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W.","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Ramsden, C. W.","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-07-24","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1962-08-17","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434462\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 1J\t\nYears of\nDaily Service\nto the Kootenays.\nthm l&il\nT\nmi\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAT: Mostly cloudy.\nCooler. Winds light. Low and high\nat Cfanfcrook 55 and 78, Crescent\nValley 55 and\" 75.  \"\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 61\n\u2022 FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 17. 1962\n10 Cents\nNo. 100\nIRAQI PLANES\nBOMB TURKEY\n\u20220*3 VTHOT.DTA, |\n1SIAIH0HV\nHvaan ivionia'\nANKARA (AP) \u2014 Iraqi planes\nraided Turkish territory for the\nsecond straight day Thursday, the\nTurkish foreign ministry announced. It said later Iraq apologized\nfor the incidents and promised\nto punish those responsible.\nA brief announcement said Turkish jets fired on an attacking\nIraqi plane near Biskan, about\n25 miles inside Turkish territory.\nNo casualties were reported.\nThere were conflicting accounts\nthat the plane, identified as a\nRussian-built MiG, crash-landed\nor got away after the clash with\nTurkish jets.\nPrepare for\nBig Fruit Year\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP) -\nOkanagan fruit growers are busy\nthese days wrestling with a peach\ncrop that's expected to be 10 to\n15 per cent higher than last year\nand an apple crop that may produce 2,000,000 boxes more than\nthe 1961 harvest.\nLast year's apple crop ran to a\nlittle more than 3,000,000. This\nyear it is estimated that the harvest will bring 5,000,000 boxes to\nmarket.\nJ. B. Lander, general sales\nmanager for B.C. Tree Fruits, the\nagency which handles nearly all\nfruit sales for British Columbia\ngrowers, said there is no particular concern at present over the\nalmost 100-per-cent increase in\nthe apple production.\n\"Five million boxes may sound\na lot but we have had 7,000,000-\nOOMox crops in the past,\" he\nsaid. \"It is impossible to forecast\nwhat the market will do, but we\nare quite sure we can handle 5,-\n000,000 boxes. There's no need for\nanyone to be concerned at this\nstage.\"\nTurkey had protested sharply\nto Iraq following the death of two\nsoldiers in Wednesday's attacks,\nalso near Biskan.\nStilish First\nOn Communism\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Four\nBritons have become the first\nforeigners to climb Mount Communism, the Soviet Union's highest peak, it was reported Thursday.\nThey reached the summit Saturday, accompanied by four Soviet climbers, according to a\ntelegram received by the British\nembassy here Thursday from Dr.\nMalcolm Slessor, leader of the\nBritish team. i\nMount Communism, formerly\nMount Stalin, rises 24,590 feet in\nthe Pamir range. It was first\nscaled nearly 20 years ago by a\ngroup of Soviet climbers led by\nEvgeny Abalkov and has been\nclimbed several times since.\nTELEVISED FROM SPACE\u2014Lt. Col. Pavel Popovich smllea\nbroadly soon after going into orbit. The photo was televised\nfrom spaceship Vostok IV to Soviet screens.   (RadiopliotoJ\nVERNON  MILL  BURNS\nVERNON (CP) - Fire of undetermined origin destroyed the\ngang saw plant at Long Lake\nLumber Limited early Thursday.\nPolice could give no reason for\nthe blaze, the second at the mill\nIn three years.\nThe gang mill ran two shifts\ndaily at peak production, and\nemployed 12 men who will be laid\noff temporarily.\nCHURCHES BACK\nGHANA BISHOP\nPARIS (Reuters) - The World\nCouncil of Churches Thursday\nnight asked tlie Ghanaian government to reconsider its decision\nto expel the Anglican bishop of\nAccra, Dr. Reginald Roseveare,\nand withdraw,the visiting permit\nof the Arohibshop of West Africa,\nMost Rev. Cecil Patterson.\nA unanimous resolution said\nthe council's central committee\n\"reaffirms the belief that the true\nwell being of a people requires\nliberty to call public attention to\nmatters affecting the common\ngood and especially that those\nwho hold pastoral office in the\nchurch have the right and duty to\nexpress resopnsible judgment in\nmatters of' religious faith affecting the Ife of society.\"\nThe International Council of\nChristian Churches, meeting in\nAmsterdam, Thursday passed a\nresolution sayings its members\n\"vigorously protest this denial of\nreligious freedom by the Ghana\ngovernment.\"\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nMoney Gift Costs Too Much\nFORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)-A gift of nearly $170,\n000 has boomeranged into a $106,968 debt, a Fort\nWorth woman and her husband said Thursday.\nIn 1955, George Westinghouse, Jr., a 79-year-old\neccentric now in a Canadian mental hospital, went\non a $540,000 cash give-away spree and $169,660 of\nit was handed over to Marie McNally, now Mrs. David\nL. Zips, 42.\nWednesday the United States tax court ruled she\nowed $106,968 in back income taxes on the gift.\nZips, who married his wife shortly after Westing-\nhouse's spree, said most of the money \"just went.\"\nMrs. Zips, in an agreed judgment in 1956 with the\nRoyal Trust Company of British Columbia, returned\nmore than $48,000, Code Edwards, Mrs. Zips' lawyer\nsaid.\nZips, who works at a recreation parlor, said \"it\nfeels pretty bad to owe that much when you don't\nhave anything.\"\nIllilllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiili\niiiail Crime Will Be\nSays Top U.S. Investigator\nU Thant Landlord\nExchange Charges\nToo Many Parties Ruined Suite;\nUN Chief Says No, Calls Him Liar\nAROUND AND AROUND\u2014This map diagram illustrates the\norbits of the two manned Soviet spaceships, Vostok III and\nVostok IV. They were reported within sight of each other.\nUNITED NATIONS (AP) - U\nThant, acting United Nations secretary-general, Thursday accused\nhis landlord of lying about goings-\non in the fashionable eastside\napartment where Thant has lived\nsince 1959.\nWilliam Wholey, who sublet\nthe apartment to Thant, charged\nin court papers that the UN chief\nexecutive permitted guests to\nsleep on the floor. The papers\nalso asserted the place had to\nhe fumigated to get rid of undesirable odors.\nIn a statement, Thant called\nthe allegations absurd and false.\nHe said documents on file in\nNew York Supreme Court would\nrefute the charges, which he described as fabrication.\nThant said he was happy to\nawait the decision of the court\n\"to prove their complete falsity.\"\nThe exchange between Thant\nand Wholey were offshots of a\ncourt action filed by state rent\ncommissioner Robert E. Herman\ncharging Wholey and three other\ndefendants with rent over-charging.\nThe rent administrator filed\n$51,000 suit last spring after\nThant declined to press charges.\nWholey chaims misuse of the\napartment by Thant resulted in\n$6,447 in damages to the furnishings.\nSun Sets On Dance\nNo Saints to Lead\nWork for Money\nCALGARY (CP)-Able-bodied\nwelfare recipients in suburban\nBowness are being asked to report for work Monday.\nThe town office will find jobs\nfor them doing such things as\ncleaning up playground areas.\nThe program is a new venture\nfor the town, whose council decided to put men on the welfare\nrolls to work for their cheques.\n\"This way, we get jobs done\nwe could not ordinarily afford to\nget done and the men who get\nhand-outs won't then, we hope,\nfeel too bad about receiving charity,\" said Coun. J. B. Braun.\nPRISONER SLAIN\nIN PENITENTIARY\nPRINCE ALBERT (CP) \u2014 A\n30-year-old prisoner at Prince Albert penitentiary was found stiib-\nbed to death in his cell during the\nnoon meal period Thursday.\nFred Cummins, penitentiary\nwarden said an officer on guard\nduty found the body of Russell\nMacConneville. No weapon was\nfound. RCMP are investigating.\nCoorner Dr. F. Cenuika called\nan inquest later Thursday.\nMacConneville. a transient originally from Ontario, was serving a two-year sentence for breaking and entering and was scheduled to be released in November.\nSTAND OFF, Alta.. (CPHTime and civilization have\nforced''changes in ancient dances performed at an annual\ntwo-week celebration staged near here by the Blood Indian reserve.\nIndian leaders say it's unlikely the entire series\never will be performed again. A special sun lodge, covered\nwith branches, built for the first time this year since 1943,\nwon't be built again. The intricate dances were staged\nin the lodge.\nThe first dance to go is the\nsun dance performed by members of the Horn Society of the\nBlood Indian tribe. Only two\nelderly men know the intricate\nchants for it.\nOne is Riding-At-The-Door,\nwho performed at this year's\nceremony and the other is blind\nand unable to participate:\nThe dance must be led by an\nextremely saintly woman and\nIndian leaders say few will volunteer.\nAbout 1,000 tribe members\ntook part in the celebrations\nthis year. They ended Wednesday. They were held, as has\nbeen the custom for years, at\nBelly Butes, a wind-swept slope\nabove the Belly River, about 25\nmiles southwest of Lethbridge.\nThe land has never been\nturned by a plow and has been\nthe domain of the mighty Black-\nfoot nation since they drove the\nCrees south. The Blood tribe\nwas assigned to guard the area.\nBecause only two men know\nthe entire series of chants interpretation of the ceremonies\nare confused. Some Indians\nsay the rites used symbols of\nKwakiutl Chief Renewed Indian Culture\nTotem Carver Mungo Martin Dies\nBy TOM WATT\nVICTORIA (CP) - Chief Mungo Martin, who helped breath\nlife into the dying Northwest Indian culture, died here Thursday.\nThe 83-year-old totem carver,\nwhose works stand in many parts\nof North America and in England\ndied following an illness of several weeks.\nHis body will lie in Kwakiutl\nHouse, Thunderbird Park, which\nhe built in 1953, and will be buried at his birthplace of Fort\nRupert, at the northern tip of\nVancouver  Island.\nWhen he was taken seriously\nill last month, he expressed his\nlast wish that he re-visit Fort\nRupert to meet members of his\nKwakiutl Tribe. He confessed to\nhaving been lonely in Victoria\naway from his people.\nI  \"I longed for the smell of the\ntall firs \u2014 to hear again the\ncry of the eagle and the raven,\"\nhe said.\nAmong his own people, Mungo\nwas respected for his artistry and\nknowledge and for his position\nas chief of three clans and one of\nthe three top - ranking chiefs\namong all the Kwakiutl?,\nThe chief had no birth certificate. He figured his age from the\ngreat Seattle fire of 1889, which\nhe saw when he was going with\nhis family to pick hops. He said\nhe was nine or 10 at the time.\nMungo learned the art of totem\ncarving from his step-fatther\n(his father died when he was\nquite young) Charlie James, a\nfamous carver, when he was 18.\nChief Martin loved his indian\nculture and was once described\nas holding in \"gentle, tolerant\nconcept\" members of his race\nwho chose to forego it and live\nas the white man.\nTlie chief's two greatest totems were done in the past 10\nyears.\nHe carved the world's largest\ntotem (127 ft. six inches I in 1956.\nIt now stands in Beacon Hill\nPark in Victoria.\nTwo years later, Mungo carved\na 100-foot Royal Totem Pole for\n\"f have taught him everything\nped to England and erected in\nWindsor Great Park.\nHowever, Chief Mungo Martin's\ntotems were not his only contribution to indian culture. He recorded about 300 sons of his\npeople for the University of British Columbia and for the Provincial Archives.\nThe chief had taught his son\nDavid his craft and had hoped\nthat he would carry on the work.\nHowever, David was drowned in\nChristianity,    others    say\nprayers  were intended for the\nsun god.\nStill others say the sun is an\nenemy and the purpose of the\nceremony is to make the thunderbird release rain.\nThe camp at Belly Buttes in\nmany ways was the personification of the Indian as he once\nwas \u2014 the proud and mighty\nwarrior, master of all as far\nas he could see.\nBraves of more modern times\nsat around the fire and told of\nhow they fought in the Second\nWorld War and how they\ndreamed of the Horn Society\u2014\nthe most powerful group on the\nBlood reserve\u2014when they hid in\nthe trenches while artillery\nburst around them.\nMany said privately they\nwould be glad when the celebrations were over so they could\nreturn to their dust-free homes.\nThose taking part in the\nrituals got time off from work\nand drove to the camp site in\nmodern cars. The chanting,\ndrumming and whistling from\naround the camp fires competed\nwith music from portable radios.\nTo older members the radio\ndid not replace the noise-making\nmedicine pipes, the fasting, the\npraying and the building of the\nsun  lodge.\nUNEMPLOYMENT\na fishing accident in September.\n1959.\nThe grief-stricken chief handed\nover a collection of family masks\nrattles, drums and whistles to\nthe provincial government.\nIn doing this, Mungo defied\nthe tradition he so dearly loved.\nWith the death of his son, Mungo\nshould have burned the masks\nand other items to transport them\nalso to the \"after life.\" But this\nwas not done, \"to me my son\nhas not passed away.\"\nBefore he died, Mungo expressed the hope that the B.C. Government would hire his great-\ngrandson, Tony Hunt, 20, as assistant carver at Thunderbird\nPark.\n\"I have tought him everything\nI know,\" he said.\nChief Mungo Martin lived in\nhope that his knowledge would\nnever die.\nMID-MONTH\nFIGURES\nManhunt Begins in  $1.5 Million Theft,\nLots of Leads But No Suspects\nNEW YORK (AP)-The man\nwho sublet his east-side apartment to U Thant claimed Wednesday the United Nations acting secretary-general held large\nparties and let animals romp\naround the premises, resulting\nin $6,447 in damages to furnishings.\nThe claim was made in court\npapers filed by William Wholey,\nprime tenant of the apartment.\nWholey and the owners \"and operators of the building are de'-\nfendants in a $51,000 suit alleging the UN official had been\novercharged on his rental.\nFor the two years beginning\nJune  1,  Thant's  rent  for  the\napartment was $12,600 a year.\nThis was increased to $14,400 in\nthe I the second lease.\nWholey denied he had overcharged the Burmese diplomat,\nsaying he had himself been\novercharged by the owners,\nwhom Wholey is suing for $23,-\n070 in damages for alleged over-\nchanges.\nAt the same time, he charged\nThant with negligence.\nThis, he said, consisted of\n\"entertaining great numbers of\nguests, at which functions a\ngreat amount of liquor, food\nand tobacco was dropped on\nsaid property, permitting upwards of 20 persons to sleep on\nthe floor and elsewhere on the\npremises, permitting food to be\nthrown about and from the windows of said premises, permitting such undesirable odors to\npermeate the premises that\nthey had to be fumigated, permitting animals to sit and sleep\non and rip, tear and soil said\nfurnishings and to leave droppings on the carpets and floor\nand otherwise permitting said\nfurnishings to be damaged and\ndestroyed.\"\nWholey said Thant had paid\n$1,074 for damages and agreed\nto pay an additional $5,000 over\na 28-month period.\nNo Review for\nSix Sons Now\nIn Prison\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Attorney-\nGeneral Bonner Thursday turned\ndown a request from Sons of\nFreedom Doukhobor leaders for\nreview of the cases of six Freedomites jailed for obstructing\njustice.\n\"Questions of whether or not\nconvictions have been properly\nobtained are subject to appeal in\nsuperior courts and not to this\noffice,\" he said in a telephone\ninterview.\nMembers of the Freedomites'\nfraternal council said in a letter\nto the attorney-general the six\nSons, serving one to two-year\nprison terms, were convicted oh\nthe same kind of evidence rejected by a magistrate when he dismissed conspiracy charges\nagainst 72 council members.\nCouncil spokesman Joe Podivi-\nnikoff said later: \"It's fine for\nhim to tell us to go to court, he's\ngot the people's money to play\nwith.\n\"What does he think we are \u2014\nmillionaires?\"\n\"Is there one kind of justice\nfor people who can hire the best\nlawyers and another for the\npoor?\" .   _\u201e,       ,.. ,,\nJUST MARRIED -\nHAVE 18 KIDS\nSOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -\nA chemist and a nurse have been\nmarried on the University of\nNotre Dame Campus assembling\na merged family of 18.\nThe bridegroom, Dr. Kay A\nYoung, head of the chemistry\ndepartment at King's College,\nWilkes-Barrie, Pa., was a widower with 12 children, three to 19-\nyears old.\nThe bride, Mary A Treacy, 36,\nwas a professor's widow with four\nchildren, six to nine.\n\"I think it's wonderful,\" said\ndaughter Cecilia, 17, one of the\nyoung children who came here\nfor the wedding.\nThe bride said Wednesday she\nexpects the family of 18 to be\n\"a challenge.\"\nBOSTON (P)\u2014Henry B. Montague, 50-year-old chief\nU.S. postal inspector, flew from Washington Thursday to\ntake charge of the widespread hunt for the bandits who\nsnatched $1,551,277 trom a mail truck Tuesday night.\nAnd he made this prediction:\n\"The robbery will be solved.\"\nThe oldest investigating service in the U.S. has a\nreputation to uphold \u2014 a record of 99-per-cent convictions\nfor   crimes   involving   the\nrushed from nearby brushland,\ntook the mail truck men by surprise and forced them to disarm.\nIn the next hour and a half\nthe robbers drove the truck and\nstopped three times to unload\nsealed mail bags that contained\nthe money.\nBROADCAST ALARM\nState police broadcast an alarm for five men and a woman.\nDescriptions were vague. Two\nof the men were known only as\nTony and Buster\u2014names they\nspoke freely in front of their\nprisoners during the operation.\nThe woman, seen in a sedan\nthat apparently followed the\ntruck, was pimply-faced and\nshort hair.\nThe Federal Reserve Bank of\nBoston, to which the money was\nconsigned, revised the loss figure up to $1,551,277 from the\nprevious approximation of $1,-\n500,000. This compared with a\nprevious record haul of $1,219,-\n000 in the Brink's robbery in\nBoston in 1950.\nThe bank disclosed that\nnearly all the money was bills\nof relatively small denomination\u2014ranging from $20 down to\n$1.\nMost of the money, a spokesman added, probably was in\nworn bills and could be passed\neasily.\nIn the entire amount seized\nby the robbers there were only\ntwo $1,000 bills and 120 $100\nbills.\nBernard    Domanski,    45,   of\nCentral  Falls,  R.I.,  A  former\nmember  of  the  Harvey  (Mad\nDog) Bistany gang which once\n$29,000   in   a   post   office\ncrimes\nmails.\nThe huge investigating force,\nincluding state police, Boston\npolice, the FBI and postal inspectors, has lots of leads. But\na spokesman conceded there\nare no actual suspects.\nA round-the-clock check of all\nreports and rumors has brought\nthese results:\nA burned automobile, found\nin Boston, carried in its trunk\ndetour signs, similar to one set\nup by the bandits in their\nsmoothly carried out stickup on\nRoute 3 in Plymouth, on Massachusetts' south shore.\nFIND PRINTS\nA check produced three fingerprints on the trunk of the\ncar, which, police learned, had\nbeen stolen June 12.\nSeveral motorists who were\nforced to make the detour from\nthe Plymouth bypass have\ncome forward and said they\nsaw a man in police uniform\nstanding at the barrier.\nThis led to the theory that\ntwo of the robbers wore police\nuniforms.\nPolice believe the detour sign\nwas set -up after the mail truck\ndrove north of the bypass.\nThe driver, Patrick Schena,\nand his guard, William F. Barrett, reported a man in police\nuniform, signalled them to halt\nwhere the gunmen had two cars\nready as a roadblock.\nOther holdup men, armed\nwith sub - machine - guns, then\nTHE WEATHER\nC\/WADA'S HIGH-LOW\nPrince Albert \t\nLethbridge \t\n76\nNELSON    55\nToronto    -  53  80   .30\nRegina  48\nN. Battleford  51\nCalgary  47\nEdmonton    54\nPenticton   51\nVancouver   68\nSeattle  -  56   75\nLos Angeles  67   80\nSpokane   .59   90\n82\n92\n84\n78\n70\ngot   .\nholdup in New York, was taken\nto   Foxboro   barracks   of   the\nMassachusetts State Police for\nquestioning.\nA postal inspectors' spokesman in Boston said \"as yet he\n(Domanski) is not a suspect as\nsuch.\"\nDomanski was returned to\nWalepole Station Prison as a\nparole violator.\nAden Politician\nRap London Talk\nADEN (Reuters) \u2014 Spokesmen\nfor Aden's two strongest political\nparties Thursday criticized the\nresult of the Aden constitutonal\ntalks in London.\n5 B.C. Babies Born\nDeformed After Drug Used\nSLIGHT INCREASE \u2014 Unemployment in Canada Increased by 7000 to 308,000 at mid-\nJuly. Thc figure, 4.5 per cent\nof the labor force, was 46,000\nless than in July, 1961. Graph\nshows unemployment trend for\n1961 and 1962. Totals Include\nthose on temporary layoff as\nwell as those without jobs and\nseeking work. (CP Newsmap)\nVICTORIA (CP) - At least\nfive B.C. mothers of deformed\nchildren took the drug thalidomide during pregnancy in a 13-\nmonth period ended June 30,\nHealth Minister Eric Martin\nsaid Thursday.\nHe said there is a possibility\nthat the drug was . responsible\nfor the malformation in the\nbaby, but an official of the\nhealth department said \"it is\nalmost impossible to prove.\"\nA departmental investigation\ndating from June 1, 1961, is still\nin progress, the officer said,\nand there could be more conclusive  information  later.\nThere were 22 notices of birth,\nduring the 13 - month period,\nwhich reported congenital malformation of the limbs or ears,\nMr. Martin's statement said.\nOf the five cases where thalidomide  was  taken,  two were\non Vancouver Island and three\non the lower mainland.\nTbe   department   would   not,\nfor reasons of medical ethics,\ndisclose the identities of people\ninvolved, nor the communities\nin which they live.\n\"We decided to be purposely\nvague because it puts the parent\nin a ' very embarrassing position,\" a doctor of the department said.\nAlthough proof is virtually\nimpossible, the investigation\nshowed deformities in the five\ncases to be \"entirely similar to\nthe deformities\" in Europe\nwhere large numbers have been\nreported and attributed to thalidomide, a type of tranquilizing\ndrug.\nMr. Martin said the government has accepted a part in\nFriday's federal-provincial conference in Ottawa to deal with\njoint measures to be taken on\nbehalf of victims.\nDr. G. R. F. Elliot, deputy\nprovincial health officer, and J.\nA Sadler, director of welfare,\nare attanding.\nThe genera! secretary of the\nnewly-formed People's Socialist\nParty, Abdul Alasnag, who also\nleads the Aden Trades Union Congress, commented: \"Our position\nhas not changed. We called a successful general strike on July 23\nin protest at the talks and we\nmean to maintain this policy.\"\nAli Mohammed Luqman, secretary-general of the People's Congress, the small but powerful intellectual party, said: \"Our position is as clear as the fact that\nneither the federal council or the\nlegislative council is representative enough to reach an agreement in this respect,\"\nNO LET UP IN\nWINTER WORKS\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Labor Minister Starr says there will be no\nreduction in cither the government's winter works or vocational and technical school building\nprograms.\nHe made the statement during\na ceremony honoring an Ottawa\nfirm as \"building suply dealer\nof the year\" for having increased\nhome improvement sales by 379\nper cent last winter.\nMr. Starr also said an aggressive \"do it now\" campaign would\nbe undertaken to promote winter\nworks to which the government\ncontributes 50 per cent of labor\ncosts.\nCHILDREN BURNED\nKIPAWA, Que. (CP) - Four\nyoung children were burned to\ndeath Thursday when fire swept\ntheir log home here some 40\nmiles northeast of North Bay,\nOnt.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nWINNIPEG (CPi-A 19-year-old youth, who went through\nthree stop signs at speeds over 100 miles an hour trying to evade\na police cruiser, was lined $100 in provincial court here on a\ncharge ot furious driving.\nAsked why he went through three stop signs, Terrance Wallace told the court:\n\"When I'm driving at 100 miles an hour I keep my eyes on\nthe road.\"\nPERTH (Reuters)\u2014A hotel at Broome, 1600 miles north of\nhere on the edge of western Australia's great sandy desert, Thursday chartered a plane to fly in four kegs of beer to relieve-a\n\"desperate\" beer shortage. Hotel proprietor J. F. Conlan explained\nthat the regular supply ship is not due until Sunday.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Abdul Aziz Al Mouhaffer, described by\npolice as a retired Iraqi diplomat, pleaded guilty Thursday to\nstealing two chickens valued at $3.60 Irom a cenrtal London supermarket. Mouhaffer, whom police said was living in an apartment\nrented tor \u00a3600 ($1812) a year, was fined \u00a37 ($21.15).\n '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 17, 1952\nIntimidation Behind Terrorism\nUnited Church Group Charges\nTRAIL (CP) - A United\nChurch advisory committee on\nDoukhobor affairs has accused\nthe Sons of Freedom Doukhobors of using terrorist tactics\nto intimidate the government,\npublic utility corporations,\nschool boards, orthodox Doukhobors and the general public.\nThe charge is made in an\n\"open statement on Freedomite\nterrorism,\" issued Thursday by\nCASTLE   Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"FIVE GOLDEN HOURS\"\nErnie Kovacs - Cyd Charise\nShows at 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL. B.C.\nLast Time Tonight\n\"WILD IN THE COUNTRY\"\nWith Elvis Presley, Hope Lange\nand Tuesday Weld\nShow Time, 8:40 p.m.\nCoachmen   Car  Club\nCAR WASH\nTONIGHT\n5-8 P.M.\nFairview Safeway Car Lot\n$1.00\nthe Kootenay presbytery of the\nUnited Church. Chairman is\nRev. Rodney M. Booth of Trail.\nThe advisory committee,\nwhich includes several ministers among its membership,\nstates that Freedomites have\nthrown up \"a smoke screen of\ninnocence . . . but our intimate\nexperience with this group\nleaves us convinced that intimidation is indeed the real motive\nbehind Freedomite terrorism.\"\nThe committee's statement\ncomes little more than a week\nafter 70 members of the Sons\nof Freedom fraternal council\nwere freed by magistrate's\ncourt on charges of conspiracy\nlo intimidate the Parliament of\nCanada and the B.C. Legislature.\nThe court refused to commit\nthe Freedomites  for higher\ncourt trial because it said there\nwas insulficient evidence.\n800-WORD STATEMENT\nThe United Church committee\nhere issued an 800-word statement which said acts of nudism, arson, dynamiting and violence\u2014all  of  which hove been\nTRAIL BOY\nDROWNS\nGRAND FORKS (CP) - A four-\nyear-old Trail boy was drowned\nThursday while palying on thc\nshore of Christina Lake.\nJames Decembrini, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Decembrini, failed to respond to 90 minutes of artificial respiration.\nSiaJilJjqhL. drive-in |\nTonight - Saturday\u2014Show Times 8:30\nRegular Admission Prices\n\u2022*yL*\nIt delves Into the\nhungers that lie\ndeep within U3 all!\n(Adult\nEntertainment!\n7:00 - 9:00\nHOSTLER\nattributed to Freedomite Doukhobors for years in the Kootenays of southern Interior B.C.\u2014\n\"cannot be termed religious or\nmoral protests.\"\n\"It is to intimidate the government and the department of\njustice, because of the charge\nlaid against the fraternal council, that the latter has sanctioned the latest frightful\nscorched-earth policy and the\nburning of over 200 Freedomite\nhouses,\" the statement said.\nIt added that this was an attempt to force the government\nto provide shelter and living\nmaintenance for hundreds of\nelderly men and women and\nmothers with children.\nThe committee says attempts\nby the fraternal council to\n\"shift all the blame onto some\nother group who they say are\nthe real Freedomites, is pure\nand simple smoke screen.\"\nWHERE   IS  REFORM?\n\"They call themselves the reformed Doukhobors,\" the statement says, \"but where is the\nreform?\"\nThis was a reference to a\nstatement by the fraternal\ncouncil members in Vancouver\nlast week that they are reformed Doukhobors, separate\nfrom the Sons of Freedom.\nThe committee urged the provincial government to continue\n\"its attempts to bring these\ncriminals to justice.\"\nIt says the church is concerned over rehabilitation of the\n\"Freedomites, displaced by the\nself-burning of their homes in\nseveral Kootenay communities,\nbut added:\n\"Rehabilitation must be preceded by repentance.\n\"Since anything but repentance is being exhibited by the\nFreedomites, there would seem\nto be no alternative but to press\nfor some means of bringing\nthem to justice before the law.\"\nFreedomite spokesman said in\nVancouver the committee's state\nment \"shows those people are not\nsatisfied with the decision of the\ncourts and shows the prejudice\nprevalent in the Kootenays.\n\"It shows why members of our\ncouncil charged with any offence\ncouldn't get fair play in the Kootenays \u2014 anyone accused was\njudged before the trial began,\"\nsaid Freedomite council member Joe Podivinikoff.\nHe said newspapers in Nelson.\nTrail and Vancouver \"worked up\nsuch animosity there was no\nchance for any of our people to\nget an unprejudiced jury.\n\"If our trial had been in the\nKootenays we wouldn't have had\na ahance.\"\nPodivinikoff was referring lo\nthe preliminary hearing on the\nconspiracy charges.\nSeveryn New\nBCAA Head\nA prominent figure in the Nel\nson hockey circles for the past\ndecade, Marsh Severyn has been\nappointed district manager of the\nBritish Columbia Automobile As\nsociation, Kootenay hzea..\nHe succeeds Ernie Gare, who\nhas been named athletic director\nat Notre Dame College for the\ncoming year. The succession took\nplace when Mr. Gare assumed\nhis new duties at the college Aug-\nust 1.\nBorn in Vegre^'ille 30 years ago,\nMr. Severyn first came to Nelson's attention as a defenceman\nfor the senior Nelson Maple laeafs\n10 years ago. He continued to\npatrol the blueline for tlie hockey\nteam each succeeding year.\nPrior to joining the BCAA em\nploy, Mr. Severyn was well known\nin the city insurance field. For\nfour years lie was an insuranc\nageni. for North American Life\nAssurance Co.\nPrior to entering the insurance\nbusiness, he had served four\nyears on the city police force\nDuring this time he was on duty\nat the time of two major calamities, the foombng of the Nelson\nBus Depot and the Strathcona\nHotel Fire. He checked tlie bus\ndepot minutes berore a bomb\nshattered the interior of the building, and was first officer at the\nhotel fire scene where six people\ndied.\nTV\nREPAIRS\nPhone\n352-3355\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St.\nFormerly  Soren's TV\nTheft of Bridge\nTickets Charged\nAppearing before magistrate\nR. S. Nelson in city court Thursday on a charge of theft exceeding $50, Marc Yates Heibey of\nNelson requested adjournment\nuntil this morning. He is charged\nwith stealing 60 weekly bridge\ntoll tickets. No plea was taken.\nResidents of Nelson and District\nFOR 12 YEARS\n0\/ Your Wonderful Patronage\nAs in the past-we pledge ourselves to serve you\nwillingly during store hours and after hours for\nemergency prescriptions.\nYou are invited to visit us and browse around,\nWe will continue to feature Quality, Nationally\nPreferred Products at Competitive Prices.\nOPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. TONIGHT\nNELSON\nPHARMACY  LTD.\n639 Bolter St.\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\nAcross from the Bus Depot\nPhone 352-2313\nPor\nCOAL\nin  Nelson\nDial 352-5018\nAll Popular Brands\nAvailable\nQUEEN  CITY\nFUEL\n524 Railway St., Nelson\nEDEY'S\nCycle\nShop\nFOR\nTHE\nLargest Selection  of\nBICYCLES  and  TRICYCLES\nin the Kootenays\n737 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 352-3245\nMilk Producers Say Price Cut\nMay Kill Industry In District\nPuts Company in Line With\nCompetitors, Farmers Told\nBy RON DARLING\nUnless residents of Nelson and district points are\nprepared to buy more locally-made products the West\nKootenay may lose another industry.\nThis is the consensus of those connected with the\ndairy industry in this area.\nEffective Thursday, Palm Dairies Ltd. of Nelson cut\nprices paid to suppliers by 10 per cent across the board\n\u2014 a cut which means from $1200 to $2500 per year to\nthe dairyman who supplies\nihe company with milk.\nSome dairymen have stated\nemphatically they will go out of\nbusiness because the price they\nare now paid lir their milk\nmakes it no longer financially\nfeasible to continue operations.\nFeed mills lear that cut back\nmay force the dairy farmer to\ngo the way of the Kootenay\npoultry farmer. Poultry farming\nno longer exists on a large scale\nin the West Kootenay as it did\na few years ago, due to increased competition and high cost of\nfeed.\nBecause of the West Kootenay's\ngeograhpic location, transportation costs are high, therefore\nfeed costs are higher than in\nother areas of the province. Most\nareas are not suited to beef\ncattle.\nSTUDY ALTERATIONS\nThe 15 farmers who own about\n480 cows have not yet united\nwith a common aid for a common purpose. Individually they\ntalk of selling out, forming a\nco-operative, or establishing a\nmilk board which would control\nthe price of milk paid to the\nshipper,\nPalm Dairies says a cut in\nprices paid their shippers has\nbeen made because the prices\npaid before were \"unrealistic.\"\nLeon Kelsch, manager of the\nNelson branch, said that the\nprice cut simply \"puts us in\niine with all our competitors.\"\nFor years, he stated. Palm Dairies have been paying higher\nprices to their shippers than other\ndairies in the West Kootenay.\nTypical of the feeling of many\nWest Kootenay dairymen, and\ndairymen in Creston area, are\nthe words of K. S. Edgell of Harrop, \"I'm getting too old to start\nmaking this farm pay on another\nbasis. I don't know what I'll do\nbut I won't stay on here and lose\nmoney. We're going to lose quite\nfew thousand dollars just by\npulling out.\"\nYet another feeling is expressed by Nick Dosenberger of Sunshine Bay. \"My place Is paid\nfor so we'll get by. I'm not going to let Palm push me out.\nIf only the fellows who haven't\ntheir places paid for yet\ncan stick it out; we'll get our\nprices back,\" he said optimistically.\nNO TIME TO SELL\n\"This is the wrong time, economically, to consider selling\nout,\" Dr. C. C. Cunningham said\nwhen asked to comment. He\nemphasized that he was speaking\nas an ex-dairy farmer in the\nFraser Valley, not in his position\nas provincial veterinary inspector for Kootenay.\nDr. Cunningham said lhat as\na former dairy farmer he had\nexperienced a similar problem\nin the Fraser, but that \"these\nthings rectify themselves; they\ncertainly did at the Coast where\nthe effects were on a far greater\nscale.\"\nHe said he knew that it was\nan upsetting period for the farmers who had fought for higher\nprices but that \"this is not the\ntime lo panic and walk out.\"\nThey would be at the mercy of\nthe purchasers if they decided\nto sell their cows, for buyers\nwould name their prices.\nAn official from another company was not available for comment.\nThe notice the farmers received\npointed out that Palm had paid\na price to producers equal to the\nMr. Edgell bought his dairy\nfarm just four years ago.\nHe said he knew of three dairymen in the Creston area who\nclaims they would start shipping\nto another dairy because of thc\nPalm cut.\nMr. Dosenberger, a neighboring\ndairyman, intends to sit tight and\nhope for the prices to come back,\nbut he won't be increasing his\nherd at this time as he had planned.\nHe stated he was happy about\nthe price cut because, he said,\nprice   paid   for   milk   in   other ent that it was going to happen.\nparts of the country, and that at nt that it was going to happen\ntimes the company's price had\nbeen in excess of established producer prices.\nThe company was reducing its\npaying price for milk, effective\nAug. 16 as follows:\nNo. 1, $5.50 per hundredweight\nfor four per cent butterfat; country, $4.70; secondary, $3, and\nsurplus, $2.60.\nThe notice also said that the\ncompany had \"done our utmost\nto pay as much and in some\ncases more for our milk than\nother markets have done, but it\nIs absolutely necessary that we\nset a price for our raw products\nthat will allow us sufficient earnings to compete and to continue\nto sell your products on this\nmarket. You are also aware of\nthe very sizeable amounts of\ncapital our company has spent\nto buy equipment, both in our\nplant and in our delivery trucks,\nwhich has made it possible for\nus to buy your increased production, and by so doing, find markets for your milk produced.\"\nDairymen in the Harrop-Proc-\nter. Trail, Creston and Slocan\nValley areas are affected by the\nprice cut.\nIn way of explanation, No. 1\nmilk is the top quality milk the\nfarmer produces; country milk\nis the same milk but which is\nmarketed in points outside of Nelson and Trail; secondary milk is\na product not as high in quality\nas No. 1; and surplus is the milk\nwhich Palm buys from the farmer over and above his quota.\nEach farmer is given a quota\nof milk to produce and if he\ngoes above his quota the com-\nnany will purchase it from him\nat the lower price.\nINSTALLED TANKS\nRecently many dairymen have\ninstalled bulk milk tanks and\nnew milk houses at an average\ncost of $3000.\nThe dairyman who ship to Palm\nand do not have bulk ianks arc\npaid 20 cents less per hundred\npounds of milk than others. The\ncompany spearheaded the move\nfor farmers to install bulk tanks\nto improve the quality of milk\nsold to the consumer.\nMr. Edgell said in an interview\nhis dairy farm investment is $85,-\n000. During the past three years,\nhe said, he has spent $10,000 in\nimprovements.\nRecently he spent $3200 for a\nbulk tank, over $1200 for a new\nmilkhouse and about $700 for rewiring.\n\"All the money and work has\nbeen wasted now. We're going to\nsell out for sure.\"\nBOARD ANSWER\nMr. Edgell, who owns one of\nIhe top 10 best milk-producing\ncows in the Dominion, feels thai\nestablishing a milk board in the\narea would be the answer to the\nproblem.\n\"But it would take at least a\nyear to get a milk board in here j\nand I can't afford to wait.\"\nHe says he will begin to sell\nhis young stock this Fall in Calgary, Lethbridge or Eraser Valley markets and sell out his entire herd no later than next\nspring.\n'This has brought it to a head,\nnow.\"\nHe feels the reason for the cut\nIs because another dairy company is expected to ship milk to\nTrail and Nelson areas from\nCreston when the Salmo-Creston\ncutoff is completed and Palm is\ngetting prepared to fight a price\nwar.\nOthers expressed the same opinion hut Mr. Kelsch denied that is\nwhat his company is attempting\nto do.\nMr. Dosenberger feels that a\nmilk board will result from tlie\nprice cut. \"But I'm staying with\nit 'til hell freezes over,\" he said.\nBACKWARD STEP\n\"I hate to see it happen. It's a\nstep backward for the whole of\nthe Kootenay district.\"\nM. D. MacKinnon of Proctir\nsaid, \"This has come as quite a\nshock to us. We are not prepared\nto cope witli such a drastic drop\nin price. The price of grain has\ngone up $25 a ton in three years.\nBut I'm sitting tight and see if\nwe can't persuade Palm differently.\"\nHe, too, felt the company was\npreparing for a price war.\nHe also felt that a .milk board\nwill be established.\nSome of the dairymen buy hay\nfrom Lister businessmen and Mr.\nMacKinnon had this to say about\nthe price of hay: \"The men in\nLister haven't raised their prices,\nwhich will help us out a great\ndeal.\"\nThe Major brothers of Procter\noperate on a smaller scale than\nothers on tlie West Arm but also\nfeel they are going to sit tight for\nsome time to see what develops.\n\"The small farmer is being\npushed right out of business,\"\nMrs. Major said.\nC. A. Noakes of Balfour wants\nto stay in the daily business but\nit will depend on what changes\nare made, if any, in the present\nprice setup.\nIf the present price paid by the\ncompany does not increase he\nsaid he will stay in business one\nyear to try it out. If it proves to\nbe not financially feasible he said\nhe will hold an auction sale on his\nproperty to sell his stock.\n\"I'd kind of bate to see the milk\nboard come in because I don't\nlike government control, but maybe that's the only answer,\" Mr.\nNoakes stated.\nHe does not think forming a\nseparate co-operative would be\npractical because of the great\nplant cost involved.\n\"I was really stunned when I\njot the letter. I was looking for\na 20-cent increase when I completed my bulk tank; then I get\na 40 cent  chop.\n\"In the States they give a bonus\nfor those who have a bulk tank.\nHere they cut down the men who\ndidn't have a bulk tank and kept\nthose who did at the same old\nprice.\"\nJUST EXISTING\nOne supplier in Nelson stated:\n\"The cost of feeds and the lack\nof local support of the local pro\nduct has driven Kootenay poultry\nfarmers out of business and I\nthink the same thing is going to\nhappen in the dairy industry.\"\nHe said, \"The farmers have\nbeen just existing. They've been\npaid the lowest average price\nfor their milk in B.C.\n\"The backbone of any community is agriculture and if we\nlose our agriculture the situation\nwill be bad.\"\nHe has suggested that the 15\nfarmers affected by the price cut\ngo to the seven-member Kootenay Valley Co-op on these terms:\nExpand your co-op to let us in\nor we'll form another co-op in\ncompetition with you.\nHe urged Nelson and district\nresidents to \"Be local \u2014 buy\nlocal. Patronize your local industry. If we lose the dairy farming it will practically kill all\nagriculture in the entire district.\"\nOne feedhouse in Nelson has\nalready been eliminated in recent\nyears because there was not the\nvolume of sales. Many farmer's\ninstitutes shipping feed have\n\"fallen by the wayside,\" he\nstated.\nMr. Kelsch said, \"The price we\nhave been paying our shippers is\nabsolutely unrealistic. We have\naveraged 75 cents to $1 more per\nhundredweight than any other\ndairy in the Kootenay. This.has\nenabled our shippers to put in refrigeration on the farms.\n\"We have spent one-quarter\nmillion dollars in our Nelson\nplant in the past three years and\nwe've been doing every bit of\neconomizing we can. The farmer\nmust produce a maximum\namount of milk with a minimum\nnumber of cows.\"\nHe stated that by his company\nreducing the price paid to its\nshippers it \"puts us in line with\nprices paid by aill our competitors.\"\nNOT PRICE WAR\nHe quashed the suggestion\nPalm Dailies were getting prepared to fight a price war. \"Tins\nis not our intention,\" he said. \"We\ndid this to keep the price of milk\nto the consumer at the present\nprice.\"\nHe, too, urged residents of the\nKootenay to support local industry to help rectify the situation.\n\"We ve gone out and gotten\nmarkets for our products as far\naway as Kimberley. This has enabled our farmers to come from\nthe small shippers they were a\nfew years ago. With bigger markets they can now produce\nmore.\"\nThe over-all picture isn't a pretty one. If the dairymen go out of\nbusiness it will hit the feed supply\nhouses hard. Without shippers\nPalm Dairies would be hit drastically. Many thousands of dollars in milk cheques and wages\neach month would become nonexistent. Palm Dairies have undertaken a large expansion of\ntheir Nelson operations and this\nwould be affected too.\nThe economy of the entire district would feel the blow.\nIt appears that the consumer\u2014\nthe householder \u2014 can save the\nKootenay dairy industry by buying local products rather than\nthose brought in from other areas.\nReference to the possibility that\nanother dairy company is expected to ship milk to Trail and Nelson presumably arose from a recent announcement that Purity\nDairy of Lethbridge had purchased City Dairy of Cranbrook. An\nextensive reconstruction program\nis planned for the Cranbrook\nplant, the announcement said.\nPurity has one dairy in Lethbridge and distribution operations\nthroughout southern Alberta and\nsoutheastern B.C. It is owned by\nStanley and Romeo Fabbi, Lethbridge businessmen.\nNew\nSTERADENT\nTABLETS\nOxygen   Denture   Cleaner\nOnly 59e\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613       Nelson\n\\tl*!Q\nTeams  For\nWomen's, Mixed\nand Men's\nBowling Leagues\nNow Forming\nGet Your Entries\nIn Today\nCALL 352-21 IS\nOpen 12 Noon \u25a0 12 Midnight\nNELSON BOWLADROME\nPhone 352-2115\nCall Your Local Dairy for\nDaily Delivery Today\nKOOTENAY\nMILK\nFOUNDATION\nSPECIAL\nHome-Cured\nBACON\nBy-the-Piece\nONLY\nib. 65c\n(Sliced, 79c Lb.)\nAll Fresh  Cut Meats\nat WHOLESALE PRICES\nCITY LOCKER\nPLANT\n611 Front St.        Nelson,\nPHONE 352-5841\nB.C.\nTHE HIGH POWER\nLIGHT WEIGHT CHAIN SAW\nFOR THE\nREALLY TOUGH JOBS\nA powerful chain taw for\ntough jobs ... a light and\neasy to handle chain saw\nfor small chores.\n\u2022 Tougher crankshaft putt\nnew muscle in Ihe heart\nof your engine.\n\u2022 New Micro-Mesh air Alter sheds dirt and sawdust ... is easy to clean\n. . . stays clean longer.\n\u2022 Big power reserve meant\nextra speed to uso on\nheavy wood-cutting jobs.\nSEE THIS HEAVY DUTY\nCHAIN SAW SOON AT\nHOMELITE\nSALES & SERVICE\n432 Stanley St. Nelson\nPh'. 352-5225\nKITCHEN  RENOVATION SALE\nat\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\nSINKS\n2I\"x32\" Double Stainless Steel. Ledge type, substandard\nspecial, wilh basket strainer and chrome- \"J \u25a0\"\u00bb QC\nplated mixing faucet. Complete J li\/J\n20\"x20'4\" Single Bowl Stainless. Ledge type steel sink (substandard special! with basket strainer and\nchrome faucet. Complete\t\n22.95\nPLYWOOD\nTo complete counter top and cupboards. \u00a3  Q C\n4'x8'xV4\" sanded firply. Per panel     . 0\u00bb^3\nARBORITE COUNTER TOPPING\n .39\nPriced from\nper sq. ft.   .\nAlso In Stock . . .\nCHROME MOULDING, ARBORITE EDGE TRIM,\nCONTACT ADHESIVE, CABINET HARDWARE\nTo Complete Your Kitchen Renovation\nColumbia Trading Co.\n901   Front St.\nNelson\n  ,\t\nTeenagers Plan Own Farewell\nJohn Holden to Receive Giant\nSendoff From Grateful Village\nBy CY JACKMAN\nSALMO (NDN Bureau) - A\nmonster farewell party such as\nhas probably never been seen before in this district, is scheduled\nfor tonight at Pine Springs, near\nSalmo, for John Holden, principal\nof the Salmo Junior-Senior High\nSchool, who in a few short years\nin the village has won for himself, by his community efforts,\nthe unofficial but well-earned title\nof \"Mr. Salmo.\"\nTlie party tonight is sponsored\nby the Salmo Branch, Royal Canadian Legion, Salmo Chamber\not Commerce, Salmo Shrine Club\nand Salmo Rotary Club. The four\norganizations will make a single,\nall-inclusive presentation to the\nman who has sparked not only\nthe organizations to which he belonged, but the whole village, and\nnot least the teen-agers in the\njunior-senior high school, most of\nwhom look upon him as something of an idol.\nThe deep-voiced, amiable, almost-always-smiling John Holden\nhas won a place for himself in\nthe hearts of Salmo residents that\nfew men are ever able to achieve\nIn a community.\nThe Salmo Shrine Club long ago\npaid its tribute to this man by\nmaking  him  their  president,   a\nJOHN HOLDEN\nposition not so easily come by as\nthe presidency of other organizations. The Salmo Chamber of\nCommerce this year, and the Canadian Legion branch here, too,\nboth recognized his worth by elevating him to the presidency. Rotary Club members named him\ntheir secretary, apparently making real use of his versatility.\nPine Ridge Club\nHolds Gymkhana\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Second gymkhana of the Pine Ridge Roping\nClub and its ladies' auxiliary\ndrew good entry when it was run\noff at its own grounds near the\noverpass.\nMrs. Cliff Grainger of Fort\nSteele and Mrs. Robert Cleland\nof Cranbrook were in charge of\nthe competitive events' strictly\ngymkhana except for the rodeo\nA NEW SERVICE\nFOR SALMO\nRESIDENTS\nJACKMAN'S\n(Next to Overwaitea)\nhave   been  appointed\nSubscription,\nAdvertising,\nPrinting and\nNews Reporting Agents\nFor The\nSatig Nfutii\nTo have The Daily News\nDelivered by Mail\nor Carrier . . .\nTo Place Display or\nClassified Advertising . . .\nTo Order Quality Printing\nof All Kinds ...\nTo Submit News of Your\nClub or Organization\nActivities . . .\nJust Phone\n357-9344\nOr Drop in to the\nNew Salmo Agency\n(Next to Overwaitea)\nsteer-riding and calf-roping, and\nRobert Cleland was announcer\nexplaining intricacies of the competitions, many of them new to\nthis district.\nIn the pole bending winners\nwere: 11 years and under, Linda\nCockwell, first, Larry Stahl, second; 12 to 14 years, Wayne Cockwell, first, Jean Grainger, second; 15 to 17 years, Gary Hine,\nfirst, Jackie Beller, second; and\nsenior, Toni Stahl.\nBarrel racing: 11 and under,\nHelen Canning first, Larry Stahl\nsecond; 12 to i4, Gary McCardle\nfirst, Jean Grainger second; 15\nto 17 years, Jackie Bller frist,\nCarol Grainger second; senior,\nTone Stahl first, Tom Floer second, and Mrs. Sam Wormington\nthird.\nStake and Barrel: 13 to 17 years\nJackie Beller first, Gary McCardle second, and Lome Grainger\nthird.\nBoys' steer-riding: Dean Chat-\nterson first, Danny Stahl second.\nBoys' steer decorating: Billy\nStill and Danny Stahl lied for\nfirst; Rusty Brewer and Fred\nCanning tied for second.\nCalf-roping: Lister Canning\nfirst, Carl Brewer second.\nCash prizes are awarded in\neach of the three summer gymkhanas, with the third set for the\nfirst week in September. At\nthat time, season trophies will\nbe awarded and presented.\nOne sad thing about tonight's\naffair is that it is \"by invitation\nonly\" and no one under 21 may\nbe admitted. An estimated 125\ninvitations have been issued,\nmainly to members and wives of\nthe four sponsoring organizations,\nbut a few also to other members\nof the community.\nJunior-senior high school students, whose hearts were won by\ntheir principal, are left out of tonight's affair but may have their\nchance later in the month. There\nis a tentative move already under\nway by the teen-agers to give Mr.\nHolden a send-off all their own.\nDuring the dinner tonight and\nafterwards, there will likely be\nan impromptu program of songs\nand music, followed at 9 p.m. by\na dance.\nMr. Holden, who before coming\nto Salmo was on the teaching staff\nat Nelson, will leave here Aug. 28\nfor Kamloops, where he will assume the position of director of\nelementary education.\nFind Drivers\nImpaired, No\nCharge as Yet\nINVERMERE - Ability of the\ntwo drivers involved in a fatal\naccident was impaired, a coroner's jury found when inquiring\ninto the death of Lucien Morris\nDumas.\nDumas died from a fractured\nneck resulting from a collision\nof two motor vehicles, the jury\nfound.\nNo charge has been made yet.\nA coroner's inquiry into the\ndeath of Lester George Conley\nof Golden in a Highway 95 accident found that death was due\nto a fractured neck.\nDifficult Task of Placing\nPoles Accomplished by Air\nCreates Stir\nIn Kinnaird\nKINNAIRD \u2014 An unusual sight\nwas presented by a humming\nbird flitting about flowers in the\ngarden of Mr. and Mrs. 0. Wieg-\nand. Tenth Avenue, recently.\nUsually appearing in shades of\nbronze, green, or blue, this, one\nwas snowy white. The tiny albino\nwas apparently unaware of the\ninterest it had roused as it performed its delicate operations on\nthe flowers.\nKIMBERLEY - A spectacular\nfeat of engineering was completed last weekend for Kootenay\nEnterprises.\nErection of the transmission\nline from Pudding Burn Mountain, connecting the new receiving tower with the existing line\non Highway 95 created many\nproblems. Lack of any access\nroad and steep slopes of the\nmountain made it virtually impossible to use standard pole-\nsetting equipment.\nOkanagan Helicopters Ltd. was\nchosen for the job.\nThis was precision work of the\nhighest order. Helicopters are\noften used for carrying materials to a site, but in this case\nmuch more was required. The\npole had to be transported from\nthe cold deck a considerable distance and dropped into the hole.\nAfter being set by the ground\ncrew and supported by guy poles,\nthe cable was detached, and the\nhelicopter returned for another\npick-up.\nTo accomplish this, ideal weather conditions were required,\nand Ihe closest co-operation by\nair and ground crews was necessary. The steep slope of the\nmountain brought the pilot almost level with his contact man\non the ground, and directions\nwere given both by radio and\nvisual signal. The long slashing\nthrough the mountain forest\nshows the direction the five-mile\nline will  travel.\nThe new receiving tower will\npick up programs from Spokane\nand from CTV, and will carry\nthem by wire to the several\nthousand viewers in Kimberley\nMarysville and Chapman Camp.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMore  District\nNews On Page 5\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTwo Years for\nKEEPS COLD\nOUT!\nSAVES FUEL!\nTWIN SEAL\nINSULATING GLASS\nSave* tn Initial Installation cost.\nEnables you to relax In r.omfoi!\ncloser to your windows, no matter\nhow cold It ii outside.\nLOWES! PRICES!\nBacked by 5-Year Product Warranty\nLOCAL  DEALER\n. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nPhone 156\nNelson, B. C.\ns From\nOil Plants\nCRANBROOK - Archie McMahon, 36, and Sidney Gillis,\nboth Cranbrook residents, were\nsentenced to two years less one\nday in prison when they appeared before Magistrate Richard\nShiell in city court Tuesday.\nThey had pleaded guilty earlier\nto charge of breaking, entering\nand theft of tires and other items\nvalued up to $1000 ten days ago\nfrom the Imperial Oil bulk plant.\nLater they also pleaded guilty to\nbreaking, entering and theft from\nthe nearby Texaco Oil bulk plant\nthe same night, and on this\ncharge they were sentenced to\nsix months concurrent with the\nfirst sentence.\nnds 41 Years\nCRANBROOK\u2014Stepping down\noff the Canadian Pacific Railway easlbound Dayliner passenger service here Monday. .1. L.\nSenter of Lethbridge ended 41\nyears of railroading for the C.\nP. R. and went into retirement.\nFriends at points alerted along\nthe way between Nelson and\nCranbrook had filled the Day-\nliner cabin with flowers and gifts\nby the time it arrived here.\nRailway officials and fellow\nworkers gathered informally to\ncongratulate him and wish him\na happy retirement. Most of his\nrailway service as trainman and\nconductor was out of Lethbridge,\nuntil he was assigned to the Day-\nliner Nelson-Cranbrook trun six\nyears ago. He and Mrs. Senter\nwill continue their Lethbridge\nhome after a trip east to visit\ntheir daughter in Winnipeg and\nson in Toronto.\nHOLD ITI Pilot Jim Grady of Nelson, flying -for\nOkanagan Helicopters, hovers his machine as the\ncrew on the ground place guy poles to hold a power\npole when the cable is released. In charge of the\ncrew at the pick-up cold deck at the bottom of the\nmountain is Chuck Roberts of Nelson.\n\u2014Photo by Charles Wormington.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 17, 1962 \u2014 3\nrei\nOperating Engineers\nSeek Wage Increases\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 At a meeting\nof the Operating Engineers, Local\n115, and the Heavy Construction\nAssociation, Monday night, proposals were made for v\/age increases and improve working\nconditions.\nWage, increases proposed at the\nmeeting were eight cents per hour\nretroactive to June 1, 1962, 10\ncents per hour starting March 1,\n1963, and 10 cents per tour starting March, 1964.\nA change in classification was\nalso proposed. In the present\nagreement wage rates for new\nclassification are subject to negotiations between the association\nand the union. The proposed\nchange provides that if no agreement is reached within 30 days\nof a request Irom either party\nthe matter can be referred to a\ngrievance procedure, in which\nevent a settlement can be obtained from an arbitration hoard.\nA change was also proposed in\nthe transportation and travelling\ntime   agreement.   The   change\nTRAIL MAN IN\nVICTORIA CAR\nCOLLISION\nVICTORIA (CP) - A Victoria\nwoman suffered possible concussion Wednesday night when the\ncar in which she was riding col.\ntided wth a vehcle driven by a\nTrail resident.\nMrs. Barbara Browning was\nhurled to the pavement by the\nimpact of the crash. Driver of the\ncar in which Mrs. Browning was\nriding escaped injury.\nPolice said other car involved\nwas driven toy James Thatcher of\nTrail. He was not injured.\nstates that \"when travel time exceeds 30 minutes a flat rate per\nday or any other arranga^ment\nfor eacih i^mployee may be established at a pre-job conference, if\nrequested by the union.\"\nAnother proposal made stated\n\"if a member is tenminated the\nunion has the right to arbitrate\nHie matter if just cause is not\nshown by the company.\"\nNo progress was made regarding tlie question of a subsistence\nallowance where camps were not\nmaintained.\nA new grievance proposal was\npresented that called for a griev\nance panel to sit in arbitration of\ndisputes.\nThe proposals were signed by\nR. Johnson, R. Tomkinson, and\nA. W. Scott, of aLocal 115 negotiation committee.\nCURRIERS INSURANCE\nAnd\nREAL ESTATE AGENCIES)\nI960 LTD.\nAll Classes of\nGeneral Insurance\nTrail, B.C. Ph. 368-34141\niiilliiilllillliiiiiilllliliiiiiiiiiniiiii\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS Ltd.\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nStationery, Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane St.\nPh. 364-1313     Trail  B.C.\n11 Tl I If Tl III111II r IIITI1111II11E11 111! IM11\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave. Ph. 368-5025\nTRAIL, B.C.\nSAY DAD!\nHow About a\nWATCH\ni Go Back to School With\nMcLACHLAN     S\nJEWELLERS LTD. f\nFor the FINEST in Watches\nWEEKEND\nSPECIALS\nOn  Sale Today  and  Saturday Only\nSHOP EARLY and   SAVE\n%fei&&\\\n1st  Quality\nSeamless Mesh\nNYLONS\nDress sheer. \u2014 Latest Fall colors.\n400 needle, 15 denier. Sizes 8-11.\n45c Pr. 2  Pairs 88$\n\u25a0' An assortment of plain and fancy shorts.\nSizes 8 -14.\nGIRLS7 SHORTS\nd fancy s\nReg. $1.99. Final Clearance QQr\nLadies'\nSUMMER\nSKIRTS\nCotton prints and plains.\nMost sizes available.\nValues to $3.99\nFinal Clearance\n24\"   Motorized\nBAR-B-Q\nComplete with hood and\nspit. Height lever.\nOur Regular Low Price\n14.88\nWoolworth Special\nToday and Sat.\n$11.77\nMEN\nAmmmmmWmm\nGREAT INDUSTRY\nOldest of Britain's staple industries, her wool textile industry is also the world's largest.\nwhen a fella...\nneeds a,\niTANDARD OIL COMPANY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA LIMITED\nfriend\n(we take better care of your car, too)\nChevron Dealers\/Standard Stations\n Attaint Sally -Nruus     | yZT\nEstablished April 22   1SW1 Nelson. B.C. \u00a3\nPubUshed by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266 Bukei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holiduys in the centre ot the Kootenuys with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash.\nC. W. HAMSUEN, Publisher\n\"\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-\u25a0 A. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF  THE CANA HAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE C^ADIAW DAILY NEWPAPER PUHUSHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press oi Heuters in this\npaper and also the local oews published therein.\n~~~l Friday, August 11, 1962\n\"llll'\nIndividual\n'.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin  gv  prances Drake \"\u2022'\"\"\"\"\"\"\"i'*\nKootenays Will Approve\nThe National Energy Board will\nhold a public meeting in Trail next\nmonth to consider an application by\nthe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company for permission to engage in an equi-change of power with\nthe Bonneville Power Administration.\nAn equi-change is a matter of the\nexchange of power. There is no\nmoney involved and the whole bookkeeping involved is a matter of recording the amount of power exchanged. It . is a simple matter of\npeak periods when one party has a\nsurplus of power and the other a\nshortage, and of the surplus power\nbeing used to supply the deficiency.\nThe result is that both parties are\nfrbje to continue to use the maximum\namount of power regardless of their\nown ability \"to produce it. In this case\nlt means that the Cominco will be\nable to rely upon firm power throughout the year to provide for the industrial needs of the Kootenays. Because\nof such an interchange it will be possible for additional generators to be\ninstalled at Waneta, something which\nis not economically feasible without it.\nThe scheme in no way affects the\nproposed Columbia River project and\nwith that development at present undecided it seems a wise thing to have\nthis interchange of power even if the\nColumbia is developed.\nThai, apparently, is the opinion of\nthe provincial government, which is\nstrongly supporting the application.\nIt will be generally supported\nthroughout the Kootenays which area\nstands to benefit greatly by the interchange; whatever the opinion on the\nColumbia proposal may be.\nSmall Busine\n- \u25a0 Small business is an important\nelement in Canada's economy, characteristic of the democratic way of\nlife in which a man is free to make\nchoices and achieve security through\nhis own efforts.\nHistorically, ours has been a. nation of entrepreneurs, independent\nbusiness men who are proud of their\nself-reliance and their ability to accomplish miracles against overwhelming odds. They are marked by\ntheir competitive spirit and their\nsingle-miiidedness of purpose.\nThere are still, in spite of the increasing bigness of industrial operations, a large number of people in\nCanada with that spirit of entrepren-\neurship, people who not only believe\nin and talk about free enterprise but\npractice it by. going into business for\nthemselves.\nSome people, of course, deplore\nthe present status of small business,\nbut reports of its impending demise\nhave been greatly exaggerated. In\nmany sectors of our economy small\nfactories and small businesses hold a\npreferred and stable position.\nWe should disabuse our minds of\nthe idea that a small business is\nmerely a miniature and shabby replica of big business. It is a special\narea, calling for special qualities and\nknowledge. Its strength resides in its\nindividuality. It may not have the\ncapital and buying power and the\nother things that go with size, but il\nis spared the sprawling bureaucracy\nof the big firm, with its piles o( paper\nwork and its horde of filing clerks. A\nman can keep it in his own hands, if\nthey are capable hands.\nThe essence of small business is\nits freedom and its scope for enterprise. Should it come to rely upon\ngovernment for help that is not normally a government function, it loses\nits independence. It is not far-fetched,\nunder such circumstances, to imagine\na day when the entrepreneur would\nhave to seek a government charter\nbefore beginning business, and then\nsubmit to tutelage by a government\nbureau.\nThis freedom, like all other freedoms, entails responsibility and self-\nreliance. The man who starts a small\nstore or a small factory will make use\nof all the aids offered him in the way\nof government and industrial information, but the summing up and the\ndecisions for action are his alone.\nOne of the first things to be done\nis'to make a careful survey of the\npotential market. What is the demand\nfor the item he proposes to make or\nto sell? What is the demand at the\nprice he will charge? Unless the prospect is for a good volume of business\nin the face of competition at a price\nhigh enough to return profit, the outlook is bleak.\nNot only the wants of-people but\nss Successes\ntheir caprices are important. A business man may not approve of people's tastes, but insofar as his product\nis concerned he is ruled by them.\nIf a man feels that he is not getting\na fair share of the potential business\nhe might ask himself: \"Does my product or my store appeal to the sort of\npeople in the price bracket I wish to\nserve?\" Something designed for buyers in the $3000 a year category may\nlack attractiveness for people who\nhave more buying power, while a\nstore design that is attractive to\nwealthy people may frighten away\nthe lower income group. Many a business man runs into initial difficulty\nthrough his failure to aim a specific\nproduct at a specific group of customers.\nBusiness is not an altruistic effort\nto improve people's habits. The word\n\"business\" implies a financial statement upon which the two most important words are \"profit\" and \"loss.\"\nProfit, which is the reward for taking the risks of business, is not a\nguaranteed reward. It is earned only\nby businesses which are successful in\novercoming the risks, some of which\ncan be foreseen, and allowed for by\ngood management while others come\nout of the blue when least expected.\nIt is the outcome of hard work and\neffort, but above all of good judgment.\nAmong the most common risks are\nthese: a competitor may produce a\nbetter product or as good a product\nmore cheaply; buyers may change\ntheir wants; business may change ior\nthe worse; discovery or invention\nmay render both product and capital\ninvestment obsolete; governments\nmay alter tariff rales adversely or\nincrease taxes.\nThese risks apply to all business,\nbut small business is particularly\nvulnerable because it is likely to\nspend some years still unsteady on\nils feet. To give himself the best possible chance of reaching success, the\nsmall business proprietor should\nallow himself ample time to think\nahead on management problems; to\norganize efficiently; to plan adequately; and to relate in their proper\nimportance Ihe operating and financial responsibilities and functions.\nThese principles \u2014 that business\nconsists of production and marketing,\nwith finance as the facilitating agent\nof both \u2014 should be a required part\nof education in primary and secondary schools. There is no need, at\nthat stage, to learn about the complex organization of business or to\ndraw process flow charts, but every\none, as prospective business operator\nor prospective customer, should learn\nthe basic principles of the private enterprise system.\u2014Royal Bank ol Canada Newsletter.\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Saturday, August 18, 1962\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 The elements for success are\nabundant now but some are\nhidden, and the way you seek\nthem out will-greatly decide How\nyou will succeed. Avoid supersensitivity. Ask favors diplomatically.\nInterpreting\nThe News\nBy CARMAN CUMMING\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe new Soviet leap into\nspace comes at a bad psychological moment for the United\nStates.\nPress and public have been\npreoccupied with economic\ntroubles, government scandal,\nlabor and  integration  disputes.\nPresident Kennedy reports\ngloomily that 1,000,000 teenagers are \"out of school and\nout of work\" and says that \"the\nfact of the matter is that theres'\nbeen a slowdown in our\ngrowth . . .\"\nAt such a time it is not pleasant for Americans to learn that\nthey're farther behind in the\nspace race, too.\nAside from the military implications \u2014 which are great-\nAmericans seem to feel the Soviet technological achievement\nposes a threat to their \"way of\nlife.\" They fear that it will lead\nto increased prestige abroad for\nthe Soviet Union and an accompanying decline in the U.S. position.\nMoscow apparently thinks so,\ntoo, saying the twin flights of\nits spacemen demonstrate \"the\nunquestioniible advantages of\nthe socialist ICommunist) system.\"\nThis claim has a false ring,\nparticularly in view of the reports of food shortages in the\nCommunist bloc and in view of\nthe Berlin Wall, a constant reminder that the Communists\nhave had to use force to keep\ntheir own people from leaving.\nThe space flights do demonstrate several things\u2014courage,\nendurance, amazing technical\nability.\nBut they do not demonstrate\nthat lite is any better for the\npeasants of the Ukraine or the\nfactory workers of East Germany.\nADO   NEW  DIMENSION\nThe flights undoubtedly will\nhave an impact on tlie cold war.\nln the words of one British scientist, they add \"a new and\nagonizing dimension lo the\nworld's troubles.\nBut while the U.S. scientists\nrace to catch up, it will be up\nlo the whole Western world to\nkeep the ideological argument\nin perspective\u2014to demonstrate\nthat democracy is capable ot\nmuch more than technical excellence.\nThe final test for communism\nmay be its ability to put meat\nand bread on the tables of its\npeople\u2014and an element of freedom in their lives \u2014 rather\nthan its ability to put men into\nspace.\nFall and winter classes in Civil\nDefence training generally start\nin late September or early October. All classes are free and to\navoid disappointment, interested\nparties should contact their Civil\nDefence Co-ordinator for information.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Restraint required, and care in\nstatements and carrying out\ntasks, to hold down errors and\nhaving to re-do. Preview what\nyou would attempt; don't be\nshort with others.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014If day is free, keep activities in\nline to avoid wasting energies\nfoolishly, Remain realistic even\nwhen those around you are reckless, over-optimistic.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014Venture where a belief is sound\nand data readily available. In the\nlatter connection, you may have\nto search more. If anything is\nworth doing, it usually entails\ncomplexities, but also bigger\nrewards.\nJULY 24 lo AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Begin new, creative work,\ntake up a refreshing diversion,\npractice a skill. Day favors the\narts and sciences to high degree;\nalso companionship, sympathetic\ninterpretations.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Avoid tendencies\ntoward irritability and discouragement. Your bright mind and\nphysical agility should rebel at\nthis. Maintain tranquility.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 ft would be advisable now to spend leisure hours\nwhere you are out of reach of\npeople and temptation to overdo\nthings. Concentrate on activities\nthat are salutary and relaxing.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Leave the status\nquo in all phases of your life unless you are forced to act by\ncircumstances beyond your control. But, even then, act reservedly.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Do not\nallow yourself to become overly\nanxious or impatient now. These\ntraits are the enemies of true\nprogress. Be cautious about taking advice from others. Extremists are about.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Can you improve some facets of everyday\nlife and your career this weekend? It would facilitate matters\nnext week. But don't neglect\nrest, refreshing enjoyment.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n10 (Aquarius) \u2014 Forget annoying situations of the past. Today\nis here for your pleasure; grasp\nit with relish, and mold it to the\nhelnful  pattern.  It can produce.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Be your reserved,\nretiring self. Cogitating, contemplating are surely your privilege, and where properly applied\nthey benefit you immensely.\nYour optimism must overcome\nothers' cynicism.\nYOU BORN TODAY are mag-\nnelic, a witty entertainer, emotional. Leo rules the Heart especially, which gives an idea of Ihe\nrealm to be nurtured, guarded,\ncontrolled. Shun rashness, avoid\nhasty decisions and a tendency\nto haughtiness. You share your\ngoods with others readily, have\ngreat pride in family, and once\ndisciplined, can become an outstanding executive, respected by\nemployes and superiors. Leo\nshould like sports as a pastime,\ndoes savor luxuries. Birthdate of\nMeriwether Lewis, explorer.\nNo Reduction    Bf.Ts sApotligh:\nIn Winter       All Action Has  Reaction\nWorks-Starr   Savs Foundation  Director\nOTTAWA (CP)-Labor Minister Starr said Wednesday there\nwill be no reduction in either\nthe government's winter works\nor vocational and technical\nschool building programs.\nHe made the statement during\na ceremony honoring an Ottawa firm as \"building supply\ndealer of the year\" for having\nincreased home improvement\nsales by 379 per cent last winter.\nMr. Starr also said an aggressive \"do it now\" campaign\nwould be undertaken to promote winter works to whicli the\ngovernment contributes 50 per\ncent of labor costs.\nBy FORBES RIIUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nIn taxation, as in the physical world, every action has a\nreaction, Ronald Robertson, director of the Canadian Tax\nFoundation, comments in an\narticle in the current issue of\nthe \u25a0 Canadian Tax Journal.\n\"The prime example of this,\"\nMr. Robertson adds, \"is the\nsimple truth that the level of\ntaxation depends on the level of\ngovernment expenditures. We\nmortals never seem to be able\nto keep both sides of the equation in mind for any length of\ntime.\"\nThe article is an abbreviated\nversion of a paper presented by\nMr. Robertson to the tax man\nagement course given by\nQueen's University School of\nBusiness in May, and it summarizes a number df objections\nto the present tax structure and\nsuggests some approaches towards solutions.\nMr. Robertson says it now is\nbeing realized that none of the\nlongstanding concepts of equity,\nlaw, accounting, business or\neconomics, as they pertain to\ntaxation, can be accepted uncritically.\n\"We  could  do   better   if  we\nSaskatoon Radio Director Hopes\nTo Open Station In Transcona\nOTTAWA (CP) - Gordon E.\nWalburn, program director of a\nSaskatoon radio station, sought\nWednesday to establish a new\nAM radio station in the Winnipeg suburb of Transcona.\nMr. Walburn made the application before the Board of\nBroadcast Governors on behalf\nof a proposed company backed\nby himself and a group of local\ncitizens.\nHis submission at the public\nhearing was supported by\nTranscona Councillor Nick Slo-\nteck. Mr. Walburn also read\nletters of support from the\nTranscona, North Kildonan and\nSpringfield,  Man.,  councils.\nNo one appeared to oppose\nthe application.\nMr. Walburn, a native of\nWinnipeg who said he has been\nin broadcasting for 18 years,\nnow is program director at\nCKOK  Saskatoon.\nHe said the proposed station,\nwhich would have a power of\n1,000 watts and operate on a\nfrequency of 950 kilocycles, is\ndesigned to give metropolitan\nWinnipeg listeners a further\nchoice of programs.\nWOULD  BE NO. 1\nIt aimed at becoming the No.\n1 quality station, he said. The\npopulation growth of the Winnipeg area required another station dedicated to public service\nof a kind not now provided by\nother stations.\nMr. Walburn said that from\na market point of view it would\nnot interfere with the existing\nWinnipeg market. The station\nwould concentrate on the east\nside of the Red River, which\nhe considered separate from the\nmain Winnipeg market.\nBoard counsel William Pearson noted that the board had\nalready reserved a decision on\nNetherlands Bow\nOut of New Guinea\nBy MAX HARRELSON\nUNITED NATIONS (AP)-A\nbitter 13-year dispute over West\nNew Guinea has been ended by\nan agreement under which The\nNetherlands will bow out of the\nbig island territory it has ruled\nfor 134 years.\nThe western half of the island\nwill be transferred first to a\ntemporary UN administration\nand then will be handed over lo\nIndonesia by next May 1. Its\nfinal disposition will be decided\nby a United Nations-supervised\nplebiscite in 1969.\nIn the agreement signed by\nDutch and Indonesian representatives Wednesday night, the\nNetherlands government gave\nup the last bit of its colonial\nempire in the Far East. Indonesia gained independence in\n1949.\nBoth Indonesian and Dutch\nrepresentatives hailed the\nagreement as a major achievement for U Thant, acting UN\nsecretary-general, and his special envoy, former U.S. diplomat Ellsworth Bunker, who negotiated the settlement.\nYIELDS  TO PRESSURE\nDutch Premier Jan De Quay\ntook a different tack. In a\nradio-television address to the\nDutch people Wednesday night,\nhe said his government had\nyielded because the pressure of\nIndonesian military action\n\"threatened to culminate in a\nreal war\" and because \"The\nNetherlands no longer could\ncount upon its allies for support.\" He obviously referred to\nthe United States.\nUnder the approved peace\nplan, a cease-fire becomes effective at one minute after 8\np.m. EDT Friday.\nA UN administrator, supported by a civilian staff and\nUN military force of at least\nan infantry battalion, will arrive in West New Guinea between Sept. IS and Oct. 1. The\nDutch will start pulling out as\nsoon as the UN administrator\narrives.\nFor the first time in its\nhistory. Thant said, the world\norganization will have temporary executive authority over a\nvast territory.\none application for a new Winnipeg station because of the\nmarket conditions.\nMr. Sloteck said it was hoped\na radio station would help keep\nmore shopping dollars within\nTranscona.\nMr. Walburn said the station\nhoped to have some 58 hours of\n\"live\" coverage a week including 22 hours of news. It planned\nto use local \"live talent,\" put\non recitals of serious music,\npoetry readings, cover local\ndrama, children's programs,\ndocumentaries supplied by the\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation, news on new library books\nand other features.\nBoard Vice-Chairman Carlyle\nAllison asked Mr. Walburn\nwhether he actually could fulfil\nthe 58-hour \"live\" quota. He\nnoted tliat Mr. Walburn's present station in Saskatoon maintained a high \"live\" quota for\nCanadian stations hut in exhibition week this still had been\nonly 45 hours.\nMr. Walburn replied that he\ncertainly believes he can program for the extended period.\nDecision on the application\nwill be announced later.\ncould reach some consensus j\nabout a handful of desirable ob- I\njectives and remove some of;,\nthe folklore inevitably attached!\nto tax questions.\"\nThe Tax Foundation has also\nissued a volume on co-operatives. It contains a new article\nby Prof. R. Craig Mclvor of Mc-\nMaster University on Recent\nGrowth in Canadian Co-operfl-\ntives; a reprint of his 1959 study\nentitled The Post War Taxatfon\nof Canadian Co-operatives; a^nd\npapers on co-operatives presented at the Foundation's 1961\ntax conference.\nLatest technological advances\nin world textile production will\nbe discussed at the Canadian\nTextile Seminar at Queen's University Sept. 5-7, sponsored by\nthe Textile Technical Federation of Canada.\nAs a result of the Common\nMarket, relations between countries on either side of the Atlantic will be intensified, especially those between Canada\nand France, says a booklet issued by the recently-formed Canadian arm of one of the big\nFrench banks.\nThe Canadian subsidiary, with\nheadquarters in Montreal, is So-\nciete Financiere pour le Commerce et l'fndustrie Ltee (Commercial and Industrial Finance\nCo. Ltd.) Its parent firm Is\nBanque Nationale pour le Commerce et l'lndustrie, commonly\nknown as BNCI.\nAims of the Canadian subsidiary, as outlined by the booklet, include: financing and\nworld - wide services of the\nBNCI group for Canadian exporters: support for Canadian\ncompan i e s forming overseas\nbranches or subsidiaries; opening of credit lines overseas;\naids to new French and other\nEuropean companies establishing in Canada; and guidance in\nFrench and European investments.\nTlie BNCI has 1,350 branches\nand agencies, of which 150 are\noutside France. .    .\nF. B. Pearce Writes\nUpper Lake\nTreatment I\nBy ROBERT RICE\nTORONTO (CP)-Freighters\nof Upper Lakes Shipping Limited were delayed and harassed\nin American lake ports after\nthe company broke with the\nSeafarers International Union\nof Canada (Ind.) and signed\nwith a new marine union, the\nNorris inquiry was told Wednesday.\nThomas J.  Houtman,  person-\nFreighters Resent\nn American Ports\nHUBERT\n\\JsSs>\n3*\n ^w>\n\u25a0 V* AAA A\u00a3 'AAA,;:,: ;,*$..,... tmx*\n-J ^ .....    r._ . a- ,:_..._\u2022 a...   iaai;9 ^*-\n1{]i<mWs :\n\u00a9 Kinir Features Syndicate'. Inc., 13(12\n. Waarlll riclits ruferveri.\n\"I gu<3ss his foursome didn't show up.\"\nnel manager for the Toronto-\nbased lake shipping line, told\nthe public inquiry about a series of incidents that stalled Upper Lakes ships in Toledo, Chicago and other lake ports.\nIn sworn testimony, Mr.\nHoutman told about picket\nlines, court injunctions, threats,\nviolence and ship shootings that\nerupted this summer after his\nfirm signed up with the Canadian Maritime Union, a CLC-\naffiliated union that is trying\nto oust the independent SIU\nfrom the lakes.\nMr. Houtman's evidence came\nunder cross-examination by SIU\nlawyers Thursday as the inquiry\nheaded by Mr. Justice T. G. Norris of Vancouver moved into its\nthird day, with all indications\npointing to a long and complex\nseries of hearings.\nCLAIMED  LOCK-OUT\nMr. Houtman testified that\nthe picket lines were instituted\nby the SIU or its allies to hamper Upper Lakes operations.\nPickets carried signs claiming\nthe company had \"locked out\"\nSIU crews and protesting against\nunfair treatment.\nJ. A. Geller, counsel for the\nshipping firm, called the company's telephone operator, Mrs.\nThelma Palmer, to testify about\nmysterious phone calls she received at the offic eearlier in\nthe day.\nMrs. Palmer said the anonymous caller mentioned the SIU\nand made vulgar remarks about\nherself and Upper Lakes President J. D  Leitch.\nMr. Justice Norris told SIU\nchief Hal C. Banks to use his\npowers to end such irresponsible calls \u2014 if the SIU was responsible  for  them.\n\"If he is the strong man that,\nhe is reported to be. then he will\nuse all his efforts to see that,\nthese things don't occur again.\"\nLater, Mr. Justice Norris said\nhis warning applied to all\nparties\u2014to Upper Lakes Shipping Company and the Canadian Labor Congress and its affiliated unions as well.\n\"I am determined to maintain control of this inquiry,\" he\nsaid.\n\"I will oppose with all the\npower I have any attempt to direct threat or indirect pressure\nto   intimidate   parties   or   frus-\ntrade this investigation.\"\nIn this drab and dreary world\nI'm all for beautifying our women\nfolk. No, I didn't say they need\nit. Perish the thought. But you\nknow what I mean. However\ndelightful they may look they\nfeel that they should look different so it is not surprising that\nwigs for women is all the fashion.\nI'm in favor of them but my\nfriend Aloysius says that women\nshould look as the good Lord\nmade them and he invokes the\nact of King James' reign which\nis directed against women,\nwitches and warlocks and those\nwho primp, paint and powder with\nintent to seduce Her Majesty's\nloyal subjects and inveigle them\ninto matrimony. If you saw his\nwife you would understand why\nlie feels that way.\nHe also says that if thc women\nwear wigs why not rubber face\nmasks? This I think is most contemptible but he insists that a\nspecial early morning face for\nwives would be highly desirable.\nHe is entitled to his views if his\nwife will let him have them.\nThe fashion editor of a Coast\npaper lias been to New York and\napparently it was a case of off\nwith the old wig and on with the\nnew. She is highly enthusiastic\nabout them and looking at her\nphotos in the paper she seems\nto have something. This is what\nshe says in her enthusiasm:\n\"Imagine having a sleek, beautifully coiffed head of hair ready\nand waiting to be worn on days\nwhen your own hair is a mess.\nEspecially if something unusual\npops up and you want to look\nyour best.\" Yes, just imagine. It\nwould he a boon to those ladies\nwho go around looking a mess\nin curlers just for one glorious\nhour of night, wouldn't it?\nIt would be rather hard on the\nhusband, though. Fancy coming\nhome at. night and finding that\nyour wife has doffered her own\nwig and now looks like tlie late\nMarilyn Monroe without her|\nother atractions. It would be most\ndisappointing.\nBut why must this fad stop\nwith the ladies? Why shouldn't\nmen wear wigs? Our mayor and\naldermen could be provided with\nwhite wigs which they might\nwear during council meetings to\nprovide an atmosphere of grave\nwisdom. I should like a brown\none for myself to make me look\n20 years younger. My own hair\nis so nondescript.\nThen there are false moustaches. The chief of police should\nhave one, a good big fierce one\nfrom which criminals and terrorists would cower, and what\nabout sideburns and beards? A\nset of these would be admirable\nfor old timers.\nOf course it might be hard on\nwives if their husbands came\nhome with their faces hidden by\nbeards. They might find only too\nlate that they were kissing tlie\nwrong man but there, there art\nalways some risks in life.\nToday\nIn History\nBy  THE   CANADIAN  PRESS\nAug. 17, 1962 . . .\nGold was discovered on\nBonanza Creek in the Klondike 6fi years ago today by\nGeorge Carmack and two\nIndian companions \u2014\n\"Skookum\" Jim and \"Tag-\nish\" Charlie. The 1896 strike\nbrought 30,000 fortune hunters to the almost inaccessible region . of the Yukon\nTerritory in the next few\nyears.\n1936 \u2014 Union Nationale\nswept into power in Quebec,\nwinning 76 seats to the Liberals'  14.\nCape Canaveral   Plans Space\nShip for Journey  to Venus\nCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.\n(API\u2014An intricate Mariner II\nspacecraft is being readied\nhere for a 115-day journey to\nthe vicinity of the planet Venus\nto kick off an extensive U.S.\nprogram of interplanetary exploration.\nThe National Aeronautics and\nSpace Administration reports it\nhas corrected trouble which resulted in failure of the Mariner\nI launching July 22 and is\nready  to  try   again   soon.   The\nlaunching is expected next\nweek.\nA faulty guidance system\nequation caused the Atlas-\nAgena B rocket carrying the\nfirst Mariner to stray off course\nand the range safety officer destroyed the vehicle after about\nfive minutes of flight.\nMariner II has the same mission. It is to cross millions of\nmiles of space and pass within\n1(1,000 miles of Venus early in\nDecember.' As  the 446 - pound\ncraft makes a 30-minute sweep\nacross Venus' sunlit side, sensitive instruments are to measure\nmagnetic fields, radiation, temperatures and other details.\nAfter passing Venus, Mariner\nII is to settle into endless orbit about the sun.\nRussia launched the only previous rocket. It came within 62,-\n000 miles of the planet but provided no data because its radio\nfailed early in flight.\n l\u00b0H5\nGbouL Uul J own.\nPhone 352-3552\nA surprise shower was held, for bride-elect Miss\nDonna Riley at the home of Miss Dianne Bachynski of\nthe Silver King Road when office rjirls from the Department of Highways, wives of the executive and mother of\nIhe guest of honor comprised\nthe guest list of 19.\n\u2022's A gladiolus corsage was presented to the bride-to-be and a\nfedrsage.to her mother, Mrs. J.\ntjiley. Games were enjoyed and\nraSfreshments served by the hos-\n, tegs, assisted by Miss Duane\nBourgeois and Mrs. L. G. Tric-\nkett.\nMr. and Mrs. C. H. Jones, 811\nTenth Street, have had as their\nguest for the past three weeks\nMis.\"' Jones' mother, Mrs. C. V.\nTravis of Brighton, England,\nwho left Wednesday for her\nhome.\nMr. and Mrs. J. M. Skellern,\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Signalman\nMaurice De'Meulenaere arrived\nMonday by plane from Camp\nPetawawa, Ontario, to visit his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nLariviere.\nMr. and Mrs. Ernest Doney,\njr., of Cranbrook, were weekend\nvisitors at the homes of Mrs.\nmother, Mrs. M. E. Aylwin,\nAylwin and Mr. Doney's mother,\nMrs. E. Doney, Sr.\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Bingham\nof New Westminster are holidaying with Mrs. Bingham's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Greer.\nMr. and Mrs. Ron Johnson,\nLynn and David of Calgary spent\na holiday at Valhallah Camp at\nthe head of Slocan Lake. Mr\nJohnson caught a 6(i-pound\nKamloops trout up Wilson Creek.\nMrs. N. F. Brookes and Mrs.\nJ. Taylor were Sunday visitors\nIn Kaslo at the home of Mrs.\nS. M. Smith and at Mirror Lake\nvisited Mrs. Brook's mother, Mi's\nM. E. Crook.\nMrs. Frank Campbell of Calgary is the guest of Miss Beatrice\nBell and brother, William Bell,\nin Rosebery.\nMrs. A. L. Levy returned from\nCalgary via the Roger's Pass\nhighway and Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. S. C. Kenneth\nof Sm Diego, California, are\n(holidaying with Mr. Kennett's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J, Ed\nKenneth and brother, W. P. Ken-\n,Bett, also his brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Thomlinson.\ni Mr. and Mrs. C. L. McKellar\n.returned from Vancouver, where\nthey visited relatives and their\n\u00abon, Brian, who is a patient in\nfea Island Hospital, Richmond,\nj Mr. and Mrs. T. K. Smith and\nfamily of Enderby, B.C., manager of the Bank of Montreal, spent\ntheir holidays here, visiting their\nmany friends.\ni Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bergren and\n' son Douglas returned from Calgary, where they attended the\nwedding of Mr. Bergren's sister,\nMiss Elian Bergen.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Lariviere and\nfamily had as their guests. Mrs.\nLariviere's mother, Mr. and Mrs.\nB. Hawkinson of Hillcrest, Alberta and her niece, Mrs. J.\nClinton and family of Cowley,\nAlta.\nMrs. J. A. Forsythe and three\ndaughters, Misses Mary Phyllis.\nGinny and Dawn, returned home\nfrom Spokane.\n501 Nelson Avenue, have as their\nguests Mrs. Skellern's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. H. T. Winsby of\nVictoria.\nBride-Elect\nFeted At\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Miss Jean\nCliarlwood, bride-elect, was guest\nof honor at a miscellaneous\nshower in the Royal Canadian\nLegion Hall at New Denver.\nHostesses and serviteurs were\nMrs. E. A. Baja, Mrs. W. J.\nWilson, Mrs. H. Lager, Miss\nMary DeRosa, Miss Jeannett\nMcDonaugh, Miss Sonja Alstad\nand Miss Maureen McCrory.\nPianist for the evening was Mrs.\nI. T. Steenhoff.\nBlue and pink streamers, white\nand pink wedding bells and vases\nof gladioli decorated the hall for\nthe occasion and the decorated\ncake was topped with pink rosebuds and flanked by tall white\ntapers in silver holders.\nThe table at which the guest\nof honor was seated was covered\nwith a lace cloth. Beside her sat\nher mother, Mrs. H. Cliarlwood,\nand her grandmother, Mrs. B.\nHawkison of Hillcrest. Alta., and\nthe mother of her fiance, Mrs.\nA. Lariviere, who assisted in unwrapping the many gifts. All received corsages, pinned on them\nby Mrs. J. Draper.\nThe gifts were arranged on a\nlong table in the center of the\nhall.\nA skit was presented by Mrs.\nLager, Miss Alstad and Miss\nDeRosa, wearing forage caps\nand army helmets and reciting\nverses composed from the names\n\"Charlwood\" and \"DeMulen-\naere.\"\nCommunity singing was enjoyed and refreshments were\nserved by the hostesses.\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nFrom Mr. John's custom millinery collection comes\nthis handsome hat silhouette fashion to top the new\nsuits and coats. This new-type sailor is of blue felt,\nwith a high, round crown banded by darker blue silk\ngrosgrain ribbon ending in a perky bow. The full\ndome is balanced by a hand-shaped, molded brim.\nWomen Hold Destiny\nOf Man Tells CWL\nKinnaird Notes\nKINNAIRD\u2014Spending a three-\nweek vacation here are Mr. and\nMrs. Douglas Lindsay and two\nchildren, Pauline aind Roy, of\nGait, Ontario. They motored here\nto visit Mrs. Lindsay's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. P. T. Melville.\nVisitors at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. A. J, Leveridge are Mrs.\nLeveridge's mother, Mrs. R.\nHood, and their nephew, Bobby\nCornish, who came with his\nfather. Herb Cornish, last weekend. All are -from Edmonton.\nHarry Palsson has left by\nplane for a month's vacation in\nKolsda, Sweden. Travelling by\nway of Calgary, Toronto and\nLondon, England, he will be reunited with a brother, sister and\nfriends whom he has not seen in\n38 years. He will visit in Alvros,\nSweden, his birthplace, and expects to return home September\n11,\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nn? 7PM-\n\"SPECIALS\n\u2022  Limited Quantities \u2022  Personal Shopping\nOnly \u2022  No Phone or Mail Orders\n\u2022  On Sale Sharp at 7 p.m.\nReg. value 5.98\u2014ADULT LIFE JACKETS\nGovernment approved. 3   QQ\nTo cleair    S.S J\nReg. Value 3.9ft\u2014CHILD'S LIFE JACKET\nGovernment approved. 45 - 90 lbs. \"J  QQ\nTo clear  <4.3>3'\nReg. value 1.49\u201430' GARDEN HOSE\nVinyl hose, to clear. =7=?\nSpecial  .11\nReg. 2.49\u201450' GARDEN HOSE\nClear plastic. 7\/16 opening. \\   'J'J\nSpecial     I.I I\nReg. values, 2.98, 3.29\u2014BEACH BAGS\nPlastic and straw bags.\nEach \t\nSUBSTANDARD NYLONS\nSeamless mesh, 400 needle nylon stockings. \"\\\nTender beige shade. Sizes 9-11. a*, prs.\nFormerly  2.98\u2014MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS\n28 ONLY. Men's first quality rayon swim trunks.\nSizes 30 .and 32.\t\nBy EDNA BLAKELY\nHALIFAX (CP) - Woman\nhas decided the course of history and the destiny of mankind is hinged on her, Most\nRev. Sebastiano Baggio, apostolic delegate to Canada, told\nmembers of the Catholic Women's League  here Wednesday.\n\"On this theme, the Bible\ntells us . . . more than sticky\nromantic literature or . . . the\npresumptuous psych o 1 o g y of\nour times.\"\nHe said the \"truly great moments of human history\" surrounded Eve and Mary.\n\"It was left to a woman to\ndecide the course of history as\na symbol of despair or hope;\ndoes it not, help us to understand why it is that she always\nholds man suspended between\nsalvaton and ruin, between life\nand death, between happiness\nand agony, between heaven\nand hell,\" he said.\nMrs. Hermon Stevens, a former Calgary alderman, was to\nbe installed today as the\nleague's 22nd president.\nWANT DRUGS TESTED\nDelegates agreed to ask the\nfederal government to delay approval of new drugs until they\nare thoroughly tested. The resolution referred to deaths attributed to birth-control pills\nand pills which have been\nblamed for the malformation of\nbabies' limbs.\nLeague members deplored reported requests for legalized\nabortions for women who took\ndrugs which might cause deformities in the expected child.\n\"Abortion is murder, no matter what the condition of the\nliving fetus may be,\" the resolution said.\nThe league will protest to the\nCBC about \"an increasing tendency   toward   obscene   matter\nand profane language in television produced in Canada.\"\nThe film industry will be\nasked \"to improve the manner\nin which the moral structure of\nour Christian and democratic\nway of life is portrayed by a\nbetter selection of subjects in\nfilms.\"\nOne resolution noted that\n\"more than 2,500,000 copies of\nimported publications dealing\nwith sex, vulgarity and violence\" are sold each month on\nCanadian newstands.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY; AUG. 17, 1962\nLet Bears Have Berries, Find Them\nAt Qrocer's for Today's Recipes\n(Editor's note: Huckleberries are scarce this year, hence,\nsays one expert, the frequent appearance of bears in the back\nyard- It is hard to say how the blueberry crop Is in this district,\nor whether there are any growing. However, there soon will be\nthis year's crop of eastern canned blueberries appearing on the\ngrocers' shelves (at the end of August and early September).\nThere may even be some of last year's shipment left and lt is\npossible also to find frozen blueberries in the frozen foods departments.)\nHere are some more recipes for\nBurton Wl\nMarks 50lh\nAnniversary\nBURTON - Guests from Fauquier to New Denver attended\n! the celebration of Burton Women's Institute's 50th anniversary Saturday, which saw life\nmemberships presented to two\nwomen.\nMrs. A. Johnson and Mrs. R.\nKeffer received the life membership pins for their years of\nservice to the Wl.\nA sunny day outside and a\npleasant atmosphere inside provided by summer flowers in a\ngold motif set the scene for the\nsuccessful event, which was\nattended by 60 visitors and\nmembers.\nThe head table was covered\nwith a linen cloth and centered\nwith a three-tiered cake flanked\nby gold roses.\nA program of singing, dancing\nand other musical selections was\nenjoyed. Tea was served buffet\nstyle.\nblueberry desserts by Margaret\nCarr, cooking columnist. Other\nblueberry (or huckleberry) recipes were printed in the Daily\nNews of August 15.\nBLUEBERRY COFFEE C.UIE\nOne and one-half cups pre-sifted\npastry flour, 2 teaspoons baking\npowder, hi teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons sugar, 3 tablespoons shortening, Va cup blueberries, fresh\nor frozen; 1 egg beaten, .2\/3 cup\nmilk. Confectioner's icing if desired.\nSift together flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Cut or rub\nin shortening. Add well-drained\nberries. Combine egg and milk.\nAdd to flour mixture, stirring only\nuntil flour is moistened. Spread\nin greased 8-inch layer cake pan.\nBake in hot oven (425 deg. F.) 20\nto 25 minutes. Cut in pie-shaped\nwedges to serve. Yield; One flinch coffee cake.\nBLUEBERRY COTTAGE\nPUDDING\nOne package (1 lb. 3-oz.) white\ncake mix, Va cup water, 1 tea.\nspoon grated orange rind, 2 egg\nwhites, Va cup orange juice\nEmpty cake mix into large\nbowl. Add water and grated\norange rind. Blend: then beat 2\nminutes at medium speed of electric mixer or 300 vigorous strokes\nby hand. (Scrape batter from\nbowl and beaters or spoon often)\nAdd egg whites, blend, and beat\n1 minute in mixer or 150 strokes\nby\/hand. Then add orange juice\ngradually and beat 1 minute\nlonger in mixer or 150 strokes by\nhand.\nPour batter into 13 x 9 x 2-inch\npan, which has been lined on bottom with paper. Bake in moder\nate oven (350 deg. F.) 30 to 35\nminutes. Cool. Then cut\nsquares and serve with fresh\nBlueberry Sauce.\nFRESH BLUEBERRY SAUCE\n2    tablespoons    quick-cooking\ntapioca\n2    cup fresh blueberries\nVa cup granulated sugar\nVi cup brown sugar\nDash of salt\nDash of cinnamon\n1V> cups water\n2    teaspoons lemon juice\nCombine quick-cooking tapioca,\nblueberries, sugars, salt, cinna\nmon and water in a saucepan\nCook and stir over medium heat\nuntil mixture comes to a boil.\nAdd lemon juice. Remove from\nheat. Cool 15 minutes; stir. Serve\nwarm. Makes 2'i cups sauce, or\n6 to 8 servings.\nNOTE:    As   with\nBible School Closes With Presentation\ncooking   tapioca   recipes,   this\nsauce thickens on cooling.\nUNCOOKED BLUEBERRY J.\\M\n3   cups  blueberries,  mashed\n5    cups sugar\n1    tbsp. fruit freeze powder\nVi cup lemon juice\n1   pkg. powdered pectin\n1   cup water.\nPrepare or clean and mash\nblueberries. Combine sugar and\nfruit freeze powder, add to blueberries with lemon juice and let\nstand 20 minutes. Cook pectin and\nwater together to the boiling\npoint, then boil hard one minute.\nAdd to blueberry mixture and\nstir two minutes. (Correct timing\nis important). Ladle jam into\nsterilized jars. Cover and let\nstand at room temperature 24\nhours. Cover with a layer of\nparaffin and store in refrigerator\nor freezer. Makes nine 6-ouna\nglasses.\nNOTE: Fruit freeze powder is\navailable at your drug store.\nBLUEBERRY BELLES\n1   cup pre-sifted pastry flour\nVi tsp salt\n% cup brown sugar\nVa cup stortening, soft\nhi teaspoon vanilla\n1    egg\n1    cup rolled oats  (quick or\nold-fashioned, uncooked)\n1\/3 cup blueberries, drained\nHft together flour and salt into\nbowl. Add brown sugar, shortening, vanilla and egg; beat until\nsmooth, about 2 minutes. Blend in\noats, mixing well. Lightly stir in\nblueberries.\nDrop by rounded teaspoonfuls\non to greased cooky sheets. Bake\nin a moderate oven (350 deg. F.)\n10 to 12 minutes. Sprinkle with\ngranulated sugar. Cool about 2\nminutes before removing cookies\nfrom sheet.\nNEW DENVER\u2014A community\nvacation Bible school was held in\nKnox Presbyterian Church in\nNew Denver this month, with 40\nchildren registered to study the\ntheme, \"My Bible and I.\"\nThe teachers were: student\nUnited Church minister P. W.\nMayfield, Mrs. J. A. Greer, the\nMisses Sandra Anderson, Betty\nHeslip, Gerogina Stewart, Alice\nAnn Hope and Beverley Steenhoff.\nMrs. E. R. Hope Was organist\nand Presbyterian minister' Rev.\nEvans helped with the devotional\nperiod when he was able to attend.\nHandicrafts were taught daily\nby Mrs. G. Higgins.\nOn Friday evening a' closing\nprogram was enjoyed by parents\nand friends, with a display of\nhandicraft and performances by\neach class presented.\nRiondel Notes\nRIONDEL \u2014 Recent visitors\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nP. Pasiechnyk have been Mrs.\nPasiechnyk's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Urechko\nand son Johnny of Flin Flon,\nand Mrs. John Luciow and family of Uranium City, Sask., and\nManitoba, also her cousins, Mr.\nMr. and Mrs. Bill Kardos and\nchildren  from Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Muise and\nfamily have returned from a two\nweek vacation spent in the Okanagan centres of Merritt, Penticton, Kamloops and Kelownn\nWhile in Merritt they vacationed\nwith fromer Riondel resident:\",\nMr. and Mrs. W. Finlay.\n\"Save-Your-Hair Day\nSet For Tomorrow\nWINS LEGION\nSCHOLARSHIP\nINVERMERE - Donna Tegart,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen\nTegart of Invermere, has been\nawarded the Canadian Legion\nScholarship.\nDonna, 18, graduated this past\nJune from the David Thompson\nHigh School at InvermCTe. She\nwas valedictorian of her class.\nLast Easter she went to Victoria\nto receive the Girl Guide Gold\nCold award from Lieutenant-Governor George Pearkes.\nThis September Donna will enter the nursing school of the Roya1\nall   quick- Jubilee Hospital at Victoria.\nCutoff Completion\nDate Given Chamber\nCRANBROOK - Hope for completion of the Salmo-Creston cutoff on Highway Number 3, Southern Provincial Highway by late\n1963 was expressed by Hon. P. A.\nGaglardi, minister of highways,\nin a letter to Cranbrook Chamber\nof Commerce answering Chamber queries of mid-July.\nThe queries dealt with inadequacies of the Kootenay Lake\nferry service at that time to deal\nCranbrook Seeks Start\nFinancing Sewer Program\nCRANBROOK - Application\nhas been made by the city to the\nCanadian Imperial Bank of Commerce for credit with reference\nto its ratepayer approved Sewer\nConstruction and Financing Bylaw to spend $302,000 on extension\nand improvement of the system.\nAssistant City Clerk Frank Bertoia reported this to council this\nweek.\nStatutory waiting period is\ncompleted next week, and no action can be started on arranging\nthe finance until then. In the\nmeantime, Associated Engineer-\ning Services, which drew up\nplans and recommendations, have\nsuggested the sewer laterals in\ntlie plan be undertaken by the\ncity works department.\nActual extension and improvement, covering substantial expansion of the lagoon disposal\narea and major trunk line additions and improvements, is aimed at completion next March to\nqualify for federal assistance.\nAnswering a letter query from\nM. G. Klmkhamer, Cranbrook\nAgencies, on behalf of clients,\ncouncil reported transfer of the\ncity dump to a new location about\na mile east of the present Iocs\ntion awaited only legal formalities and completion and registration of the survey. Mr. KUnk-\nhamer was protesting intruson of\ngarbage from the dump northwesterly to a tract proposed by\nhis clients as residential subdivision when the dump is moved.\nTentative proposal by Falkins\nAgencies Ltd. for a 40-unlt apartment located west of Fifth Avenue on an undeveloped residential block was considered further, and council split on the matter. The architect drawings show\n22 three-bedroom and 18 two-bedroom units, and the company asked whether city would consider\neliminating lane in development\nof the two-block area. Decision\nwas made to forward the drawings to Associated Engineering\nServices, together with the comments by city buildng inspector\nJames Gordon, to determine if it\nwas acceptable in the general\ntown-planning program which will\nbe determined by the new Zoning\nBy-law the firm has been asked\nto prepare.\nApplication for a building permit for a duplex residence on a\n50-foot lot on Fifth Street South\nbetween Third and Fifth Avenues\nby R. D. Stevely was examined by\ncouncil and will be recommended\nfor approval by the building in\nspector.\nExtra-municipal water extension to Little Van Home from\nSouth Fourth Street, for which\nR. D. Weitzei applied, was approved at expense of the applicant.\nwith the volume of traffic resulting in long ferry waits, a situation now aleviated by opening of\nthe Rogers Pass.\nMr. Gaglardi said completion\nby late 1963 was contingent on\nfavorable weather for construction season, early spring starts\nand work into fall on the contracts for competion and paving\nwhich he said, had been let.\nThe letter was presented by\nchamber secretary William\nThomson to the August general\nmeeting. Sagging tourist traffic\nsince opening of the Trans-Canada Number One Rogers Pass\nroute was reported on all sides,\nfollowing the July tourist volume\nwhich had district tourist facilities taxed to capacity.\nChamber president Gordon\nLyons and Mrs. Lyons will attend the annual meeting of the\nCanadian Chamber of Commerce\nin  September.\nSgt. Borodulo Takes\nOver in Castlegar\nAs Detachment Head\nCaiSTLEGaUl \u2014 A policeman\nwho left Castlegar 11 years ago\nwhen tlie local RCMP detachment had only two men has returned now tp head the six-man\ndetachment housed in its modem\ntwo-storey brick building.\nSgt. A. Borodula was in Castlegar between 1044 and 1951 and has\nreturned to boss the ocal detach\nment. In the intervening years\nhe has served in the force at Nelson, Trail, Greenwood, Hazelton,\nPrince Rupert and lately. Prince\nGeorge.\nReturning to Castlegar with\nhim, and well remembered in tlie\ncommunity, is his wife, Marion\nand two teen-age daughters, Lor\nane and Penny,\nWhen Sgt. Borodula was last in\nCastlegar the detachment was\nhoused in a small building behind'\na large home near the ferry. The\nhouse and building have since\nbeen taken over by the forestry\ndepartment. ,\nHe has been in the police force\n18 years, starting with the old\nprovincial force.\nActive in first-aid work, Sgt.\nBorodula has received the Cross\nof Jerusalem award from the St\nJohn Ambulance Society for his\nwork in first aid aind in establish\nng first-aid centres.\nAn ardent golfer and curler\nSgt. Borodula described himself\nand his wife as impressed witli\nthe nine-hole Castlegar and District Golf Course.\nFOR BALDING HEADS LIKE THESE, a \"Save-Your-Hair\nDay\" has been announced. As long as you have some hair,\ntrichologist M. D. Harrison says you ha- e an excellent chance\nto grow thicker hair by new methods of home treatment.\nWhat Causes Baldness?\nHow many times have you\nheard men attempt to explain\ntheir loss of hair with one of\nthese remarks:\n\"Oh, baldness runs in my family, so I just have to accept it\"\n. . . or \"Well, it's natural for\na man to lose his hair as he\ngets along in years\" ... or \"If\nyou're going to be bald, you're\ngoing to be bald, and there's nothing you can do about it . . .\"\nSo many men have said such\nthings for so many hundreds of\nyears, these old ideas are still\nwidely believed. But they are not\nsupported by modern knowledge.\nTrue, some few men do inherit a scalp structure that may\npredispose to early baldness. But\nany such tendency can be overcome by proper hair care.\nAs for the excuse of age, it\nis established now that men's\nhair naturally grows faster in\nthe years from 35 to 65. And\ncertainly much can be done to\nstop hair loss, as the careful\nrecords kept by Harrison Hair\nand Scalp Specialists prove.\n\"Actually, the two most common causes of baldness,\" says\nhair expert M. D. Harrison, \"are\nneglect and mistreatment of the\nhair.\nDon't Resign Yourself\nMost men just don't take care\nof their hair. Consequently, they\ndon't get very far along in life\nwithout hair trouble. They become\n'balding' . . . then just plain\nbald.   And   usually   do   nothing\nabout it except perhaps experiment with some hair 'tonics' and\ncure-alls.\"\nThis famous authority urges\nthat you do not resign yourself\nto baldness unless you are already bald. .,\nGet expert help for your hair-\nHarrison Hair and Scalp Specialists help. Go in and talk with\nIhe Harrison expert tomorrow\nduring \"Save-Your-Hair Day.\"\nExpert Answers Your Hair\nQuestions Free\nAs a feature of \"Save-Your\nHair Day\" Harrison Hair and\nScalp Specialists offer a free consultation service.\nAll you have to do is take your\nquestions in person to their suite\nin the Hotel Nelson and let trichologist M. D. Harrison, the\nHarrison expert, give your scalp\na complete examination.\nThese are the questions most\npeople want information about:\n1. How often should you wash\nyour   hair?\n2. Which kind of shampoo is\nbest for you?\n3. Is brushing necessary?\n4. What   about   dry   or   oily\nscalp?\n5. Are \"tonics helpful?\n6. When is dandruff dangerous\nto hair growth?\n7. Can your hair be thickened?\n8. What are home treatments\nlike?\nTake this list with you tomorrow to see Harrison Hair and\nScalp Specialists.\nCHECK YOURSELF HERE AND NOW\nCan't decide whether your\nhair needs expert attention?\nGenerally, if you're concerned about your hair, you\nhave good reason to be.\nCheck this list of signs that\npoint to a hairless future:\nQ Have noticeable dandruff?\nO Scalp hard, tight?\n\u25a1 Scalp itchy or irritated?\nO Hair dry or greasy?\n\u25a1 Lose much hair in washing?\n\u25a1 Getting \"highbrow\"?\n\u25a1 Lose much hair in combing?\nO Thin spot on crown?\nIf you've checked ONE of\nthese conditions, you should\nsee that Harrison Hair and\nScalp Specialists on \"Save-\nYour-Hair Day.\"\nScalp Specialist Here\nTo Demonstrate New\nHome Treatment\nNow is the time to carry out\nthat long-delayed resolution to\n\"do something about your hair.\"\nFor tomorrow, Saturday, August 18 is \"Save-Your-Hair Day\"\nin Nelson. The event is sponsored\nby Harrison Hair and Scalp Specialists, largest organization of its\nkind in the Dominion, They have\nsent trichologist M. D. Harrison\nhere to personally examine hair-\nworried men and women from 1\np.m. to 8 p.m. tomorrow at the\nHotel Nelson.\nThe Harrison program for preventing baldness by home treatment is explained by director M.\nD. Harrison this way:\n\"Almost two million Canadian\nmen are already bald or soon\nwill be. How many women are\nbald, no one can estimate. Certainly all of these men and women regret their condition.\nCan Prevent Baldness\n\"The shocking truth is that\nmy.t of these bald people need\nnot have lost their hair; Although\nbaldness can nqt.be 'cured', it\ncan most certainly be prevented.\nOur Harrison trichologists have\ndeveloped methods of self-administered home treatment that are\nsuccessful 95% of the time.\"\nThis dynamic young hair expert, whose main office is in Vancouver, has personally worked on\nthe hair problems of thousands\nof men and women for 17 years.\nBut he still can't understand why\najmost everybody postpones getting specialized help for their\nhair.\nDon't Put It Off\n\"Your hair is in better condi-.\ntion today than it will be next\nmonth or even next week. That's\nwhy we urge you to see the Harrison trichologist before further\ndamage is done. Find out tomorrow about our new home treatment methods for saving your\nhair,\n\"Then you won't wake up a\nfew years from now to find yourself bald\u2014and painfully aware\nthat you need not have been.\"'\nM. D. Harrison, sponsor of\n\"Save - Your\nHair Da y,\"\nhas w o r k ed\nwith thousands\nof hair-worried\nmen and women for 17\nyears.\nHere's how to get your free\nscalp examination on \"Save-\nYour-Hair Day\":\nCall at the Hotel Nelson tomorrow and ask Ior the suite number of trichologist M. D. Harrison of Harrison Hair and Scalp\nSpecialists. Any time between 1\nand 8 p.m. He does not make\nappointments so come in at your\nconvenience.\nGet the Facts\nIf your condition is hopeless,\nhe'll tell you so frankly. He does\nnot accept cases involving systemic or organic disease. Such\ncases should be treated by a phy\nsician.\nOtherwise, he'll tell you what's\nwrong with your hair and scalp,\nwhat you should do about it, how\nlittle of your time and money\nwill be required to put your scalp\nin condition to grow healthy hair\nagain.\nFree Examination -\nHarrison emphasized that his\ntreatment is neither \"mail-order\"\nnor \"cure-all\". Different scalp\nconditions require different procedures. \"For that reason,\" he\nsaid, \"we do not ever recom:\nmend a treatment without first\nmaking a persona! scalp exam;\nination.\n\"For the same reason, we have\none of our experts recheck your\nhair and scalp condition at regu.\n!ar intervals.\"\n \u25a0\u2014;\t\n6\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 17, 1962\n(tfh&JUL, to $o . . . (x)kaL io (Do . . . J>&l SummsUt J>wl\nESCAPE FROM PRISON\nCARACAS, Venezuela (API-\nFour army officers have escaped from a prison in Caracas where they were awaiting\nsentence for a revolt, authorities said Wednesday. The officers were said to have tricked\ntheir guards and fled in two\nwaiting automobiles last Sunday.\nPhone 352-3552  for  Classified\nSilver King\nBeverages\nNelson - Phone 352-6737\nIN TRAIL\u2014\nSnappy Service\nPhone 368-5353\nIN  CRANBROOK\u2014\nNational Fruit\nPhone JU-6-2251\nFishing Healthful,\nRelaxing Recreation\nAngling has become one W\nCanada's great outdoor recreations. This has not been brought\nabout just because people want\nto eat fish.\ngo fishing because it is\nand relaxing. It gives\nopportunity to get away\nconflicts and worries of\nlife. Besides the fun of\nthere is sunshine and\ntrees and wild flowers,\nstreams  and  beautiful\nPeople\nhealthful\nthem an\nfrom the\nI everyday\nfishing,\nfresh air\nrippling\nlakes.\nAll angling, in one way or another, is dependent upon our forests. There are lakes and some\nstreams without trees but somewhere along the watershed the\nforests are storing and gradually\nreleasing cold, clear water to the\nfeeder creeks and streams, The\nquality of all streams is determined by the condition of the\nwatershed.\nTemperature is the most important factor in the environment\nfor fish. For instance, brook\n[trout will thrive in wat.r with a\n! temperature of 66 degrees F.\n' and die when the temperature\n'reaches 78 degrees F. Trees and\nthe forest floor help regulate the\nflow and tempertaure of streams.\nWhen this cover is removed by\nfires or unwise forest management, it has a disastrous effect\nupon  fish.\nFlash floods and soil erosion\ndestroy spawning beds. The\naquatic plant and animal growth\nis destroyed. Muddy or heavily\nsilted water excludes sunlight and\nprevents growth of all living\nthings. When the temperature of\nwater rises, the oxygen content,\non which the fish live, decreases\nand in some cases is destroyed\nentirely. For these reasons, forests are essential to fish.\nd'Oyly Company Meets\nJust Another Crisis\nii\nFISH DERBY\nOne Day Only\nSunday, Aug. 19\n12:01 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nTickets $1.00 Each\nOn Sale at Most Stores and Marinas\non Kootenay Lake\nPrizes for Heaviest Fish:\n1st\u2014Complete Camping Outfit\n2nd\u20148 mm. Kodak Movie Camera\n3rd-Mitchell Fishing Reel\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) -\nD'Oyly Carte company, It was\njust another crisis met and\nmastered.\nIt happened Monday, at the\nstart of the Gilbert and Sullivan troupe's first American\ntour in seven years. Just as\nthe company was beginning its\nfinal lighting rehearsal for the\nevening's opening at Pasadena\nCivic Auditorium, an underground cable exploded, cutting\noff electricity in downtown Pasadena.\nAfter a two-hour delay, rehearsal continued with emergency gear. The Mikado was\npresented on time that night,\nwith the same brilliance and\nprecision with which the company has done it since the premier  in 1885.\nSuch conquest of crisis was\nroutine for the D'Oyly Carte\ncompany, which has survived\nstorms, blitz and the changes\nof fashions for nearly 80 years.\nIt had until recently a British\nmonopoly on Gilbert and Sullivan, a monopoly that did not\nextend, however, to the United\nStates.\nA performance by the company is a rare experience. You\nget the feeling of tradition, as if\nthe show were being presented\nprecisely as Sir William Gilbert\nand Sir Arthur Sullivan desired\nit. Yet the entertainment values are up to date.\nThe Mikado was handsomely\nmounted and beautifully sung,\nwith Thomas Round's Nanki-\nPoo and Donald Adams' Mikado\nthe standouts. John Reed,\nhailed as a successor for Martyn Green, is an athletic and\nresourceful Ko-Ko.\nBetween the acts. I chatted\nwith Bruce Worsley, manager\nof Hie tour and well cast for his\nrole as guardian of the tradition-laden company.\n\"I suppose the D'Oyly carte\nis the longest-running of all\ntheatrical companies,\" he observed. \"It has been going continuously since 1884\u201448 weeks\na year with four weeks off for\na holiday.\ny ^EVERYBODY'S- b,\nCboating^\ni^n^ABy Fnink Kuchirchuk, Central Press Writer\u2014--\nHow to Treat\nFish (aught\nIn Hot Spell\nThe best way to handle fish\nas they are caught in hot weather is to break the neck and bleed\nit. Then slit the belly and remove\nthe entrails. i\nDo not wash in water but wipe\nthe fish with a cloth or paper.!\nWipe out the thick blood along i\nIhe spine as this and the gills are\nIhe first points where decay sets\nin.\nIf the fish is to retain its head, |\nremove the gills and eyes. Place\nfish in the sun and permit it to\ndry off inside and out. When dried\nivrap the fish in a number of\nthicknesses of newspaper, folding the paper ends over so the\nair is shut out.\nWrap only one fish by Itself,\nnever two together in contact.\nThis is important. Tie each wrapping with string and place in a\nbasket or dry sack. See that it\nis kept dry.\nIf fairly large fish, up to several pounds, are to be wraped\ncut the rib bones in two long slits\nalong the spine, one on either\nside of the backbone. Into these\nslits pour salt. Wrapped as stated\nthis salted fish can be sent clear\nacross the country.\nWipe dry but do not wash\nWater destroys the protective\nfilm, If the fish is dry when wrapped and no air gets to it, your\nfish is safe.\n2*>*^\nTHE SECRET of staying alive when an emergency arises Is\nknowing what to do and what not to do. This can be\naccomplished only by not panicking, for panic causes irrational\naction. Inexperience or lack of knowledge causes panic.\nIf a boat Is overturned suddenly instinct produces action for\nsurvival. If tha individual has learned the rulea of safety and\nIs a good swimmer, his likelihood of living through the experience is excellent. On the other hand, the inexperienced will\nlose his head and subsequently his life. If you should become\nInvolved in an overturned boat, the American Red Cross suggests the first and most important rule is to stay with the boat.\nThere Is hardly a small boa.t in existance that will sink, even\nIf overturned.\nIf .you're with someone, extend the arms over widest part of\nthe boat so you can hold on to your friend's wrists. Alternate\non the wrist holding. Retrieve and don a life preserver or\nbuoyant seat cushion sind caill for help. NEVER attempt to\nswim toward shore.\nIf you're in a boat about to rescue someone floundering In\nthe water, approach the scene slowly, then cut off your engine.\nPrevent as much wake as possible, for this can drown the\nvictim. Extend a boat hook or life preserver, but, above all,\ndo not get Into the water yourself.\nToo Cramped to Camp?\nOutboard Rig the Answer\n'si\n1 \u2022'\u25a0'.\u25a0?.\u2022\nKnowing Your Motor\nCan Save Irritation\nHELICOPTER SERVICE\nmmmmm\nHELICOPTERS\nBASED\nIN\nNELSON\nREVELSTOKE       CRANBROOK\nPIPER SUPER CUB\nFIXED WING AIRCRAFT\nON FLOATS BASED IN NELSON\n-\u25a0x^wa^i -tm-^m\u2014\u2014.\u00ab-\u00ab\nOKANAGAN HELICOPTERS LTD.\na NELSON 352-5411\nDOUG  HARTNELL\nJIM GRADY\nor drop in to our Office of the Nelson Airport\nWhen an outboard motor is used\ncontinually, minor mechanical\ndifficulties may arise which cause\nmore irritation to tlie owner than\ndamage to the machine. A lot of\nthis irritation can be spared if\nthe proper procedures in taking\nremedial action are known.\nFor instance, if the outboard\nwill not start, there are several\nthings to be checked. First, the\nfuel connection should be properly made. Check to see that the\nfuel line is not pinched. The fuel\nfilter may be obstructed, or there\nmay be water in the fuel system.\nIn starting a cold engine it's a\ngood rule to extend the choke\nfully while cranking, until the engine fires. A warm motor, however, might easily become over-\nchoked and flooded.\nIf the motor will not idle properly, it's likely that it either has\ndefective spark plugs, an improper fuel mixture, or the carburetor is improperly set for slow\nare weeds or other foreign material on the propeller or gearcase.\nExcessive vibration may result\ntoo from improper carburetor adjustment.\nKnowledge of these simple remedies is a quick and easy insurance against, minor irritations\nwhich can take a lot of the pleasure out of a pleasant pastime.\nThat camping has caught on\nduring the last few years, be-\ncomes quite evident to the Individual who takes a drive through\nprovincial and national parks\nwhere camping Is permitted. In\nfact, it's now so popular that finding a place to pitch a tent or set\nup a camp trailer in these parks\nis often next to impossible. Still\nhowever, there is plenty of room\nto stretch out and enjoy some\nreal camping says the Outboard\nMarine Boating Clinic, if a boat\nis included in the plans.\nThe outboard rig is a natural\nfor camping, right from the time\nof loading bulky tents and equipment into the boat before leaving\nhome. It provides a convenient\ncarry-all for equipment while\nmaking (he trip; a way to search\nout. and select that perfect sport\nand the nucleus of your fun once\nthe camp is set up.\nEASY WITII BOAT\nFor real camping enjoyment,\nthere's nothing like getting away\nfrom the congested public sites\nand finding that special place.\nThis is easy to do with a boat. Upon arrival at the waterway of\nyour choice, put the boat in the\nwater, park the car and forget\nabout It. With camping gear tucked neatly under the deck, cruise\nfhe shoreline to locate that perfect, spot. Ideally, it should be a\nplace far enough away from the\ncrowded confusion of a public\ncamp area but close enough to\nthe conveniences of a grocery\nstore; fresh drinking water and\nfuel for the motor and camping\nequipment. Usually these provisions are available at water front\nlocations and it's a simple matter\nto make a short boat run every\nday to get them.\nCamping is a family affair and\neveryone should have a part in it.\nWhile Dad and the kids pitch the\ntent and tidy the camp site, Mom\ncan start thinking about prepar-\n! ing the first, meal. An open camp\nfire is fine for roasting wienies\nand as a gathering place for an\nevening song (est, but for cooking\nmeals, a portable camp stove is I ploring especially if the camp site\nmore practical. A gas lantern or is set up on a river or on one of a\ntwo  will  provide  all  the  light [chain of connected lakes. And to\nneeded.\nThe boat, of course, will play\nthe biggest part in making the\ntrip a success. Camping itself\ncan soon get to be \"old stuff\";\nbut with a boat along, the situation is quite different for there\nis always something to do. With\nthe boat in the water ready to go\nat all times, no time is wasted in\ngetting ready to go after the big\nones as the sun begins to peek\nover the horizon.\nEXPLORING FUN\nA mid-morning ride on the\nwater skis will be a refreshing\nbreak for the whole family. Or\nperhaps a swim, with the boat\nfilling in nicely as a raft will have\nappeal. Afternoon is a time to be\nlazy. It's the time to gas up the\nboat and set out for a little ex-\nset the day off, there are the\nevening hours when the cooling\nwater takes on the appearance of\npolished glass. Nothing is as relaxing as crusing at this time to\nthe quiet hum of an outboard motor as it pushes your boat silently\nacross the water.\nWhether looking for a pleasant\nway to spend a week end or an\nentire vacation, give boat camping a try. It is hard to find a better way to get a more profitable\nreturn on the recreational dollar.\nJust Good Food .. .\n\u2022 PAN-FRIED CHICKEN\n\u2022 SEA FOODS\n\u2022 CHOICE STEAKS\nThe Skylark\nRESTAURANT and\nCOCKTAIL LOUNGE\nW. 518 Sprague Ave.\nFI1EE\n2-Hr.: Parking at City Ramp\nNasookin Craft Shop\nFREE MUSEUM\nLocal  Hand-Made Souvenirs\nROCK HOUNDS\nESPECIALLY   WELCOMED\n2 Miles From Nelson On the\nNorth Shore\nSKI   VIEW\nDRIVE-IN\nHAMBURGERS\nCHICKEN 'N' CHIPS\nSANDWICHES - DRINKS\n(All Kinds)\nJust Outside City Limits\nSouth on Highway 3A-6\nPhone 352-2161\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 $7.50\nCanadian Currency\nACCEPTED AT PAR\non Room Rent\nPNE Opens 52nd Season\nIn Vancouver Saturday\nH the motor loses power at high\nspeeds, this condition also could\nbe ascribed to defective spark\nplugs. Alternatively, the fuel system could be partially restricted,\nor the fuel contaminated The\nhigh speed carburetor adjustment may be improperly set, or\nperhaps tlie cooling system is not\noperating properly and the motor\nis running excessively hot. To\ncheck the cooling system, look to\nsee if water is being discharged\nfrom the water outlet.\nFor excessive vibration, check\nto see whether the propeller is\nbent or broken, or whether there\nWorld Briefs\nDIE IN AVALANCHE\nBOGOTA, Colombia <AP> -\nAn avalanche near Ipiales on\nthe Ecuadorian border killed 10\nperson, authorities reported today. Tlie group was on a pilgrimage to a religious shrine\nwhen the landslide killed them.\nCLASH WITH POLICE\nBANGKOK. Thailand (AP1-\nA band of 50 opium smugglers\nfrom Burma shot it out with\nThai border police in northern\nThailand and freed three of\ntheir comrades captured in an\nearlier encounter, press reports\nsaid today.\nANNOUNCER DIES\nNEW YORK (AP) - Ford\nBond. 57, former radio announcer and onetime radio and\ntelevision producer, died Wednesday in St. Croix, Virgin Islands. Bond began his radio\ncareer in 1922.\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nVANCOUVER (CPl-The Pacific National Exhibition, Canada's second largest annual\nfair, kicks off its 52nd season\nhere Saturday, still charging\nthe same 50-cent admission\nprice that it did when the first\none was held in 1910.\nIts theme is one of Canadiana, timed to catch the thousands of United States visitors\nin the area as a result of the\nworld's Fair in Seattle.\nThe U.S. influx is expected to\nhelp give the 14-d.iy PNE its\nfirst 1,000.000 attendance-it hit.\n941.000 last year and 963,000 in\n1960 in its two best years so\nfar.\n\"This is the people's show,\"\nsaid PNE President Thomas R.\nFyfe on the eve of the opening.\nHe was explaining why the\ngate-admission fee here has remained the same while most\nother prices have gone up, including the tab at Canada's\nbiggest annual fair, the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto which now charges 75\ncents at the gate.\nEASY ON FAMILIES\n\"We've always felt that 50\ncents is a nice round figure and\nthat by holding our admission\nto that, a chap with his wife\nand kids can get into the\ngrounds for a cOuple of bucks.\n(The kids get in for 25 cents if\nthey're between six and 12\nyears, free if younger.)\n\"We're a civic organizatin\nand we're not here to make\nmillions.\"\nMr. Fyfe and other PNE directors have extended the \"Canadian Cavalcade\" flavor\nright to the food being sold on\nthe grounds.\nNative B.C. Indians will bake\nsalmon over outdoor fires for\nsale to the publie. Buffalo meat,\nfrom the annual slauehter of\nbuffalo in the Wood Buffalo National Park of northern Alberta,\nwill be sold in buffalo-burgers\nand for the adventuresome,\nwhale meat will be sold.\nOne   of   Canada's   best-known\nNORTH   SHORE\nSERVICE\nGos - Oil -- Repairs\nICE\nj attractions\u2014the RCMP musical\n: ride\u2014has been obtained to head\n| line the PNE's first grandstand\nshow, another event where the\nadmission price is 50 cents.\nTheme exhibit on the 170-acre |^._^\ngrounds in east end Vancouver\nis a model of an old-time log-\nwalled fort, and there on Saturday night Joseph E. Gandy',\npresident of the Seattle World's\nFair, will declare the PNE officially open.\nLOT OF CATTLE\nThe exhibition has drawn a\nrecord livestock entry of more\nthan 2,000 animals, including\nmore than 200 prize - winning\nAyrshire cattle from as far\naway as Manitoba to compete\nin the national Ayrshire show.\nThe Italian and Japanese governments have hecome the first\ngovernments ever to hire space\nat the PNE for commercial and\nindustrial exhibits, generally obtained by private industries only in the past.\nFor the Traveller\nQofowaL\nMoid\nIN TO MI-ART OV\nDOWNTOWN SHOPPING\nSENSIBLE  RATES\nPhone   Riverside  7-9494\n12415 North Post\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nYour Hosts\nSally and Rich Van Dom\nNOW OPEN\nFrom\n7 a.m. to 11  p.m.\n\"We Specialize in the\nFINEST   HOME-COOKED\nMEALS\"\nTreat Her at\nHI-WAY  CAFE\nEsther aud Joe Niehaus\nNorth End of\nNew Nelson Bridge\nRough n Ready\nCAMP GROUND\nPropone Gas  Cooking\nFireplaces\nLarge Community\nFireplace\nShower Bath\nLaundry Facilities\nWaterfalls\nFree Train to\nAll Campers\nSee the City and the\nValley\nI\nOne Rate\nAll\nEAST SPOKANE\nCovers\nn DISHMAN\nWrite Eastwood Motel for Free Folder\n5502 E. Sprague Ave., Spokane, Wash.\nVISIT . . . ENJOY . . . HAVE FUN\nNAT. PARK\nSpokamL\n3200 West Boone Avenue\ndUdu ihsL ...\n\u2022 Jack Rabbit Roller Coaster\n\u2022 Scooter Cars    \u2022  Octopus\n\u2022 Rocket Ship\n\u2022  Merry-Go-Round\nOuJL Iha. . . .\n\u2022  Nut House   \u2022  Free Zoo\nFREE PARKING\nPICNIC  TABLES\nChildren  10c\n(Under 12\n \u2014\n1\n\u2022\na___\nwm\nWakeham Reaches Semis\nIn Canada Amateur Golf\nLONDON, Ont. <CP>\u2014Young\nBill Wakeham of Victoria refused to be beaten In the Canadian amateur golf championships Thursday chalking up two\nvictories to earn a berth in the\nsemi-finals.\nWakeham was the lone BritlFh\nColumbian to reach the fours winning one up over Tommy Wood-\nall of Toronto in the morning and\nbeat Ron Fiddler of Winnipeg 4\na.id 2 in the afternoon.\nDoug Stlverberg of Calgary,\nplaying nerveless and steady golt,\ndefeated formidable Nick Weslock of Toronto one up in the\nthird round. The big Westerner\nrefused to become awed in tackling the man who ousted champion Gary Cowan of Kitchener\nin the morning round and who\nwon the Canadian crown five\nyears ago.\nWESLOCK DOWNS  COWAN\nWeslock's win over Cowan\nearlier was 3 and 2.\nOut of Thursday's two rounds\nonly one former champion emerged to continue. He is Don\nCherry of Wichita Falls, Tex.,\nwinner in 1955.\nSix started in the tournament\nMODERNIZE\nYOUR   HOUSE\nInstall . . .\nELECTRIC\nHEAT\nCall\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nLtd.\n502 Front St.       Nelson,\nPHONE 352-3175\n\u2014four   Canadians,   including\nCowan, and two Americans.\nCherry defeated Steve Plpoly\nof Canfield, Ohio, in the morning and eliminated Richard Sid-\nerowf of Newington, Conn., 2\nand 1 in the third round.\nTom Draper, a veteran from\nRoyal Oak, Mich., who will\nmeet Silverberg, turned back\nyoung Jim Scissons of Saskatoon in the second round and\nwon 2 and 1 over Merle Noyes\nof Port Colborne, Ont., in the\nthird.\nReg Taylor of Joahnnesburg,\nSogth Africa, moved along on\ntwo one-up wins. Keith Alexander of Calgary, 1960 champion,\nwas Taylor's victim in the\nmorning and Labron Harris Jr.,\nof Stillwater, Okla., was eliminated in the afternoon.\nOUST 1938 CHAMP\nPhil Brownlee of Toronto\nousted 1938 champion Ted\nAdams of Phoenix, Ariz., two up\nin the morning round and won\n3 and 2 over Ken Doig, London,\nOnt., in the afternoon.\nPeter Hope, Nova Scotia\nchampion from Dartmouth,\nplaying two fine rounds, ousted\nStanley Hilinski, Jr., of Manchester, Conn., two up, and\nDave Lee of Ancaster, Ont., 3\nand 2.\nBob Wylie, second Calgarian\nstill in the running, defeated\nBob Fair of Stratford 7 and 6\nand then hung a 6-and-5 defeat\non Howell Fraser of Panama\nCity, Fla.\nPlay-for-Fun\nSoftball\nSavoys continued to fall apart\nin the late innings Wednesday,\nas Nelson Hotel came from behind to score eight runs in the\nseventh inning and defeat Savoys\n10-8.\nBill Woykin went the distance\nfor the winners giving up 11 hits,\nwhile G. Jablonski and B. Loff\nshared the loser's pitching chores,\nallowing 18 hits.\nMike Borch clouted a homer\nfor the losers, followed by Bernie\nMonteleone with a triple and a\ndouble. Woykin hit a three-bagger\nand M. Vecchio and G. Cahill\nclouted doubles for the victors.\nNelsons       000 020 8\u201410 18\nSavoy      400 110 2- 8 11\nLamb's\nNAVURDM\nThree runs in the sixth inning\nled North Shore to an 8-7 decision\nover Grey-Palms in a B division\ncontest Wednesday night.\nLaurie Tees led the North\nShore batters with a triple and\nhome run to account for five\nruns. E. Pippi clouted a home\nrun and triple to lead the Grey-\nPalm batters. E. Marlowe, M.\nLeverington and B. Wakaluk added doubles.\nGrey-Palm     023 002 0-7 15\nNorth Shore     221 003 x-8 13\nIn a second B division match\nGhosts trounced Eagles 24-12.\nHugh Hooker and E. Moisey\nled the Spooks with home runs,\nfollowed by doubles by F. Zait-\nsoff,, I. Leslie, P. Peters, A.\nKonken and W. lie.\nS. Siminoff led the losers with\na four-bagger and a two-bagger.\nJ. Stedile added a home run and\nK. White a double and triple.\nGhosts       906 44-23\nEagles      023 43-12\nHearty In body,\nytt light in flavour\nand aroma.\noho\nLiquor Control Board or by the Gov't of British Columbia.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nBILL WAKEHAM\n. reaches semi-finals.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 17, 1962 \u2014 7\nCalgary Stamps on Lion's Tail\nLast Quarter Rally\nGives Calgary Win\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Calgary Stampeders, shaking\noff a third quarter fumble that put them behind, scored\nthree fourth-quarter touchdowns to defeat British Columbia\nLions 35-20 Thursday night in a tense Western Football\nConference game before 30,135 fans in Empire Stadium,\nwas the\nRough Riders\nUpset Als\nMONTREAL (CP) - Ottawa\nRough Riders, supposedly torn\nby dissension and minus coach\nFrank Clair, upset Montreal Alouettes 29-18 Thursday night before 23,534 Eastern Football Conference fans.\nSandy Stephens, Montreal's\nhighly-prized rookie quarterback\nfrom Minnesota, led the club\nthroughout on offence and his\nperformance was considerably\nless sharp than in his league debut in Toronto last week, when\nAls  dumped  Argonauts  28-15.\nDon Clark skirted 85 yards\naround the right end for one\nMontreal touchdown and George\nDixon added another on a two-\nyard buck over left tackle.\nHURRY-HURRY-HURRY!\n\/\n12th\nANNUAL\nGILKERS\nAUGUST CLEARANCE\n#\nBoot Neck\nT-SHIRTS\n1\/3 OFF\nReg. 4.00: $2.66   Reg. 3.50: $2.34\n10%  Off All Other Tee-Shirts\nSTRAW\nHATS\n25% OFF\nJantzen and Viking\nSWIM TRUNKS\nOUR ENTIRE STOCK\nTO CLEAR\n20% OFF\nBeach Combers\nWhite, Black, Olive,\nand Coral.\nBlue\n20% OFF\nThese Items and\nScads of Others\nMUST GO!\nGILKERS' LTD.\n546 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-6713\nPennant\nChase\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L  Pet Gbl\nLos Angeles     80 42 .656  \u2014\nSan Francisco ....   77 44 .636   2%\nCincinnati       74 47 .612   5V4\nPittsburgh     67 51 .568 11\nSt. Louis     66 55 .545 13Vi\nMilwaukee       64 58 .525 16\nPhiladelphia     57 66 .463 23%\nChicago       45 76 .372 34%\nHouston       43 75 .364 35\nNew York     30 89 .252 48%\nSan Francisco 000 000 000\u20140   6 1\nChicago     110 201 10x-6 15 0\nPierce   (11-4),   Garibaldi   (5),\nMiller (7) and Bailey, Cardwell\n(6-11) and Bertell.\nLos Angeles   002 103 010-7 14 0\nPittsburgh ....   300 000 000\u20143   7 1\nWilliams (12-8) Perranoski (8)\nand Camilli; Gibbon, (2-4) Francis (6), Lamabe (8) and Burgess.\nHR: LA-Camilli (3).\nMilwaukee .... 010 000 000\u20141 10 0\nCincinnati ....   000 060 Olx\u20147 10 0\nBurdette (9), Notebart (5), Lemaster (7) and Torre; Maloney\n(7-4) and Edwards: HRs: Mil\u2014\nMaye (7). Cin \u2014 Robinson (2)\n(31).\nSt. Louis     000 000 120-3 6 1\nHouston     000 001 000\u20141 5 0\nJackson (10-10) and Sawatski\nSchaffer (7); Farrell (8-15), Urn.\nbricht (8) McMahon (9) and\nCampbell.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW L   Pet Gbl\nNew York     72 46 .610   -\nLos Angeles     68 53 .562   5%\nMinnesota      67 54 .554   6%\nChicago       63 59 .516 11\nDetroit       59 60 .496 13%\nBaltimore       58 62 .483 15\nCleveland       58 63 .479 15%\nBoston       56 63 .471 16%\nKansas City  :..   55 66 .455 18%\nWashington     45 75 .375 28\nChicago      700 202 000\u201411 10 0\nCleveland .     001 010 112\u2014 6 12 1\nFisher (5-4), Stone (9) and\nLollar; Grant (6-5), Gomez (1),\nDailey (8) and Romano. HRs:\nChi\u2014Maxwell (9); Cle\u2014Mahoney\n13), Kindall (ID, Cline (2).\nWashington 100 100 000-2 4 1\nKansas City   020 020 OOx\u20144 10 0\nOsteen (6-10), Burnside (9) and\nRetzer; Rakow (11-3) and Sullivan.\nNew Y'ork    100 010 204 0-8   8 1\nMinnesota     001 400 021 1-9 12 3\nStafford, Sheldon (5) Coates (7)\nArroyo (8), Bridges (6-1) (9) and\nHoward; Stigman, Sullivan (3-0)\nand Battey. HRs: NY-Boyer (15)\nRichardson (7). Minn \u2014 Allison\n(18).\nTlie victory was the first in\nthree starts for the Stampers,\nwho fumbled away a possible\ntriumph against Winnipeg Blue\nBombers Monday night. The loss\nleft Lions with a 1-1 record in\nthe season.\nFor a moment they teetered on\nthe brink of a similar <lisaster,\nthen turned the break around\nwith a pass interception that led\nto a touchdown and two long\nruns that brought two more.\nQuarterback Jerry Keeling,\nthe second-year import from\nTulsa University, who directed\nthe potent Calgary offence\nscored two touchdowns himself, both in the final quarter.\nBUCHANAN GETS TWO\nHalfback Ed Buchanan, another second-year Cowboy from\nSan Diego College, also got two,\none of them on an 80-yard\nscamper after keeling had gone\nfor six and lateralled to spring\nhis mate. Fullback Earl Lunsford plunged for the other Calgary touchdown and Canadian\nhalfback Larry Robinson converted all five.\nLions, who lead 7-0 after the\nfirst quarter, trailed 14-7 at the\nhalf and led 17-14 after the\nthird, got touchdowns from fullback Nub Beamer and end\nPat Claridge, the latter on a\nfive-yard pass from quarterback Joe Kapp for the only\ntouchdown pass of the game.\nGuard Vic Kristopaitis converted once and kicked two field\ngoals, from 13 and 27 yards, and\ndefensive halfback Bob Sch-\nloredt,   second-year   lion   from\nWashington   University,   got   a\nsingle on a booming punt from\nthe Calgary 41.\nStampeders, with Keeling,\nBuchanan and Lunsford doing\nmost of the carrying, put a\nwhopping dent in the Lions defensive unit, which had not\ngiven up a touchdown in its\nlast two games.\nTheir come-from-behind triumph, scored in spite of two\nthird-quarter fumbles at key\ntimes, spells trouble for Lions\nwhen they meet the Stampeders again next Monday night in\nCalgary.\nSTATISTICS\nFirst downs: Calgary 19, B.C.\n17.\nYards rushing: Calgary 387,\nB.C. 209.\nYards passing; Calgary 140.\nB.C. 129.\nPasses made\/tried; Calgaiy\n7\/13, B.C. 12\/25.\nInterceptions by: Calgary 1,\nB.C. 1.\nPunts\/yardage: Calgary\n9\/38.3, B.C. 9\/46.1.\nFumbles\/tost: Calgary 2\/2, B.C\n0\/0.\nPenalties total yards: Calgary\n7\/63, B.C. 3\/1.\nRossland Leaps Into\nJunior Ball Finals\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Rossland Junior Capilanos, showing\npower on the mound and at bat, advanced to the finals\nof the West Kootenay Junior Baseball League finals Thursday, dumping Fruitvale 7-4.\nRossland's victory gave the mountain top club the\nbest-of-three semi-finals in two straight games, as they\ndefeated Fruitvale 3-2 in the opener. Rossland now meets\nNelson Texans for the league championship, with the first\ngame slated for Rossland\nSunday afternoon.\nRossland needed three hurlers\nto post the victory with two of\nthe hurlers tossing no-hit baseball. Winning pitcher was Al De-\nCliecko, who allowed two-hits after relieveing B. Dawson in the\nfirst inning. Barry McGillivary\nrelieved De Checko in the sixth\ninning, contributing to silence the\nhosts' bats. T. Beaty went the\ndistance for the losers, giving\nup 10 hits.\nTWO RUN HOMER\nRoss Saundry gave Rossland\na 2-0 lead in the first inning\nclouting a home run over the\nleftfield barrier with D. Sever on\nbase.\nRossland added four runs in\nthe second frame on McGilli-\nvary's bases loaded triple and\nJim Ling's lead off home run.\nIn the fifth Ling scored the final\nrun on attempted pick off play,\nafter DeChecko had singled him\nthird.\nFruitvale scored its first run\nin the initial frame as starting\npitcher Dawson walked four successive batters. In the second\ninning T. Beatty clouted a triiple\nto score another run.\nFruitvale added two more runs\nin the fifth on two walks, a sacrifice fly and a pass ball.\nRossland     140 020 0-7 10 0\nFruitvale   110 020 0-4   2 0\nFootball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nWESTERN CONFERENCE\nEdmonton     2   0 42 23\nWinnipeg     1   1 61 47\nB.C    1   153 42\nCalgary     1   2 68 82\nSaskatchewan     1  2 31 61\nJuniors To Shoot\nFor Parslow\nTrophy Sunday\nFive, possibly six teams, are\nexpected to invade the Nelson\nRod and Gun shooting range at\nPorto Rico Creek, shooting competition.\nClubs are expected from Rossland, Trail, Salmo, Castlegar,\nRiondel and possibly Creston.\nThe competition is closed with\nonly the member clubs of the\nWest Kootenay Rod and Gun Association being accepted.\nThe shoot will be strictly on\na team basis, with an age handicap. Strating time is 10 a.m.,\nwith entries being accepted up to\npost time. Only those passing\nthe Junior Firearms Program\nare allowed to enter.\nINDUSTRIAL TV\nClosed-circuit   TV   at   textll*\nfactories in Huddersfield, England, enables a constant check\non distant machinery.\nTee Time\nArnold Sherwood toured the\nine-hole Nelson Golf and Country\nlub course in 34 strokes Thurs-\nlay night to win low gross at\nhe weekly men's night competi\n.ion.\nA three-way tie for low net\n'lonors resulted with Don McDon\naid, Jim Geddis and Dr. Graeme\nSteed finishing with 31s. In second place were Bill Day, Red\nKoehle and Fred Koehle, with 32s\nGoofer club went to Al Threat\nful.\n(ole, Hitchens\nPace Women\nIn Canada Open\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Four tired\ngirls Thursday qualified for the\nsemi-finals of the Canadian women's open golf championship, led\nby medalist Betty Stanhope Cole\nof Edmonton and Vancouver's\njunior Gayle Hitchens.\nThe two meet in the 18-hole\nsemi-final today while Colleen\nSmith of Vancouver and the five-\ntime Alberta open champion, Rae\nMilligan of Calgary, meet in the\nother half of the draw.\nThe qualifiers played through\ntwo 18-hole rounds during a hot\nand breezy day on Winnipeg's\nsuburban Glendale Golf Club.\n\"Mrs. Cole scored a 4 and 2 victory over Winnipeg's Marlene\nNetterfield, going to the 16th hole\nafter dropping a perfect 50-foot\napproach putt on the rolling par-\nfivo 15th hole for her only birdie\nof the round.\nMiss Hitchens, who earlier\nscored a second-round 3 and 2\nwin over Winnipeg's Heather\nLawrence on a three-under-par\nfirst nine that included four\nbirdies, was equally brilliant\nagainst Winnipeg's Marg Home\nnuik in the afternoon round, winning 5 and 4.\nhim ^fd(\\m\\j^\n22's - Hi Powers - Shotguns - Ammunition \"t SJ\n  I I \"m * \u00bb\u25a0    \u2014Jaaaaaaaa\u2014     W**~Smim i   I I *\nInjoy Your Hunt with a .30-06 Bolt Action Mauser Sporting Rifle\n89.98\nryn\nTrail's Mclntyre\nReaches Senior\nGolf Finals\nVICTORIA (CPI - Bill Blakely of Portland will be shooting\nfor his third Seniors' Pacific\nNorthwest Golf Assocatiion tournament championship when he\nmeets Peter Mclntyre of Trail\nhere today in an 18-hole final.\nBlakely, this year's medalist,\nadvanced to the final Thursday\nwith a comfortable 3 and 1 victory\nover defending-champion Tom\nGreen of Seattle.\nThe other semi-final match saw\nMclntyre, the tournament's 1955\nchampion, defeat Dr. Merle Taylor of Portland 2 up.\nFlying Tigers\nAwait\nDecision\nThe Flying Tigers gymnastic\nsquad expects to receive the official word Monday deciding their\nfuture as British Columbia representative in the Canada Fitness\nCouncil meeting in Toronto Sept.\n1-3 at the Canadian National Exhibition.\nThe gym squard, comprised of\n10 versatile gymnasts, have been\nlooking forward to the occasion\nfor the past few months, and\nunder the direction and expert\ninstruction of Dick McKeen and\nAlec Ross have been practicing\nregularly.\nRecently Ihey travelled to Kelowna to participate in the Kelowna Regatta, staging two, sometimes three, shows per day. Mr.\nRoss termed the Kelowna exhibition \"a real success.\" They plan\nto travel to Golden and Windermere August 23 to put on another\nshow.\nThe Fitness Council will pay\nthe expenses if the \"Tigers\" get\nthe green light for the province\nrepresentative, r e p or t e d Mr\nRoss. Only question puzzling the\ninstructor was the equipment,\nbut he assumed all the needed\nequipment would be supplied by\nthe council.\nPorker Ha'e Safari standard model with stock of seasoned, finely checkered\nEuropean walnut \u2014 Monte Carlo pattern. Streamlined action with backswept bolt \u2014 adjustable rear sight \u2014 ramp and bead foresight with tubulor\nprotector. Barrel length 22\", overall 42\".\nBudget Priced .303 British DeLuxe Lee-Enfield Rifle\nrifle  re-engineered to sporter model.  Hand picked from\nond converted by skilled craftsmen. Equipped with Mrew-\nsight graduated from 100- I30O yards \u2014 tang on tamp\nlength 22\". Magazine capacity 5 shots.\nTry This \"King Size\" Sleeping Bag\nONLY 10.99\nPlenty of room for a real big hunter ki this\nfeatherlight Celacloud filled bag \u2014 full 72\"x80\"\nwith open end zipper. Shell is of fine poplin with\nfleecy cotton lining \u2014 hunting scena print.\n9x12 Umbrella Tent\nIdeal for hunting. Easy \u25a0 to erect in\nabout 10 minutes. Made of a sturdy\ncotton drill, approximately lO'\/i oz.\nafter treatment. Poles included.\nOnly 54.98\n1  Gal. Thermos Jugs\nFor that first hot cup of coffee early\nin the morning. Fibreglass insulated;\nunbreakable plastic liner. Reg. 6.95\nSPECIAL\n4.99\nHunting Knives\nAll made from Solingen steel. Various\nsizes and prices from\n4.25 to 4.95\nStore Your Game in a Freezer\n$\n269\nNO DOWN PAYMENT\nEASY TERMS\n\u2022 17 cu. ft. holds 600 lbs.\n\u2022 Convenient chest type\n\u2022 Signal light an front glows to\ntell you all is well.\n\u2022 With baskets, movable\npartitions.\nGame birds, venison and fish can be enjoyed all year round when you store your\ncatch in a freezer. Self-sealing balloon\ngasket lid, Du Pont enamel finish. 8 year\nunconditional warranty. Insurance covering food spoilage for 5 years up to $200.\nIn^oni JW tfajtwnfi\n=ORATE,D--''2v.'?'-.M'AY   i'670;.\n \t\n-\n\t\n\u2014\u2014_.-._.\u2014_____.\u2014\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 17, 1962\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP)-Active demand for a variety of aerospace\nissues saved the stock market\nThursday from its first decline\nof the week.\nThe list closed mixed, as volume dipped from Wednesday.\nThe''popular market averages\ndeclined slightly, but more is\nsues advanced than declined\nfor the eighth straight session,\nand all 15 most active stocks\nwere in the plus column. Most\nchanges were relatively small.\nThe demand for companies in\nthe space field came from a\nWall Street report that the defence department would soon\nmake public a big contract for\nthe Titan III space booster.\nMartin - Marietta, which is\nbuilding the Titan I and II missiles, was the most active, gaining 2% at 24 on 226,300 shares.\nSperry Rand, second most active, was up % at 14',i on 87,-\n400 shares.\nCurtiss-Wright was third most\nactive, gaining % at 197\/b on\n57,600 shares. Others on the defence-industry list included Litton Industries, Avco and Ling\nTemco.\nSTEELS DOWN\nSteels, motors, tobaccos and\ndrugs closed generally lower\nwhile utilities, metals, rails,\nchemicals, oils, rubbers and\nmail order-retail issues were irregular.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks fell .3 at 222.1. The\nDow Jones industrial average\nfell .05 at 606.71, after topping\n611 at one point.\nAmong Canadian stocks, Wat-\nker-Gooderham fell VA but Distillers Seagrams was up Va. Mclntyre Porcupine and Dome\nMines were Vi higher. Hudson\nBay Mining and Granby Mining were down Va and Aluminium Ltd. %.\nAmerican Stock Exchange\nprices advanced. Calgary and\nEdmonton gained more than a\npoint. Scurry Rainbow Oil and\nJupiter Corp. were up Vs. Canadian Marconi and Shawinigan\nwere off Vi.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock\nmarket sagged Thursday for\nthe first time in recent sessions.\nBanks spearheaded the decline as Royal fell a point, Montreal %, Toronto-Dominion %\nand Canadian Imperial Bank of\nCommerce Va.\nOther key losers included Algoma Steel, down Ma, Walker-\nGooderham, off %, Interprovincial Pipe Line % and Bell Telephone Va.\nDominion Foundries and Steel\nand Dominion Bridge all declined in a Va to 3\/i range.\nRussell Industries climbed\n\\Va to 16V4, Levy Industries rose\nVa and Distillers Seagrams,\nConsolidated Paper and Alberta\nGas all Va.\nOn the exchange index, industrials dropped 1,88 at 560.08\nand western oils .13 at 106.39.\nGolds rose .21 to 94.44 and\nbase metals .12 at 189.74. Closing volume was 2,652,000 shares\ncompared with Wednesday's 3,-\n330.000.\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nCKLN   PROGRAMS 1390 ON  THE  DIAL\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 17,  1962\n:59\u2014Sign On\n: 00\u2014 News\n: 05\u2014Farm Fare\n: 15-Wake Up Time\n: 30\u2014News\n: 35\u2014Direct Report\n: 45\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n: 00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Wake Up Time\n: 25\u2014Sports  News\n: 30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n.00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n:15-Wake Up Time\n: 30\u2014Opening Markets\n:35-Wake-Up Time\n: 45\u2014The Archers\n: 00\u2014News\n05\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n20-Alan's A.M. Spot\n30\u2014Playground Reporter\n35\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot Continues\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014News\n05\u2014Birthday Book\n15\u2014Cat and Mouse\nKeep House\n10:30\u2014Pacific Express\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:45\u2014Sing With Bing\nI2:00-Let's Sing Along\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25-News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Holiday Time\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n5:50\u2014Holiday Time Continues\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10-Sports News\n6:15\u2014Having a Wonderful Time\n6:30-Halifax Theatre\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n8:00\u2014Radio International\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Victoria In Living Memory\n10:30-Friday Frolic\n11:57\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Chapel In Tlie Sky\n12.15\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 18,  1962\n6:00\u2014Bert Nelson\n9:00-B.B.C. News\n15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Matinee Highlights\n10:30\u2014Continental Varieties\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Regional Weather\n12:00\u2014Saturday Date\n11:15\u2014Sixty Five and Up\n2:30-Chico's Place    -\n3:00\u2014Here Comes The Clowns\n3:30\u2014World Church News\n3:45\u2014This Week at the U.N.\n4:00\u2014Records On Review\n5:00\u2014Cornucopia\n6:00\u2014On the Move\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Canadian Amateur\n8:00\u2014Whack-O !\n8:30\u2014Moon River\n9:00\u2014Four's   Company\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Looking Through\nthe Papers\n10:30\u2014Take It From Here\n11:00\u2014Western Jamboree\n11:57\u2014News\nGolf\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n7:00 Wonderful World\n7:30 Margie *\n8:00 Hathaways *\n8:30 Flintstones *\n9:00 77 Sunset Strip *\n10:00 Target: The Corruptors '\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Movie\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n6:30 Whiplash\n7:00 Ripcord\n7:30 Rawhide *\n8:30 Route 66 *\n9:30 Father of The Bride :\n10:00 Twilight Zone *\n10:30 Eyewitness *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 Tonight Show *\nAmong base metals, Falconbridge advanced % and Consolidated Mining and Smelting Va,\nwhile Hudson Bay Mining and\nNoranda each dropped Vt. North-\ngate fared worst in the speculative market, sinking 35 cents to\n$6.00.\nChromium Mining and Smelting Corp. Ltd., one of three\ncompanies whose shares were\nsuspended from trading Wednesday, was reinstated Thursday. The other two firms\u2014SKD\nManufacturing Co. Ltd. and\nSan Antonio Gold Mines Ltd.\u2014\nremain  on  the suspended list.\nHoward Graham, president of\nthe Toronto Exchange, said the\nshares of Chromium were suspended because they had been\nheavily dealt in by an individual who had also involved in\nlarge - volume trading in the\nshares of the other two companies.\nHe said there was a danger\nthese holdings would be put on\nthe market in such volume as\nto create unstable market conditions. However, he said this\nmorning the Exchange was satisfied that market stability\nwould not be endangered by restoring Chromium shares to\ntrading.\nThe stock, which had dropped\nin price after announcement of\nthe suspension to $1.70 a share\nfrom $4.60, sold Thursday as\nhigh as $3.00 and closed at\n$2.45 on fairly heavy turnover.\nIn the western oils list, Calgary and Edmonton climbed\nVia to 26%. Home A and B each\ngained Va, while Hudson's Bay\nand Pacific Petroleum dropped\n% and Vi respectively.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stocks\nmoved lower on the Montreal\nand Canadian exchanges Thursday after three consecutive\ndays of strong gains. Trading\nwas fairly light.\nBanks were sharply lower.\nRoyal Bank fell 1% to 69 and\nCanadian Imperial Bank of\nCommerce dropped a point to\n58.\nAmong base metals, International Nickel was off a point\nat 70 and Aluminium fell 14 to\n25'A. Consolidated Smelters rose\n% to 20%.\nDu Pont fell 1% to 32%\namong industrials. Walker fell\na point to 54%, Salada at 11%\nand Industrial Acceptance at\n23'\/2 each fell % in active trading, Dominion Bridge fell Vi\nto 21 and Hudson's Bay Company fell Vi to 11 Vi.\nCalgary and Edmonton rose\ntwo points to 26% to lead the\nfew issues to show gains. Seagrams rose % to 453\/4 and Power\nCorporation closed at 55%, up\n2'\/i from its price at Friday's\nclose, the last day it was traded.\nSaucon rose four cents to 25\ncents among mines. Kiena Gold\nfell 10 cents to $2.05, Talisman\ndropped 10 cents to 80 cents\nand Hollinger was down Vi at\n21% among golds.\nStock Quotations\nTbe Dally News does not bold Itself responsible In tbe event\nol an error in tbe following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium .06\nAgnico .B4\nAnacon Lead .36\nAunor 4.00\nBarnat 1.21\nBibis Yukon .0514\nBrunswick 3.05\nBuffalo Ank 1.55\nBuff Red Lake .04\nCampbell C 4.00\nCassiar 11.00\nCentral Patricia 1.15\nCoch  Will 4.80\nChimo .46\nCons  Denison 10.75\nCons. Discovery 1.25\nC G Arrow .48\nCons Mining & Smelting    20.62%\nCons Regcourt .06%\nConwest 4.25\nCopper Corp .17\nCraig 19.25\nD'Aragon .16V4\nEast Amphi .08%\nEast Malartic 2.58\nEast Sullivan 1.70\nElder Gold 1.03\nFalconbridge 52.25\nFaraday 1.75\nGeco 26.00\nGiant Yel. 12.25\nHarminerals .13\nHeadway .29\nHollinger 21.75\nHudson Bay 51.00\nHydra  Ex .29\nInt. Nickel 70.25\nIron Bay .95\nJonsmith .13\nR J Jowsey .31\nKenville .05\nKerr Addison 8.00\nLabrador 24.50\nLeitch 1.51\nLittle Long Lac 1.85\nLorado 1.07\nLouvic't MVa\nMadsen R. L. 2.29\nMaritime Mining .61\nMcLeod 1.15\nMcKenzie R L .26%\nMetauran .08\nMining Corp. 13.50\nMulti Mins .25\nMurray .92\nNew Bidlamaque .06\nNew Hosco .75\nNoranda New 29.50\nNormetals 2.97\nNorpax .15V4\nNorth Rankin .29\nOpemiska 4.95\nPickle Crow .69\nPine Point 9.25\nPlacer Devel 25.00\nQuebec Lab .04%\nQuebec Lithiqm 3.00\nQuebec Metallurgical .87\nQuemont 9.80\nRadiore .47\nRayrock .95\nRio Algom 9.25\nSherritt Gordon 3.55\nSiscoe 1.96\nSteep Rock 5.45\nSullivan Con 1.52\nTeck Hughes 1.60\nTemagami .95\nUnited Keno 9.80\nUpper Canada 1.71\nViolamac 1.75\nWiltsey Goglin .22\nWright Hargreaves .86\nYale .0814\nYellowknife Bear 1.06\nYoung (H.G.) Gold .16\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc .05\nBanff Oils 1.10\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nBailey Selburn\n7.15\nBata Petroleum\n.07\nCalgary and Edmonton\n26.37V4\nCanadian Devonian\n3.70\nCanadian Delhi\n3.10\nHome A\n11.8714\nNat. Pete\n2.32\nOkalta\n.12\nPacific Pete\n14.00\nPonder\n.51\nPlace\n.68\nStanweli Oil\n.28\nTriad\n1.37\nUnited Oils\n1.38\nYank Canuck\n.05!*\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\n46 Vi\nAlgoma Steel\n42%\nAluminum\n25 Vi\nArgus 2nd pfd.\n49 Vi\nAtlas St.\n34\nB.A. Oil\n30 Vi\nBathurst Power\n49\",\nBeatty Bros.\n10V4\nBell Telephone\n52\nBrazilian\n3.10\nB.C. Forest\n11%\nB.C. Power A\n16%\nBurns A\n8V4\nCanadian Breweries\nion\nCanadian Canners\n124\nCan. Cement\n25\nCan Chem Co\n7%\nCanadian Dredge\n8 Vi\nCan. Curtis Wright\n1.05\nCan. Malting\n65\nCan Oil\n36 Vi\nCanadian Pacific Rly\n22%\nColumbia Cellulose\n3.80\nCons Gas\n17%\nDist. Seagram\n45 Vi\nDom. Stores\n12%\nDom. Tar k Chemical\n18\nDom. Textiles\n17V4\nEddy Paper\n25%\nGatineau\n33 Vg\nGen. Steel Wares\n9%\nGoodyear\n139\nGoodyear pfd\n43V,\nImperial Oil\n44%\nImp. Tobacco\n14\nInd. Ace.\n23V4\nLoblaw A\nBV4\nLoblaw B\n9\nMassey Ferguson\n11%\nMolson Brewery\n26\nVIont. Loco\n124\nMoore Corp.\n46%\nPage Hershey\n18%\nPower Corp.\n55-%\nRuss. Industries\n164\nShawinigan\n23%\nSimpsons A\n2fiVi\nSoutham\n30 Vi\nSteel of Canada\n18\nTexaco\n474\nUnion Gas of Can\n18\nWeston George\n16\nWoodwards A.\n13%\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Shannon\n7:30 International Showtime *\n8:30 Robert Taylor's Detective's*\n9:30 The Indiscriminate\nWoman *\n10:30 Chet Huntley Reporting\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Late Movie:\n\"High Wall\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nROBERTSON \u2022 HILLIARD - CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.\n156 Ward St. Nelson Phone 352-7252 for Information\n\"INSURANCE FOR EVERY PERSONAL\nAND BUSINESS NEED\"\n3:15 News\n3:30 Intermezzo\n4:00 The Tea Zone\n4:30 Caravan\n5:30 Huckleberry Hound\n6:00 Playbill\n8:00 Red River Jamboree\n8:30 Burns and Allen\n9:00 A Summer Night\n9:30 Perry Mason\n10:30 The Outdoors\n11:00 News  iToronto)\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n10:45 Test Pattern\n11:00 Baseball Game of Week\n\"Cleveland at Baltimore'\n5:00 On Safari\n5:30 Bugs Bunny\n6:00 Country Time\n6:30 A Song For You\n6:45 The Living Word\n7:00 Some of Those Days\nSATURDAY\n7:30 Sir Francis Drake\n8:00 Timberline Theatre\n8:30 Have Gun Will Travel\n9:00 Front Row Centre:\n\"Marked Woman\"\n10:30 Discovery\n11:00 CBC News\n11:10 North Lethbridge Presents\n\"Valentino\"\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nAOBOSS\n1. A smarting\npain\n6. Follow\n11. A petty\nperson:\nslang\n12. Pueblos\n13. Act in a\ntheatrical\nmanner\n14. Add distinction to\n16. Cozy room\n16. Fairy-like\ncreature\n18. Die: Scot.\n19. Walking\nstick\n21. Ship's\nkitchen\n24. State,\nnorthwest\nIndo-Chtna\n28. In advajice\not\n29. New Eng.\nstate\n30. Sacks\n31 rod:\ncar part\n82. Strident\n84. Siamese\ncoin\n37.Two: Sp.\n38. Feminine\npronoun\n41. Pierced,  as\nby horns\n43. Vine-\ncovered\n45.Desert\nplaint\n46. Seeped\n47. More\ncourageous\n48. Destitute\nDOWN\n1. Hastened\n2.\" and\ntide\"\n3. Sacred\npicture:\nvar.\n4. Seino\n8. Said\n\"hello\" to\n6. Fine-cut\nhay for\nfodder\n7. Coal\nscuttle\n8. Footles:\nanimal\n9. \"Your\nmajesty\"\nequivalent\n10. Anglo-\nSaxon\ndomestic\n17. To place\n19. Cut\n20. Gleam\n21. Talk\nmuch\n22. Ex-\nclamav\ntion\nof\npleasure\n23. A\nsupport\n25. Islet\n26. Palestine\nplain\n27. Japanese'\ncoin\n29.'! accomplished'\nSI. For\n33. Common\nviper\n34. Biblical\nking\n35. Roman\ngarment\nT\nft\nF\nP\nvBr\nU\nQ\n5\nA\nA\nn\n0\nR\ne|u\nN\n1\nO\nN\nM\ni\nR\nv\nR\nO\nsi\nA\nA\nN\nJ\nP\nr\np\ns\nH\n5\nc\nC\nE\n5\nA,\nSi\nFlrl\n*\u25a0\nA\na\nr\nA\nA\nr>\nN\nT\nn\n1\nQ\nr>\nft\ns\nT\n1\nA\nD\nD\n= H\nA\ni-\nT\nE\nEl\nr,\ni.\nO\nD\nDY\nC\nA\nR\nA\nF\nE\nR\nr\nE\nL\nF\nb\nN\nl.\ns\nr a\nI\nn\nl\u201e\nE\n0\nD\nE\n\u00ab\nrP\nR\nF\nfOt\n\u25a0\u25a0:\nU\nL\nPA\nr-\n5\nYgjE\nM\n1-\nE\nf eiterdiy'i Annwor\n36. English\nstreetcar\n38. Magnitude\n39. Pay\nattention\n40. Founder of\nChristian\nScience\n42. Cain's\nmother\n44. Orkneys\ninlet\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\ni\nla\n7\nS\n9\nIO\n11\n1\nIZ\nal\nV\/\n14-\na5\n%\nIfa\nn\n^\n16\nV\/A\nfa\n%\n19\nIO\n77\n'77\/\n11\n33\n33\n^^\n24\n35\n2to\n3.7\nx%\n%\n39\n3o\nV\/\/t\n31\n%\nVA\n^\/t\n33\n33\n%\n%\n%\n34\n35\n3fa\n^\n31\n%\n36\n39\n4<a\n41\n4X\n^,\n43\n44\n45\nl\n46\n47\n^t\n48\n13^7\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nto LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for ajiother. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\nEaich day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nLTZEZ  MX D  VSQ  KMLYMJ AX,\nDJQ  KZ  URSK  KYZJ  IZ  XLMEX\nA X.\u2014S B M Q\nTesterday's Cryptoquote: WITHOUT CONSTANCY. THERb\nIS NEITHER LOVE NOR VIRTUE IN THE WORLD.\u2014\nADDISON\n\u00a9 1962, KIck FoatmeB Syndicate, Int.\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\nBeth Cop\nCanam\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold\nCowichan Cop.\nCraig\nGiant Mascot\nGranduc\nHighland Bell\nKamloops\nKootenay Base Metals\nMt. Washington\nNational Ex\nPend Oreille\nQuatsino\nReeves MacDonald\nSheep Creek\nSilbak Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard\nSkeena\nSunshine Lardeau\nTaylor\nTorwest\nTrojan\nWestern Exploration\nOILS\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCharter\nHome\nPacific Pete\nPeace River Gas\nRoyal Can\nUnited '\nVantor\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nB C Forests\nBurrard Mort.\nB C Power\nB C Telephone\nCanadian Collieries\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\nTrans Mtn.\nWestminster Paper\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com.\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest  Coast VT\nBANKS\nUnavailable\nFUNDS\nAll  Can. Conf'\nAll   Can.  Div.\nCan inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGrouped Incore\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nTrans Canada \"C\"\nUnited Ace. Funds\nAm.  Growth\nDiversified  \"B\"\nMutual   Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual   Inc.\nMVa\n2.015\n.il\n,09\n1.10\n.61\n18.75\n.74\n2.03\n2.40\n.07%\n.30',z\n1.20\n.05\n1.85\n.10\n1..15\n1.20\n.41\n.034\n.22%\n.14\n.011\n.13\n.41\n.06\n.16\n25.75\n.96\n10.50\n14.00\n.11\n.06\n1.32\n.13\n2.10\n1(1.50\n7.0(1\n16.50\n25.75\n5.50\n21.00\n5.00\n4.(10\n14.00\n27.00\n27.37%\n21.00\n1400\n1575\n8.20\n5.88\n9.66\n8.27\n4.10\n3.34\n6.42\n11.76\n6.99\n5.110\n5.64\n7.64\n3.05\n3.36\n6.32\n4.95\n8.99\n6.44\n10.50\n0.06\n4.53\n3.05\n6.98\n12.78\n7.66\n6.40\n6.16\n8.33\n4.25\n3.67\n7.14\n5.41\nSAID ARRESTED\nHONG KONG (API - The\nJournalist Digest said Wednesday Marshal Ho Lung, one of\nCommunist China's top military\nleaders, is under house arrest\nafter a political dispute with\nMao Tze-tung. Tlie Digest, a local Chinese publication, said the\nsource of its report was a late\nChinese Communist general's\nson who fled the mainland in\nMay.\n PW\nCLASSIFIED\nBIRTHS\nRENWICK - To Mr. and Mrs,\nPatrick Renwick, 711 Cottonwood\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, August 16, a daughter.\nJARVIS - To Mr. and Mrs.\nAllan Jarvis, 801 Gordon Road,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, August 15, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nMAN 30 TO 50. HANDLE SALES\nterritory surrounding Nelson.\nWorth up to $12,000 in a year,\nplus bonus. Write O. C. Swallow, Pres., Southwestern Petroleum Co., Box 789, Fort Worth\n1, Texas.\nGOOD WATKINS ROUTE. Established customers. No experience necessary, we teach you.\nPresent men earning better\nthan average wage. Phone collect Trail 364-2283 for appointment.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nFEMALE CARETAKER WAN?\ned, with or without children, for\nretired gentleman's home in exchange for fuel and rertt. Near\nschools, lake and park. Apply\nBox 7579,  Daily  News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n17-YR.-OLD BOY WILL WORK\ncleaning, painting, gardening.\nPhone 352-6586.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\n1 BAY, HALF-THOROUGHBRED\ngelding, 16 hands, well broken;\n1 bay yearling colt, thoroughbred, Appaloosa cross. Well\nstarted. Both reasonably priced. Apply Box 1493, Creston,\nB.C. or phone EL 6-4479.\t\nWELL BHOKEN SADDLE~HOR-\nses, all kinds. Apply G. Boise!,\nSavoy Hotel or at J. Schwan\nacross from Glade ferry turn-\noff.\nFOR SALE: 15 GRADE HOL-\nstein cows with or without 250\ngal. 7.P. bulk tank. Phone Andrews 7-7339 or write Eugene\nLong, Copeland, Idaho, U.S.A\nC O W~~F OR S A Le7_MIKE\nStoochnoff, Shoreacres, B.C.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nTHERMOCRAFT FIBREGLASS\nbok aluminum boats; sail\nboats; Wacanda boats; Spring-\nboats; Johnson motors; Gator\nboat trailers; boating accessories; trailer supplies; trade-ins.\nBarrett Trailer Sales. Fruitvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE - LARGE FISHING\nboat, 16 ft. long, 6 ft. beam,\n314 ft. deep. $450. Apply Kaslo\nMarine Service or write G. R.\nSchindler, Gen. Del. Kaslo.\n12 FT. PLYWOOD BOAT WITH\nElgin motor like new, trailer\nand hitch. Terms. Ph. 352-6330,\n118 Houston.\nBOAT HOUSE FOR SALE. $40\ndown, bal. terms. Norm's Sport\nShop. Phohe 352-2015.\n12   FT.   PLYWOOD   BOAT   IN\ngood condition $35. Ph. 352-3045.\nBOAT  HOUSE  FOR  RENT.\nPhone 352-3300.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED\nWANTED - NEAR BALFOUR\nBay 18-year-old boy entering\nGrade 13 wishes room and\nboard Mon. to Fri. for school\nterm. Please phone Mrs. I. D.\nGreen, 2-E Crawford Boy.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANTI-\nques. Home Furniture Exchange.  Ph   352-6531,  413 Hall\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" sq. 10c a lb. Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED:   COAL   AND   WOOD\nfurnace. Jacob Verigin, Ymir.\nOLD AND NEW GUNS. NORM'S\nSport Shop. Phone 352-2015.\nSEWING MACHINES\nBEFORE YOU.BUY A SEWING\nmachine see the new Kenmore\nPush-Button Twin-Needle Automatic Zig-Zag at Simpsons-\nSears. Only $99.88. Backed by\nour famous 20 vear guarantee\nTRAILERS\nRA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES\nRollohome and Safeway Dealers, New and used. Trades and\nterms. We specialize in parts.\nTrail, B.C.\nMUST SELL 45X10 DREAM-\nhome trailer. Excellent condition. Cedar Crest Trailer Court,\nCastlegar.\n45 x 8 ROLLERHOME TRAILER\nApply to K. Gohlke, Riondel.\nAUTOMOTIVE.   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n323 Vernon St. - Nelson\nPhone 352-3121\n24-Hr.  BCAA  Recommended\nWrecker Service\nCHEV. - OLDS - CADILLAC\nCORVAIR - CHEVY II - ENVOY\nF-85 Oldsmobile\n6 New Chevrotets\n1   New i-Ton\n1   F-85 Jetfire Oldsmobile\nWith Turbo Charger\n2 Monza Spyder's\nWith Super Chargers\nO.K.   USED  CARS\n1-1901 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1-1960 CHEV. 'i-TON\n1-1960 BEL AIR CHEV.\n1-1959 STUDEBAKER LARK\n1-1958 CHEV. SEDAN\n1-1958 RENAULT SEDAN\n1\u20141958 FORD SEDAN\n1-1957 THAMES PANEL\n1-1957 PREFECT STN. WGN.\n1-1957 CHEV. BEL-AIR\n1-1957 CHEV. %-TON Flat Deck\nPhone   352-3552   for   Classified\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nSPECIAL\n1957 Chev.  3-1  Ton\nVII.  Radio, Standard, Short\nWheelbase.   Ready to haul a\nlarge house trailer.\nAsphalt Paving\nNelson Asphalt Paving Ltd.\nPhone 352-7621 - Nelson, B.C.\nAutomobile  Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac - Buick\nVauxhall - GMC\n701 Baker St.        Phone 352-6641\n24 Hour Wrecker Service\nFront End Aligning -\nAutomatic Service\nBody and Paint Shop\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Larkl\n213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231\nRENAULT SALESITSERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411 295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 7 a.m.-II p.m.\nAcross Lake Pbone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\nB23 Nelson Ave.      Phone 352-5355\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof plywood\n301 Baker St.        Phone 352-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St. Phone 352-6601\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\nMl Front St. Phone 352-5571\nForester\nROBERT B. WALKLEY\nB.C. Registered Forester\n510 Filth St - Nelson \u2022 Ph. 352-7065\nGarages\nSHELL SERVICENTRE\nPhone 352-2014\nWheel Aligning and Balancing\n301 Nelson Avenue \u2014 Nelson\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies     Ph. 352-2525\nInsurance\nAllstate Insurance Agent\nSimpsons-Sears, Trail Ph. 364-1144\nNelson: Saturdays. Ph. 352-5531\n1-1956 CHEV. SEDAN\n1-1956 FORD SEDAN\n2\u20141956 PLYMOUTH SEDANS\n1-1956 DODGE SEDAN\n1-1956 VOLKSWAGEN   PANEL\n2-1955 CHEV. SEDANS\nWe Have  Many Specials From\n$50.00 to $200.00\nBUY   NOW  AND   SAVE\nJewellers\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nFor fine watches and repairs\nPhone 352-9012      511 Baker St.\nNovelty Shops\nSOUVENIRS! NOVELTIES!\nThe Cutest - HOBBY SHOP\nPaint Contractors\nZEEBEN LUMBER CO.\nYmir. B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375\nCleaning Service\nSVe Clean Offices, Stores, Houses\nFree Estimates.\nDUTCH CLEANING SERVICE\nPhone 352-6323\nContractors\nFor a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPLE LEAF CONSTRUCTION\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S., P. Eng.\n218 Gore Street. Nelson\nPhone 352-3341\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\n! C Land Surveyor -- 33 Pine St\nPh 365-5342 - Castlegar, B.C.\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n73 Baker- Nelson -Ph. 352-7434\nlox 653 - Creston - EL 6-4224\n09 Baker-Cranbrook-JU 6-3622\nRAY G. JOHNSON\n'. C Land Surveyor and Engineer\n69 Baker St. Nelson. Ph. 352-7117\nF. II. DOYLE\nPaint Contractor\nPhone 352-7311 - Nelson\nPrinting\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nSaws Sharpened\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n395 Baker St..       Nelson\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street    Phone 352-7741\nTopsoil,   Gravel\nLarry's Topsoil. Sand and Grave!\n9th and Davies. Ph 352-2355 days\nor 352-7576 evenings.\nBUERGE\nREUBEN\nMOTORS\nLIMITED\n323 Vernon St\nNelson, B. C.\nPHONE 352-3121\nYour G-M Dealer\nGAS  PUMPS  OPEN\n8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. EVERY DAY\nCOTTONWOOD W R E C K A GE\nwrecking '53 Consul, '52 Chev.\npickup, '55 Ford pickup, '53\nZephyr, Plymouth, Fords,\nChevs., Pontiacs, Morris Oxfords, lj ton Fargo, 15\" wheels\nfor Ford, Chev. and Dodge.\nGood motors, 270 G.M.C, '57\nDodge V-8, '49-'53 Ford, '53\nZephyr, '52 Pontiac, '52 Chev.\nPhone 352-5815. Box 382, 24\nYmir Road.\nNEW CAR GUARANTEE - 90\ndays or 4000 miles New pep for\nyour old car with an Allstate re\nmanufactured engine. Guaranteed trade in allowance regardless oi condition. No crate deposit needed. Fast shipping service trom factory. Priced as\nlow as $11.00 monthly. Simpsons-Scars Limited, 556 Baker\nSt., Nelson, Phone 352-5531\n'Sll^UICl^roANAUTdMAfrc,\nradio; '52 Buick 2 door hardtop\nautomatic, radio; '53 Buick 4-\ndoor standard transmission,\nradio: new boat winch. Phone\n352-3846 or 352-6111.\n'51 FORD 4 DOOR. $160 OR\nswap for tape recorder, Martin\nguitar, or what have you? Box\n648, Castlegar.\n1952 METEOR, 1961 TRIUMPH\nHerald Convertible. 1950 Chev.\nNorth Shore Service. Phone\n352.2929.\n1960 RAMBLER AMERICAN\nstation wagon in good condition\nWill accept smaller trade.\nPhone 352-6953.\n'M^PONTIAcV GOOD ^SHAPE.\n$450 cash or nearest offer. Call\nat Kroener's Shoe Shop.\nDELUXE.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued)\nBetter\n'61 PONTIAC HARDTOP\n'61 CHEV. FAMILY SEDAN\n'61 SIMCA SPORT COUPE\n'60 FORD SEDAN\n'58 PONTIAC SEDAN\n'58 LINCOLN HARDTOP\n'57 CHEV. TUDOR HARDTOP\n'56 BUICK SEDAN\n'56 METEOR SEDAN\n'56 FORD RANCHWAGON\n'56 STUDEBAKER HAWK\n'56 OLDS. TUDOR HARDTOP\n'55 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n'55 FORD TUDOR RANCHWAGON\n'54 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n'54 FORD SEDAN\n'53 PONTIAC FAMILY SEDAN\n'53 FORD SEDAN. Clean.\n\"American model.\"\nTRUCKS\n'57 IHC TANDEM\n'57 IHC Vi-TON\n'55 GMC 5-TON\nWith Box and Hoist\n\"Road Ready and Rarin' To Go'\nMany More '49s to '54s,\nAll makes, all models.\nNO DOWN PAYMENT ON\nAPPROVED CREDIT\nCome In and Pick Your\nSecond Car\nTWO LOTS \u2014\nTWO LOCATIONS\n701 Baker St. in NELSON\n498 Columbia Ave., CASTLEGAR\nMOTORS  LTD.\nGMC. Trucks\nPontiac,  Buick, Vauxhall\n24 HOUR WRECKER\nPhone 352-6641\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nEXTRA SPECIAL - TEEN-\nagers' and women's shoes on\nsale at $3.99. R. Andrew & Co.\nOIL HOUSE HEATER.  APPLY\n706 Stanley St. or Ph. 352-6871.\nPORK  FOR  SALE,   HALF   OR\nwhole. Phone 352-2355.\nONE G.E. TV SET, 1959 MODEL.\n21\" screen. Phone 352-5895.\nBANTAM CHICKENS FOR SALE\n\u20142 boys' bikes. Phone 352-5741.\nDAVENPORT AND CHAIR. PH.\n352-6953.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPriced   right   properties   are\nselling. If you are considering\nselling or interested in a larger\nor smaller dwelling \u2014\nSEE US TODAY\n2 B.R.s in Fairview\n2 nice lots. Modern bungalow.\nC o m p act   kitchen.   Rumpus\n[oom'GaoN,v   $12,600\nfurnace. ONLY     v      '\nTerms.\n2 Older Style\nFamily Homes\nOn 3 nice corner lots. Attractive 3\/4 BR home. Full base-\n\u25a0\u2122nl. Gas $10,900\nTerms.\nfurnace.\nOn 3 nice lots, corner location.\n3 BRs. Part basement, gas furnace. Large garage. Immediate\noccupancy. $9900\nTerms\t\nExcellent Value\n4-B.R. home, close in. Complete\nnew bathroom. Full basement,\ngas hot water heat.   $8500\nTerms. Only\t\n2 B.R.s Uphill\nCompact bungalow with kitchen\nand utility room. Gas furnace.\nPriced right $$900\nNorth Shore\n3 Lake frontage properties. Vacant lot, 62' lake      $3000\nfrontage\t\nSummer home (easily converted) 1.2 acres, 100' sandy beach.\nP    , , $17,900\nPriced at .. '\n2 BR permanent home, 1 acre,\n\"\"'lake $19,500\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,   ETC.,   FOR   SALE\n(Continued)\nJOHNSTONE ROAD\nNORTH SHORE\nJust across the bridge. 2-B.R.\nhome; extra B.R. 1st level.\nH.W. floors L.R. Kitchen with\ndining area facing the lake. \u2014\nCement foundation with garage\nattached. 66'x200'     $7200\n$2000 down,\n$76 per mon. Incl. 6% interest.\nFAMILY HOME\nAdjacent to Sr.  High School.\n3 B.R. home. Large L.R. Well\nplanned kit. and dining room.\n- wiling. J6500\nS.P.\n$2000 Down.\nSecluded choice Fairview\nHeights tri-level 3-B.R. home\nof newest architectural design\nof quality materials and workmanship. Picturesque L.R. (selected brick fireplace, full\nwall); functional kitchen, dining room and utility room; also\nfamily room (fireplace); patio,\ncarport.   Beautifully  land-\nfg\u00ab- $19,500\nBal. N.H.A. 5% Mortgage\nIncl. Princ, Int., Taxes\nFAIRVIEW, 10TH STREET\nIn a secluded setting 3-4 B.R.\nhome. Details of Canadian\nBirch and shantung. H.W.\nfloors, well planned kitchen\nand breakfast nook. Utility\nRm., vanity bathroom, double\n\u00ab-fP.     $16,740\nDiscount Price ...A      '\nN.H.A. Bal, Mort. $66.16 per mo\nincluding 5% interest.\nCREEK STREET\nJust right for the farmer at\nheart. 2\/3 acre of fruit trees,\nberries and garden ready for\nharvest. Neat 3-B.R. home on\none floor. $5900\nS.P.\nOnly $2000 down.\n1961   VOLKSWAGEN\nPhone 352-6259.\nTV and Appliances'\nI960   VOLKSWAGEN,   CUSTOM,\n14.000 miles, radio. Ph. 352-2042.\nLiberty Appliance Sales\n324 Hall St  - Phone 352-2910\n'48   CHEV    WHAT   OFFERS?\nPh. 352-7339.\nPHONE 352-3823\nCONCRETE\nFor  ALL Building  Purposes\nSAND and GRAVEL\nNEED\nFLOOR COVERINGS?\nSee Simpsons-Sears. Low, low\ncatalogue prices. Fast shipping\nservice from Vancouver. Complete selections of samples at\nHEAT YOUR HOME FOR PEN-\nnies by using the Valley Comfort auotmatic wood lurnace or\nheater, forced air, gravity or\nspace heating. One cord of\nwood burnt in the Comfort\nequals 150 gals. of. fuel oil.\nWood lasts for at least 12\nhours. Write Slocan Valley\nSupply, Appledale or phone\n355-2276 asking for \"Why 1\nShould Use Wood For Fuel.\"\nLIBERTY VARIETY STORE-\nwide Clearance held over for\nfinal week! All stock 30% - 5%\noff. Save on buttons, zippers,\nsewing needs, children's back-\nto-school wear, new freezers,\nwashers, fridges, and T.V. All\nsales final. No reasonable offer\nrefused.\nSIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c lb.\nSides of grain fed pork, 37c lb.\nBacon and hams. Newdan\nFarms, Creston, Ph. EL 6-9901,\nFree weekly delivery.\nfrontage. ..\nService Stations\nSlocan City. Coffee Shop, groceries, etc. 4 BR home. Commercial garage.    <t | 5 500\n2 gas pumps.       ^      '\nTerms.\nCreston-Salmo Highway. 2 Service bays. Office. Cafe. 500'\nroad  frontage.  2  gas  pimps.\n\"\u00b0use $20,000\nTerms  '\nRanch and Timberland\nClose to Nelson. 2 good houses.\n360 acres, 30 cleared in hay.\nFull line of machinery. Ample\nwater supply. Good pasture for\n50\/60 head. $22,000\nAND OTHERS TO\nCHOOSE FROM\nMOST DESIRABLE\nLOCATION\nClose in \u2014 2 B.R. home rebuilt\nand designed by archil. Featuring large L.R., functional kit.\nMany custom built-ins. Utility\nroom wired for washer, dryer\nand auto, dishwasher. Cement,\nbasement and new gas furnace,\nalso new wiring. 50'x32' lot. Low\ntaxes-, 0wner \\<f \u25a0   $8500\ning. Priced right at\n$1500 Down, $68 per mo.\nincluding 6% int.\nOwner is willing to accept a\nTRAILER\nas full or part down payment\non big North Shore Hollywood\nstyle home, that offers everything in luxurious comfort,\nfrom an ultra-modern kitchen\nto a heating plant, overlooking\nlake and city. \u2014 Look at this\none and you are in for a breathtaking surprise. For the discriminating buyer only. Your\nenquiries are invited.\nI LIKE KOOTENAY LAKE\nj Only \\ mile to 50' sandy beach.\n: Rebuilt 3-4 B.R. home.  Large\nL.R., kitchen with dining nook,\nsundeck overlooking the lake.\nEasy access to parking area.\nSee this one \u2014 we have the\nkey.\nS.P.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(SECTION 162)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot 7\nof Lot 7551, Kootenay District,\nPlan 4049.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate\nof Title No. 125264-1 to the above\nmentioned lands in the name of\nCHARLES C. HAY and bearing\ndate of the 8th February, 1961\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of\nmy intention at the expiration\nof one calendar month from first\npublication hereof to issue Provincial Certificate of Title in lieu\nof such lost Certificate. Any person having any information with\nreference to such lost Certificate\nof Title is requested to communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C.\nTHIS 16th DAY OF\nAUGUST, 1962.\nL. A. McPHAIL\nDeputy Registrar.\nNelson Land Registration\nDistrict.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, A'JS. 17, 1952 \u2014 9\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\n(Continued)\nPUREBRED GERMAN SHEP-\nherd pup, tan and black, 2\nmo. old. Ph. 352-3056.\nC H 1HUAHUA PUPS, APPLY\nto Bird's Kennels, Blueberry\nCreek.\nSIAMESE KITTENS FOR SALE.\nPhone 365-2853.\nRENTALS\n$14,800\nGood Terms.\nWE TRADE DWELLINGS\nAll our listings are inspected\nand appraised at a fair price\nto  vendors  and  purchasers,\nT. D. Rosling\nLtd.\nPhone 352-3581, Office\nJ. B. Brown, 352-2356\nPhil Robinson, 352-2304\nFOR THE DISCRIMINATING\nBUYER \u2014 Fairview residence\non nicely landscaped grounds.\nLiving rm., den, bdroom, dining\nrm., sun room, kitchen, breakfast rm. and bath on ground\nfloor. 2 bdrooms. upstairs. Lower level finished rumpus room\nand bedroom. Tiled utility area.\nHot water oil heating. Oak\nfloors throughout. Matching\ngarage. Priced below appraisal.\nPhone 352-2139.\n$45\n$65\n$60\nA WONDERFUL BUY IN A\nvery comlortable family home.\nFour bedrooms, 2 bathrooms,\nbeautiful private back yard\nablaze right now with many\ncolorful flowers. Close to\nschools, churches and town. Ph\nHarrison 352-6026.\nFOR SALE 123i acres. New\nhouse and other buildings, fruit\ntrees, plenty of water. Good\nlocation (or Auto Court or\nmotel on highway No. 3 Thrums\nN. Kabatoff.\nFOR SALE, SADDLE HORSE\nand saddle, $125. Good Alfalfa\nand Timothy hay. Joe Pogony\nJr., Lister. B.C. Phone E16-2605.\n2 ONLY iVa H.P.-2 ONLY 3 H.P.\nChoremflster Tillers drastically\nreduced. 1 only used model.\nEllison's, 523 Front St.\nANSILAGE CUTTER WITH\nblower. Phone 674 Balfour or\napply R. L. Stevenson, R. R. 1.\nFINDLAY COMBINATION\nrange, gas. Good condition.\nPhone 352-2549.\n2 HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTOR\nI   cycles. Phone 352-2663.\nZENITH TRANSOCEANIC RA-\ndio, used little. $275. Apply Box\n180, Nelson Daily News,\nSIMPLEX IRONER MANGEL.\nIdeal for Motel, etc. $85. Ph.\n352-6902.\nHOUSE - 4 ROOMS AND BATH,\nhalf block from Main St. on\nRailroad Ave., Salmo, also 33\nlots north of ball park. Phone\n357-9481.\n4 ROOM HOUSE ON ONE ACRE\nPrivate location, close-in, $750\ndown. F.P. $4,000. Wm. Kaly\nniuk Agencies, phone 352-2425.\ni RM. HOUSE WITH A RUM\npus Room, gas furnace, just\nlike new. 708 Kokanee St., Fair-\nview. Call after 1 p.m.\nFAMILY HOME IN FAIRVIEW.\nClose to park and schools. Ph.\n352-3498 after 5, weekends all\nday.\nFARM FOR SALE AT TAGHUM,\nB.C. $1,500. Ph. 352-3397 after\n5 p.m.\nREVENUE HOUSE. 200 BLOCK,\nVictoria St. Apply Box 8956.\nDaily News.\nONLY $1000 DOWN\nClose in. 2-B.R. home. New gas\nfurnace.  Utility room,  plumbing for automatic     $6500\nwasher. S.P\t\nVIEW STREET\nBuilt 1959. Home for the discriminating buyer. Smart decor.\nL.R. (fireplace), D.R., 2 B.R.s\nwith extra B.R. first level. Furnished rec. room. $ J g \u00bb00\nSpecial price ^ '\n$5000 down.\nFOR RENT\nSingle Unit.\nRent      \t\nDouble Unit.\nRent      {.\t\nHouse.\nPer month     \t\nThis   Could   Be   Your   Old\nAge Security. $1000 Down.\nClose in. Duplex, 2 B.R.s each.\n2 lots, secluded location. Ideal\nas   home   and   income.   Full\np\u21226 $9000\n$80 per mo. inc. 6% int.\nINNES ST.\nHere is a new home.  1 B.R.\nlull basement. Very good decoration. Lot 75x120'. $6300\nCash price \t\nBLAYLOCK ADDITION\n2 choice  corner  lots. 95'xl50',\n$1500\n$500 Down.\nCROSSLEY ST.\n3-B.R. home. Ap.      $65Q0\nprox, 6 lots. ^\nOnly $2000 down.\nEach\nGOVERNMENT RD.\n3-B.R. home. 2 lots. $4800\nPrice\nOnly $1500 down.\nPHONE 352-6144\nFOR REAL ESTATE\nRudi Martin, Res. 352-7689\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 352-3846\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES  LTD.\nREAL ESTATE \u2022 INSURANCE\n554 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nAMENDMENT:\nTimber Sale X88725\nThere wil be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 2:00 p.m.\n(Local Time) on September 7th,\n1962, in the office of the Forest\nRanger, Kaslo, t h e Licence\nX88725, to cut 1,316,000 CU. ft.\nof: fir, larch, hemlock, white\npine, cedar, spruce, balsam and\nlodgepole pine trees and trees\nof other species on an area situated on Murphy Creek, East side\nof Kootenay Lake, Kootenay Land\nDistrict.\nFive (51 years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend in person may submit a\nsealed tender, to be opened at the\nhour of auction and treated as\none 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, Kaslo, B.C,\nMACHINERY\nSPECIAL\n2 Only\nS\n5 Roller Tracks,\nFull Reverse Diesel\nEngine With\nHydraulic Bulldozers,\nLogging Winch\nFor Logging Use\n$7500 Each\nThese are new machines but\nmust be sold.\nCENTRAL\n& Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\n702 Front St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-2633\n2  BDRM.  HOUSE.  GAS  HEAT,\ncorner location. Ph. 352-7716.\n3   BEDROOM    HOUSE,    COAL\nfurnace. Phone 352-6808.\nIN  FAIRVIEW~\"NE\\V~2  BDRM\nhouse, gas heat. Ph. 352-3889.\nPOLE  MAKERS \"\nFARMERS\nCAMPERS\nMUNICIPALITIES\nNew Low Price on\nMcCulloch\nModel 142, 18\" bar.       <t | 55\nNow *\nModel 152, 24\" bar.      $205\nNow .. ^\n6-Month Guarantee\nHURRY - HURRY to\nMAC'S\nWelding  &   Equipment Co\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\nGROUND FLOOR SUITE. FUR-\nnished. Adutls only. Two extra\nlarge rooms, kitchenette, private bath, private verandah\nUse of auto; laundry. $70.00 in\neludes everything. J. B. Brown.\n352-3581 or eves. 352-2356.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nTWO-BEDROOM APT. HEAT,\n[ridge, stove. Adults. Ph. 352-\n2592 after 6 p.m.\n1 BDRM. APT. FURN. OR UN-\nfurn. Ground level. Ph. 352-5252.\n3     ROOMS,      UNFURNISHED,\nself contained. Ph. 352-6003.\nCENTRAL   APARTMENT.   4\nrooms. Adults. Ph. 352-6024.\n2 RM. STE. ALSO HSKPG. RM.\nApply 140 Baker or Ph. 352-3384.\nSMALL CABIN FOR RENT. PH.\n352-6340.\nAIR CONDITIONED\nLOW RATES\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   room,   weekly,   monthly\nrates.  Dishes,  linen  supplied,\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker\nOVER OUR OFFICE, SINGLE\nhousekeeping room, some furniture, fridge, etc. $30 month.\nHeat and electricity supplied.\nC. W. Appleyard & Co., 421\nBaker St.\nSMALL 1 BDRM. HOUSE N.\nShore, 2V4 miles from bridge.\nWired for range, winterized.\nRent $40 per month. Adults\nonly. Phone 352-7717.\nRENT A SINGER SEWING MA.\nchine, delivered and returned\n$2 per week; $5 per month.\nSinger Sewing Centre, Phone\n352-3631.     \u25a0\nONE FURN. 3 ROOM SUITE,\nalso one furn. housekeeping\nroom..Close In. Phone 352-5492\nbetween 9 and 11 a.m., or\napply 311 Cedar St.\nUNFUR. SELF-CONT. SUITE.\n1 bdrm., spacious living rm.,\nkitchen with stove and fridge.\n$40 a mo. includes heat and hot\nwafer. Apply 918A Kootenay St.\n4 R.M. COTTAGE WITH HOT\nand cold water and electricity\n$40.00 per mo. Mayflower Service, Slocan Park, B.C.\n2 BED, HEATED DELUXE APT.\nfurn. or unfurn. Automatic\nwashing facilities. Upper Fair-\nview. Phone 352-3808.\nSMALL N.S. COTTAGE. PER-\nmanent. Adults only. Box 8912,\nDaily News.\nUNFURNISHED ONE BDRM.\nsuite. Bevanne Apts. Phone\n352-6538.\n6 RM. APT. PERMANENT. AD-\nults only. Box 8615, Nelson\nDally News.\nLARGE HOME NEAR S. NEL-\nson schools. $75 month. Available  Sept.   15th.  Ph.   352-5401.\nHEATED AND FURNISHED 3-\nroom suite close to schools. Ph.\n352-5298 eves.\nSMALL APARTMENT. 810 Victoria St. Ph. 352-2902.\nSUITE, SUITABLE FOR 1 OR 2\nworking girls, Ph, 352-7195.\nUNFUR. 2-BDRM.  SUITE,  PH.\n352-6985, 411 Silica St.\n1 BDRM. COTTAGE FOR RENT.\nPhone 352-2624.\n2 ROOM HOUSE, WITH BATH.\nPhone 352-6272.\nREMODLED 3 RMS. AND BATH\nGas stove. Ph. 352-5198.\nDUPLEX. 3 RMS. AND BATH,\nlarge basement, electric range,\nheated. Ph. 352-7491,\n(Continued Next Column)\nNrbntt\nlatlij Nms\nCirculation Dept., Phone 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 35 cents\nSubscription rates:\nBy Mail in Canada\nin advance.\nOutside Nelson\nOne month ,.  g $ 1.25\nThree months . :    B.50\nSix months _....._ L    6.50\nOne year   _... 12,00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe Commonwealth\nOne month  ? 1.75\nThree months ..\u201e,_.;.._._    5.00\nSix months .__     9.00\nOne year  18.00\nBy Mall to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month  $ 2.50\nThree months _     7.00\nSix months  -    13.00\nOne year    24.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,   phono   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillisson;\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner)\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown.\nNEWSP.WER Ma\\N DTES\naUAMAGORDO, N.M. (AP)-\nRoscoe B. EUard, 63, internationally known educatlnist and\nnewspaper man, died Tuesday\nafter a short illness. He had\nserved as. professor. p\u00a3 journ-\nnalism at the University of Missouri, was an associate dean o(\nIhe graduate school of journalism at. Columbia University and\nwas founder and director of th\u00bb\njournalism school at Washington and Les University.\nC. W. APPLEYARD & CO. LTD.\nEstablished 1912\nREALTORS and INSURaANCE AGENTS\n421 Baker Street P.O. Box 26 Phono 352-3944\n8 - 10 YD. BOX AND HOIST ALSO complete sets 28,000 lb. bogies, 1960 302 G.M.C. motor, 5\nspeed transmissions and 3\nspeed auxiliary, recently overhauled, A-l condition. Ph. 365-\n5491.\nMINING MACHINERY. 315 CFM\ncompressors, mucking machines. All types of mining equipment fo rsale, rent or renlal\npurchase. Phone Slocan 355-\n2241.\nI960 INTERNATIONAL 300 UTI-\nlity tractor equipped with back-\nhoe and front end loader. A-l\ncondtion. Priced for quick sale.\nPhone 365-5938 Castlegar, Jesse\nHeifer.\nUSED JAMMERS, GRADERS,\ncats, trucks. Stored in Nelson.\nVancouver Equipment Corp.\nPhone Scotty at 352-6488.\n$1000 DOWN, TD-18 CAT, CARCO\nwinch and hydraulic angle dozer newly overhauled. Full price\n$5500.. Slocan 355-2241.\n20-LB. MINE RAIL AND 2-INCH\nblack pipe for sale. Phone Slocan 355-2241.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nK 9 REG BOARDING KEN-\nnels Fruitvale Highway. G. A.\nCrawford prop. Ph. 367-2483.\nIContinued Next Column)\n1-WE HAVE 3 HOMES in the $5500 bracket and It to possible\n$1000 down might handle any of these. Come in and talk lt\nover.\n2\u2014A VERY LOVELY HOME 3M. miles from Nelson on North\nShore, at $18,500. - This is one of the nicest homes wo have\nhad listed for months. Good terms.\n3-A WELL-BUILT 4-BEDROOM HOME, very close h. Gas\nfurnace; garage in basement. Good siding, good roof, Al\nfoundation. $6900. Exceptionally easy terms.\n4\u2014NORTH SHORE, 15-Mile. Neat cottage, fully modern, on\n1 1\/3 acres. Good water supply. 2 bedrooms, full bathroom,\ngas automatic furnace. New garage, easy $8250\naccess. Vi mile from store\t\n$3000 cash and $75 per month.\n5-REVENUE HOME. In a secluded location six blocks from\nBaker Street. Gas furnace, A-l wiring. - $8900 - $2000 down\nmight handle \u2014 balance monthly. Your own suite and a potential revenue of another $80.00 or $100.00 a month.\n6-Several North Shore BUILDING SITES and BEACH frontages. \u2014 From $2000 up.\nY-FAIRVIEW. Ideal family home In preferred location; convenient to schools, shopping districts and churches. Well-\ndeveloped grounds, 75'xl30', with wrought-iron fencing. This\ncharming home has double plumbing and four $23,500\nbedrooms. With terms\t\n2 REASONS WHY -\nit will pay you to list your property with us:\n1. Baker Street window to advertise your property.\n2. Money available to purchasers by way of Mortgage\nto help you get a larger down payment.\nAgents for All Types of INSURANCI\nFIRE - AUTO - LIABILITY\nand MODERN PACKAGE POLICIES\nPHONE 352-3944\ndealer\nWILLYS PICKUP\n1952   4-Wheel  Drive,  4-Cyllnder\n1962 WILLYS  JEEP\nUMVERSaU, CJ5 \u2014 4-Wheel Drive\nKLINE'S MOTORS\nJust Out of City Limits South, Highway SA--6\nPhone 352-7238 Nelson; B. C.\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUG. 17, 1962\nIt's a Good bet That\nHELENE CURTIS SHAMPOOS\nCan Help You to Healthier Hair\nClear Shampoo: Large size\nLanolin Lotion Shampoo: ..\nShampoo Plus Egg:\t\nCreme Rinse:\t\n $1.19\n.99 and 1.29\n.99 and\n.99 and\n1.29\n1.19\nCheck the Specials at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nTwin Cosmonauts Rest\nAfter Medical Tests\nBy PRESTON GROVER\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014The Soviet\nUnion's twin cosmonauts rested\nup today and underwent medical tests to determine the effects of their historic joint\nflight as Moscow made ready\na giant welcome in Red Square.\nThe Russians did not disclose the exact whereabouts of\nMaj. Andrian Nikolayev and\nLt.-Col. Pavel Popovich, who\nlanded six miutes apart Wednesday in hill and desert country about 1,500 miles southeast\nof Moscow after space flights\nof four and three days.\nThe Soviet news agency No-\nvosti said \"for the next few\ndays they will remain under observation  of  doctors  to  study\nDominion Scientists Certain\nMeteorites Made Quebec Lakes\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nOTTAWA (CP) - New evidence has been collected that\nthree craters in northern Quebec may have been carved by\nmeteorites which plunged to\nearth as much as 2,000,000,000\nyears ago.\nThe data was gathered by\nscientists of the Dominion Observatory and the Geological\nSurvey of Canada during recent\nvisits to the Clearwater Lake\nand New Quebec craters.\nTwo craters form Clearwater\nLake, located some 800 miles\nnorth of Ottawa and 50 miles\neast of Richmond Gulf on the\nast coast of Hudson Bay. One\nis 20 miles in diameter and the\nother 14 miles.\nThe New Quebec crater, two\nmiles across, is in northern Quebec about 130 miles south of\nHudson Strait. It also forms a\nsmall lake.\nMichael Robert Dence, scientific officer with the Dominion\nObservatory, said Wednesday\nin an interview studies of the\nClearwater craters tend to disprove earlier theories that they\nmay have had a volcanic origin.\nFIND SHATTERED ROCKS\n3Mr, Dence, member of a\nparty which visited the craters\nfor 10 days, said shattered rocks\nof the type found i nthe neighboring countryside were found\non the shorelines of some of\nthe 11 islands which dot the larger lake. The theory is that the\nshattered rocks were created\nwhen a meteorite struck.\nOther material believed to\nhave been formed by the impact of a meteorite also was\nfound. About a half a ton of\nshattered rocks and other material now is on its way to Ottawa for detailed  examination.\nAn attempt also will be made\nthis winter to obtain core samples of material below the bed\nof the larger lake by drilling.\nThis lake is relatively shallow,\npermitting drilling operations,\nwhile the smaller lake has_ a\ndepth of about 550 feet.\nDr. Kenneth Currie, geologist\nwith the Geological Survey,\nsaid   angular  shaped   rocks\nfound in the area and deforma-1\nties found in other rocks could\nhave been created by the impact of a meteorite.\nDr. Currie estimated that the\nQuebec crater is some 50,000\nyears old and that the craters\nat Clearwater Lake were\nformed about 2,000,000,000 years\nago.\nFog Plus Faulty Compass\nMade Flyer Change Course\nBURNS LAKE, B.C. (CP)~\nFog and a faulty compass\nforced a former Polish combat\nflyer to deviate from his course\nand crash-land 25 miles short\nof an airstrip in the British Columbia northland,\nJan Falkowski and his three\npassengers then rationed out 12\ntoffee candies while they waited\nthree.days for rescue as search\nplanes combed an area 300\nmiles to the south for their\nMooney 20A aircraft.\nFalkowski, 50, a Second\nWorld War flying ace, Alma\nTanski, 45, her son Tom, 22,\nand Grant MacGregor, 20, of\nOshawa, Ont., escaped injury\nin the crash landing near Nah-\nlouza Lake, about 300 miles\nnorth of Vancouver.\nTwo nights and three days\nlater, they were spotted by Carol W. McGuife, 50, of Seattle,\nwhile he flew over the area late\nTuesday looking for cariboo.\nThe following morning, Mc-\nGuire led a forest service helicopter to the crash scene and\nthe four were flown one at a\ntime to nearby Red Fern hunting lodge. Later they were\ntaken to Burns Lake.\nHIT BUD WEATHER\nFalkowski, a Goodwood, Ont.,\nadvertising executive and flying instructor, was headed from\nCalgary to Vancouver Monday\nwhen he hit bad weather about\n150 miles from the coast.\n\"We were following the Fraser river and when we got to\nBoston Bar we could see the\nentire area ahead was solid\nfog,\" he said. \"Then we found\nthe compass was acting up. I\nturned north and followed the\nedge of the coastal range looking for a break in the weather\nso that I could get through to\nthe sea.\n\"When we were flying high\nthe radio was fine. But, at the\nlower altitudes we were unable to reach anyone.\n\"I found a place to get\nthrough to the west. It was all\nrugged hills below and we were\ngetting very short of gas. I saw\nthe field and it was the only\nplace for miles that I knew we\ncould land safely.\"\nWAVED RED COAT\nHe said they first saw Mc-\nGuire's plane late Tuesday.\n\"Alma waved her red, knitted\ncoat and we all shouted. He\ncircled, then came very low.\nWe were all very excited. We\nhad been living on three candies a day each and we were\npoorly dressed for the cold.\"\nPhillip Smith, engineer on\nthe helicopter which picked up\nthe survivors at the crash\nscene, said: \"If Mr. Falkowski\nhad kept flying for another 10\nminutes he would have reached\nthe airstrip at Red Fern, but\nof course he couldn't have\nknown that.\"\nFalkowski kept calling may-\nday signals on his plane's radio every hour for two days.\nOne wing was torn off the\nplane, the propellor was badly\ndamaged and the undercarriage\nhad sunk into the muskeg.\nTHREE MONTHS ADDED\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) -\nPeter Lewis Martin Day, 24, who\nescaped from the British Columbia penitentiary here, had three\nmonths added to his sentence\nThursday.\nDay who escaped by scaling a\n14-foot barbed-wire exercise yard\nfence Aug. 8 was at liberty Vk\ndays.\t\nHe was serving a five-year\nsentence for manslaughter.\nWeekend SPECIALS\nPlastic Pipe\n100-foot rolls.\n%-inch\n3.99\ni-inch\n6.95\nTurpentine\nPure gum.\n26 oz. bottle\n.49\nSchool  Lunch  Kits\nThermos brand, with bottle.\nRegular 3.98 \t\n3.39\nKem-Glo\nThe super quality enamel.\n2.89\n9.33\nQuarts,\nRegular 3.55 .\nGallons,\nRegular 11.65\nSuper Kem-Tone\n2.33\n7.49\nQuarts,\nRegular 2.90\nGallons,\nRegular 3.25\nLoomex\n2\/14 with ground.\n250 ft. box. Foot ..\n.05\nG.E. Toasters\nAutomatic.\nRegular 23.95 .\n18.99\nC.C.M. Bikes\nMen's sports models. 3-speed. A\u00a3 QC\nRegular 54.95     T'O.J'J\nReg\nSamson\n9.95 ..\nHeat Pads\n      8.29\nReg\n8.95\n7.59\nReg\n7.95\t\n 6.95\nWestinghouse\nLight Bulbs\n60 and 100-watt.\nInside frost ~* for\n\u2022   for \u2022 ' *\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nMember Link Hardware Chain\nPhone 352-5517\n395 Baker St.\nthe influences of prolonged\nspace flight on the human organism.\"\nPreparations already have\nbeen begun for the mammoth\nreception expected at week's\nend in Red Square, where Russia's space pioneers Maj. Yuri\nGagarin and Maj. Gherman i-\ntov were feted after their epic\nflights.\nNikolayev and Popovich will\njoin Khrushchev and other Soviet leaers atop Lenin's tomb\nto watch a parade that doubtless will run for hours.\nSTAGE PARADE\nA group of youthful Moscow\nresidents staged a parade of\ntheir own Wednesday as word\nspread that the cosmonauts finally had landed.\nThey paraded through the\ncity carrying big portraits of\nall four Soviet spacemen and\nplacards with the inscripttion:\n\"Glory to the explorers of the\nuniverse!\"\nMoscow newspapers were full\non praise for Nikolayev and\nPopovich and claims that the\nCommunist system was responsible for the amazing feat.\nCommentator Georgi Zhukov\nnoted in Pravda that President\nKennedy \"admmtted in public\nthat the United States was lagging behind the Soviet Union in\nspace exploration and that the\nUnited States is worried over\nthis.\"\n\"In the eyes of the whole\nworld this gesture would assume great importance, if it\nwere followed by real steps toward the conclusion of an\nagreement on general and complete disarmament and the establishment of American-Soviet\nco-operation in the peaceful exploration of outer space,\" he\nsaid.\nNEEDLES U.S.\nZhukov, former chairman of\nthe committee for cultural relations with foreign countries,\ndevoted his long Pravda article to praise for the new astronauts and jibes at the United\nStates.\n\"The Soviet Union has attained such breath - taking\nheights which were inaccessible\nto the West, which yesterday\nwas still boasting of its old\ncivilization,\" he wrote.\n\"The pure air of these heights\nis amazing, favorable for the\nboldest and most daring creative endeavors. Those who must\nconduct their scientific activity\nin the stifling old world of the\ndollar lack this invigorating\nair.\"\nThe astronauts had a long\nphone talke with Premier\nKhrushchev, on vacation on the\nBlack Sea.\n\"I won't detain you,\" Khrushchev told them. \"Go and rest\nup\u2014rest up in a real way.\n\"In the cosmos you had more\nquiet when you rested,\" the\npremier joked, \"but we can't\nguarantee you such quiet now.\nYou'll have to put up with the\nnoise of the earth as we do.\"\nMessage Found In Empty\nPlane From Mackenzie\n, EDMONTON (CP) - The\nsilent, lonely north and a message found in an empty, damaged plane.Thursday clad in mystery the fate of a pilot who disappeared months ago \u2014 just as\nit did 11 years ago.\nThe rugged wilderness offered few clues to what happened to Edmonton airman\nBlake MacKenzie. The disappearance roused echoes of the\ndramatic 1951 search for northern bush pilot Johnny Bou-\nrassa.\nThe discovery of MacKenzie's\nplane, missing since January,\nwas reported Wednesday. It\nwas found by a prospecting\nparty near McLeod Lake, in an\nisolated area south of the Na-\nhanni Valley, 625 miles northwest of here.\nA message from MacKenzie\nfound in the deserted plane said\nhe was not injured. The plane\nhad been landed above the tree\nline one of the many 5,000-foot\npeaks which slash the area.\nJust as the note left behind\nby Johnny Bourassa had said,\nthe message of the 47-year-old\nMacKenzie said he had remained with his downed plane\nfive days; that he was then setting out afoot in a bid for civilization.\nVANISHED IN WILDS\nBoth disappeared in forbidding wilderness while on flights\nbetween remote northern\npoints.\nBoth, said veteran northern\nbush pilots, violated a cardinal\nrule of survival in the north by\nleaving their planes. But in\nboth cases, discovery of the\nmessage came months after the\nsearch for their missing single-\nengine planes had been abandoned.\nThe text of the message from\nMacKenzie, a one-time RCAF\nnavigator, was not immediately\navailable. It was not known in\nwhich direction he had set out\nor what equipment he had with\nhim.\nj A former co-ordinator of cultural affairs for the Alberta\n! government, he was a member\nof a group making a travel film\non the Nahanni district.\nHe was on a 100-mile supply\ntrip in a Cessna 180 aircraft between Smith River, on the B.C.Yukon boundary, and Mickie\nLake. He was within seven\nmiles of his destination.\nMacKenzie was reported\noverdue Jan. 5, but blizzards\nwhipping the area delayed a\nstart of aerial searching until\nJan. 17. The hunt continued until Feb. 8. covering 118,000\nsquare miles.\nIn the 1951 disappearance of\nBourassa, a two-time winner of\nthe DFC during the second\nworld war, the Peace River,\nAlta., pilot was lost on a 200-\nmile flight from Bathurst Inlet\nsouth to Salmita Mines.\nFOUND PLANE\nHe disappeared May 18. A\nsearch covered 160,000 square\n\u25a0miles without finding any trace\nof him. On Sept. 4, his single-\nengine Bellanca was found on\nthe rock-strewn shores of Whol-\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type;  larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nRotary luncheon Friday, 12:15\np.m., Hume  Silver Room.\nTrail Business College\nNew Term Begins Sept. 4\nOffice Reopens August 20\nFresh skim milk 15c gt. ta proven\nsanitary container (glass) from\nK. V. CO-OP DAIRY Ph. 352-7317.\nClearance  of  summer  costume\njewellery.  Va  PRICE.\nTED   ALLEN'S   JEWELLERY\nGOLF  DRIVING  RANGE   AT\nTANGLEWOOD LODGE\nPROCTER-HARROP  RD.\nCorduroy pants for St. Joseph's\nare in\nTOT 'N' TEEN SHOP\nBINGO\nEAGLE  HALL TONIGHT\n48\" Satin Back Drapery\nRegular $2.95 $1.49\nSTERLING HOME\nFURNISHERS\nMake  your  reservations  now\nfor that winter vacation. Phone\n352-3212\nBRADLEY TRAVEL AGENCIES\nWell stocked in all sizes of\nBack  to School  wear for girls\nand boys at\nEBERLE'S 625 BAKER ST.\nSummer  clearance  items  include sun and beach wear, sun-\ntan dresses, shorts, pedal pushers, etc., on sale now at\nEBERLE'S.\ndaia Lake, 350 miles southwest\nof his destination.\nA note found inside the plane\nsaid he was unhurt in a ski\nlanding on the lakeshore. A rock\ndamaged the propellor and undercarriage of the craft.\nBourassa, a veteran woodsman who had flown and trekked\nafoot over much of the north\nand had survived a 1949 crash\nin which two were killed, said\nin his note he planned to walk\nin a northwesterly direction.\n\"I believe that will take me\nto great Slave Lake, somewhere near Reliance,\" the note\nsaid.\n\"I have a good two weeks'\nration that could be stretched\nto three weeks. I hope to be\nsomewhere before then.\nToday, in a rugged area far\nto the west of where Johnny\nBourassa disappeared, searchers were to hunt clues to the\npath followed by Blake MacKenzie.\nChicago Longshore\nMen Refuse To Load\nCanadian Grain Ship\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Longshoremen refused Wednesday to load\na Canadian grain ship docked\nat Chicago's St. Lawrence Seaway port. (\nThe Gordon C. Leitch, owned\nby Upper Lakes Shipping\nLimited of Toronto, arrived at\nContinental Grain Company's\nCalumet River elevator Sunday,\nbut Seafarers International\nUnion of North America members on towing tugs refused to\naccept a tow line from the\nLeitch. The ship's captain, however, brought her in without\ntugs.\nThe firm has been involved in\na labor dispute between two\nCanadian unions, the Seafarers\nInternational Union of Canada\n(Ind.) and the Canadian Maritime Union (CLC), formed when\nthe SIU was expelled from the\nCanadian Labor Congress for\nmembership raiding.\nUpper Lakes ships formerly\nwere manned by SIU members,\na spokesman for the company\nsaid, but the firm signed a contract with the new union last\nyear. The SIU in the United\nStates has been supporting its\naffiliate in a bid to man upper\nlakes ships.\nAtlantic and Gulf Stevedoring\nAssociates, which loads ships at\nContinental elevators, said they\ncalled for workers to load the\nLeitch, but were told by the\ndispatcher that grain trimmers,\nwho distribute grain in the\nships's holds, refused to go\naboard the Leitch because of\nfear of violence.\nKennedy Salutes Russian\nRecord-Smashing Flights\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nrecord-smashing flights of Russia's space twins has drawn a\nsalute from President Kennedy\nand confident predictions from\nU.S.   space   officials   that   the\nfirst man on the moon will be\nan American.\nThe president's congratulations were in a message to Soviet Premier Khrushchev,\nmade public Wednesday by the\nWhite House. It read:\nEisenhower Concedes\nRussians Go Ahead\nLONDON (CP)\u2014British exports differed Thursday with former president Eisenhower's assertion that the Russians aren't\nahead in space. They cited the\npinpoint landings made by Russia's twin cosmonauts as clear\nproof of a Soviet space lead\nover the United States.\nEisenhower, who is touring\nEurope as a \"private citizen\"\nwith his wife and two grandchildren, told a press conference here, televised to the U.S.\nvia the Telstar satellite:\n\"I do not agree they (the\nRussians) have a space lead.\nWe have not been indulging in\nthe same kind of exercise.\n- \"They have been indulging in\nall kinds of spectaculars. We\nhave been putting all kinds of\nsatellites in the air for meteorological readings and things\nlike that.\"\nThe former president added:\n\"I do not admit there is a\ngap. I'm a little tired of that\nword.\"\nHe conceded, however, that\nthe Russians \"have admittedly\nand obviously gone ahead in\ncertain things, particularly in\nthe making of great engines.\"\nSOUND BREAKDOWN\nNorth American viewers saw\nthe filmed press conference,\nbut couldn't hear it because of\n\"an unfortunate technical\nhitch.\"\nA spokesman for Associated\nRediffusion, a London commercial television company, said\nthe breakdown in sound was\ncaused by a fault in a microwave link between the main\ntransmitter and the Savoy Hotel, where the press conference\nwas held.\nThe Manchester Guardian's\nair correspondent said the landing of both Vostoks in the\nplanned recovery area inside\nsix minutes was \"an even\ngreater achievement\" than the\ninitial one of placing the spacecraft in almost identical orbits.\n\"The sharp contrast between\nthe accurate ending to this\n'group flight' by the two cosmonauts and the confused overshoot which brought astronaut\nScott Carpenter down almost\n300 miles beyond his target\narea in the Atlantic on May 24\nseems to sum up the gap between Soviet and American\nachievements   in   space,\"   the\nU.S. Rocket  Chief Sees No\nNeed to Change Space Plans\nBLACKSBURG, Va. (AP> -\nDr. Wernher Von Braun, head\nof the U.S. program to develop\nrockets powerful enough to send\nmen to the moon, says there is\nno need to change U.S. space\nplans because of the sensational\nSoviet dual orbit this week.\nOn the contrary, Von Braun\ntold reporters, the United States\ncannot afford to waste time\nchanging things around.\nWhat the U.S. needs, he said,\nis not a crash program but continuing public support for a period of years.\n\"We cannot sit on our hands,\"\nhe said.\nVon Braun gave a detailed report on the Saturn moon-rocket\nprogram last night to 350 scientists, who are attending a lunar exploration conference, and\nmore   than   2,500   townspeople\nand students.\nThe German rocket expert\nsaid arrangements are under\nway for the third flight test of\nthe so-called \"small Saturn\"\nC-l booster which will be capable of launching an Apollo\nspacecraft into orbit around the\nearth.\nTO GO TO MOON\nThe C-l is the first U.S.\nrocket that will exceed the capability of the rocket that the\nRussians have been using. It\nwill be followed by the advanced C-5 Saturn that will\ncarry the three - man Apollo\ncraft to the moon and back.\nThe rocket will be powerful\nenough fo toss the equivalent of\none 707 jet airliner into orbit\n300 miles above the earth, drive\na 40-ton load to the vicinity of\nthe moon, send a twin-engined\nDC-3 all the wa yaround the\nsun, or boost a Chevrolet out of\nthe solar system. \"I am not\nsaying how lar the C-5 can send\na Vokkswagen.\n\"I have heard that the lunar\nexploration conference here has\nsplit as to whether the moon is\nhot or cold and its surface is\nrough or smooth,\" Von Braun\nsaid.\n\"The only answer is to go\nthere, visit it, and bring the\nanswers back.\"\nAsked as to the U.S. position\nin the space contest, Von Braun\nsaid, \"We are ahead in many\nfields but way behind in well\nproven rockets with large pay-\nload carrying capabilities\u2014that\nis our dilemma.\"\nguardian  correspondent  declared.\nSUPPORT LOVELL\n\"For American scientists and\nengineers the taste must be bitter.\"\nThe tone of other reaction in\nBritish scientific quarters was\nmuch the same. It tended to\nsupport the estimate of Sir\nBernard Lovell, Britain's leading space authority who Wednesday put the Soviet lead at\npossibly 10 years.\nMost British newspapers\nfront-paged the Soviet feat under huge headlines and editorial\nwriters had no'doubts about the\nSoviet lead.\nIn Paris, all four morning papers gave the story page-one\nplay, ranging from two col-\nums in the conservative Combat\nto a three-page splash in the\nCommunist Humanite.\nOslo's. Aftenposten said it\nwouldn't be surprised if the\nRussians soon put up a permanent space platform from\nwhich to launch manned flights\nto the moon.\n\"It is most likely the Russians will have such an installation operating while the\nAmericans still only know it\nfrom their strip Cartoons and\ntheir science fiction literature,\"\nthe newspaper said editorially.\n\"I send to you and to the Soviet people the heartiest congratulations of the people and\nthe government of the United\nStates on the outstanding joint\nflights of Maj. Nikolayev and\nCol. Popovich.\n\"This new accomplishment is\nan important forward step in\nthe great human adventure of\nthe peaceful exploitation of\nspace,\n\"America's astronauts join\nwith me in sending our salute\nto Maj. Nikolayev and Col.\nPopovich.\"\nEarlier this week, in a radio\nand television address, the\npresident said the United States\nwas behind in the space race\nand would remain behind for\nsome time to come.\nSHOW OPTIMISM\nOfficials of tbe National Aeronautics and Space Administration struck an optimistic\nnote at a press conference in\nWashington.\n\"I think that we will make\nthe manned lunar landing before they do,\" said Administrator James E. Webb\u2014and before the end of the decade.\nDeputy Administrator Dr.\nHugh L. Dryden put it this\nway: \"The fact that they may\nhave done one job ahead of us\ndoes not mean that they are\nahead of us in going to the\nmoon.\"\nWebb said a crash program\ncould speed efforts to put Americans on the moon, but it would\ncost more money and \"undoubtedly cut into the military program.\"\n\"It's a question,\" he said,\n\"of changing men from building missiles\u2014and putting them\non boosters.\"\nRussia's space feats are generally believed based on boosters with greater thrust than the\nU.S. has.\nMONSTER\nSALS\nSTILL CONTINUES\n\u2022\nReady Made\nSUITS\n30%\nOFF\n\u2022\nMade-to-Measu re\nSUITS\nReg.\nReg.\nReg\ni 85 $69.50\n95 __   77.50\n100      82.00\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     ^\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nB.C. Briefs\nSURVEY PLANNED\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - A federal-\nprovincial housing survey is to\nbe made here Aug. 20-24. The\nobject is to determine the amount\nof emergency lodging available,\ntest survey methods and train\nemergency welfare lodging chiefs\nfrom various points in B.C.\nGIRLS SAVES CHILDREN\nNANAIMO (CP) - Marilyn\nStuffco, 13, led a younger brother and sister and carried a six-\nweek-old baby to safety when\nfire ripped through her home\nWednesday night. Her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. John Stuffco had\nstepped out for 20 minutes.\nOFFICE ESTABLISHED\nNANAIMO (CP) \u2014 The first\nIndian Affairs office here has\nbeen established. John C. Lawrence is district superintendent of\nIndian School for a territory that\nextends from Victoria to Alert\nBay and includes all the West\nCoast. He formerly worked out\nof Port Alberni.\nHave the Job Done Right I\nVIC GRAVEC\n^        LIMITED       *\"\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\nRexall\nECZEMA\nOINTMENT\nFor  minor  skin  eruptions,\npimples, ulcers and sores.\nPrice 80\u00a3\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611 Box 460\nCLASSIFIED ADS !\nAre Your Best\n989UR\nTURN UNWANTED ARTICLES\nINTO READY CASH\nDon't clutter up the house with things you no longer\nneed or want - a small Classified Want Ad will bring\nyou ready buyers!\nphone 352-3552\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING   DEPARTMENT\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1962_08_17","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0434462","@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":"1962-08-17 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1962-08-17 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\/1.0434462"}