer said he\ntook the sentence in a gentlemanly, dignified way and had no\ncbmplalnts to make.\"\nNamatjira himself said nothing.\nHe \"went bush\"\u2014that is, he disappeared into the desert, apparently to seek solace amid the\nstrange redu and blues of the\nstark country that made him\nfamous.\nSOME MUST PAY\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Ottawa\nCollegiate Institute Board is\ngoing to start charging fees for\nstudents who have been in its\nhigh schools for six or more\nyears and who have failed more\nthan once. Beginning in January,\nthese students will be charged $25\na subject, to a maximum of $150.\nOTTAWA (CP) - The \"book\nof the-year\" medals for the best\nCanadian books for children, one\nin English and one in French,\nwere announced by the Canadian\nLibrary Association,\nJohn F. Hayes of Toronto is\ngiven the English language\naward for \"The Dangerous Cove\"\n(Copp Clark).\nMrs^ Helene Flamme of Montreal wins the French language\nmedal for \"Un Drole de Petit\nCheval\" (Editions Lemeac.)\nMARK BOOK WEEK\nThe awards coincide with the\nopening Nov. 15 of Young Canada's Book Week and are determined by a vote of the 171 members of the Canadian Association\nof Children's Librarians' across\nCanada.\nThese medals, given only in\nthose years when a book is\ndeemed worthy, are \"to encourage the writing and publishing in\nCanada of good books for boys\nand girls by Canadian authors.\"\nMr. Hayes, a director of the\nSoutham Company Limited, previously twice won the Governor-\nGeneral's award for two histori.\ncal adventure stories\u2014\"A Land\nDivided,\" in 1952, and \"Rebels\nRide at Night,\" in 1954. Some of\nhis books have been adapted for\nradio dramatization by the CBC,\nand his stories have appeared in\nschool books both in Canada and\nthe United States,\nEXCITING DAYS\n\"The Dangerous Cove\" tells of\nthe adventures of two boys in\nNewfoundland during the exciting\ndays when pirates were raiding\ntile settlements.\nBorn in Dryden, Ont., 53 years\nago, Mr. Hayes was educated in\nWinnipeg and had a variety of\noccupations including garage mechanic, clothing salesman, steel-\nmill worker, advertising salesman and bush worker before joining the staff of the Southam\nnewspapers in Toronto. He- had\nstudied art under Franz Johnston\nand from the Southam Company\nwas transferred to the Southam\nPrinting Company, of which-he\nnow is vice-president and managing director.\nMrs. Flamme, a native of Ottawa, waS educated in Montreal\nand her first book \"Claude et\nClaudine\" was published tn 1956.\nThis was followed by three illustrated children's stories. Herself\nthe .mother of a young boy, Mrs.\nFlamme's medal-winning book is\nthe story of a little girl's love for\nClassified Adi Get Results\nBROKENSHIRE\nat\nFRUITVALE\nlegion Hall\n8 p.m.\nThurs., Nov. 27th\nPUBLIC MEETING\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nGuest Speaker:\nPETER DEWDNEY\nInserted by Rossland - Trail\nConservative Association\nan unattractive colt on her grandfather's farm.\nCONFIDENTIALLY  YOURS\nby Byrne Hope Snnders\nMONTREAL; Nov. 27th \u2014 Cats are connoisseurs\nAm. Hk  muntmsal; Nov. zyui \u2014uats are connoisseurs\nH MJ  of good food I You know how snooty they can\n^\u25a0i|i'B  be about food tliey don't like \u2014and how enthu-\nwlilPlsF    elastic  they  become  about  DR.  BALLARD'S\n.i||*||^     CHAMPION WHOLE FISH CAT FOOD1 AU cats\n\u25a0H urn       and kittens love fish, and Dr. Ballard's new cat\n^HM. food  contains  the  high-quality  proteins  found\n^m only in whole fish ... and has Vitamin Bl\nadded. It's a new balanced nutrition formula that jmll make a\npurring beauty of your cat . . . sleek coat, bright eyes, bouncing\ngood health and high spirits. Yes, this new Dr. Ballard's Cat Food\nis better than ever!\nMAKE YOUR PRESENT HOME YOUR DREAM HOMEI . . .\nWith outside construction work slackening off        \u2014^\nfor the winter, it's now easier to find skilled   _^4%_\nworkmen to do your long-planned indoor home f     55\nimprovements. Turn your house Into the dream [ RIM\nhome it can be by arranging for a low-cost\/ W_V\nBANK OF MONTREAL Home  Improvement\nLoan. You'll save money by paying cash for^\nmaterials and labour. You can repay your loan\nin equal monthly instalments, plus interest at\nonly 0% per annum, on the amount outstanding.\nJust secure an estimate on the cost of your\nmodernizing plan, then see your nearest B of M manager about\na Home Improvement Loan.\nFOR CHRISTMAS ENJOYMENT. Gather around the festive table\nto enjoy Holiday Egg Nog, made with\nBORDEN'S EAGLE BRAND Sweetened Condensed Milk . . .\nHoliday Egl Nog\nkl until (hick nnil light.\nBeat 4 ej( yolks until (hick am] llilht. Gradually beat\nIn one IS-oi. can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed\nMilk, Add tt tap. unit, 1 tap, vanilla, and 4 cupa whole\nmUk. Whip egg.whllds tintU atlf! hut not dry. Blend\nmeringue Into Egg Nog mixture. Sprinkle with nutates\n,, \u201e \u00bbnd garnish with whipped cream if desired , . .For\nvariation, add 2 tbapa. rich roast instant coffee for every quart of Egg Nog.\nBeat this mixture with rotary better until won blended. (Friends of mini\n\"lace\" It \u00ab\u00abtly (Or adults.) '\nWJ55C,RSLy.?A\u00a39i.for b5stinl tI,e 'what-to-have-for-dessert'\nproblem is ROYAL INSTANT PUDDINGS. For\na dessert that's dcliciously different, try this:\nCraiy Mlxed-up Puddln'\n9 cups cold milk \u2014 1 pkg. Rot. Instant Vanilla Pudding\n\u2014 tt cup seedless rslslns \u2014 tt cup chopped maraschino\ncherries\u2014 Vt cup chopped nut meats.\nPour milk Into bowl; add Royal Instant Vanilla Pudding\nas directed on package. Slir In fruits and nuts, spoon\nInto serving dishes. If desired; top with whipped cream.\nMakea f|vo scrumptious servings.\nIt's fun to try other variations - marshmnllowo, diced fruits, shredded coconut\n... you b\u00ab the Inveptorl\nVtm'U be glad to know that Royal instant Pudding Is tho \u00bbns y*u tan Main\nwilh skim milk. To save cash and calorics, simply foUow the directions on\ntho package.\nBITINO WINGS AHEAD; cold, cold mornings, when loving\nmothers make sure their families are cared\nfor cheerily with a hot cereal for breakfast I\nBless you all\u2014for ft means so much to each\n. one to enjoy, say, RED RIVER CEREAL,\nbefore the day's labors. Red River, with its\ndelicious blending of cracked wheat, rye and\nflax, brings energy values to the diet of\nyoungsters, and active workers, and guards\n,       r     ..     .regularity for older people,  and sedentary\nworkers. I write with real enthusiasm for Red River-and you'll\nunderstand why when you and your family have enjoyed it. Do\nget some this weekl\nA.\u00a3KJ!!ln_ !,FU'\" 'RIENpSHIP between you and your pup begini\nwith the first meal you feed him. Be sure it's\nDR. BALLARD'S CHAMPION DOG FOOD\nand you can be sure he'll be a happy,\nhealthy, devoted companion for years to come.\nDr. Ballard's is the veterinary diet that contains all the nutrients a dog needs. Your pet\nwill do equally well on any one of these\nthree flavours \u2014 Liver, Chicken and Regular.\nYou'll be delighted with your pup's sleek coat\nand high spirits. This week order some Dr.\nBallard's for your petl\nIDEAS! IDEASI You'll have lots of them when you use easy-\nto-prepare MINUTE RICE. So many delightful\n\u2014huiitcI mt\u00bb\\    combinations \u2014 with vegetables or fruits. Here's\ni<!s.i'_E't.A     one 'or PineaPPle Cream Rice which can bo\nISfg %Si    varled by using other fruits. Minute Rice \"fixes\nitself\"   In   just  5   minutes \u2014 plump,   tender,\nseparate kernels every time.\nPineapple Cream Rin\nCombine 2\/3 cup Minute Rice, 14 cup pineapple Juice,\n2\/3 cup water and tt tap. salt In a saucepan. Mix lust\n:   ,  \u201e . .      l0 moisten sil  rice. Bring quickly to a boil over high\n52, ,_aver \" \"?, im!\"\u00ab 5 minutes. Remove from beat and let stand 5 minutes.\nAdd tt cup well drained canned, crushed pineapple and mix highly with a fork. .\n\u00a3\"?' Si room  temperature.  Whin tt  cup heavy cream!  add 2  tbsps. sugar.\nfold cream into rice mixture and chiU about 1 hour. Makea 4 servings\nAUTHENTIC\nD COUNTRY\nRECIPE\nHptf\nNABOB\nMINCEMEAT\ntr- jm^'-jMi\" .rm1 v\nIt's easy to make delicious\nfestive treats with this rich,\nspicy mincemeat. Juiciest\napples, plump rslslns,\ntart peel.., matured\nand aged to perfection.\nk_\n \u2022SCMl\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27, 1958\u20147\nPRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., FRI., SAT.\nS1C0ND BIG WEEK! We are continuing our tremendous Beef Sale for all of this week. This is without a\ndoubt the finest-eating beef that we have ever offered for sale. Aged to perfection with a DOUBLE\nyour money back guarantee this meat is certainly a wonderful buy. Why don't ybu choose your favorite cut\nihis weekend from our bountiful selection -your family will be more than satisfied!\nCOMPARE * THE PRICE - THE TRIM - THE QUALITY\nBeef Sale!\nSirloin, T-Bone or Club. \"Waste-Free\".\n\u2022 STEAKS\n\u2022 CROSS RIB ROAST\n\u2022 BEEF SHORT RIBS\nTender Pot Roast.\nIdeal for braising.\n* STANDING RIB ROAST\n* GROUND BEEF\n* CHUCK ROAST\nKing of all roasts\nFor a tasty meat loaf.\nServe old-fashioned pot roast.\ni oz. ctn.\nMARGARINE   Calgary Packers; 16\nSWEET BISCUITS **'\u00bb a\u2014** **^\nGOLDEN    CORN    Malkin's Fancy; 15 oz. tin\t\nNAOVO    COFFEE Dr'P or Regular Grind\t\nSODA BISCUITS*\u2022*>\u00bb'\u2022 M**\u00ab*<\u2022\u00bb\u2022 \u2014\nWHITE HONEY **\u00ab\u2022 *\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab.\u00ab.,Ll\nib- 75\u00b0\njb.|ie\nib.33\u20ac\n.ib.59e\n\u2014 ib.39e\n\u2014 3 ibs. 65c\n3 tor $1.00\n_  2 for 25C\n....__ ib. 79c\n _ 25c\n\u2014\u2014 99c\nCABLE    MUXES    Monarch, Chocolate or White; 14 oz. pkg.\n3 \u00abor 85c\nFun for all . . .young and old alike ... at the grand\ngala opening of our big\nDon't Miss It  . . .  We Have the LARGEST SELECTION OF QU;\nNELSON at Very Reasonable Price. SAVE HERE\nTOYS IN\nOven Ready 'B'\nTURKEYS\nClean as a Pin Inside and Out\nI.C -\nIb.\n49\nMandarin Oranges\nCHILDREN LOVE 'EM\n$'\nBox\t\nBundle\nof\n2 Boxes\n1.63\n$3.19\nWESTLAND\nICE CREAM\nAssorted Flavors;\nHalf Gallon .  . .\n69\nRed Emperor\nPi\u00bbmp am*\nSonlcist Navel\nORANGES\nSweet and Juicy\n2ib,35c\nOkanagan Crisp\nMcintosh Apples\nGrade \"C\"\nlbs.\nGolden Ripe\nBANANAS\nServe With Jello\n2 .b, 3 9e\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\n|\n\u2014\n.   \u00bb -   \u2022\nChristmas Bell Ringer Values\nTerylene Blouses\nin Pretty Styles\nReg. 5.95 value. \u2014 Many styles and colors to choose from in this selection of attractive, dressy and casual blouses; short and three-quarter sleeve.\nPackaged for gift-giving. Holiday colors of white, blue, pink, maize. \u2014\nSizes 12 to 20. .......'....\t\n3\n99\nReversible Skirts\nPure wool fabrics in all-around pleated style. She\ngets two skirts in one. \u2014 It's completely reversible.\nSeams are sewn down both sides to fl* ^ C\nhip. Sizes 12 to 18 .'.      m\\fmmj\nSWEATERS...\nNew Ban-ion sweaters are a popular gift.\nThey're so luxurious in appearance, yet\npractical too. They come in lovely colors:\npastels and deep tones. Sizes 16 to 20.\n7.95 Cardigan\n5.98 Vullover\nTartan Slim Jims\nReg. 10.95\nExpertly tailored of imported\nall wool tartans that are authentic. Black Watch, Red\nFraser, Jubilee, McKinnon,\nHunt. FraBer Sizes: 10-18\t\n8\n99\nGift Slips\nNylon Half SIjp and\nPantie Set\nAttractive gift sets consist of 1 half slip with matching briefs. Nylon lace trim. Packaged together in\nplastic. Colors: white, pink, blue, maize, ^\/TQ\nred. Sizes: S, M,<L   AiQ\/\nTo delight a feminine heart. 40 dewier nylon slips in a lovely assortment of colors and white, lace trim.\nSizes 32 to 42.\n3.98\nBlanket Coats\nAyers' blanket coats, warm and\nlight weight, made from all 'wool\nblankets. Ideal for sports or casual\nwear. Will make an appreciated gift\nfor Christmas. Colors: red, fl* '<% f*\nblue, gold, mint. 12 to 20.   ^*mj\nSport Shirts Make Very Good\nGifts for the Men on Your List\nMen's Arrow Dress Shirts\nFine broadcloth.  Short fused collar. French\n' or plain cuff.   White. <fc E\nSizes 1414 to 17.     ?3\nMen's No-Iron Dress Shirts\nNeed little or no ironing. White broadcloth\nin dress style. '   .t C\nSizes UVt to 17     S>3\nDad's Favorite Nylon Socks\nLong wearing all-nylon yarns in novelty knit.\nElastic tops. Handsome colors. *l\nSizes 10 to 11%      H\u00bbl.\nDiamond Socks for Gifts\nMen really appreciate these! They're all-\nwool, in diamond argyle patterns, i nn\nSizes 10 to 12.  1.79\nMen's Gabardine Shirts\nA full and comfortable cut in smoothly finished gabardine. Gripper fasten-r A QO\ners. Sizes SmaU, Medium, Large.    1i\u21220\nMen't Flannelette Pyjamas\nOur own \"Baycrest\" make. Popu- \u00ab OR\niar colors. Sizes A, B, C, D, E.....    O.TO\nWarmly Lined Dress Gloves\nPliable capeskin with warm lin- O Ofl\ning. Tan, Black. Sizes 8V4 to 11.    *\u2022.*O\nCasual V-Neck Sweaters\nOrion and lambswool. Pre-shrunk. Q OE\nMothproof. Sizes S, M, L      O.TJ\n4\nA good choice of new, fancy patterns in this group. Neat-fitting collars, long sleeves. Popular colors.\nSizes: S, M, L, XL.\n.88\nOthers priced at 4.95 to 7.95\nOrion Sweaters\nLong sleeve, V-neck style in high\nbulk orlon. The ideal gift for the\nman in your life. Colors of red,\nblue and beige. i m aa\nSizes S, M, L   3.W\nBoxed Ties\nHandsome ties, attractively boxed\nfor Christmas giving. Wide choice\nof colors and fl\u00bb|\ndesigns.  4)1\nMen's\nDress Shoes\nFull grain leather uppers in three\npopular styles.' Full leather soles,\ngodyear welt constmctiori'\/-Colors\nof black or brown. 1 ^ Q C\nSizes 6_> to 11    ItL.yj\nDress Slacks\nPopular price, high quality slacks\nin all the wanted shades. Expert\ntailoring to give neat appearance\nand longer wear, Q QC\n30 to 40. y,yj\nMen's\nDress Hats\nBaycrest and Stetson quality fur\nfelt hats in latest styles. Tela-pinch\ninner circle Stetson in shades of\ncharcoal grey, brown and jet.\n6.50 and 9.95\nBoxed Briefs\n3 pairs of pretty nylon briefs in\nattractive jewel box. Perfect for\ngift-giving. 3 colors in   *\\ Q Q\neach box. S, M, L  tC..*fO\nOthers from 1.98\nPanties\nDainty trims of lace or embroidery, elastic or rib leg. In rayon.\nAssorted colors.      \"J &M\nSizes: S, M, L 3 for   ^>l\nQuilted Nylon Dusters Quilted Cotton Dusters\nQuilted nylon tricot makes really beautiful dusters. They're lightweight yet\n'. Fully Bn '   \" \"\nwarm and cozy. _\nflame, blue, apricot.\nSizes 12 to 20.\nlined. Colors:\n13.95\nFor that someone special! With attractive floral print, fully self-lined for\nwarmth. Lace trmi. Rose ii Grand blue print. S, M, L  I I .7 J\nCHRISTMAS CAKES\nRich, moist, dark or light Christmas cakes from the \"Bay\". Just full of old-fashioned goodness and flavor. Buy several now at these special prices, In handy re-usable lithographed tins\nor foil tins that are so handy for mailing overseas, ,\n1 Lb. Fruit Cakes\n(cello wrapped) \t\n2 Lb. Fruit Cakes\n(cello wrapped) \t\n.49\n.89\n2 Lb. Christmas Fruit Cakes, light\nor tiark (cello wrapped)  *\t\n2 Lb. Christmas Fruit Cakes, light\nor dark, almond iced\t\n1.79\n1.79\nVA   Lb.   Christmas   Fruit   Cakes,\nround tin, light - 1   QQ\nor dark.,    I.OSr\n2Vt Lb. Christmas Fruit   t*   mq\nCakes, round foil tin  tu.t\u00a3.tf\nSpecial Price Men's Socks\nArgyle famous make hose in diamond Argyle patterns. First quality. Regular Ctl\nvalue 1.75. '....: \u00abP I\n6 x 3 rib hose; famous name\nbrand. Reg. 1.50 value.\nPlain shades.\t\n$1\nSpecial Boys' Orion Sweaters\nA good-looking V-neck sweater just like \"Dad's.\nHigh bulk'100% orlon. Bright shades to please\nany young man. Sizes: S, M, L\t\n3\n69\nFlannelette Pyjamas in Prints\nFleecy soft flannelette in tailored or mandarin styles. Sanforized and sanitized for long wear and easy washing. Sizes 32-40.\n3.98\nNylon and Taffeta Crinolines\nFeminine styles in pretty crinolines. White, pink, blue. '\nSizes: S, M, L\t\nOTHERS TO 4.98\nNylon Baby Dolls\nDainty trim of nylon lace will make\nan attractive gift. Colors: cottilion blue,\npink, turquoise. 3  QQ\nSizes: S, M, L   D.sO\nMATCHING GOWNS\nWaltz-length in nylon tricot;\nfancy nylon lace trim\t\nFlannelette Shirts for Boys\n2.98\nComfortable flannelette with a fluffy nap,\nBright patterns and colors. Sizes: 8 to 18.\nBoys' Dress Shoes\nSavage Seniors in handsome styles. A perfect fit. Choose\nfrom black or brown in senior boys'   ' A AP\nsizes 3'\/a to 7   if *irj\n3.98\nNew Style Girls1 Dusters\n3.98\nBigger Boys' Dress Slacks        Lined Jeans\n#1\nCozy quilted dusters in newest\nstyles are sure to appeal to junior\ngirls. Some have lace trimmed yokes\nand pockets. Peter Pan collars,\ndainty cuffs, roomy pockets. Choice\nof yellow, pink or blue. Sizes: 7-14.\nLittle girls who are beginning to take\nan interest in clothes will really be\npleased with one of thesel Chemise\nor trapeze feature lace trimmed styles\njust like Mommy has. In pink, blue,\nmaize. Sizes: 4 to 6X.\nMade from quality suitings in regular pleated A AQ\nfront style. Handsome colors. Sizes: 28 to 34.   7*7'0\nBoys' Flannelette Pyjamas\nA roomy, comfortable cut in warm flannelette. A choice\nof popular colors and patterns. ' ^ A\\C\\\nSizes: 6 to 16  JLJltS\nHeavy denim jeans warmly lined throughout with flqn-\nnelette. Reinforced at points of strain. 2 QQ\nSizes 6 to 16.   D.J'O\nBoys' Sport Coats\nReg. values to 24.95. All wool jackets in    | \u00a3f QQ\nstriped or tweed effect. Sizes: 26 to 34    lO.Jf^r\n7.95\n5.98\nBoys' Handsome Slacks Boys' \"Happy Foot\" Socks\nReg. to 17.95\nGirls' 3-Piece Coat Sets\nAU wool fabrics in 3-piece coat sets\n\u2014 hat, leggings and coat. Some\nfeature fur fabric collars, others\nwith novelty detail. Broken sizes 3\nSPECIAL    10.99\nReg. to 16.95    \/\nSpec\/a\/ Coaf Sets\nWools, some nylon fleece warm\nquilted lining, 3-pieces, hat, leggings and coat. Assorted styles\nand colors. 1 f\\ AA\nSizes: 1 to 3X.    iV***\nm\nWell-tailored slacks in quality fabrics. Perfect\nfor dresB wear. Sizes: 24 to 34\t\nFoamtreads\"\n5.98\nIn lambswool or wool and nylon blend. Stretchie   d*|\nknit means no size worries: Medium or Large ^)l\nMen's \"Foamtreads\"\n3.98\nReversible Skirts\n-'All wool skirts that are com-\n.pletely reversible. Get 2-in-l\nwear in these lovely all-around\npleated skirts for that special\ngirl on your list. \u2014 New patterns and colors, tm QC\nSizes: 7 to 14   \/ .7 J\nOrion Sweaters\n100% high bulk Cardigans and\nJ\" mllovers in cashmere soft or-\non, guaranteed washable. \u2014\nColors: pink, blue, maize, red,\nbeige, wnite, mint. Sizes 2-6X.\nBoys' and Girls'\nPyjamas\nSoft and warm flannelette in\na good selection of styles and\nprints Perfect for gift-giving.\nSanforized. Sizes 3-6X, boys\nand girls'; sizes 7-14 | QQ\ngirls' only  I .70\nCorduroy\nSlim Jims\nNovelty corduroy stripes and\nmetallic stripes on solids. Sanforized. Girls will love a pair\nof these for Christ- \/t QO\nmas. Sizes 8-14  *?.>0'\nOthers at $3.98\nNylon Party\nDresses\nNew arrivals in pretty nylon\nparty dresses. -4 styles to\nchoose from. Lovely florals\nand solid fabrics, all nave self\nslip included. Party\ncolors. 4 to 6X.\n3.98\nA cozy type ot slipper with\nelastic side Inserts. Bright Red\nfabric uppers. Sizes: 6 to 2.\nBoys' \"Foamtreads\"\nBoys' Housecoats       Br|ef $ets\nCARDIGANS\nPULLOVERS\n2.98\n2.79\nSanforized fine pinwale corduroy, ideal for Christmas\ngifts. White trim on sash, boxer motif on pocket. Colors:\nblue and grey.\nSizes 2-6X\t\nr\nI\nStore Houn\n5.98\n\"~1\nI\nI\n3 pairs of pretty briefs boxed\nfor gift-giving. LSce trim elastic and band leg. Assorted\ncolors to box. <\u00a3 |\nSizes 2-4-6  <P '\nGirls'\nCrinoline Slips\nReg. 2.98\nFor gift-giving: lovely crino\nline slips of white nylon top,\ncrisp skirt. Ribbon trim bor\nder. Sizes: i  no\n8 to 14  I .77\nComfortable, easy to slip on, slippers for boys. Foam soles, fabric\nuppers. Red. Sizes: 1 to 5.\nWo's Foamtread Slippers\nWomen like these because they have the\ncomfort  of  a' bedroom  slipper,  yet  are\nsmart  enough  ta  wear  all   day\nfor   housework.    Slip-on    style.   *1 QK\nSizes: 4 to 9. ^'^\nWomen's Moccasins\nA favorite with Mom! Cozrly lined, fur\ntrimmed for real luxury; bead trim on vamp.\nFink, blue, red. ^  OQ\nSizes: 4 to 9   JLs.ifO\nThese Red or Grey plaid slippers\nare a popular gift. Foam soles,\nfabric uppers. Sizes: 6 to 12.\nMen's Romeo Slippers\n4.98\nDad's favorltel Comfortable side\ngore romeos with leather soles.\nIn Brown. Sizes: 6 to 12, with\nhalf sizes.\nTues., Wed., Thurs.,\u20149:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.\nI Friday, Shop 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nSaturday, Shop 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.\nClosed All Day Monday j\n-\u00bb    INCORPORATED  2?j? JA& JS7.Qv_ \u201e\n| \u25a0 1\n>  A Bay 90-Day Budget Account  \u25a0\nI helps make your Christmas shopping easier. '\n.    Group your purchases and  pay   '_  at the time\n|    of purchase. No carrying charges on bolance if\npaid within 90 days.\n_J\n \u25a0\n3043\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27, 1958 \u2014 9\n.     \u00bb   '    . \u00bb\nChristmas Bell Ringer Values\nGive Her a Gift\nof NYLONS\n%\nII'.\n60-Ga., 15-Den.\nNylons\nTwo pairs of sheer hose\nin pretty gift box. Sizes\n8_ito 11.\nSheer\nSeemless Hose\nTwo pairs of seamless\nnylons in gift box. Pretty\ncolors. Sizes 8_2 to. \u25a01.\ntit\n2.98\n1.98\n2.39\nBoxed Christmas Cards\nBox of 51 very attractive cards, complete with en-\nV.l.qp.s. Buy now atthis low \u2022' QQ\nsale price.     *0\\W\nLovely\nBoxed Hankies\nAssorted fancy hankies. Two\nor three to a box.\n59< to $1      59* to 1.29\nPearl Ensembles\nCreamy pearl necklaces with matching clip-on earrings. In attractive box for gift giving. 4Q\nA very good gift value!     ef tr\nJewelry Boxes\nGood idea! Large lower compartment for necklaces, bracelets. Divided upper tray for 1   QQ\nsmall pieces. Pink, blue, ivory.      \\*tW +\nGirls' Mitts, Gloves\nFancy wool mitts and gloves in\npretty styles. Lovely -\u00bbq\ncolors. Sizes: S, M, L.      .17\nKiddies' Mitts, Gloves\nChildren's applique mitts,\ngloves; toddlers' mitts with neck\ncord. Sizes: 1, ,n\n2. 3. .07\nHANDBAGS\nGenuine leather bags that are leather-lined throughout. Good choice of color and style. fl QQ\nReg. 9.95 value.    V\u00bbX*\nDelicious Chocolates\nHere's everyone's favorite gift! A variety of    \u00a3 ^*\nfresh and tempting centres  in every one-    j)   \u25a0\npound box\u2014fresh and tasty! Coated with\nthick chocolate for a real treat\nNylon Scarves\nGood choice of rayon, silk or\nnylon scarves. Wide range of\ncolors and patterns.\n, ' and save. Per Yard .\nReg. 14.95\nTerylene' Comforters\nDouble-bed size with nylon cover over terylene\nfibre fill. Non-allergenic, non-matting, resilient,\nlightweight and comfortable. 1 3 QO\nEach\n1 Registered trade-mark Polyester fibre.\nOval Bath Mat Sets\nSolid overlay on tweed background. A new and\nvery attractive item. Ybur choice of Rose, Pink,\nTurquoise, Coral, Blue, Green ^  QQ\nt_' or Yellow. A gift special\nm\nBoxed Towel Sets\nThree-piece plain and striped jacquard sets, four\npiece solid color sets, novelty kitchen towels with     ^i\ndishcloths. Make a lovely gift for\nhomemakers. Attractively packaged.\nSheets, Pillowcases\nOne sheet with a pair of matching  pillowcases, tl\nFine quality linen in lovely colors: Pink, Blue, J\nGold, Green, multi-colors, stripes,      jjjj QQ \"l^\nGenerous sizes. ~ ' W\u00bb3'^\nReg. .69\nFlannelette Yardage\n36\" wide in softly napped flannelette. Printed\nand plain pastel shades. Buy now Am\n*J\n*!'\n*\u00a7\u00a3\nBoxed Esmond Blankets\nThe perfect gift\u2014Rayon and nylon blend, completely'\nwashable. Approx. 72x84. Your choice C QQ\nof Rose, Green, Blue or Coral. Each    m**ir if\nChenille Bedspreads\nDoubel bed size in soft, closely-woven all-cotton chenille. Wide color range in contrasts m QQ\ndesigned for any decor. Each      * *****\nReg. 59.50 Piedmont\nPortable Sewing Machine\nA gift she is sure to appreciate. This Bay exclusive features\nsewing Ught, reverse stitch, adjustable stitch, fingertip control\nand por'-ble carrying case.\n2 Only\u2014$44 Each\nA Gift of Lasting Enjoyment for All\nBaycrest Combinations\n329.95\nPay Only $30\nDown\nBolance   Monthly\nGive hours of enjoyment to your family\n. \u2014 this set has true hi-fidelity reproduction. 10-tube radio with power\ntransformer to cover four bands:\nA.M., P.M., long and short wave.\nFive speakers, including woofer, mid-\nronge and tweeters. Fully automatic\nrecord player.\nRCA Victor Hi Fi Units\n299.95\nPay Only $31\nDown\nBalance   Monthly\nOne of these RCA Victor combinations mokes\no lovely gift. Outstanding performance makes\nthis a very popular model. It features an\n8-tube standard radio and a .fully automatic\nrecord changer with four speeds. Cabinet has\nthree speakers including woofer.' Range from\n40 to 20,000 cycles. Units are available In\nMahogany or Limed Oak cabinets. See this\nRCA Victor unit today!\nReg. 239.95 RCA 1959 17\" Television Set\nFor a gift of lasting enjoyment. 19-tube chassis\nwith push-button on-off switch. Finished in walnut. Due to a special purchase, we are pleased to\npass this saving on to you.\n199\n95\n*    Baie If Desired Extra 14.95\nRCA Victor Clock Radio\nVictor <\n39.95\nA gift that will be used every day! RCA Victor clock\nradios with \"window dial\" tuning, pre\nselected volume. Pretty decorator colors!.\nRCA Victor Nipper Radio\nSmart table radios with \"Golden Throat\"\ncolors that blend with bedroom, kitchen,\nliving room. Size 7!_s\"xl2Jri\"x63\/4\".\t\n\"Easy\" Twin   Reg. 279w\nBrush Floor   AMC\nPolishers,   ^frigerators\nScrubbers\nGIFT SUGGESTIONS\nBe sure to see our Second Floor gift aisle featuring Boxed Towel Sets, Sheeti and Cases, Blankets, Lead Crystal Brassware, Devon ware Ornaments, Fine China, Bar Accessories and. Traffic\nAppliances, Our buyers have combed the world\nmarkets for the old favorites and the new and\ndifferent.\n10.5 cu. ft refrigerators featuring push-button defrost,\npastel interiors, eye - level\ncontrol. Chrome finish trays\nand egg-rack on door.\n239\n95\nShe'll really appreciate a gift like this \u2014\nthe \"Easy\" floor polisher and scrubber will\nlighten her housework every day for years\nto come. Swivel handle offers the most ease\nin getting into corners and out-of-the-way\nspots. Twin brushes bring floors up to a high\n' gloss when used as polishers, when used as\nscrubber they eliminate a lot of back-\nbreaking work. Comes with polishing\nbrushes, buffers and steel wool pads. Give\nher an \"Easy\" polisher and scrubber this\nyear!\n79\n95\n#1\ntone. Come In\n27.95\nReg. 11995\n1-Pce. Lounge\nTempered steel coil base\nwith white cotton padding.\nDrop-back model makes into\n3\/i-bed by night and Chester\nfield\" by day. Wool freize\ncovers in your choice of\nGreen or Red.\n?l<\nMen's 2-Suiter\nLuggage\n2250\nFor Dad or your best beau, this\ntwo-suiter bag makes a wonderful\ngift. Plywood construction, brass\nhardware, sturdy hinges. Two\nhangers, suit rack ,divider, pockets and tie flap. Linen lining.\nVinyl finish is abrasive-proof. In\nhis favorite London Tan finish.\nn\n*[\n\u00bbE\n*M\nI\n#1\n*1\nPopular Gift Idea\nCowhide Club Bags\n15.95 to 39.95\nThese split cowhide bags make a\nvery nice gift for the man who\ntravels! Irish linen lining, zipper\nclosing and lock. A good size, too.\nTwo pockets to hold socks, hankies and underwear. In handsome\nLondon Tan shade.\nlet Buckets\nMade from spun-aluminum In\nhammered finish. Secure fitting\nlid and easy-to-carry handles.\nChrome-type\nfinish.  \t\n2.19\nLead Crystal\nSalt and Peppers\nCut glass type with chroma finish\nscrew tops. Imported from Western Germany.\nPair \t\n.98\nNut Bowl Set\nLarge 10\" size wooden bowl with\ncracker and picks. *\\ ^ft\nSet 4*,A*f\nReg. 8.95\nKitchen Waste Cans\n\"Sani-Queen\" step-on model. \u2014\nSquare design to save you space.\nRust-resistant aluml- \u00a3? QQ\nnum inner container.   w\u00ab<f ir\nReg. 7.95\nBathroom Scales\nAll metal ease and action. .\u2014\nChrome-skirted, magnified dial,\ngraduated to 250 Ibs.\nSpecial \t\n5.99\nReg. 6.99\nBathroom Hampers\nMade from sturdy hardwood\nframe and wicker weave. Quilted\nplastic covered hinged\nlid. Variety of colors.\n5.99\nOthers to 3.50\nINCORPORATED   8W MAY IG70\nChristmas Tree Gift Service\nYou just submit a list ef children's names and ages and tell\nus how much money you want to spend. The gifts will then\nbe delivered to you, gift-wrapped and ready for Santa to distribute. Special offer open to all organizations for staff and\nchildren's parties.\n \u2014\n'\n. \t\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27, 1958\nOttawa Asked To Revise\nCrowsnest Freight Rates\nHAMILTON (CP)-The Canadian Industrial Traffic League\nWednesday asked the federal government to revise its freight rates\non grain and flour in the territory covered by the Crownest\nPass rates.\nThe league, in a telegram to\nTransport Minister Hees, said\nreasonable rates should be determined and the difference borne\nby,the national treasury similar\nto the Maritime Freight Rates\nAct.\nThe movement of export grain\nbetween the Lakehead and the\nPacific coast are fixed by the\nCrowsnest Pass Statute of 1925.\nAll grain moving within the west\nto export markets is carried\nunder the low, statutory rates.    j\nUnder the Maritime Freight\nRates Act of 1927, the Atlantic\nprovinces get a 20 per cent reduction from normal freight\nrates, under a subsidy by the\nfederal government.\nIt is the first time the league,\ncomprised of 1,100 industrial and\ncommercial traffic management\npersonnel, has proposed a i solution to freight rate problems'. The\nmanagement personnel represent\n650' companies  throughout   Can-\n\"One type of freight   has\nThe league said freight rates\nized by the board of transport\nrate increases,\" the association\nmoving under statutory rates as\nrequest said. \"That is the traffic\ncovered by the Crownest Pass\nagreement.\" 1.\nNO PROVISION\nThe rates based on this formula were removed by statute\nfrom the jurisdiction of the\nboard and no provision for the\nconsideration or the adjustment\nof them was made in order to\nreflect changing economic conditions, the association said.\nRailway operating costs had increased tremendously since 1897.\nThis had necessitated a number\nof general increases in freight\nrates. I\n\"Traffic other than that covered by the Crowsnest rates must\nbear the whole burden of the\ngenerai increases.\"\n'\"The result has been that the\nburden of the concessions\ngranted when the act was passed\nin 1897 has, by change in economic conditions, been transferred from the carriers to the\ngeneral users   of  the   carriers'\nChild Anthrax Patient\nHas Doctors Puzzled\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Government\nofficials here are awaiting a laboratory report which may tell\nthem how a six-year-old girl\ncaught anthrax at her farmhome\n150 miles northeast of here.\nBut they said Wednesday there is\nno danger of an epidemic of the\nonce-fatal disease and there will\nbe no need to destroy animal\nherds where there is infection.\nLinda Gail Apland of the Lang-\nenburg district has been found to\nhave a mild form of anthrax.\nShe is believed to be the first\nhuman in Saskatchewan to catch\nthe disease in 30 years. Anthrax\nis usually caught from cattle or\nsheep, although it can be caught\nfrom other animals.\nDANGER MILD\nDr. F. B. Roth, provincial deputy health minister, said the danger of an epidemic is 'nil.\" Anthrax is not as catching, he said,\nas measles or smallpox and is\nnot an epidemic disease. The\nonly way to combat spread of the\ndisease is by isolating cases and\nthat has been done. The Apland\ngirl is the only known case.\nWhile anthrax once was fatal,\nmodern antibiotics such as penicillin have a strong effect on it.\nThe disease now lasts only three\nor four days, Dr. Roth said.\nHowever, there is no way of\ngaining immunity.\nWhile it can take other forms,\nanthrax usually means the formation of pustules on the skin,\nDr. Roth said. He said he believes the Apland girl has only\none small pustule on her face\nand he credited her local doctor\nwith discovering the disease\nquickly. The girl was progressing\nfavorably Tuesday.\nPROBLEM AMONG ANIMALS\nThe disease1 is more of a problem among animals than humans,\nDr. Roth said.\n\"You can tell humans to keep\naway from cases of the disease\nbut you can't tell animals.\"\nDr. E. E. Carlson, district\nveterinarian for the Dominion\nagriculture department, said vet-\nn !\nerinarians have checked the Apland farm animals. They now are\nawaiting a laboratory test to see\nif a cow, which died some time\nago, was suffering from the disease.\nHe said there is no need to investigate the herds of neighboring farms because anthrax' is not\nspread. through the air but\nthrough the soil used by diseased\nanimals.\nWOULD TAKE STEPS\nShould the laboratory test show\nanthrax was present, the department would take steps to clean\nout the disease, Dr. Carlson said.\nThis would not mean destruction\nof herds, he said, adding that\nanimals with the disease die\nquickly anyway.\nIt is possible to vaccinate animals against anthrax, Dr. Carlson said, but onee the disease is\ncaught it acts too quickly for victims to be cured.\nDr. Carlson said anthrax is\nrare amongst animals in Canada\nbut \"pockets occur occasionally.\" . \u25a0 ..\nFull Text of Green's Statement\nOn New Freiqht Rate Increase\nQueen Dedicates\nMemorial Chapel\nLONDON (AP) - Vice-Presi-\ndent Richard Nixon and 12 other\nAmericans stood with the Queen\nin crowded St. Paul's Cathedral\ntoday as Britain dedicated a\nmemorial chapel to American\nwar dead.\nNixon flew to London Tuesday\nto represent President Eisenhower at the ceremony. The 12\nother Americans were next-of-kin\nof some of the 28,000 U.S. servicemen the chapel commemorates, men who died during the\nwar in Britain or in operations\nfrom British bases.\nhe bishop of London dedicated the chapel to mark \"the\ncommon sacrifice made by the\nBritish and American peoples\nduring the Second World War.\"\nNixon, in formal morning dress\narrived with his wife at St.\nPaul's a few minutes before the\nceremony opened, hen came the\nQueen with Prince Philip, the\nQueen Mother and Princess Margaret.\nThe Queen unveiled a marble\npedestal on which the memorial\nroll of honor rests.\nOTTAWA. (Cf)-Following is\nthe text of acting prime minister Green's statement on a new\nfreight rate increase allowed\nthe railways: ,-,,'\u25a0\nOn the hearing of the appeal\nfrom the decision of'the board\nof transport commissioners\nawarding Ihe railways an increase in freight rates in order\nto meet a proposed increase in\nwages, it was agreed by the\neight provinces and the rail-\nWays:\n(1) That the wage increases\nare reasonable;\n(2) That a railway strike\nwould be a national disaster\nand must be avoided.\nThey disagreed on the propriety of the action of the board\nof transport commissioners in\nrates on an anticipated wage\nincrease which had not been\nunconditionally agreed upon by\nthe railways and their employees; the provinces asked that\nthe order made by the board be\ndisallowed on this ground.\nWe consider that, in future,\nthe railways and their employees must come to a definite\nagreement before a wage increase should be accepted by\nthe board of transport commissioners as the basis for an increase in freight rates; otherwise the board, as it foresaw\nitself, is apt to be forced into\nmaking judgments about wase\nsettlements which are not its\nproper responsibility. In the\npresent case we are not allowing the appeal on this ground\nbecause to do so at this stage\nwould precipitate a nation-wide\nstrike over an increase in\nwages as recommended, by a\nconciliation board which increase neither the railways nor.\nthe provinces have resisted or\nwill resist.\nThe suggestion was made\nthat these wage increases should\nbe paid from the federal treasury. We do not intend to\nembark upon a policy of subsidizing wage increases; there\nwould be no end to demands on\nall governments if such a policy\nwere adopted.\nsidizing wage Increases; there\nwould be no end to demands on\nall governments if such a.\npolicy were adopted.\nIt is however recognized by\nthe government that tiiere are\nserious inequities in the present\nfreight rate structure which\nhave both contributed to, and\nbeen aggravated by, the system of horizontal rate increases. The government has\nalready Indicated its intention\nto move towards a solution of\nthese problems.\nRepresentatives of the provinces made it clear during the\ncurrent hearings that their\nchipf- request is for a complete\nrewsion of fhe freight rate\nstructure. Obviously this could\nnot' be undertaken in the circumstances of the present appeal and in view of the certainty of a nation-wide railway\nstrike next Monday if immediate action were not forthcoming. The interim increases have\naccordingly been allowed, although this type of freight rate\nincrease is not in accord with\nthe government's long range\nplans.\nA study is being undertaken\nat once to work out measures to\nrelieve against inequities in the\nfreight rate structure, including\nany that may be aggravated by\nthe present increases.\nSteps are also being taken to\nset up a suitable body to review\nthe general field of railway\nproblems and policy. This study\nwill include not only a comprehensive consideration of the\nrailway freight rate problem-\nincluding the situation of the\nlong haul provinces in the West\nand in the Atlantic region\u2014but\nalso other specific problems\nwhich require solution if Canada's railways are to serve the\nnational interest without preju-\nBusiness Panel Predicts\n1959 Economic Recovery\nTWO CREWMEN, aloft, the\ntop section of the mainmast of\nthe Royal yacht Britannia is\nlowered at Portsmouth, England. The top section of the 123-\nfoot mast is to be hinged so that\nit can be lowered to squeeze\nunder bridges of the St. Lawrence Seaway through which the\nship will carry Queen Elizabeth\nduring the formal opening of Ihe\nwaterway next year.\nBy FORBES  RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business  Editor\nA year of economic recovery is\npredicted by a group of businessmen who have given their views\nto the St. Catharines chamber of\ncommerce.\nThe views\u2014outlined in a panel\ndiscussion to Tuesday night's fall\ndinner of the chamber\u2014indicate,\nhowever, that there is still considerable slack in the country's\nproduction facilities and recovery may proceed at a modest\npace.\nTHE PANEL\nThe panel consisted of J. Douglas Gibson of Toronto, assistant\ngenerai manager of the Bank of\nNova Scotia, and the following\nSt. Catharines businessmen:\nF. J. Barbeau, president of\nMcKinnon Industries, part of the\nGeneral Motors family; D. G.\nWillmot, president of Anthes-m-\nperial, producers of construction\nmaterials; C. Bruce Hill, president of ETF Tools; and F. R.\nCavers of Cavers Brothers, retail\nmerchants.\nMr. Gibson, presenting the general economic picture, made the\nfollowing points:\nGross national product, a record $31,400,000,000 in 1947, will be\nabout $32,200,000,000 this year and\nprobably well over $33,000,000,000\nin 1959. These increases, however, are not enough to keep up\nwith growth' of population and\nproduction capacity.\nExports, currently running\nslightly ahead of last year's record, will be sustained next year\nbut' Ao sizable increase is. likely.\nWHEAT NOT GOOD\nThe outlook for wheat Is \"not\ngood\" because of big Un i t e d\nStates crops. Cattle and aircraft\norders may also decline.\nCapital investment may decline moderately from this year's\n$8,50,000,000 to less than $8,000,-\n000,000, due to the fact that some\nlarge projects such as the St.\nLawrence Seaway are approaching completion.\nHousing may be down from\nthis year, but more money will\nbe spent on schools, post offices\nand highways. In general, current government outlays will\nstay up.\nMr. Gibson said it is encouraging that the recession has been\nhalted\u2014as a greater \"correction\" would not have been sur-\nSrising fallowing the 1955-1956\nbom.\nCARS STILL LAG\nMr. Barbeau said Canadian\nproduction of cars and trucks-\nestimated this year at 354,300 vehicles, compared with 403,581 in\n1957\u2014might pick up to 380,600 in\n1959. This would De a 7^-per-\nceht increase over this year, but\nstill behind 1957.\nMr. Willmot, speaking for the\n$6,800,000,000 construction industry, said that while construction\ncontracts in ihe first 10 months\nare 20-per-cent up from the same\nperiod last year, the increase in\nthe residential, commercial and\nengineering categories are up 36\nper cent. Industrial construction\nwas down 49 per cent.\nMr. Hill said Canada runs a\nlarge trade deficit with the\nUnited States and surplusses\nwith most other countries.\nAccordingly, any diversion of\npurchases from the U.S. to other\nareas could result in much renewed business through giving\nthose areas power to buy Canadian goods\u2014and should occasion\nno complaint in -the U.S.\ndicing particular industries or\nareas.\nthe intention of the government is tp provide both an im\nmediate alleviation of discrimination where it exists, and a\nlong term . solution to the\nbroader problems.\nJapanese Prince Chooses Bride\nTOKYO (AP) ,^'The Imperial\nCouncil is expected to announce\nThursday that Crown Prince Akihito. will marry a pretty commoner, Michiko Shoda, 24.\nAfter years of discreet gassing who the next empress\nJapanese  were  told  Wednesday1 a   bride. for   Japan's   imperial\nAkihito, 24, has picked, his. bride,\nAn announcement said the Imperial Council will meet Thursday to\ndiscuss matters concerning the\nmarriage of the Crown Prince.\"\nBy law, Uie 10-member council has to.approve the choice of\nENERGY SOURCES\nAbout half the world's energy\nsupplies now are derived irom\noil and natural gas.\nprinces. It is expected to approve\nMiss Shoda, daughter of the\npresident of the giant Nisshin\nFlour Company. She will be the\nfirst commoner in Japan's history to become the prospective\nempress: \u25a0\n\u2022\nteGJifi?\nFine Jewelri\nmemorable gi\nFor HIM... For HER!\nTwnsisto\u00bb W.\nLess B^ri<*\nElectric\nRazors\nSCHICK POWERSHAVE\nPHILISHAVE\nSUNBEAM GOLDEN GLIDE\nREMINGTON ROLLECTRIC\nREMINGTON PRINCESS\nREMINGTON AUTO-HOME\nLADIES' PHILISHAVE\nPAYER\nOTHER LADIES\nRAZORS from\nRONSON CFL ELECTRIC\nSHAVER with super-trim\n$26.68\n$19.97\n$22.50\n$20.97\n$14.95\n$23.87\nOLSON'S\nCREDIT JEWELLERS\n364 Boker St.\nPhone 1149\nOlson's \"to avoid price claims that are misleading\"\ndoes not make  comparative price statements.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\u201411\nm^6\nMEDIUM CHEESEBerk8hire Canadian\n! Cheddar:  pound\nCANTERBURY TEA .\u00bb&.\u25a0\"\u00a3**\nCREAM Of; WHEAT ft \u00a3\u00a35*1\t\nIRISH STEW p ita\n15 oz. tin\n\"T\"\nDOMESTIC SHORTENING 3 pound\nCannister\n58 oz. Jar.\nNALLEYS DILL PICKLES\nSHELLED WALNUTS %JA.\nAUSTRALIAN CURRANTS Glenview\n16 oz. package\n631\n$1.12\n 33$\n2 for 65*\n.,..;: 950\n_ 750\n690\n270\nFresh Eggs\nBreakfast Gem. Grade A\nin Cartons. Dozen\n59'\nFresh Bread\nPolly Ann. 24 oz. sliced loaf\nPark & Beans\n' Van Camps. 10 oz. tin\nli.25'\nOrange Juice\nBel-air Frozen Concentrate. .6 oz. tin\n2 or 59*\nMINCEMEAT    Empress Pure. 24 oz. Jar ..Liu.. 490\nHARVEST MARGARINE , *,*\u00ab***  2 tor 490\nGIANT  TIDE   special offer; package   \u2014. 750\n^.950\nAUSTRALIAN RAISINS J\u00a3\u00a3U.\nH. P. SAUCE\nFor meat and fish dishes\nSVt oz. bottle .....\u201e i ;\t\n350\nWORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE WcK340\nWin a free football helmet and football.\nEnter Swift's Grey Cup Contest.\nHalf and Half\nCoffee Cream. Lucerne\nPint Carton\t\n29*\n* Happy note\nfor the Holidays\nCOFFEE VALUES\n5 Coffees for 5 kinds of coffee lovers.\nGet them fresh every time you shop at SAFEWAY\nAIRWAY Mi'd' Mellow\n1 lb. bag\nNOB HILL ^tTatic...\nEDWARDS\nRich, Vivorous\n1 lb. Un ....:\t\n730\n750\n790\n2 lb.\nAIRWAY INSTANT Kfcious 470\nSAFEWAY INSTANT fT&\n490\n2 lb.\nBag   \t\n2 lb. tin\ntin .>\t\n8 oz.\njar  \t\n6 oz.\njar \t\n$1.43\n$1.47\n$1.55\n$1.49\n$1.19\nScore With Swift's Grey Cup Values\nLUNCHEON MEAT swift's Prem. 12 oz. oblong tin 2 for 85\\t\nLUNCHEON TONGUE SwUt., u 0, _* 6\\\nSWIFTS LARD i lb. package ..   L__ V.\nJEWEL SHORTENING t_ pM\t\nPORK   SAUSAGE Swift's Premium; 12\"oz. tin\nJapanese Mandarin\nORANGES\nFirst of the Season . . . Sweet, Juicy, Easy to Peal\nPer\nBox\nn.63\nBundle of\nTwo\nBoxes\t\n$\n3.19\nFlorida Grapefruit\nIndian River\n5 \u00ab59\nTurnips\nLocal Swedes.\nib. 5e\nCranberries\nOcean Spray.\nMake your sauce now for the holidays.\n16 oz. pkg. \u00a3mrw\nSweet Potatoes\nBake and serve with ham.\n2 ibs. 39\u00b0\nSoup Mixes\nLipton's Chicken Noodle\nor Tomato Vegetable\npackage Jm for OOr\nQuaker Oats\nQuick cooking.     CC$\nS Ib. bag     J J\nLicorice\nAllsorts\n2 lb. gift 7Q.\nbox. ..     I'.*\nLUCERNE\nOrange\nDrink\nQuart ^3*\ncarton.\n23'\nFoil Wrap\ne\n65*\nStuart House\n18\" by 25'\nRoll\t\n* Kamloops' Show Beef *\nHere again is your opportunity to enjoy top quality Show Beef from the Fat Stock\nShow and Sale held in Kamloops. This week we are offering properly-aged hindquarter cuts. Enjoy Beef this weekend for a family treat.\nKAAT       \\tA3|\/C    Sirloin, T-Bone or Club .,    7\\   \/ i\nUCCI        JlCCllw    Kamloops Show Beef        lb. W #    \\\nSs*\"\u25a0*fc65cS_-r* \u201e89<\nKamloops Show Beef.._\t\nRound Steak  .,  \"Fftc\nOr Roast Beef ID.    #   ^M\nKamloops Show Beef  m-      ^r\nRump Roast   ., \u25a0mW:-t%c\nFirst and Second Cuts ID.    m       JM\nKamloops Show Beef .7.  m       ^r\nRoast Beef\nKamloops Show Beef.\nSide Bacon\nSwift's Premium Sliced\n1 Ib. package\t\nSWIFT'S\nFully Cooked Hams\nSwift's.\nWhole, Half or Quartered. \t\n69c\nib. 59c\nPurex Tissue\n4  fr 49*\nPrices\nEffective\nNovember\n27-28-29\n \u2014-1\"-\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27, 1958\nTwin Cities'Vote Will\nSettle Long Rivalry\nTHE LAKEHEAD, Ont.- (CP)\nThe twin cities of Fort William\nand Port Arthur at the head of\nLake Superior vote in the next\ntwo weeks on whether to end\ntheir long rivalry and unite to\nform Canada's 14th largest city.\nIt is possibly a reflection of\nthe once-bitter but now friendly\nfeud that the two cities which\nmake up what is known as The\nLakehead will be voting on different days..\"\nFort William, where the first\nwhite settlement dates back to\n1678, goes to the polls Monday,\nDec. 1. Port Arthur, where the\nfirst house was built in 1856,\ngives its verdict a week later,\non Dec. 8. Both votes are being\nheld at city elections for mayor,\ncouncil and other offices.\nMAYORS   SUGGESTED\nThe idea ot amalgamation was\nsuggested early in 1958 by the\nmayors of the adjoining cities-\nHubert Badanai at Fort William\nand Mrs. Eunice Wishart of Port\nArthur\u2014in inaugural addresses\nto their councils. l\nThere were enthusiasm at the\noutset but then interest appeared\nto wane. However, Fort William\nbrought the matter to a head n\nAugust by deciding to put this\n87-Year-Old Doctor Makes\nOne Concession to Tempus\nquestion to the voters: \"Are you\nin favor of amalgamating the\nCity of Port Arthur and the City\nof Fort William as one city?\"\nSAME SIZE\nLatest population counts show\nthe two cities almost equal. Port\nrthur, incorporated- as a city in\n1906, has 41,685 persons. Fort\nWilliam, Which became a city in\n1907,. has 42,210. Should they\nunite, the joint total of 83,895\nwould leave them close in size\nto Regina, now Canada's 13th\n-city with 88,797.\nThere is little sign of any campaign for an affirmative vote,,\nNeither mayor has pushed the\nidea since the first mention.\nThe area's two daily newspapers have taken a cautious approach. The Port rthur News-\nChronicle advised voters against\nhasty action before all the facts\nwere known. The Fort William\nTimes-Journal recalled that Port\nrthur tried to annex Fort William in 1907 and might try it\nagain.\nEXPORTS OF CANADIAN products totalled a record $4,839,\"\n000,000 in 1957 and are running close to the same figure\u00bb .JJMj\nThis graph shows the totals and trends of exports to the United\nStates, United Kingdom, other Commonwealth countries, and all\nother countries since 1926. Not only have Canada's total exports\ngrown but exports to the United States, to Commonwealth countries\nXr than the U.K., and to all other countries haye \u00a3c\u00a3ttsed.\nMONTREAL (CP)-An active\ngeneral practitioner for almost 60\nyears, Dr. Francis McNaughton\nhas finally made one concession\nto old age.\nThe 87 - year \u2022 old doctor has\ngiven up driving his car.\n\"I don't want to get these fellows at the licence bureau a\nchance to tell me I'm too old to\ndrive,\" he said in an interview.\nBut he still rises early every\nday to get to his offices in suburban Westmount, where he\nkeeps up a practice he started in\n1899.\nACTIVE  LIFE\nHe doesn't need to watch bis\ndiet, and he spends summer\nweekends fishing in the Gatineau\nHills.\nA native of Huntingdon, Que.,\nhe graduated in medicine from\nMcGill University and set up his\nfirst offices at Shawville, Que.\nThere he spent five years, handling everything from maternity\ncases to dentistry,\n\"I charged $5 for bringing a\nbaby into the world and 25 cents\nfor pulling a tooth,\" he recalled.\n\"and  I  made my  own  anaesthetic.\"\nHe moved to Westmount in 1904\nand became the suburb's health\nOfficer, while maintaining a private practice. After 15 years, he\nleft the civic job to concentrate\non private work.\nLIKES MODERN TREND\nDr. McNaughton said he favors the modern trend toward\nspecialization in medicine.\n\"There is no doubt about it. Today's specialists can give a patient better care and treatment\nthan the general practitioner was\nable to provide in years gone\nby.\"\nHe said while he recalls the\n\"good old days\" fondly, he\ndoesn't mourn their passing.\n\"It was a good life and I enjoyed every moment of it. But\ntimes change and you have to\nchange with them.\"\nAll six of Dr. McNaughton's\nsons were graduated from McGill. One, Francis, Jr., has followed his dad's footsteps and is\nchief neurologist at the Montreal\nNeurological Institute.\nFAMILIAR FACES\u2014 Patricia Morlson and\nAlfred Drake resume oft-repeated pose at TV rehearsal of\n\"Kiss Me Kate.\" They starred in musical on Broadway.\nFINDS CD APATHY\nMONCTON, N.B. (CP) - Lt.-\nGen. Howard D. Graham, retired\nchief of general staff, said Wednesday he is disturbed by unsuf-\nficient public support for Civil\nDefence in many areas of Canada. Gen. Graham is making a\ncross-Canada inspection of Civil\nDefence organizations at the request of the federal government.\nHe said, in an interview, he has\nfound public apathy to the importance of civil defence.\nNfcw Book Tells of Canadians'\nSiegfried Line Struggle\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014At five o'clock\non the morning of Feb. 8, 1945,\na force of 470,000 Canadian and\nBritish troops launched its spearheads from the Nijmegen bridgehead against the powerful northern hinge of the Siegfried Line.\nThe grim and terrible struggle\nthat followed is the subject of The\nBattle  for  the Rhineland  (Hutchinson), a new book by R. W.\nThomson.\nThe author is a former British\nwar correspondent who has already written about Canadians in\naction in Dieppe at Dawn and The\nEight-Five days.\nHis latest work provides a vivid\nand moving account of the final\namphibious battle in which the\nAllied soldiers, manhandling their\narmor across flooded fields and\nrouting the enemy, at bayopet\npoint, hurled the last German soldiers from the western banks of\nthe Rhine and opened the way\ninto the heartland of Germany.\nSLOGGING  MATCH\nThe ferocity -of the four-week\nbattle told in chilling statistics.\nThe 1st Canadian Army lost 16,-\n000 killed' and wounded, two-\nthirds of them members of the\nBritish 30th Corps. The United\nStates' 9th Army, on the left\nflank, lost 7,300. And the remnants of the German Army Army\nwithdrawing across the Rhine,\nleft behind some 90.000, men\nkilled, wounded and prisoners.\nFrom beginning to end, the battle fought over the 35 miles from\nNijmegen to the Rhine crossing\nof Wesel was a grim and deadly\nslogging match. In one day the\n8th Canadian Infantry Brigade\nsuffered 25 per.cent casualties.\nAnd Thomson gives this description of the resistance offered to\nthe 4th Canadian Armored Division in the So ch wald Forest\narea:        j; ,\n\"Counterattacks came in again\nand again,, and were maintained\nwith an almost demoniac vio-\n, lence, not only of men, but of\nheavy mortars; self-propelled and\nmedium guns. Nothing like this\nhad been encountered before anywhere on the western front. By\nthe end of the second day 100\ntanks had been put out of action,\nmore armor than any enemy panzer division could have mustered.\"\nOn the left flank, the 3rd Canadian Division went to war in\nboats, the floodwaters having\nforced the division to exchange\nits tanks for lightly armed amphibious Buffaloes. The Canadians named their jumping off\npoint Wainwright Beach after the\nAlberta buffalo reserve.\n\"Wainwright Beach was. . .an\nimprovised shipyard resounding\nto the clang of iron on iron and\nsteel on steel as mechanics labored without rest, and sodden to\ntheir bones, to keep enough craft\nin Service. . .it must be doubtful if ever before in warfare men\nat the back have worked so hard\nand tirelessly and with such ingenuity to supply and serve the\nfighting troops. And they, too,\nworked often under fire.\"\nThomson's main theme is that\nmany of the difficulties in the\nRhineland originated in a disastrous and little-known . action in\nNovember, .1944, when American\nforces failed in an attempt to\ntake the town of Schmid at the\nheadwaters of the River Roer in\nGermany. This allowed the Germans to retain control of the\nRoer dams and to flood the Roer\nwhen the Rhineland battle\nopened.\nCOSTLY RESULT\nAs a result, American forces on\nthe British-Canadian right flank\nwere blocked at the flooded river,\nwhile the enemy reserves of men\nand armor moved into position\nagainst the 1st Canadian Army.\nIn the end the Canadians and I\nBritish  in   the  Rhineland   battle\nfound themselves in a position\nalmost identical to that they held\nin Normandy. They formed the\nleft hinge, drawing the full weight\nof the enemy defensive battle,\nand opening the way for spectacular American gains,\nwhen the Roer eventually ebbed.\nRepeatedly Thomson makes the\npoint that the C a n a d i a ns appeared fated to fight their major\nbattles while the spotlight of\nworld attention was elsewhere.\nThis, he says, had a depressing\neffect on the 1st Canadian Army\nheadquarters \"and not without\nreason.\" \u25a0    ,  '\n\"Their great fight on the left\nflank in Normandy had passed\nalmost unnoticed. Their unimaginative investment of the channel\nports had been dreary. Even\ntheir long sustained struggle for\nthe Scheldt Estuary had been\novershadowed by the final assaults on Walcheren.\n\"And now, after months of\nplodding up the left flank, living\nfn dreadful conditions, they ap-\nproached the climax of their\ngreatest battle at a moment when\nthe world looked the other way.\nHowever unfortunate it may be,\nor appear to be, the audience had\nbecome an important factor in\nthe Second World War.\"   ,.\nActor Wants\nDesert Island\nBy. EDNA USK3R\nCanadian Press StaH Writer\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014David Gardner, 30-year-old Toronto native\nwho is the only North American\nin the Old Vic Theatre company,\nis looking for a desert island.\nThe blond six-footer appeared\nTuesday night in the London\ncompany's opening performance\nof a week's run here, his first\nCanadian appearance since he\nheaded for Europe 18 months ago\nto study theatre work.\nHe has returned, he says, with\nwads of notes and a trunkful of\nliterature from 13 countries and\nwants desert island peace and\nquiet to produce a ' blueprint\nfor the theatre in Canada.\nDESIRE FIRST .\n\"The most outstanding need in\nCanada is a desire,for theatre\nhe said. \"There is no deep-seated\nlove for it here, although there is\na precious minority of workers\nfor the theatre, have collected\nideas abroad about designing theatres, experimenting, \u25a0 festivals,\nstyles of production, and box office mechanics. I hope^ these\nstudies will help Canada.\nDaVe spent two season with the\nShakespearean Festival at Stratford, Ont., and while there won\na $750 award from the Tyrone\nGuthrie Fund, to \"study theatre\nabroad in terms of the needs of\nCanadian theatre.\"\nIn 1957 he spent several months\ncovering theatres from Scandinavia to Yugoslavia.\nn England, he got a small part\nin a London play, then won the\nlead part in a new play Hunter's Moon by Marc Connelly. It\nran for four performances.\n\"It may have been a flop, but\nsuddenly I was established as a\nleading player,\" he said. \"I\nmade films for British television,\nboth commercial and government-sponsored.\"\nHe moved to the Old Vic com.\npany \"after working on my\nNorth American accent.\nTHREE ROLES\nDave plays secondary, roles in\nall three plays being offered on\nthe tour, Twelfth Night, Henry V\nand Hamlet.\nThe company has toured part\nof the United States goes to\nMontreal next week, and then returns for a five-week engagement\nin New York, followed by another U.S. tour.     '\n\"When the company folds up\nin March next year I don't know\nwhat I shall do,\" he said.\n\"I would like to go back to the\nOld Vic; I should Uke to stay in\nCanada; I want to go\" to New\nYork;\u2014and there are all those\nnotes and that desert island.\" '\u25a0\nDisagree With\nCompulsory\nTransfusions\nTORONTO (CP) - Deputy Attorney-General W. B. Common of\nOntario and Dr. Arthur Kelly,\nsecretary of the Canadian Medical Association, Wednesday said\nthey disagree with compulsory\nblood transfusions given children in\nHamilton, Ont., despite parental,\nobjection on religious grounds.\nMr. Common said a doctor who\nadministered a blood transfusion\nwithout parental or guardian consent might leave himself open to\na suit for damages or a criminal\nassault charge.\nA doctor should not make transfusions without consent, he said.\nDr. Kelly said: \"Patients and\nparents have a perfect right to\naccept or reject treatment offered.\" He added the CMA has\nnever officially examined the\nquestion and has no policy on it.\nNo doctor can be positive that\na person will die if he doesn't get\na transfusion or live if he does,\nDr. Kelly said. \"That would attribute to doctors more wisdom\nthan human beings possess.'\nThe principle is an important\none \"relating to the liberty of\ncitizens,\" Dr.. Kelly said. The\nsame thing applies to any other\nmedical treatment, \"and right or\nwrong, people have a right to decide.\" ....   \u201e,.\nA 14-year-old boy died in Winnipeg Nov. 14 after his parents\nrefused to allow doctors to give\nhim blood transfusions. The parents are Jehovah's Witnesses and\nbelieve blood injection is forbidden by the Bible.\n\u2022 Later it wis disclosed in Hamilton, that at least seven persons\nwere given blood transfusions despite parental objections recently.\nCoast Girl Off\nTo Hamburg\nSwimming Test\n' TORONTO (CP) \u2014 Marg Wa-\nsaki 17, ol Vancouver was one\nof six teen-aged Canadian girls\nwho left Toronto by air Tuesday\nfor Hamburg, Germany to compete in a sehies of international\nexhibition swimming meets.\nOther team members are Sandra and Lynda Scott, 16-year-old\ncousins, Bonnie Benson, 16, and\nDiane Ferguson, 17, all of Toronto and Sara Barber, 17, of\nBrantford, Ont.     .\nThe Toronto girls are members\nof the Etibicoke. Memorial Aquatic Club and are assompanied by\ncoach Alec Stermac. and chaperon\nVirginia Grant. Miss Barber and\nMiss Wasaki were added to tht\nteam to strengthen it.\nOfficials of the West German\nswimming team approached Mr.\nStermac at tile Melbourne Olympics in 1956 and tentativt arrangements were made to take\nan Etibicoke team to Germany.\nTlie Hannover Swim Club is\nacting hosts on the tour which\nhas meets in five West German\ncities.\nSchedule: Hamburg, Nov. 27;\nHannover. Nov. 29-30; Bayreuth,\nDec. 2; Hiedelberg, Dec. 4; Dues-\nseMorf. Dec 6.\n*27.50\n5-Pce. Suite\nGood apartment size. Table size 38x30 closed, $\/JQ QQ\nto 48x30 when 10\" leaf is inserted; price ....      T'z.W\n6 Chairs in Deluxe Set\n5 side chairs and 1 armchair are includedin this family size\nset which features an extra large table. Table <iaq jp\/%\nWith 2 leaves, 36x46 to 57x68 open; price iZV.DU\nBronzetone Step Stool\nBrohzetone Baby High Chair\n__ *13.99\nArborite tray, padded back and seat.\nPrice . .\t\nPhone 1860\n636 Baker Street\nNelson, B. C.\n\u00abT. EATON C'\u00b0\n\u25a0\u2022 CANADA msWiiK\n'limited\n Pope\nMiPiilPlflP^PP^\n3CKT\"\nReceives War\nGraves Commission\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters) -\nPope  John  Wednesday  received\nSiembefs of the Imperial War\nraves! Commission.\nThe! commission's commonwealth-Italian joint committee met\nin Rotie Tuesday to confer on the\nmaintenance of the 38 Commonwealth war cemeteries in Italy.\nAttending Wednesday's audience\nwere Leon Mayrand of Canada,\nSir Ashley Clarke of Britain and\nDominic Mcguire of Australia.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\u201413\nFederal Experts Question PM's\nColombo Plan Wheat Promises\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Federal experts\nsuggested Wednesday that Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker may be\ntreading on delicate ground in\ncalUng on the Asian Colombo\nPlan countries' to step up their\nToo Much Control From Theorists\nEx-Principal Tells Commission\nABBOTSFORD, B.C. (CP) -\n\"Theorists in ivory towers\" have\ntoo much control over British Columbia's educational system, a retired school principal said Tuesday.\nStanley D. Meadows told the\nRoyal Commission on Education\nthat present rules, regulations and\nprocedures make it difficult for a\nteacher to do a good job.\nMr. Meadows complained particularly of the \"soft discipline\" in\nB.C. schools which has \"driven\nthousands of fine youngsters into\ntoo serious trouble at too early an\nage.\"\nHe said youngsters expect \u2014 in\nfact \"like\" \u2014 discipline providing\nit's \"fair, firm and friendly.\"\nAnother major failing of the\nsystem is \"that there is not enough\ndemand for the youngster to produce,\" he said.\nMr. Meadows, principal of Simon\nFraser school for 23 years, had\nan atentiye hearing from commission chairman Dean S. N. F.\nChant of the University of B.C.\nand John Liersh, Powell River\nCompany executive. Third commission member, R. P. Walrod,\nwas not present. .\nDean Chant said: \"We are interested in your views because few\npeople have had as much practical\nexperience in education as you\nhave.\"\nAbbotsford school trustees also\ncondemned certain aspects of the\npresent school system:\n\"Schools are doing a satisfactory\njob in preparing students for university but are failing rather sadly\nin the preparation of students for\nthe training so necessary in business and English.\"\nThe trustees advocated a longer\nschool day, at least in high schools\nand an extended school year.\nimports of Canadian wheat and\nhour*\nThey expressed astonishment\nalso that Mr. Diefenbaker would\nseem to imply, as reported in a\nColombo dispatch, that Canada\nwould like to see a large share\nof the planned increase in Colombo plan aid used for ridding\nCanada .of surplus grain.\nOne informant emphasized that\nthe Colombo Flan was never intended as a relief project. It was\nintended to help India, Pakistan,\nCeylon and other countries in\nSoutheast Asia grow more food\nand produce more goods by providing money for irrigation, hydro and industrial projects.\nONLY SMALL ROLE\nSome Canadian wheat and\nflour have been shipped under\nunder Canadian contributions,\nbut they generally have been\nonly small percentages of overall shipments which included\nmainly industrial goods, such as\nhydro equipment, locomotives,\nmetals and trucks.\nThe Canadian government has\ndecided to increase her annual\nColombo Plan contribution from\n$35,000,000 to $50,0O0,000v starting\nin 1959. Mr. Diefenbaker was reported as saying in Colombo:\n\"We will naturally be hoping if\nnot expecting that Colombo Plan\ncountries will take a larger share\nof our wheat and flour.\"\nThe dispatch also quotes a high\ninformant as-saying that in talks\nImperial Bank President Urges\nJoint Anti-Inflation Action\nTORONTO (CP) - PubUc attention should be turned to protecting the economy against inflation, John S. Proctor, president of the Imperial Bank of\nCanada, said today at the bank's\nannual meeting.\n\"Should future booms develop\nthe intensity of the 1955-1956\/'\nhe said, \"price increases are\nbound to be the rule unless aU\nsections of, the nation\u2014government, private business, labor\nunions, farmers and consumers-\nrecognize the necessity for joint\nanti-inflationary action.\n\"A general determination to\nkeep prices stable can succeed;\nbut neither the monetary authorities nor the government alone\ncan beat this menace.\"\nOL FUTURE BRIGHTER\nH. W. Thomson, general manager, in a review of business\nconditions, said that while the\noutlook for the oil industry is\ntemporarily clouded, studies indicate the over-supply situation\n..-will be ameUorated within a. ew\nI years.   <\nWit is hoped, said Mr. Thomson,\nMat the flow of Alberta gas to\nthe East\u2014already begun\u2014will in\nsome measure be an early solution to the present problem of\nlower earnings of the Canadian\nIndustry and so place it in a\nposition whereby exploratory\nwork and drilling development\nmay be stepped up.\nIn regard to the recent recession, Mr. Proctor said recovery\nhas not yet gone far enough to\nIndicate Its ultimate strength,\nbut it has been sufficient to\nestablish that the forces of recession have been checked before they could plunge us into\nSerious depression.\nThe shortness of the recession\n\u2022nd   the   strength   of  recovery\nAlberta Expects\nCold Week-end\nEDMONTON (CP) - Sub-zero\ncold is expected to continue at\nleast until the weekend in Alberta\nand Saskatchewan.\nDawn readings Wed. included\n29 below at Lethbridge, 13 below\nat Medicine Hat, 19 below at Regina, 17 below at Prince Albert\nand 11 below at Saskatoon.\nTlie weather office said cloud\ncover raised Edmonton and Calgary temperatures to seven above\nzero.\n'-'-Coldest spot in Canada Wednesday was Eureka, on Ellesmere\nIsland in the Arctic, with 43 degrees below zero.\nwere among the most gratifying\nevents of the year.\nMr. Proctor's comments were\ncontained in an advance text issued to the press.\nHe said pubUc outlays on goods\nand .services may be varied to\ncounteract both inflation and recession. ,\n\"This,\" he said, \"is one of the\nlessons of the last 20 years and\nit would be most unfortunate if\nin the abandonment of counter-\npolitical expediency should result\naccompany them.\ncycUcal budgeting that should\ncycUcal  policies  and  the   anti-\nHe said that in Canada re-\nthem by government regulation,\nresources and to propose to limit\ntimes associated with natural\nto deplore high earnings some-\nTo prevent such gains where\nMoreover, suoh earnings ulti-\ntaxes and, from what remains\nless great risk is incurred,\nno national service is rendered\ncently there has been a tendency\nis of course desirable, he added,\nafter taxes, provide much of the\nthem severely would be to re-\nrisk capital by which further development is financed. To limit\ntard our national economic\ngrowth.\nDouglas Lists Six-Point\nPlan To Halt Inflation\nREGINA (CP) - Premier T. C.\nDouglas of Saskatchewan charged\nWednesday night that the Conservative government'is doing nothing\nto stop inflation and Usted a six-\npoint plan to keep the value of\nmoney from decreasing.\nMr. Douglas did not blame the\nfederal government for starting\ninflation, which, he said, began in'\n1945 and 1946 when price controls\nwere lifted. But he said it is up to\nFinance Minister Fleming and the\nConservative government to stop\nthe inflationary trend.\n\"The fact is that Mr. Fleming is\ndoing nothing to stop inflation;\nindeed he is adding fuel to the\nflames of deficit financing to the\ntune of more than $100,000,000 a\nmonth,\" Mc Douglas said.\n\"This attempt to pump new\nmoney into the economy without\nany devices for collecting it back\nfrom those who don't need it has\nonly added to the inflationary pressures in our economy.\"\nMr. Douglas spoke in a provincial affairs broadcast over five\nSaskatchewan stations. Copies of\nthe text were given to the Press\nin advance.\nCompared to 1939, the buying\npower of the dollar now is 50 cents,\nMr. Douglas said, and compared lo\n1949 it is 75 cents.\nOther political parties used, to\naccuse the CCF of destroying the\nincentive to save, the premier\nnoted. But inflation was destroying\nthat incentive today.\nInflation hurts \"ordinary folks\"\nmore than the rich, Mr. Douglas\nadded, since wealthy persdns\nusually put their money into stocks\nand real estate which go up in\nvalue as the power of the dollar\ngoes down. But most persons put\ntheir money into savings banks or\nbonds, annuities or pension\nschemes, and their savings are\nworth only a fraction of what they\nWere before inflation began.\nMr. Douglas blamed inflation on\nCanada's \"unplanned\" economy.\n\"If you believe that our society\nshould be run by great monopolies\nand gigantic corporations, then\ndon't be surprised when the Uttle\nfellow gets pushed to the wall.\"\nCanada's system is- known as\nfree enterprise, Mr. Douglas said,\nbut it is neither free nor enterprising. Prices, instead of being\nset by the law of supply and demand, were mainly set by agreement between monopoUes and\ncartels.\nMr. Douglas'.six steps to combat inflation:\n1. Impose price controls on a\nselected list of basic commodities\nand raw materials.\n2. Impose a capital gains tax on\nprofits made from speculation.\n3. Impose an excess profits tax\nto take huge profits of great corporations out of circulation.\n4. Impose higher income taxes\non the upper income brackets and\nhigher succession duties oh those\nwho leave large fortunes.\n5. Re-examine the defence budget to see if money is being spent\non obsolete equipment.\n6. Establish a national investment board to direct investment\ninto socially-useful and employment-creating projects.\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMoscow \u2014 Georgi Zarubin, 58,\nSoviet deputy foreign minister\nand a former ambassador to the\nUnited States and Canada.\nDayton, Ohio\u2014Charles F. Kettering, 82, who developed the\nfirst successful self-starter and\nwent on to head the research division of General Motors Corporation.\nToronto\u2014Moshe Matus, 44, Israeli artist whose works have\nbeen exhibited in many world\ncities.\nCedar Rapids, Iowa \u2014 Moray\nLeon Eby, 81, one of owa's all-\ntime great football coaches.\nLizards, scaly-covered reptiles,\ndeposit eggs covered with shells\nas do turtles.\nwith Pakistan, India and Ceylon,\nMr: Diefenbaker strongly emphasized Canada's desire that a\nlarge part of the increased Colombo Plan contribution should\nbe ln wheat and flour.\nExperts here \u2014 those in the\nranks of the civil service who\nadivse the government on poUcy\nplanning\u2014stressed that while the\nColombo Plan countries could\nuse more food, there were local\nareas where farmers had good\ncrops. These farmers resented\nimports from Canada because\ncompetition from extra suppUes\ntended to reduce local prices.\nAustralia also competed with\nCanada for markets in that area.\nAny extra pressure by Canada\nto dump more surplus wheat in\nthat area through gifts could\nbring strong protests from Australia wheat exporters.\nWEAKEN POSITION\nIt also could weaken Canada's\nposition in demanding that the\nUnited States reduce U.S. wheat\ngiveaway programs in commercial markets where Canada competes for customers.\nOf the $35,000,000 made. available by Canada to the Colombo\nPlan countries this year, $7,400,-\n000 went in the form of wheat\nand flour.\nBut in addition huge exports of\nwheat were made under a special\n$50,000,000' federal aid program,\nallowing India, Pakistan and Ceylon to get $15,000,000 worth of\nfree wheat and $35,000,00 worth\non loans maturing in about nine\nyears.\nThere has been some thought\ngiven in federal quarters to continuing and expanding this loan-\nand-gift program. But the government is known to be facing\nheavy pressures on the budget\nand Mr. Diefenbaker's remarks\nat Colombo, placing emphasis on\nthe Colombo plan as a wheat\ndisposal program, may mean the\nextra loan-and-gift program is to\nbe ditched.\nNew Parly Aims\nAf Liberals\nOTTAWA (CP) - A new Canadian poUtical party gave an early\nembryonic wriggle , Tuesday and\nstirred a response from the Liberal Party it hopes to replace.\nThe Canadian Labor Congress\nand the CCF party unveiled at a\npress conference a publication\naimed at promoting interest in\nformation of the new party of the\nleft.\nStanley Knowles, who as a\nvice-president of both groups ofa\nficiated at the: ceremony, :said the1\nLiberals \"have'liad it.\"\nLester B. Pearson, the Liberal\nleader, responded Tuesday night\nwhen he appeared on the CBCs\nnationally televised \"press conference\" program, He said there is\nno room for a new party.\nREFERENCE TEXT\nThe manual for the proposed\nparty \u2014 as yet unnamed \u2014 was\nproduced by a joint committee of\nthe CCF and the 1,100,000-member\nCLC. It is to be distributed as \"a\ndiscussion outline and reference\nmanual\" with the hope it will produce suggestions for the party's\nmake-up and platform.\nMr. Knowles made it clear the\nultimate result 'to which the\npamphlet, A New Political Party\nfor Canada, Will contribute will\nbe' an alignment at the left-of-\ncentre of labor, farmers, the CCF\nand \"liberally-minded individuals.\"\nMr. Pearson in his television\ncomments suggested formation of\nthe new party is a move by the\nCCF to put themselves on an\n\"entirely new basis for existence.\"\nNO MORE ROOM\nThe Liberals \"belong left of\ncentre,\" he said. \"If we do our\njob the right way, we will be the\nparty of all liberally-minded people\nand there will be no room for any\nother party.\"\nThe newly-unveiled manual disclaims any desire on labor's part\nto dominate the new party and the\ncommittee has left room in its\ncomposition for the addition of\nfarm union groups or such uncommitted labor bodies as the Canadian and Catholic Confederation of\nLabor.\nIt also says \"farmers, labor and\nthe middle class people\" have common aims and common enemies\nthe latter including \"huge private\nmonopolies, heartless greed and\nprofiteering in the economy and\nspecial privileges for the few at\nthe expense of the many.\"\nMr. Knowles, a Commons member for 13 years until his defeat\nin the March general election, said\nhe expects a constitution and program for the new party will be\nready for presentation to the CLC\nconvention in April, 1960. A CCF\nconvention likely would be held\nlater the same year.\nCANARY CHEW \u2014 Snooker Is a canary which\nlikes tobacco. Here, its owner, Chester Stewart, of Watson-\nville, Calif., permits ths bird to peck away at a cigarette.\nSeagram** V.(X\ny >cagra uv$\n\u2122,\/t, Sure\n*  $eap.ramV83\"\nThli advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nliquor Control Board or by ths Government of British Columbia\nOUR FLYER PRICES\nContinue for All This Week\nQuality Meats\nLean ... Freshly Ground\nDozens of\nLow Prices\n\"Shopping the ads for the best\nfood buys is a highly recommended practice. But no ad \u2014\nno, not ALL the food itorei adi\n\u2014 can show you as many low\nprices as you wil tee at OVERWAITEA! We've a storeful of\nthem. They're on every shelf\nand table ... in every case\nand section \u2014 hundred* of\nlow prices to give you savings\nall along your food lilt. That'i\nwhy you always lave the molt\non the foodi you like belt\nwhen you ihop at Overwaitea!\nCONTEST WINNERS\nNov. 15-24\" BRIDE DOLL\nMrs. F. Ozeroff, 230 High St.\nHOCKEY GAME\nMn. N. MacLeod, 806 Mill St.\nNov. 22-24\" BRIDE DOLL\nMn. R. Hesse, 18 Gyro Park Rd.\nHOCKEY GAME\nMn. C. A. Peters, 616 Gore St.\nHAMBURGER\nSTEAK\n2\u00abb 79c\nENTER TODAY\nA Doll and Hockey Game given\naway every week 'til Christmas.\nGRADE A RED\nDEUCATED\nSTEAKS \"\u00bb\n79\nPREM\nGRADE   A   RED     Blade Bone Removed.\nBLADE\nROASTS\nBEEF\nIb.\n59\nGRADE A RED\nLean Brisket     IL\nBoiling Beef     lb-\n33\nFruits & Vegetables\nOrder Your Christmas\nTURKEY EARLY\nTo Make Sure You Get the Size\nand Type of Bird You Want.\nCarrots\n^ LB.   CELLO BAQ^|^{\nOranges\n4\u201449c\nFirm Head\nLETTUCE\n*n\n mmm^hfPim-Mnm\n14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27, 1958\nBOTTLE BALANCE- Fair of French equilibrists use empty champagne bottles as they practice their\nact outside circus tent near Frankfurt, Germany, Cathedral.\nRACE   MARKS   SPAN   0 P E N I N C \u2014 Spectators jam the Chung Hsing bridge and banks ot Tamsui river in\nTaipei to watch dragon boat race marking the opening of new bridge. The 3,460-foot span served as tlie finish Une for regatta.\nBABY N BABY- Female giraffe, aptly named\nBaby, taken long look at her three-weeks-old offspring as\nJunior makes Its public debut at the Vincennes Zoo in Paris.\nR H 0 N E S P A N N E R _ The new suspension bridge\ncrossing the Rhone at Orange, France, will be opened early\nln 1959. It replaces structure ruined by RAF In last war.\nAT H 0 M E -This\nlounging outfit combines\nglamor and comfort. The formal purple jacquard jersey\nrobe is lined with red jersey,\nrepeated ln one-piece pajama.\nANTARCTIC   STUDY\u2014A hidden floodlight silhouettes members of (J. 8.\nNavy task force exploring ice formations ln an ice cave. Study is part of IGY program.\nMARKS MILESTONE _ Conductor Ernest\nAnsel-met, renowned for his interpretation of modern composers, leads orchestra rehearsal prior tb his 75th birthday.\n\u25a0\u25a0ll. WM        mm\nPfm   Ii     1\n;\n'  \"\"';\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 y\nSTUDENT AGAIN \u2014 Bernard Baruch\"chats\nwith student as he attends a class at his alma mater, the\nCollege of the City of New York. He was graduated In 1889.\nCURVED   ATTRACTION\u2014A wall porthole at London show accents curve\nof nyio-i h_f slip shirred onto bands of ribbon, barked lace, It's worn under bell skirts.\nRED LINE- Czech\nambassador Jiri Nosck has\nthe backing of his delegation\nas he supports Soviet proposal\non spaoe problems before\nU.   N.   political  committee.\nADDED AUDIENCE \u2014 Two firemen watch\nAva Gardner repair makeup on lot of Rome studio while\nshooting \"The Naked Maja.\" She plays Duchess of Alba.\nCIVILIAN    DEFENSE \u2014 Military p^'lrc super. I.\u00abe pistol firing by Brilish\ncivilians uu Cyprus. Arms were liiued lo qualified ci.i.ians in wake of terrorist activity.\nCANE CHECK \u2014 Nrlron A. Rockefeller examines\ntall scr; :. c~'\u2014:on his Vc \u25a0 \"\"n ranch during vacation\nwith wiic aiter winning New lurk gubernatorial election. \u2022\nDOUBLE   CELEBRATION\u2014 Omnibus of World War I vintage rolls along\nFleet Street in parade marking Armistice Day and inauguration of Lord Mayor of London.\n N\nSLSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\u201415\nNorad Sends Orders\nfrom Tourist Town\n.      By DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, >Colo.\n(CP) \u2014 Here under the frowning\nbrow of the Rockies pulses the\nbrain of North, merican Air\nDefence; Command.\nFrom here flow out the orders\nfor the ^00,000 NORAD'personnel\nin Canada and the United States\nwho man. 1,500 fighter.planes, .61\nNKE missile battalions, 45 ships,\nradar picket planes and hundreds\nof radar ground stations.\nInto here flows \"unceasingly information charting., the 200,000\ndaily aircraft flights in North\nAmerica\u2014600 of them from overseas\u2014as NORAD stays on the\nalert.around the clock for a flight\nor flights which might be hostile.\nOne can hardly imagine a more\nunmilitary place ' than' Colorado\nSprings. It exists mainly for\ntourists. The town's wide streets\nare lined with comfortable but\nnot sumptuous homes and scores\nof motels.\nON MAIN STREET.\nNORAD headquarters, on one\nof the main streets, is hardly distinguishable from the hospital or\nhigh school except for a single\nsentry at the main gate and an\ninconspicious  wire fence.\nThe headquarters is not even\nunderground\u2014though there are\nplans for that\u2014but in a plain\nyellow three-storey building. The\n400 NORAD personnel\u201436 Canadians\u2014drive to work from their\npleasant tree-shaded bungalows,\npark their cars and quietly go to\nwork like the bank manager in\nVictoria or the investment dealer\nln Montreal.\nOutside, all is quiet and serene.\nnside the buildings are quiet\nfootfalls and unraised voices as\nthe deadly game of watching for\na terrifying assault which may\nnever come goes on and on and\non.\nDespite the quietness, one soon\nfeels a sense of briskness, confidence and keenness. The source\nbecomes readily apparent: The\npresence of the NORAD commander and his deputy, U.S. Air\nForce Gen. Earle Partridge and\nRCAF Air Marshal Roy Slemon.\nCAN BE SHARP\nPartridge is tall and spare and\ntalks with refreshing candor. He\ncan react sharply when he feels\nhis command is being unfairly\njudged because he is its < own\nharshest judge.\n\"What are your defences\nagainst the missle-launching submarine'?\" he was asked.\n\"Zero,\" he said, forming an O\nwith his index fingers and\nthumbs.\nA' reporter suggested fighter\ndefences should be pushed farther\nnorth.\n\"We're not just sitting round,\nyou know,\" Partirdge snapped.\n\"If they (the Russians) come,\nwe'll move up to meet them.\"\nSlemon is fiercely dedicated\nto NORAD and has a passion for\nthe important details which would\ndrive many a man around the\nbend. i \u25a0 \u2022\nSPEAKS OUT\nI His dedication is so sincere\nthat he is apparently willing to\nsacrifice his job if need be to\nstate publicly what he considers\nNORAD's essential needs.\nWhile the Canadian government\napparently is deciding to scrap\nthe supersonic. Arrow \u2022 jet interceptor, Slethon said here Monday\nthat manned interceptors are an\n\"inescapable requirement.\"\n' \"I may suffer for this statement,\" he said Monday night in\na dinner speech, \"but I am prepared to.\"   ,\nSlemon hotly denied a reporter's suggestion; that he was uttering  propaganda  for  the RCAF\nwhich'wants the Arrow,\nALWAYS ON DUTY\nPartridge and Slemon are\nnever, off duty even when they\nare away from their headquarters. They have a telephone system which hooks up to their\nplanes when they are travelling.\nSelrrion has seven telephones in\nhis home so that he has never\nmore than a step or two away\nfrom NORAD headquarters.\nAsked what percentage of the\ntime he... is the commander when\nPartridge is away, Slemon said:\n\"We work together as a team\nwhether either is away or not.\nWe're slaves to the telephone.\"\nPartirdge said NORAD has\nnever had a real scare concerning possible enemy attack. The\nCanada-U.S. command now is so\nwell integrated, Partridge said,\nthat officers chew each other out\nregardless of nationality.\nSouthern Manitoba Storm\nLeaves Piled Wreckage\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Most roads\nin southern Manitoba were made\nimpassable by drifted snow today\nalthough the storm that caused\nthe trouble had blown eastward.\nOne death in northwestern Ontario was indirectly attributed to\nthe storm.\nThirteen-year-old William Ross\n(Anton was struck by a school\nbus near Dryden, Ont., during a\nheavy snowfall.\nThe roof of' a 30-year-old skating rink collapsed under the\nweight of more than a foot of\nsnow at Carman, 40 miles southwest of Winnipeg. The-wall of\nthe adjoining curling, rink\nbuckled and the community appeared likely to be left without\na winter sports centre.\nSAFETY ASSURED\nNo one was reported missing.\nOne report assured the safety of\n24-year-old George Wengenmeyer\nof Winnipeg, who was reported\noverdue on a hunting trip east of\nthe city. RCMP at Oakbank,\nMan., said they had helped get\nhis stalled car started on the\nroad home.\nAlso in the Carman area, the\nweight of snow collapsed a mink\npen and 144 of the valuable fur-\nbearing animals escaped from\nthe ranch of J. W. Hetherington.\nHowever, most of the animals\nlater were rounded up.\nHeaviest snowfall reported was\nat Macdonald, ah RCAF station\nnear Portage la Prairie, 58 miles\nwest of Winnipeg, where 20\ninches fell from Monday night to\nTuesday night. There was 9.8\nInches at Winnipeg in the same\nperiod, bringing -the November\ntotal to 29.3 inches compared\nwith a record 31.6 in 1955 and a\nnormal November fall of 8.7\nInches. '\nMORE THAN M INCHES\nPortage la Prairie had 10.3\ninches of snow.\nThe fall stopped almost completely between 6 p. m. and midnight Tuesday, although winds up\nto 50 miles an hour still kept the\nair filled with snow and cut visibility to a minimum in many\nareas.\nThe weather office said blowing snow in the Winnipeg area\nwould taper off this afternoon.\nCold air surged into the area\nas cloud moved out towards Hudson Bay and temperatures were\nexpected to plunge well below\nzero tonight.\nIn Winnipeg, more than 96\npieces of snow - removal equipment concentrated overnight on\nclearing bus routes, ajfcrial' traffic routes and streetsneading to\nhospitals and fire stations.\nEXTRA  BUSES\nThe greater Winnipeg transit\ncommission said buses were running behind schedule and plans\ncalled for extra buses to be out\nIn service today. Movement of\ntransit vehicles was reported\nslow.\nThe city got along without help\nfrom provincial snow - clearing\nequipment, available when the\nfirst big storm of-the season hit\nsouthern Manitoba a week earlier. City equipment was aided by\nrented gear.\nThe Manitoba highways branch\nsaid most roads in the. southern\npart of the province could be considered impassable.\nCARS STALLED\nIn southwestern Manitoba, hundreds of cars were reported\nstalled.  Highway  department\ncrews were said to have abandoned efforts to clear roads and\nconcentrated their efforts to rescue stranded motorists.\nA snow plow and two graders\nstruggled most of Tuesday to\nfree one bus stuck near Dunrea,\n30 miles south and east of Brandon. Passengers had been removed by cars which got within\nhalf a mile of the stranded vehicle before H was freed.\nHotels at Mie southwestern\nManitoba towns of Minto, Glen-\nboro, Melita and Deloraine were\nreported jammed with storm-\nstayed travellers.\nRural Bchools which opened\nTuesday in' Southwestern Manitoba sent students home early.\nTown schools in the southwestern\nManitoba oil town of Virden\nclosed in mid-afternoon and were\nnot expected to re-open today.\nSOME FLIGHTS\nAirline traffic was reported\nmoving in and out of Winnipeg.\nHowever there were no flights\nthrough the Fort William atl3\nBrandon airports. The- RCAF\nclosed down operations at its stations in Manitoba, which include\nWinnipeg, Gimli on \"the west\nshore of Lake Winnipeg and Macdonald.\nCity officials said no snow-\nremoval operations would be attempted ,in Brandon before the\nstorm subsided.\nAs the blizzard raged at its\npeak Tuesday night, the city\ncouncil in Portage la Prairie was\nadvised that when snow started\nfalling about Nov. 15, there was\n$1,700 for snow removal in the\ncity kitty.\n\"I don't believe that there is\nany left now,\" said alderman\nAlbert Barrett.\nCheck\nThese\nUsed Cars (heap\nIn London Town\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Things are\ntough in Britain's used car market. If you drop a couple of coins\nnear a used car lot you may\nmake a deal.\nFor instance. Passing a used\ncar lot, 16-year-old Maurice Ratcliffe pointed to a 1935 model and\njoked: '\"11 give you seven and\nsix (about $1) for that one.\"\nIt was no joke to the auto\ndealer, who responded: \"Make it\neight and six.\"\n\"It's a deai,\" said Maurice. He\nonly had two bob in his pocket.\nThey agreed that should be the\ndown payment. Now Maurice is\npaying off the balance at a shilling a week.\nThe slump has mainly hit autos\nabout 20 years old. These used\nto sell for \u00a350 and up.\nFor that, amount now, with instalment buying restrictions off,\nyou can make a down payment\non a new car or one only a couple\nof years old.\nSometimes the bargains are\nreal finds.\nDavid Lalor bought a 1937 car\nfor nine pence (11 cents). Cleaning behind the back seat he\nfound seven pence that had fallen\nout of a passenger's pocket in the\ndim and distant past.\nSPECIAL\nVALUE\nBUYS\nQUEEN OLIVES\n,6\u00ab, -, 59*\nSTUFFED OLIVES\nGattusso; 24 oz  \/ w r\nBABY DILLS\n32 oz. Bicks 59*\nKIIENEXT,SSU^\n400's\nIN COLOR\nMm\nHi* or\nWhits\nSALE PRICE\n3boxes$1.00\nBRITISH CARS\nBritish exports of cars, trucks\nand buses reached a record total\nof nearly 550,000 in 1957.\nColored, Twin packs.\n4 for 49c\nGIANT SIZE; SALE PRICE\n1 TUBE TOOTHPASTE\n12 oz. jar\nLUSTRE CREME SHAMPOO\nReg. $1.08 value;\nfor only\t\n63c\n2 TUBES TOOTHPASTE\nWITH FREE TOOTHBRUSH\nAll for\n99c\n3cH\u00b0l\ndairy dept\nq.................\nCHEESE 29*\nBrookfield; 8 oz. pkg      ^:>\nMARGARINE    J      g\u00a3*\nMARGARINE    J     \u00a3Q*\nGood Luck;  \u2022\"  lbs. W W.\nChuck Steaks\nStew & Kidney\nSausages\nmade     2ibs. 8\u2122\nChuck Roasts\n59*\nGrade \"A\"; Ib.\n... i    v.\n\u2022:\u2022  \u2022\nPlum       . \u2022*\n.V\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\n\u2022V\nv.\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022 \u2022\nPuddings\nILL\n39tf\n\u2022 SPRING HILL\n\u2022  140Z.-..\t\n*\u2022\u2022\u2022   Fruit Cake\n\" \u2022\u2022 Robin Hood\nMix\nHalibut\nFresh slices; lb. \t\nRock Cod\nWhole, Avg. 2 to       OfW\n3 lbs.; Ib 07?\nbakery treats\nq > ...................\nYou want a good, solid\nchunk of beef to serve\nyour ever-lovin' hunk o'\nman? Right, here's where\nyou'll, find it! . . . It's\ndee-licious, low-priced,\nespecially for our sale,\nand you'll find the salad-\nmakin's and dessert treat,\nalso, at LIBERTY.\nMakes a large cake\n\u2022 Special\n.   Pkg. \u2014\n\u00ab\nBread;\n16 oz.\n\u2022 \u25a0\n69*\n\u00bb\u2022*   no\n.\u2022\u2022\u25a0beefta.'\n\u2022n\n\u2022 Toaut Lxiese\nBARGAINS\n#\u00ab*ToouttIaee\u00a9\n'*&\u2022* \u2022 . BARGAINS\n\u2022y\u00bb\nPUMPERNICKLE\nFRENCH LOAF SPU\nWhite or\nbrown, _\nSliced, 16 oz.\nWHOLE WHEAT 4x_2\nBaked fresh daily in Nelson.\nDUTCH MAID\nCome Early - See the Values\nCanned Food Sale\nrCAd    Devon assorted; 15 oz.  O\nSTEW    Swift's Beef; 15 oz 4\nCREAM CORN TJ? 6\n15 oz.\nCUT GREEN: York\nfancy; 15oz.\t\nDevon Standard;\n15 oz. ..\t\nBEANS\nPEACHES\nDC A DC    Snow Cap, Flemish;\n15 oz.\nASPARAGUS\nTIPS: York\nfey; 12 oz.\n6\n5\n5\n3\nfOr$1.00\nfoAOO\nfor$1.00\nfoAOO\nfor$1.00\nfor n.00\nfor$l ,0Q\ngroceries Pre-Christmas Sale\nq..............\nPUDDINGS IS2t 4for 31*\nHONEY S^Sj&xU $l-09\nMEAT TASTE &dZ%m49t\nMIXED PEEL fift:______ 39*\n69*\nMalkin's; special, Ib.\nCOFFEE\nSUNLIGHT SOAP _ 2.^23*\nWlwlV    For heavy laundry; giant size OO^\nfrozen fresh\nq..................\nBOX\nFraservale\n55*\nFISH & CHIPS\nPINEAPPLE iK5: 2^33*\nCHICKEN PIES ubbys ....2 ^ 69*\nPEAS    Froze; 2 lb 39*\nICE    CREAM   Peter's; Half gallon 88*\nPineapple Rings\nGlace, 2 in pkg.\t\nJapanese Mandarin  - Thin Skin\n$1.63 rE\u00a3$3.19\nTOMATOES\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00bb Field, No. 1 fancy, red,  \\ *%mf.\n: tasty, firm-; lb.  ml rft\nI   PINK GRAPEFRUIT\n\u2022        i\n\u2022 Florida's original, n       \"iQ\/f\n\u2022 .heavy and juicy  \u2022*  lbs. *\"f\n1   Fresh Strawberries\n\u2022 Calif., juicy,\n\u00bb tasty; bskt. ..\nMIRACLE WHIP\n29.\nM\u00bbMMM\u00bb\u00ab*\u00ab*MMMM\u00ab\u00abMMMMMM*.  ^   purchase   of   g   )ettuce\n32 oz. jar bnly\t\nMix Glace Fruits\nWith pineapple; Ib. pkg. \t\nCitron Peel\nDiced; 4 oz.. pkg.\t\n17c\n47c\n14c\n651\nSanta Claus Will Be at Liberty\nthis weekend. Friday 7 to 8 p.m. and Saturday 2:30 - 3:30\nto treat the children with a gift. Write Santo a letter ...\n... win one of 10 valuable prizes.\nChristmas Sweets\nBiggett Selection in Town.\nCHOCOLATES\nMcCormick's, bungalow, fresh, contains  *i QQ\ncaramels; 3 lb. gift box   ^liTT\nCANDY CANES\nPeppermint striped, * raj\nwrapped     O   for*'*\nFOP CORN\nWith prize; m        aaj\nChristmas package;      O bass ttw\\%\nBaby Walnuts 4Q*\nBrazils AQ*\nMedium, Fresh; Lb.    *~\nFilberts J.Q*\nNew Crop; Lb    **\nMix Nuts        2        Q5*\nNo. 1. No Peanuts;  \u2122 lb. pkg. * \u00bbf\nAlmonds AQ*\nSoft Shell: Lb ZWW\nPlanning a Christmas Party?\nLet Liberty solve all your party gift problems \u2014 all you do ii give ui\na lilt of ages, we do the rest \u2014 We will gift wrap all presents and\nhave them ready for you when you need them. \u2014 Another Liberty\nservice to the community.\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities.\nTHE TREND IS TO SHOP\nWE DELIVER\nLIBERTY\nPRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY TO MONDAY, DEC. l\u00bbt\n 16\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1959\nllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllllll||IIMIIIIIII|lllllllllllllllllllll|llll|llllllllll|lllll\nSPORTS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nOil ihsL fioinL\nMickey Maglio has earned a good many scoring\npoints that just managed to escape him somewhere between\nthe crease and the twine, but on Saturday night the hardworking winger wrapped up a story-book victory for the\nleafs with a score just 20 seconds short of the final buzzer.\nIt was his second of the evening, and the crowd exploded\nin happy delight. It couldn't have happened to a more de-\n. termined, persistent and popular player. And the two points\n\"it cinched for Nelson forced Trail to move over and make\nroom for the Leafs on the league's second place rung. If\nthe locals can handle the Trail Smokies in their own backyard tonight, they will be climbing to challenge Rossland'B\nfirst place roost come Saturday evening when Trail visits\nNelson.\nAnother lad on the Leaf blueline\ndeserves a nod for the hockey effort and spirit he's been displaying lately. We mean Shorty Malacko. \"Go Shorty!\" is becoming\na familiar chant from the fans as\nMalacko winds up for one of his\ndangerous rushes, and he rarely\nfails to respond with exciting offensive effort. He's been a steady\nand strenuous performer for the\nlocals all season, earning fan, team\nand coach congratulations for his\ndrive.\nGradually Dorohoy is sorting out\nhis player potential and getting\neach man in his most effective slot.\nSo,far Shorty seems to have functioned effectively from the blue-\nline position.\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nFan opinion was unanimous after\nSaturday's game concerning Howie\nHornby, the new right-handed forward, who plays either wing or\ncentre with equal vigor and alertness. He's a first class competitor\nwhb bores in fast without forgetting to come back just as rapidly.\nWhen the coach finalizes his forward arrangements and their rotation, the Leafs will boast three\nfront lines that can launch and sustain consistent attacking power.\nThere will be no weak trio bn the\nsquad, something new in balance\nfor the Leafs.\n\u2022 *  \u2666\nDorohoy is still concentrating a\nlot of time and attention on defensive strategy, a labor that will,\ngame by game, show improving\nresults. More and more the Leafs\nare breaking former habits which\nfound the puck travelling too long\ninside their own blueline.\nThere were many break-away\ndiversions of Rossland atacks Saturday, and this pattern should\nbecome more prevalent as the\ncoach's lessons pass from learning\ninto new habits. With the power\nNelson boasts up front, the sooner\nthe puck is over the red line the\nmore often it will be possible for\nthe forward strength to strike effectively. That was happily illustrated several times last Saturday\nagainst Rossland.\n'  * , *  *\nEverything is being done tb make\nthe weekend home game against\nthe Smokies the hockey event of\nthe season. The actual ice-action\nshould be terrific and fans are\ntalking up the contest in lively\nfashion. What is needed to provide\na real old fashioned Saturday night\nhockey outing is a fully packed\nrink. The crowds have been growing. It wouldn't take too large an\ninflux this Saturday to realize the\nroaring home-town crowd which\nmakes hockey night something, to\nremember. With the kind of game\nIn store, and the league rounding\ninto battling shape, this could be\nthe BIG evening. Whatever the results in Trail tonight, Saturday's\ngame here will be a crucial contest for both aggregations. With\ntwo for two under our belt, we'll\ngo for three and call Nelson to win\nagain.\nWings Join Canadiens\nAs NH League Leaders\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nDetroit Red Wings powered\n\u25a0 their way into a first-place tie\n--with Montreal' Canadiens in the\nNational Hockey League with a\n5-2 victory Wednesday night over\nToronto Maple Leafs.\n' In New York, the Rangers\ncame from behind to defeat the\nCanadiens by 5-3 and secure a\nthird - place tie with Boston\nBruins.\nIn the New York fixture. Maurice Richard got his 600th NHL\ngoal to give the Canadiens a\ntemporary lead in the first period.\nIn a wild Toronto game\nmarked by two outbreaks of\nfighting, Detroit wrapped up -all\ntheir- scoring  in   the   first   two\nV\nStrikes\nSpares\nHigh single in Men's Commercial\nLeague bowling last week went to\nArt Bouchard of B&L with 345. In\nthe same teague, high aggregate\nwent to Don Roller, RCMP, with\n681, team high single, B&L, 1163,\nand team high agrgegate, Finning\nBulldozers with a score of 3114.\nBetty Stewart of Betty's won\nSenior Women's League high single\nwith a score of 286. High aggregate\nin the same league went to Dot\nWaterer of Dot's with 654. Anne's\nand Fanny's received honors for\nthe team high single and team high\naggregate with scores of 966 and\n2642 respectively.\nIn the 10-Pin League, high single\nand aggregate went to Lome\nShockey with 235 and 571. The Old-\nTimers took team high single and\naggregate with 861 and 2364.\n\u25a0 High single and aggregate went\nto Kay Allen of the Centennials in\nthe Variety Club with 263 and 654.\nThe Centennials also got the team\nhigh aggregate by chalking up a\nscore of 2313. Team high single\nwent to the Jets with 864.\nPhyllis Smith of the Dynamos\nwon high single in the Junior Women's League with a score of 273.\nHigh aggregate went fo Jane Pearson of the Mix-Ups with 603. In the\nsame league, team high aggregate\nand single went to the Corner Pins\nwith scores of 2444 and 930\nspectively.\nIn the Mixed Commercial League\nHume Hotel's Lena Koehle copped\nhigh single with 292. Women's high\naggregate was 700, scored by Alice\nBond of Overwaitea. Her team also\ncaptured the men's high single\nwhen Pete Fahlman got a 281.\nBrian Hughes scored the men's\nhigh aggregate for the Queen's\nHotel with 706. The Queen's also\ncaptured the team high single and\naggregate with scores of 1237 and\n3376, respectively.\nIn the Friday Mixed League,\nwomen's high single went to Joan\nBluett of Forestry with 276. Women's high aggregate was 630, scored by Vicky Trozzo of the Quits.\nThe Quits also received honors for\nthe team high aggregate with a\nscore of 2783. Men's high single,\n281, went to Bob Fields of the Pee\nTees. Men's high aggregate went\nto Rick Barber of the Pin Pushers\nwith 720. Inland Gas got the team\nhigh single of 988.\nperiods to win impressively and\nmove into a deadlock with Montreal atop the league race\u2014each\nwith 23 points.\nLEAFS AT BOTTOM\nThe Wing scoring was handled\nby Tom McCarthy, Gordie Howe,\nJack Mclntyre, Len Lunde and\nNick Mickoski. Dave Creighton\nand Ron Stewart scored for the\nlast-place Leafs.\nLeafs, who have not won' a\ngame since they beat Detroit 2-0\non Nov. 9, were never a threat\nand found penalties extremely\ncostly. Three Wing goals came\nwhile Leafs were a man short.\nThe Toronto crowd of 12,619\nwas lightly hostile towards Leaft,\nbooing the team as it came out\nof the dressing room for the\nthird period and hooting whenever a Leaf attack went sour.\nThe first skirmish broke out as\nthe second period ended. Detroit's Forbes Kennedy and Toronto's Barry Cullen exchanged\nblows behind the Toronto nets\nand were given five-minute majors.\nGAVE HABS LEAD\nIn New York, the Rocket's goal\ncame at 17:32 of the first period\nand gave Montreal a 3-2 lead.\nAndy Hebenton tied the score\nat 3:02 of the second period while\nthe Rocket was sitting out a\ntripping penalty. Three minutes\nlater Jim Bartlett raced down\nthe right boards and his shot\nfrom a difficult angle caught\ngoalie Jacques Plante unawares.\nThe disc went past Plante's outstretched glove and put New\nYork ahead 4-3.\nHebenton's second goal of the\ngame at 12:32 o( the third period\nwrapped up the scoring.\nBetting Line Favors Ticats,\nBut Sentiment With Bombers\nIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nRocket Scores\n600th Goal\nNEW YORK (AP) - Maurice (the Rocket) Richard of\nMontreal Canadiens scored the\n600th goal of his National\nHockey League career Wednesday night..\"';'\nBefore a capacity crowd of\nmore than 15,000 fans In Madison Square Garden, the 37-\nyear-old Richard registered his\n519th goal In regular season\nplay. He bas 81 In Stanley Cup\nplayoff competition.\nThe score came in the first\nperiod against New York\nRangers and he got a standing\novation.\nRichard Is the all-time NHL\nleader ln goals.\nIllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllll\nNewcomer\nScores Upset\nLOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Newcomer Rudell Stitch scored an upset 10-round decision over Yama\nBahama at the fairgrounds Wednesday night.\nStitch, swinging wildly but rocking Bahama when he connected,\nwon his 16th victory. The Louisville\nwelterweight has lost four in his\nbrief career.\nBahama, who came in at 150\npounds against Stitch's 145%, absorbed his ninth loss. Bahama has\nwon 51 and had two draws.\nStitch's best punches were overhand rights and lefts that seemed\nto come from the $2 seats. Bahama\nsuffered a deep cut over his left\neye in the sixth.\nAUTO MEN\nRAP WHITELEYS\nThe Nelson Senior \"B\" Basket\nball League saw its first upset\nWednesday night as the City Auto\nclub romped over the Whiteleys\n66-39.\nCity Auto is conisdered a strong\nteam, but in recent games lacked\nthe leadership to win any of their\ngames.\nWhiteleys seemed lost without\nthe strength of their six foot seven\ninch centre, Jeff Craig, who was\nunable to make the game due to\nillness in his family.\nCity Auto's top scorer was Lome\nShockey, who was put out of the\nteam's last game for having too\nmany fouls. He posted 17 points\nfor his club.\nRunner-up on the same team was\nIsto Latvala, who scored 15 points\nand has come to the Senior \"B\"\nleague from the L. V. Rogers Juniors.\nTop scorer on the losing White-\nleys, was Joe Postnikoff with 15\npoints. Runners-up were AI Campbell and Jack McKenzie with six\neach.\nBy ]1M PEACOCK\nCanadian Press StaH Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The betting line favored Hamilton Tiger-Cats but sentiment was largely on the side of\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers in this west coast city Wednesday\nas the tide of football fever grew with each hour bringing\nthe Grey Cup final nearer.\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON (Reuters) - Results of\nRupby Union games played in the\nUnited Kingdom Wednesday:\nCounty Championship\nSussex 0, Hertfordshire 11\nEastern Counties 16, Surrey 11\nHampshire 9, Kent 3\n' Oxfordshire 3, Dorset and Wiltshire 9.\nTiger-Cats, the defending\nchampions whose Wednesday arrival was two days behind Bombers, were quoted as 7-to-5 favorites to repeat their victory of a\nyear ago over the Winnipeg club\nand in some quarters a Winnipeg supporter could get $12 eastern for $5 western.\nThe point spread favored the\nCats by TA points.\nSentimentally, the city is pro-\nwest,  and this feeling was Bolstered  Wednesday  with the  arrival of every train and plane.\nCROWDS DUE FOR GAME\nThe number of fans arriving\nWednesday was small in comparison with the crowds expected today and Friday, when the specials are due, but westerners outnumbered eastern visitors by a\nvast majority.\nAs more fans trickled in and\nfootball executives from across\nthe country arrived. Wednesday,\ninterest in the game intensified\nhere.\nExecutives of clubs in th*\nWestern Interprovincial Football\nUnion and the eastern Big Four\nchecked into hotels. C o n f 1 a b s\namong league and club officials\nbrought increased interest.\nDRY AND MILD\nThe-weather forecasters came\nout boldly with a prediction for\nmild, cloudy weather at game\ntime (2:30 p. m. MST) Saturday\nand added that no precipitation\nis expected. The temperature\nshould be between 42 and 52 degrees.\nThe pre-game festivities so far\nhave had sunny, 40 - degree\nweather during the day but overnight the reading dipped to 22 degrees and the tarpaulin covering\nthe turf at Empire Stadium during the night couldn't be removed until 11:30 a. m. Wednesday. It was frozen stiff.\nWhile officials met and the\nfans began warming up to the\nbig blowout that climaxes with\nSaturday's gridiron clash, the\ncombatants were seeking seclusion to prepare for the battle.\nBOTH TEAMS HERE\nTicats were flying in from Hamilton \u2014 along with Patti Gail\nSmith, the 20 3 year - old Miss\nTiger - Cat who will compete in\nthe Miss Grey Cup contest-and\nwere to go directly from the airport to an out-of-the-way motel in\nnearby Whaiiey. They'll work out\nin adjacent New Westminster.\nBombers, who took Tuesday\nnight off for fun and games with\na 1 a. m. curfew, returned to\nwork with a special press confer-\nTo Join Stomps\nCoaching Staff\nVILLANOVA, Pa. (AP) - John\nSandusky disclosed Wednesday he\nhad resigned as a member of the\nVillanova University football\ncoaching staff to take a similar\njob with Calgary Stampeders.\nSandusky's connections with the\nWildcats ended with Villanova's\nfinal game of the season with\nQuantico Marines last Saturday.\nA Villanova alumnus, Sandusky\nplayed six years with Cleveland\nin the National Football League\nbefore joining coach Frank Reagan's staff two years ago.\nHe said Calgary coach Otis\nDouglas offered him the position\nand he took it to get into the pro\ncoaching field,\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nOakland, Calif.\u2014Bobo Olson, 174,\nSan Francisco, stopped ' Paddy\nYoung, 170, New York, 6.\nDetroit-Wilf Greaves, 161, Detroit, outpointed Charlie Cotton,\n153, Toledo, 10.\nPortland, Ore.\u2014Phil Moyer, 153,\nPortland, outpointed Luther Raw-\nlings, 151, St. Louis, 10.\nHoiyoke, Mass. \u2014 Jimmy Beau,\n163, New Canaan, Conn., stopped\nWillie Gray, 161, Boston, 6.\nBROKENSHIRE\nat\nFRUITVALE\nLegion Hall\n8 p.m.\nThurs., Noy. 27th\nPUBLIC MEETING\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nGuest Speaker:\nPETER DEWDNEY\nInserted by Rossland-Trail\nConservative Association\nParker Again Named\nOutstanding Player\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Quarterback Jackie Parker of Edmonton\nEskimos has been voted the outstanding football player in Canada for the second successive year,\nit was announced Wednesday night.\nIt is the first time a player has\nbeen so honored two years in a\nrow in balloting by sports writers\nand broadcasters in the nine cities\nof the Big Four League and the\nWestern Interprovincial Football\nUnion. The balloting is conducted\nby a distillery.\nParker, who formerly played\nwith University of Mississippi,\nedegd out halfback,Dick Shatto of\nToronto Argonauts.'\nPlayers on western teams now\nhave been winners four times\nagainst two for easterners since\nthe voting began in 1953,\nLUZZI IS LINEMAN\nDon Luzzi, two-way tackle of the\nCalgary Stampeders, was named\nlineman of the year. Luzzi, formerly \"of Villanova University in\nPennsylvania, was playing his first\nseason in Canada.\nRon Howell, halfback with Hamilton Tiger-Cats, was named outstanding Canadian player.\nThis is the third season of balloting for outstanding lineman \u2014\nwon twice before by eastern players \u2014 and for top Canadian. Howell is the first eastern player to\nwin the best-Canadian honor.\nence to allow interviews and pictures en masse, then retired into\nclosed practice sessions at Brockton Oval, far from the downtown\nhotels where the fan antics occur.\nWith the city decked out since\nMonday in special football regalia\u2014on top of British Columbia\ncentennial add Christmas decorations \u2014 a festival atmosphere\nexists.\nMANY SIDE EVENTS\nFirst of a batch of official side\nevents began Wednesday night\nwith a private dinner surrounding individual player wards.\nBy late Wednesday night, nine\nof the 10 Miss Grey Cup contestants were to be in town \u2014 Miss\nSaskatchewan Roughrider, Jane\nWentz of Saskatoon, is scheduled\ntoday \u2014 and the girls will begin\ntheir rounds with a welcome\nluncheon today.\nThe Grey Cup dinner\u2014a $10-a-\nplate stag with more than 780\npersons expected to attend\u2014and\nthe Miss Grey Cup dance, at\nwhich the queen of the frolic will\nbe named, highlight Friday evening events.\nVancouver's nine o'clock gun\u2014\na canon that blasts a booming\nblank nightly at 9 \u2014 will boom\nllVt hours early on Saturday to\ntouch off the two-mile-long Grey\nCup parade: Then, the game itself.\nCITY EXPECTS 15,000\nThe city is prepared for the\nmain fan onslaught on Friday,\nwhen most of the 15,000 expected\nout - of- town visitors are due.\nThree special trains, carrying\nsome 2,000 fans, are due then\nfrom Calgary, Winnipeg and Edmonton along with special rail\nsections on regular transcontinental trains carrying about 250\neastern supporters. i\n\u2022_#\t\nWolves, Tigers\nHoop Winners\nTeams in the High School Basketball League clashed again Monday\nnight in the L. V. Rogers gym.\nIn the first game, Wolves out\nscored Bisons two to one by whipping them 31-15. Top scorers for\nthe Wolves were Dave Grant with\nnine points, and Keith Acres with\nsix. Bisons* top man was John Ross\nwho netted eight points for the\nlosers.\nIn a battle for first place in the\nleague, Tigers edged out Rams\n35-32 in a close game. Big Jim\nBedard, with 11 points, was once\nagain the Tigers' top scorer, and\nwas well supported by Jim Carter,\nDean Carmen and Carl Hennig,\neach of whom scored six points\nfor the Tigers. Isto Latvala of the\nRams potted 12 points for the\ngame losers while Daniels contributed six.\nIn the final ' game, Cougars\nwalked over the Juniors 42-16\nGordie Jeffs paced the Cougars all\nthe way as he had a good night\nwith 20 points, close to half of his\nteam's total score. Top scorer on\nthe Juniors was Mike Laughton\nwith six points.\nEarlier in the evening, the Jets:\nL, V. Rogers junior basketball\nteam, posted a 32-15 win over\nNotre Dame.\nHarvard Football\nStar Would\nCome to Canada\nCAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CP) - A\n200-pound guard who kicked Harvard off to a 28-0 victory over Yale\nthis year in the 75th renewal of\nthe rivalry says he wants to attend\nMontreal's McGill University next\nfall so he can continue playing\nfootball.\nChuck Papalia, defensive stand\nout as Harvard gained revenge for\nlast season's 54-0 drubbing at the\nhands of Yale, says he intends to\napply to McGill's school for physical education, where he hopes to\nget a master's degree.\nA senior, Papalia would be in\neligible to play as a graduate student in American competition.\nSPEEDING UP\nMEXICO CITY (AP) - The communications ministry has received\nthe first four of 50 mail cars\nbought from Switzerland to speed\nup Mexican mails.\nNOW-\nIN PUSH-BUTTON CANS!\nFOR HHGtR-TIP STARTS\nAT WTY BELOW.\nNo need for primer system!\n(The pump is in the can)\nI Just press the button and press the starter\n! FOR INSTANT COLD-WEATHER STARTS\nYour Local Standard Oil Agent\nFRED MAW ER\n95 Government Road Phone 1153\nIIMIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nLEAFS PLAY\nTRAIL TONIGHT\nSecond place Nelson Maple\nLeafs do battle tonight with\nTrail Smoke Eaters, who are\nin the cellar. Both teams have\n10 points in the standings, but\nNelson has a game in hand\nwith Trail and two with Rossland Warriors.\nIf Nelson wins, they will be\nonly four points behind the\nleague-leading Warriors.\nThe standings:\nW   L F   A Pts\nRossland     8   5  69  55   16\nNelson     5   \u00ab   48   48   10\nTrail       5  7  51   53   10.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSweden's Top\nHeavy lo Meet\nPatterson!\nNEW YORK (AP) - Ingemar\nJohansson and his adviser came\nout of involuntary seclusion Wednesday and said there is a good\nchance Johansson will meet\nworld heavyweight boxing cham-\nEion Floyd Patterson in a title\nout.\nBut there was no confirmation\nof this from Cus D'Amato, Patterson's manager, in a comic opera press conference.\nJohansson is a poised, good\nlooking, unmarked fighter who\nthinks he has a good chance of\ngetting a crack at Patterson in\nthe United States next summer.\n\"He'll beat Patterson, too,\"\nsaid Edwin Ahlquist, Swedish\npromoter and adviser of the undefeated heavyweight king from\nSweden.\n\"I hope so,\" said Ingemar.\nBACK IN JANUARY\nAhlquist said he intends to\ncome back in January with the\nhopes of having everything\nsettled. He said if things aren't\nsettled by February \"then I intend to go ahead with two important fights, one I will promote\nin Sweden with Ingemar against\na leading American.\n\"The other would be a big one\nin London \u2014 a European title\nfight against the winner of the\nBrian London-Henry Cooper English title fight.\nOFFERED  CLARIFICATION\nD'Amato shouted for attention\nseveral times. He said he wanted\nto clarify the situation.\n\"I am dealing in five possible\nfights for Patterson and the Johansson fight is just one of them.\nWe have received a guarantee of\nsubstantially more than $250,000\nfor a fight in Colorado Springs to\nmeet one of five top ranking\nfighters. Outside of that I can't\ntell you any more.\nStone Aggregate\nStill Undefeated\nFew Thrills\nIn Tied Game\nBIRMINGHAM, England (API-\nEngland and Wales tied 2-2 Wednesday in a dull international soccer match that produced plenty of\nwild kicking but few thrills.\nCentre-forward Derek Tapscott\nand Inside-left Ivor Allchureh scored for Wales. Inside-right Peter\nBroadbent got both of England's\ngoals.\nA crowd of about 50,000 saw England, with three reserves in the\nattack, produce only glimpses of\nthe form that led to a 5-0 victory\nover Russia at Wembley Stadium\nlast month.\nBy TERRY ROSS\nCanadian Press Statt Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Five\nrinks, two from out of town, remained undefeated as play ln the\n$10,000 centennial Totem bonspiel\nmoved through the half \u25a0 way\npoint late Wednesday.\nBung Cartmell of Vancouver\nwas scheduled, to play the C. F.\nWesterman rink of Regina late\nWednesday afternoon in the\nEvergreen, one of two main\nevents. A loss would still leave\nhim eligible in the Totem, the\nother starred event.\nAll curlers were to take the\nnight off to attend the annual\nbanquet. The Totem's 'spiel wis\nfirst held here iq 1955.\nHolding unblemished records\ngoing into Thursday's draws\nwere the Glen Gray rink of Edmonton ahd that of Reg Stone of\nTrail, B.C., the Dan Baykey and,\nArden Brown rinks of Vancouver\u2014and Cartfpell, should he win\nagainst Westerman.\nUPSET THE FAVORITE\nGray, who upset pre-spiel favorite Matt Baldwin of Edmonton on Tuesday night, defeated\nDan Topping of Oliver, B.C., 9-7.\nStone, who was four down after six ends, came on with a\nrush to overpower the Elmer\nMeier rink of Vancouver 13-11.\nStone is six-times B.C. champion.\nBaykey defeated Lyle Reichert\nof New Westminster, B.C. 6-5 and\nBrown defeated Earl Campbell of\nChristina Lake, B.C., 9-0.\nBaldwin, who predicted no rink\nwould come through the bonspiel with a no-loss record, re*\nmalned in the Evergreen event\nwith an 9-8 victory over the Ken\nAnderson rink of Calgary, If\n'baldwin loses another game he\nwilt be eliminated because of his\nlate loss in the Totem event.\nTWENTY RINKS OUT\nThe first eliminations went\nWednesday. Twenty rinks were\neliminated in the first two of the\nday's four draws.\nAll the 176 rinks entered ln the\n'spiel were guaranteed eight\ngames. The way the draw works,\nany two losses after six games\neliminates a rink.\nThe bonspiel ends Friday night.\nJohn Chesser pf Riondel won his\ngame in the second draw of the\nEvergreen event, but lost out in\nthe Stanley Park event.\nChesser defeated W. Allen of\nOlds, Alta., 12-5 In the Evergreen,\nbut was beaten 8-5 by H. Worth of\nCalgary in the Stanley Park.\nNelson curler, H. Farenholtz\nedged R. Chambers of Victoria 9-8\nin the Dogwood event.\nWith Stone\nand Besom\nFollowing   are   the   results   of\ndraws played in the Nelson Curl*\ning Club competition Wednesday:\nW. Tiekner 8, D. Meakins 12\nD. Porteous 5, E. Mason 8\nJ. Bailey 10, N. Sardich 8\nJ. Harvey 7, L. Bicknell \u00ab\nJ. Sutherland 8, W. Triggs 8\nH. Moore wdn by default from\nW. Marr.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nJutTt^ JoiA\nLlftllNl\nTODAY \u2014 2 to 4\n(IhUdiMA. Skatbiq.\n4:05 to 5:55\nFREE DELIVERY\nCool Bottkd fissM\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brend Nome\n\u2022 Columbia Lager \u2022 Fernie Lager\ne Kootenay 4 Columbia\nPale Ale Cream Stout\nEMPTY  BOTTLES COLLECTED ON DELIVERY ONLY\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ot British Columbia\nCASE-TERRATRAC\nTORQUE CONVERTER DRIVE\nLOADERS - DOZERS - HOES\nFORK LIFTS and LOG GRABS\nCRAWLER MOUNTED\nModel 320   \u25a0   44 H.P.\n500\n- 50 H.P.\n600\n- 62 H.P.\n800\n. 80 H.P.\n1000\n- 100 H.P.\nRUBBER MOUNTED\nModel 320 - 42 H.P.\n370 - 50 H.P.\n420   -   60 H.P.\nExtra dollar LOADIRS\nvalue has made\nthe versatile CASE-\nTERRATRAC one of the\nmost popular machines in\nthe field today. With a wide\nrange of models and attachments\navailable, CASE-TERRATRAC offers the\nbest in low-cost mobile power for every jobl\nPhone, Write er Wire\nLOADER and BACKHOE\n$&&\nVANCOUVER 1, B. C\n \u25a0^ww^mp\nMany Rooms af Coast lor Grey (up\n* Fans But Few In Downtown Area\nT\nBy BOB TRIMBEE\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\n. VANCOUVER (CP) - There is\nplenty of hotel and motel accommodation for Grey Cup visitors\nfortunate enough to get tickets\nfor next Saturday's Big game.\nBut don't expect rooms at the\ndowntown luxury hotels. They've\nbeen gobbled up for months.\n\"If anyone -is looking for a spot\nin our first-class, luxury hotels,\nthey may as well stay at home;\"\na Hotels Association spokesman\nsays. \"But there Is plenty of\nspace in good, clean hotels ln the\ncentre! sr* eastern a0-\"'Of* of\nthe city We expect most of the\nhrtel space, about 8.000 rooms,\nwill be filled a couple of. days\nbefore the game.\"\nThe city's two big hotels, ths\n540-robm Hotel . Vancouver and\n316-room Georgia, both in the\ndowntown sec'ion, are sold out.\nThey are nearly el\u00bbht mi'es from\nEmpire Stadium, site of tha classic in the eastern nutskir,s o' the\ncity, ard they will b\u00ab tin focal\nspots of the pre-game and post-\ngame celebrations.\nMOTEL ACCOMMODATION  -\nThere are 1.20O motel units here\nand Vancouver and An'\" Ourt air]\nResort Association officials estimate that abnut 600 were reserved a month, a^o. The ACRA\nwill help fans get acccmmndatinn\nif requests ar\u00bb sccnm\"at\"ed bv\na cheque for the rent. It also has\nset up a telephone service to help\nlate arrivals coming here on\nspeculation.\nIn addition, the CPR and CNR\nwill spot sleeping cars at downtown terminals for use of passengers. Railway officials estimate\nthey can handle about 1200 persons at prices ranging from $2.25\na night for a tourist sleeping-car\nupper berth, to $9.30 for a drawing room for two.'\nNormal hotel rates will prevail.\nAt tbe Hotel Vancouver, rates\nrange from $8 for a single to $16\nfor a doubie a night. Georgia\nprices range from $8 for a single\nto $12 for a double.\n\"There won't be any accommodation problems at all,\" says\nDon Mackenzie, general chairman of the Grey Cud. committee.\n\"Conservatively, I would say that\nabout 12.000 persons will visit\nVancouver during Grev Cup\nweek.\" In 1955, when this city\nstaged the classic for the first\ntime, abnut 10 000 out - of \u2022 town\nfo^'ball fans th'on?e<' here.\nHowever, ur'ik\u00bb thr\u00b0e years\nago, fans must make their own\nroom reservations.' In 1955 the\nGre1' Cuo committee accepted\nmailed requests, searched for\nrooms and confirmed reservation.\n\"We won't b\u00bb doing thst th's\nvear.\" Mfkenzie says. \"It will\nbe on a first-come, first-served\nbasis.\"\nOttawa Considers A-Power\nSubmarine Freighters\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA   (CP)  -  Canada  Is\nmaintaining what amounts to be\na watching brief on developments\nin submarine cargo carriers.\nEconomists of the northern affairs department have been instructed to keep abreast of these\ndevelopments, particularly with a\nview to what progress may\/mean\nto Canada's North.\nWhat one official has called\n\"this cursory Interest\" is confined by and large to clipping reports emanating from Britain,\nthe United States, Russia, Western Germany and even Japan.\nAnother phase involves tossing\nout titbits periodically to drum up\nModern Healing\nMakes Danish\nSweeps Idle\nBy JOHN CHADWICK\nCOPENHAGEN (Reuters) -\nDenmark is in danger of losing\none of its most picturesque sights\n\u2014the top-hatted chimney sweeps.\nThe soot-grimed sweeps are not\nseen treading the rooftops very\noften these days.\nDenmark's thousands of chimneys are kept clean and in good\nrepair by . a b o u t 500- skilled\nsweeps, who may be among the\nlast survivors of this centuries-\nold craft.\nDWINDLING NUMBERS\nAs the old buildings disappear,\nand chimneys become fewer, the\nsweeps have dwindled and it becomes more and more difficult to\nget a chimney swept. Records of\nthe sweeps' own guild, an association of employers set up In 1778,\nshow that there are today fewer\nthan 200 master sweeps, about\n300 journey men and some 80 apprentices.\nThere is still a fair amount of\nwork for them, although Denmark prides itself on being one\nof the most modern countries\nWhen it comes to heating houses\nand apartment buildings.       . \u2022\nDanes have to imnort their\ncoal, mainly from Britain, and\nthis comparatively costlv fuel is\ntherefore never used in the home.\nWhat coal is imported Is used by\nthe gasworks from which housewives buy coke with which to\nstoke the stoves of their central\nheating plants.\nThere are also district-heating\nfilants in Cooenhagen, amor\" the\nargest In Western Europe. These\nheat some districts hy steam,\nothers bv hot water. The heat is\nproduced at three electric power\nstations and represents a great\nsaving in fuel costs.\nFrom these central plants, heat\nIs supplied to hospitals, schools\nand factories in the thickly populated areas of the rcapital.\nPEAT IS USED\nIn north Jutland and in ma*y\n\u2022 farming districts of Zealand, the\neasternmost   Danish   island,   on\nwhich Copenha\u00bben stands, peat Is\nstill the main fuel.\nA chimney sweep in Denmark\ncan still earn good money, especially as comnptltion dwindles in\nhis trade, ton hat is not merely\na coiorful headdress for the\nsweep. It is a most useful Hem\nof eouioment.' For (fenerations,\nthey have tucked their'personal\npapers and small personal belong-\nings into their tall hats, tinder\nwhich they wear a tight \u25a0 fitting\nskull-cap.\nAnd no other form of headgear, they Bay, is as effective as\nthe wide-brimmed top hst in\nkeeping soot out of a chimney\nsweep's eyes.\nRECEIVE GRANT\nTORONTO (CP) - The University of Toronto has received a.\n$90,000 grant from the Carnefia\nCorporation of New York with\nwhich to beein a mammoth cues!\nfor information on talented hieh\nschool pupils an* what happen?\nto them in terms of ability and\nachievement. Prof. R. W R.\nJackson, director of e^iontional\nresearch at the Ontario Collese ol\nEducation, will direct the survey\nwhich will take pt least five\nvearl and may cost as much as\n$750,000.\nreaction by interested Canadian\ngroups.\nThe two procedures apparently\nare what Northern Affairs Min-,\nister Alvin Hamilton had in mind\nrecently when he advised an Edmonton conference that the \"very\nfullest study\" is .being given to\nexciting new possibilities for the\nNorth, including nuclear - powered submarine cargo ships,\nDepartment officials, on the\nother hand, emphasize that the information being collected is not\na study as such. More definite\naction, they say, probably would\nrequire an inter - departmental\ncommittee rounding in all sides\nof government Investigation.\nThe navy has been studying nuclear pronulsion for its vessels\nfor some time and hopes to make\na decision p e r h a ps by next\nspring. The transport department has been taking an equally\nhard look at a nuclear-powered\nicebreaker\u2014Russia has one\u2014but\namid indications that such a vessel at this time might cost more\nthan it would be worth,\nhis department's work on submarine carriers was prompted bv\nthe spectacular Arctic oneraMon\nof th\u00bb,U.S. r\"clear subs Nautilus\nand Skate. The economic implication is especially pertinent in\nplanning for such Items as northern roads.\nCOSTLY BUSINESS\nSo far, it seems taken for\ngranted that submarine transport\nwill be expensive. Some British\npetroleum interests have indicated it might become feasible in\n15 years and some U.S. forecasts\nhave predicted an earlier working date, without stinting on cost\nestimates.\nImperial Oil Limited in Canada has also expressed interest\nand a spokesman has suggested\nthat the oil believed to lie in the\nArctic islands and mainland\nmight thus be able to compete\nwith Middle East oil transported\nby the longer surface route to\nEurope.\n' Liquids or non-solids\u2014oil, pulp\nslurry, grains and iron ore\u2014have\nbeen suggested as the most suitable submarine cargoes.\nSubmarine carriers, if proved\neconomical, could assist in the\nsupply run to the Nor*. Present\npractice involves a rush surface\nshipoing job to coincide with the\nNorth's short, ice-free season, a\nmatter of weeks in the far north.\nCostlv air transport also is used\nto distribute fuel oil, food and\nother supplies to isolated island\noutoosts such as weather stations.\nTo Manage\nBraves Farm Club\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - Travis\nJackson, sure-fielding shortstop of\nNew York Giants in the 1930s, was\nnamed Wednesday as manager of\nMilwaukee Braves' Eau Claire.\nWis., farm club in the class C\nnorthern league.\nHe replaces Gordon Maltzberger,\none-time major league pitcher\nwho guided Eau Claire for the last\ntwo seasons. Maltzberger was nam\ned pitching coach for the Braves\nfarm system.\nJackson, a member of the\nBraves' organization since 1950,\nmanaged Midland, Tex., In the so.\nphomore league last season until\nillness forced him to the sidelines.\nHe played for the Giants from\n1922 to 1936.\nNEISON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\u201417\nMIDDLER MAGNET - - -  Bv Alan Mover\n6 xo$ in8 Boot* prove\nHH pwic\/fmn pou\/er\nai\/p record 6Ate&\nSET B\/ til&\nCOtMTRyMEII PROVE\nHli  PULUflG\nPoWSR-IROHIOALLy,\nHE'S A STABLE\/DATS,\nOFFloYP PATTER60I\/,\nWHOM VlRTl\/AU\/   '\nHO0'Opy GETS TO SEE.\n\u2022JtttttittKlS by King Ftatttm Bun il\nCanada Uses Plutonium\nFor Peaceful Purposes\nBy JOHN E.  BIRD\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nCHALK RIVER, Ont. (CP) -\nPlutonium \u2014 the material which\ngives the atomic bomb its explosive power\u2014is being put to\nwork by Canada for peaceful\npurposes.\nIt is being used to increase\nconsiderably the research capacity of the second most powerful\natomic reactor operated by\ncrown-owned \u25a0 Atomic Energy of\nCanada Limited at this great nuclear establishment 135 miles\nnorthwest of Ottawa.\nDr, G. O. Baines, executive assistant to Dr. W. B. Lewis, vice-\npresident of the company, said\nin an interview that plutonium is\nbeing used as a fuel, along with\nnatural uranium, in NRX, code\nname for the $11,000,000 reactor.\nNEW  DISCLOSURE\nThis is the first time the company has disclosed this development, although plutonium has\nbeen used as a fuel in NRX\nsince 1951.\n\"We consider our success with\nplutonium as a fuel as quite an\nachievement,\" Dr. Baines said.\nREADILY AVAILABLE\nThe decision was made to use\nplutonium because it was a byproduct of .the reactor and was\nreadily available. Canada does\nnot have the means to make uranium-235, produced in plants in\nthe United States costing $1,000,-\n000000 to erect.\nThe natural uranium rods in\nNRX contain Only .7 per cent\nuranium-235, the material which\nmakes the atomic process possible. More than'99 per cent of\nnatural uranium is uranium-238\nwhich is not fissionable.\nThe uranium-235 can be separated from natural uranium for\nuse as a highly - concentrated\natomic fuel. The cost is prohibitive for Canada.\n. Other countries are using ura\nnium-235 to enrich natural uranium fuel and must buy the bulk\nof it from the U.S. Enrichment of\nnatural uranium with one to two\nper cent by weight of uranium-\n235, the amount of greatest interest for power reactors, costs from\n$15 to $110 a pound.\nBut highly enriched uranium, ln\nwhich 90 per cent of the atoms\nare uranium-235, costs about $7,-\n000 a pound.\nVALUED EXPERIENCE\nDr. Baines said Canada's work\nwith plutonium has enabled this\ncountry ttf \"build up perhaps\nmore experience in tne use of\nthis fuel than any other country.\"\nThis experience will be invaluable in the event, that plutonium\ncan be used in future in electricity - producing atomic power\nplants. Canada's present plans\nfor power stations involve the\nuse of natural uranium asja fuel.\nSince 1951 about 21 pounds of\nSlutonium have been used in\nIRX to enrich the natural uranium fuel rods. This quantity has\ngenerated as much heat as could\nbe obtained by burning 4,500 tons\nof coal.\nSome 12 pounds of plutonium\nnow being, used in NRX is responsible for producing from 10\nto 15' per cent of the 40,000 kilowatts of energy produced by the\nreactor. The'plutonium ls in the\nform of an alloy made into the\nshape of the natural uranium\nfuel rods.\nDr. Baines said experience obtained to date lends confidence\nto the continued use of plutonium\nas a source of.fuel enrichment\nfor atomic research reactors,\nCanada will be able to rely on\nits Chalk River reactors for an\nabundant supply of plutonium,\nNRX and NRU, the biggest Canadian reactor, can produce\nabout 115 pounds annually. Most\nof which is sold to the U.S.\nf~}f^ti\u00a3t777ii7, -.'(':. \u25a0-''\n-SENIOR\nmW9^^Sk\nHOCKEY\nmt.               lss\\W\nSaturday\n( .jm^tir '-\u00a3 \u00a3PHHK_i\"\n8 p.m.\nCivic Arena\n%.    tan- W\n_ Tickets On Sale\nFriday,\nCivic Centre\n9:00-5:00 p.m.\nSaturday,  Kootenay\nStationers, 9 to 5 p.m.\nReserved $1.25\nAdult $1.00\nStudents. 35c\nBOBBY KROMM\nNelson City Band\nIn Attendance\nTrail     vs.\nNelsbn\nSmoke Eaters\nMaple Leafs\nWteer.*\n101\nCANADIAN\nuihiskn\n$1 Million\nMink Sales\nExpected\nBy UN DONALDSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer .\nmink breeders hope to celebrate\ntheir 20th anniversary in business this year with $1,000,000\nworth of sales.\nIf they make It, sales will be\n90 per cent above those of 1956. <\nWith a record 40,000 animals\nquartered on the province's 75\nranches, record sales are-imminent. About 15 varieties are\nraised in.the province now. n\n1936, breeders offered eight color\nstrains on the Montreal market.\nThe industry is younger and\nsmaller than those in central\nCanada and British Columbia.\nBut Charles A. Whitman, secretary of the Nova Scotia Mink\nBreeders' Association, says it's\nexpanding. \"It has pretty well\nceased to be a sideline now,\" he\nsaid.\nOWN 4000 MINK\nHe points to the ranch of Wallace and Edsel Mullins of New\nTusket as one of the most modern layouts in Canada. The Mullins' own 4,000 animals.\nAbout 95 per cent of Nova Scotia's mink is sold in Montreal at\nHudson's Bay Company and Canadian Fur Auction sales. Some\nare shipped to New York.\nThe mink have moved in to replace fox on many provincial\nranches. In 1938, there were\nabout 1,040 fox ranches in Nova\nScotia stocked with about 36,000\nanimals. There now are three\nranches.\nSTYLES CHANGING\nThe once-booming fox industry\nin Prince ' Edward Island has\nalso felt the pinch of changing\nstyles. In both provinces, breeders are keeping a few animals\nin hopes another buying splurge\nwill come along.\nBut Nova Scotia's deputy lands\nand forests minister, G. W. I.\nCreighton, said the fox ponnlation\nIs drooping yearly. Mr. Whitman\nsaid foxes \"are gradually slip-\npip'!.\"\nMink ranching is general\nthroughout the province. Nova.\nScotia weather apnarently suits\nthe animals. Mr. Whitman said.\nMink flourish in cold damp autumns \\ and winters.\nThis advertisement is not published 0, displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia.\nName Femme Te\u00abm\nFor Commonwealth\nGolf Tournament\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The executive\nof the Canadian Ladies' Golf Union\nannounced the Canadian team\nwhich will take part in the Com.\nmonwealth tournament in Britain\nnext June.\nThe team: Mrs. Marlene Stewart\nStreit, Roma Neundorf and Mrs.\nJ. H. McCarter, all of Toronto;\nMary Gay and Rae Milligan, both\nof Calgary, and Judy Darling, Montreal.\nDemand for Grey Cup Tickets\nLooks Like Hitting Record\n-   By BOB TRIMBEE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Higher\nprices have not lessened the demand for Grey Cup tickets and\nthe scramble will be as great as\never for the football classic being played here Nov. 29.\nAbout 42,000. fans are expected\nto crowd Empire Stadium, st\nticket prices- ranging from $10\nfor the best seats to 22 for standing room.     ,\nTicket sales will total $302,386,\na record. Television, radio, movie\nand radio program rights will\nadd another $228,000, a record.\nThe total receipts will hit $530,-\n000, a record.\nChinese Leader\nDespises Pools\nHONG KONG (AP) - Take it\nfrom Red China, swimmers who\ngo to. pools are just hot house\nflowers.\nMao Tse - tung, known as a\nswimmer himself, wants his compatriots to swim more in their\nrivers. The Peiping newspaper\nT'l Yu Pao, in an edition received here, tells of a meeting\nMao had at Wuhan, capital of\nHopeh Province, with three swimming instructors:\n\"In several talks (he chairman\n(Mao) had with the athletes he\ntouched upon this question:\n\"'Is it not possible to make\nuse of the many rivers in our\ncountry for swimming purposes?\nIs it not possible for 300,000,000\nof our 600,000,000 population to\nswim in these rivers?'\n\"What a great inspiration this\nwas. Was it possible for 300,000,-\n000 people to go swimming? The\nthree athletes were stirred by the\nlofty target set by Chairman\nMao. They did not immediately\nanswer the chairman's question\nbut they certainly, aspired to and\nadmired this Possibility.\n\"It is possible. It is entirely\npossible,' Chairman Mao said.\n\"The athletes excitedly clenched\ntheir fists and replied affirmatively: 'It is possible, it is entirely possible.'\n\" 'Swimming against the river\ncurrent is a good way for\nstrengthening will and courage,'\nChairman Mao said. 'We must\nkeep away from the swimming\npools.'\n\"Yes, Chairman Mao's well-\nmade point opened his listeners'\neyes, and refreshed their minds.\nThe swimming pool, like a hot\nhouse, fosters flowers that cannot weather storms. We must\n'keep away from the swimming\npool,' swim ln rivers, and press\nahead energetically to achieve\nbetter  rets.\"\nThe paper made no mention of\nhow many pools China has.\nshambles of marks set here Nov.\n26, 1955 when 39,417 jammed the\nstadium to see Edmonton Eskimos defeat Montreal Alouettes\nand paid a top of $7.50. The\nticket; television, radio, movie\nand program sales returned $285,-\n860 in 1955.\nThese   figures   will   make\nThe top seats are In the sideline stands. However, only 15,000\nof the 17,500 are covered or partially covered by a roof. Permanent seats in stands around the\nsouth end will cost $7.50, while\ntemporary seats pn the infield\nsidelines will cost $6 and similar\nseats along the ends $5. The\nstanding - room section at the\nnorth end will hold about 7,000.\nThe breakdown of seating capacity shows 17,541 seats at $10;\n10,718 at $7.50; 2,614 at $6; 3,149\nat $5 and around 7,01)0 standing\nat $2.   .\nThe British Columbia Lions\nhave been awarded 11,000 seats\nand the 7,000 standing-room tickets by the Canadian Rugby\nUnion, while the western and\neastern champions will get about\n4,500 tickets each, the other finalists about 3,000 and the remaining Big Four and WIFU teams\n2,000 each. 1\nHowever, no special sections\nhave been reserved for any city.\nFans  from Hamilton may wind\nup among a group from Winnipeg or vice versa.\nHerb . Capozzi, Lions general\nmanager, said his club hai no\nextra tickets and long before they,\nreceived the allotment from the\nCRU it was known the demand\nwould outstrip the supply.\nSTARTED YEAR AGO\n\"Our first application came\nlast November,\" ne said.\nSince  then   mail   applications -\nhave been received from across\nthe country .and even from\nAlaska, nearby Washington State\nand Argentina, 1\n\"We're still getting them.\nWe've had the usual little old\nladies telephoning in for a couple\nof the best. A few days ago some\nAmericans in Anchorage, Alaska,\nasked for tickets and a couple in\nBuenos Aires wrote to say they\nwould be here during Grey (Aip\nweek and wanted tickets for the\ngame.\n\"A Vancouver man called up\nand said he was throwing a special Grey Cup party and needed\n20 of the best tickets.\n\"Another called and said he\nwas either a corporate member\nor a season ticket holder and\nwanted four tickets to the game.\"\nWhen told he did not qualify\nfor tickets, he said:\n\"If that's the way It is I hope\nIhe Lions lose!\"\nAlmost every man enjoys\nWHITE\n10v\nS'lfjtjoGtod prioo\nOWL.\n5 days a week-for 6 weeks\nIN EVERY DAILY NEWSPAPER\nIII CANADA\nThis CONTINUITY is one secret of SALES-\nPRODUCING Daily Newspaper Advertising\nNewspaper Advertising\n...proven sales producer\nfor this best-seller\n\"Prestone\" Anti-Freeze advertising la prepared\nby Stanfield, Johnaon & Hill Limited\nsmembersgoncyoftho Canadian\nAssociation of Advertising Agencies\nFor thirty years, the major portion of \"Prestone\"\nAnti-Freeze advertising has been placed in\nCanadian daily newspapers. This autumn, every\nnewspaper will be used for thirty days\u2014representing by far the largest share of the advertising\nbudget.\nEvery year, daily newspaper advertising has\ncontributed greatly to the ever-increasing sales\nof this anti-freeze. Because of PROVEN sales,\nmore \"Prestone\" Anti-Freeze advertisements will\nappear in more daily newspapers than ever before,\nHere is a lesson in CONTINUITY which every\nadvertiser might well ponder. Ask any daily\nnewspaper advertising manager for further facts.\nMORE ADVERTISING IN DAILIES\nTHAN ALL OTHER MEDIA\n'During the thirty years in which \"Prestone\"\nBrand Anti-Freeze has grown into Canada's best-\nselling anti-freeze, more money has been invested\nin daily newspaper advertising than in all other\nmedia combined.'\nAdvertising Manager, National Carbon Company\nDivision of Union Carbide Canada Limited\nCanadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association\n55 University Avenue, Toronto 1, Ontario\n)\n\/. H. Macdonald, General Manager\nHilts\n 18\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium   14.75\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News does tot Bold Itself rcspon  tie In Ihe event\nol an \" ror in the follnwlne lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices) Pickle Crow 86\nPlacer Devel   10.37%\nQuebec Copper  , 26\nQuebec Lab       06\nQuebec Lithium         3.85\nQuebec Metallurgical  74\nQuemont     12.00\nRadiore  40\nRoche      .13%\nSan Antonio  i 58\nSherritt Gordon      4.05\nSilver Miller  61\nSteep Rock          11.75\nSlocan Van Roi _ 23\nSullivan Con     2.09\nSylvanite     1.02\nTeck Hughes      1.81\nTemagami     1.66\nThomp-Lund 62\nTombill   26\nTrans Cont Res 18\nUnited Keno       4.00\nUpper Canada  88\nVentures    27.50\n.16\n.28\n.17%\n.13\n2.50\ni  1.42\n.18\nMVt\n.10%\n.07%\n.54\nMVt\n3.65\n1.15\n.07%\n7.00\n8.70\n.70\n9.00\n1.00\n.51\n.13\n.25%\n11.62%\n3.45\n3.45\n.60\n3.05\n22.00\n.14%\n.75\n4.35\n.15\nAmal Larder\t\nAnglo Rouen\t\nAtlin Ruft\t\nAumacho\t\nAunor \t\nBarnat \t\nBase Metals  \u201e\t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBibis Yukon  \t\nBoymar\t\nBroulan\t\nBrunhurst \t\nBrunswick  \t\nBuffalo Ank \t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCampbell C \t\nCampbell R. L \t\nCan Met \t\nCassiar   \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nChimo\t\nCoin Lake ,\nConiaurum  \u201e\t\nCons Denison  \t\nCons Denison Wts\t\nCons. Discovery \t\nCons Halliwell\t\nCons Howe\t\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCon Regcourt \t\nCon Sub \t\nConwest\t\nCopper Man  _\t\nD'Aragon 32\nDonalda      .12\nEast Amphi  \u2014      ,14\nEast Malartic     1.33\nEast Sullivan      1.95\nElder Gold 70\nFalconbridge      28.00\nFaraday       1.05\nFrobisher     1.85\nGeco    16.75\nGeo. Scientific Pros _    1.10\nGiant Yel    5.65\nGlen Uranium      .10\nGoldale      .16\nGold Eagle 30\nGolden Manitou  26\nGunnar Gold :   17.87%\nHarminerals       .15\nHeadway !      .45\nHollingeri _   28.00\nHudson Bay    58.25\nInt. Nickel    83.00\nIron Bay _.     2.00\nJonsmith        .13\nR J Jowsey 50\nKerr Addison ....'.   19.12%\nLabrador       24.75\nLexindin         .05%\nLittle Lohg Lac     1.77\nLorado    39\nMacassa      2.81\nMacDonald  \u2022         .25 ,\nMalartic Q. F      .97\nMaritime Mining      1.11\nMcMarmac    08%\nMcKenzie R L       .24\nMilliken     2.24\nMining Corp    13.75\nMulti Mins  50\nNew Delhi        .27\nNew Harricana       .12%\nNew,Hosco      1.17\nNipissing        2.15\nNoranda New    51.00\nNormetals       3.35\nNorpax   :.'. 21\nNorth Can      1.20\nNorth Rankin     1.52\nOpemiska     8.40\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 16\nBralorne\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold\nViolamac\nWaite Amulet ..\nWiltsey Goglin\nYale\n1.47\n6.20\n.19\nYellowknife Bear  87\nYukeno      .06%\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc 16\nBanff Oils  .'.     1.81\nBailey Selburn     9.10\nBata Petroleum  -     .06%\nCdn Atlantic     5.50\nCanadian Collieries     5.40\nCommonwealth Pete .,    1.95\nDuvex ,       .16\nHome-A   17.75\nLong Island Pete   ;   .07\nMarigold  '  .11\nMidcon    \u201e 68\nNew Continental  35\nOkalta       1:13\nPacific Pete    16.87%\nPetrol      1.35\nPonder  22\nProv Gas      3.00\nRoyalite    10.00\nSpdoner\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad  \t\nUnited Oils \t\nYank Canuck \t\nWestern Pacific ....\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel-\t\nAluminum \t\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\n6.40\n.04%\n.73\n.10\n.08%\n1.40\n.23\n.15\nFarwest Tungsten \t\nGiant Mascot  \t\nGranduc\t\nGrandview    \t\nHamil Sil (New) \t\nHighland Bell     1.60\nKootenay Base Metals 02\nPioneer Gold          1.10\nPremier Border  13%\nQuatsino  18%\nSheep Creek ....: 87\nSherritt Gordon      3.95\nSilback Premier  05%\nSilver Ridge      14\nSilver Standard  14\nSunshine Lardeau 10\nTaylor  12%\nTrojan  09\nOILS\nCharter      1.71\nHome     17.25\nNat. Steel Car \t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp. \t\nRuss. Industries .\nShawinigan  \t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A \t\nStandard Paving .\nSteel of Canada .\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Steel \t\nWeston George       34%\n23%\n63\n11\n33\n30%\n31%\n43\n67%\n16\n12\nOkalta Com   1.05i\nPeace River Gas  ,_. 49\nRoyalite ......   .. 9.75\nRoyal Can    .36\nUnited   2.15\nVanalta 25\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers  2.50\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.80\nB C Forests  13.87\nB C Telephone  40.75\nCanadian Collieries   4.25\nCrown Zeller (Can)   20.50\nInt Brew B    4.25\nInland Nat Gas  6.75\nLucky Lager   5.12\nMacM & Bloedel B   36.25\nMid Western  1.45\nPowell River      37.75\nTrans Mtn (New)   10.37\nWestminster Paper   30,00\nWestern Plywoods  16.75\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk  20.12\nAuwon   ; 07\nTrans Canada Com   27.62\nWestcoast Com   18.87\nWestcoast Trans   75.00\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal  52.00\nCan. Bank of Com   \u201e 57.50\nImperial Bank of Can  61.50\nRoyal Bank of Canada  72.50\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund   8.99\nCommonwealth Int.  7,62\nGrouped Income  _ 3.71\nInvestors Growth   5.70\nInvestors Mutual   10.73\nLeverage    5.89\nTrans Canada \"C\"  5.65\nBell Telephone\t\nB.C. Forest \t\nB.C. Packers A \t\nB.C. Packers B\t\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A \t\nCanadian Breweries \t\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Celanese\t\n.Can. Cement ..'.\t\nCan Chem Co\t\nCanadian Dredge \t\nCan. Malting\t\nCan Oil\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly ...\nCan. Packers B\t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas .:\t\nDist. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium \t\nDom. Stores \t\nDom. Tar & Chemical .\nDom. Textiles \t\nEddy Paper\t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer  .'. '.\nFord A \t\nGatineau\n.16%\n.70\n4.30\n2.15\n.10\n.19\n33\n30%\n26%\n38%\n41%\n14%\n15%\n15%\n35y4\n13%\n34%\n14%\n18%\n33%\n8%\n23%\n63%\n27\n29%\n49%\n13%\n34%\n32%\n38\n11%\n76\n14%\n10\n55\n21\n18%\n105\nGatineau 5% pfd  \u201e      102%\nGen. Steel Wares .\nGoodyear\t\nGypsum Lime :.\t\nHoward Smith \t\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInt. Pete \t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris ..:....\nMcColl Frontenac .\nMont. Loco \t\nMoore Corp\t\n9%\n185\n37%\n37%\n42$\n13%\n48\n33%\n34\n10%\n59%\n18\n85%\nON THE AIR\nCKLN   -ROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1958\n1:05\u2014Interlude\n1:15\u2014Fighting Words\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:40\u2014B.C. Road Report\n3:45\u2014Rocking Witb Boates\n4:45\u2014Tales of the Explorers -\n5:00-NEWS\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014Ottawa Report\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n5:50r-Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15-UBC Digest\n6:30\u2014Old Favorites\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Hoedown\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:10\u2014Citizens' Forum News\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014What Are Our Rights?\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00-News\nll:05-Sign Off\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05-Wake Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15-Story Parade\n9:30\u2014Country Caravan\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Time Out\n10:15-The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014The Woman in My House\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Party Line\n11:45\u2014Food Facts\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54-CKLN Reports\n1:00\u2014News\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nfriday; November 28, 1958\n6:00\u2014Sharpe at Six\n4:30\u2014Tales of the Explorers\n9:00\u2014News\n4:45\u2014Musical Program\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n5:00\u2014Bands on Parade\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n5:30\u2014News\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n5:40\u2014On The Scene\n10:45-:Woman In My House\n5:45\u2014Sports Desk\n11:00\u2014One Man's Family\n5:55\u2014Byline\n11:15\u2014Court of Opinion\n6:00\u2014Points West\n11:45\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n6:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n12:00\u2014Emerson's Digest\n6:40\u2014Rawhide\n12:15\u2014News\n6:55\u2014Preface\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n7:00\u2014National News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n7:30\u2014Evening Concert\n12:55-Five to One\n8:00\u2014Curious Canadiana\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n8:30\u2014The Four Gentlemen\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n8:45\u2014Grey Cup Party -\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n10:15\u2014CBC News\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\n3:30\u2014Operatic Highlights\n11:00\u2014Sign Off.    ...   .\n4:00\u2014Ottawa Concert\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n4. Peter\t\n5. Southeast\nby south\n(abbr.)\n6. Walter's aid\n7. Price\"\n21. Young\nsalmon\n25. Attain\n26. Rum.   <\npled\n(colloq.)\nMfclfflU   UHHkJ\nHHHMM  allium\n8. Social Insect 27. Pi-\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n7:43 Test Pattern\n7:58 Bible Reading\n7:59 Program Previews\n8:00 Continental Classroom\n8:30 Q Toons\n9:00 Dough Re Mi \u2666\n9:30 Treasure Hunt *\n10:00 Macy's   .Thanksgiving\nDay Parade *\n11:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n11:30 Sports Page \u00bb\n11:45 NCAA Football\nTexas vs. Texas A&M\n2:30 PCC Hi Lites\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n\"Leave Her To Heaven\"\n4:45 Cliff Carl Show\n5:00 Five o'Clock Movie\n'Life Begins For Andy Hardy'\n6:30 Weatherwise\nFront Page\n6:45 NBC News \u2022\n7:00 Highway Patrol\n7:30 State Trooper\n8:00 Ed Wynn \u00ab\n8:30 Concentration *\n9:00 Sea Hunt\n9:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford *\n10:00 You Bet Your Life *\n10:30 News\n10:40 Late Movie\n\"Lost Horizon\"\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n8:45 Good Morning\n9:00 Pro Football *\n12:00 Dan Smoot\n12:15 Industry On Parade\n12:30 As The World Turns \u00ab\n1:00 Jinuny Dean Show *\n1:30 Houseparty *\n2:00 Big Payoff \u00bb\n2:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n3:00 Brighter Day \u00bb\n3:15 Secret Storm *\n3:30 Edge of Night *\n4:00 Matinee Theater\n4:30 Cartoon Clown\n5:00 Laurel and Hardy\n5:30 Song Shop\n6:00 News\n6:10 Greater Spokane\n6:15 Doug Edwards *\n6:30 I Love Lucy *\n7:00 Rendezvous With Adventure\n7:30 Derringer *\n8:00 Zane Gray\n8:30 Playhouse 90 \u2022\n10:00 Soldiers of Fortune\n10:30 Night Edition\n10:40 Post Time\n10:45 Late Show\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n6:00 Huckleberry Hound\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Burns and Allen\n7:30 Leave It To Beaver *\n8:00 Zorro\n8:30 Real McCoys \u2022\n9:00 Pat Boone *\n9:30 Rough Riders *\n10:00 Vagabond\n10:15 J. L. Hudson Parade\n(This one time only)\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:45 John Daly\n11:00 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to.chaw by stations without notice.)\n9. Color\n10. Ushers ln\n16. Month\n(abbr.)\n19. Couple\n20. Begone!\n21.It is\n(contr.)\n23. Ostrlchlilce\nbird (var.)\nrates'\ndrink\n80. Baking\npit\n(H. I.)\n33. Test\nHHH      HSSBBE\nIE     00\nt-IUaHBH   BHBQ\nasaaasa\naaaa sauaaa\nas    f.iaariuium\nBunraHa    oaa\nHHI1@S   B.HHHB\nannua aaase\n\u25a0 1-3\nKeslerdsy's Answer\n37. Terrible\n34, Character-    38. A Nazi\nistic of man 41. Support\n35. Leavening    42, Wing\nagent 43. Male sheep\nACROSS\n1. Fellows\n6. Rubbish\n11. Goddesses\nof seasons\n12. Red Belgian\nmarble\n13. Baking\nchambers\n14. Oil of rose\npetals\n15. Coin (Jap.)\n16. To color\n17. Sun god\n18. Pass, as\ntime\n21. Sick\n22. Received\n25. Chief rooms\n(Rom.)\n28. Spars\n29. Court\nattendant\n31. Buzz\n32. Robert  .\nU.S.\ndiplomat\n36. Exist\n37. Black, as in\nCeltic names\n39. Regret\n40. Eleanor\n(dim.)\n42. Fragrance\n44. Swerves\n45. Volcanic\nrock (poss.)\n46. Borders\n47. Catkin\nDOWN\n1. Selected\n2. Hut'\n8. Skating\narea\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXIC\nklOXQIKIiLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another.   In this sample A li\nused for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,\napostrophles, the length and formation of the words are all\nhints.  Each day tho code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nCY,    EAR    ITZQ    JDTJWDJ    OAYBR\nXDHXHYQ'T.    BJDT    BBBB    LYT    JD\nOOYXTB \u2014IYIB.\nYesterday's Crytoquotet ETERNITY!   THOU PLEASING\nDREADFUL THOUGHT!\u2014ADDISON.\n\u00ab 1958. King Features Syndicate Ino. i\n1\n%\n3\nx-\n?-\n1\nT\"\n7\u2014\na\n\u20223\nIO\nII\n%\nIX\n13\n%\nii\n15\n^\nVA\nK>\nk\nn\nia\nvt\niff\n%\n\\%\n21\n%\n%\n%\n11\n23\n24\nIS\n\u25a0Lb\n27\nal\n29\nw\n30\n|\n%\n\u00a7\n31\n%\n%\n31\n33\n34 '\n35\n3*\n^\n37\n38\nn\ni\n39\n40\n41\nl\n41\n43\n44\nl\n4S1\n4*\n%\n47\n1-17\n SMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  \u2014\u25a0 PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN  NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nLADY FOR GENERAL OF-\nfice work including typing, 5-day\nweek, 7 hours a' day. To start\nJanuary 2. State experience and\nsalary expected. Apply to Box\n8042, Daily News.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRUGS, CARPETS, UPHOLSTERY\nDuracleaned in your home. Use\nagain same day. No obligation.\nPhone Ken Forbes, Fabric Spe-\ncialist, 446-R, 405 Nelson Ave.\nEXPERIENCED SECOND CLASS!\nengineer, steam-electrical construction, desires employment\nNelson-Creston vicinity. Box 8144,\nDaily News.    __\t\nFOR l'HE BES1 IN BODY AND\npaint work,; see Ted's Auto Body.\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus 98  res   1IB6-Y\nR E M 0 CELLING? BUILDING?\nRepairing? For better workman-\nshio call 597-L-2.\nRESPONSIBLE GRADE 12 GIRL\nwill baby-sit in Fairview. Phone\n1467-Y.\t\nRELIABLE WOMAN REQUIRES\nevening baby sitting. Ph. 1043-R.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Ph\nPAcific 6357\n808 CALIBRE FEATHERWEIGHT\nSavage rifle, used one season.\nNew price $440. Take it away for\nonly $75.00. Guaranteed. Can be\nseen at Mc & Mc, Jtelson \u2014\nPhone 1300.\t\nSEE OUR EXCELLENT BUYS IN\nused hi-fis, television, ranges\nand refrigerators. Jeffery Radio\nand Appliance Ltd., Nelson, B.C.\nLADIES' GREY WOOL VELOUR\nwinter coat. New style. Fits 16\nto 18. Call 717, Josephine St.\nFOR SALE - 1 UNPAINTED\nchest of drawers, very reason-\nably priced. Phone 1563-L.\nFUR COAT, LIKE NEW, ANY\nreasonable offer accepted. Box\n8161, Daily News.'\t\nCLARINET BOEHN SYSTEM -\nBest offer. Phone 678-L-2.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nFOR SALE - MAN'S 3-GEARED\nbike, good condition. Ph. 712-X.\nGAINADAY IRONER, SPLENDID\ncondition. Phone 77T-L.\nIN\nGOLF   SET   AND   GUITAR\ngood condition. Phone 85.\nMORRIS PIANO. 918 SILICA ST.,\nphone 734-L.\t\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSCRAP STEEL WANTED - C\/L\nlots. Also auto body tin. Commercial Steel and Metals, 1561\nWillingdon Avenue, Burnaby 2,\nVancouver, B.C.\t\nWANTED: A SMALL REED OR-\ngan to buy or rent. Phone 1855-R.\nWANTED - LARGE SIZE DOLL\nbuggy. Phone 1766-Y-l.\t\nBUSINESS  AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH  S. ELMES, ROSSLAND. B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist,  Mine Rep,\nENGINIMUS ANT* SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON, B.A. Sc.\n. B.C. Land Surveyor\n1015 Eighth St., Nelson,  Ph. 144-R\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng (Civil*\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n173 Baker St.   Nelson   Phqne_1118\nINSTRUCTION\nNELSON  COMMERCIAL\nTRAINING SCHOOL\n701 Front St  or ohone 2109-L.\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd\nSerious Strikes\nSweep Italy\nROME (AP) \u2014 Transport and\ncommunications strikes swept\nItaly today in mounting labor\nturmoil.\nThe most serious walkout, a\n24-hour railway strike, started at\nmidnight. It appeared fairly effective, with trains halted at Uie\nbig stations in Milan, Florence,\nRome, Bologna and Bari.\nOfficials of the state railways\nhoped to run a few trains, with\narmy transport corps' help, but\nthey were making no effort to\nmaintain anything near normal\nservice.\nPost and telegraph operators in\nthe government-run services were\ncalled out today on a similar 24-\nhour strike.\nMeanwhile, seamen in Genoa\ncontinued a strike started Saturday on Italian flag vessels operating\/out of that port. It was not\nfully effective but showed an indication today of spreading to\nother Italian cities.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\u201419\nMARKET TRENDS\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTENDERS FOR HEATING AND\nwiring store will be accented until December 1. Paul Markoff,\nSlocan Park.\nMACHINERY\nReconditioned\nCrawler Tractors\n'55 International TD-14A\nHydraulic Blade and Logging\nWinch. As New.\n'53 International TD-14A\nHydraulic Blade and .\nLogging Winch.\n'51\nInternational TD-14A\nHydraulic Blade and\nLogging Winch.\n'55   International  TD-9\nHydraulic Blade and\nLogging Winch. As New.\n'50 International  TD-9\nHydraulic Blade and\nLogging Winch. Very Good.\n2 '50 Caterpillar D-4\nTractors\nHydraulic Blades, 1 With Winch.\n'49 International TD-14\nHydraulic Blade, No Winch.\n'57  International  TD-9\nWith Drott Hydraulic Loader,\nIt4-Yd. Capacity, and Hydraulic\nBackhoc. Only operated 770 hrs.\nWrite or Phone for Prices\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd\n702  Front St\nPHONE   1810\nMcCulloch's\nNew Models\nAre Tops\nAUTOMATIC      '    '\nCHAIN OILING\nOne D30 3Ml-H.P.\n18\" Bar $177.00\nD36 4V2 H.P.\n24\" Bar  $221.00\nAlso, Mr. Logger, the\nSuper 44 and Super 55\nare still King of the Woods.\nSEE THEM AT\nv*\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n514 Railway St.     Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\n\u2022Neimin W\\h\\ Nrnta\nCirculation Dept.. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week 35c\nin advance\nSubscription Ratet\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 the\nUnited States:\nOne month           $ 1 75\nThree months    $ 5 00\nSix months      $ 9 00\nOne year .. $18 00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook phone Mrs Wm Stevely\nIn Kimberley. A W  Brown.\nIn Trail. Mrs Syd Spooner\nIn Rossland Mrs Ross Saundry\nFOR SALE-\"JAEGER\" 2-DRUM\nwinch, size 2-B, 6 cylinder Nereides gas engine, 4-speed transmission. Drum sizes 12\" dia.\n22\" face, VA\" flange. Price $1400,\nNelson Machinery, Nelson, B.C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nBICK'S COFFEE SHOP, SMALL\ngrocery, also living quarters\nPriced low for quick' sale Phone\n1288-1.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES   ETC\n100 TONS SPRING WHEAT, CAR-\nload lot or by the ton. Also 50\ntons feed oats. Inquire for price\nfrofci W. Dale, Creston, B.C.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nNelson Ready-Mix\nCONCRETE\nFOR ALL PURPOSES\nPHONE 871'\nPREMIER SAND & GRAVEL\nFor\nSand. Gravel, Crushed Rock,\nFill Cement and\nPea Gravel for Roofing\nPHONE 1368 or 871\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nSave $50 to $500\nAt\nReuben Buerge\nMotors Ltd.\nOn Best Stock of Cars\nin the Interior\n1959 Chevrolet Impala Sd.\n1959 Chevrolet Pickup\n1958 Chevrolet Pickup New\n1957 Buick 4-Dr. Hardtop\n1957 Plymouth Sedan\n1957 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1957 Chevrolet Sedan    '\n1957 Chevrolet Pickup\n1957 Pontiac Sedan\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Pickup\n1956 Chevrolet Bel-Air Sd.\n1956 Chevrolet 2-Dr. Hdtp\n1955 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Coach\n1955 Plymouth Sedan\n1955 Ford Sedan\n1955 Pontiac Sedan\n1954. Monarch Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan Del.\n1954 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Hard Top\n1953 Mercury Pickup\n1953 Chevrolet Panel\n1953 Morris Sedon\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Pontiac Sedan\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\nTerms and Trades\nLots of Storage Space\n$10 00 Per Month\nReobem\nBoerge\nMotors Ltd.\nCHEVROLET, OLDSMOBILE\nCADILLAC\n323 Vernon St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill\nmans. '50 to '54 Morris Minor.\n'47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac '52\nVanguard. '47 Oldsmobile 6, '49\nMonrach, 49 Chev For sale. '47\nOlds motor Cottonwood Wreck\nage Service, phone 2100, Box\n382. 24 Ymir Road, Nelson\nRENTALS\n(Continued I\nFOR RENT - MODERN, INSU\nlated 2-bedroom cottage at Willow Point. Furnished or unfur-\nnished. Phone Ludgate 1670-X-2.\nFOR RENT - 2-ROOM FURN.\nsuite, newly decorated, on main\nfloor. Ph. 491-X or apply 140\nBaker St.\nAPT., 3 ROOMS AND BATH. PRI-\nvate entrance. Hot water heated.\nElectric range supplied. Phone\n978-R.\t\nFURN. HOUSEKEEPING ROOM,\nheated, near Baker, immediately. Preferably elderly man or\nwoman. Phone 1184-Y.\nWE HAVE A NICE BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars.\nphone 77\t\nSELF CONTAINED, UNFURN\nsuite, four rooms and bath. Gas\nfurnace. Phone 376-L\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nCentral. Write Bon 8174, Nelson\nD?ilv News.\nHALF DUPLEX, 3 BOOMS AND\nbath, heated, electric range,\nbas\u00bbn_nt. Adults. Ph. 1941-Y.\nFruit Farmer Would Discourage\nBuilding Through Lush Areas\nVINELAND, Ont. (CP) - An\nOntario fruit grower said today\nthe Ontario   government   should\nFURNISHED CAtSiNS AT 7-MILE.\nOH stoves. $25 a month. Shady\nLane Cabins, phone_1803-R-3.\nSELF-CONT. UNFUR. 6-RM. APT\nBath gas furnace. No s\"nall children. 410 Victoria Street.\nSMARTTROOM   SUITE.   GAS\nrange, self-contained. Apply up-\nstairs. 912 Vernon St.\nWINTER   RENTALS,   A    HOME\naway from h-Mine . Brad's Auto\nCiurt   Phone 1580.\nSLSEPING ROOM, WEP K OR\nmonth. Winter rates. Apply\nStirlins Hotel.\nFUi.LY MOD.JRN 3-ROOM FUR-\nnished suite. Suit couple. PhoTie\n619-L.\n3-ROOM FURNISHED APART-\n. ment, heated, cen.r Balnr, Jan.\nl^Adults only._Phor,e_1184-Y. _\nSMALL COTTAGE FOR\" RENT -\nnewly decorated, gas. piped in.\nPhon? 1954-L.\nGeologist Finds\nPrehistoric\nReptile Fossils\nHALIFAX (CP)-A young Halifax geologist says a casual stroll\nalong a beach in southwestern\nNova Scotia last summer led to\nthe discovery of reptile fossils believed to be 150,000,000 years old.\nWilliam F. Take, 28, a staff\ngeologist with the Nova Scotia\nMuseum of Science, said he was\nwalking along the shore in Kings\nCounty when he noticed what he\nfigured was a big tooth hall-\nburied in the sand.\nThe find was sent to palaeontologist Dr. Donald Baird of\nPrinceton University who confirmed that it was a relic of\nsome prehistoric creature.\nMore fragments were dug tip\nfrom the sandy red soil and Dr.\nBaird visited the site last week.\nHe said the discovery is unprecedented in eastern North\nAmerica. In Canada fossils of\nthis type have been found only\nin Alberta and Saskatchewan.\nSo far about 20 fragments have\nbean found, including teeth,\narmored ,fish scales, pelvis particles, skull fragments and some\nunidentified bones.\nhelp preserve the Niagara region's fruitlands from the inroads\nof industry and housing.\nR. K. Matthie of St. Catharines, manager of the Ontario\nPear, Plum and Cherry Growers'\nMarketing Board, told a 100-\nmember seminar on land use the\ngovernment should discourage\nhighway building through lush\nfruit - growing districts because\nindustry and housing always follow the highways.\nMunicipal planning should encourage housing and industry to\nuse less desirable agricultural\nareas by providing services to\nthose areas only, he government should also provide some\nform of relief to \"true fruit growers\" against \"the high municipal\ntaxation for services brought\nabout by road building and subdividing.\"\nThe oest way to prevent the\nloss of good fruitland, he said,\nis to make fruit-growing profitable. But this would require federal - provincial - municipal cooperation as well as co-operation\namong processors, consumers\nand'the growers.\n\"While growers and processors\nvie with each other on marketing\nissues and the trend is toward\nlower prices, more land is being\nsold because growers aren't able\nto make as much money as they\ncan . by selling their land for\nhousing,\" Mr. Matthie said.\n\"At the same time, the various governments, for fear of political reaction at the polls, sit\nback and avoid the issue.\" Meanwhile, he added, imnorted fruit\nis getting an increasingly larger\nshare of the market.\nTORONTO (CP)-Gas and oils j\nissues sparked Industrials to\ntheir biggest single session gain\nWednesday in almost two months\nas the stock market moved\nahead in moderately-active trading.\nIndustrials-with a better than\nfour-point gain on the day wiped\nout. Tuesday's loss and cut Monday's nine-point drop almost in\nhalf.\nWestern oils climbed nearly\nthree points and base metals\nwere up IVt points. Golds, hit by\nprofit-taking at the opening after\nbeing the only winners Tuesday,\nremained off throughout the session for almost a one-half point\ndip. Losses, however, were generally small.\nFinal volume of 3,526,000\nshares, fell just short of Tuesday's 3,583,000. It was the lightest session in almost a month.\nPipelines, refining oils and\nsteels paced industrials. Trans-\nCanada Pipe Line set the pace\nup 2Vt at 28. Interprovincial\ngained 1% at 44 and Trans\nMountain added 1% at 10%.\nCPR rose % at 29V\u00ab- as the'federal government announced it\nwould   not   interfere   with   pro-\nSosed freight rate increases by\nte railways.\nSenior mines closed ahead\namong base metals with Consol-\nid\u00bbf\u00b0rl Mining up Vt at 22.\nSenior issues were up almost\non a line among western oils.\nPacific Pete was the leader,\nahead 1% at 16%. Pembina, at\n9% and Hudson's Bay, at 19%,\neach gained %.'\nIndex changes: Industrials, up\n4.19 to 503.29; golds off .41 to\n83.91; base metals up 1.46 to\n172.05; western oils up 2.95 to\n132.53.\nNEW YORK (AP)-llie stock\nmarket made its biggest single\nadvance in a year on Wednesday\nand recouped about a third of the\nestimated $11,000,000,000 lost in\nquoted values during the three\nprevious sessions,\nThe estimate is based on the\nrise ih The Associated Press 60-\nstock index tb $201.90, $2.90\nhigher than Tuesday's close.\nSales totalled 4,090,000 shares,\nup from Tuesday's 3,940,000.\nBrokers described the advance\nas a technical recovery that was\nhelped by reports of some better\ncompany earnings and dividends.\nInternational Nickel's 2 - point\ngain was the best in the Canadian section. Canadian Pacific\nadded Hi, Aluminium Ltd. %\n& and Hudson Bay Mining 1  .\nThe American Stock Exchange\nwas higher and active. Canadian\nMarconi gained Vt. Also higher\nwere Brazilian Traction, Shawinigan and Fargo Oil. Turnover\nwas 1,770,000 shares compared\nwith 1,440,000. on Tuesday.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Prlces were\nhigher   Wednesday   in   moderate\ntrading on the Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges.\nThe pipelines registered the biggest gains. Interprovincial was up\n2 at 45, Trans-Canada gained Vn\nat 27% and Trans Mountain advanced 1% at WA.\nIn utilities, Calgary Power was\nup 1V4 at 76. B.C. Power was off\nVt at ZaVt.\nUp Vt in the papers were Fraser\nat 31. St. Lawrence Corp. at 17\nand Consolidated at 42%. Anglo\nPulp was up % at 39%, anew\nhigh, while Price Bros, lost Vt at\n46.\nThe mines and oils were irregularly higher.\nIndustrial volume was 84,500\nshares, mines and oils 343,800.\nThe closing averages show banks\nup .27 at 57.80, utiltities up 1.4 at\n149.1, industrials up 2.5 at 290.8,\ncombined up 2.1 at 243.5, papers up\n3.1 at 451.1 and golds unchanged\nat 79.90.\nFBI Recovers\nMore Missing\nCanadian Bonds\nBOSTON (AP) - The Federal\nBureau of Investigation today reported the recovery of another\n$50,000 worth of bonds stolen in\ntwo multi - million - dollar Canadian robberies early this year.\nThe new discovery, in a bank\nat Waterville, Me., raised, the\ntotal recovered in the New England area to $126,000. Earlier\n$76,000 worth of stolen bonds had\nbeen found in two banks at New\nLondon, Conn. In each case, the\nFBI said, they had been pledged\nfor loans. ....\nA federal grand jury at Hartford, Conn., Tuesday indicted\nBernard J, Ezhaya, 45, of New\nLondon, a Boston industrial relations consultant, on charges of\nreceiving several stolen bonds\ntaken in the raids. Ezhaya wai\nheld on $100,000 bond,\n\"Early today the FBI at Boston\nreported Ezhaya was rearrested\nat New London Tuesday night in\nconnection with the Waterville\ntransaction.\nLooted in Canada were \\ the\nCaisse Nationale D'Economle of\nMontreal on Jan. 25, 1958, and\nthe Brockville (Ont.) trust and\nSavings Company on May 4, 1958.\nThe FBI said Ezhaya waa to\nbe arrainged this morning before\na U.S. commissioner at New\nHaven on federal warrants charging violation of the statute forbidding Interstate transportation\nof stolen property;\nLONG RECORD\nHarvard College, from which\ngrew Harvard University, was\nfounded in 1636.\nSjOL.   UO.M'i'.uiNiD CLiAN 3-KM\nsui*\u00bb   Ph\"'-p l\"'!l-l. r't=r fi n -n\nNORTH SHOEii MOTiSL OPKN\nfor winter rentals   Phone IBM -\nSLEEPING. ROOM, GENTLEMEN\npreferred. 410 Victoria St.\t\nMODERN  LAKESIDE  COTTAGE\nfor two. Phc-e 1703.\t\nGARAGE'FOR RENT. 412 SILICA\nStreet.\nHOUSfiKEEPlNS   ROOMS\nrent. _.   Front Street.\nFOR\nSEMI-FURNISHED SUITE. SUIT-\nable frr cnu\"' . Pli-i-\u00ab 316.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.\n$40 per month. Phone 4S9-L.\n5-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT. AP\nply 503 Cedar Street.\nHOUSE FOR RENT. H. HARROP.\nphone 1278.\t\nDESIRABLE    SELF-CONT.\nfurn. duplex. Phone 933-X.\nUN\nWANTED  TO RENT\nWANTED - ZBED ROOM MOD\nem spacious apt Adults only\nRent   no   object.   Phone   1512-X\nHAVE CARS-WILL SELL, AT\nprices so reasonable you'll be\namazed. All models, all y-.-ars\nPhone 1090, Peebles Motors. Nel\nson\nRENTALS\nLARGE DOWNTOWN APART-\nment. Electric stove. Steam-\nheated. Frig., oak floors, cabinet\nkitchen. Pembroke bath and\nshower. Adults only. Phone 293\nfrom 9 to 5 p.m., or 2077 after\n5 p.m. \u201e\nFOR RENT - MODERN 5-RM.\nhouse at Ymir, electric stove,\nannex garbage burner, water\ntank, floor oil furnace, full basement. Apply E. Haukedahl or\nMr. and Mrs. Noble Gould.\nTRAILERS\nPROTECTED AREA AVAILABLE\nfor wide-awake dealer to sell the\nmost popular Travel Trailer in\nAmerica. Now is the time to prepare for early spring sales. These\ntrailers range from 16 to 29 ft.\nwith and without toilet facilities.\nWe will be making a trip through\nyour area within a month, so\ncontact me now and I will give\nyou further details. Box 8421\nDaily News.\nPETS, CANARIES. BEES\nFOR SALE - BOSTON TERRIER\npuppies. Mrs. D. Howe, Fruit\nvale. ,\nUNFURNISHED UPSTAIRS APT.,\n1 block off Baker. Kitchen, large\nliving room, 2 bedrooms, bath,\nprivate basement and entrance.\nElectric fridge and stove supplied, $65 perjjionth. Ph. 1924-Y.\n3-ROOM APARTMENT, NEWLY\nrenovated, available Dec. 1. Will\n-rent furnished or unfurnished,\nAutomatic gas heat, gas stove.\nand fridge. Apply 171 Baker St\n1 BEDROOM AND 2 BEDROOM\ncompletely furnished units, avail\nable by the week or by tbe\nmonth. Winter rates. Ph. 1214,\nKencourt Motel.\nULTRA MODERN APT 3-RM\nand tiled bath, unfurn. Electric\nrange, fridge. Oil heat. Handy\nlocation. Pbone 130.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms. Furnished and heated.\nRates by day, week, month. Allen\nHotel, 171 Baker St.\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY -\n3-bedroom house with basement,\npreferably gas or oil furnace.\nPhrce 1753-L.\nROOM  AMI   BOARD\nROOM,    BOARD    AND    EXCEL I\nlent care for invalid, elderly lady\nor couple, in private home. Re\nferences.   Phone   EL-6-4429   or\nwrite P.O. Box 55. Creston, B.C\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen. Phone Mrs.\nTruscott, 1179-X.-\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED TO BUY - 2 OR 3 BR\nhouse, older type. Must be cheap\nApply Box 8167, Nelson News.\nONE   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nnartly furnished. Phone 1341-X.\n\u2022Continued in Next Column) 1\nOutput Higher\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada's 1958\npack of canned tomato juice,\ntomatoes, wax beans and plums\nshowed increases over 1957, the\nbureau of statistics said Wednesday.\nHowever, the bureau said in a\nspecial statement that the pack of\ngreen beans, all kinds of corn and\npeaches was smaller.\nPack of tomato juice rose 20 per\ncent to 5,289,153 cases from\n4,420,716 a year ago, canned\ntomatoes by four per cent to\n1,955,440 cases from 1,879,830. wax\nbeans by 17 per cent to 1.414,854\ncases from 1,210,001 and plums by\n44 per cent to 378,104 cases from\n261,845.\nThe year's pack of green beans\nfell 28 per cent to 905,597 cases\nfrom 1,249,949, corn by 13 per cent\nto 3.547,345 cases from 4,078.520\nand peaches 13 per cent to 1,854,431\ncases from 2,123,055.\nBuying -\nRentins\n\\our Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINI\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\nPut one word in each space.\n(Each group ot numbers or letters c ount as one word)\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as fou r words.\n(Box 00 Nelson New )\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nPer tine\n1 Insertion\t\n2 Consecutive Insertions\t\n3 Contecutive Insertions  .\t\n6 Consecutive Insertions\t\n26 Contecutive Insertions \t\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20c a Line Per Time.\n5  .20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge it two lines\n\u2022 Add 15e for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% trom above ratet if payment it\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage ot the low six time rate\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nYOUR  NAME\nADDRESS\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run\nBill Me    \t\nPayment Enclosed  \u2014\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n \u2014\n\u25a0\n20\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 27,1958\n\"They Just Can't Be Beat\"\nAnd we do mean eur (election of\nBOXED and SINGLE\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\n12 High Class Glossy Surface ._\n12 Colorful Holiday Mood Cards\n14 Slim 'n' Slender :\t\n12 Golden Glow  .\n21 Beautiful Christmas Cards\n18 Favorite Greetings\t\n12 Chapel Window Cards\t\n12 Holiday Memory\t\n25 Favorite Greetings \t\n-$1.50\n. .79\n_ 1.10\n_ 1.00\n_ 1.00\n. .89\n.89\n_ 1.00\n_ 1.10\nCome in and see for yourself\nbefore they are all gone.\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nMiners Ponder Georgia Jobs\nCanada Hopes To Send\nCeylon Surplus Wheat\nSPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) - A\nchill wind ana light snowfall\ngreeted 13 miners when they arrived here Tuesday night from\nt  week's  vacation  in  Georgia.\nThe future looked almost as\ncold, as the weather. The men\nsaid they had been offered jobs\nin the southern state but were\ngoing to think over the offers.\nLevi Milley, a miner who likes\nraising chickens, said he is \"seriously considering\" taking a job\nin.a sea food plant he visited in\nGeorgia.\nThe men and their wives and\nchildren, 44 in all, arrived in\nHalifax from New York on a\nTrans-Canada Air Lines flight.\nBuses brought them here from\nHalifax.\nThe 13 were among 19 who\nsurvived Uie Oct. 23 upheaval in\nNo. 2 colliery here. They were\ntrapped for up to SVt days. The\ncave-in killed 75.\nThe miners and their families\nvacationed at Jekyll sland, as\nguests of Governor Marvin Griffin.\nDoug Jewkes, who had: been\ntrapped without food, water or\nlight for \u00abVt days, said the white\nsands of Jekyll Island were, a\nlong way from the dark mine.\n\"I'll always remember them,\"\nhe said. \"The kids played there\nall the time.\" '\nThe men returned here with\nlittle chance of finding work.\nSince Dominion Steel and Coal\nweeks ago it would cease operations in the area, 800 men have\nbeen thrown out of work.\nBy ALAN DONNELLY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon (CP)-The\nCanadian government hopes to\nwhittle down its wheat surplus\nwhile boosting Colombo Plan aid\nto South Asian countries, Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker indicated\nWednesday.   \u2022\nHe told a press conference that,\nCanada, planning to increase her'\nannual Colombo Plan contribution to $50,000,000 from $35,000,-\noon, has \"a tremendotn turplus\nof wheat.\"\n\"We will naturally be hoping\nif not expecting that Colombo\nPlan countries will take a larger\nshare of our wheat and flour.\"\nEarlier, at a luncheon given by\nCeylon's Parliament, the Canadian leader gave a strong reply\nto those who he said claim the\nUnited States is aggressive.\n\"If you want to see their purpose come to us,\" he said.\nThere was no country which\nwould be more beneficial for the\nU.S. to acquire than Canada. But\nCanada knew it would never\nhave to take arms against her\nsouthern neighbors.\n\"At no time have we in the\nslightest had anv reason to believe that the United States has\nas its purpose the annihilation of\nour race or acquisition of our\nterritory.\"\nHAS PRIVATE  TALK\nOn the final day of his three-\nday visit to Ceylon, Diefenbaker\nhad a private talk with Prime\nMinister Solomon Bandaranaike.\nCanadian sources said the major\ntonic was Commonwealth trade\nwith special emphasis on basic\ncommodities.\nA highly-placed informant said\nthat in the talks with Pakistan,\nIndia and Ceylon, Diefenbaker\nhas strongly. emphasized Canada's desire that a large part of\nits increased Colombo Plan contribution be in wheat and flour.\nCanada felt it was unfair that it\nshould not use the plan . where\npossible to help reduce surpluses\nwhile other countries, notably the\nUnited States,, were doing that.\nOne of the main problems was\nthat with Canadian shipments recipient countries must pay shipping costs in dollars while under\nU.S. shipments, recipients could\npay part of the freight in local\ncurrency,\nThe prime minister motored\nhere this morning from Kandy.\n75 miles away, He went from a\npress conference to the new Institute of Technology at nearby\nKatubedde, built with the help of\nCanadian Colombo Plan aid. He\nunveiled a plaque commemorating the assistance.\nAt night he was tb attend a reception by Bandaranaike .followed\nby \"a quiet dinner. He leaves\nearly Thursday on the flight to\nKuala Lumpur to begin a four-\nday visit to Malaya.\nFormer Sudan\nPM Says Coup\nSaved Country\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Su-\ndan's former prime minister says\nthe military coup that ousted him\nsaved his country from a foreign-\nsponsored move to end Sudanese\nindependence.\nThe former government chief\nAbdullah Khalil, made clear he\nwas accusing President Nasser of\ntrying to annex Sudan to the\nUnited Arab Republic.\nKhalil was interviewed in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, by a\ncorrespondent of the Beirut newspaper l'Orient. It was his first\nstatement for publication since\nGen. Ibrahim Abboud, commander\nof the Sudanese army, Ousted the\ngovernment Nov. 17 and made\nhimself premier.\nKNEW BEFOREHAND\nKhalil said he knew beforehand\nof Abboud's coup and approved it.\nKhalil called the coup \"a great\nstep forward and a clean movement which has no relations with\nany outside power. It's true I was\nin office when the coup occurred\nbut I felt the country needed drastic changes, in government.\"\nHe charged that one Middle\nEastern power had been working\nwith some Sudanese army officers\nfor the last three months to engineer a coup to \"prejudice Sudan's\nindependence.\" '\nAsked whether he meant the\nU.A.R. and Nasser, Khalil said,\n\"you mention the aggressor in the\nmideast and everybody's fingers\nwill point to him.\"\nDIGITAL   DISCUSSION \u2014 TV's Steve Allen and concert pianist Van Cliliurn\nappear engrossed in a problem of piano lingering during gathering in New York restaurant.\nVan Meegeren Forgeries\nInspired by Hatred\nGENTLEMEN PREFER A\nWHITE CHRISTMAS\nGive Him One of These\nWhite No-Iron\nSHIRTS\nBy Forsyth that can be\nbleached. Single or double cuff.\nm\n$5\n95\nJ.MORY\n*^    LTD,\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\n'S\nTORONTO (CP) - The speed\nlimit on many Ontario highways\nwill be raised to 60 miles an hour\nwithin the next two months, Highways Minister Cass said Wednesday. The new limit will apply on\nall controlled - access highways\nand on certain two-lane roads, he\nsaid.\niery here. They were        Classified Ada Get Results       75 miles away. He went from a   READ THE CL,\nWhen you select o TOY\"- djffjp\nmoke sure it's right for girl or boy\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nTake-apart-\nput-together Toyt\nSand Toyt, Boxes\nStuffed Animals\nBuilding Blpckt\n2   Light Wogont\nPush-Pull Toyt\nWagons\n*j,  Housekeeping\nToyt\nDolls\nAutos\nBoott\nDoctor's Kits\nMusical Toyt\n8 to 10\nyears\n* SKIS\n* TOBOGGANS\n* SLEIGHS\n* BICYCLES\n* POCKET\nKNIVES\n* WRIST\nWATCHES\n* CARPENTRY\nTOOLS\n* SKATES\n* TABLE TENNIS\nGun Sett\nSimple Gym Set\nWheel Toyt\nBlack Boards\nSleds\nEasy Construction\nToyt\nTelephones\n,-   Storekeeping\n**?     Toyt\n10 to 12\nm Years\nOTTAWA (CP) - A Dutch painter who hated his unsympathetic\nart critics carved his name in the\nart world as a master of forgery.\nHenricus Van Meegeren died in\n1947, but the \"Van Meegeren\nForgeries\" remain a drama of the\nart world.\nDr. Paul Coremans, director of\nthe Royal Belgian Institute for\nConservation of Works of Art, unravelled the tale of the forgeries\nin a recent lecture at the National Gallery here.\nThe. scientist from Brussels was\nprominent on a committee of\nmuseum experts who investigated\nthe forgeries.\nSOLD TO GOERING\nThe Van Meegeren forgeries\nwere uncovered in an indirect\nfashion after the Second World\nWar. Dutch authorities, rounding\nup suspected Nazi collaborators,\nbrought artist van Meegeren to\ntrial because he had helped Field\nMarshal Goering to purchase a\nVermeer. He had also sold ether\nimportant paintings.\nThe painter was sentenced to a\nyear in prison, but while there\nhe made a sensational confession\nthat he had painted these works\nDesign Outfitt\nChemistry Sett\nMusical Toyt\nArchery Sett\nTable Tennit\nPuzzles    .\nBoard Garnet\nModel Autos,\nBoats, Planet\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPhone 1530\nWHOLESALE \u2014RETAIL\nNelson, B. C.\n593 Baker St.\nhimself. He died after about six\nweeks of imprisonment.\nIncredulous authorities started\nto check on the authenticity of\nthe paintings. Dr. Coremans and\nhis team tested them with x-rays\nand chemicals. Thev were indeed\nmasterpieces of imitation.\nDr. Coremans said Van Mee-\ngeren's technique included use of\na 17th-century canvas. He erased\n\u25a0part of the paint and then, produced his masterpiece with more\nor less modern materials, but in\nthe style of Vermeer.\nDUPED EXPERTS\nHe \"baked\" the painting in an\noven and then rolled it bver a\ncylindrical object, filled the cracks\nwith India ink to make it look like\nthe dirt in an old master's painting\nand produced a work that duped\neven a famous Dutch art historian.\nHis most famous forgery was\n\"The Disciples at Emmaus,\"\ndone in true Vermeer style.\nDutch authorities found the artist residing in a princely home in\nAmsterdam as a result of his\ntalent for imitation.\nDr. Coremans said that apart\nfrom the artistic and scientific\ninterest in the forgeries, the forger\nSee Airlift as Possible\nChallenge To East Berlin\nBy GEORGE   BOULTWOOD\nBONN, Germany (AP) \u2014 Ths\nWestern allies are likely to challenge any East German effort to\ncontrol their traffic to Berlin by\ntaking to the air, not by trying\nto. force through a ground convoy.\nThat is the opinion of informed\nWestern sources here. They say\nany idea of attempting to push\nan armed convoy through East\nGermany has been abandoned.\nThe Communists could thwart\na cpnvoy attempt without resorting to arms, the allies reason.\nThe East Germans would only\nhave to throw some switches,\ntear up rails or blow up a few\nbridges.\nWOULDN'T SHOOT\nBut to stop an airlift, the Communists would have to shoot\ndown' the planes. And Western\nofficials do not think the Russians, want to run that risk.\nWestern authorities are reported confident of their ability\nto supply their 10,000 troops in\nWest Berlin if the Soviet Union\nwithdraws from four-power occupation of the city and gives control of military traffie to the\nEast German regime.\nSources say the three Western\npowers would refuse to allow\nEast Germany to replace Russia\nin the four-power allied air safety\ncentre in West Berlin which controls air traffic in and out of the\ncity.\nThe West would simply run\nthe centre on its own, the sources\nindicate. Allied transport planes,\nprobably with fighter escort,\nwould be given clearance to fly\nalong the three air corridors linking West Germany with Berlin.\nWithin range of the corridors\nthe Russians have a number of\nmodern jet fighters. 15ie East\nGerman regime has its own air\nforce equipped with Russian jets.\nBy ignoring air safety centre\nrules and flying in the corridors\nthese Red fighters could make an\nairlift hazardous. But shooting to\nhimself aroused his curiosity. He\nvisited Van Meegeren in prison.\nThe scientist said the painter\ntold him his original work had not\nbeen recognized by art critics. So\nhe decided to prove he was a\ngreat painter by imitating Vermeer.\nDr. Coremans said the first\nforgery, \"The Disciples at Emmaus, was a very good painting\u2014\nthe artist's hatred for the critics\nhad gone into it.\nstop the transports is not expected.\nThe sources say that if one day\nallied military trains or road\nconvoys through East Germany\nfound East German officials instead of Russian soldiers waiting\ntp check their credentials they\nwould turn back.\nThis would avoid an examination that might be interpreted as\nrecognition of the satellite regime. At one time it had been\nsuggested in allied circles that\nexamination wouid be accepted\non the theory that the East Germans were just agents for the\nRussians. This apparently has\nbeen abandoned.\nU.S. Farmers\nVote To End\nCorn Control\nWASHINGTON <AP) - Farmers\nvoted in * referendum Tuesday\nto end government production\ncontrols on corn, the largest\nsingle U.S. crop.\nThis was the first time since\nbefore the Second World War\nthat growers of a major crop\nhave rejected federal restrictions\nas a measure for stabilizing returns. Corn controls date back 25\nyears.\nThis politically significant action had been urged by Agricul-\nCOUNTING DELAYED\nPreliminary returns from 25 of\nthe 26 major corn states in which\nballoting was conducted gave\n246,475 votes to end federal restrictions and 100,064 to retain\nthem. Vote counting in the other\nstate\u2014North Dakota \u2014 was delayed by. bad weather.\n' The results were expected to\nstrengthen the Eisenhower administration's hands in dealing\nWith tbe new Democrat - controlled Congress on future farm\nlegislation. The voting followed\nrecent Congressional and state\nelections in which Republicans\niost ground in farming areas.\nThe vote to abandon corn controls may encourage the administration to sponsor plans to ease\nif not end restrictions on other\ncrops, such as wheat, rice, peanuts and tobacco.\nNET EFFECT\nThe net effect of the referendum is a grower acceptance of\nlower government price supports\nfor the right to grow all the corn\nthey wish.\nFor consumers, the increased\ncorn supplies and lower support\nprices could mean larger supplies and lower prices for meat,\npoultry and dairy products.\nOfficials estimate that supports\nnext year will average between\n$1.12 and $1.15 a bushel. Under\nthe control program, the average\nwould have been between $1,\"'\nand $1.27.\nNEW    LEADER-\nMrs. William Sale Terrell of\nWest Hartford, Conn., wat\nelected president of United\nChurch Women by national\nassembly, meeting in Denver.\nTOY ANIMALS\nFOR CHRISTMAS\nTiger Pyjama\nPlus Toy Bag\t\nGrey and Pink Cat\nPlush Toy Bag\t\nELECTED \u2014 Andres\nRivero Aguero, S3, is president-elect ot Cuba. He it a\nlawyer and longtime protege\not Fulgenclo Batista whom\nhe'll succeed in presidency.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Solon\nPhone St7\n176 Baker St.\nV\nHave Ths Job Done Right\n\\#K GRAVEC,\n\u25a0        LIMITED        <**\nPHONE 815       s.\nMASTER PLUMBER\nElizabeth Arden's New\nBlemished Skin Kit\nImprove the Skin\nFor Blemishes, Blackheads,\nPimples. Enlarged Pores.\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nJfared\nGQODWfo\nCory art\nDog on a Pillow Pyjama\nPlush Toy Bag. Pink. Green, Red.\nTeddy Bears\n3.49 1.98 1.49 .69\nSee Our Window Assortment of\nPLUSH ANIMALS\nFLEURY'S PHARMACY\nBOX 435 PHONE 25\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Lin-\nuor Control Board or by the Government Of British Columbia\n.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1958_11_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0431014","@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":"1958-11-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1958-11-27 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\/1.0431014"}