{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Contributor":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","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"}],"Contributor":[{"@value":"Gibbon, A. W.","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Ramsden, C. W.","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-06-01","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1959-09-04","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0432959\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 11\n',''.',   \u25a0 - ;'!\":--;'.-i \u25a0.   -.>'\u25a0    \u25a0\u2022: >   ;\u25a0\n4Pi\u00ab.l-MI\u00bbi\u00abJW\n.'\u2022'\u25a0\"'\u2022\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0:-.-. \u25a0f^!;..1 Sp ^U^IlfL:^^\nVol. 57\nThe Interior's\nLargest Daily Newspaper\nJuly Daily Average Press Run 9007 .. ---,.\nPublished at Nelson, transportajblVugj^Uig^^ Iriancial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nKEiS&^toJ^T\/104V .\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959\nPfPPPWPfll||?^r^^lPWIl\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKOQTENAY: Cloudy overnight\nand Friday with scattered showers\nin afternoon. Notj much change in\ntemperature. Winds light. Low-high\n\u00bbt Cranbrook 35 and 65, Crescent\nValley 40 and 85.\nNot More Than Tc Dally, 10c Saturday.\nNo. 115\nStolen Anti-Polio Vaccine Found\nInterest Rate Swings Up Again\nFleming Fends Off\nNew Money Demands\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Bank of Canada interest rate\nbounced upwards again Thursday as tight-money problems\ncontinued to squeeze the booming economy.\nThs rate climbed by .31 per cent from last week to\n5.89 per cent with the sale of less-than-normal $100,000,-\n000,000   in   91-day   treasury\n' bills.\nIn a move apparently aimed a*t\navoiding fresh demands on the\nmoney market, Finance Minister\nFleming announced that again\nnext week the gov\u00abrnment will\nborrow a below - normal amount\nby means of the short-term bills\nwhose selling price determines\nthe central bank interest rate.\nThe bank rate is set at one-\nquarter of one per cent above the\naverage yield on the weekly issue\nof bills sold at tender. Last week\nthe rate dipped to 5.58 per cent\nfollowing a two - week decline\nfrom the record high of 6.41 Aug.\n13.\nREFLECTS CONDITIONS\nThe central bank's interest\nrate\u2014minimum charge made on\nthe infrequent loans to chartered\nbanks--generally reflects conditions in the short - term money\nmarket.\nThis week prices of short-term\ngovernment bonds declined following last week's short - lived\nrise, bringigOond.yields higher.\nMeanwhile'there was an apparent tightening in other areas.\nWeek - old figures made public\nThursday showed that last week\n\u2014for the first time since mid-\nJuly \u2014 the chartered banks cut\nback on the total amount of general loans outstanding. It was a\nslight drop of $3,000,000 in the\nweek before Aug. 26 to a total\n$5,101,000,000. But It was only the\nthird weekly decline since bank\nlending began a huge expansion\nin early spring. In early March\nonly some $4,300,000,000 in general loans were outstanding.\nAs well, the money supply-\nbank deposits and currency\u2014declined to $13,308,000,000 on Aug.\n26 after a three - week decline\nfrom the peak of $13,403,000,000\non Aug. 5. The money supply\nnow is back to its mid-July level.\nRESISTS EXPANSION\nThe Bank of Canada's policy\nhas been to resist an expansion\nin the money supply. The fear is\nthat an increase would be inflationary in the light of last year's\nbig money rise.\nThursday's $100,000,000 in 91-\nday treasury bills were sold at\nan average yield of 5.64 per cent,\ncompared with 5.33 per cent last\nweek.\nLaos Citizens Given\nGuns For Last Stand\nBy DAVID LANCASHIRE        I\nSAM NEUA, Laos (AP) - Communist rebels were reported massing 27 miles north of here Thursday and this royal army headquarters for Northern Laos prepared grimly for a list-ditch defence.\nPGE Bonds Win\nGood Response\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The government - guaranteed Pacific Great\nEastern Railway $10,000,000 bond\nissue may be oversubscribed by\nthe end of the week, it was reported in investment circles here\nThursday.\n\"The sale has been going extremely well,\" said A. G. Osborne,\nchairman of the Investment Dealers' Association of Canada.\n\"There has been a surprising\nresponse, especially from small investors.\" he said.\nMr. Osborne estimated that orders now in total between $7,000,-\nO00 and $10,000,000, but, he said,\nthey have not all been processed\nthrough to Victoria.\nThe five-percent bonds went on\ngale Tuesday. The demand has\nnot been too heavy in Vancouver,\nbut from other cities and rural\nareas many orders have been\nplaced.\nArmy officers issued sub - ma\nchine - guns and ammunition to\ngovernment workers and school\nteachers. A handful of paratroopers\nwere moved into the thin out-lying\ndefences.\nCommunist advance units \"are\nprobing our lines only 18 miles\naway,\" said Brig. - Gen Amkha\nSoukhaving, commander of northern military headquarters.\n\"They will attack within 10 days\nat the most\" he predicted.\nThe general said the Laos rebels\nand regulars from Communist\nNorth Viet Nam were gathering\nin the jungle - clad mountains 27\nmiles north of this town of 2500\npopulation.\nThe general gave no figures. But\nearlier Defence Secretary Phoumi\nNosavan said at least a battalion\nof Communist Vietnamese regulars\nwere in the field on the Sam Neua\nfront.\nNosavan talked to reporters in\nVietiane, the administrative capital 200 miles south of Sam Neua.\n\"It's classic warfare, not guerrilla tactics,\" Nosavan said. \"We\nintend to hold Sam Neua at all\ncosts.\"\nSAM NEUA QUIET\nDespite the military commander's gloomy assessment, the town\nof Sam Neua was quiet. Residents\nstrolled in the streets, shopped and\nlounged in the shade, watching the\ntroops moving north. Even tl\/ise\nissued guns showed no excitement.\nr*.    YUKON    \\\nCANADA'S POLIO COUNT\n'FEDERAL HEALTH DEPARTMENT FIGURES AT AUG 22\"\nNWT\n\u2022 i      r'\u00bb\nBC    ' AlTA  ' VI : vn\n1 ' \"\u00bb      ' '       . CAtK '\nLEGEND\nDEATHS I CASES\nTelephone Tipoff\nLeads Police to\nApartment Hideout\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Police, acting on an anonymous\ntelephone call, Thursday recovered the $50,000 worth of\nanti-polio Salk vaccine stolen by three hooded men Mon-\nday night from a University\nof Montreal laboratory,\nThe vaccine was found in an\nunfurnished apartment on St. Hubert Street, in east-central Montreal. The apartment had been\nrented, the night the shipment\nwas whisked from the Institute\nof Microbiology and Hygiene in\nsuburban Laval des Rapides.\nThere were no immediate arrests but police said arrests are\nexpected by today.\nQuebec provincial police said\nan anonymous telephone call\ncame about 3:30 p. m. The caller\ngave the St. Hubert Street address and the number of the\napartment. He said the vaccine\nwould be found there.\nPOLIO PICTURE \u2014 The iederdl health department\nreports that Canada had seven times as many cases of\nparalytic polio at Aug. 22 as it had the same time last\nyear.\nThe total at that date was 455 castes with 41 deaths.\nOn a 1958 date the country had 64 cases and seven\ndeaths.\nMap details the number of cases and deaths by\nprovinces.\n\u2014(CP Newsmcrp)\nPeace Assured If West Holds Firm\nU.S., French Leaders\nAgree on Berlin Stand\nSitosd Qohn&M\nBy PYRAMUS\nNelson is one of those places\nwhere one grumbles at prices,\nservice, weather, entertainment\nfacilities and so on, while one lives\nhere, but after moving to another\ncity. Nelson is the one spot that\nseems to embody all the qualities\none looks for.\nSo say a number of former Nelson people who return in the course\nof a year for a holiday or some\nother reason.\nSEEN IN PASSING - The former Mae Doi, now Mrs. Tsuk 01-\nkawa of Vancouver, who returned\nto Nelson with her husband to attend a reception held for newly-\nweds Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mar.\nShe says she misses Nelson and is\never telling her new Coast friends\nof its attractions . . . oldtimers\nhaving their regular cup of tea in\na Baker Street restaurant where:\nthey meet every afternoon at 3:30 j\nas   \"The Senate\", Walter H. Smed-\nley, John Draper, Jack Brown, W.\nStan Smith and one or two others\ncomprise the organization ... A\nyoungster being measured for\nschool trousers by his mother,\nMrs. A. R. Ramsden, in a children's wear department . . . R. J.\nMark about to sally across the\nstreet for mid-afternoon coffee . . .\nAid. C. E. Bradshaw sauntering\nalong Baker Street with his hands\nin his pockets ignoring the rain on\nhis bare head . . . Cornelius Van\nPelt running his finger along an\noffice ledge, looking at the dust\nand shaking his head . . . window\nshoppers peering into blank store\nspaces in the new business building\nat the corner of Baker and Stanley\nStreets, wondering who the occu\npants will be.\n*   *   *\nConfession: When we say a man\nhas no sense of humor, what we\nreally mean is that he hasn't the\nsame sens* of humor we have.\nBy  RELMAN  MORIN\nPARIS (AP) - Presidents Eisenhower and de Gaulle Thursday\nnight wound up two days of\n\"very friendly\" talks ranging\nfrom summit conference possibilities to the Algerian rebellion.\nA communique on meeting of\nthe American and French leaders\nwas issued after President Eisenhower told his Western Allies\nthat peace is assured if the West\nremains firm in principle, flexible in tactics and patriotically\ndevoted to the North Atlantic alliance.\n\"Then there will be no war,\"\nEisenhower said.\nAlthough the commu.jque said\nonly that North Africa was discussed by the leaders, White\nHouse press secretary James Hagerty later disclosed they had\ntaken up a new policy toward Algeria. Hagerty said de Gaulle is\nto disclose the policy after Eisenhower leaves France today for\na Scottish holiday.\n\"It may be expected that Gen.\nde Gaulle will make a statement\non this subject,\" Hagerty told\nreporters.\nNO DATE GIVEN\nHe would give no date and added \"it would be inappropriate\nfor us to make any comment until de Gaulle has made his statement.\"\nInformed sources said the\nFrench president would make his\nannouncement on the Algerian\nrebellion before the Sept. 15 opening of the UN general assembly in New York.\nThese same sources indicated\nde Gaulle would outline a new\napproach.\nHagerty parried all questions\nconcerning details.\nAsked if the United States\nwould have something to sayt\nafter de Gaulle makes his public\ndisclosure, Hagerty replied\n\"yes.\"\nEisenhower and de Gaulle\nagreed that a summit conference\nwould be useful in principle, but\nsaid  one  should  be  held   \"only\nPEI Gov't To\nTake Office Soon\nCHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. (CP)\n\u2014The new Progressive Conservative government of Prince Edward\nIsland will take office Sept. 15\nor 16.\nOutgoing Liberal Premier Alex\nMatheson announced after a meet\ning with his cabinet Thursday that\nhe would resign the government\n\"the afternoon of the 15th or the\nmorning of the 16th.\"\nwhen there is some possibility of\ndefinite accomplishment.\"\nAGREE ON BERLIN\nTheir communique said they\nwere in complete agreement on\nthe question of Berlin.\nIt also said they reaffirmed the\nimportance they attach to the resumption of negotiations on general and controlled disarmament\nand to the problem of assistance\nto underdeveloped areas.\nAnother subject discussed was\nde Gaulle's desire to give France\na place equal to that of the\nUnited States and Britain in dealing with world strategy.\nOn this point the communique\nsaid de Gaulle and Eisenhower\n\"also examined the means of organizing better co-operation between the two countries in the\nworld as a whole, especially\nthrough the expansion of consultations on all major problems,\npolitical as well as military.\"\nThere was no mention in the\ncommunique of de Gaulle's desire to have a voice in any possible future decision to employ\nnuclear weapons anywhere in the\nworld.\nNO NUCLEAR CO-OP\nNor was there any indication\nthat Eisenhower had promised to\nco - operate more closely with\nFrance in developing nuclear\nweapons.\nHagerty said de Gaulle and\nEisenhower had a general discussion of how to keep in touch.\n\"This is to be informal.\"\nBar Edgy on\nBill of Rights\nVANCOUVER (CP)-In the vernacular of'football,'the Canadian\nBar Association has become involved in a bill-of-rights contest in\nwhich nobody wants to carry the\nball.\nThis situation arose Thursday at\nthe CBA annual convention, where\nthe civil liberties section, after\nVh hours of inconclusive discussion, decided to \"place the baby\non the doorstep\" of the association's executive and council.\nCanada First\n-Diefenbaker\nCHICAGO (CP)-Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker Thursday reminded\nUnited States businessmen that\nCanadians expect the business policies of U.S. sudsidiaries to be\nbased on Canadian considerations\nand to be in the best interests of\nthe Canadian economy and people.\nHis outspoken reminder was\ngiven in an address to a joint luncheon meeting of the Chicago Rotary Club and Chicago Association\nof Commerce and Industry.\nArmy Called Out to\nBattle Calcutta Mobs\nCALCUTTA (CP)\u2014The Indian\narmy was called on to restore\norder Thursday after Communist-led  mobs surged throughout\nthe riot - ridden, strike \u2022 bound\nCalcutta area,  attacking police\nstations and patrol squads with\nguns, bombs and knives.\nTen or more persons were killed\nbringing the death toll this week\nto at least 19. More than 170 persons were injured, many of them\npolicemen.\nIt was the fourth straight day of\nopen battle against the West Bengal state government. Prime Minister Nehru's central government\nalso is being drawn into the fight.\nCommunists declare they are\nfighting for proper distribution of\nfood and against high prices.\nAfter a day of shifting but apparently systematic attack by the\nmobs, the Indian army moved in\nto restore and keep order Thursday night in the industrial slums\nof Howrah, across the Hooghly\nRiver from Calcutta.\nOther Indian troops were held\nready to take over completely if\nthe Bengal state police forces fail\nto suppress the rioting.\nFor the first time in this week's\nfighting, major battles developed\nat police installations orf both sides\nof the Hooghly.\nThe Howrah police headquarters\nand a dozen sub-stations were attacked by thousands of people and\nin Calcutta proper police were at\ntimes held at bay.\nPeacetime Coexistence or\nElse\u2014Says Khrushchev\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Nikita\nKhrushchev says the West must\nfall in with the Soviet policy of\npeaceful coexistence of communism and capitalism or face \"the\nmost destructive war in history.\"\n\"There is no third choice,\" the\nSoviet premier said in an article\nappearing in the current issue of\nForeign Affairs, quarterly review\nof the Council of Foreign Relations, a private organization of\nprominent Americans.\nKhrushchev said that if relations between the West and the\nCommunist bloc are to improve,\n\"all barriers in international\ntrade must be removed\" to let\ninternational life develop normally.\nBLAMES  WEST  GERMANS\nKhrushchev accused the North\nAtlantic alliance of letting the\nWest Germans convert NATO\ninto an instrument for\nplans that could \"plunge the\nwhole World into the chasm of a\ndevastating war.\"\nHe called West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer a potential stumbling block to the improvement of East - West relations.\nKhrushchev wrote:\n\"Some say: The Soviet people\nare unduly sensitive. Can one assume that West Germany now is\nin a position to precipitate another world war? Those who put\nthe question thus forget that\nWestern Germany is at present\nacting in the world arena not\nalone but within the military\nNorth Atlantic bloc.\n\"She plays a paramount role\nin this bloc ... if Is not at all\nimpossible, therefore, that Western Germany, taking advantage\nof her position lh the North Atlantic   affiance,   might   provoke\nhostilities in order to draw her\nallies into it and plunge the whole\nworld Into the chasm of a devastating war.\"\nDIFFERENCES  REMAIN\nThe Soviet premier said the\nBig Four foreign ministers conference in Geneva brought the\ntwo sides closer together but that\nthere still' are substantial differences on .a number of questions.\n\"I am deeply convinced that\nthey are not fundamental differences on which agreement is impossible,\" he wrote. \"And if we\nstill have differences and have\nnot reached agreement on certain important questions, it is\u2014\nas we believe, with adequate\ngrounds\u2014\u00ab result of the concessions made by the Western powers to Chancellor Adenauer, who\nIs pursuing a military policy, the\npolicy of the German revan-\nchlsts.\"\nIndian Army\nTo Reoccupy\nRed-Held Post\nBy PETER JACKSON\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) - The\nIndian army Thursday night was\nreported preparing a bid for the\n\"peaceful\" reoccupation of a northeast frontier outpost seized by Chinese Communist soldiers late last\nmonth.\nIndian troops were said to be\nmoving to forward areas of the\nNortheast Frontier Agency, where\nthe nowrCb,inese-held Longju outpost jras set up by India in April,\nInformed sources said the Indian force was under orders to\ntry to reoccupy Longju without the\nuse of arms and to open fire only\nin self-defence.\nThe Assam Rifles militia detachment, driven from Longju by\nCommunist gunfire has established\na new forward post two days'\nmarch south of the lone one, and is\nin contact with the next nearest\npost of Limeking.\nReconnaissance of the area was\nreported being carried out in preparation for the move. The area\nis one of the most desolate on the\nNortheast Frontier.\nThe army's new operational headquarters at Jorhat, on the Assam\nPlains 120 miles south of Longju\nnow is fully set up under Brig.\nShiv Dayal Singh.\nMeanwhile offical sources said\nIndia has rejected a Peking government protest charging that Indian\nborder guards trespassed on Chinese territory near Longju and\nopened fire on Chinese patrols.\nIWA Considering\nSettlement Plan\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 International\nWoodworkers of America union officials said Thursday it will take\n\"at least 10, maybe 14 days\" to\nhand down a decision on the\nDeutsch formula for settlement of\nthe coast woodworkers' strike.\nIWA official Ed Haw told Vic\ntoria labor council Wednesday that\nthe Deutsch recommendation \"was\nnot as good as we had hoped for.\"\nHe said union picket lines were\n\"all solid, but we have not received\ntoo much financial support from\nthe rest of the labor force in the-\nprovince\".\nPolice found the apartment\ndoor open. No one was inside,\nHalf the stolen vaccine\u201410,000\nvials in all\u2014was found in a refrigerator. The rest was found in\ncartons, different from those in\nwhich the vials were packed\nwhen stolen.\nThere had been clumsy attempts to keep the vaccine cool.\nTwo blocks of ice were found\nmelting in a sink. The refrigerator contained, besides some vaccine, a dozen bottles of beer.\nThe only furniture in the apartment was a bare mattress and\nan empty butter box, in which\nthe ice apparently was brought\nin periodically.\nThe apartment caretaker said\nthe apartment was rented Monday night by a dark-haired man\nabout 30 years old. He paid $23,\na weeks rent, in advance.\nBEING TESTED\nThe vaccine has been returned\nto the institute and is to be tested\nto see if it has deteriorated. At\nthe time of the theft, institute officials said the vaccine should be\nkept in temperatures just above\nfreezing or it would go bad in 48\nhours.\n\"Our men think they know who\ncarried out the theft but we have\nto establish some proof to the\ncase,\" said Provincial Police Director Hilaire Beauregard.\nThere was some speculation\nthat the thieves had found the\nvaccine too \"hot\" to sell on the\ninternational black market.\nThree hooded men carried out\nthe theft Monday at the institute,\nthen joined a fourth man waiting\nin an automobile. The night\nwatchman was locked in an\nempty cage used for housing\nmonkeys that are subjected to\nmedioal tests.\nThe 10,000 stolen vials were\nsaid to contain enough salk vaccine to inoculate 75,000 persons.\nMeanwhile, 16 new cases of\npolio were reported Thursday in\nMontreal, bringing the total to\n619 for this year. Deaths were reported at 32.\nEmployment\nPicture Better\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Continued improvement in Canadian employment was predicted Thursday by\nLabor Minister Starr in a Labor\nDay message.\nDuring the past year, he said,\nthe Canadian emonomy has reached a substantially improved position over that Of a year ago.\n\"Employment h as expanded\nsteadily,\" he added, \"and by June\nhad reached an all-time record\nlevel.\n\"This has resulted from a\nbroadly-based expansion of business activity which has developed\nduring the past 12 months.\n\"I have no doubt that this expansion will continue to affect favorably the standard of living and\nemployment prospects of Canadian\nworkers for some time to come.\"\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nUNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (AP)\u2014Take It from the florists\u2014June\nIs losing out as the favorite month of brides, a flowery bit of scientific research disclosed  Thursday.\nAugust Is looming as a strong threat and even September and\nNovember are coming up fast, though these latter still are below\nthe average of other months excluding mid-winter.\nMid-winter weddings still appear to be unpopular both as to\nIncidence and the money spent upon flowers when they do occur.\nThese and other facts came to bloom In a report made to a\nhorticultural session of Hie annual meeting of the American Institute\nof Biological Sciences on the campus of Pennsylvania Stale University.\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Britain's Wildfowl Trust Thursday reported\nsadly that people are losing interest in adopting ducks.\nAccording to the trust's annual report, only 1200 ducks found\nfoster parents in 1958 compared to nearly 3000 two years ago.\nFor five shillings\u201470 cents\u2014anyone can adopt a duck, goose\nor swan.\nAlthough the scheme has been going for 11 years, no one ever\nhas asked for a swan.\nThose who adopt a duck are allotted a bird ringed by Ihe Wildfowl Trust. After that.'if the duck is recaptured, they arc informed\nof its progress.\nMost duck adopters are children.\n. Stuck for a gift'\nAs the trust suggested, \"try a duck adoption token.\"\n ^M\n^\u25a0^^^\nIWPillBiipSrpiPPPP\n\u2014\u2014\n'\"\u25a0I'|J--'i\n2\u2014NELSON  DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\nTONIGHT-SATURDAY\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-9:05\nA HACY,\nmorous NEW\nCOMCDY HIT I\nFilmed on location in\nthe\nhaystack I\nDEBBIE REYNOIPS\nTONY RANDALL\nPAUL DOW\nThe Mating\nGame\"\nt\u00bb.u,\u2122, FRED CLARK\n(Adult Entertainment) cikemascot .nd MtrroflOlOR\n\"LONG JOHN SILVER\" AT THE SATURDAY MATINEE\n**************\n*\nComa\nsundown ..\ncomes\nsudden\ndeath\nin a\ntown\ncalled\nWARLOCK\nwith\nRichard Wldmark, Henry Fonda,\nAnthony Quinn, Dolores Michaels\nand Dorothy Malone\nCinemascope \u2022 Technicolor\n\"SUNDAY MIDNIGHT PREVIEW\"\n*\nt\n*\n*\n*\n*\ni\n*\n*\n*\nNelson To Be  Headquarters\nFor Regional Scout Association\nNelson has been selected as thel    \"The regional council will super-\nsite for headquarters of the Koot-1 vise and assist the future develop-\nenay Boundary Regional Scout Association.\nOfficials say Nelson was chosen\nbecause of its central location with\nreference to the Scout population\nof the area and because of the\nready availability of most suitable\noffice space.\nThe regional council is now receiving applications for executive\ncommissioner to direct the Scouting\nactivities and carry out the field\nvisits to the Scout groups which has\npreviously, been done from Pentic-\nton by J. V. Scrivener.\nThe regional council will take the\nplace of the provincial council in\nco-ordinating and administering\nScouting activities in the Kootenays\nand Boundary, will organize leader\nand boy training courses, 'control\nand supervise Cub and Scout\ncamps, and supply proficiency\nbadges, insignia, books, pamphlets\nand other supplies previously obtained from provincial or national\nheadquarters.\nment of Scouting in all of the Boun\ndary and Kootenay communities.\"\nit has been announced.\n\u25a0 The\" creation of the Kootenay\nBoundary regional council is the\nfirst step in a provincial plan of\ndecentralization following several\nyears of study of how to handle the\ntremendous growth of Scouting in\nB.C. that has resulted in a four-\nTRAVELLING TRIO. This carefree threesome from Montreal arrived in Nelson\nrecently on the final leg of their Atlantic to Pacific journey in a 1936 automobile.\nGeorge Lagace, Gerald Lemieux and Hubert Goulet traded a television set for the\ncar and started off with $50 each.\u2014Daily News phofo by Mickey Carl\/on.\nDoughty 1936 Model Car\nChugs Trio Across Canada\n**************\nHaving swapped a television set for a 1936 model car,\nthree French - Canadians are\nmaking a trans-Canada junket.\nThe threesome from Montreal\narrived  in  Nelson  recently  with\n00^1\n[\n10f DRIVE-IN       |\nI      Last Times Tonight     \u25a0\nJ \"Houseboat11\n\u25a0 Cary Grant, Sophia Lorenl\nTECHNICOLOR\n\u25a0 One Complete Show, 8:15 p.m.\nFREE BRIDGE TICKETS\nTREE SCHOOL SUPPLIES\nI   At Falrview Esso, with the |\npurchase of Drive-In Theatre\n1     Tickets at Falrview Esso. 1\nOpen to 8:00 p.m. I\nI\nIt Scribblers and 1 Pencil FREE I\nwith every children's admission I\ni\u2014 PLUS 8 Draws for Lunch Kits \u25a0\nI and Thermos Sets. Draws to he I\n'made Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.\n{\u00ab i\nAUTO-VUE DRIVE-IN - Troil\nTonight and Saturday\nWalt Disney's\n\"SHAGGY DOG\"\nFred MacMurray, Jean Hager\nFeaturette: \"Sleepy Hollow\"\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight and Saturday\n\"THE SMALLEST SHOW\nON EARTH\"\nPlus MANFISH (In Color)\nOne Showing Approx. 8 p.m.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Saturday\n\"TARZAN FIGHTS FOR LIFE\"\n(Color)\nGordon Scott - Eve Brent\nNEWS - CARTOON - SHORTS\nTHE WEATHER\nNelson\t\n    45\n65\n.mi\nVictoria \t\n    53\n(12\n.14\nSpokane     \t\n       48\n78\n-\nTransient Veterans\n\"Riding\" on Legion\nTransient veterans who have\nbeen \"railroading and riding\" the\nLegion will find a cool reception\nIn the future.\nA. P. Jeffery, president of the\nNelson branch of the Canadian\nLegion, told a membership meeting Thursday night that funds from\nthe poppy fund have gone to help\nonncE\nSATURDAY\nAnd don't miss the Midnight\nFrolic Sunday night \u2014 Buddy\nMarr Orchestra.\nPLAYMOR\n,'iiM \u25a0HuTI-fffl \u25a0timSE\nWALT DISNEY'S\nFlight to the Moon\nEXERCISE\nBOOK\n12  tor 98c\nRegular  10c  Earn\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your   Fnrlress   ol   Health\"\n4.1.1  Josephine St.       Phmip 1201\nHe said the fund was for relief\nwork, but felt 75 per cent of it\nshould be earmarked for needy\nNelson Legionnaires and their fam\nilies.\n\"There have been many Legion\nnaires travelling across the coun\ntry at the Legion's expense. They\nhave been railroading and riding\non the Legion,\" he said.\nThe membership agreed to use\nthe bulk ol the poppy fund for local\nrelief work.\nFOR LANDSCAPING\nA call for volunteers to help landscape Kootenay Lake General Hospital grounds in the near future\nreceived the response of 16 members.\nDonald D. MacKenzie, reporting\non the Legion spoils Hay in Trail\nSept. 26, said the coach at the high\nschool and junior high will \"talk\nit up\" when school'opens and make\nevery effort to stage a preliminary\ntrack and field meet.\nAs an added attraction at next\nSaturday's dance, a performance\nof Highland dancing will be presented by Pamela Clark, 15, Ros-\nanne Booth and Carol Zubick. both\neight. The girls will do the Highland fling, double sword dance, and\nseann truibhais.\nPresident Jeffery reported a\nsteady Increase in membership\nwith eight new members and\nfour reinstatements during (lie\nmonth. Secretary-manager C. R.\n7500 road miles to their credit in\na car that had 84,868 miles on the\nspeedometer when they started.\nHubert R. Goulet, 36, Gerald Lemieux, 24, and George Lagace, 23,\nleft Port aux Basques, Newfoundland, in July on their Atlantic to\nPacific expedition.\nNumber of Jobless\nAt Three-Year Low\nThe trio started with $50 each\nand have stopped along the way\nto work for a few days to finance\nfurther roaming.\nThe men found the scenery of\nthe Kootenays \"excitingly spectacular\"  and the people  \"the most\nfriendly we have met so far.\"\nNO  FLATS\nDuring the long journey in the\nold car the only mechanical failure\nwas due to a broken fan belt.\nThere have been no flat tires.\nGoulet is an able seaman, Lemieux, a former soldier, and Lagace, a stevedore. After a winter\nin Vancouver they plan to retrace\ntheir steps east via the United\nStates.\nThey hope to write a book on\nUnemployment was at its lowestl wood, owing to strikes at the coast\nin three years last month, accord- has cut into potential sales,\ning to the  National Employment    The forest nre season helped one\nService at Nelson. segment of the population, if it was: their experiences.\nThere were 361 persons registered not a good thing for others. Food'  :\t\nfor work, compared with 491 the supplies went \u00bbp during the time\nprevious month and 396 a year ago. men were being used to fight fires\nwhich covered many areas of the\nNelson Forest District.\nThe decrease was primarily\nmale job-seekers, now down to 267,\na drop of 129. Women applicants\nwere slightly Jiigher in number.\nMORE TRANSIENT\nAPPLICANTS\nAn increase in transient job-! for some time past. Three were:Wil\nseekers, first reported last, month,' sent into construction work and one for\ncontinues. Most seem brought here' into a sawmill job.\nDISABLED HELPED 1\nService noted that during August\nit had been able to find more positions for those with disabilities than\nLions Clubs\nPlan Meeting\nCustoms Hours\nUnder Study\nExtension af customs office hours\nat Nelway and Paterson is under\ninvestigation by the directorate of\nport administration in Ottawa,\nThe Chamber of Commerce,\nwhich has urged 24-hour service as\na means of improving tourist trade\nand as a convenience to travellers\nreceived this information Wednesday.\nThe Ottawa communication stated that \"the requirements of an\nextension of hours at these offices-\nespecially Paterson, is under investigation. Should traffic volume\nand conditions warrant the additional administrative cost, certain action may be expected.\"\nDeputy Minister\nTo Visit City\nJ. E. Brown of Victoria, deputy\nminister of municipalities, will\nvisit Nelson Sept. 25 in the course\nof a tour of interior centres.\nThe city has been advised of his\ncoming visit, and discussions will\nbe held by City Council members\nand Mr. Brown,\n97-YEAR-OLD\nRECOVERS  FROM\nFALL ON STREET\nW. A. Huffy, 97, of the Annable'\nBlock was reported to be in good\ncondition Thursday after a fall\nwhich sent him to Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Wednesday night.\nThe well known oldtimer trinped\non the curl; at the corner of Ward\nand Baker Streets, and fell, striking his head on the pavement. He\nwas released from hospital Thursday.\nin ii iiiiissii mini ii m ii ri ill is\nVISITOR BUILDS\nWATER-WHEEL\nAn Alberta visitor wilh an\nartistic flair has put his abilities to work al the North Shore\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. B. F.\nSchneider.\nAra Thomas cf Greencourt,\nbrother of Mrs. Schneider, has\nbuilt a colorful water-wheel in\nShannon Creek whic-h flows at\nthe foot of the Schneider lawn.\nHe is now completing a rainbow bridge, which is to be\npainted in rainbow colors.\nRainbow - shaped stringers\nand other parts o fthe bridge\nwere cut from trees on the\nmountainside above ihe property. The Schneider property\nis the former heme of Mr. and\nMrs. F. H. W. Chanter, now at\nVictoria.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nfold increase in the past 12 years\nto  35,000  members.\nMagistrate R. S. Nelson has been\nelected as second vice-president of\nthe council.\nA sub-committee composed of J.\nJ. McEwen, chairman: district\ncommissioner E. K. Evans and\nMagistrate Nelson was appointed\nto investigate and recommend suitable quarters for the regional office in Nelson.\nThe necessary finances to handle\nregional costs will be obtained from\nregistrations, association memberships, district assessments, and a\ngeneral canvass of special names.\nDON'T\nSIT ON THE\nFENCE\nG\u00abt Your\nEXHIBITION\nSeason  Tickets\nNow at\nGilkers' Ltd.    \u2022\nBen Sutherland's\nKootenay Stationers\nNIGHTLY PRIZES\nRepresentatives of 14 Lions Clubs\nconverge on Nelson Sept. 26\ni zone meeting.\nThis information was conveyed to\nhy hopes ot- work on Celgor's big|\npulp mill construction project at!\nCastlegar. NF.R reports that thei\nmajority of such applicants have\nno special skills or trades and are;\nnot required or employable.\nTo some extent it has been necessary to obtain properly trained men' August as in July It was up from\nfrom outside districts, hut this1 last year. August saw 94 applying,\nis not the policy of the Celgar com-' In some instances there were va-\npany, which has publicly stated it I cancies but no properly twined\nprefers, whenever possible, to hire ; applicants,\nlocal men. , |    At   Celgar   the   payroll   is   now\nIn   mining,   activity   has   been over   200  persons.   This   includes\nquiet. Three miners were placed\nin  the  Trail  area,  but  otherwise\nThe number of war veterans the Nelson club at its meeting\napplying for work Is at Its lowcstj Tuesday at the Nelson \"Hotel hy\npoint In a year and a half with; member Frank Beresford, who is\nonly 23 still listed as looking fori zone chairman.\nwork. i    The same day will hold its annual\nWhile Ihe number of women look- charter celebration with a '\ning   for   work   was   the   same   in night.\"\nBANK CLEARINGS\nUP $6 MILLION\nBank clearings in Nelson last\nmonth totalled $3,582,162 close to j\nthe  figure  set in  August,  1958. N\nTotal for Ihe year is $34,790,451\nup $6 million over the same period\nof last year.\nHews Of The Day\nthe situation reflected the general\nlow point of the industry. Despite\nthis, only eight miners were listed! SUB-0\u00bb\"FICE\nin the  area as  unemployed,  but |\nLooking ahead to activities this\nfall, the club decided lo again sponsor its light bulb sales campaign,\nand to again operale an ice cream\nbooth at the West Kootenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition\nnext week,\nsupervising personnel  and profes-]    Ross Campion, a new member,\nsional help. Two vacancies in the was introduced by president Arthur\nlatter category were filled through] Irving. Dinner gnosis were Trevor\nthe Nelson office last month.        | White,   Russell   Hawes   and   Ross\nMark,    and    a    former    member\n! Larry Urquhart, now of Squamish.\nSQUARE DANCE  BEGINNERS\n, Classes commence Tties., Oct. 6.\ndies'; Register now. Contact Vic or Milly\nGraves, phone 1952-1,.\nHIGHLAND DANCERS at the\nCanadian Legion Dance Saturday,\n10:30 p.m.\nSPECIAL\nSemi-Porcelain\nCups and Saucers\n19*\n5 ^r 90c\nWILSON'S HARDWARE\n327 Baker St.\nPhone 2174\nA sub-office of the National Em-\nofficials explained this by, saying i p|oyrnen.t Service was compieted\nolhers bad moved into different oc-j ;lnd pllt in(0 opcraUon at the CeI.\ncupations\nFire Chief Speaks\n,    , .        ,      gar site. Practically all employment T\u00ab If :\u00bb.\u00bb\u2022.:* rink\nSummer weather had Us effect} for lhe (.ompanv win be hand]ed   10 IVIWOniS V-IUD\non the soft drink industry, with the1 lhrough NES offices ej(ner on Ul(J\nresult extra help has been required; sjje or elsewhere.\nfrom time to time. i      '     \u25a0 \u25a0\nOil, diesel and gasoline dealers,\nserving   the   holidaying   public   as fish Hook Causes\nwell as normal traffic, nave foundi\nthe season, good, with construction\nhosting sales in osme areas.\nSimilarily, retail huilriing suppliers have found construction demands good, hut a shortage of ply-\nRigging snid Indications are that\nthe Legion will soon show a\nprofit on Its operations.\nOFFIfKR HONORED\nA mednllinn was presented to\nFred Castle for 12 years of loyal\nservice as sergeant-at-arms.\n41\t\n\u2022  LEGION  MEMBERS AND GUESTS\n\u2022\ncome to the\n\u2022      HIGHLAND FUNG\n\u2022\nTONIGHT\u2014Legion  Hall        J\n&L\/L\nMUSIC  BY  ROY  KLINE\nAdmission  $1.50  per  Couple\nEye Injury to Boy\nStephen Benwell, son of Mr. and\nMrs. William Benwell, has been\ntaken by plane to Vancouver for\ntreatment after a fish hook caught\nin his eye, it was learned in Nelson Thursday, The child's condition is not known.\nThe young boy hod been staying\ning with his grandparents. Mr. and\nMrs. George. Benwell. Nelson\nAvenue. His father is B.C. Forest\nService ranger at Lardo.\nFfre chief E. S. Owens addressed\nthe Kiwanis Club at its dinner\nmeeting at the Hume Hotel Thursday night, speaking on the fire\ndepartment and the value of fire\nprevention. He showed a 15-minute\nfilm illustrating his topic.\nKLEENBURN . . .\nWESTERN MONARCH\nOREENHILL . . .\nCANMORE   Briquettes\nCoal\nPHONE 889\nT0WLER\nFuel 8t Transfer\nWaterproof\nLEATHER\nBOOTS\nBy Greb\nSee These Entirely\nNew Types of\nSylflex  Tanned\nLeather  Boats\nTHAT ARE GUARANTEED\nWATERPROOF\nIdeal   for the  Hunter.\n8\" TOP WATERPROOF\n$19.50\n8\" TOP WATERPROOF\nAnd   Insulated  Against  Cold\n$21.50\nWADE'S\n350  Baker St.\nJ_\nPaint Sale\nAll Our Endurance\nExterior Paint at\nBig Discounts\nEntire Stock of\n, Wallpaper\n20%  Off\nSale   Prices\non . . .\nLADDERS,\nROLLERS, BRUSHES\nCARMICHAEL\nSIGN AND PAINT STORE\n407 Hall St. Phone 379\nWe Stock All of Your LAWN REQUIREMENTS\nLAWN\nSEED\nA selected No. 1\nmixture of three\nfine grasses, which\nwill give you a\nrich, green lawn. Lb.\nPEAT\nMOSS\nA High Grade of\nselected spahagnum\nmoss, which will retain\nmoisture and food in the soil\nfor your lawn to feed on.\nLAWN\nFertilizer\nValley Pride 6-8-6\nComplete plant food\nto strengthen your\nplants and lawns\nagainst Winter'elements\n80 Pounds\nLATER'S\nDust\n(or.\nFor all your Fall Bulb Plantings\nfor disease free plants next spring. 8 oz\n(LARGER SIZES AVAILABLE!\nNow U the Time to Put In Your New Lawn\nNelson Farmers' Supply\nPhone 2255\nNelson, B!C.\n524 Railway St.\nJ\n k^k^H\nMisinformation Blamed\nWhere Are Applicants?\nAsks Di\\ Green Home\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Residents of the\nDr. F. W. Green Memorial Home,\nin operation for nearly three weeks\nnow, continue to total two persons,\nand the board of directors is puzzled as to how to encourage applicants to the point where it is in\nfull use for its capacity 26 permanent residents. Purpose of the residence is to provide a comfortable\nand attractive home for persons\neither physically or financially unable to continue their own private\nhomes.\n\"A great deal of misinformation\non admissions and residence regulations appears to have been circulating, and the attractiveness\nand oomfort of the accommodation\nalso appears to have scared a number of possible applicants from considering the move,\" officials say.\nThe home has now been licensed\nby the provincial government as\na boarding hame for elderly people.\nIt is prevented under its type o!\nlicence from admitting bed-ridden applicants, or people requiring services of a registered nurse,\nbut can accept people who require\nminor extra physical care. There\nis no minimum age limit for resident*.\nRATES CRITICIZED\nRates  have  also  come  in  fori\ncriticism. Minimum rate was set\ntentatively at $75 a month covering everything for the resident who\nis sharing one of the four-bed\nrooms. The home offers two of\nthese multiple rooms. Rate for a\ntwo-bed room covering everything\nwas set at $100 a month. Single-\nroom residents, rate was set at\n$125. For old age pensioners also\nreceiving the provincial social service allowance the board rate is\npaid in full by the social welfare\noffice and a small monthly allowance is also paid to the resident.\nj This makes residence at the Home\npossible for persons in any income bracket.\nBeyond ordinarily civilized behaviour, there are no institutional\nregulations for the resident, who\ncan come and go as they please\nand their friends can visit them at i\nany time, with all general living\nKorpack\nCement\nProducts\nCO. LTD.\nFerraro Bros.\n\u2022   *\nSand and\nGravel\n\"Suppliers to the\nKootenays\"\nManufacturers and\nDistributors\nCONCRETE BLOCKS\nCINDER BLOCKS\nPUMICE BLOCKS\nCHIMNEY BLOCKS\nCONCRETE BRICKS\nCEMENT\nBUILDING mm\n154 Wellington, Trail B.C.\nPhone Trail 2105\niiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiim\nMOUNTIES GET\nTHEIR BEARS\nNAKUSP\u2014Mounties. apparently, not only get their man;\nthey can be deadly to bears.\nBut then the bears should\nhave known better.\nThe two bruins, who had been\nstartling residents for several\ndays by wandering along\nstreets and through properties,\ntook refuge at the s;te of the\nnew RCMP detachment quarters one day this week. That\nwas definitely the wrong place\nfor treed by a labrador, they\nwere shot by Corporals Turner\nand Dolter.\nBoth bears were three-year-\nolds, one weighing 204 pounds\nand the other 209 pounds.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllll\nfacilities of the building common\nproperty of all residents. There\nare* no limits to the area from\nwhich eligible residents will be accepted.\nElderly people who are considering applying for residence are welcome to inspect the home's facilities at any time and are under no\nobligation, officials add.\nIf their interest is increased by\ninspection they can discuss the\nfinancial terms with Miss Ida\nGummer, housekeeper, or with Society president Edward Gummer,\ndirector R. J. Laurie, social welfare officer O. D. Bjaranson or\nwith Society secretary-treasurer\nRon Bailey.\nDEDICATION OCT. 1\nDedication of the building as a\nmemorial to the late Dr. F. W.\nGreen who had realized for decades the need of such accomodation for elderly people has been\ntentatively set for Oct. 4.\nActual realization of the $110.\n000 project was done through co\noperation and support of his many\nfriends and the general public, to\ngether with the various government grants to help establish this\ntype of senior citizens residence\nm\n$63,160 in Building\nOkayed at Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Th\u00ab value, of building permit* approved in the village of Castlegar in August totalled $63,180,\nshowing continuation of the growth that has marked recent\nmonths.\nSome of the large construction projects approved were:\nPine and Columbia Holdings retail store, $25,000; British\nColumbia Telephone Company exchange building, $21,000;\nMike and Mary Harshenin, residence, $6000; lack Zibert\nfor a residence, $3000, and Rev. E. A. Brophy for chapel\nwork, $1000.\nTRAIL STUDENTS\nINCREASE BY 300\nTRAIL\u2014It's back to school next\nweek for 5509 students and 218\nteachers in Trail school district.\nThe schools' population has increased by 300 children since the\nScott-Atwoter\nOutboard Motors\nBall-a-Matic Ends Hand Balling\nModem Electric\nBay Ave. Phone 138\nTrail, B.C.\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n15M Bay Ave.       Phone 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.\n\u2014^~\u00bb^\u2014   \u25a0    \u25a0    \u00abi.X .0m   \u00bb\u00ab\nLOWEST PRICED SEWING\nMACHINES\nhi the Kootenays.\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1510 Bay Ave.   Trail  Phone M60\nA-6 Indicates\nNew Legislation\nVICTORIA (CP) - Attorney\nGeneral Bonner said Thursday the\nlegislature next spring will study\nnew legislation to speed up payment of claims against the Unsatisfied Judgment Fund and for extending fund coverage to provide\nfor claims by victims of hit-and-\nrun accidents.\n\"These new arrangements will\nlead to payment of claims within\na matter of days following a court\njudgment by a claimant,\" he said\nin a press release.\nMr. Bonner met Wednesday in\nVancouver with E. H. S. Piper,\ngeneral manager and counsel of\nthe All-Canada Insurance Federation, and discussed the new arrangements, j\nCurrent arrangements in B.C. i\ninvolve, in some cases, lengthy de-'\nlays following judgment. Thi6, he!\nsaid, is something both he and]\nthe insurance federation are seeking to stop.\nThe Unsatisfied Judgment Fund\nprovides $10,000 for death or severe injury to one person and $20,-\n000 if more than one person is affected.\nPremier Opens\nAsh River Plant\nALBERNl (CP) \u2014 Premier Bennett officially unleashed the 35,000\nhorsepower Ash River power development Wednesday despite a\npushbutton rumble.\nClimaxing the speeches, the premier lifted a radio telephone from\nits cradle to instruct a Nanaimo\ntechnician to set the turbine in\noperation by long-distance automation. But for a brief moment, nothing happened.\n\"This is Premier Bennett speaking .. . will you push the button?\"\nhe said.\nThere was a pause.\n\"Hello, can't you hear me?\" said\nthe premier.\nLowering his voice he entered\ninto a conversation with the operator 70 miles away. Finally, to the\nrelief of the 300 guests and tensed\npower commission officials, the\nhuge machinery whined into life.\nIt was learned later the radio\ntelephone required that a button\nin the handset be pushed when\ntransmitting and released when receiving. But no one had told the\npremier.\nThe Ash River ceremony followed a similar rite at Chemainus\nearlier Wednesday when Premier\nBennett opened the 100,000 horsepower Georgia gas generation station.\n1958-50\" year, according to the\nschool board. Of the total, 508 are\ngrade 1 pupils who will be attending school for the first time.\nThe school board also announced\nthe transfer of Thomas Tillemans\nfrom boys' counsellor of the Rossland junior-senior high school to\nconsultant in counselling and testing for the school district. The\nlatter position was established\nwhen Dr. J. A. Stewart joined the\nstaff three years ago.\nMr. Tillemans, a graduate of the\nUniversity of Amsterdam, has a\nmaster of education degree in\ncounselling.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\u20143\nWarning Issued After Plastic\nClaims Lives of Two Infants\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationery, Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane St.     Phone 11\nTro'l,  B.C.\nACCOUNTANTS'\nAWARD GOES TO\nFERNIE MAN\nFERNIE - R. A. Colleaux of\nFernie is a schoalrship winner in\nawards announced for high advanced cost accounting marks.\ntrol Your Ho\nInsulate Your Home and Save\nReduce Fuel Costs Up to 40%\nINSULATE WITH\nZONOUTE\nThe Insulation that . . .\nPS'iKSlNTOPi^r\n\u2022 LightWeight\n'#   Easy to Handle\n# Good for the Life of\nthe Building\n#   Fireproof\nBurns Lumber\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPhone 1180\nNelson, B.C.\nWORK TO START-\nON COMINCO'S\nCHEMICAL PLANT\nCALGARY (CP) - Construction will begin immediately on\na $5,000,000 chemical plant in\nsoutheast Calgary, following approval Wednesday by the technical planning board.\nThe plant will be built for Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany adjacent to its present\nfertilizer plant. A company official said it will be operational\nby July, 1960.\nThe new unit will have a capacity of 36,000 tons annually of\nurea.\nPeach Shipments\nAl 350,000 (rales\nKELOWNA (CP) - B.C. Tree\nFruits announced Thursday that\nmore than 350,000 crates of the\nOkSnagan's peach crop have been\nshipped to the fresh fruit market.\nThe season is about two or three\nweeks'later than usual.\nPicking of Vs is almost completed in the Oliver-Osoyoos area,\nwhile in Penticton and Summer-\nland deliveries now are at their\npeak. Elbertas and J. H. Hales are\nexpected in limited volume from\nsouthern districts towards the latter part of this week.\nThe crop has exceeded earlier\nestimates, in some cases by substantial volume, due partly to the\ngenerally larger sizes prevailing\nthroughout the areas.\nHarvesting and packing of Bartlett pears is nearing completion\nin earlier districts.\nLateness of the season has been\nborne out by prune shipments. So\nfar this year about 60,000 packages\nhave been shipped. At the same\ndate in 1957, a total of 250,000 had\nbeen shipped.\nB.C. Tree Fruits said Okanagan\nf.o.b. price levels are being affected by low competitive quota\ntions in Washington and Idaho.\nTwo Drivers\nFined at Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR - Two men were\nfined a total of $30 and costs in\npolice court here.\nMike Fedosoff was fined $20 and\n$5 costs on a charge Ln connection\nwith a hit-and-run incident, and\nWilliam Kabatoff was fined $10 and\n$5 costs for failing to obey a traffic signal device at a ferry line-up.\nTrail Student Qiven\nMusic Scholarship\nTRAIL \u2014 David Dahlstrom, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Dahlstrom\nof Trail, has been granted a Frederick Harris scholarship for further musical study, it was announced by the Royal Conservatory\nof Music of Toronto.\nThe outstanding young musician\nis also a recipient of one of the\nConservatory's silver medals, for\nhis marks in recent music examinations in violincello.\nAnother Trail winner of a silver\nmedal was Patrick Burroughs,\npupil of Miss Elfreda Sewell of\nNelson, for violin.\nYet another is David Dahl-\nstrom's sister, Carol, a pupil of\nMrs. D. A. Sinclair, who receives\nher silver medal for results in\nsinging examinations.\nCORRECTION\nCombination Meat Offer\n1 LB. SWIFT'S SAUSAGE\n1 LB. SWIFT'S WIENERS\nVi LB. SWIFT'S SIDE BACON\nALL  FOR ONLY\n99\nPETE'k PAN\nApple and Strawberry Jam\n46 Ol. TINS\n69\nOverwaitea Ltd.\n(Nelson)\nCRANBROOK\u2014The second death\nof an infant this summer ln East\nKootenay from asphyxiation by a\nplastic fabric has been noted with\nconcern by the Health Unit.\nThe first occurred in June and\nthe second in July. Both infants\nwere about two months old.\nMATTRESS COVERING\nIn both instances, plastic wrapping had been used on crib mat-\n$25,000 Grant for\nVancouver Festival\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An emergency grant of $25,000 was given\nby city council Thursday to the\nVancouver International Festival\nto keep it in business.\nFestival officials had appeared\nbefore council on two occasions to\nask for the money to hebp pay unpaid accounts this year. They said\nit would be impossible to run the\nfestival again in 1960 without the\nrequested money. The festival\nearlier this year asked for and received a $25,000 city grant to keep\nit operating.\nCity council was told that the\nfestival owes approximately $108,-\n000 and has only $50,000 in assets\nto meet these bills.\ntresses and had worked loose, covering and adhering to the baby's\nface, preventing any outcry and\ncausing death by suffocation.\nThe Health Unit has issued  a\nwarning  that  this  pliable  trans\nparent material used for packaging should not be used in any\naspect of child care, and has recommended that it be destroyed ,\nimmediately in any households in\nwhich there are young children.\nBuy, sell, trade the Classified way.\nATTENTION\nParents and Pupils\nof School District No. 8 (Slocan)\nSCHOOLS REOPEN ON\nTUESDAY, SEPT. 8\nThe buses will make their regular runs in the\nmorning and for this day only will make the return\ntrips at noon. Lunches need not be packed on this\nopening day.\nSchool District No. 8 (Slocan)\nEATON'S\nFeature Value\nVIKING AUTOMATIC WASHER\nModel 59-HO.  2-cycle.  ONLY \t\nVIKING AUTOMATIC DRYER\nTo match washer. Has 2-heat selection control. Model D-59-H. ONLY\nFriday and\nSaturday\nOnly\n$2399S\n\u2022179'98\nAUTOMATIC GAS\nHot Water Tank\n1 Only\u201422-Gal. $^Q-95\nnow           iy\nPressure and Temperature Relief Valve $2.49\n3-Speed Glider Bicycle\nBack-to-school. $^\"J.95\nSPECIAL PRICE .__..\nP47.\n1 ONLY\u201412.8 CU. FT.\nViking Refrigerator\nStraight line design.       $T \/I Q-98\nTrade-in accepted. Only   fcT\/\n1 ON1Y\u2014USED COMBINATION\nGas-Coal-Wood Range\nVery good condition.        $\"\" ^ \u00a3\".00\nOnly\nPHONE  1860\n1 ONLY\u2014DEMONSTRATOR\n21\" Viking Television\n19-tube. Regular $319. $\"\u00bbQQ.OO\nOnly               2.00\n7 Transistor Portable Radio\nWith pull-out antenna. Long and short\nLeather carrying      \"HTQ-95\nwave\ncase.\nSAVE $30.00\nChesterfield Clearance\n2 Only - Chesterfields\nBeautiful Chocolate Shade\nChoose One\nToday and Saturday Only\n\u00abT EATON C\u00b0\n\u25a0 \u25a0      CANADA       ^\"*umn\nNELSON BRANCH\nLabor Day\nMONDAY, SEPT. 7\nAnnual\nHIGHLAND GAMES\n^=^ fomfvdiiiotiL-\nAt\nCivic Centre Grounds -  10 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nCOMPETITIONS IN\n\u2022 Highland Dancing \u2022  Piping\n\u2022 Drumming       \u2022  Band Competitions\nMASS iAND PARADE\n6 Kiltie Bands I\nApprox.  1   p.m. on  Baker St.\nApprox.  120 Playing  Kilties From\nSpokane, Trail, Coeur D'Alene,  Edmonton,  Kimberley,\nCalgary and Nelson (BRING YOUR CAMERA)\nAdmission  to Grounds - Adults  50c\nKiltie Band Concert SUNDAY, SEPT. 6th\nAPPROX. 2 P.M. AT LAKESIDE PARK\nSponsored by Nelson  Kootenay Kiltie Pipe Band Association\n ~7T7, -\nNflaott latUj Nnua\nEstablished April 22, 1902 Nelson, B. C.   -\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings eKcept\nSundays and holidays in the centre of the Kootenays wilh\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, OtUws.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILV NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS' ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper, and also the local news published therein.\nFriday, September 4, 1959\nFreedom for Freedomite Children\nThe report that the Sons of Freedom\nhave been refused admittance to\nRussia shows that the past actions and\nbehavior of the Freedomites is the\ngreat bar to their acceptance. No\ncountry could be expected to give them\nasylum when their record in Russia\nand Canada has been so definitely\nanti-social\u2014to say the least.\nBritish Columbia is stuck with the\nSons of Freedom. For the time being\nthey have ceased their terrorist activities, but there has been no definite\nrenunciation of these. However, there\nis always the hope that they have at\nlong last found that such activities get\nthem nowhere.\nBut if the Kootenays toe somewhat\nsceptically looking forward to a period\nol peace with the Sons of Freedom,\nthey would much prefer to have them\nco-operate with the authorities for the\nbetterment of their social conditions.\nThis is not as easy as it seems. The\ngovernment has enriched the lives of\ntheir children and opened up new avenues of happiness to them by sending\nthem to the New Denver school. But\nthere seems little that can be done with\nthe parents.\nUndoubtedly their poverty has\nmuch to do with their unrest. Under\ntheir present system of communal life\nthat seems to be the only thing they\nshare. They lack the incentive to improve their lives by building better\nhomes and owning their own farms\nbecause their system of communal living reduces effort to the minimum.\nEven these idealists suffer from selfishness to the extent that they see little\npoint in doing work for the benefit of\nothers.\nThe result is that their settlements\nare deplorably run down and an eyesore on the landscape. In contrast the\nsurge forward by the orthodox Doukho-\nbors in the past few years is remarkable. Their homes are well built, well\nkept, and their grounds a pleasure to\nlook at. They bought the land, built\ntheir houses and went quietly about\nthe business of living.\nNot only that, they sent their children to school, and today these high\nschool graduates are playing their\npart in the business life of Nelson and\nother district centres. While standing\nfast by their religion, they are nevertheless part of the community. As time\ngoes on we look to their taking part in\npublic affairs and becoming leaders\nin the community.\nThis is something which no one can\nenvisage, at this time, as happening\nwith the Sons of Freedom. Our greatest\nhope is that the next generation will\nall have attended school and found\nfreedom of the mind which will enable\nthem to free themselves from the domination of ignorant persons.\nInterpreting\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nThe first move toward an October\nelection in Britain ls expected this\nmonth.\nAs the excitement of President Eisenhower's visit fades away in the coming weeks, political attention will be\nfastened on Downing Street and Balmoral Castle.\nThe strong expectation is that Prime\nMinister Macmillan will journey to Balmoral to ask the Queen for a Royal\nFriendly Relations\nOnce upon a time statesmen put\ntheir hopes for peace in a troubled\nworld upon the growth of personal\nrelations among the great heads of\nstate.\nIn 1520 Henry VUI of England met\nFrancis I of France upon the famous\nfield of the Cloth of Gold. As the\nTwentieth Century began Kaiser Wil-\nhelm II was the honored and feted\nguest of both the King of England and\nthe Czar of all the Russias. Between-\ntimes the statesmen of Europe were\nbusily marrying the daughters of kings\nto the sons of others and scurrying\nemissaries about from capital to capital to spread greater understanding\nand closer personal ties.\nYet before the Sixteenth Century\nclosed England and France were once\nmore locked in their struggle for the\nWestern shores of Europe. And the\nTwentieth Century had hardly begun\nbefore Wilhelm's country was at war\nwith the country of his cousin'Nicky\nand the country of his cousin George.\nAll this, we suppose, is no more\nthan a footnote from a dusty history\nbook. Kings have faded; today parliaments, presidents and dictators attempt to manage nations and no one\ndreams any more of finding peace for\nthe world in the ceremonial marriage\nof dynasties.\nBut even a footnote is worth reflection as a reminder that peace among\nnations requires first a concord on\nfundamental issues. Otherwise some\npeople may dream once more thai\nfriendly relations can be built on no\nmore than personal mee'ings of great\nheads of state upon a bright carpet\nof hospitality.\u2014Wall St. Journal.\n>7 the News\nproclamation dissolving Parliament\nand paving the way for the first country-wide voting test of strength since\nMay 26, 1955.\nA minimum of about three weeks\nis necessary between the proclamation\nand polling day, generally expected to\nbe in mid-October. Dates most often\nmentioned are Oct. 15, Oct. 22 and\nOct. 29.\nNomination papers must be delivered not later than eight days after\nthe proclamation. After that, polling\nday must be within nine days, not\ncounting Sundays, Good Fridays,\nChristmas or August bank holidays.\nUsually about six weeks elapse between dissolution and the vote. Some\npolitical observers say Macmillan may\nprefer the minimum three-week campaign.\nHe may feel this will enhance the\nchances of the governing Conservatives, now running appreciably ahead\nof the opposition Labor party in the\nopinion polls.\nAn October election would fit\nneatly between the reciprocal Eisen-\nhower-Nikita Khrushchev visits. There\nseems little likelihood that a Big Four\nsummit meeting will take place this\nyear. The new target mentioned here\nis early 1960.\nFifteen months ago British opinion\nwas nearly unanimous thai Labor\nwould win the next election. Now the\n\"malaise of the middle classes\", so\nwidely discussed in early 1958, seems\nto have been dissipated in a general\nsense of economic well-being, and the\nConservatives will rank favorites to\nwin their third straight general election.\nMacmillan's personal popularity\nhas increased as his efforts as an international peacemaker have won recognition.\nA focus of recent criticism of the\ngovernment has been its colonial policy in Africa, where the death of 11\nMau Mau prisoners in a Kenya detention camp and Ihe hpndling of unrest\nin Nyasaland were vigorously attacked\nin the House of Commons.\nMany Conservatives concede that\nKenya and Nyasaland are their chief\npolitical liabilities. But they are conii-\ndent that these are overbalanced by\ntheir assets elsewhere.       '-'\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters may be published over a>\nnom de plume, but trie actual name\nof the writer must be given to the\nEditor as evidence of good faith.\nAnonymous letters go into the waste-\n. paper basket.\nIt Takes All Kinds\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014May I be once more permitted to\npublicly complain about the poor quality of\nyour editorial page material with regard to\nlocal issues? Of all the drivel!\nI suggest that your valuable space would\nbetter serve the interest of your readers if\ndevoted to plain facts and common sense,\nrather than to crude fairy stories and paraphrased poetry.\nJOHN WELLS.\nYmir, B. C.\nHow to Raise\nA Juvenile Delinquent\nThe Police Department of Houston, Texas, gives lo the parents of each\njuvenile who runs afoul of the law\ntwelve rules for raising a juvenile delinquent:\n1. Begin with infancy to give the\nchild everything he wants. In this way\nhe will grow up believing the world\nowes him a living.\n2. When he picks up \"bad\" words\nor \"dirty\" words, laugh at him. That\nwill make him think he is \"cute\". He\nwill run off and pick up some other\nwords that will blow the top off your\nhead.\n3. Never give him any spiritual\ntraining until he is twenty-one, and\nlet him decide for himself. By the same\nlogic, never teach him the English language. Maybe when he is old enough\nhe will want to speak Bantu.\n4. Praise him ln his presence to all\nthe neighbors; show how much\nsmarter he is than the neighbors' children.\n5. Avoid the use of the word\n\"wrong\". It may develop in the child\na \"guilt complex\". This will prepare\nhim to believe thai when he is punished later oh for stealing cars or\nassaulting women that society is\n\"against him\" and that he is being\n\"persecuted\".\n6. Pick up everything after him: his\nshoes, his books, his clothes. Do everything for him, so that he will be experienced in throwing burdens on\nothers.\n7. Let him read anything he wants.\nHave no concern whatever for what\ngoes inlo his mind. Provide him with\nLily cups for his lips, but let his brain\ndrink out of any dirty container for\nwords and ideas.\n8. Quarrel frequently in Ihe presence of your children. In this way they\nwill be prepared for broken homes\nlater on.\n9. Give him all ihe spending money\nhe wants; never let him earn his own.\n10. Satisfy every craving of the\nchild for food, drinks and everything\nthat has to do with the sense of taste\nand touch, gratifying every sensual\ndesire.\n11. Take his part against policemen, teachers and neighbors. They\nare all \"prejudiced\" against your\nchild.\n12. When he gets into real trouble,\nalways defend yourself and  say,  \"I\nnever could do anything with him.\"\n\u2014\/. B. Mcindeer in 20th Cenfury Chris-\nfian.\nPress Comment\nIGNORE HIM?\nThe president of the American\nCouncil of Christian Churches calls\nPremier Khrushchev the \"bloody\nbutcher of Hungary\". He says the coming visit of the premier is morally\nwrong and he is organizing public\nprotest rallies against the invitation\nextended to the Russian by Eisenhower.\nAny number of people will agree\nwith the objector, Khrushchev has been\ncruel, merciless.\nBut what is the alternative to the\nreception ol Khrushchev on this continent? Must we shun his company,\nignore him? Are we to refuse lo negotiate with him for peace? Should it be\nIhe policy ol Ihe West lo maintain the\ncold war?\u2014Ft. William Times-journal.\nImperial Oil\nAgrees on\nEnergy Report\nTORONTO (CPI-Imperial Oil\nLtd., is in general agreement\nwith the immediate recommendations of the second report of\nthe royal commission on energy,\nalthough certain important factors have not received the emphasis they deserve, president\nJ. R. White said Thursday.\n\"The commission quite rightly\nconcludes that an Edmonton-\nMontreal crude oil pipe line is\nuneconomic and can only be\nmade possible by government\nregulations to limit competition\nin the Quebec market,\" he said.\n\"We believe that from a national standpoint the reservations\nexpressed by two members of\nthe commission, Dr. G. E. Brit-\nnell and Dr. R. D. Howland, are\nmost pertinent. The report tends\nto consider today's marketing\nproblems without sufficient regard for the future.\"\nMr. White agreed with the\ncommission that aggressive action by the industry is tire proper\nway to develop maximum markets. However, he pointed out\nthat the report implies that unless the industry can expand\nsales by 40 per cent by the end\nof 1960, some form of drastic\ngovernmental action and control\nshould be imposed\n\"This seems to be a rather\nlarge target to be achieved by a\nfew refiners. This task should\ncall for the combined efforts of\nail producers and refiners in\nCanada.\"\nRELIEVE PRESSURE\nHe agreed with the suggestion\nof the report that producing\nregulations in Western Canada\nbe studied with a view to reducing the undue pressures for developing excess production,\nwhich continuously tends to outrun the growth of markets. He\nfelt more emphasis should have\nbeen given  this point.\n\"In fact, the entire Canadian\nmarket from Halifax to Vancouver, would provide only temporary relief since it is not large\nenough to use all the oil we could\nproduce now, let alone the new\nproduction that is being developed daily at a relatively\nhigh rate.\"\nMr. White said the work of the\ncommission indicated the need\nfor a fiu'ther examination of provincial producing regulations and\ngovernment practices to find\nways to permit development of\nlow-cost production as opposed to\nthe present encouragement of\nmarginal,  high-cost production.\nSI. Laurent\nNot Alarmed\nBy Elections\nVANCOUVER (CPi - Rt. Hon\nLouis St. Laurent said Wednesday night the Progressive Conservative party's sweeping victory in Tuesday's Prince Edward Island provincial elections\nis of little significance as far as\nnational politics  are concerned.\nMr. St. Laurent said in an interview defeat of the former\nLiberal government in the island\nand winning of a 15-seat majority by the Conservatives was the\nresult of a slight tipping of the\nscales.\nThe former Liberal prime minister received a standing ovation\nearlier when he was introduced\nat a Canadian Bar Association\nconvention dinner. Mr. St. Laurent, an honorary life president of\nthe CBA, was not called on to\nspeak.\nSpeaking with reporters about\nIhe Prince Edward Island election, he noted the Conservatives\nhad less than a one per cent\nplurality.\n\"The Liberal majority of seats\nwas very large and the Conservatives had very few seats,\" she\nsaid. \"I haven't seen the detailed results but I imagine it is\nnow very much the other way\n... it is of no great significance\nnationally.\"\nMr. St. Laurent, who was active president of the CBA in 1030.\nis expected to see his son and\nlaw partner. Renault, 47. take\nover Ihe office Saturdav at the\nconclusion of the convention.\n(hint oHgL\nWatch Your Language\nPREPOSTEROUS (pre-POS-ter-us) Adjective\u2014Contrary to reason, nature or common sense; absurd: irrational. Origin: Latin\n\u2014Prae, before, plus posterns, later.\nIt's Been Said\nAll finery is a sign of littleness.\u2014John\nCaspar Lavaler, Swiss theologian.\n*2 -\n\u00a9Joetf-^fTcJfO - OTTAWA\n\"Having lunch at the Chateau with clients is altogether different \u2014 (his isn't\ndeductible.\"\nP.E.I. Premier Credits\nSuccess to Hard Work\nOnly two things restrain me\nfrom tellin' the deacons what I\nthink. I hate tn start a fuss, and\nthey might tell me what sthey\nUiink.\nBy DON HOYT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCHARLOTTE!WN, P. E. I.,\n(CP) - Walter R. Shaw, elected\nTuesday to head the first Prince\nEdward Island Conservative government in more than 24 years,\nworked long and hard to become\npremier of Canada's smallest\nprovince. He feels a deep humility.\n\"A government, should be humble,\" he said Wednesday at his\nattractive farm home in St. Catherine's, about 15 miles from\nhere.\n\"There is no power in the\nhands of an individual or small\ngroup that is greater than the\npower in the hands of the common people themselves.\" he said.\n\"There will never be a time\nwhen the humblest citizen of this\ncountry can't come and talk to\nme.\"\nThe 71 - year - old agriculturist,\nwho worked as deputy agriculture minister under provincial\nConservative and Liberal governments until his retirement a few\nyears ago, led Progressive Con-\nseative candidates to tiheir first\nvictory here since 1931. They\nelected 22 members to the Liberals' seven. One seat was still\nin doubt pending a recount.\nWORK HIS FORMULA\nHard work was the secret of\nthe Conservative leader's campaign\u2014\"you can't climb a ladder\nwithout exerting yourself.\"\nAfter his marriage in 1921 to\nthe former .Margaret MacKenzie\n\u2014a registered nurse he met\nwhile she was nursing his mother\n\u2014he built his 10-room farm home\nand developed a 175 - acre farm\nwhere there had been \"just an\nopen  field.\"\n\"When we were going properly,\nwe raised 30-40 acres .of grain,\n10 acres of potatoes, bred registered Clydesdale horses and\nshorthorn cattle, hogs and poultry.\" he said.\n\"Now I'm carrying on more or\nless of a grassland project. We\ntake in cattle in the spring and\nsell them'in the fall.\" The Shaws\nspend the winter here.\nLooking 20 years younger than\n71, he stumped the Prince Edward Island hustings vigorously\nduring the Ifard - fought election\ncampaign which ousted the Liberal government of Premier Alex\nMatheson.\nLAUDS ORGANIZATION\n\"We had wonderful meetings,\nhe said. \"There was an enthusiasm ynu could serse. I think\nwe had a  fine organization.\"\nBern al \"the old farm homestead\" nol far from his present\nhome, the new island government leader' was educated in\nPrince Edward Island and graduated from the University of Toronto with a science degree in\nagriculture.\nHe worked in the provincial\nfield extension department before\nenlisting with the 9th Siege Battery in the First World War. He\nhad applied for overseas duty but\nwas  floored\"  by  the  \"black   flu.\"'\nMr. Shaw worked in Quebec\nas a farm journalist and re\nturned to Prince Edward Island\nin the early 1920s as superintendent  of livestock.\nIn 1934. he became deputy\nminister of agriculture under the\nConservative government and\ncontinued in the post under a Liberal government elected in 1935.\nTHREE DECORATIONS\nHe retired in 1954 after a distinguished career that brought\nhim three decorations for meritorious work. He also organized\nthe Prince Edward Island agriculture federation, the provincial\nagricultural council, provincial\ncampaign to cleanse cattle of tuberculosis, started the boys' and\ngirls' farm clubs which have developed mto 4-H clubs and served\nas president of the Canadian\nHorticultural Council from 1954-\n55.\nIn an interview once, Mr. Shaw\nsaid he entered politics because\nit. was his \"destiny.\" His first bid\nfor a seat in the legislature\nended in defeat in 1955 when he\nlost in Kings Third by 219 votes\nto Education Minister Keir Clark\none of five Liberal ministers defeated this time.\nMr. Shaw won the party leadership two years later by two\nvotes over Dr. L. G. Dewar, one\nof Ihe four PC members of the\nlast legislature who was re-elected.\nSTRATEGY LEADER\nR. R. Bell acted as House\nleader. Mr. Shaw directed PC\nlegislature strategy from a seat\nprovided on the floor of the legislature by Premier Matheson\nbut could not speak in debates.\nHe won in Queens First.\nHe and his wife relaxed Wednesday amid interrutpions. There\nwere many telephone calls and\nnewspaper men wanted interviews. An inch-thick slack of\ntelegrams lay on a sofa,\n\"I enjoy politics,\" Mrs, Shaw\nsaid, \"You meet a lot of lovely\npeople.'' White-haired and gracious, she said the election victory\nwas \"wonderful.\"\nHer main interest now0 \"I\nhave to look alter my husband,\nthat's my first responsibility.\"\nThey have three children\u2014Dr.\nW. M. Shaw, a specialist in interna! medicine at an Oshawa. Or.t.\nclinic; Mrs. A. J. MacLeod, wife\nof a justice department official\nin Ottawa and Mrs. H. M. Simpson whose husband has an office\nfixtures company here.\nTO MEET OTHERS\nMr, Slhaw said he will mark\ntime for the present, consider hit\ncabinet selections and meet Ihe\n21 PC members in caucus. It. is\nexpected he will taj^e over from\nPremier Matheson within the\nnext two weeks.\nThe responsibility of his government \"is just what our slogan\nis\u2014\"do whal is best for Prince\nEdward Island.'\n\"All we campaigned on was\nour platform. Our program is\nthere and we'll endeavor to carry\nit out.\"\nThe PC leader trailed in his\nown district until late in the\ncounting when he moved ahead\nand wound up 30 votes ahead of\nhis Liberal opnonent.\nThat, he* said, was unimportant.\n\"I didn't pay any attention to\nmyself at all, I wanted to elect\na party \"\nHousekeepers'\nStrike in\nSecond Week\nCHICAGO (AP) - A strike of\n201) housekeeping employees\nagainst two Chicago hospitals\nstarted its second week Thursday\nwith management and the\nstrikers standing firm.\nThe strike here of the non-professional workers against the\nMount Sjnai Hospital and the\nHeme for Incurables is similar\nto the 46 - day strike of 4,000\nhousekeeping employees against\nsewn non-profit hospitals in New\nYork. The latter strike ended\nJune 22.\nRoth were called for recognition of unions as bargaining\nagents\u2014in Chicago, a local of the\nAmerican Federation of State,\nCounty and Municipal Employees; in New York, a local of the\nRetail Drug Employees Union.\nCLAIM  EXEMPTION\nIn both cities, hospital management contended that as nonprofit organizations they were\nexempt hy federal law from\nrecognition of collective bargaining and from slate and federal\nminimum wage laws.\nIn bet*1! cities, unpaid volunteers filled many of Ihe postj\nleft vacant by the strikers\u2014orderlies, nurses aides, elevator\noperators, kitchen help and\nmaintenance workers.\nThe   Home   for   Incurables   began hiring new workers Wednesday    but   still    is    filling   most\nstrikers'    jobs    wilh    volunteers.\nHeads   of  both   institutions   have\nj said   that   any   striker   who   re-\nj turns an   finds his job still open\nI may have it back.\n|     Hospital    services    were    not\n] measurably impaired by Ihe New\n| York  strike   and,   the   institution\nofficials said,  have   not  been in\nthe Chicago walkout.\nPEACEFUL   PICKETING\nPicketing has been most peaceful here and no delivery trucks\nhave been barred from entering\neither hospital.\nVictor Golbaum. head of the\nAmerican Federation of State,\nCounty and Municipal F.mploy-\n\u25a0 ees. said he called the strike as\nI a prelude to a drive for higher\nwages. Current wages for the\nhousekeeping employees, he said,\naverage 1 an hour with no overtime rates.\nIn New York, pre-stnke wages\nwere as low as 25 weekly.\nThe New York strike ended\nwith the setting up nf grievance\nmachinery which, if il fads, will\nbe followed by arbitration, A\nboard to adjust wages, hours and\nworking conditions also was\ncreated.,\nSHUFFLE  KEO  CABINET\nTOKYO lAP)\u2014North Korea's\nCommunist government Wednesday announced a major cabinet\nreorganization. Pyongyang radio\nsaid the ministries of .justice, local administration, city construction, management and labnr have\nbeen abolished arid the electric,\ncoal and chemical industry ministries were merged into a single\nministry of power and chemical\nindustry: No explanation was\ngiven.\n f^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*\n\u25a0 ;>.v \u25a0.- \u25a0:\u25a0 :;\u25a0;\u25a0: .^-jv-\"->-'.?'.'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0'\nHWWSIW1WPH1\n^W*PSPBP\n\u2022.      -.\u25a0\u25a0.-;.\n'^3 ail\nYmir Notes\nYMIR \u2014 S. Martin has returned\nfrom a holiday trip to Seattle.\nMrs. F. Ekstrom and children\nhave returned from a week's stay\nin Cranbrook,\nJ. Mottl left for Red Deer, Alta.\nHis daughters Marian and Joan\nwill return with him after spending\ntwo months visiting their aunt\nthere.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Nord had as\nguests, their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. B. Garrett of\nGreenwood.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Martin had as\nGhouL IhsL J own.\nPHONE   1844\nOff to attend the Third Triennial\nWorld Congress of physiotherapists, #to be held in Paris for a\nweek, Mrs. Helen Butling left\nby plane Thursday tor Vancouver,\nwhence she will fly to Paris. The\nconvention starts Sunday night\nand after attending the week-long\nevent, Mrs. Butling will continue\nto Denmark where she will visit\n...      ,     ,        ,, . \u201e     i firmer  Nelsonites,   Mr.  and  Mrs.\nguest Miss Darlene Roos of Spo- airistopne,.  Lindt  for   [our  days\nkane\nMr. and Mrs. W. Schnieder had\nas guests Mr. and Mrs. William\nJalbert ol New Westminster. B.C.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ferworn had\nas guests Mrs. Ferwprn's aunt,\nMrs. L. Sherrin of New Westminster,   B.C.\nand will then cross to England\nto visit her father and two sisters\nli'ntil October 4.\n*   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Teltord K. Oliver\nhave left for their home in Vancouver by way of Trout Lake, Rev,-\nJayl&iL ...\n*5.95\n$3.50\n60\" WORSTED TARTANS\nNew muted shades.\nYd. .. ....:.'\nFINE ALL-WOOL FAILLE\n6 beautiful shades. 56\" wide.\nYd.   ... .  .\nPOLO COATING FOR GIRLS\n56\" wide. All wool. $^   ^ |J\nYd.   ..... . T\\2. J\nNEW FALL COTTONS\nIn wide variety.\nPhone 1485\n624 Baker St.\nFor \"Back-to-School\"\nyou can't beat them\nOur crowd has really\ngone for these rugged,\n#*\u00a3)    new Hewelson styles\niHEWETSON   CHUKKA   BOOTS\n\u00a3,\u2014 hits from coast to coast for\nall round leisure wear\nColors\nBlue,\nGrey,  Black\nMen's Sizes 6-1 '\nThe Shoe Centre\n553  Baker St. Phone 895\nelstoke and Kamloops after spending the last two weeks visiting Mr.\nOliver's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R\nL. Oliver, 311 Elwyn Street, also\nhis brother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. Bain Oliver,'511 Nelson Avenue, and his brother-in-law\nand sister Mr. and Mrs. C. B.\nStallwood, 703 Silica Street.\n* *   *\nThe Mackinac Bridge, St. Lawrence Seaway and Fort Henry at\nKingston, Ont., were a few of the\npoints of interest visited on a\nmonth's motor trip to eastern Canada from which Mr. and Mrs. G.\nH. Kirby, 709 Sixth Street, have\njust returned. In Ontario, Mr. and\nMrs. Kirby visited Mr. Kirby's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Al Kirby of Sudbury, and the\nlattcr's sister, Miss B. Sutherland\nof Toronto at her country home\nat Bob Cagcn, Ont., and brothers\nDonald and David Sutherland at\ntheir summer home on Weslem-\nkoon Lake. On their return to the\nwest, Mr. and Mrs. Kirby stopped\noff in Regina, Sask., to visit relatives and friends and in Winnipeg\nto visit former Nelson residents\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Bell.\n* *   *\nRichard Derbyshire, 602 Eighth\nStreet, has left for Cormvallis,\nNova Scotia, where he will enter\nthe Royal Canadian Navy as a\ntrainee,\n* *   #\nMrs. Edith Haigh, 715 Park\nStreet, has left for Rochester, New\nYork, where she is attending an\nadvanced course in hair styling.\n* *   *\nAttending Camp Council, two-\nweek Canadian Girls in Training\nsummer camp on Keats Island, B.\nC, are Dawn Beattie and Bever-\nlee Ward from Fairview United\nChurch CGIT and Beverley Archibald of the St. Paul's-Trinity United Church CGIT. Miss Beattie is\nvice president of the Kootenays on\nthe executive of the Council.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Bren-\nnan, Rossland, wish to announce\nthe engagement of their eldest\ndaughter, Verna Irene, to Robert\nWayne King, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles F. King, 1624 Columbia\nAvenue, and grandson of Mr. and\nMrs.  Rowley, 712 Stanley Street.\nThe wedding will take place at\nSt. Andrew's United Church, Rossland, September 26, 7 p.m., Rev.\nA. J. Lawton officiating.\nNEW NELSON FAMILY. Coming from Vancouver at the beginning of July, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. B. Barnhill and sons David and Robert are now part of the Nelson\nscene. Mr. Barnhill succeeds William Forsyth as manager of the Nelson branch of\nthe Bank of Montreal. David, 17, will enter grade 12 at L. V. Rogers High School this\nfall and Robert, 16, will enter grade 11. Both boys play football and hockey. Mrs.\nBarnhill was secretary of the Red Cross Lodge at Shaughnessy Military Hospital in\nVancouver. The family is pictured in the living room of their home at 810 Hendryx\nStreet.\u2014Daily News photo by Ian Brown.\nWynndel Notes\nMrs. Clarence Wilson of Honolulu\nis here visiting her relatives, Mr.\nand Mrs. Fred Hagen, Mr. and\nMrs. Ad Hagen and Miss Olga\nHagen.\nA community shower was held at\nthe Wynndel Hall to honor Miss\nAngela Hagen, whose marriage\ntakes place September 5.\nMrs. Ella Vogan has left with\nher son and daughter for Ontario,\nwhere she will visit relatives. Rev.\nLuidsay Vogan and son of Edmonton drove the travellers to Calgary\nwhere they took a plane to Toronto.\nDean Says University\nStudies Enrich Life\nSPECIALS - ODDS \u00abd ENDS\nFurniture SALE\n3 Only Swivel Chairs\nReg  $15.95 SALE *J2.50\n4 Only  Hostess Chairs\nReg, $16.95 SALE *J2.95\n1 Only  Lazy-Boy Chair*\nReg. $129.50 SALE *79.50\n2 Only  Platform   Rockers\nReg. $59.50 SALE *44.50\n2 Only  Double  Dressers\nReg. $89.50 SALE *69.50\n2 Only Single  Dressers\nReg, $49.50 SALE ^42.50\n2 Only Walnut Chiffoniers\nReg. $42.50 SALE *34.50\n2 Only 4' 6\" Bookcase Beds\nReg. $49.50   SALE *39.50\n1   Only  Walnut\nExtension Table\nReg. $89.50 SALE *69.50\n1 Only 3-Pce. Bedroom Suite\nReg. $169.50       SALE *?34.50\n2 Only 4' 6\"\nSealy Mattresses\nReg. $59.50 SALE *39.95\n1   Only  Set  of  Bunks\nComplete With Filled Mattresses\nReg. $139.50        SALE *J09.50\n1   Only Studio Lounge\nReg. $99.50 SALE *69.50\n1 Only 2-Piece Lounge Suite\nReg. $199.50        SALE *J39.50\n2 Only 3' 3\"\nContinental  Beds\nReg. $69.50 _..... SALE *49.50\nSterling Home Furnishers\n441 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 552\nTORONTO (OP) - Mrs. Mary\nQuayle Innis, dean of women at\nUniversity College, Toronto, is\nconvinced that women should go\nto university to study and not for\nany other reason.\n\"But whether she works or\nmarries, university is going to\nenrich her whole life,\" says the\neducationist and author who represented Canada at the recent\nCommonwealth Education Conference at Oxford, England.\nThe main causes of failure and\nunhappiness among first - year\nstudents lie in the adjustments to\nuniversity studies and getting\nbogged down in too many extracurricular activities, says Mrs.\nInnis. She advises the student to\njoin a couple of groups\u2014\"it is\nwise to do something\"\u2014-but not\ntoo many.\nMUST CONCENTRATE\n\"It's a matter of their work not\nbeing supervised,\" she said of\nthose who fall down in their studies. \"Students often think they\nare studying when they are not.\"\nShe is the widow of Professor\nHarold Adams Innis, the political\neconomist and historian who died\nin 1952. Her husband enjoyed an\ninternational reputation as a\nscholar. He wrote 14 books, and\nMrs. Innis herself is the author\nof seven, many dealing with Canadian economic histo'ry. She is\nworking now on a continuation ol\n\"Travellers West\" which was\npublished in 1956.\nTheir four children, two boys\nand two girls, are all graduates\nof University College, affiliated\nwith   the  University  of  Toronto.\n\"What to take\" is the query\nof too many girls at all levels,\nsays Mrs. Innis.\n\"A lot of women graduate and\nstill don't know what, to do.\" Tt\nmight be caused by a general\nfeeling of uncertainty in the\nworld, and the fact that more\ncourses now are open to girls.\nShe has no simple  solution  to\nMore  New Arrivals in\nShoes at Andrew's\nDaily from now until our completed shipments are all in, you\nwill see new lines of shoes continually.\nPlay safe, bring your children\nnow to R. Andrew and Co. for\nnew Savage shoes. The new\nBack-to-School styles by Savage\nare now in stock, all are well\nmade, of good materials, over\ncorrect lasts, and are sanitized\ntor extra protection.\nWe have a full range of Savage\nshoos for all occasions, for boys\nand girls of all ages . . . from\nbabies right up to teenagers.\nBe sure wilh Savage . . , correctly fitted at Andrew's.\nWilh your purchase of Savage\nshoes pick up a free autographed portrait ot \"Leave It to\nBeaver.\"\nA special note to mothers and\nof course the busy working girl:\n... we now have our new\nshipment of Naturalizer shoes in\nstock. You owe it to yourself\nto protect your feet arid health\nby discovering, the Naturalizer\nfor yourself. Drop in ... inquire now; no obligation; you'll\nbe glad you did.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nEst. Since 1902\nthis problem, but says that during high school, girls \"should be\naware at least that they ought\nlo be deciding.\"\nToo many girls go on to university without proper consideration, says Mrs. innis, \"moving\ninto it as on an escalator. There\nare many other ways to broaden\nexperiences and get extra training. It's unfair to the taxpayer\nand to other students not to come\nto university to work.\"\nThe parents' responsibility lies\nin accepting their daughters'\nchoice, says Mrs. Innis, who is\nstill amazed at the number who\ndecide the course for the girls.\nParents should accept the fact\nthat the college girl will conic in\ncontact wilh new and contradictory ideas.\nFor the girls themselves, she\nadds: \"You are exploring yourself, as much as your studies al\nuniversity. Find out what you are\nand be that.\"\nWynndel Notes\nMrs. Lena Lawrence was guest\nof honor at a surprise housewarm-\ning party. During the evening Mrs,\nLawrence was presented with a\ncorsage, a walnut step table with\nlamp and a gift of four tups and\nsaucers for her new home.\nLister Notes\nMr. and Mrs. P. .1. Sherstobetoff\nand daughters Louise and Mrs. O.\nSchwab of Calgary, Alta.. were\nvisiting their daughter at Prince\nGeorge, B.C.\nLister Notes\nLISTER - Mr. and Mrs. Vincent\nAdamski of Boston Bar, B C. were\nvisiting Mrs. R. E. Beard and Mr.\nand Mrs. W. K. Beard.\nMrs. Alfred Wellspring was visiting relatives in Edmonton;\nMr. and .Mrs. Ray Ragsdale and\nfamily, accompanied by Miss\nGloria Calwell, attended the wedding of their daughter. Mary Lena\nRagsdale, lo Henry Bennik at\nLethbridge on August 29.\nMiss Frieda Herman of North\nVancouver. B.C , was visiting her\nfather, E. Herman, and her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. Dave Mahon.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Scott of\nCalgary were visiting Ihe latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman\nSommerfeld.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Younnie and\nson of Vancouver, B.C , are visiting the latter's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. A. W. Sinclair, also Mr. and\nMrs. Rune Anderson.\nMr. and Mrs Walter Nelson and\nchildren ot Fernie, B.C., were\nvisiting Mrs, A. Domke and Mr\nand Mrs. E. Domke.\nMrs. L. W. Huscroft and Ohil\ndren are visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nHu^o Sommerfeld at Kimberley,\nB.C.\nMr. and Mrs. W Waine of Vancouver, B.C., were guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. A  Lanoville.\nMr. and Mrs. Sid While and children of Vancouver, B.C., were\nvisiting the latter's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Alex Ivany\nMr. and Mrs. Mike Krier and\nfamily were weekend visitors at\nLethbridge.\nMr. and Mrs Bill Woeknilz of\nNanaimo, B.C., and Mr. and Mrs.\nEd Pendry of Kimberley, B.C.,\nwere visitors of Mr. and Mrs. R\nFleck,\nMiss Rita Kranahetter was visiting relatives at Hope. Idaho.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\u20145\nMrs.  Pandit  Leaves\nLondon Secretly to\nConfer With  Nehru\nLONDON (AP) - Mrs. Vijaya\nL. Pandit, Indian high commissioner in London, left secretly by\nplane for New Delhi to consult with\nPrime Minister Nehru, her brother.\nPresumably she wants to exchange views with him on me\ninternational situation and Indian\ndefences against Red China's\nborder inoursions. Mrs. Pandit,\n59, departed without even telling\nmembers of her staff.\nOnly Tuesday night, in a brief\ntalk with President Eisenhower,\nshe renewed Nehru's invitation\nfor Eisenhower to visit India. Indian informants said the president replied that he would like\nto make the trip as soon as his\ncommitments allow, and said he\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL - Mr. and Mrs. M.\nHouston, and family of Vancouver,\nB.C., are visiting Mrs. Houston's\nmother, Mrs. D. Huscroft, for a\nfew days.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Taylor and family, accompanied by Mr. Taylor's\nmother, Mrs. George Taylor, plan\na weekend trip to Lethbridge,\nwhere the latter will remain to\nvisit relatives. They will also go\nto Waterton Park, where Miss\nJoanne Taylor will join them to\nreturn home, after being employed\nat Waterton for the summer.\nhad been  following recent news\nfrom India with interest.\nNehru is being left in no doubt\nthat in the event of a showdown\nwith the Red China regime he\ncan count on strong American\nand British backing.\n\u00b0ol sho&*\nMwderMnhwt\nGet the children's school shoes\nhere . . . and get good looks,\ncomfort, long wear ... at\nprices surprisingly low for so\nmuch value.\n11M\nLimited Quantities\nReg. 2.79\nBoys'  Fleece-Lined\nCombinations\nPre-winter s p e c i a 11 Boys'\nwarm and cosy combinations,\nfleece lined, long sleeves. \u2014\nBroken size range   \u00bb   QQ\n26 to 34. i \u25a0 y y\n10-Rib Umbrellas\nLimited quantity only; slim\nstyle; in assorted i \/LQ\nplaids. I .^y\nReg. 8.98\nMen's Loafers\nBrown leather uppers, neolite\nsoles and heels. \u00a3 Q Q\nSizes 6'\/z to 10 Vs.      O.OO\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nSPECIALS\nOn Sale Sharp at 7 p.m.\nPersonal Shopping Only\nReg. 1.29 Chino Cloth\n45\" wide; ideal for sportswear\nof all types. Stripes or checks,\nassorted colors. 7Q\nReg. $35\nMen's 3-Pc.\nSuits\nII Only. Melbourne flannel suits\nwith two pants. 2 size 38 in\nbrown, 1 only 'y 3 o Q\nsize 40 in blue.    X3.00\nPer yd. .\n25 Reg. .49\n25 Reg. .39\nCups and Saucers\nTall cup styles in plains or\nflorals. 50 only. \/% <\u00a3|\nSpecial T1 for ^\u00bb \u2022\nTerylene and Cotton\nHalf Slips\nTop quality half slips; attractive lace trim, shadow panel.\nSizes S, M, L. White only. \u2014\nLimited quantity.\nOnly   .\nReg. .89\nChildren's T-Shirh\nShort sleeve cotton T-shirts;\nsolid colors and some novelties. Crew neck, sanforized.\nTop quality.\nSizes: 2-4-6.\n1.66\nSimpsons-Sears\nFreezer\nSPECIAL\n15 Cu. Ft. Model\nLong-wearing enamel liner ls safe for all foods. Resist*\nstains, scratches, discoloration.\nStrong, 20-gauge steel construction, with white Dura bond\nbaked-on enamel finish.\nDirect-contact freezing colls on all sides of cabinet en-\nsure better, faster freezing.\nSpring-loaded steel hinges on counter-balanced lid make\nfor effortless opening and closing.\nAutomatic Interior floodlight comes on when lid to open.\nFull 3 inohes of super-dense Fibreglass in vacuum-sealed\nwalls ensures best insulation.\nWell over 1,000,000 Coldspot Home Freezers have\nalready been sold . . . more than any other brand\nname in the world. Why? Because Coldspot has\nalways set the standard value by giving you the\nMOST FOR YOUR MONEY.\n556 Baktr St.\nPhone 1490\n ^\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014I\nfm#>vm\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^\u2014r-.\u2014\u25a0.\u2014'\u25a0;'>\"..   t.i:>i \u25a0\u00abm.v,\u00ab\u00bbi^'),n Ji!. \u25a0w'IW\\W'[iWW!\u00bb<^5U\u00abl\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1939\nZ^Ckeck WwU Wketft To (|o!\nhWTo(|o! \/^J\/bHoTafa! AH!\nfnc\/\/a Shocked To Learn\nOf Women Bootleggers\nBy RUKMINI DEVI\nCanadian   Press   Correspondent\nBOMBAY (CP)-India's traditionally shy and law - abiding\nwomen have been shocked by recent official disclosures that\nwomen are taking a prominent\npart in defying prohibition laws\nin  force in a number of states.\nThat women can and do participate in bootlegging and illicit\ndistillation on a considerable\nscale is something Hindu society\ncannot even stomach. But that\nseems to be the harsh reality.\nA number of social welfare organizations in the country are\nstudying the situation with a view\nto taking \"remedial\" measures.\nOfficials of the All-India Social\nWelfare Board propose to submit\nan up-to-datj report on the extent and methods of female defiance of prohibition regulations.\nFisherwomen around Bombay\nhave been adopting ingenious tactics to defeat the prohibition police.\nCOUNTRY BREW\nPolice say that women from\noutlying fishing villages have\nbeen regularly smuggling \"country liquor\"\u2014a smelly brew made\nfrom rotten vegetables and fruits\n\u2014in bicycle tires cleverly wound\nround their bodies.\nA passenger bus recently was\nhalted at a prohibition check-post\noutside Bombay city. All the passengers, the majority of whom\nwere fisherwomen, were asked to\nget out. The police found that all\nr\nDUnCE\nSATURDAY\nAnd don't miss the Midnight\nFrolic Sunday night \u2014 Buddy\nMarr Orchestra.\nPLAYMOR\nNelson   \u2022   14 Miles   \u2022   Castlegar\nappeared to be in an advanced\nstate of pregnancy.\nThen, one ol them fainted. Illicit brew drenched her body.\nExamination showed that each\none of these \"pregnant\" women\ncarried two gallons of illicit liquor\nin cycle tubes wrapped round\ntheir stomachs.\nIn another case, a woman was\nfound    \"importing\"    the    finest\nscotch whiskies  into Bombay  in\nmilk bottles.\nCOLLEGE TRADE\nCollege girls have <i en arrested\nin a number of states for working\nas smugglers' agents. One, police say, handled 1,000 rupees\nworth of liquor every day, receiving a commission of 10 per cent.\nIn one month she earned more by\nbootlegging than her father could\ndo in five years.\nNow, women social workers\nwill visit \"suspected\" villages\nand try to wean away the offenders from lucrative temptation.\nHindu women also are adopting Gandhi - style methods to\n\"convert\" drunkard h u sbands\nand brothers. In one village in the\nVldarbha region of central India\nwomen undertook a three - day\nhunger strike and refused to do\nhousehold work in order to compel their men to give up illicit\nliquor. The result is described as\n\"encouraging.\"\nA social worker who visited the\nvillage reports: \"The novel\nmethod adopted by the village\nwomen has resulted in only 10\nper cent of the men giving up\ntheir drinks. But there has been\na 90-per-cent gain in the realm of\nwife - beating which the village\nmales used to delight In after\nlaking the heady country liquor.\nThe nights no longer echo to the\ncries of beaten women.\"\nCONSTRUCTION SPURTS. More than half ol the 4500 miles\nof the Trans-Canada Highway will be paved to specification! by\nthe end of this year. Construction has been pushed by the participating provinces\u2014all except Quebec\u2014because federal assistance\nexpires Dec. 31, 1900. Map shows status of construction so far.\nSolid  line  shows  completed  highway,  although  some  sections\u2014\nnotably in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick\u2014are not up to standard. The only two real gaps (broken line) are north of Sault Ste.\nMarie, Ont., and east of Revelstoke, B.C. Broken line in Newfoundland indicates gravel road. By the end of 'next year it is\nexpected that It will be possible to drive from St. John's, Nfld.,\nto Victoria.\u2014(CP Newsmap)\nSmaller NATO Partners Not\nTo Be Forgotten-Eisenhower\nUNIVERSITY WORK\nEDMONTON (CP) - Contracts\nfor more than $4,700,000. mostly\nfor work on the new University\nof Alberta at Calgary, have been\nawarded by the public works department.\nGUIDE TO. . .\nNelson-North Shore\nBalfour\nPARIS (API-President Eisenhower said Thursday there will\nbe no war if Ihe 15 member\ncountries of the North Atlantic\nalliance pledge \"patriotic, deep\ndevotion\" to the principles of\nNATO.\nIn a surprise talk to members\nof NATO's permanent council,\nEisenhower also declared that no\nmember country of the alliance\n\"need take a second place.\"\nThat clearly was an allusion to\nFrance, which has been demanding a bigger voice in shaping\nNATO policy.\nEisenhower went before the\nNATO council shortly before\nmeeting again with President de\nGaulle.\nWON'T FORGET THEM\nEisenhower reassured the\nsmaller partners of the alliance\nthat he won't forget them when\nhe exchanges visits with Soviet\npremier Khrushchev.\nEisenhower drove from the\nAmerican Embassy residence lo\nthe Palais ie Chaillot - NATO\nheadquarters \u2014 for his unscheduled talk before the NATO council.\nThe session was behind closed\ndoors but the White House press\nsecretary.   .lames  Hagerty,   later\ngave an account of the remarks.\nFIRM  BUT FLEXIBLE\n\"If we are firm among ourselves, if we refuse to retreat one\ninch from principle, if we remain\nflexible as far as tactics are involved, if we give to NATO the\nsame patriotic deep devotion we\ngive to each of our own nations\nthen there will be no war. There\nwill be peace.\"\nEarlier Eisenhower met at the\nU.S. Embassy residence wilh\nPaul - Henri Spaak of Belgium,\nSecretary-General of NATO, and\nJoseph Luns of The Netherlands,\npresident of the NATO council.'\nThen Eisenhower, in a surprise\nbreak in his tight schedule, drove\noff to a special meeting of the\nNorth Atlantic Council, made up\nof the 15 alliance members' permanent representatives at NATO\nheadquarters in Paris.\nThe diplomats didn't know until the president arrived al NATO\nheadquarters that he had asked\nfor the meeting.\nMEETS ITALIANS\nAlso on his morning schedule\nwas a meeting flth Italian Premier Antonio Segni and Foreign\nMinister Giuseppe Pella and a\ntalk about the Western mililary\nsituation   with  Gen.   Lauris   Nor-\nFull Marine Facilities\nRent a Boat, Motor or Both by\nHour, Day or Days.\n\u2022 Fishing Equipment\n\u2022 Accessories\nFREE DEMONSTRATION\nOn All Models of Boats and Motors in Stock\nNelson Marine Service\nCity Wharf\nPhone 14S9\nTunnel Under Alps to\nLink Italy, Switzerland\nUsed Outboards\nLowest\nPrices\nEver!\nThis year go boating and fishing\nwith your own outboard motorl\nWe have \u2022 big selection of Expertly reconditioned outboard!\nat reasonable prices!\nColeman Electric\n502 FRONT ST.\nPHONE 2055\nBy  RODERICK  McKELVIE\nM A R T i G N Y, Switzerland\niReuLers)\u2014A 34-irule tunnel under Uie great St. Bernard Pass\nin the A.ps, to provide a year-\nround road link between Switzerland and Italy, is expected to be\nopened to traffic in the summer\nof 1961.\nThis estimate was made at a\nrecent ceremony here to mark\nthe beginning of tunnelling on the\nSwiss  side of the mountain.\nWork    on    the    Italian    side\nstarted last year and so far about j\n985   feet   have   been   excavated. '\nHowever,   because   the   workers |\nhave     met    unexpectedly     hard\nrock,   process   has  been   slowed\ndown  from 2fi and 30 fret  a  day\nto little more than six feet a day.\nWhen    completed,    the    tunnel \\\nwill  provide an all-weather road\nroute   between   Aosta,   Italy,   and I\nLausanne,   Switzerland,   and   will I\nbenefit travellers coming through j\nSwitzerland   from  the  north  and\nnorthwest into Italy.\nAT   HIGH  ALTITUDE\nTo shorten the length of the\ntunnel and thus hasten its com- j\npletion. it was decided to build 1\nit comparatively high up the '\nmountain, starting at an altitude i\nof about fi.2O0 feet and making j\nuse tip to thsi point of an exist- :\ning road over the pass. '\nThe road will be improved and\ngiven a concrete foundation from j\nthe village of Bonrg St. Pierre, j\nSwitzerland through the tunnel to\nthe village of St. Rhemy, Italy, |\nIf necessary, part of it may be i\ncovered to ensure that jt remains |\nnegotiable in winter. 'The pass j\nnormally is blocked by snow\nfrom November to May. |\nThe tunnel will be about 32 !\nfeet wide, including three - foot \\\nsidewalks on either side. There\nwill be emergency areas, each\n157 feet long, to allow cars and\neven trucks with trailers to p^rk\nor turn around.\nThe entire ventilation system\nwill be automatic and will vary\naccording to the amount of traffic and of carbon dioxide from\nthe exhausts,\nRIVAL   ROUTE\nThe total cost of the Z iss side\nof the tunnel is estimated at 26,-\n500.000 Swiss fraryes (about $6,-\n360,000'.\nThe tunnel will become a serious rival to a neighboring one\nbeing built under Mont Blanc.\nThis will link France with Italy\nthrough the Chamonix Valley,\nemerging at Entreves in Italy\nand. like the great St. Bernard\ntunnel, converging on Aosta for\nTurin and Genoa.\nSMORGASBORD\nDINNER\nLABOR DAY-Sept. 7\n4 p.m. to 8 p.m.\nCastlegar Hotel Dining Room\nChildren  12 and Under $1.23  \u2014 Adults $2\nstad, NATO's supreme military\ncommander in Europe.\nEisenhower was expected to\ntell the smaller allies that his\ntalks with Khrushchev will be\nconfined to getting acqualhted.\nU.S. spokesmen have said repeatedly that Eisenhower will not\nnegotiate alone with Khrushchev.\nEisenhower's meetings with the\nNATO officials and the Italians\nwere a prelude to his final talks\nwith President de Gaulle, the\nwindup of the U.S. president's\nEuropean tour.\nPROMISING START\nInformed sources said the\nEisenhower-de Gaulle talks Wednesday were in the preliminary\nstage but got off to a promising\nbeginning.\nThey reported that the French\nleader was. gradually unfolding\nhis ideas for a settlement of the\nnationalist rebellion in Algeria\nand France's demands for a\nplace in NATO councils equal to\nthat of the United States and Britain.\nDiplomatic sources said the\ntwo presidents also covered possibilities of a summit conference\nand the Berlin situation.\n\"Everything has gone, very\nwell between us,\" de Gaulle told\nthe throng that packed the\nsquare before the Hotel de Ville\nfor the city's official welcome.\nEisenhower in turn said the\ntalks began in a \"good and encouraging manner.\"\nWANTS UN SUPPORT\nDe Gaulle was believed to have\noutlined a plan for ending the\nAlgerian war, a plan he hopes\nwill result in U.S. support for j\nFrance in United. Nations debate\nthis fall. '\/'\nThere was no word of Eisenhower's reaction to de Gaulle's\nviews qn Algeria. But the American called off tentative plans for\na press conference. This aroused\nspeculation that de Gaulle had\nasked him to do so, fearing that\nthe questioning would bring out\ninformation on the Algerian plan\nbefore the French president is\nready to reveal it.\nEisenhower's visit was bathed\nin affection, pouring out from an\nestimated 1.000,000 Frenchmen\nwho lined the streets Wednesday\nand cheered as ttie two presidents drove  about the city.\nRECALLS VICTORY\nDe Gaulle sounded the keynote\nof the reception for Eisenhower\nwhen he told the crowd at the\nHotel de Ville:\n\"Although the years pass, nothing can efface the memory of 'he\nvictory won under his command\nby Uie Allied armies and. naturally in France, with soldiers of\nFrance.\"\nEisenhower delighted a state\ndinner in his honor with a unique\ntoast to his host. Referring to a\ncharacteristic of de Gaulle that\nhas caused headaches for the Allies in war and in peace. Eisenhower said:\n\"I would call him stubborn,\nves. But as long as he Is stubborn in support of principles and\nritfht and peace, this can be a\npowerful inspiration for all of us,\n\u2022 \"Unless we have the stubbornness, courage and resolute persistence of President de Gaulle,\nwe shall not win.\"\nBAN ADVERSE REPORTS\nLONDON (Reuters) - Ma].-\nGen. Ahmad Saleh el Abdi, Iraq's\nmilitary governor - general, has\nbanned news reports that may\nhave an adverse effect on \"in-\nicrnal and external state security or public order.\" Baghdad\nRadio  said  Wednesday night.\nNarrow Escape\nFor Three\nMen in a Tank\nMONTREAL (CP) - A crew\nmember of the> ill-fated water\ntank in which three men tried\nto sail the Atlantic described\nWednesday how the voyage\nended in a blaz\u00ab of fire.\nAlbert Barth. 31, a diesel mechanic, said the fire broke out\nwhile skipper Riohard Melldsch\nwas making coffee early in the\nmorning. The fire put an end to\nthe nine-day cruise of the ponderous craft,  named Diogenes.\n\"But it was great fun while it\nlasted,\" Barth said, \"We were\nseasick for a couple of days but\nafter that we just fished and\nsang sea shanties.\"\nFIRE IN  KEROSENE\nMellisch ignited a paraffin tablet to brew his coffee on the\nmorning of July 17. The tablet\nfell among cans of kerosene.\n\"We made it through the conning tower and up to the monkey\ndeck in 10 seconds flat,\" Barth\nsaid.\nPerched on the deck they\nwatched flames leap out of the\nconning tower. One of them\nclosed the hatch to smother the\nflames but the snorkel apparatus\ncontinued to supply air.\nThen the deck got too hot and\nthey launched their dinghy and\npushed off. For three hours the\ntank billowed smoke. Finally tne\nfire died for lack of fuel.\nSUPPLIES GONE\nBarth said everything was gone\nwhen they got back. Destroyed\nwere clothes and food \u2014 even\nthe crate of kippered herrings\nsupplied by sympathizers in St.\nJohn's. Nfld , from where they\nembarked.\nBarth said they couldn't sleep\nin the tank and had to huddle on\ntop for four days during some of\nthe fiercest gales to batter the\nAtlantic in recent years.\nOn the fourth night a British\nfreighter, the Larrinaga. saw\nflares set from the Diogenes and\ntook them aboard.\nTEXT OF IKE'S\nNATO SPEECH\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014Following is\nthe text of President Eisenhower's speech to the NATO council\nThursday:\nThere is really no important\nreason for me coming here today. I have no business or transactions to place before the council.\nMy appearance here today,\nhowever, is testimony to the importance that I and my country\nattach to the permanent council.\nIt is a further indication of the\nwork of co-operation between the\nnations of the North Atlantic\nTreaty Organization.\nThe United States seeks no\nposition in NATO except that of\nan equal partner ready to work\nwith all member nations regardless of their size.  No nation  in\nits spirit and in the moral fore*\nthat it can exert within this organization need take a second\nplace. NATO is a matter of\nspirit, of determination to work\nas partners and to preserve thos\u00ab\nIdeals  that  we all cherish.\nI came here today not to offer\nanything new but merely to give\nmy testimony to this great group\nof nations you collectively represent.\nIf we are firm among ourselves, if we refuse to retreat\none inch from principle, if we remain flexible as far as tactics\nare involved, if we give to NATO\nthe same patriotic, deep devotion\nthat we give to each of our nations then there will be no war,\nthere will he peace. Thank you\nfor letting me come.\nVACATION GUIDE\nFor South of the Border\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Flame\nFOOD and COCKTAILS\nT-Bone Steak\n$1 45\nSmall   Orders   for   Children\nOut of the High Rent District\nE2401 Sprogue\nTurn   at   Altamont  Street   *\nALWAYS  OPEN\nTHE SKYLARK\nRESTAURANT  '\nAnd\nfodrfaiL  eCoutttpL\nPAN FRIED CHICKEN\nA SPECIALTY\nCHOICE STEAKS\nAcroBB From Rldpath Hotel\nSPOKANE. WASH.\nAAA APPROVED\nLIBERTY   MOTEL\nNorth 6801   Division St.\nSpokane, Washington\n\u2022 Ultra Modern\n2 to 6 Person Units.\n\u2022 15 Minutes To Downtown\nShopping.\nMR. and MRS. R. W.\n\"BOB\" WHIPPS\nOwners and Managers\nAIR-COOLED  ROOMS\nHOTEL\nW213 Riverside   W214 Sprague\nSpokane, Wash.\nRooms with bath $3.50 to $4.50\nWithout bath $2.00 to $3.00\nSuites $7.00\nWELCOME   CANADIANS\nCurrent Premiums Paid\nCT^^ Spokane s\nVISIT SOVIET WORKERS\nLONDON (Reuters i - 'Hugh\nGaitskell and his wife chatted\nwith Russian workers in a Leningrad steel foundry Wednesday\nwhile Aneurin Bevan talked to\nstevedores in the port. The two\nBritish Labor party leaders also\nvisited the Soviet cruiser Auoria,\nTass said.\nFRIENDLY Hotel\n\u2022 Reasonable Rates     \u2022 Family Plan     \u2022 Free Parking\n\u2022 24-Hour Restaurant Service\nVISIT THE FAMOUS MONKEY ROOM - Dancing Nightly\nPresent this ad and it will entitle you to 5% DISCOUNT on your room ... or if you plan a week's\nstay ... the 7th day will be a FREE DAY.\nCLIP AD HERE\nUltra-Modern . . .\nEastwood Motel\n5502 E. Sprague       Spokane        Phone KE 5-2416\n40 Units \u2022     Free  TV. \u2022   Kitchenettes\n\u2014 PLAYGROUND \u2014\nTen   minutes  from  City's  centre,  quiet and  restful\n#        off the Highway.\nWELCOME! Cbmemywa\/u!\nBusiness and\nSocial Center\nWhen you're away from\nhome, one of the nicest ways\nto meet friends is to stay at\nHotel Spokane. Have your\nmail forwarded here. Make\nuse of our facilities for your\nconvenience and comfort.\n\u2022 Close to leading shops\n\u2022 Close to theaters\n\u2022 Only blocks from the\nfamed Coliseum\nBeautiful \"Tally Ho\" Room\nand World \u25a0 Famous Silver\nGrill adjoining the lobby.\nJ\n JPPPWWM-'W \"\"'\u25a0\u25a0-\u00bb\"ft^HiW|W,UJtJ..WWM>!ti..'lt....-,'...t \u25a0' .   \"\u25a0\u25a0\nupftlBjl|IBi.|)il,;J.i^ (|ip.UHirl4i.i|l.!Jli|lkW(\u201el!'|..,' i\nFirst Shock of Second\nWorld War Hit Canada\nBy STEWART MacLEOD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CPi\u2014Twenty years\nago Thursday a German torpedo\ntore through the liner Athenia, and\nCanada felt the first shock of the\nSecond World War.\nIt was ihe German navy's first\nhostile act on the high seas, a\nfew hours after w;.r was officially\ndeclared. It has gone into history\nas one of the meanest.\nThe 13,500-ton Athenia, loaded\nwith 1,417 passengers\u2014200 more\nthan normal capacity - had no\nweapon stronger than a flare\ngun. She had no escort, not even\na strategic cargo. Her passengers\nincluded nearly 1,000 women and\nchildren, of whom 469 were Canadians.\nThe Montreal - bound Athenia\nwas the last liner to leave Britain\nbefore the outbreak of war. It\nsailed down the Clyde from Glasgow Sept. 1 after stevedores in\nthat port shouted \"cowards\" at\nthe hundreds of Canadians and\nAmericans who arrived late and\nunsuccessfully tried to board the\nship which was already filled.\nBUT LATER, HEROISM\nWithin the next 48 hours the\nrocking decks of the Athenia\nwere to become a stage for unparalleled  acts of heroism.\nThe black-hulled liner, owned\nby the Donaldson Line of Glasgow, was about 250 miles out\nlrom the Irish coast on Sept. 3\u2014\na Sunday \u2014 when Capt. James\nCook posted a notice on the bulletin board. It said simply that\nBritain and Germany were at\nwar.\nThere was no panic, not even\nvisible excitement. The declaration was expected. Everyone\nfiled into the dining rooms as\nusual, and Cook sat calmly at\nhis tale with Sir Richard Lake,\nformer lieutenant - govecor of\nSaskatchewan, and Mrs.  Lake.\nIt was nearly 8 p.m., just before dark, when the watch in the\nCrow's nest screamed a warning.\nEveryone ran to the port side\nwhere a black, sinister submarine broke surface and loosed\na torpedo at the Athenia.\nPANIC AS  SHIP  SINKS\nFrom then on the ship was\noverrun by scurrying, screaming\npassengers trying to find room in\nthe 26 liieboats.\n\"It was terrible,\" recalled Mrs.\nElizabeth Turner of Toronto after\nshe was rescued. \"Bodies were\nlying all around.\"\nMrs. Rose Griffin of Toronto\nwas lying unconscious in the sick\nOppenheimer\nQuits Party\nJOHANNESBURG (ReutersI -\nSouth Africa's opposition United\nparty Wednesday lost one of its\nw e a 1 t hiest members, diamond\nmagnate Harry F. Oppenheimer,\nwho quit the party.\nOppenheimer said he found\nhimseli \"in general sympathy\"\nwith the \"progressive group\"\nwhich broke away from the party\nlast month.\nAlthough the \"progressives\"\nhave announced that they will\nform a new political party to promote their campaign of \"cooperation between the races.\"\nOppenheimer Said he has \"no intention of joining any other political organization at this stage.\"\nHis resignation brings to 14 the\nnumber of i~ecent resignations,\nIncluding Jacobus Gideon\nStrauss, former leader of the\nparty, and Dr. Jan A. Steytler,\nleader of the \"progressive\ngroup.\"\nSteytler said last month that\nhis group had split from the\nparty because they considered a\nparty decision to oppose further\nland purchases by the government, for Afrioans in the proposed Bantustans 'semi - independent black states' was a\nbreach of an undertaking given\nby the party in 1946.\nbay. She bad fallen down a stairway before the attack and was\nrescued without knowing anything about the sinking.\nCrew members, fighting\nbravely to calm passengers, had\na monumental ordeal. Women\nwere separated from children,\nhusbands from wives.\nJudith Evelyn,\" then a student\nactress, was returning to Toronto\nwith Andrew Allan, now a Cana-\n'dian television producer. Both\nhad finished two-year courses at\nLondon colleges. They were\npushed into a lifeboat and set\nadrift. In the darkness a rescue\nship appeared, the yacht Southern Cross.\nLIFEBOAT  CAPSIZES\n\"Just as we came close,\" said\nMiss Evelyn afterwards, \"her\npropellers started to turn and\nour lifeboat  was capsized.\n\"About 90 persons were aboard\nour boat \u2014 about seven were\nsaved.\n\"1 managed to grab the upturned keel. As my fingers struggled for a hold they came in contact with another hand \u2014 it was\nAndrew's.\"\nThe lifeboat accident must\nhave been the worst single disaster of the sinking. The entire\n.death toll was 128.\nW.H. Cox of Neepawa, Man.,\nwho managed to get his wife and\ntwo children in another boat, had\nto bail out water with his boots\nand help give sea burial to an\nelderly woman who died of exposure.\nMOST RETURN TO BRITAIN\nMost of 'he passengers were\npicked up early Monday morning, a few during the night. About\n600 were taken to Scotland, about\n400 to Ireland and the rest to\nHalifax.\nThe Athenia was scarcely below the surface when Hitler's\npropaganda machine began purring. Joseph Goebbels, minister\nof propaganda, said Winston\nChurchill planned the ship's destruction to bring the United\nStates into the war against Germany.\nNobody believed  it.\nLater Capt. Fritz-Julius Lemp,\nskipper of U-boat 30 which sent\nthe Athenia to the bottom, wrote\nabout the incident. He attributed\nhis trigger - happiness to \"over-\ncitement caused by the sudden\ndeclaration of war.\" He was\ngiven the Iron Cross.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - TUB stock\nmarket took a sharp drop Thursday as worry over tightening\ncredit and caution prior to the\nlong Labor Day weekend pervaded on Wall Street.\nThe estimated drop in quoted\nvalues was based on a fall of\n$2.30 in the Associated Press average of 60 stocks which losed\nat $225.90.\nIt was the sharpest decline\nsince Aug. 10 when the 60-stock\naverage lost $4.10.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average also took a steep loss of 9.90\nto 646.90.\nAmerican Motors was the most\nactive stock for the third straight\nsession but this time it lost\nground instead of gaining it. It\ndropped %, to 484 on 53,200\nshares'.\nAmong losers were U. S. Steel\noff 2%, Youngstown Sheet 2,\nChrysler Vi, General Motors 1,\nInternational gpaper 2%, General\nElectric 2\u00bbi, Anaconda 1%. Amerada 2V<, Merck 2 and Martin\nCo. 1%.\nAmong the Canadian issues, International Nickel and Mclntyre\nPorcupine, both fell by 3, Hudson Bay Mining dropped by 1%,\nAluminium Ltd., Granby Mining,\nand Walker Gooderham, all\ndropped by Vi and Canadian Pacific and Dome Mines lost Vs.\nAmerican Stock Exchange\nprices were mostly lower on volume of 720,000 shares. Canadian\nMarconi gained 1b and Scurry\nRainbow Oil lost Vs.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Prices continued to drop across the board\nThursday in moderate trading on\nthe Montreal and Canadian stock\nexchanges. All closing averages\nreflected the trend.\nBanks were weaker with Toronto-Dominion slipping IV4 to 58\nand Montreal losing the same at\n56V\u00ab. Commerce lost % at 58.\nSteels showed fractional losses.\nStelco dipped to 80'i off %.\nBase metals weakened fractionally except Hudson Bay which\ndecreased 1V4 at 51s4.\nSmall fractional decreases featured papers. Rolland A at 31\nlost Vi.\nUtilities weakened a little in\nmost issues. Quebec Natural Gas\nat 16% lost >b and B, C. Phone\nlost \\ at 41'*. Shawinigan at\n293-4 lost \"4.\nInlerprovincial Pipe Line weakened 2 at 51 and Trans-Canada\nPipe Lines lost vi at 254. Refin-\nRevised Anglican Prayer\nBook Given Approval\nBy   KENNEDY   WELLS\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nSTE. ANNE DE BELLEVUE,\nQue. 1 OP)\u2014The Anglican Church\nof Canada's 20th general synod\nThursday gave virtually unanimous\napproval to the revised edition\nof the Book of Common Prayer.\nApproval came with startling\nswiftness only a few minutes\nafter Bishop Howard Clark of Edmonton, chairman of the central\nrevision sub - committee, presented the book for the synod's\nconsideration.\nRev. H. V. R. Short of St. Catharines, Ont., moved the whole report be accepted without debate.\nOnly a few moments later the\nsynod's lower house voted in favor\u2014there was only one negative\nvote.\nThe upper house \u2014 the church\nbishops \u2014 followed with another\nalmost unanimous vote of approval. There were no negative\nvotes but the Bishop of Huron,\nwho had objected to some\nchanges in the revised calendar,\nabstained.\nEXPECTED   2-DAY   DEBATE\nMany observers had expected\nthe revised edition to cause more\nheated debate than any other\ntopic on the calendar and two\nfull days were scheduled for its\ndiscussion.\nBut it was obvious immediately\nHI-FI LONG PLAY\nRECORDS\nOnly *|98\n(Stereo $2.49 and Up)\nBy RCA Victor, London\nand Mercury\nMAIL ORDERS\nFrom District Towns\nA Specialty\nMcKay & Stretton\nLTD.\nPhone  1555\nNelson, B.C.\nafter Bishop Clark's good - humored presentation that the vast\nmajority of lay and clergy present were whole-heartedly in favor\nof the revisions.\nThe book must still be given\nofficial confirmation by the next\ngeneral syhod\u2014in 1962\u2014but this\nis largely a formal step and the\nrevised book now may be used\nin churches which have their\nbishop's permission.\nOne reason for the quick approval was that many of the revisions had already been approved by the 1955 synod: another was that most changes are\nin no way startling or radical.\nMAKES EDITION CONFORM\nIndeed, the chief aim of the revisers was to bring the Canadian\nprayer book into line with .the\neditions used in most other Anglican communities.\nAll of these except England\nhave revised the 1962 edition and\nBishop Clark fell, the Canadian\nrevisions were fairly conservative compared to some others.\nBRINGS  UP  TO DATE\nThe chief effect of the revisions\nhas been to remove obvious\narchaisms, eliminate words\nwhich have changed their meaning and generally to shorten\nmany services.\nIn addition several verses and\nin one case a whole psalm have\nbeen removed altogether because\nit was felt they were hang-overs\nfrom the harsh traditions of reformation' era theology which\nemphasized an angry, almost\ncruel diety and a humanity\nsteeped  in   original   sin.\n\"We have tried to bring back\nsome of the joy of the primitive\nchurch,\" Bishop Clark said in an\ninterview,\nRETAIN   RHYTHMS\nBut along with these efforts to\nmake the prayer book more\nsuited to modern worshippers\nthere was a constant, effort to retain the sweep and beauty of the\nlanguage used by Bishop Cran-\nmer, chief architect of the book\nnow in use.\n\"Bishop Cranmer had an instinctive feeling for prose\nrhythms that we could not\nmatch,\"  Bishop Clark  said.\nA more liberal climate of\nthought than that r the 17th century can be seen in changes in\nthe calendar of holy days which\nnow includes dayj of remembrance for such non - Anglican\nfigures as John and Charles Wesley, founders of the methodist\nchurch.\nIn addition, special days commemorating events and figures\nof Canadian Anglican history\nsuch as the first communion\nservice in Canada\u2014at Frobisber\nBay, Sept. 2 1578\u2014have been included.\ning oils eased with Imperial Oil\ndown % at 37.\nIn Western oils, Home Oil A\nat 14V4 down'% and Home Oil B\nat 131-2 off 1% also were new\nlows.\nIndustrial volume was 78,300\nshares and mines and oils were,\n305,900.\nClosing averages show banks\noff 0.43 at 62.41, utilities off 1.1\nat 148.2 for a new low, industrials\noff 2.1 at 310.4, combined 'off 1.8\nat 256.3, papers off 2.1 at 436.1\nand golds off 0.63 at 86.62.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014For the second day this w\u00abel\u00a3 industrials\ndipped more than five points on\nindex as the stock market continued down in light trading.\nWestern oils dosed at a four-\nyear index low, giving up more\nthan two points and reducing\ntheir index to 109.56. Base metals\nslipped almost 2V2 points while\ngolds, early winners, faded for a\nfew decimal points loss, closing\nat  a  1959  low of 86.95.\nIndustrials were down almost\n5V4 points, giving them an almost\n12 point break in the index in\nthe last three sessions. Today refining oils, liquors and motors\nwere the major losers but losses\nwere general, outnumbering\ngains more than 5-to-l.\nCanada Packers B and Ford\nMotor, the United States firm,\nlost at least 2 points. Algoma\nSteel, B-A Oil, Imperial Oil and\nA. V. Roe Canad, were off V4\neach.\nSenior base metals all were\neasier. International Nickel lost\n1% at 913i while Hudson Bay\ngave up 14 at 51%. Uraniums\nwere softer as Gunnar dipped \"i\nat ll'-\u00bb and Consolidated Denison\ngave up ai at 12%.\nMclntyre was off IVi at 16 and\nHollinger and Kerr-Addison were\noff small, fractions in golds.\nCampbell Red Lake added Vi at\n10 = 4.\nHome B took the top loss in\nwestern oils, down 1 at 13. Calgary and Edmonton slipped % at\n23y4.\nIndex losses: Industrials 5.42 to\n\u25a0n\nVancouver Stocks\nSPSPfPPSBSPW?\nP*9WpSP!Piwpw\u00bbfP\u00abPfF\u00bb\nPWPWPWW!\n^Xf\\::\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne . \t\nCariboo Gold  _ \t\nCraig\t\nFarwest Tungsten\t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc \t\nGrandview \t\nHighland Bell  _\t\nNational Ex\t\nPend Oreille\t\nQuatsino \t\nReeves MacDonald\t\nRix-Athabaska Uran \t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSilver Standard \t\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor \t\nTrojan  _\nUtica . \t\nWestern Exploration\t\nOILS\nA P Consolidated\t\nCharter \t\nOkalta Com \t\nPacific Pete \t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite   \t\nRoyal Can \t\nUnited\t\nVantor \t\n.16\n6.10\n1.05\n3.40\n.11\n.22\n1.22\n.15\n1.48\n.08\n2.30\n.18\n1.05\n.25\n2.55\n.32\n.12\n.17\n.09\n.01 Vi\n.12\n.43\n1.27\n.58\n13.00\n.46 Mi\n7.20\n.16V4\n2.00\n.72\n13.75\n35.50\n4.25\n4.f\nINDUSTRIALS\nB C Forests\nB C Power\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\nMacM & Bloedel B     38.50\nPowell River     34.00\nTrans Mtn     11.50\nWestminster Paper     35.50\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk     26.00\nMidwest Copper 23Vi\nTorwest ...  32\nTrans Canada Com       25.25\nTrans Mountain Unit ....:    11.50\nWestern Mines 08\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan Bank of Com\nImperial Bank of Can\nRoyal Bank of Can\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nTrans Canada \"C\"\nF;rst Oil and Gas\n56.00\n67.50\n71.00\n82.50\n57.00\n68.50\n72.00\n83.50\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\u20147\nAnglicans Turn Thoughts\nTowards South-East Asia\nBy  KENNEDY   WELLS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSTE. ANNE de BELLEVUE,\nQue. (C) - Bishop Ivor Norris\nof Brandon, Man., Wednesday\nturned the eyes of the Anglican\nChurch of Canada towards the\nunderprivileged masses of Southeast Asia.\n\"You must face up to the task\nof Christianizing the East,\" he\ntold delegates to the church's\n20th general synod, \"for it is one\nof the- greatest tasks before the\nchurch.\"\nObviously affected by Bishop\nNorris' appeal and later description by clergymen from Canada's\nfrontier districts, the synod\nwould up its second day of sessions with a quick approval of\nthe Missionary Society's report\nand a series of recommendations\ndesigned to strengthen overseas\nand home missions.\nBishop Norris, speaking after\na tour of Anglican missions in\nthe Orient, said all Christian\nCanadians must be concerned\nwith developments there.\n\"How difficult it is for new nations to achieve self-government\nwithout the foundations of decency, honesty and respect for\nwomen and children which Christianity supplies,\" he said.\n\"We are teaching children to\nread, but we are giving them no\nChristian literature and they are\nturning Communist because the\nCommunists supply them with\nliterature. . . .\"\nRURAL SHORTAGE\nRt. Rev. S. C. Steers, bishop of\nSaskatoon, told the synod \"unless\nwe devise 'means of obtaining\npriests for rural parishes in the\nWest we might as well give up\nwork in those areas.\" '\nBishops Tom Greenwood of the\nSTAPLE FOOD\nThe average consumption of\n'bread in Canada is about 105\npounds a person annually.\nYukon said that while the North\nwas expanding the church was in\nsome cues forced to cut down\nits work because it could no\nlonger find ministers to serve in\nisolated areas.\nSynod delegates later approved\na recommendation that every\nAnglican divinity student be prepared to serve in an overseas or\nCanadian mission during the\nearly years of his ministry.\nUrged on by the booming voice\nof Canon A. H. Davis, associate\ngeneral secretary of the Missionary Society's board of management, the delegates also approved annual raises for clergy\nin Canadian missionary dioceses\nand nearly a dozen recommendations of increased support of\noverseas missions and Anglican\nchurches in Asia.\nBuy, sell, trade the Classified way.\n9 05\n9.93\n8 35\n9.18\n3.87\n4.23\n6.20\n6.70\n11.44\n12.37\n6.74\n7.41\n6.05\n6.60\n4.34\n4.74\nj 519.33;\nmetals\ngolds   .14  to  86.95:   base\n2.48   to   168.17;   western\noils 2.18 to 109.56.\nCongratulations ....\nWjl. (Rjuaa. UakniinsL\non the\nGRAND OPENING\nof your new store\nCORNER OF STANLEY AND BAKER STREETS\nWe wish you much success in your new premises.\nSTAR WEEKLY\nThink-and-Do Books\nGrades 1 to 4.\nEach 55t - 70*\nWinston School Dictionary\nEach     $].40\nGirls'\nRAINCOATS\nWater Repellant Poplin, Patch\nPockets, Full Lining, Fly Zipper\nFront.\n- Sizes  4#to   12.\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nEach*4.99\nZIPPER\nBINDERS\nGenuine Leather, Bumper\nEdge, Large Rings. ....\n$1.98 to  $12.95\nFREE Key-Tab with each purchase of\nBinder over $4.95.\nSKIRTS AND JUMPERS\nWool   plaids,   worsteds,   tweeds,  corduroy.   Complete\nsize range 2-14x. J I  Qft\nPriced as low as\nViva-Tone Pencil Crayons\n6 colors 29c\n8 colors                        56c\n12 colors 89c\nSargent Hexagon Crayons\n8 colors   19c\n16 colors   35c\n24 colors   49c to 59c\n32 colors   89c\n48 colors                  98c\nDRESSES\nAssorted fabrics of corduroy, wool blend and drip-dry\ncottons\u2014all the latest styles and colors for J1 Qfi\nfall. Sizes 2-14x. Priced as low as     4>|\u00ab<\/\nSWEATERS\nAll wool, nylon and orlon. Pullovers and J I Q 6\ncardigans. Priced as low as   \t\nBOYS' TROUSERS\nIdeal for back-to-school. Complete size J J ^JQ\nrange 3-18. As low as . v   '\nGuitar Oil Pastel\n24 colors, each\n89c\nBLOUSES for Back-to-School\nIn a variety of styles, fabrics and colors.\nComplete size range. Priced up from\n79c7j\nLUNCH KIT SETS\nO.\/O  Complete\nVACUUM BOTTLES\nUp From 98^\nReeves Tempodisc Points\nNo. 6, each 98c\nNo. 12, each $1.49\nReeves Tempera Poster Colors\nNo 7, each  $1.69\nEpCE Ball Pen with every purchase of school\niKCE   supplies    and    back-to-sehool    wear.\nSCHOOL  LISTS  FOR  ALL\nNELSON SCHOOLS\nAvailable for Your Convenience\nLIBERTY\nVARIETY DEPARTMENT\n(DOWNSTAIRS i\n IflWWPl^PIBrSlfPIl^^\n-\u2014W\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\nIt k not too late to outfit your child for school. She has probably\noutgrown some of her dresses and, naturally, you will want her to\nhave some of the new school styles. Here is a selection of lovely\nback-to-school dresses designed by our Marian Martin. Any one\nOf them will put daughter among the best dressed in her class.\n\u25a0\"Brother,\" too, has been included in this selection.\nPrinted Pattern 9369 is for the Junior Miss and can be mdde\nwith a swirling or a sleek .skirt. Why not make both versions of\nthis smart shirtdress? Note the bloused back and the interesting\nbutton detail. The pattern xomes in Junior Miss Sizes 9 to 17.\nThe dress your Teen-er will want to wear every day is this\nbreezy, easy-to-sew shirtwaist. It has a gay flip-up collar and button-\nback yoke above an action pleat. Printed Pattern 9165 comes in\nTeen sizes 10 to 16.\nLittle Sister loves separates as much as her Big Sister. These\nseparates mix-match so happily through the school year. The blouse\nand skirt are easy to sew in a carefree tubbable cotton. Printed\nPattern 9404 comes in Children's sizes 2 to 10.\nWhip up a wonderful, new wardrobe for sister, and one for\nbrother also, from this smart separates pattern. Ideal for back-lo-\nschool. Choose skip-iron cottons in gay, mix-match colors. The boy's\ntrousers come in three lengths. Printed Pattern 9050 comes in\nChildren's sizes 2 to 8.\nPrinted Pattern 9395 is the beginner's delight. No waist seams,\nthis princess jumper has a whirling skirt and button-on belt. Choose\nwarm washable wool .for jumper, cotton for blouse, and your child\nis all set for happy days in the classroom. Printed Pattern 9395\ncomes in children's sizes 2 to 10.\nDaughter will adore this gay young middy fashion. It has- a\nwide whirl skirt topped by a new, easy-fit blouse. Sew it for school,\nparties, or holidays in a crisp cotton blend, cotton, or wool in bright\nor basic colors. It will be lovely for every occasion. Printed Pattern\n9390 comes in Girls' sizes 6 to 14.\nThe desk set's favorite style for school. Printed Pattern 9119\nis Mom's favorite too \u2014 a princess that's popular in the classroom\nor at a party. Make two versions with our easy-to-follow Printed\nPattern \u2014 one. with a collar, one with a simple-but-smart square\nneckline. This pattern comes in Child's sizes 2 to 10.\nWhip up this dashing jacket and beanie-cap set for Little\nBrother tor for sister, or both). It is perfect for school as well as\nplay, in bright wool, cotton tweed, or denim. Make several versions. Printed Pattern 9408 comes in Children's sizes 2 to 10.\nPrinted Patterns 9165 and 9395 are Forty Cents EACH; 9408,\n9369, 9404, 9050, 9390, 9119 are Fifty Cents EACH, in coins (stamps\ncannot be accepted!. Send to Marian Martin, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson, B.C. Please print plainly SIZE,\nNAME,  ADDRESS, STYLE  NUMBER.\nNobel Prize-Winner Tells\nOf Nuclear Test Threats\nEDMONTON (OP) - Dr. Linus\nPHuling, a nobel prrae - winning\nchemist, said Wednesday 1,540,-\n000 persons are going to die from\nthe effects of nuclear weapons\nwhich have been exploded in the\nlast. 14 years.\nThe U.S. scientist also said\nthat 30,000 to 60,000 will die for\nevery midear bomb exploded in\nthe future.\nDr. Poking was speaking to a\norowd of 2.000 at. a public melt\ning sponsored by the Edmonton\nCommittee for the Control of Radiation Hazards. He said the\ncertainty of the deaths has been\nproven by American and British\nscientific teams'.\n\"The national leader who orders nuclear bomb tests started\nagain with our knowledge; our\ncertainty; will be committing an\nact ot criminal folly, showing\ncontempt for the people.\"\nDr    Pauling  was   awarded   the\nnobel prize for chemistry in 1954\nand holds honorary degrees from\n15 universities.\nHe said 150,000 persons now\nliving will die of leukemia and\nbone cancer; 140,000 will die of\nradiation effects on human reproductive organs; 1,250,000 in\nthe next 1,000 years will die of\ncarbon 14, a radioactive element.\nFor each new bomb exploded,\n15,000 to 30,000 persons will die\nof cancer and the same number\nfrom genetic effects.\n\"The maximum fallout from\nthe bombs exploded so far will\nfall around 1967 then peter out.\nRut it will continue falling for the\nnext   too  vnars.\"\nRETURNS  SWORDS\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)\u2014Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, who\nbrought two valuable swords\nhome from Japan as souvenirs,\nis sending them back. The wartime commander of the Pacific\ngave the treasures to Junzo Sato,\nwho came to the United States\nseeking historic swords taken at\nwar's end.\nHeoley Willans'\nNew Work  Played\nTORONTO (OP)\u2014A new work\nby Dr. Healey Willan was given\nits first performance Wednesday\nnight at the golden jubilee convention of the Royal Canadian\nCollege of Organists.\nThe work, entitled Passacaglia\nand Fugue No. 2, was played by\nDr. Charles, Peaker on the organ.\nDr. Willan first achieved international recognition in 1919 when\nhe published the Introduction,\nPassacaglia and Fugue.\nNew Zealanders\nPrepare for\nAntarctic Visit\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. (Reuters)\n\u2014The New Zealand government\nis getting ready to launch new\nexploration in the Antarctic during the summer season starting\nnear the year's end.\nRecruiting is, under way for\nteams of scientists, surveyors and\nclimbers to carry out New Zealand's program of land and sea\nexploration.\nThe Ross Dependency Research\nCommittee has drawn up the program. The newly formed Antarctic division of the department of\nscientific and industrial research\nwill carry it out.\nDuring the last three seasons,\nabout 44,000 square miles have\nbeen covered by the New Zealand\ntrans-Antarctic expedition, and\nexpeditions from the geological\nsurvey, the lands and survey department and Victoria University\nin  Wellington.\nThe publication of maps of this\nextensive area is well advanced.\nIt is hoped to produce by the end\nof this year a map of the surveys carried out by the Irans-\nAntarcitc expedition as well as\nmaps of the Hallett region explored by toe geological survey\nexpedition in the  1957-58 season.\nNew Zealand will continue to\nman Scott Base in 1960. and\nagain will join the United States\nin manning the Hallett Station.\nThis season the government\nwill help the Victoria University\nexpedition to complete its studies,\nundertaken last year, of the ice-\nfree valley system of the Wright-\nVictoria \"dry valley\" area.\nTwo \u00b0 scientists from the soil\nbureau will make a fundamental\nstudy of soil processes.\nA probable addition to the program will be the installation of\nradar to observe the aurora.\nLOAN   ARRANGED\nEDMONTON (CP) - Alberta\ngovernment telephones has almost completed negotiations in\nNew York for a $10,000,000 loan\nto cover capital expansion of the\nsystem.\nYou- hdlvMul\nHOROSCOPE\nNEW HOSPITAL\nPICTURE BUTTE, Alta. (CP)\nOland Construction of Lethbridge\nhas heen awarded general contract for construction of Picture\nButte hospital and nurses' residence at an estimated cost of\n$300,000.\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor Saturday September 5, 1959\nMARCH 21 to yfPRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Benefits indicated if you are\nunselfish in attitude. Your aim to\nplease will react favorably, bringing happiness, help, harmony to all.\nAvoid extremes.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nSome restrictive influences; some\nvery auspicious ones. The latter\nencourage familiar matters, work\nand other affairs for which you\nhave training, knowledge. Use care\nin spending; avoid debt!\n> MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nYou can achieve best results if you\nrestrict yourself to essentials. Plan\nyour schedule for the weekend\nwisely and check where you can\nimprove. Sound judgment stressed.'\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nDon't dally or put off urgent tasks\nbut do take time to study problems\nand propositions to be solved and.\nmanaged. There will be no need to,\nretrace your steps or make needless errors if you think before acting.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) \u2014|\nUse Leo's smiling salesmanship!\nand keep your good reasoning\npowers working overtime now. A\ngood period for seeking favors from\nthose in a position of affluence,\nalso for granting favors to the\ndeserving.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23;\n'Virgo) \u2014 In personal affairs, romance, and domestic affairs, be\ndiplomatic. Some unexpected situations may develop. You can\nhandle these sensibly \u2014 DO!\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Aspects are not too encouraging for other than familiar\nmatters, daily duties. Specialized\nwork will call for careful scrutiny,\nsome reviewing before taking action. With careful judgment and\naction, however, you may be surprised at the results!\nOCTOBER 24 lo NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Success could be\naround the corner. It is worth looking for, but will have to be attained\nby energetic work, thinking. Don't\nmiss out by being over confident,\nhowever.    \u25a0\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 You may have\nto work hard for what you want\nnow. Some obstacles likely in the\nearly hours. Better influences prevail later in the day.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 A good day for\nfinancial    transactions,    shipping,\ntravelling and research. Improve*\nyour education.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 An opportune time\nfor making needed improvements;\nalso for travel and holding conferences. Make your own bids for\nsuccess, but hold back until you\nhave checked.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You may need to be\non extra good behavior all day.\nYou could upset good prospects by\nan inadvertent act or word. Discretion is essential in all matters,\nespecially in finances, family relationships.\nYOU BORN TODAY are generally studious, sincere; often positive,\nyet innately fair; personable in appearance, giving an impression of\npoise. If true to the BETTER you,\nyou will accent discretion, generosity, friendliness. Don't ever lose\nyour optimism. Keep in mind that\nothers, too, are clever; keep cultivating your talents and compete\nalways \u2014 but without strain.\nOriginality and initiative are two\nof your best assets.\nCanada's Hog\nRumors Annoy\nRepublicans\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Twelve\nRepublican members of the\nHouse of Representatives have\nasked Agriculture Secretary\nEzra Benson to restrict port imports if the Canadian government establishes a price support\npayment policy on hogs.\nRepresentative Albert Quie of\nMinnesota and 11 colleagues\nWednesday called the attention\nof the secretary to falling hog\nprices.\n\"We are particularly disturbed\nabout recent reports that the Canadian government is considering the establishment of a compensatory payment program for\nCanadian hog producers,\" they\nwrote.\nThey said U.S. markets might\nbe unduly disrupted by imports\nof pork at prices that impair\nmarket stability and the effectiveness of the pork purchase\nprogram undertaken by the department.\nThe Edmonton committee was\nformed here recently to focus attention on radiation hazards.\nThirty-seven scientific, religious,\nand community leaders compose\nthe group. ;Thcy hope soon to be\nnalionallv   chartered.\nHave an extension phone\nin each, of your living areas\nAnswer eafls while you work, visit with friends\nwhite yoa relax. \"Easy living\" homes have\nweH-ptaced phones. An extension phone costs\nonly |1.00 a month, and installation is free.\nFor a glamorous color phone, there's a moderate\nadditional charge \u2014 but you pay this only once.\nCall the4 Telephone Company \u2014 ask for\n\"Extension Phones\".\nCorrection\nHOOT MON\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nThere's been an error \u2014 Due to a proof reading\ntypographical   error,  the   price of our turkeys in\nThursday's ad should be:\nGrade A\nOven-\nReady  Ib.\n\u25a0 ^'^ - -\t\n$MZ*y\u2122\n10M-&OV\n3 \u00a3\n__i J-\n ,_\t\n^Shop-Easy\n s 1 i\n mmmwmmf*\n^\u2122\"\n\u25a0pp\"^^\"\n<PJ3\n\/.!\njiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiimitimmMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiMiiiiiiiiiHiimmiiHiii\nSPORTSSpokane Keeps Foot in WIHL Door\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMHIIIIIIIII g | .\nBombers Capitalize\nOn Lions' Fumbles\nBy The Canadian Press\nWIFU\nW\nCalgary   \t\nWinnipeg  \t\nB.C\t\nEdmonton\nSaskatchewan\nl r a pt\u00bb\n1 129   78 8\n2 181 111 8\n3 118 133 6\n2 7\u00bb 21 4\n5 47 208 0\nBy AL VICKERV\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Winnipeg\nBlue Bombers took advantage of\npass interceptions and opposition\nfumbles Thursday night to roll to\na 34-23 victory over British Columbia Lions in a Western Inlerprovincial Football Union game before 18.003 fans.\nThe victory moved Bombers into\na first-place tie with the idle Calgary Stampeders, both with eight\npoints. Stampeders, however, have\na game in hand with a 4-1 record,\ncompared with Bombers' 4-2. The\nloss left Lions with a record of\nthree wins in six starts.\nPlaying alert football, Bombers\nturned two B.C. fumbles and one\npass interception into touchdowns.\nThree other pass interceptions\nhalted drives by the Lions.\nPITTS GETS TWO\nLeague-leading scorer end Ernie\nPitts scored two touchdowns, both\non passes from quarterback Jim\nVan Pelt. One went for six yards:\nthe second for SI yards. Lewis also\ntook a Van Pelt pass for an 11-\nyard TD.\nCarver Shannon raced nine yards\nfor another TD, while Van Pelt\nwent for the other six-pointer on\na six-yard dash around right end.\nThe former Michigan star converted four of the five touchdowns\nfor a 10-point performance.\nFullback Don Vicic plunged one\nand three yards for two B.C.\ntouchdowns. By Bailey, former Import and now a Canadian, raced 11\nyards for the other major score.\nVic Kristopaitis converted twice\nand hoofed a 35-yard field goal.\nBaseball Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWashington       000 000 110-2   4   2\nNew York        023 000 04x\u20149 17   0\nKemmerer (8-15), Woodeshick\n(3i, Griggs (8) and Naragon; Dit-\nmar (11-8) and Howard. HRs:\nWashington, Sievers (18), Courtney (2>.\nBoston 000 101 002-4   7   1\nBaltimore 002 000 12x-5 10   2\nBaumann (5-4), Chitlum (8) and\nWhite; Brown (0-7), Loes (9) and\nTriandos. HR: Baltimore, Nieman\n2  (171.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nChicago 013 000 010\u20145 12   0\nSan Francisco 002 222 OOx\u20148 14   0\nAnderson, Hillmam (6-10) (4), El-\n\u00bbton (5), Henry (6), Buzhardt (8)\nand Neeman, S. Taylor (8); Antonelli. Miller 8-7 (3) and Lan-\ndrith, Hegan (8). HRs: Chicago,\nDark (5': San Francisco, Bres-\nsoud (6), McCovey (10), Mays (25).\nSt. Louis 103 010 000\u20145   6   1\nLos Angeles   . 200 000 001-3   7   0\nMiller (3-2) and Smith; Drysdale\n(15-11). Craig (31, Sherry (8) and\nRoseboro. HRs: St. Louis, Cunningham (7), Boyer (27); Los Angeles,\nRoseboro (7).\nPANTON WINS\nCALCUTTA\nThe 1959 Calcutta Sweep played\nat the Nelson Golf and Country\nClub Thursday night was won by\nTerry Panton, who shot a hot 2-\nunder-par 31 for a net total of 27\nover the nine-hole course.\nThe Calcutta, which drew a large\nnumber of golfers, was the second\nhalf of the Kootenay Futurity\nHandicap which was played last\nThursday. All horses (golfers)\nwere scratched except eight which\nwere then put up for auction. Bids\nran as high as (ft.\nWalter Apostoluik came In second with a gross 35, net 32 while\nthird place went to Alex Koenig\nwith a gross 39, net 33. Others\nwere Fred Whiteley with a 41, net\n33, and Bill Hamilton, Bob Carlson and Bill Morris, all tied at net\n34.\nFor the regular men's night,\nPanton was tops with his 31, net\n27, while Bob Paterson came second with a gross 38, net 30. For\nthird place. Howie Hornby and Red\nKoehle were tied with net 30s.\nFritz Koehle tied, with Jack Skel-\nlern for fourth position with net\n31s. Goofer club went to Clayton\nKirk.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\u20149\nDecision Soon, Tubbs\nTells Meeting Here\nJunior Outlaws\nTo Visit Slocan\nDon't count Spokane out of the\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague yet.\nDespite reports that Spokane\nJets (formerly the Flyers of the\namateur league) wouldn't bt able\nto ice a team this year, Clarence\nTubbs of Spokane last night told\nWIHL representatives at a league\nmeeting in Nelson that there was\nstill \"a very good possibility\" the\nAmerican centre would be on the\nice again this winter.\nMr. Tubbs stated emphatically\nthat a final decision would be\nknown within two to three days.\nHe assured the league meeting that\nmoney to build a second ice rink\nin Spokane was not only available,\nbut that a Spokane promoter was\nmore than willing to proceed with\nthe plans.\nThe hitch, Mr. Tubbs revealed,\nwas that under city ordinances off-\nstreet parking for at least 15 per\ncent of the customers must be\nprovided. The space for this had\nbeen difficull to obtain, although\nthe site for the rink had been obtained long ago.\nThe signs now were that this\nhandicap could be overcome, the\nSpokane sportsman .said, and\n\"while I may be a little off base\nBRITISH CRICKET\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Thursday's\nclose-of-play cricket scores:\nM.C.C. 329 for 9 declared and\n22 for no wicket; Yorkshire 331\nfor 5 declared.\nSurrey 206 and 166 for 4; Northamptonshire 218. \\\nGlamorgan 364 for 8 declared and\n$ for 2; Middlesex 269.\nLancashire 230 for 253; Somerset\n170.\nNottinghamshire 127 and 72 for\n523; Kent 386.\nSussex 374; Warwickshire 169.\nALBERTA WRITER\nMagistrate Emily Gowan Murphy published six novels under\nthe pen-name of Janey Canuck.\nTrail, Salmo Tied\nIn Softball Series\nTrail 16, Salmo 7\nSALMO-Trail tied up the West\nKootenay women's Softball league\nplayoffs at three games apiece by\ntrimming Salmo 16-7 in a comedy\nof errors here Thursday night.\nThe game was called because of\nrain and darkness after 5 innings.\nWinning pitcher Debbie Fitchett\nworked all five innings for Trail,\nRossland Juniors Take\nWK Baseball Crown\nROSSLAND   \u2014   Winner   of   the land's Ling drove in what turned\nWest   Kootenay   Junior   baseball out to be the winning run.\nleague playoffs for the third con-j    Starting  pitcher  for  Trail  was\nsecutive   year   are   the   Rossland Maniago, who was relieved in the\nJunior  Capilanos.  They   beat   the third by Campeau, who went the\nTrail CYO Giants in the finals 3 2, rest of the game. Maniago gave up\nThursday. three hits and two runs while Cam-\n_    \u201e     ,     , , ,       ..   ,,    peau gave up six hits and one run.\nThe Rossland team automatically     pRcni     (he m slx in\u201e,       for\nwon the East-West Kootenay\u25a0 Junior, Rossland was Ken Smithi w)l0 had\nchampionship when it was learned a n0.hiUer     \u25a0     ,\u201e {he en(J o[ (n(,\nthat Kimebrley was unable to field fifth_ No Trai, baUer Was am t0\na team' | get.  on   base   for  the   first  three\nThe game, called at the end of innings,\nthe sixth because of darkness, sawj    All  Rossland  runs  were  driven\ntwo runs scored by the Capilanos j in by doubles by Smith, Ling and\nin the first. Giants tied the score Profili. Morris and Maniago drove\nat the top of the sixth before Ross-' in the two Trail runs.\nallowing   11   hits,   giving  up  two\nwalks, and striking out none.\nCarol Madaski was charged with\nIhe loss after chucking three and\ntwo-thirds innings. She faced 28\nbatters, allowed eight, hits, two\nwalks, and struck out one. Reliefer Alia Gibbons gave up six\nhits and two walks, while striking\nout none.\nTrail sluggers were led by Jo\nWebster, two-for-two; Merle Gordon, two-for-three, and Shirley .Ra-\ncelte, two-for-four, including Trail's\nonly extra-base hit.\nShelagh Grutchfield, two - for-\nthree; Fran Madaski and Alta Gibbons, each two-for-four, and Ann\nMadaski, who came through with\na long homer to centre field, were\ntops with the willow for Salmo.\nJean Crawford pulled off the\nmost spectacular play of the night\nwith a leaping catch of a hard-hit\nlino drive off the bat of Ann Madaski.\nThe series will be finished at\nTrail, but date of the seventh game\nhas yet to be decided.\nin saying so, I am inclined to think\nwe will get going\".\nARENA STILL PLANNED\nHe intimated that if a favorable\ndecision is made work can be\nstarted within three weeks, and\nthat a rink \"very similar to that\nin Trail\" would be ready for use\nwithin 45 to 60 days if ice machinery could be had.\nThe proposed new structure\nwould cost between $200,000 and\n$245,000, would not have the\" seating capacity of the Spokane Coliseum, but would handle around\n30O0 to 4000 patrons.\nProfessional hockey did not score\na great success last year in the\nInland Empire city, Mr. Tubbs\ntold the meeting, \"and I don't feel\nthe pro's will do any better this\nyear\". He even suggested that a\npossible Canadian boycott of Spokane games after that town dropped out of the WIHL had affected\nthe pro receipts. \"Many Spokane\nstores never saw a Canadian bill\nuntil after March,\" he Said, in\nsweating that hockey fans stayed\nhome in B.C.\nRossland, Trail and Nelson delegates all agreed a Spokane, entry\nwas desirable, but decided to proceed with drawing up a league\nschedule based on two alternatives.\nOne would give the three Kootenay teams 20 home games each.\nIn the event exchange games could\nbe arranged with the Okanagan\nLeague, home games would be Increased to 24.\nWith Spokane in, the schedule\nwill see 24 home games for each\nteam.\nDon Adams of Rossland, president, of the WIHL, was named\nleague delegate to the British Columbia Amateur Hockey Association annual meeting in Vernon\nSeptember 18 to 20. Each team in\nthe league, including Spokane, will\nhave representation as well,\nIt is hoped at that time to arrange an exchange of home and\nhome games with all four Okanagan teams.    '\nKIMBERLEY-IN DOUBT\nLast night's meeting also heard\nthat the chances of Kimberley being able to ice a team this winter\nwere small. The lead-town is having trouble, due to strikes at the\ncoast, in obtaining delivery of the\nlaminated trusses needed for the\nnew arena, and the likelihood the\nrink would be ready for hockey\nuse this winter seemed doubtful.\nSpokane, if it comes into (lie\nleague, will be able to ice a good\nteam, Mr. Tubbs told The Daily\nNews. While they have hesitated\nto put strings on any players, he\nnamed an impressive roster of experienced men who want to play\nwith them, and also stated the\nclub has lines out for several good\njuniors. If the word to go ahead\ncomes within the next few days\nthe club will be hot on the wire\nto round them up. Joe Benoit, Trail\nSmoke Eater great of years ago,\nhas been signed to coach.\nIndicating the extent to which\nthe Spokane amateur club is willing to go to get back into the\nleague, Mr. Tubbs said they went\nso far as to offer $600 per game\nto the Coliseum for hockey dates,\na figure, he said, $150 to $200 above I\nthe amount the professional team\npaid. They were turned down because of the rink's other commit-,\nments.\nNelson Junior Outlaws baseball\nteam will wind up their first with\na return game at Slocan City Sunday. Final arrangements will be\nmade tonight. Coach Ernie Gare\nis highly expectant that a full\nsquad will be fielded for the last\ngame of the season.\nCanada Wins\nGold Medal\nCHICAGO (CP) _ Gerry Ouellette won Canada's first gold medal\nat the Pan-American Games Thursday and led Canadian marksmen\nto the greatest-ever single-day haul\nof medals by a Canadian team in\ninternational competition.\nThe 25-year-old Ouellett-, already a gold medallist marksman\nin Olympic competition, won his\nfirst-place medal Thursday in the\nsmall bore 50-metre shooting from\nprone position.\nOuellette, design engineer from\nDeep River, Ont., also won a sec\nond-place silver in the small bore\nover-all three-position competition\nand a third-place bronze in the\nsmall bore 50-metre kneeling posi\ntion.\nBob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que.\na member of Canada's Davis Cup\nteam and seeded No. 8 in the\ngames tournament, added another\nsilver medal to Canada's total\nThursday after a straight set 6-4,\n6-1, 6-3 loss to Luis Ayala of Chile\nin the final of the men's tennis\nsingles.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\nvisiting the games, saw the final\ntennis set\u2014the best of the match\nSeven of the nine games went to\ndeuce points six times.\nThe prime minister visited the\nswimming pools to watch the worn\nen's springboard diving, in which\nCanada's Irene MacDonald placed\na disappointing fourth.\nSOCCER SATURDAY\nNelson soccer club hopes to com\nplete arrangements for a game\nwith the Riondel club here Saturday afternoon.\nIf for any reason Riondel cannot\nbe here, a practice game will be\nplayed between sides chosen from\nthe regular lineup.'\nOutlaws Champs\nNelson 11, Fruitvale 5\nTRAIL \u2014 Once again Nelson\nOutlaws proved they are a \"come-\nfrom-behind'1 team as they last\nnight knocked over Fruitvale to\ntake the West Kootenay Basebail\nLeague title in three straight\ngames.\nDown 5-4 as they entered the 8th,\nthe Outlaws put on one of those\nbig innings they have been pulling\noff all year. Farenholtz singled,\nRon Nash came through with a\n'pinch-hit sacrifice, Shockey walked. Lome Bay tripled (his second\nof the night), Hufty walked and\nPostnikoff squeezed Bay home.'\nThat the rampaging Outiaws\nadded 4 more in the ninth was\nmostly an anti-climax. Hamilton\ngot a double, Monteleone and Farenholtz made it on errors:\nWith the bases loaded Shockey\nscored Hamilton on a fielder's\nchoice. Monteleone was caught out.\nat home. Bay made first on an\nerror and Hufty brought him home\non another error.\nFor Hufty it was another great\nperformance. The stocky pitcher\nallowed. Fruitvale only 7 hits, of\nwhich Molina managed to get 3,\nand kept, the home team well covered especially in the later innings.\n\"Whitey\" Paugh went for Fruitvale, but was pulled for Pollock\nin the 8th when Outlaws started\nto get to his curves. P. Secco rapped out a homer for Fruitvale but\nas things went it did little good.\nNelson now plays the winner of\nthe East Kootenay Baseball\nLeague, which was reported to he\nCreston Cruisers. Dates and places\nfor the series have not been set.\nOutlaws may have to play them\nall away from home due to the\nexhibition scheduled for Nelson\nnext week.\nLine scores:\nNelson      ....    .        001 021 034\u201411\nFruitvale 020 210 000\u2014 5\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters)-Results of\nThursday night's soccer games: .\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision II\nScunthorpe 2 Plymouth 0\nSwansea 2 Ipswich 1\nDivision IV\nGillingham 2 Rochdale 0\nNotts C 4 Crewe Alex 1\nIRISH LEAGUE\nGold Cup, 1st Round\nColeraine 3 Glentoran 2\nPortadown 4 Ards 0\nDistillery 3 Derby City 0\nKeep your eye on Classified.\nLITTLE LEAGUE\nFINALS LINED UP\nWith Kinsmen and Lions out on\ntop in regular play, a thrilling playoff series is in store for the Little\nLeague championship next week.\nFinal standings are as follows:\nW    L  Pet.\nKinsmen     9     3   .750\nLions        8      4   .660\nRotary         6      6   .500\nKiwanis     4      8   .333\nGyro      3      9   .250\nPlayoffs start with Kinsmen and\nRotary battling it out Tuesday and\nThursday, and Lions vs Kiwanis\nWednesday and Friday.\nFinals will be played the following week hetween the two winning\nteams. All series games will be\ntwo out of three.\nAt stake is the Bank of Montreal\ncup, now held by Rotary.\nColumbia Trading Has It!\nMahogany Plywood Panels $1.89 up\nFir Monodoors       .           5.95 up\nStoneboard Panels, 16\"x96\". Ea.    .75\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nMahogany Plywood\nPrefinished with 2 coats of lacquer, ribbon\ngrain V-groove full mismatched <Q QC\n4x8 sheets; each .            O.\/O\nNow Is the Time to Insulate\nDo-lt-Now With\nWESTROCK BLACK INSULATION\nBe Sure To See the\nNewest  Dryer on the Market\nin the Columbia Trading   Exhibit\nat the Fall Fair.\nColumbia Trading Co.\nPhone  1511 Nelson, B.C.        901   Front St.\nBP Excel-Board\nCeiling Tile\n12x12x1 Ceiling Tile \u2014 16x16x1 Ceiling Tile\n16x32x1 Ceiling Tile \u2014 12x12x1  Fissurtone\n12x12xJ Random Pnt. Acoustic \u2014 4x8x1 Wallboard\n16x8x1 Tongue and Groove Wall Plank\n2 COATS OF FIRE RESISTANT\nWASHABLE PAINT\nBfdisik, BmjA. at Bssl\nBbjl\nSudldhxq. Supply ^ld.\nPhone  1704\nWest Kootenay Open\nTennis Draws Listed\nTRAIL \u2014 Twenty-seven netmen\nwill compete in the men's singles\nof the West Kootenay open three-\nday tennis tournament here over\nthe Labor Day weekend.\nSpokane, Colville, a new entry;\n:ind Nelson are sending players.\nFifteen teams will compete in\nhe men's doubles, 13 in the mixed\ndoubles and six each in the women's singles and doubles.\nFirst draws were announced Fri-\nday and on Sunday all players are\nexpected to he on hand, officials\nsaid. Play ends Monday afternoon.\nThe draws:\nSaturday, 11 a.m.\u2014Jim Stephen,\nTadanac, vs Cal Gumm, Colville;\nMed Rhodes, Trail, vs Roy Lowell,\nfolville; Dave Broom. Spokane.\nvs Roger Americk, Colville.\n12 noon\u2014Dave Yerex, Trail, vs\n^eed Warriner, Spokane; Bob Porter. Colville, vs Jim Richardson,\nTadanac; D. Grieser, Trail, vs G\nR. King, Colville.\n1 p.m.\u2014Terry Howell, Colville,\nvs Brian Rennison, Rossland;\nBarry Ferguson, Nelson, vs Ed\nHaley, Rossland; Bob Bauer, Spokane, vs G. Lewis, Tadanac.\n2 p.m.\u2014Mickey Soss, Spokane,\nvs Hans Sohick, Trail; Bill Lang-\ndon. Spokane, vs Ted Muraro,\nKimberley; Kent Brennan, Spokane, vs winner of Stephen-Gumm.\n3 p.m.\u2014Winner  Broom Americk\nvs winner Yerex-Warriner; Marshall Reynolds, Spokane, vs winner Porter - Richardson; winner\nHowell-Rennison vs winner Fer-\nKuson-Haley;\n4 p.m.\u2014Winner Bauer-Lewis vs\nwinner Langdon-Muraro; winner\nRhodes-Lowell vs winner of Soss-\nISchick;,E. Halliwell and L. Halli-\nwell, Tadanac, vs C. Bagnall and\nE. McAdam, Nelson;\n5 p.m.\u2014Bob Hamson, Spokane,\nvs winner Grieser-Klng; Bob Quail\nand M. Reynolds vs A. Jorgenson\nnnd A. Ferguson, Nelson; T. Workman and T, Foxall, Nelson, vs B.\nRennison and J. Toms, Rossland.\n6 p.m.\u2014J. McAdam and E. McAdam. Nelson, vs Lois Haley and\nT. Muraro; T. Howell and R. Lowell vs D. Yerex and G. Lewis;\nD. Broom and M. Soss vs B. Ferguson and M.. Gelzinis, Nelson.\nSunday, 5 a.m.\u2014G. B. King and\nC. Gumm vs H. Schick and T.\nMuraro; N. Rhodes and E. Haley\nvs Bob Hamson and R. Warriner;\nR. Americk and B. Porter vs K.\nBrennan and D. Bauer.\n10 a.m.\u2014Bob Thompson, Nelson,\nvs Bbb Quail; J. Toms and P.\nRocxie, Rossland, vs M. Coon and\npartner;\n11 a.m.\u2014R. Thompson and J.\nMcAdam, Nelson, vs J. Richard\nson and B. Rennison; D. Yerex and\nJ. fierex vs B. Langdon and J.\nLangden.\nYour Vehicle Out of Mildhoies - Easily -Take Along\nCUM-A-LONG    V\/ill pull 3000 lbs. with ease. Weighs only 9 pounds.      Only    ^62.50\nMannlicher 30-06\nComplete With\nScope\n$309.50\n(Trade Accepted)\nWINCHESTER\nModel  94\n30-30\n$79.50\n(Trade Accepted)\nIthica Deluxe\nModel  30\n12 GAUGE SHOTGUN\n$98.50\n(Trade Accepted)\nFOR THE LOWEST PRICES - HIGHEST QUALITY\n.GET\nYOUR\nHUNTING\nLICENSE\nHERE\nColeman\n2 - Burner\nCamp Stove\nSPECIAL\n$18.88\nExtra Special\n.303 British\nEnfield\nRifles\n$22.50\nea.\n(Trade  Accepted)\nMake Mc & Mc Your One-Stop Shopping Centre for Famous Make Guns\nand Accessories - Pack Boards - Ammunition - Hunting Knives - Scopes\nEtc.\nPHONE 1300\nNELSON, B.C.\n476 BAKER ST.\n \u00ab!W^\"WPBHP^\"\n\"\u25a0\"\u00ab '\u25a0 '.\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0i~r~\u2014m^m.<\" I.;, i.1 \"i\",'.   '\n, . ! P1, !   H.      \u25a0   !     '.. \"\n\t\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally New* does not hold itself responsible in the event\nof an error In the following Hats.\nTORONTO STOCKS\"\nMcKenzie R.L 29\nMilliSen _     1.15\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAlgom  Uranium  \t\nAmal Larder\t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAnglo Rouen \t\nAtlin  Ruff   \t\n.12\n14.50\n.33\n.60\n22.50\n.12\n,03'A\n1.35\n.16\n.15\n.63 <b\n.03\n2.65\n.08\n.10\n7.00\n10.75\n.10\n10.50\n1.39\n1.67\n.      .14\n.36\n1.23\n3.80\n.59\n2.85\n19.00\n.lOli\n.09 <i\n.08\n3.90\n.31\n.Wi\n.29\n.10\n.08\n.32\n1.64\n1.23\n.   27.37'4\nBaska Uranium\t\nBibis Yukon\t\nBrunhurst \t\nBrunswick\t\nBuff Red Lake \t\nCampbell C\t\nCampbell R.L\t\nCan Met  \t\nCentral Patricia\t\nChimo    \t\nCoin Lake _\t\nConiarium    \t\nCons Denison WTS\nCons  Halliwell  \t\nCons Howe\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Orlac \t\nCon Sanorm\t\nConwest       \t\nCopper  Corp  \t\nCopper   Man   \t\nEast Amphi \t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nElder Gold      \t\nFalconmridge \t\nFrobisher\nGeco\n2.07\n17.00\nMining Corp.\nMulti Mins .\nNew Alger\n13.50\n.42\n.06 M,\nGea. Scientific Pros     1.00\nGiant Yel     8.20\nGoldale  19'^\nGold Eagle      10\nGunnar Gold     11.12*4\nHarminerals    13\nHeadway    31\nHollinger         30.75\nHudson Bay     51.75\nInspiration    40\nInt Nickel    90.75\nIron Bay      2.60\nJoliet Que 26'i\nJonsmith      19\nR J Jowsey  40\nKenville         05 \"^\nKerr Addison     20.8215\nKhistina       1.30\nLabrador          27.00\nLakeshore            4.95\nLexindin  03'4\nLittle Long Lac      1.81\nLorado    20\nLouvic't  :.., 07\nMacassa       3.05\n...       .32\n2.80\n1.09\n...     1.25\n...     1.07\nNew Bidlamaque  08V4\nNew Delhi  20\nNew Harricana  11\nNew Hosco 75\nNew Lund 21\nNipissing           1.50\nNoranda New     50.00\nNorgold        06\nNormetals       3.50\nNorpax   11\nNorth Can          1.42\nNorth Rankin      1.14\nOpemiska        8.40\nPickle Crow 95\nPlacer Devel    11.25\nPreston E.D     5.55\nQuebec Copper 19\nQuebec Lab        05\nQuebec Lithium          2.90\nQuebec Metallurgical     10.75\nRadiore        .59\nRoche     12V4\nRayrock        32\nSan Antonio      71\nSherritt Gordon      2.82\nSilver Miller      30\nStadacona 10\nSteep Rock            11.75\nSlocan Van Roi  13M\nSullivan Con      1.90\nSylvanite         1.04\nTaurcanis        61\nTeck Hughes      1.60\nTemagami      2.70\nTombill  74\nTorbrit  34\nTrans Cont Res  19\nUnited Keno            4.70\nUpper Canada       1.15\nVentures     25.50\nViolamac      2.17\nWaite Amulet      6.30\nWiltsey Goglin-      14\nWright Hargreaves     1.26\nYale  29\nYellowknife Bear      1.15\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  13\nBanff Oils      1.16\nBailey Selburn ..    7.25\nCalgary and Edmonton       23.25\nCanadian Devonian      4.00\nCentral Explorers      2.30\nCanadian Dredge    19*4\nCurtis Wright   5.80\nCan. Malting   62*4\nCan Oil _ 26\nCanadian Pacific Rly  26*i\nCan. Packers B         49*4\nCan Hydro Carbide  10*4\nCockshutt          15*i\nCons Gas         41*4\nDist. Seagram      31%\nDom. Foundries     46*4\nDom Magnesium     9Ve\nDom. Stores                63*4\nDom. Tar 4 Chemical  . .. 17VB\nDom. Textiles     10%\nEddy Paper   61\nEddy Match         30*4\nFamous Players   21%\nFanny Farmer   17\nGatineau               37V4\nGatineau 5% pfd   104*4\nGen. Steel Wares   15*4\nGooyear            188\nHoward Smith   44*4\nImperial Oil    3634\nImp. Tobacco   13*4\nInd. Ace.          38*4\nInt. Pete          32V4\nLaura Secord   24*4\nLoblaw A        27'4\nLoblaw B  27*4\nMassey Harris   13*4\nMolson's Brewery   25*4\nMont, Loco   18\nMoore Corp  41 n4\nPage Hershey   30%\nPowell River        34Vi\nRuss. Industries   18V4\nShawinigan             2934\nDIVIDENDS\nBrooke Bond Canada (1959)\nLtd., pfd. 26 cents, Oct. 15, record Sept. 16.\nBuilding Products Ltd., 46 cents\nOct. 1, record Sept. 17.\nCanadian Collieries Resources\nLtd., pfd. 2*4 cents, Sept. ?\",\nrecord Sept. 4.\nCanadian Oil Companies Ltd.,\n4 per cent pfd. $1, 5 per cent\npfd. $1.25, 8 per cent pfd. 2, Oct.\n2, record Sept. 9.\nConsumers' Gas Company, 25\ncents, 5*4 per cent series A pfd.\n$1.37*4, 5*2 per cent series B\npfd. $1.37*4, Oct. 1,* record Sept.\n15.\nGiant Yellowknife Gold Mines\nLtd., 10 cents quarterly, Sept. 30,\nrecord Sept.  10.\nNorthern Telephone Co. Ltd.,\n2*4 cents Oct. 15, record Sept. 30.\nRussell Industries Ltd., 15 cents\nSept.  30, record Sept.  16.\nSimpsons A \t\nSoutham       \t\nStandard Paving \t\nSteel of Canada \t\nTaylor Pearson \t\nTexaco \t\nUnion Gas of Can \t\nUnited Steel\nWestern Grocers A\n74\n19\n81\n21*4\n64\n71*4\n9*4\n37\nMacDonald   \t\nMadsen R L\t\nMalartic G F.\nMaritime Mining\nMcLeod\nMcMarmac\nf Enjoy \\\nj Canada's Favourite- -I\n{WRIGLEY'SJ\n(SPEARMINT?\nt CHEWING GUM\nt Gel\nCdn Highcrest\nCon East Crest\t\nCons Peak      \t\nDevon Leduc \t\nDuvex       \t\nHome A    \t\nKroy\nLong Island Pete\nMarigold\nMidcon\nUat. Pete\nNew Continental .\nOkalta\n.31\n.44\n.04*4\n1.05\n.08\n14.73*4\n\u202204\n.19\n.11*4\n.56\n2.10\n.33\n.63\nPacific Pete       13.60\nPetrol \t\nProv Gas \t\nRoyal Canadian\t\nRoyalite  \t\nSpooner \t\nStanwell Oil \t\nTriad \t\nUnited Oils   \t\nYank Canuck    \t\nWestern Pacific \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum\nAmerican Tel & Tel\nArgus 2nd pfd\nAtlas St. \t\nB.A. Oil \t\nBeatty Bros\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s    \t\nB.C. Electric 434s \t\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A      ...\nB.C. Power A   \t\nurns A\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners\nCan. Cement\nCan Chem Co\n1.59\n2.61\n1.05\n7.35\n.16\n.68\n4.10\n1.99\n.07\n.16\n36%\n3714\n31-T4\n6%\n78*4\n25*4\n36*4\n9\n41%\n4.95\n75\n85*\n13%\n16*4\n35 \"i\n12J\/4\n373\/4\n14*4\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959\n54\u2014Sign On\n55\u2014Farm Fare\n00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n15-Wake-Up Time\n25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n:15-Wake-Up Time\n: 30\u2014Opening Markets\n8:35-Wake-Up Time\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Story Parade\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Sun Showers\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05-The Little Show\n10:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014Music in Black and Whit*\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Fred Boates Show\nll:30-Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Women Today\n11:40\u2014Entertainment World\n11:45\u2014Swift Money Man\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05-Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25-News\n12:31\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:00\u2014Court of Opinion\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Mattae*\n3:30\u2014Wpg. String Orchestra\n4:00-Rocking With Boates\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:20\u2014Ottawa Report\n5:25\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:40\u2014Clpsing Markets\n5:45\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:55\u2014Dee's Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:25\u2014Tempo Pt. 8\n6:55\u2014Musicale\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Serenade\n8:00\u2014Halifax Theatre\n8:30\u2014Serenade\n9:00\u2014Songs of My PeopI*\n9:30\u2014Serenade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-Sports: Weather\n10:15\u2014Personal Appearanot\n10:30-Concert Hall\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Sign Off\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1959\n: 00\u2014Bert Nelson\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Bert Nelson\n:00\u2014BBC News\n: 15\u2014They Fought Alone\n: 45\u2014Outdoor Tales\n00\u2014Tim and Abbie\n15\u2014News\n25-Weather\n30\u2014Baseball\n:30\u2014Musical Program\n: 00\u2014Traditional Echoes\n30\u2014Band Concert.\n45\u2014World Church News\n: 00\u2014CBC News\n15\u2014Camera Club\n30\u2014Sports College\n3:45\u2014Stu Davis\n4:00\u2014Don Messer's Islander*\n4:30\u2014Polka Party\n5:00\u2014Piano Pops\n5:15\u2014Science, Society and\nThe Individual\n5:30\u2014Ca C'est Montreal\n6:00\u2014Four's Company\n7:0O-CBC News\n7:10\u2014For Valor\n7:30\u2014World Music Festivals\n9:00\u2014My Word\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014This Week\n10:30\u2014Dance Bands\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STA\nVDAHD TIME\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\n8:00 On The Go*\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n8:30 Sam Levenson*\n7:43 Test Pattern\n9.00 HLove Lusy*\n7:56 Bible Reading\n9:30 Top Dollar*\n7:59 Program Previews\n10:00' Love of Lite*\n8:00 Dough Re Mi*\n10:30 Search For Tomorrow*\n8:30 Treasure  Hunt*\n10:45 Guiding Light*\n9:00 Price Is Right*\n11:00 Coffee Club Theatre\n9:30 Concentration*\n12:00 It's a Great Life\n10:00 Tic Tac  Dough*\n12:30 As the World Turns*\n10:30 It Could Be You*\n1:00 For Better or Wor\u00abe*\n11:00 Queen  For A Day*\n1:30 Houseparty*\n11:30 Blondie*\n2:00 Big Payoff*\n12:00 Young Dr.  Malone*\n2:30 Verdict Is Yours*\n12:30 From These Roots*\n3:00 Brighter Day*\n1:00 Truth or Consequences <C)*\n3:15 Secret Storm*\n1:30 County Fair*\n3:30 Edge of  Night*\n2:00 Matinee on Six \"Mokey\"\n4:00 Cliff Oarl  Show\n3:45 Our Gang\n430 Tea Time Matinee\n4-00 I Led Three Lives\n6:00 News\n4:30 Four   Thirty    Movie   \"Beg\n6:10 Sports   Spotlight\nBorrow or Steal\"\n6:15 Doug Edwards*\n5:45 Weatherwi.se. Front Page\n6:30 Rawhide*\n600 Cavalcade of Sports*\n7:30 1 Ixwe Lusy*\n6:45 Decorating   Ideas\n8:00 Phil Silvers Show*\n7:00 Journey to Understanding*\n8:30 Amateur Hour\n8:00 M Squad*\n9:00 The Lineup*\n8.30 NBC Western Theatre*\n9:30 Bold Venture\n9:00 Special Agent 7\n10:00 Night Edition\n9:30 Official   Detective\n10:10 Sports Scoreboard\n10:00 Mike Hammer\n10:15 4-Most Feature\n10:30 News\n10:45 Late   Movie   \"Hamlet\"\nKREM-TV -\n- Channel 2\n5:00 Bugs Bunny\n8:00 Tombstone Territory*\n5:30 Mickey Mouse Club*\n8:30 77 Sunset Strip*\n6:00 Newsbeat                    1\n9:30 Col. Flack\n6:15 John Dely*\n10:00 Nightibeat\n6:30 Rin Tin Tin*\n10:15 Jack Paar*\n7:00 Walt Disney Presents*\n11:30 Channel  Two Theatre\nACROSS\n1. Instrumental duets\n5. Box scientifically\n8. A physician\n10. Desired\n12. Rounded,\nconvex\nmolding\n13. Eat away\n14. Bombycld\nmoth\n16. Liberty\n17. Type of\nfriction,\nmatch\n20. A tribe\n(Naga Hills)\n21. Laid away\n22. Dumbarton\n24. Center of\ntown\n26. Malt\nbeverages\n28. Bearded\nvultures\n(S.Afr.)\n81. Compass\npoint (abbr.)\n82. Resembling\na spider\n83. Region in\nPalestine\n86. Gold (her.)\n87. Avoid by\nsubterfuge\n88. \u2014- Laredo\n(Mex.)\n41. River embankment\n42. Attempts\n43. Chair\n44. Luminous\ncelestial\nbodies\nDOWN\nTu Pious\n2. Japanese\nshrub\n3. Lubricate\n4. Sneered\n5. Steep\n6. Skin opening\nT. Havmg no\nfeet\n8. Tree\n9. Drudges\n(dial.)\n11. The\npopulaca\n(anc. Gt.y\nHi, Bothersome\nofficial\ndelay\n18. Approach\n19. Flower\n22. Was in\ndebt\n28. Queen\nSMS\nmm\nof Cleves\n38. Acquaint*\n(one.\nself)\n26.Atheatrl.\ncal hacker\n27. Departs\n29. Flocks\n30. Cyolades\nisland\n32. Driving toe\nand rain\nas aama an\nHma   HHi:iaii*i\nRR\nI RPJ 1 O N fc\n; vbp o q m\nYesterday's Answer\n84. Wash\n35. Notion\n39. Bolivian\nIndian\n<var4\n40.0ns\n<Ger.)\n%\nt\nT-\nr\n*\u2022\n1\n?~\nr-\nT~\na\nF<\n\u2022J\nl\nu>\nii\nll\nV\/\/f\n13\n1+\n%\n%\nii\n16\nif\nIS\nIS\n%\n%\n2b\n21\n^\nTi.\n13\n^\n%\n14\n25\nf<\nv4\n2ft\n17\n%\n28\n29\n16\ni\\\nyA\n%\n32.\n33\n34\n3S\n%\n%\nit.\n37\n1\n30\n39\nAO\n41\n1\n4i\n^f\n43\n%\n44\n^\n9-4\n(Programs subject to change hy stations without notice.)\n ^_\t\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Hero's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos*\ntrophes, the length and formation of the words aie all hints,\neach day the code letters an different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nORUDL    BRUT    TZX.SH    DHSDRTSL    0 W\nO R L    riMID    IE    WORLZD    HISSVO\nWLLG     TO     K Z ej A     O R h A D L F M L D \u2014\nYIZZTL.\nYesterday's  Cryptoquute:   MANS  INCLINATION   TO   INJUSTICE MAKES DEMOCRACY NECESSARY \u2014 NIEBUHR.\n(O 1\u00bb09, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)\n mr\nW^\n!WW!7^^^H(IP^\u00abMipf!Pl^PBJBP!PPiR\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  ~  PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED  ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nJMAIFF - To Mr. and Mrs.\nMike Jmaiff of Appledale, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Aug.\n26, a daughter.\nMAKAROFF - To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Makaroff of Shoreacres, al\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nAug. 29, a son.\nDRULOTTE - To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Drulotte of Ymir, at Kootenay J\nLake  General  Hospital,   Aug.  28, J\na son. |\nCHERNOFF - To Mr. and Mrs.\nPeter Chernoff of Appledale. at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nAug. 27, a daughter.\nMARK1N - To Mr. and Mrs.\nAlec Markin of Slocan Park, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nAug. 27. a son.\nSIMMONDS - To Mr. and Mrs.\nNicholas Simmonds, 606 Carbonate Street, at. Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Aug. 21), a son.\nPAQUETTE - To Mr. and Mrs.\nPhilip A. Paquettt of Slocan City\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept. 1. a son.\nVERESIIAGEN - To Mr. and\nMrs. Fred Vercshagen of Shore-\nacres, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Sept. 1, a daughter.\nCHERRY - To Mr. and Mrs.\nArthur John Cherry, 2013 Stanley\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Sept. 2. a son.\nPIRO - To Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Piro, 822 Innes Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept.\n2, a daughter.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nhelp wanted\nwTnTedTmmediately~eT\nperienced GM car salesman. Top\nguaranteed wage and commission. Group medical plan benefits. Write Bob Nelson Motors\nLtd. in Cranbrook. B.C., for particulars.\nlilORE I N C 0 M E NEEDED?\nWrite for Rawleigh's \"Your Way\nto a Better Living\". New spare-\ntime or full-time plans. Write\nW. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd., Dept\nGG-153, 589 Henry Ave., Winnipeg 2. Man.\nWANTED: A LICENSED B.C.\nlog scaler for immediate employment. Phone Juniper 5-6642\nWrite Knight Lumber Co. Ltd..\nCrowsnesl, B.C.\nExperienced apple picker\nGood living accommodations.\nContact Jaginder Basram, RR 5,\nKelowna. phnne Poplar 35019.\nFOR SALE - 2 ONLY SINGER\nround bobbin reverse sew treadles, $69.50 each. Singer Sewing\nCentre, phone 41\nFEMALE HELP WANTED. FOR\nfurther details contact Empire\nCleaners in person at 321 Raker.\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED TOR\nmiddle aged man in the country\nBox  2590.  Dailv  News.\nWanted - contract ~log-\nger?. Call 351-X. Trail.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nAUCTION OF TIMBER SALE\nX-62635\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 10:30 a.m.\non October 26, 1959, in the office\nof the Forest Ranger, Slocan\nCity, B.C., the Licence X-62635,\nto cut 1,405,000 cubic feet of\nspruce, balsam, hemlock, fir,\nyellow pine, larch, cedar, white\npine, lodgepole pine trees and\n158,000 lineal feet of cedar poles\nand piling, on an area situated\non vacant Crown Land on Trozzo\nCreek. Kootenay Land District.\nSix 16) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Victoria, B.C.: the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.:\nor the Forest Ranger, Slocan\nCity, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,  BICYCLES\nAN OCCASIONAL OPPORTUNITY\nfor teacher or intelligent housewife, to interview on Gallup Poll\nand public opinion surveys IV\nof ear desirable Some evening\nwork required Write Canadian\nFhds Limited, 49 Wellington St\nW , Toronto 1\nCOMPANION HOUSEKEEPER -\nmiddle nged \u2014 to take care ot\nelderly lady. Live in. Prefer\nsomeone with knowledge of nursing. Good wages. Apply Box 122.\nNew Denver, B.C.\t\nMAKE MONEY AT HOME Assembling our items. Experience\nunnecessary. Elko Mfg.. 515 N.\nFairfax, Los Angeles 36. Calif.\nHOUSEKEEPER FOirwORKING\nmother and 9 year old boy. Apply\n1010 Carbonate St. after R p.m.\nor phone 912-X\nNew . .,.\nChevrolet Sedans\nNew . . .\nChevrolet Pickups\n1959\n1959\n1958\n1958\n1958\n1958\n1957\n1957\n1957\n1957\n1957\n1957\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1956\nFord Sedan\nFord Station Wagon\nMercedes-Bern Sedan\nPontiac Sedan\nMeteor Sedan\nChevrolet Pickup\nChevrolet Sedan\nBuick Sedan\nPontiac Sedan\nChevrolet Sedan\nChev. Sedan Dely.\nMeteor Stn. Wagon\nMercury Sedan\nFord Sedan\nFord Station Wagon\nChevrolet Pickup\nChrysler Sedan\nSPECIAL           SPECIAL\n1954 Monarch Sedan\n$1095\nJ USHERETTES.    APPLY CIVIC\nTheatre evenings\nWAITRESS    WANTED.\n391  or 1877.\nPHONE i\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus 98: res   1186-Y\nFOR SALE - 1 ONLY SINGER\nround bobbin treadle, sews backward or forward, $79.50. Singer\nSewing Centre., phone 41\nPAINTING, BODY REPAIRS -\nDone by experts. Peebles Motors.\nNelson, B.C\nCHESTERFIELD, RUG CLEAN-\ning, invisible mehding. Dutch\nCleaning Service, phone 2190\nFoR EXPERIENCED SEPTIC\ntank cleaning, phone 1994-L for\nrates and appointments\nFOR CHIMNEY REPAIRS -\nPhone 1752-L-3.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR~SALE-NF.W HAMP. LF.G-\nhorn cross pullets, 6 months old.\nPh. 777-R-2. S, Trovan. Taghum\nHill\n40~ LEGHORN HTKTpTH IRE\ncross pullets. Readv to lav. $2\neach. M. Heddle. RR. No. 1. Ph.\n4ril-X-2\n20 COWS, 10 CALVES, $4000 -\nMostly Hereford*. Apply S\nGreen. Fruitvale. B.C.\n7-MO.NTH-OLD PUREBRED HOL-\nstein bull. Apply Meadow Dairy,\nBox 55. Nelson.\nAMES-IN-CROSS \"400\" PULLETS\nready to lay. Philip Toogood,\nBlueberrv, phone Castlegar 2262\nTRAILERS\nH\\NDY  2 WHEEL  AUTO TRAIL\ner.witlih.itch. Phone 710-R.\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1955\n1955\n1954\n1953\n1953\n1953\n1952\n1952\n1952\n1951\n1951\n1949\nFargo   Pickup\nDodge Stn. Wagon\nOldsmobile Sedan\nBuick Coach\nChevrolet Sedan\nFord Coach\nPontiac Sedan\nFord 1-Ton\nChevrolet Coach\nPontiac Sedan\nChevrolet Sedan\nStudebaker, Sedan\nFord Prefect\nMercury Pickup\nMeteor Sedan\nPontiac Sedan\nCASH    TERMS   TRADES\n24-Hour Wrecker Service\nPhone 35\nu\ne\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\ntContinuedi\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nMACHINERY\n1956 INTERNATIONAL R.F. 190\ntandem truck with 1957 15-18 ton\nColumbia trailer rigged up for\nlong logs. Phone Passmore, 2-C.\n1950 AUSTIN STATION WAGON,\nreconditioned motor, as is, $25.\nPhone 1714-R.\"\n1934   DODGE   SEDAN,   CUSTOM\nradio. Phone 1841.\n1948  DODGE   LIKE   NEW.   NEW\nmotor 3000 mi. Ph. 226-R or 2178,\nWE PAY CASH FOR GOOD USED\ncars. McElroy Motors Ltd.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nMERCURY\nOutboard\n' MOTORS\nand\nBOAT\nCLEARANCE\nMK.   10 New  10 h.p.\nRegular  $440. SttQQ\nSpecial ^^\nMK. 25 New 20 h.p.\nRegular  $516. $459\nSpecial\nMK. 28  New 22 h.p.\nRegular  $570. $5 | 5\nSpecial\nMK.  6.  Used   10 hours\nRegular $312. $245\nSpecial ^\n10  ft.   Fiberglass Car Top\nRegular  $239. 5,95\nSpecial ^\n13  ft.  Deluxe  Fiberglass\nRunabout\nwith  all  hardware.     JT'lfl\nRegular $825. Special   *'\nTERMS: 10% Down\nMc&Mc\nPh. 1300\nNelson\nPRICED FOR QUICK SALE -\n22-ft. cabin cruiser, 70 h.p. Grey\nmarine engine, newly overhaul\ned, in first class order, marine\nclutch A gift for $975 Boat house\navailable. Ph. 455-Y or write Box\n3392, Nelson Daily News.\nF1BREGLASS BOATS. ALL SIZES\n\u2014reasonable prices. Peebles\nMotors.\nGOOD AS NEW 30 H.P. JOHNSON\nmotor with gas tank. A real bargain at $300 cash. Phone 754-X.\nFOR SALE OR RENT-STORAGE\n60x30, on trackage. Phone 530,\nask for Art.\nHEALTH  FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings  924 t)-vies Si\nFOR   SALE   -   CANDY   EQUIP-\nment. Box 3842, Daily News.\nUSED 5 CU. FT. ELECTRIC RE-\nfngerotor. $75. 817 Baker St.\nRENTALS\nATTRACTIVE l-BDR. SUITE IN\nsmall modern apt. block. Electric stove, washer, dryer, automatic heat, private entrance.\nParking space. Furnished or unfurnished. Apply 506 Seventh St.\nor phnne 1627-R-l.\t\nBAKER ST. LOCATION. AVAIL-\nable approximately Sept. 1. Can\nbe used as a professional or business office or store. Personal\nparking area. All replies confidential. Apply Box 2128, Daily\nNews.\nFOR RENT \u2014 MODERN 3-BED-\nroom home, 5 miles west of\nNelson, on R.R.2. Full plumbing,\nautomafic oil heat, garden and\nfruit trees, $65 mon. Ph. 751-L-3.\nCONVENIENT, COMFORTABLE\nunfurn. suite, automatic laundry,\nfully modern apt. block. See Roy\nMatheson, Bevanne Apts., phone\n1903-L.\n2 BEDROOM APT. UNFURNISH-\ned,   wired for   electric   range,\ndownstairs. Phone  1626-X  forenoon.\nMODERN 3-BDR. HOUSE IN\nProcter, available Sept. 15. Ph.\nBalfour 23-H or write Neil MacLeod, RR 1.\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning rooms, weekly, monthly\nrates. Dishes, linen supplied;\nparking   Allen Hotel, .171 BaKer\n3-ROOM, MODERN, SELF-CON-\ntained apt., unfurnished, heat\nand hot water supplied. Central.\nAdults. Phone 2106-L.\nSELF-CONT. CENTRAL UNFUR-\nnished duplex apt., fridge and\nstove supplied, $40 monthly. Ph.\n933-X.\n2-ROOM SUITE WITH GAS COOK-\ning, hot and cold water; also\nhousekeeping room. Apply 140\nBaker or phone 491-X.\nl-BDR. HOUSE - WIRED FOR\nrange and hot water. North Shore\n2'j miles from bridge, $37.50.\nPhone 156 days, 773-R-3 evenings.\nSINGER CANASTER TYPE VA-\ncuum cleaners, sale price $49.50\neach. Singer Sewing Centre, ph.\n41.\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck-Terminus Bldg. For particulars,\nphone 77.\n2-ROOM, SELF-CONTAINED APT.\nfurnished or unfurnished. Phone\n158-L.\nROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT\nbaths. Low weekly or monthly\nrate. Savov Hotel.\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOMS AND\nhath, 1 at $40, 1 at $35. Apply\n722 Raker St.\nFOR RENT - HEATED 3-ROOM\nanL, newly decorated. Available\nSept. 1. Phone 474-L.\nMODERN, AUTOMATIC OI L-\nheated apt., unfurnished. Private\nentrance and parking. Ph. 2075.\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. \u2014\nPhone  PAcific 6357\nLTD.\nJHEVROLET  \u25a0  OLDSMOBILE\nCADILLAC\n323 Vernon Street\nNelson Phone  35\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs. Used parts tor 1949\nto '52 Austins. '49 lo '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to '54 Morns Minor\n'51 Morris Minor motor; '52\nVanguard; good '50 Pontiac mtr.:\n'49 Monarch; '49 Chev; 1950\nChampion: '48 Buick 8. Cottonwood Wreckage Service, phone\n2100, Box 382, 24 Ymir Road,\nNelson.\nCOMMERCIAL SOFT ICE CREAM\nmachine. Will be reconditioned,\nin first class condition, 2 years\nold. sacrificing 4 of new price.\nPhone 1192 or 619. Vernon.\n1959 BUICK 4-DOOR SEDAN -\nautomatic transmission and radio, low mileage, spotless condition. Phone Kaslo 44-T or Box\n2471, Daily News.\n1956~ZEPWirSEDAN7 6-CYL~-\nnew car condition with radio\nCall 211 Houston St nr ph 1978-R\niConunued in Next Column)\n1 ONLY SINGER ROUND BOB-\nbin electric, cabinet model, reverse sew, sp. $69.50. Singer\nSewing Centre, phone 41.\nFOR SALE - ROYAL GARBAGE\nburner with hot water jacket,\nNo. 1 condition. Phone 1763-X.\n214 Innos St.\nCOAL AND WOOD STOVE; OIL\nand coal and wood heaters. Hot\nwater tank. Phone 316 or 2199-L.\nLONE CEDAR CHEST - LIKE\nnew. Was $90. No reasonable offer refused. Phone 1305-R.\n3-ROOM, HEATED APT. - WITH\nelectric stove. Apply 1019 Latimer St., or phone 2263-L.\n2-ROOM FURNISHED APART\nment, light and heat supplied\nPhone 896-R.\n3-RM. APARTMENT, ELECTRIC\nstove, oil heat. 210 Victoria St.,\nphone 161\nUSED   TRUCKS\n1956 Ford Pickup\n1954 Ford Panel\n1952 Chev. Carry-All\n1952 Mack Tandem\n1949  IHC KB8-F Tandem\nUSED TRACTORS\n1955 IHC TD-9\nCrawler Tractor\nSmith Angledozer.\n. Logging Winch.\nCanopy.\n1957 IHC TD-9\nCrawler  Tractor\nWith  Drott  Loader.\nLike New Condition.\n1952 Cat D-4\nCrawler  Tra'ctor\nWide Gauge. 7U Series.\nHvdraulic Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nCanoov.\n1952 IHC TD-14A\nCrawler  Tractor\nSmith Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nCanopy.\nRebuilt. Good Condition.\n1950   IHC  TD-24\nCrawler Tractor\nCable Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nCanopy.\nIHC UD 1091\nDiesel  Power  Unit\n190 H.P. Long Skid Base.\nExtended Shaft.\nRebuilt.\nNEW\nEQUIPMENT\nNew IHC 300\nUtility Wheel Tractor\nWith Wagner Backhoe.\nWagner Front End Loader.\nNew Willock 4-Wheel Drive\nLift  Truck\n10.000 Lb. Capacity.\nFull Reverse Transmission.\nPower Steering.\nCENTRAL\nT\n& Equipment Co. Ltd\n702 Front St.\nPHONE   1810\n3-ROOM   SUITE,  HEATED,   GAS\nrange. Close in. Phone 305-X.\nHSKPG.   ROOM   FOR   GENTLE-\nman, 526 Josephine or ph. 321-R.\nCOMPLETELY FURN. SUITE .-\nFor 2, close in. Phone 149.\nSELF  CONTAINING  ROOM,   924\nDavies St. Phone 1349-L.\nCLEAN SLEEPING ROOM - AP-\nply 410 Victoria St.\t\nTWO 2-BEDROOM APT. CLOSE\nin. Ph. 1703 or 1604-R\nHSKPG   AND SLEEPING ROOMS\nMthlv   rate $12-$18  705 Victoria\nLOVELY.   SELF-CONT.   3-ROOM\nsuite for rent. Ph. 1921-L alter 6\n3\" ROOM   FURNISHED   HEATED\nsuite for rent. Phone 1968-R\nFOR RENT - HEATED HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 405-L\n\u25a0\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR' SALE\nHOME   AND  INCOME\nChoice location. 3-B.R. owner\nunit and 2 units rented. New\ngas furnace. Newly decorated.\nrPlots    $n,ooo\nOnly $2500 Down.\nYES, WE HAVE 1 OVERSIZE\nLOT   ON   LAKEVIEW\nCRESCENT\nONE   BLOCK   FROM\nBAKER ST.\n2 B Rm. home. Large L.R. and\nD.R. convenient kitchen and\nutility. Full basement and\nW.C furnace. $5590\nFull Price f\u00bb\u00bb\u00abv\u00ab\n$2500 Down.\nNEWLY REMODELLED\nLarge family home 1 B Rm down\nand 3 B Rma up with full bathroom and Vi upstairs. Full basement and utility Rm. 50'xl20'\ncorner lot fenced. 47^00\nFull Price 3\/OUU\nOnly $2000 Down\"\nPARADISE PLAYGROUND\n3 lots landscaped. 3-B.R. family home. L.R., D.R., lovely\nH.W. floors, convenient kitchen, large rec. room and utility\n. on first level. Drive-in garage.\nFu\u00bb $12,660\nprice '\nOnly $2000 Down.\nPERSONALITY  HOME\n6-year-old  3-B.R.   home  on   a\nlarge landscaped lot.  All oak\nfloors throughout. Ceramic tile\nkitchen and bath. ^ I 3 9OO\nFull price \u2022'\nTerms.\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY\nTo   live  in   centrally   located\ntriples (newly renovated) and\nprofitably rent 2 $13 000\nunits.  S.P. '\n\u00bb Only $4500 Down.\nDiscount for Cash.\nYES,   WE  HAVE   A\n2-B.R. APT. FOR RENT\nSalesmen:\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 1821-L\nRon Monty, 792-R\nRudi  Martin,  782-X-2\nPHONE \"68 FOR\nREAL ESTATE\"\ncHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\nINSURANCE - REAL ESTATE\n554 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nPrice\nThe New Model\nSuper 44A -- 7 h.p.\nIS TODAY'S\nWORLD BEATER\nand the famous\nD-44\nIS   SECOND   TO   NONE\nIf You Are Going Logging\nGo   McCULLOCH!\nChains for All Makes and\nModels of Chain Saws.\nBars Hard Tipped and Regrooved\nG-- Cans \u2022 Hard Hats \u2022 Files\nSee  H.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz.\nAlex McDonald. Gordon Coutts. at\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\u201411\nPROPERTY,  HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC.,  FOR SALE\n(Continued'\nFOR SALE -' REVENUE HOME\nin good location in Kinnaird,\n$3000 down, balance In monthly\npayments. Phone 208-L Nelson.\nFOR SALE -  1 ONLY SINGER\nlong bobbin electric portable, sp.\n$43.50. Singer Sewing Centre, ph.\n.41.\n7 ROOM HOUSE - GOOD Business location. 46 Ymir Road. Ph.\n1570-X.\n3-BDR. HOUSE, NEAR ROSE-\nmont bridge. Box 2498, Daily\nNews.\n2 BEDROOM HOME ON 2\\i LOTS\nUphill. Phone 1,223-Y.\t\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nMAN WITH CAR - EXCELLENT\nopportunity to take over well developed, profitable Watkins Quality Products route in Nelson. At\nleast 300 regular customers.\nAbove average earnings. Training given while working. For\npersonal interview, write The\nJ. R. Watkins Company, Box\n4015, Stn. \"D\", Vancouver, or\nBill Areshenkoff, 2231 Fifth Ave.,\nTrail, B.C.\nSHEET METAL SHOP FOR SALE\nComplete. 4 hand turners, 38'4-\ninch rolls, break, lock former,\nhand shears and 3-har folders\nand hand tools. All machines are\nportable if desired. First class\nshape. Used 4 months. For information write Box 2438, Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE OR RENT GENERAL\nStore with gas pumps, and cabins. Located East side of Castlegar Ferry. Excellent opportunity\nfor young couple. Phone 2511\nCastlegar or write Box 2830 Nel\nson Daily News.\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY TO EARN\nyear around. Clean pleasant\nbusiness. 'Average earnings $2.50\nan hour commission. Full or part\ntime. Apply Box 2833, Nelson\nDaily News. \t\nFOR SALE - CAFE EQUIPMENT\ngood condition, priced to sell\nApply Box 54, Christina Lake,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nNo kidding, we have the best in\nUsed Appliances.\nJEFFERY RADIO\nBaker and Ward Sts., Nelson.\nSatisfaction guaranteed in\nconcrete work or general carpentry\ntall C. W. Paine, phone 1463-L\nASSAYERS AND MINE    .\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S   ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer    Chemist    Min Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nFOR RENT - GARAGE, ON 400\nblock Silica St. Phone 582-L-2\nBEACH GAS STOVE wTTHTTUB-\nbish burner, equipped with water\nfront   Phone 1428-L.\n1958 IEL POWER SAW. $150\nPeerless 6'^-inrh skill saw with\nattachments. $.10   Phone  1537-L\nHOT\" WATm \"fTJRNACF..  GOOD\ncondition   Ph. 4'tn-X\t\n(Continued in Nexi Columni\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS   FOB\nrent. 606 Front Street\nFOR RENT-S-BEDKOOM HOUSE\"\n\u2014Phone 234-L.\nPETS.  CANARIES,  BEES\nCOMPLETE PET SERVICE -\nBoarding, bathing, etc Want to\noli'ain or place a pef Inquire\nB,ir Nothing Pet Ranch, Taglium.\nphone 599 L 2.\nWELDING &   EQUIPMENT\n' CO. LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n514 Railwav St.     Nelson   B.C\nLooking\n1\u2014For a Nice Home. We have 2\nspecials in the $10,000 to $12,-\n000 bracket. Good ierms. \u2014\nPhone for details.\n2\u2014Fine Home \u2014 4 bedrooms, 2\nfull bathrooms, lovely piece\nof ground, fruit trees, close\nto bus stop.       $10,500\n$2500 Cash.\n3\u2014Well   Established   Corner\nStore. 'Requires $33 500\n$10,000  cash.      v\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\nFull Details  on  Request.\n4\u201417 Acres and 2-Storey Dwelling needing repairs. $300.00\ncash   might  handle,   balance\n>ikf,rent- $2500\nFull price\nS\u2014Vi Acre near Balfour and comfortable home.       $3200\nBeach frontage.\nGood Terms.\n6\u2014A Beautiful Home and two\nCottages \u2014 7 acres, beach\nfrontage. Phone or see us for\nfull particulars.\n7_Lovely, fully modernized 2-\nbedroom apartment in brick\nbuilding. \u2014 Includes another\nsmall apartment and also revenue from parking $5800\nlot. Try *\nOn Terms.\n8\u2014Three older homes.\n$4500 t0 $6300\nEasy Terms.\n9\u2014614 SILICA ST. Attractive 2-\nbedroom bungalow. Tastefully\ndecorated. Gas furnace. Two\nlovely lots in $7850\ngarden,  etc.\nGood Terms.\nSAFE DRIVERS SAVE\nWITH SAFECO\nAUTO INSURANCE\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 47 Years\nBox 26 Phone 269\n421 Baker St.        Nelson, B.C.\nT. C. \"Buck\" Lambert. Manager\nFOR SALE - LARGE STUCCO\nhouse presently rented as suites,\nseparate entrances. Also 2-room\ndwelling at rear. Oil and propane\nstoves and furnace. Owner retiring. $16,000. Terms available.\nBox 805. Kimberley, B.C\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer\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.\n373 Baker St.\u2014Land Surveyor\nNelson \u2022 Phone 1118 - Res. 550-R\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor \u2014 Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Ave., Castlegar, B.C.\npn ungo\nMinister To\nResign '59\nBRUSSELS (Reuters) - The\nresignation of Maurice van\nHemelryck as minister for the\nBelgian Congo was announced on\nThursday but the rest of the government is expected to stay in\noffice.\nPremier Gaston Eyskens\npoured cold water on speculation\nthat King Baudouin might follow\nup the minister's exit by calling\non the entire government to resign..\n\"There is no question of the\nwhole cabinet resigning,\" said\nEyskens   after   seeing  Baudouin.\nThe premier told reporters the\nking had accepted van Hemel-\nryck's resignation.\nVan Hemelryck's resignation\nfollowed a cabinet meeting on\nthe Congo situation Wednesday\nwhen he was reported to have\nbeen opposed by a majority of\nministers over his proposals for\nspeeding political reforms.\nAt the conclusion of the meeting, the government announced\nthat it would remain \"faithful\"\nto its declaration of last January\nto institute gradual political reforms in the Congo and put the\nAfrican colony on the road to\nindependence.\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nWANTED TO RENT\nNORTH SHORE UP TO 9 MILES:\nCouple (both workingi, no children, wants winteri7\u00abd properly,\n$6000-$7000 F.P. on option for\npurchase to be exercised within\none year of occupancy 'immediate small down payment and\n$60 monthly payments). Box No.\n2934, Nelson Daily News.\t\nTRAILER FOR SIX MONTHS TO\n1 year. Will be located in vicinity\nof Castlegar. State rent per\nmonth delivered to location.\nWrite Box 2537, Daily News.\n2 OR 3 BEDROOM UNFURN-\nished apt., or house required by\nresponsible, professional man.\nPhnne 1407-X or 1584.\t\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,\n1179-X.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILALBE\nSept. 1. Phone 2132.\nBOARD    AND    ROOM    FOR\ngentleman.   Phone 606-X-3.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nSept. 1. Phone 2132.\t\nPERSONAL\nFOR SALE - 1 ONLY ROUND\nbobbin Singer treadle, only $9.95.\nSinger Seiwng Centre, phone 41.\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts other than the ones\nincurred by myself. Lee Langill\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\n17 Argentine\nGenerals\nUnder Arrest\nBUENOS AIRES, Argentina\n(AP) - War, Secretary Elbio\nAnaya Thursday ordered the arrest of 17 generals inaspeedy\ncounter - attack against a large-\nsoale rebellion within Argentina's\narmy.\nAt the same time, garrisons\nthroughout the country pledged\nallegiance to Gen. Carlos Tor-\nanzo Montero, fired by Gen.\nAnaya Wednesday.\nThe rebellious stand ln the\narmy erupted into a fresh military crisis for President Arturo\nFrondizi's government, which\nhas been rocked by a series of\nconflicts within the armed forces\nsince it took power 16 months\nago.\nAnaya appointed Gen. Pedro\nFrancisco Castinairas to the\nstrategic post of army com-\nmandeT-m-chief In the wake ot\nToranzo Montero's ouster.\nThe firing provoked a stern reaction among army commanders.\nThe generals arrested today had\ncabled army garrisons asking\nthem to back Toranzo Montero\nagainst Anaya. Many responded\nin favor of the ousted army\nchief.\nMore Oil Than\nGrain Said in\nSaskatchewan\nTORONTO (OP) \u2014 There now\nare more oil derricks in Sask>\natchewan than the province's\ntraditional symbol, the grain elevator, Saskatchewan's Public\nWorks Minister C. G. Willis said\nhere  Wednesday.\nHe told a Canadian National\nExhibition directors luncheon that \"spectacular\" oil and\nmineral developments are transforming the face of Canada's\n\"bread-basket\" province.\nOnly a third of Saskatchewan's\nincome comes from agriculture\ntoday, whereas 20 years ago it\naccounted for 80 per cent, he\nsaid.\nDespite this, the province still\nproduces 287,000,000 bushels of\nw*heat a year, said Mr. Willis.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n\u201e  r   r t           s      .\u00bb\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nROADBUILDING\n- PIPELINES-\nDykes, etc.,\ndesigned and\nbuilt\nby contract\nA\nG   Bayes\nLtd.\n150 Bennett\nAve\nPen-'icton\nBC\nBuy. seM. trade the Clnsslfled way\nKeep your eye on Classified.\nFOR SALE - \"5-ACRE FARM\nwith buildings and fruit trees.\n$3500. 12 acres with house and\ngranary, $3800. Also pool hall in\nTrail. Apply Fred Jablonski\n1927 Columbia Ave., Trail.\nWANTED - BOOKER HEATER.\nPhone 773-L-2.\nWILL   PAY   CASH   FOR   GOOD\nused furnace blower. Ph. 189-R-3.\nFOR SALE - NICE 2 BEDROOM\nstucco house on 2Mi level landscaped lots. Full cement base\nment, drive-in garage. Wired for\nelectric range, gas piped in:\nPrice reesonable. Phone 1681-Y.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nBABY   STROLLER.   PHONE   99.\nNplamt Eatly 2faron\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday, 10c en Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week 35c\nin advance.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month         $ 1.25\nThree months      3.50\nSix months       6.50\nOne year         1200\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or the\nUnited States:\nOne month  -... % 1.75\nThree months     5.00\nSix months  \u2014    900\nOne year     18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nIn Rossland. Mrs. Ross Saundry.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely;\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown;\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner;\nPtlBLii\nBigger\nBeys!\n\u2666\nWiser\nByys!\nThe Cleanest\nUsed Car Buys\nin Town !\nBe Wise,  Buy' Wise,\nDrive a  Peebles  Bargain!\nSEE OUR AD\nTOMORROW !\n \"*\nmt*mn^tmi\nWNIf ymmA -J'--1.' i'7\u00bb,:> \u25a0'-. '-W-WHIHlWiwmi'iJ'Jv,\nw^^p\nl'.l|l\u00abljpp I\nISWIPWP\nPP\"\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1959\nThere Is a . . .\nWATERMAN PEN\nFor Any of Your\nSCHOOL OPENING NEEDS\nTHE WATERMAN  BALLPOINT\n$ .98\nTHE WATERMAN JEWEL POINT    2.49\nTHE WATERMAN  SKYWRITER    2.95\nTHE WATERMAN CARTRIDGE     -    2.95\nand a Complete Selection of Individual Pens and Pen Sets\n.  i  functional  in design  . artistically  styled . . .  reasonably  priced\nWaterman Pens at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nMan of Many Roles\nPlans New Identity\nTORONTO (CP) - Kerdinand\nWaldo Demara Jr. says he cannot explain the impulses that led\nhim'to pose as a Canadian navy\nsurgeon, a monk, a school\nteacher and many other characters in Canada and the United\nStates.\n\"There's no justification for it\nnaturally\u2014there is an occasional\njustification if you wish by necessity, crying need and so forth,\"\nhe said in an interview with\nPierre Berton.\nThe interview was filmed in an\nundisclosed U.S. city. It did not\ndisclose Demara's whereabouts\nor whether he is currently living\nas himselt or someone else.\nDemara, 37-year-old native of\nLawrence, Mass., who has held\njabs under a dozen d i f f etfi n t\nnames, said he has difficulty\nkeeping one under his real identity.\n\"In fact 1 had three very good\njobs with three different state\nagencies in three different states\nJet Trainer's\nCanopy Blows Off\nHALIFAX (CP)-Sub-Lt. Murray J. Roberts, 22, of Vancouver\nwas under Observation in Naval\nHospital here Thursday after he\nwas shaken up when the canopy of\nhis jet trainer blew off at 25,000\nfeet.\nThe naval pilot was on formation flying 25 miles north of here\nwhen the accident ocrurred. A\nnavy official said he complained\nof a sore shoulder, but apparently has no other injuries.\nThe pilot, stationed at the\nnearby Shearwater Naval Air\nBase, was escorted back to base\nby a banshee jet.\nMIDNIGHT\nFROLIC\nSunday\nAnd don't forget the Saturday\nnight dance party\u2014Buddy Marr\nOrchestra.\nPLAYMOR\nEnglish Girl\nReplaces Lynn\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A 21-year-\nold English dancer of the Royal\nBallet, Geongina Parkinson, Jiad\nher first star part Wednesday\nhight in the London premiere of\na ballet at the Royal Opera\nHouse, Covent Garden.\nShe replaced at short notice\nLynn Seymour of Vancouver,\nwho was prevented by a sprained\nankle from appearing in the title\nrole of La Belle Dame Sans\nMerci, based by Andre Howard\non John Keats' famous ballad.\nThe ballet, with score by die\n27-year-old composer Alexander\nCoehr based on French 17th-century music, proved a slight work\nbut Miss Parkinson was warmly\napplauded.\nKashmir Reports\nInfiltration\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) - Reports of Chinese Communist infiltration in three areas of the\nstate of Ladakh have reached the\nKashmir government, the Press\nTrust of India news agency reported Thursday from Srinagar,\nPH ILrn    Quant*'the\nr < \" fcViW   World   Over\nTelevision, Refrigerators,\nAutomatic Washers and Dryers\nJeffery Radio & Appliances\nBaker and Ward Sts. \u2014 Nelson\nStrike Adds lo\nManpower Lost\nOTTAWA (CP) - Largely because of the British Columbia\nloggers strike, the number of\nman-days lost through labor troubles in July was nearly 12 times\ngreater than in June,\nFigures released Wednesday\nby the department of labor\nshowed that last month the loss\nfrom, strikes and lockouts was\n85,505 man-days. In the previous\nmonth it was 57,320 man-days.\nMore than 86 per cent of last\nmonth's total resulted from the\nlogging and sawmill industry\nstrike in B.C. This dispute, still\nnot settled, involved 27,000 workers and 594,000 work days.\nForesees U.S.\nChinese Truce\nAs Possible\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Communist\nChina might welcome a \"gradual\nrapprochment\" with the United\nStates and correspondingly less\ndependence upon Russia, James\nS. Duncan, chairman of Ontario\nHydro, said Thursday.\n\"This policy,\" he told the Canadian Council of the International Chamber of Commerce,\n\"would carry with it no immediate recognition but acknowledge and respect for China's\nposition as a great world power.\n\"Wider knowledge and appreciation on both sides, easy access,\nmore frequent travel, more\ntrade, more cultural exchanges\n\u2014these are the foundation upon\nwhich a greater degree of understanding and mutual respect can\nbe built.\n\"Such conciliatory moves could\nbe rebuffed by China, but 1 am\ninclined to doubt it.\"\nMr. Duncan recently returned\nfrom a 3V2-week tour of Red\nChina.\n\"Those guiding China's affairs\nare subtle and far-sighted men,\"\nhe said. \"It might well be that\nthey would welcome a gradual\nrapprochment.\"\nHe said there is'no evidence\nof a weakening in Russian-Chinese relations, \"although I would\nnot prophesy what this relationship might be in 30 to 40 years\nwhen China has become a highly\nindustrialized nation, more powerful no doubt than Russia.\"\nas Fred W. Demara which 1 lost\nwhen they found 1 was Fred W.\nDemara.\"\nWAR SURGEON\nDemara rose to fame in Canada in 1951 when reports of brilliant surgical feats by Surgeon\nLieut. Joseph Cyr drifted back\nfrom the destroyer Cayuga, on\nFar East duty during the Korean\nWar.\nThe real Dr. Joseph Cyr, it developed, was still practising in\nGrand Falls, N.B. Demara, who\nhad entered the navy with documents stolen from Dr. Cyr, was\ncharged and deported. His stories\nof surgical brilliance, a navy\npublic relations officer later disclosed, originated with Demara\nhimself.\nDemara said he never ohanges\nfrom one role to another until he\nis exposed, an experience he\nfinds \"devastating.\"\n\"It's part of-an explosion of all\nyou've dene up to that point be-\ncause immediately everything\nyou've done is re-examined, reevaluated.\"\nDemara said he has already\nchosen his next role and that it\nwill probably involve another\nchange in identity.\nAsked whether he has made up\nhis mind who he is going to be\nand what, he replied: \"Very\ndefinitely.\"\n\"You've got a placed picked\nout?\"\n\"All set.\"\n\"You know exactly what you\nare going to do?\" 1\n\"Exactly.\"\nBill of Rights Discussion\nPossible at Coast Meeting\nWEANED  LATE\nEskimo -babies are usually not\nweaned until they are well-grown\nyoungsters.\nPrairie Roundup\nNEW RUNWAY\nSASKATOON (CP) - A $252,200\ncontract has been awarded Asphalt Services Limited of Saskatoon\nlor the contraction of a new taxi\nrunway at the Saskatoon airport.\nCompletion date is Aug. 15, 190.\nNEW DISPUTES\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 The cabinet Tuesday named K. A. Pugh,\nchairman of the Alberta Board\nof industrial relations, as deputy\nminister of the new labor department and John E. Oberholtzer,\ndeputy minister of the now-defunct industries and labor department, as deputy minister of the\nnew industry and development\ndepartment.\nNATO STUDENT DEAD\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014A NATO student killed in the crash of an\nRCAF jet training plane Tuesday\nwas identified by Ihe RCAF Wednesday as Sgt. Ruvald Petersen,\n22, of, Denmark. Flight Cadet\nLester P. Prochuk 20, of Winnipeg, was also killed in the crash.\nRELICS STOLEN\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta. <CP>-\nA bone necklace worn by Sioux\nchief Sitting Bull during the Custer massacre of 1876 was stolen\nearly Wednesday from the Medicine Hat Historical Society's museum. Two rifles and several Indian  arrows  were  also  missing.\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An expression of opinion on the question of a Canadian bill of rights\nmay be forced from the Canadian Bar Association this week\nby its civil liberties section.\nThis possibility arose during\nthe CBA annual meeting here\nWednesday as the section discussed the topic in a wide-ranging but inconclusive debate.\nThe  association, in two years\nof fairly  extensive study of the\nmatter, has expressed no opinion\nas a whole,\nDIVERGENT VIEWS\nAnd there was no hint of any\nunanimity of opinion in the civil\nliberties section discussion Wednesday as lawyers from across\nCanada displayed almost as\nmany opinions as there were\nspeakers.\nBut when the discussion was\nadjourned Wednesday, a suggestion was put forward that a draft\nresolution be placed before the\nsection Thursday to more or less\ndefine the area nf discussion in an\nattempt to reach a conclusion.\nJust what form the resolution\nmight take was not clear, but in\nany form, ii it is passed by the\nFine Briton for\nOffensive Remark\nLONDON (API-Nicholas Gerald Humphrey Blenkey was fined\n\u00a32 Thursday for using language\nlikely to cause olfence or annoyance to the crowd who watched\nPresident Eisenhower leave London  Airport Wednesday.\nA prosecution witness testified\nthat as the president arrived at\nthe airport to travel to Paris she\nheard Blenkey shout:\n\"Harold Macmillan, why did\nyou not combine to defeat the\noppressor of Suez?\"\nBlenkey denied shouting this.\nWhat he really shouted, he told\nthe court, was:\n\"Empire Loyalists, ask Harold\nMacmiltan why he Ls feting the\nvictors of Suez. Washington and\nMoscow combined to do us down\nat Yalta and later at the time\nof the Suez crisis.\"\nSAID NOTHING TO  IKE\nBlenkey added: \"I don't see\nhow my remarks could offend or\nannoy President Eisenhower because the. weren't addressed to\nhim.\n\"Is there ai.y reason why a\ntruly British crowd should be offended at my reminder of how\nAmericans betrayed us at the\ntime of Suez?\"\nBlenkey is a member of the\nLeague of Empire Loyalists, a\nsmall but vocal group which\ncomplains that the government is\ndismantling the British Empire.\na9 Another Loyalist, John Michael Scott, was fined E5 (14) for\nclambering over an airport barrier. He pleaded guilty and said\nhe wanted to hand the president\na letter.\nTHERMOSTAT CONTROLLED\nAshley hecten are equipped with the\nAshley automatic thermostat, eliminating widely fluctuating temperatures. It\nbrings greater comfort to the home-using WOOD as fuel.\nFUEL ECONOMY\nThe Ashley Centomatic Thermostat and\nDowndraft System brings the wonderful\nluxury of long lasting uniform heat to\nwood burning homes. With this fuel saving idea, millions of families enjoy con-\ntrolled heat without bother or attention,\nat a welcomed low cost.\nTIME TESTED\nFor many years Ashley wood heaters\nhave been bringing 'round-the-clock heat\nto wood burning homes. Our files are\nfilled with letters of PROOF from grateful users.\nPROOF\nOF ASHLEY CLAIMS\nrHEhMmT\nWOOD\nMARSHALL WELLS STORE\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPhone 497\n(Owners)\nNelson, B.C.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest.  Minimum two lines. 5% discount for prompt payment.\nTanks, JeeDS, Atomic Cannons\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nRummage sale at Salvation Army\ntoday at 1:30 p.m.\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT.\nBalfour Beach Inn open all winter. Jim Molloy, chef.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St. Ph. 1108, Nelson.\nTrim-Fit Socks, boys and girls.\nAll sizes.\nTOT-NTEEN SHOP\nDob collars, choke chains, chain\nand leather leads.\nMAX RASPER SHOE SHOP\nTrail   Business  College\nOffice open daily 2-4 p.m.\nNew term  begins September 8.\nDance at Procter Sept. 5. Music\nby Kootenaires. Flower Show and\nCarnival Monday, Sept. 7.\nMandarin Chop Suey House\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nS15 Front St. Phone 2169\nYour one-stop store for back-to\nschool clothing.\nEBERLE.'S ON BAKER ST.\nCANADIAN LEGION\nDance Committee meeting Friday,\nSept. 4, 1959, 8:15 p.m.\nNew provincial and colonial patterned bark cloth, washable and\npre-shrunk, 48\" wide, at $1.95 yd.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nMrs. Gladys Webb Foster, teacher of pianoforte and violin, reopens\nstudio -Sept. 8, 423 Victoria St.,\nphone 920-L.\nWEEKEND SPECIAL\nWith every purchase of $10 or over\nwe will olean your watch free.\nBetter Buys at Butterfields.\nA mot selection of wedding and\nshower gifts at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 96*\nCORRECTION\nLiving Room Learning Brochure,\nR. Bain Oliver, phone 2260, not\n737-Y.\nLegion Members and Guests.\nCome to the Highland Fling Saturday, Sept. 5th, Legion Hall. Music\nby Roy Kline. Admission $1,50\ncouple.\nLADIES \u2014 Jams and jellies enter now; help make this year's\nFair a Wow. 1959 Fall Fair: Mail\nall entries to Room A, Civic Centre.\nNELSON COMMERCIAL\nTRAINING SCHOOL\n701 Front St.\nFall Term Sept. 8th.\nWrite, or phone 2109-L.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our deepest\nappreciation to friends and neighbors for their acts of kindness and\nexpressions of sympathy during the\nrecent loss of Mr. and Mrs. Syd\nD. A. Ballard and their son Christopher. Our special thanks to Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Ludovicci and daughter Lena, Mr. F. W. M. Drew, Mr.\nK. D. McRae and all our friends.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Elgaard,\nSouth Burnaby.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere\nappreciation to our many friends\nand relatives who were so kind to\nus during our recent bereavement\nand also for the beautiful floral\nofferings. Special thanks to Mr.\nM. Motz, Dr. Wm. Chornobay,\nMatron, nurses and staff of the\nSlocan Community Hospital; also\nthose offering their cars for transportation.\nMr. and Mrs. George P. Stewart\nand family, and Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Law.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSCOTT \u2014 Funeral services for\nMrs. Nora Lizzie Scott will be held\nat the Thompson Funeral Home,\nSaturday at 3:30 p.m. Mr. Leo\nBevins will officiate and interment\nwill take place in Nelson Memorial\nPark. Friends wishing to pay their\nlast respects may do so until Saturday at 3:30 p.m.\nsection, it will go before the convention's general session Friday\nor Saturday.\nThere was some thought, expressed privately, that this might\nin effect plaoe a \"loaded\" question before the assembly and it\nwas considered possible that the\nsection might table any proposed\nmotion after discussion.\nASK REVISION\nElsewhere in the convention\nWednesday:\nThe criminal justice - section\ncalled for a complete revision of\nthe Juvenile Delinquents Act with\nparticular attention to distinguishing between juveniles\ncharged with serious offences\nand those charged with minor\noffences.\nEric L. Teed of Lancaster,\nN.B., said the term \"juvenile\ndelinquent,\" originally coined to\naid young offenders, now was a\ndirty word that put a juvenile\nwho broke a traffic law in the\nsame bracket with one who committed, a criminal offence.\nThe same section undertook, at\nthe suggestion of Saskatoon lawyer J. M. Goldenberg, to carry\nout a study in all provinces of\nthe magisterial system.\n\"INFERIOR\" COURT\nMr, Goldenberg said the magistrate and his court, by the\ndefinition as \"inferior\" court, are\nnot held in the same respect as\nsuperior courts and their judges\nand this influences the approach\nto appointment, qualification, salary and security of the magistrate.\nThe work loaded on magistrate's court lelt it a \"conveyor-\nbelt system of administering justice.\"\nWednesday evening, Ross L.\nMalone, out - going president ot\nthe American Bar Association,\ntold a dinner audience of 1,700\u2014\nscattered in four banquet rooms\nwith three serviced through\nclosed-circuit televisiop\u2014that assuring independence of the courts\nis one of the greatest responsibilities of the legal profession.\nThe same audience gave a\nstanding ovation to a convention\nvisitor\u2014Rt. Hon. Louis St. Laurent, former prime minister and\nnow honorary life president of\nthe CBA \u2014 who arrived Wednesday and who plans to stay long\nenough to see his son, Renault,\ninstalled Saturday as CBA president.\nLutheran Synod\nSeeks freedom\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - Independence from Uie parent United\nStates body is one of the main\ntopics at the three-day conference being held here of the Ontario district, Missouri Synod of\nLutheran Churches.\nMany of the 60 delegates say\nthey favor severance of the Lutheran Church in Canada from\nits parent organization, although\nnot immediately.\nDr. A. H. Schwermann of Edmonton, president of the Lutheran Church in Canada, told\nthe group strength could be oh-\ntained from unity of the three\nCanadian districts in one national voice.\nNEW CLERK\nDAWSON CREEK, B.C. ICP' \u2014\nCity clerk Shelly Knowles has resigned to take the post of village\nclerk at Campbell river and has\nbeen replaced by lawyer Ken\nArkell of Prince George, a former B.C. Lions player. Mr. Arkell will also serve as city solicitor.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St.\nHave  the  Job  Done  Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED *J\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFALL SUIT\nSPECIAL\nTODAY\n2 groups of suits taken\nfrom our regular stock.\nGroup No. 1\n$49.50\nExtra Pants 115.00\nRegular (a $79.50\nGroup No. I\n$65.00\nRegular to $85.00\nThese are\/ all smartly tailored\nin neat worsteds and twists.\nRegular and tali models.\nSises 3744.\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00b0\nTHE  MAN'S  STORE\nBelieves Skull\nIs Missing Link\nNAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters)-A\nBritish scientist said Thursday he\nis convinced a pre-historic skull\nfound in Tanganyika recently\nrepresents the long-sought missing link showing the graduation\nof ape-man into human beings.\nAnthropologist Louis Leakey\nsaid the skull is convincing evidence of Ihe truth of the theory\nthat man is descended from\nlower orders of animals.\nThe skull was found in the\nOlduvai Gorge in Tanganyika\nwhere Leakey has been digging\non and off for more than SO\nyears. His theory that man originated in Africa.\nFOUND SKULL OF BOY\nLeakey, 56, said the skull is\nthat of a 16- to 18-year-old boy\nand he estimates its age at 600,-\n000 years, in the pleistocene era.\nLeakey said that leading anthropologists, palaentologists and\ngeologists at the Leopoldville congress agreed with his findings.\nWhen the size of the teeth and\ndepth of the palate were measured, he said he was certain it\nwas  the missing link.\nLeakey nicknamed his find the\n\"Nutcracker Man.\" He said It\nlived mainly on vegetables and\nnuts, competing with giant baboons and giant pigs for food.\nPhone 1844 for Classified.\nSchool Supplies\nKey Tabs \u2014 Science Notebooks\nLoose Leaf Fillers \u2014 Portfolios\nPens \u2014 Pencils \u2014 Crayons\nLeather Binders $3.79 - $7.00\nMusic   Cases   $5.95 - $6.95\nCOMPETITIVE PRICES\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nFor Rent\nBusiness Location\nat 371 Baker Street,\nNelson\nSuitable for store or\noffice. 1272 square feet of\nfloor space plus 1088\nsquare feet of additional\nwarehouse space available\nif desired.\nAPPLY\nBOX 2878\nNelson Daily News\nNOTICE\nThe Nelson Senior and\nJunior High Schools\nWill Register All New Pupils to District on\nTUESDAY, SEPT. 8\n2 to 4 p.m.\nREGULAR CLASSES FOR ALL STUDENTS\nWILL COMMENCE\nWED., SEPT. 9\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1959_09_04","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0432959","@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":"1959-09-04 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1959-09-04 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\/1.0432959"}